stp-zꜣ

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Egyptian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

stp +‎ zꜣ.

Pronunciation[edit]

Verb[edit]

st p
stp
V16

 compound

  1. (transitive with r or ḥr or ḥꜣ) to protect (a person, or, more rarely, a temple) [since the Pyramid Texts]

Usage notes[edit]

Originally, the subject intervened between stp and zꜣ, but in later times it often appeared twice, once after stp and once after zꜣ. By the Greco-Roman Period, it had shifted to appearing only after zꜣ.

Since the Middle Kingdom, the object is sometimes attached to zꜣ as a direct genitive or a suffix pronoun instead of following a preposition.

Alternative forms[edit]

Noun[edit]

stp
V16

 m

  1. a title used for a bodyguard of the king during his travels, literally protector [Old Kingdom]
    • 6th Dynasty, Giza, Western Cemetery, Shaft G 2188 Y, Block of sunk relief inscription mentioning the dog Abutiu (35-10-22/Cairo JE 67573), lines 1–2:[1]
      T
      z
      mE14M42n
      n
      stpV16
      r
      Hmf
      abwtywE14
      r
      n
      f
      ṯzm wnn stp-zꜣ r ḥm.f ꜥbwtjw rn.f
      The hound that was the protector of His Majesty. His name is Abutiu.
  2. used as a component of various other titles; see the Derived Terms section below [Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom, and 26th Dynasty]

Inflection[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

Noun[edit]

stp
V16
pr

 m

  1. the palace or court together with its inhabitants [since the Old Kingdom]
  2. the palace as a building [since the Old Kingdom]
  3. a temple or part of a temple in which a god is enthroned or in which a god’s image is set up [Greco-Roman Period]
  4. (Late Egyptian) the judgement hall in the afterlife

Usage notes[edit]

This term is sometimes followed by the honorific phrase ꜥnḫ wḏꜣ snb.

Inflection[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

See also the Alternative Forms section under the verb above, as this noun can be written like the verb.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Reisner, George A. (1936) “The Dog which was Honored by the King of Upper and Lower Egypt” in Bulletin of the Museum of Fine Arts, volume XXXIV, number 206, pages 96–99