πΌπππΎπ πππ
Appearance
Hittite
[edit]Etymology
[edit]A HayaΕ‘a theonym, the first part of which is generally interpreted as πΌπ (te-ri, tri, βthreeβ), and the second part of which is connected by some scholars to Old Armenian ΥΏΥΈΦΥΏΥΆ (tutn, βtailβ), hence "the deity with three tails".[1][2]
Proper noun
[edit]πΌπππΎπ πππ β’ (te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-iΕ‘)
Inflection
[edit]IPA=tΙrititΙΛnPlease see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
Broad transcription | ||
---|---|---|
i-stem noun | ||
Common gender | Singular | Plural |
nominative | terititΕ«niΕ‘ | terititΕ«niΔΕ‘ |
accusative | terititΕ«nin | terititΕ«niuΕ‘ |
genitive | terititΕ«ni(y)aΕ‘ | terititΕ«niyaΕ‘ |
dative-locative | terititΕ«niya, terititΕ«ni | terititΕ«niyaΕ‘ |
allative | terititΕ«niya | β |
ablative | terititΕ«ni(y)az | terititΕ«ni(y)az |
instrumental | terititΕ«nit | terititΕ«nit |
The desinences in this table have been normalized. For alternative endings see Appendix:Hittite declension |
Cuneiform script | ||
---|---|---|
i-stem noun | ||
Common gender | Singular | Plural |
nominative | πΌπππΎπ πππ | πΌπππΎπ ππππ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-iΕ‘ | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-e-eΕ‘ | |
accusative | πΌπππΎπ πππ | πΌπππΎπ πππ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-in | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-uΕ‘ | |
genitive | πΌπππΎπ πππ πΈ, πΌπππΎπ πππΈ | πΌπππΎπ πππ πΈ, πΌπππΎπ πππΈ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya-aΕ‘, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-aΕ‘ | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya-aΕ‘, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-aΕ‘ | |
dative-locative | πΌπππΎπ πππ , πΌπππΎπ ππ | πΌπππΎπ πππ πΈ, πΌπππΎπ πππΈ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya-aΕ‘, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-aΕ‘ | |
allative | πΌπππΎπ πππ | β |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya | ||
ablative | πΌπππΎπ πππ π, πΌπππΎπ πππΈ | πΌπππΎπ πππ π, πΌπππΎπ πππΈ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya-az, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-az | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-ya-az, te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-az | |
instrumental | πΌπππΎπ πππ | πΌπππΎπ πππ |
te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-it | te-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-it | |
More than one syllabification is possible. For more information see Wiktionary:Hittite transliteration |
References
[edit]- ^ Martirosyan, Hrach (2010) Etymological Dictionary of the Armenian Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 8), Leiden and Boston: Brill, page 383
- ^ Djahukian, Gevork B. (1990) βDid Armenians Live in Asia Anterior Before the Twelfth Century B.C.?β, in T. L. Markey and J. A. C. Greppin, editors, When Worlds Collide: Indo-Europeans and Pre-Indo-Europeans, Ann Arbor: Karoma Publishers, pages 26β27
Further reading
[edit]- Das Reich Urartu (Volkert Haas), page 24: Dte-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-a[Ε‘]? (with π (D, deity classifier))
- Indogermanische Forschungen (1937): Dte-ri-it-ti-tu-u-ni-i[Ε‘]