1814, Edward Daniel Clarke, Robert Walpole, Travels in Various Countries of Europe, Asia and Africa: Greece, Egypt, and the Holy land, Printed for T. Cadell and W. Davies, page 217:
[...] the other two are but fragments; one of them written in the common Egyptic character, that of the other approaching much more to the hieroglyphical mode of writing.
1854, John Calvin, translated by John Owen, Calvin's Bible Commentaries: Jeremiah and Lamentations, Part IV, Calvin Translation Society, page 562:
And the Prophet expressly mentions the surname of the Pharaoh, which was Hophra, the meaning of which is not known to me; and it is probably an Egyptic word, for there is no such word in Hebrew [...]
2009, Stefan Goodwin, Africa in Europe: Antiquity into the age of global expansion[1], Lexington Books, →ISBN:
The Egyptic language of Ancient Egypt, like all the others just mentioned, belongs to a linguistic phylum that is classified as Afro-Asiatic, [...]