Hindi, asked by dasratnaamal, 11 months ago

Hey!!Can you also give me some notes of dresses and fashion , Entertainment ,Writing of Indus Valley Civilization??please...​

Answers

Answered by RITURAJage15
0

AnsweThe Indus script is a corpus of symbols produced by the Indus Valley Civilization. Most inscriptions containing these symbols are extremely short, making it difficult to judge whether or not these symbols constituted a script used to record a language, or even symbolise a writing system

Answered by jkdevraj3101200347
0

Answer:

The main corpus of writing dated from the Indus Civilization is in the form of some two thousand inscribed seals in good, legible conditions (seals are used to make impressions on malleable material like clay).

Although these seals and samples of Indus writing have been floating around the scholastic world for close to 70 years, little progress has been made on deciphering this elegant script. However, we should not blame scholars for their lack of progress, for there are some major impediments to decipherment:

Very short and brief texts. The average number of symbols on the seals is 5, and the longest is only 26.

The language underneath is unknown.

Lack of bilingual texts.

The Indus River Valley Civilization developed a writing system that is still undeciphered to this day.

The Indus Valley writing used seals with pictures and symbols on them.

The Indus Valley civilization was very religious because they held sacred animals and they used them in their writing systems.

Even though these seals are undeciphered, we believe that these seals were used to keep family records, documents, contracts and other official documents.

We chose this artifact for the museum because it shows a clear example of what the writing from the Indus Valley looked like in ancient times

Similar questions