𒄩 U+12129, 𒄩
CUNEIFORM SIGN HA
𒄨
[U+12128]
Cuneiform 𒄪
[U+1212A]

Translingual edit

Cuneiform sign edit

𒄩 Sign Number
MZL 856
Deimel 589
HZL 367
Components
𒍝, 𒌋

Derived signs edit

References edit

 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
  • R. Borger, Mesopotamisches Zeichenlexikon (MZL), Münster (2003)
  • A. Deimel, Šumerisches Lexikon (Deimel), Rome (1947)
  • Chr. Rüster, E. Neu, Hethitisches Zeichenlexikon (HZL), Wiesbaden (1989)

Akkadian edit

Sign values edit

Sign 𒄩
Sumerograms A₇, KUA, KU₆, ḪA
Phonetic values ḫa (ʾa₄)

Usage notes edit

  • In Old Babylonian this sign was also used to represent a glottal stop. When that happens, some Assyriologists assign to this sign the value: ʾa₄. From Middle Babylonian on, the glottal stop was indicated by the sign 𒀪, originated as a graphic differentiation of 𒄴.

Etymology edit

Orthographic borrowing from Sumerian 𒄩 (ku₆ /⁠kud⁠/, fish).

Logogram edit

𒄩 (KU₆)

  1. Sumerogram of nūnum (fish)

Hittite edit

𒄩
The cuneiform font displayed by default does not accurately represent the Hittite script.
Please download and install Hittite fonts from www.hethport.uni-wuerzburg.de.

Etymology edit

An Akkadogram, possibly for 𒈦𒄷𒌋𒉿𒅀𒀸 (parḫūwayaš). s

Noun edit

𒄩 (KU₆)

  1. an animal whose meat was dried and eaten, possibly a fish

Sumerian edit

Etymology edit

A term found in the alleged Euphratic substrate theory, which connects it to Proto-Indo-European *dʰǵʰu- (fish). This word in particular is not of atypical syllable structure for being native Sumerian, which is the main sign indicating a potential borrowing into the language. Concurring with the opinion of Pennsylvania State University's Dr. Rubio, the borrowing from multiple languages rather than a specific substratum is now the predominant viewpoint in the field.

Noun edit

𒄩 (ku₆, kud /kud/)

  1. fish

See also edit

References edit

  • 𒄩 (kud)” in ePSD2
  • Whittaker, Gordon (2008) “The Case for Euphratic”, in Bulletin of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences[1], volume 2, number 3, pages 156–168.