jzwt

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Egyptian

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Noun

izw&&t A1
Z2

 f

  1. work-gang, team or crew of workers [since the 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 6–9:[1]
      rdiHmf
      [[s]]f
      T
      W1xwzA34n
      Ba15s f Ba15as

      iizz
      O24A
      inizizizn
      t

      qdA1A1A1
      rḏj ḥm.f [s]fṯ ḫwz n[.f] jz jn jzwt nt (j)qdw
      His Majesty gave pine oil and (ordered) that a tomb be built for him by a gang of builders.
  2. crew of a boat, especially the solar barque [since the Old Kingdom]
    • c. 2000–1900 BCE Tale of the Shipwrecked Sailor (pHermitage/pPetersburg 1115), lines 7–8:
      izw&&t A1Z2ssT
      n
      Z2
      iiit
      D54
      aD
      d
      t
      Y1
      D35
      n
      n
      h
      wnDs
      n
      mSaA1Z2ssn
      Z2
      jzwt.n jj.t(j) ꜥd.t(j) nn nhw n mšꜥ.n
      Our crew has come (back) intact, without loss to our expedition.
  3. troop, band, or company of soldiers [since the New Kingdom]
  4. entourage or following of a king or god [Greco-Roman Period]
Inflection
Alternative forms
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From jz (old, ancient) +‎ -wt.

Noun

iizz
w t
Hn
Z2ss

 f

  1. ancient times, antiquity, yore
Alternative forms

References

  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