Egyptian
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Pronunciation
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3-lit.
- (intransitive) to be(come) old
Inflection
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Conjugation of tnj (triliteral / 3-lit. / 3rad.) — base stem: tnj
infinitival forms
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imperative
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infinitive
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negatival complement
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complementary infinitive1
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singular
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plural
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tnj
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tnjw, tnj
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tnjt
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tnj
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tnj
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‘pseudoverbal’ forms
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stative stem
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periphrastic imperfective2
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periphrastic prospective2
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tnj
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ḥr tnj
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m tnj
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r tnj
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suffix conjugation
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aspect / mood
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active
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contingent
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aspect / mood
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active
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perfect
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tnj.n
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consecutive
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tnj.jn
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terminative
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tnjt
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perfective3
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tnj
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obligative1
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tnj.ḫr
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imperfective
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tnj
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prospective3
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tnj
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potentialis1
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tnj.kꜣ
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subjunctive
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tnj
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verbal adjectives
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aspect / mood
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relative (incl. nominal / emphatic) forms
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participles
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active
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active
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passive
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perfect
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tnj.n
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—
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—
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perfective
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tnj
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tnj
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tnj, tnjw5, tnjy5
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imperfective
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tnj, tnjy, tnjw5
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tnj, tnjj6, tnjy6
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tnj, tnjw5
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prospective
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tnj, tnjtj7
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tnjtj4, tnjt4
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- Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian.
- Used mostly since Middle Egyptian.
- Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective.
- Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f/.fj, feminine .s/.sj, dual .sn/.snj, plural .sn.
- Only in the masculine singular.
- Only in the masculine.
- Only in the feminine.
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Synonyms
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du 2. enclitic (‘dependent’) pronoun
- Variant spelling of ṯnj (“you two”)
interrogative
- Variant spelling of ṯnj (“where?”)
References
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- Hoch, James (1997) Middle Egyptian Grammar, Mississauga: Benben Publications, →ISBN, page 104