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We have seen that the exceptional toga with fingers (instead of the Y sign) probably is connected with the 'fingers' of ua:

20
Eb5-14 Eb5-15 Eb5-16 Eb5-17

The 'reversed' ihe tau sign in Eb5-15 also appears in Bb8-42, but there after ua and with a sign like toa instead of a hand:

Bb8-37 Bb8-38 Bb8-39
Bb8-40 Bb8-41 Bb8-42

We should next investigate whether a connection between ua and toga holds also when the toga glyph has a more normal form (with ihe tau not 'reversed'):

Eb5-15 Bb8-42 toga
'reversed ihe tau'