𐤀𐤁
Ammonite
Etymology
From Proto-Semitic *ʔabw-.
Noun
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb)
Edomite
Etymology
From Proto-Semitic *ʔabw-.
Noun
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb)
Moabite
Etymology
From Proto-Semitic *ʔabw-.
Noun
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb)
Phoenician
Etymology 1
From Proto-Semitic *bV-.
Alternative forms
- 𐤁 (b /bi/)
Preposition
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb /ab, eb/)
Descendants
Etymology 2
From Proto-Semitic *ʔabw-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʔab/
Noun
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb /ab/)
Related terms
- 𐤀𐤁𐤕 (ʾbt, “fatherhood”)
Descendants
- Punic: 𐤀𐤁 (ʾb)
References
- Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001) A Phoenician-Punic Grammar, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 227
- Steiner, Richard C. (2001) “Albounout “Frankincense” and Alsounalph “Oxtongue”: Phoenician-Punic Botanical Terms with Prothetic Vowels from an Egyptian Papyrus and a Byzantine Codex”, in Orientalia[1], volume 70, number 1, page 102
Punic
Etymology 1
From Phoenician 𐤀𐤁 (ʾb /ab/), from Proto-Semitic *ʔabw-.
Pronunciation
- (6th BCE Punic): IPA(key): /ʔab/
- (2nd BCE Late Punic): IPA(key): /ʔab/
- (2nd CE Neo-Punic): IPA(key): /ab/
Noun
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb /ʾab/)
Etymology 2
Preposition
𐤀𐤁 (ʾb /ab, eb/)
- alternative form of 𐤁 (b /bi/)
References
- Krahmalkov, Charles R. (2001) A Phoenician-Punic Grammar, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 227
- Steiner, Richard C. (2001) “Albounout “Frankincense” and Alsounalph “Oxtongue”: Phoenician-Punic Botanical Terms with Prothetic Vowels from an Egyptian Papyrus and a Byzantine Codex”, in Orientalia[2], volume 70, number 1, page 102