𐀀𐀕

Phoenician

Etymology 1

From Proto-Semitic *Κ”anta.

Pronoun

𐀀𐀕 (ΚΎt /Κ”atta/) m

  1. you (masculine second person singular personal pronoun)
Descendants
  • Punic: π€€π€•β€Ž (ΚΎt)

Etymology 2

From Proto-Semitic *Κ”anti.

Pronoun

𐀀𐀕 (ΚΎt /Κ”atti/) f

  1. you (feminine second person singular personal pronoun)
Descendants

See also

References

  • Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001) A Phoenician-Punic Grammar, Leiden; Boston; KΓΆln: Brill, β†’ISBN, pages 38–40

Punic

Etymology 1

From Phoenician π€€π€‰π€•β€Ž (ΚΎyt), from Canaanite. Compare Hebrew אΧͺβ€Ž.

Preposition

𐀀𐀕 (ΚΎt)

  1. Used to introduce a semantically definite direct object
Usage notes

As in Hebrew, 𐀀𐀕 was sometimes used to form an independent direct object pronoun; the only attested form of this is π€€π€•π€€β€Ž (ΚΎtΚΎ /⁠ʾōto⁠/).

Etymology 2

From Phoenician π€€π€•β€Ž (ΚΎt).

Pronoun

𐀀𐀕 (ΚΎt) m

  1. you (masculine second person singular personal pronoun)
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