hꜣj

See also: ḥꜣj and ḫꜣj

Egyptian

FWOTD – 6 January 2020

Etymology

Sometimes proposed to be from a form such as Proto-Afroasiatic *hVy/*hVw- (to fall, to happen), in which case it may be cognate with Arabic هوى (hawā, to come down, to fall) and Iraqw huu’ (fall, drop).

Pronunciation

 
  • (reconstructed) IPA(key): /ˈhiʀjit//ˈhiʀjiʔ//ˈheʔja//ˈheʔjə/

Verb

 3ae inf.

  1. (intransitive) to descend
    • c. 2000 BCE – 1900 BCE, Tale of the Shipwrecked Sailor (pHermitage/pPetersburg 1115) lines 24–28:













      hꜣ.kw r wꜣḏ-wr m dpt nt št-mḏwtj mḥ m ꜣw.s ḥmw mḥ m sḫw.s št-mḏwtj sqd jm.s m stp n(j) kmt
      I had gone down to the sea in a boat of a hundred twenty cubits in length and forty cubits in breadth, with a hundred twenty sailors in it of the choice of Egypt.
    • c. 1800 BCE, The Eloquent Peasant, version R (pRamesseum A/pBerlin 10499, Recto) lines 1.2–1.3:








      m.t wj m hꜣt r kmt r jnt ꜥqw jm n ẖrdw.j
      • Translation by J. P. Allen
        Look, I am going down to Egypt to get provisions there for my children.
  2. (intransitive) to fall, to drop
  3. (intransitive) to come, to walk (+ n or r: to (someone))
  4. (transitive) to charge upon, to fall upon (an enemy)
    • c. 1859 BCE – 1840 BCE, The Story of Sinuhe, version B (pBerlin 3022 and pAmherst n-q) lines 52–53:









      nn twt n.f mꜣꜣ.t(w).f hꜣ.f r-pḏt(j)w ẖꜥm.f r-ḏꜣw
      • Translation by J. P. Allen
        There is none equal to him when he is seen charging archers and engaging opposition.

Inflection

Descendants

  • Bohairic Coptic: ϩⲉⲓ (hei)
  • Sahidic Coptic: ϩⲉ (he)

References

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