See also: Rh, RH, and rh

Egyptian edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

r
x
Y1

 2-lit.

  1. (transitive) to learn, to come to know or experience
  2. (transitive, in the stative or perfect) to know (something)
  3. (transitive, in the stative or perfect) to be acquainted or familiar with (someone)
    • c. 2000 BCE – 1900 BCE, Tale of the Shipwrecked Sailor (pHermitage/pPetersburg 1115) lines 119–121:
      iwd
      p
      t
      P1
      riiit
      D54
      mXn
      n
      nwwprsqddA30A1
      Z2
      imsr
      x
      Y2
      n
      k
      jw dpt r jjt m ẖnw sqdw jm.s rḫ.n.k
      A boat is to come from home with sailors in it whom you know.
  4. (catenative, in the stative or perfect, with a verb in the infinitive) to know how to, to be able to

Usage notes edit

Unlike other transitive verbs, the stative of rḫ has an active meaning rather than a passive one and can have a direct object denoting what is known. When this direct object is a personal pronoun, it appears in enclitic (dependent) form.

Inflection edit

Alternative forms edit

Antonyms edit

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Demotic: rḫ

Noun edit

r
x
Y1

 m

  1. knowledge

Noun edit

r
x
Y1
A1

 m

  1. knowledgeable or wise man, scholar, often seen as living according to Maat (virtue/truth/cosmic order)
    Antonym: wḫꜣ

Inflection edit

References edit