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The Coptic Words Still Living Inside Egyptian Arabic
Egyptian Arabic did not simply replace the older Egyptian language. It absorbed part of it. Some Coptic words survived in months, tools, measures, village life, church life, and even baby-talk.
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How Egyptians Read the Year Through Weather
The Egyptian year was not only counted by dates. It was read through cold, wind, dust, bloom, harvest, and the turns of weather tied to the old calendar.
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Why Egyptians Still Say Toba, Amshir, and Baramhat
Coptic month names still live in Egyptian speech. They survive in weather talk, family memory, farming rhythm, and the local way people feel the year.
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