skn

Egyptian

Pronunciation

Verb


 3-lit.

  1. (intransitive, of crocodiles and people) to be(come) greedy or voracious (+ ḥr: to lust after) [Middle Kingdom literature]
    • c. 1900 BCE, The Instructions of Kagemni (pPrisse/pBN 183) lines 1.9–1.10:






      (j)m ꜣtw r jwf r gs skn šzp dj.f n.k
      Don’t raven after meat next to a voracious man; partake when he gives to you.

Inflection

Conjugation of skn (triliteral / 3-lit. / 3rad.) — base stem: skn, geminated stem: sknn
infinitival forms imperative
infinitive negatival complement complementary infinitive1 singular plural
skn
sknw, skn
sknt
skn
skn
‘pseudoverbal’ forms
stative stem periphrastic imperfective2 periphrastic prospective2
skn
ḥr skn
m skn
r skn
suffix conjugation
aspect / mood active contingent
aspect / mood active
perfect skn.n
consecutive skn.jn
terminative sknt
perfective3 skn
obligative1 skn.ḫr
imperfective skn
prospective3 skn
potentialis1 skn.kꜣ
subjunctive skn
verbal adjectives
aspect / mood relative (incl. nominal / emphatic) forms participles
active active passive
perfect skn.n
perfective skn
skn
skn, sknw5, skny5
imperfective skn, skny, sknw5
skn, sknj6, skny6
skn, sknw5
prospective skn, skntj7
skntj4, sknt4

1 Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian.
2 Used mostly since Middle Egyptian.
3 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.
4 Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f/.fj, feminine .s/.sj, dual .sn/.snj, plural .sn. 5 Only in the masculine singular.
6 Only in the masculine.
7 Only in the feminine.

Alternative forms

References

  • skn (lemma ID 146840)” and “skn (lemma ID 650002)”, in Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae[1], Corpus issue 18, Web app version 2.1.5, Tonio Sebastian Richter & Daniel A. Werning by order of the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften and Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert & Peter Dils by order of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2004–26 July 2023
  • Erman, Adolf, Grapow, Hermann (1930) Wörterbuch der ägyptischen Sprache[2], volume 4, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, →ISBN, pages 318.9–318.10
  • Faulkner, Raymond Oliver (1962) A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian, Oxford: Griffith Institute, →ISBN, page 251