wsḫ

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See also: WSH

Egyptian

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Sometimes hypothesized to be from a form such as Proto-Afroasiatic *wsɣ; compare Arabic وَسُعَ (wasuʕa), وَسِعَ (wasiʕa, to be wide).[1]

Verb

wsx
W10

 3-lit.

  1. (intransitive) to be(come) broad, to be(come) wide
  2. (intransitive, of movements) to be(come) extensive, wide-ranging
  3. (intransitive) to be(come) abundant, extensive, rich (+ m: in)
  4. (intransitive, of names) to be(come) renowned, widely known, famous
  5. (intransitive, impersonal, with n) to have space for (someone)
Inflection
Alternative forms
Derived terms
Descendants

Adjective

wsx
W10
  1. perfective active participle of wsḫ; broad, wide
  2. imperfective active participle of wsḫ; broad, wide
Inflection
Alternative forms

See under the verb above.

Noun

wsx
W10

 m

  1. breadth, width
Inflection
Alternative forms

See under the verb above.

Noun

wsx
W10
S11

 m

  1. broad collar or necklace
Inflection
Alternative forms

Etymology 2

Noun

wsx
W10
P1

 m

  1. barge
Inflection
Alternative forms

References

  1. ^ Loprieno, Antonio (1995) Ancient Egyptian: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 35
  2. ^ Alternatively, taking
    m
    as imperative (j)m: ‘…the place of the calm man is broad. Don’t speak!’ The first clause can also be interpreted in two different ways. If
    n
    represents the preposition n, then ‘The tent is open to the quiet man’; but if it represents the genitival adjective n(j), then ‘The tent of the quiet man is open’. The first interpretation is more appealing semantically, but the second is favored by parallelism with the following clause.