Course Description

In this class, students will be introduced to a tep-Heseb, (correct and precise method) for the study of mdw nTr. Based on the concept of syntax or word order this method will focus on teaching students to recognize grammar relationships or the patterns of logic represented by the words in a sentence. As patterns of logic, the student will learn how each word in a sentence is connected to a preceding or the following word in that sentence as an expression of logic.


This method will enable students to learn the basic mdw nTr grammar concepts represented by lessons 1-4, in Gardiner’s Egyptian Grammar book. Students will learn these basic mdw nTr grammar concepts or what I call the rules of mdw nTr logic, (thinking) in a new and exciting manner. *Students may repeat this course for a discounted cost until they can master the material.

NOTE: this is a foundation course and will be required if you wish to take Grammar Applications 2 parts 1 and 2, and Grammar Applications 3.

Course curriculum

    1. The preposition

    1. Adjectives are used as epithets and nouns. Basic words and concepts

    1. Types of sentences and the three uses of 1K iw

    1. Suffix pronouns. 1 m of predication

    1. The use of adjectives to express exclamatory force

    1. The genitive

About this course

  • $450.00
  • 12 lessons
  • TBD
  • TBD
  • Zoom - online course

About your Instructor

Akinjide Bonotchi

Philosopher, Author, Scholar

Akinjide Bonotchi Montgomery is a Philosopher, Author, Scholar, and student of Africa and Life. He began his study of African culture in 1977 with Dr. Ben (Yosef ben-Jochannan) Maat Khrew by means of Baba Clarence Harris Maat Khrew at Shaw College of Detroit, Mi. Baba Harris used summer seminars to introduce Doc. Ben and many other Black/African intellectual scholars and activists, such as Dr. Bobby Wright, to the young intellectual activists of Detroit.

Brother Bonotchi has an Associates Degree in Machinal Drawing from Highland Park C.C. of Highland Park Mi, and a Bachelor's degree in General Studies focused on Linguistics and African-American studies from the University of Michigan Dearborn Mi. He studied Electronics and Machinal Drawing at Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn Mi.

He studied the Medew Netcher language (Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyph) as a student of Egyptologists Dr. Rkhty Amen and Dr. Theophile Obenga. He was joined in these studies by Asheber Macharia and Babatunde Bandele. He has studied aspects of the Akan cultural system and is initiated in the Yoruba cultural system. Brother Akinjide was listed in Imhotep Magazine on African Philosophy published by the San Francisco University School of African Philosophy as "a philosopher who is working on the shaping of African studies using Kemet as a historical base" (Imhotep Magazine, Vol. 1, February 2000). For over 12 years, Seba Akinjide has been an online teacher of the Medew Netcher language at www.Abibitumikasa.com, the African language Institute founded by Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon

Currently, he continues teaching at Abibitumi.com and the Institute of Kemetic Philology. Brother Bonotchi, Dr. Kambon, Dr. Rkhty, and others are working to revitalize and bring to light the African aspects of the Medew Netcher language.

Seba Akinjide has been a member of the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilization (ASCAC) for over thirty years. He has traveled to Kemet (Egypt) on study tours with Dr. Ben and ASCAC. His book Deconstructing Aspects of the Social Constructions of Race and Racism in Western Culture: How and Why African Americans are Educated into a State of Dumbness by America's Nigger Factories: Highlighting the Need for African-centered Education! is influenced by that ASCAC relationship.