𒄠𒋛
Akkadian
Etymology
Usually regarded as a loanword from some other non-Semitic or Afro-Asiatic language. Has been compared to Middle Egyptian pꜣ-ꜣb(w) (with the Egyptian definite article prefixed) from Proto-Afro-Asiatic *leb- (“elephant”). Blažek 1998 postulates Proto-Semitic *pirl-, with assimilation r-l → r-r or r-l → l-l, yielding Akkadian forms 𒁉𒊒𒌝 (pīru) and 𒉿𒄿𒇻 (pīlu).
Compare Aramaic ܦܝܠܐ (pīlā), Old Armenian փիղ (pʿił), Persian پیل (pīl), Sanskrit पीलु (pīlu) and Arabic فِيل (fīl). From the same Afro-Asiatic root also possibly the first part of Ancient Greek ἐλ-έφας (el-éphas) (whence also English elephant) and Latin eb-ur (“ivory”).
Pronunciation
IPA(key): /piːru/
Noun
𒄠𒋛 (pīru)
[AM.SI]
- elephant
- c. 2nd millennium BCE, Proverbs, Collection 5, Segment A, Proverb 5.1:
- am-si /ni2-te\-a-ni /maš2\-[anše dšakkan2-ka]
- niĝ2 ĝe26-gin7-nam nu-ĝal2 na-[ab-be2-a]
- an-ti-ri2-gu7mušen-e mu-/na\-[ni-ib-gi4-gi4]
- u3 ĝe26-e igi-te-en-ĝu10-še3
- za-a-gin7-nam al-dim2-me-en-/e-še\
- The elephant spoke to himself: "Among all the creatures of Šakkan, the one that can defecate like me has yet to be created!" The wren answered him: "But I, in my own small way, can defecate just as much as you!"
- c. 2nd millennium BCE, Proverbs, Collection 5, Segment A, Proverb 5.1:
Descendants
References
- Václav Blažek Two Greek words of a foreign origin : I. ἐλέφᾱς, II. φοῖνιξ, Sborník prací Filozofické fakulty brněnské univerzity. N, Řada klasická = Graeco-Latina Brunensia. 1998-1999, vol. 47-48, iss. N3-4
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