In fact, if one reads the hieroglyphs, which only notate the consonants, one’s mouth inevitably travels through vowel sounds to get from one consonant to the next, and those vowel sounds actually do usually match those of the Coptic, Arabic and Hebrew cognates that we have… and they turn out to be surprisingly suggestive in English – which is descended from the language of the Angles, who lived precisely in the commonly accepted location of Proto-Germanic….
So ‘m-d3‘ actually does suggest the pronunciation ‘middle’… ‘k3‘ the pronunciation ‘Karl’, ‘b3‘ a rather lazily pronounced ‘Ba-al’, and ‘3kh‘ the pronunciation ‘Lugh’ – which is precisely the name of the Celtic god…
And ‘dp‘ – that’s actually an un-aspirated ‘t’ – pronounced ‘top’ means ‘on top of’.
‘Kh’t‘ comes out as ‘khut‘ and it’s the Pyramid Text era word for ‘knife’…
And if Sir Toby’s “Tilly-valley, lady” in Twelfth Night is actually code for “Tilly-marry”, (‘t3-mry‘, a word for ‘Egypt’ itself) then knowledge of these Megalith-era words had actually survived in esoteric and Irish culture, shortly to be destroyed by Oliver Cromwell and his Puritan troops.
And all of these words lack a reasonable Indo-European etymology: