bw

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See also: BW, .bw, b/w, bw., and Bw.

English

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Noun

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bw (uncountable)

  1. Abbreviation of bodyweight.
    • 2005, Tarek A. Kassim, Environmental Impact Assessment of Recycled Wastes on Surface and Ground Waters[1]:
      Pigs and calves: 200 mg per 15 kg bw
  2. Abbreviation of birth weight.

Anagrams

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Auhelawa

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Pronunciation

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Letter

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bw (upper case Bw)

  1. A letter of the Auhelawa alphabet.

Egyptian

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Ehret hypothesizes an origin in Proto-Afroasiatic *bǔ (place) and compares Arabic بِـ (bi-, in, with, by); as with other attempts at reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic, academic consensus is lacking.

Noun

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bw

 m

  1. place, location
  2. (with following genitive) position, location where someone or something is
  3. thing
  4. (with following adjective) forms abstract nouns; -ness
Inflection
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Alternative forms
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Derived terms
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See also
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Noun

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bWN33C

 m

  1. (Late Egyptian) item in a list
Inflection
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Etymology 2

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Related to (and probably developed from) earlier nj (not).[1] The spelling with b- may reflect a graphic phenomenon rather than a sound change. Compare the Late Egyptian development of bn from Earlier Egyptian nn.

Particle

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bW

 proclitic

  1. (Late Egyptian, with following verb in the sdm.f form) not; forms the negative aorist of verbs
  2. (Late Egyptian, with following verb in the sdmt.f form (from the Middle Egyptian terminative)) not yet
  3. (Late Egyptian, chiefly literary, with following verb in the sdm.f form) not; forms the negative preterite of verbs
Usage notes
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The verb used with bw in forming the negative aorist is usually periphrastic jrj, which is then followed by the main verb in the infinitive; however, when the main verb is rḫ or when the text belongs to a high linguistic register, periphrastic jrj is often not used and the main verb is directly negated instead. In forming the ‘not yet’ construction, periphrastic jrj is usually used, but especially with verbs of motion the main verb is sometimes directly negated instead. Periphrastic jrj is not used in forming the negative preterite.

Alternative forms
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Derived terms
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Descendants
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  • Coptic: ⲙⲉ⸗ (me⸗)

References

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  1. ^ Oréal, Elsa (2022) “The negative existential cycle in Ancient Egyptian” in Ljuba Veselinova & Arja Hamari (eds.), The Negative Existential Cycle, Berlin: Language Science Press, pages 197–230