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THE THIRD PERSON REVEALED
ane [HE] (236x: Ur III, Old Babylonian, unknown) wr. e-ne; a-ne "he, she"
[1] |
|
e-ne |
[2] |
|
a-ne |
17 distinct forms attested; click to view forms table.
1. he, she (236x/100%)
e-ne = šu-[u2] ; šu e-ne = gi-mi-il-lum šu-u2
e-ne-gin7 = [ki-mašu-a-ti] ;
[e]-ne-am3 = mi-iš-šum ;
[e-ne-da] na-me-a = <(e-la šu-a-ti)> ;
ki e-ne-[ta] = [it-ti šu-nu-ti]
u3 a-ne ;
u3 a-ne he2-em-da-de6 ;
[u3 a]-ne zu2-gag-za
a-ne-da nu
See ETCSL: e-ne=he, she.
We have already proven that Sumerian [šu] is an abbreviation of the Akkadian subject and particle: qātu [ša] [from the hand to the object, of the object]. This is a universal behaviour of Sumerian, it is constantly using Akkadian grammar.
In Akkadian šu-nu-ti meant [of him, his, from him, to the object] and then it became [he].
This structure has been found in:
Sum. šu e-ne = Akk. gi-mi-il-lum šu-u2
Sum. *šu e-ne = Akk. šu-[u2]
Sum. *šu = e-ne-gin7 = [ki-ma-šu-a-ti] (Akakdian infix -ma-)
Sum. *šu [e]-ne-am3 = Akk. mi-iš-šum
Sum. *šu [e-ne-da] = Akk. šu-a-ti
Sum. (š)u3 a-ne
Sum. (š)[u3 a]-ne
All the time Sumerian grammar mimics Akkadian grammar because the founder of Sumerian is an Akkadian genius.