See also: SJ, sj., .sj, S.J., and sjꜣ

Central Mazahua edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

sj (upper case Sj)

  1. A letter of the Mazahua alphabet.

Egyptian edit

Etymology edit

Cognate to Proto-Semitic *šiʔa.

Pronunciation edit

 

Pronoun edit

sZ4

 f sg 3. enclitic (‘dependent’) pronoun

  1. she, her (see usage notes)

Usage notes edit

This form of pronoun is an enclitic that must directly follow the word it modifies. Its meaning depends on its context:

  • When it follows a verb, it indicates the object of the verb.
  • In the second and third person when it follows an adjective, it forms the subject of an adjectival sentence.
  • When it follows a relative adjective, such as ntj, ntt, or jsṯ, it indicates the subject of the relative clause (usually only in the first person singular and third person common).
  • When it follows an imperative, it indicates the subject or the object of the verb.
  • When it follows a particle like m.k, it indicates the subject of the clause.
  • When attached to a preposition, it indicates the object of the preposition.

Inflection edit

Alternative forms edit

Pronoun edit

sZ4

 f sg 3. proclitic (‘subject form’) pronoun

  1. she [since the 17th Dynasty]

Usage notes edit

This form of pronoun is a proclitic that must stand at the beginning of a sentence (generally adverbial) and cannot come after any particles. It always indicates the subject of the sentence.

Inflection edit

Alternative forms edit

See under the enclitic pronoun above.

References edit

  1. ^ Loprieno, Antonio (1995) Ancient Egyptian: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 64

Swedish edit

Pronoun edit

sj

  1. (Internet slang, text messaging) Abbreviation of själv.
    vgd – inget sj
    – What are you up to? – Nothing, and you?