Egyptian

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Plural form of pw.

Determiner

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ipw

 m pl proximal, later vocative demonstrative determiner

  1. (Old Egyptian) these
  2. (Middle Egyptian, archaizing) O (vocative reference)
Usage notes
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This demonstrative was originally a determiner but could later be used alone, like a pronoun. When used as a determiner it follows the noun it describes.

In Old Egyptian it forms a contrastive pair with the demonstrative jpf, in which jpw is proximal.

Its use in Middle Egyptian texts is an archaism.

In Old Egyptian this form is also used for the dual. Traditionally this is interpreted as a summary writing of a special dual form jpwj (attested as such only in archaizing Middle Egyptian texts). An alternative possible interpretation is that there simply was no distinction between the masculine dual and plural demonstrative determiners.

Inflection
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Alternative forms
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Etymology 2

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Proper noun

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ipwniwt

  m./f. topo.

  1. Akhmim or Panopolis, a city in Upper Egypt
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Derived terms
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Descendants
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  • Demotic: jpw

Etymology 3

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From jp (to count, to assess, to assign)-w.

Noun

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ipwV12

 m

  1. (chiefly Late Egyptian) inventory, list, tax record
Inflection
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Alternative forms
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Noun

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ipwY1V

 m

  1. levy, duty, payments [18th Dynasty]
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References

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