π
See also: Appendix:Variations of "en"
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Translingual
Glyph origin
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Cuneiform sign "EN", for "Lord" or "Master": evolution from the pictograph of a throne circa 3000 BCE, followed by simplification and rotation down to circa 600 BCE.[1]
Cuneiform sign
π | Sign Number | |
---|---|---|
MZL | 164 | |
Deimel | 99 | |
HZL | 40 |
References
- R. Borger, Mesopotamisches Zeichenlexikon (MZL), MΓΌnster (2003)
- A. Deimel, Ε umerisches Lexikon (Deimel), Rome (1947)
- Chr. RΓΌster, E. Neu, Hethitisches Zeichenlexikon (HZL), Wiesbaden (1989)
Akkadian
Sign values
Sign | π |
---|---|
Sumerograms | EN |
Phonetic values | en |
Logogram
π β’ (EN)
- (Middle Babylonian, Neo-Babylonian, mathematics) Sumerogram of mΔ«num (βwhat?β)
Sumerian
Related terms
- πππ (den-ki, βEnkiβ)
- πππ€ (den-lilβ, βEnlilβ)
- ππ‘π¦ (en-nu-uΕβ /β ennuΕβ /, βguardβ)
- π©π (munus-ensi, βfemale seerβ)
Descendants
- β Akkadian: π (Δnum)
See also
- Sumerian terms spelled with π
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