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Egyptian [ edit ]
Etymology 1 [ edit ]
Pronunciation [ edit ]
Numeral [ edit ]
one thousand
( by extension ) herd
Inflection [ edit ]
Declension of ḫꜣ
masculine
feminine
singular
ḫꜣ
—
Derived terms [ edit ]
Descendants [ edit ]
Akhmimic Coptic: ⳉⲟ ( xo )
Bohairic Coptic: ϣⲟ ( šo )
Fayyumic Coptic: ϣⲁ ( ša )
Lycopolitan Coptic: ϣⲟ ( šo )
Sahidic Coptic: ϣⲟ ( šo )
Etymology 2 [ edit ]
m
government office
Inflection [ edit ]
Declension of ḫꜣ (masculine)
Alternative forms [ edit ]
Alternative hieroglyphic writings of ḫꜣ
Etymology 3 [ edit ]
2-lit.
( intransitive ) to be young
( intransitive ) to be small
Inflection [ edit ]
Conjugation of ḫꜣ (biliteral / 2-lit. / 2rad.) — base stem: ḫꜣ , geminated stem: ḫꜣꜣ
infinitival forms
imperative
infinitive
negatival complement
complementary infinitive1
singular
plural
ḫꜣ
ḫꜣw , ḫꜣ
ḫꜣt
ḫꜣ , j.ḫꜣ
ḫꜣ , j.ḫꜣ
‘pseudoverbal’ forms
stative stem
periphrastic imperfective 2
periphrastic prospective 2
ḫꜣ
ḥr ḫꜣ
m ḫꜣ
r ḫꜣ
suffix conjugation
aspect / mood
active
contingent
aspect / mood
active
perfect
ḫꜣ.n
consecutive
ḫꜣ.jn
terminative
ḫꜣt
perfective 3
ḫꜣ
obligative1
ḫꜣ.ḫr
imperfective
ḫꜣ , j.ḫꜣ 1
prospective 3
ḫꜣ
potentialis1
ḫꜣ.kꜣ
subjunctive
ḫꜣ , j.ḫꜣ 1
verbal adjectives
aspect / mood
relative (incl. nominal / emphatic) forms
participles
active
active
passive
perfect
ḫꜣ.n
—
—
perfective
ḫꜣ
ḫꜣ
ḫꜣꜣ , ḫꜣꜣj 6 , ḫꜣ 2 , ḫꜣw 2 5 , ḫꜣy 2 5
imperfective
j.ḫꜣ 1 , ḫꜣ , ḫꜣy , ḫꜣw 5
j.ḫꜣ 1 , j.ḫꜣw 1 5 , ḫꜣ , ḫꜣj 6 , ḫꜣy 6
ḫꜣ , ḫꜣw 5
prospective
ḫꜣ , ḫꜣtj 7
ḫꜣtj 4 , ḫꜣt 4
Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian.
Used mostly since Middle Egyptian.
Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective.
Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f /.fj , feminine .s /.sj , dual .sn /.snj , plural .sn .
Only in the masculine singular.
Only in the masculine.
Only in the feminine.
References [ edit ]
^ Loprieno, Antonio (1995 ) Ancient Egyptian: A Linguistic Introduction , Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN , page 41