π€π€
Phoenician
Etymology 1
From Proto-Semitic *Κanta.
Descendants
- Punic: π€π€β (ΚΎt)
Etymology 2
From Proto-Semitic *Κanti.
Descendants
- Punic: π€π€β (ΚΎt)
See also
Phoenician personal pronouns
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|
1st person | π€π€π€β (ΚΎnk), π€π€π€π€ββ (ΚΎnkyβ), π€π€π€ββ (ΚΎnyβ) | π€π€π€π€β (ΚΎnαΈ₯n), π€π€π€β (nαΈ₯n) | |
2nd person | m | π€π€β (ΚΎt) | π€π€π€β (ΚΎtm) |
f | π€π€β (ΚΎt) | not attested | |
3rd person | m | π€π€β (hΚΎ) | π€π€π€β (hmt) |
f | π€π€β (hΚΎ) | π€π€π€β (hmt) |
References
- Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001) A Phoenician-Punic Grammar, Leiden; Boston; KΓΆln: Brill, βISBN, pages 38β40
Punic
Etymology 1
From Phoenician π€π€π€β (ΚΎyt), from Canaanite. Compare Hebrew ΧΧͺβ.
Preposition
π€π€ (ΚΎt)
- Used to introduce a semantically definite direct object
Usage notes
As in Hebrew, π€π€ was sometimes used to form an independent direct object pronoun; the only attested form of this is π€π€π€β (ΚΎtΚΎ /β ΚΎΕtoβ /).
Etymology 2
From Phoenician π€π€β (ΚΎt).
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