The priest's clothes are hemp and sandals are papyrus. They are not allowed to wear clothes or shoes made of other materials. The priests thought that this bull belonged to the god of Ebabas, so they tested this bull in this way: for this reason, they appointed a priest to make an angry investigation to see if there was black hair on this bull, and if there was, it was unclean. The priest examined its whole body, first told it to stand, and then told it to lie on its back; After that, he pulled out the tongue of the cow to see if it was clean. He also checked the hair on his tail to see if it grew naturally. If the cow is declared clean in all these different ways, the priest will roll the papyrus on its horn as a mark, put the seal on it, and then cover it with the seal of his own ring. After that, the bull was taken away by them; Any cow that has not been identified by the priest will be put to death if it is used as a sacrifice. They took their livestock to the altar to offer sacrifices, lit the altar, then sprinkled wine on the altar in front of the sacrifice and shouted the name of God: then they cut its throat, took off its head and peeled off its whole body. Then they picked up its head and read a spell on it; If there is a market, there are a group of Greek businessmen who will take this head there and sell it immediately. If there were no Greeks there, they would throw this head into the river. They put a spell on their heads, with the purpose that if something bad happens to the victim or the whole of Egypt, they hope it will turn to the bull's head.
There are 30 monosyllabic words, 80 disyllabic words and 50 trisyllabic words in Egyptian hieroglyphics, as well as graphic characters that can directly express meaning. There are not many real pictographs, and most of them use the pronunciation of several pictographs to express other concepts. Similar to the usage of loanwords in Chinese. Determiners are similar to radicals in Chinese.