specifically: the picture script of the ancient Egyptian priesthood —often used in plural but singular or plural in construction
3
: something that resembles a hieroglyph especially in difficulty of decipherment
Illustration of hieroglyphic
hieroglyphic 2
Did you know?
If hieroglyphic writing is "all Greek to you," you know more about the etymology of hieroglyphic than you might think. That word comes from the Greek hieroglyphikos, which means "sacred carving" (from hieros, meaning "sacred," and glyphein, meaning "to carve"). The ancient Greeks who named hieroglyphic writing reserved that term for the picture writing they found carved in temple walls or on public monuments in Egypt; it was distinguished from writings done in ink on papyrus or other smooth surfaces. But since making their first appearances in English in the 1580s, both the noun hieroglyphics and the adjective hieroglyphic have been extended to apply to the picture writing of various cultures, whether or not those writings were carved or sacred.
Examples of hieroglyphic in a Sentence
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Adjective
The ostraca were written in hieroglyphic scripts, along with Egyptian demotic and Greek.—Andrea Margolis, Fox News, 3 Mar. 2025 Written in three scripts—Greek, Demotic, and hieroglyphic—the stone allowed scholars, most notably Jean-François Champollion in the early 19th century, to decipher the meaning of hieroglyphs for the first time.—David Nikel, Forbes, 2 Mar. 2025
Noun
The photograph was taken in Greene’s dining room, where a friend had scribbled what looked to be a series of hieroglyphics, a perfect backdrop for the psychedelic vibe.—Greg Evans, Deadline, 6 Mar. 2025 This ancient inscription, carved in 196 BCE, was the key to unlocking the mystery of Egyptian hieroglyphics.—David Nikel, Forbes, 2 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for hieroglyphic
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
Middle French hieroglyphique, from Late Latin hieroglyphicus, from Greek hieroglyphikos, from hieros + glyphein to carve — more at cleave
: a system of writing mainly in pictorial characters
especially: the picture script of the ancient Egyptian priesthood
3
: unclear or unreadable signs or writing
hieroglyphicadjective
Etymology
Noun
derived from early French hieroglyphique (adjective) "relating to or being writing that consists of pictures or symbols rather than words," derived from Greek hieroglyphikos (same meaning), from hieros "sacred, holy" and glyphikos "of carving"; so called because it referred to the system of carvings used on ancient Egyptian temples
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