A list of uses for the foreleg hieroglyph, with no order of importance actually implied: • Foreleg of ox, a "choice cut of meat". • Mortuary offering for ritual; the first item shown in the formulaic listing of items given to the deceased on the
funerary stele (thigh, then fowl, bread, wine, beer, and linen, etc.). • In ritual ceremony, the right and left forelegs of oxen are always "unfettered" while incapacitating the oxen and are the sacrificed forelegs. • Ideogram, or
determinative–"thigh", "arm"'' 'khepesh' '', (h)pš). • The "strong (human) arm", the strength implied by royal or divine gift. • for "strength" (
khepesh) in dedication ceremonies such as the
Opening of the Mouth; also before mummy interment. • The foreleg-thigh shape is equivalent to the power implied from the similar-shaped
scimitar presented by deities. • "The Foreleg of Ox" as
Ursa Major constellation.
Rosetta Stone Though the Foreleg of ox hieroglyph is not used in the
Rosetta Stone directly, the strength (
khepesh) of the scimitar is. In line R-6: "... and a statue of the god
Osiris of the city
Alexandria, giving to him, pharaoh
Ptolemy V, a 'royal sword' (
khepesh nesu) of victory"; the word
khepesh uses the
scimitar hieroglyph as the determinative. The quote is part of the ten rewards to be given to Pharaoh Ptolemy V in the Rosetta Stone. File:Egypte louvre 275 stele.jpg|Foreleg of ox (2) on offering table ==See also==