abum

See also: Abum

Akkadian

Etymology

From Proto-Semitic *ʔabw- (father). Cognate with Arabic أَب (ʔab) and Biblical Hebrew אָב (ʔɔḇ).

Pronunciation

Noun

abum m (construct state abi, pronominal state abū or abā or abī, plural abbū) (from Old Akkadian on)

  1. father
    • 1755–1750 BCE, King Hammurabi of Babylon, translated by OMNIKA Foundation, Hammurabi Code[1], The Louvre, Law 195:
      𒋳𒈠 𒌉 𒀀𒁀𒋗 𒅎𒋫𒄩𒊍 𒈩𒇲𒋗 𒄿𒈾𒀝𒆠𒋢
      [šumma mārum abāšu imtaḫaṣ rittašu inakkisū]
      šum-ma DUMU A.BA-šu im-ta-ḫa-aṣ KIŠIB.LA₂-šu i-na-ak-ki-su
      If a son has struck his father, his hand will be cut off.
  2. ancestor, forefather

Alternative forms

Cuneiform spellings
Logograms Phonetic
  • 𒀀𒁍𒌝 (a-bu-um)
  • 𒀀𒁍 (a-bu)
  • (genitive) 𒀀𒁉𒅎 (a-bi-im)
  • (genitive, construct state) 𒀀𒁉 (a-bi)

Derived terms

  • abbūtum
  • abi abim
  • abi ummim

References

Torricelli

Noun

abum

  1. a type of tree

References

Drinfeld, Andrey. 2023. Aro-English / English-Aro Dictionary. Ms. 112pp.