ETCSLglossingSignSign name: PI
Values: be6, bi3, g̃eštug, me8, pa12, pe, pi, tal2, wa, we, wi

A hymn to Ḫendursaĝa (Ḫendursaĝa A) (c.4.06.1), line c4061.A.85
7-be2-nediĝirmunusnu-me-ešu3nitaḫnu-me-eš
7-BE2-NEDIĝIRMUNUSNU-ME-EšIGI.DIB (U3)NITAḫNU-ME-Eš
7diĝirmunusdug4u3nitaḫdug4
7deitywomanto sayandmaleto say
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Paragraph t4061.p7 (line(s) 77-90) Click line no. for paragraph-aligned layout of transliteration and translation.
On this very day, as evening approaches, the first of the seven is a fox with a sweeping tail. The second snuffles around like a dog. The third pecks greedily at caterpillars like a raven. The fourth overpowers everything like an enormous carrion-eating eagle. The fifth, although not a wolf, will fall upon a black lamb. The sixth screeches like a hawk, when he sits ……. The seventh ……, a shark in the waves. These seven are neither female deities nor male. They hinder a man and hamper a woman; they put aside (?) the woman's weapon. They spread { a stench } { (1 ms. has instead:) lamentation } in the Land, precisely implementing the divine powers of the gods. Ḫendursaĝa, you have great divine powers, more than anyone could require.
ePSD = The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary

Sumerian scribe

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Updated 2006-10-09 by JE

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