This paper proposes that the 14-deity lunar staircase sequence at Dendera Temple (1st century BCE) encodes the Egyptian phoneme curriculum in architectural form. By extracting phonemes in order of first appearance from the deity names, a master sequence emerges: ỉ-w-n-y-t-ḥ-r-b-ꜣ-s-g-f-š-m-ḏ. I propose that valid Egyptian words should have phonemes extractable as subsequences of this master sequence—phonemes may be skipped but not reordered. Applying this test to the conventional transliteration "nfr" (𓄤, "beautiful") reveals a failure: the sequence n→f→r violates subsequence order. However, the alternative reading "nrf" passes. Analysis of 12,773 Earlier Egyptian sentences from the Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae corpus shows scribes added both f and r as phonetic complements to 𓄤 (165 and 113 occurrences respectively), suggesting historical uncertainty about internal phoneme order. This method offers a novel validation framework for Egyptian transliteration that can be computationally applied to the entire TLA corpus.
Nicholas Brown (Fri,) studied this question.