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tw

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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Translingual

Etymology

Clipping of English Twi.

Symbol

tw

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-1 language code for Twi Akan.

See also

Egyptian

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From earlier tj.

Determiner

tw

 f sg proximal, later copular/vocative demonstrative determiner

  1. (Old Egyptian) this
  2. (Middle Egyptian) O (vocative reference)
Usage notes

This demonstrative was originally a determiner but could later be used alone, like a pronoun. When used as a determiner it follows the noun it describes.

Inflection
More information determiners, pronouns1 ...

1 Unmarked for number and gender, but treated syntactically as masculine plurals when used with participles and relative forms, and as feminine singulars when referred to by resumptive pronouns.

More information determiners and pronouns, adverbs ...

1 Joined by n(j) to nouns they modify.

More information masculine, feminine ...

1 Used with suffix pronouns.
2 Originally joined by n(j) to nouns they modify; later without it.

Alternative forms

There is also an alternative form that cannot stand alone as a pronoun: twy.

Pronoun

tw

impersonal enclitic (‘dependent’) pronoun

  1. (Middle Egyptian) used as the impersonal subject of an adverbial predicate or verb form; one, someone or something unspecified
  2. used as a substitute for noun phrases referring to the king [since the New Kingdom]
Usage notes

tw can be used as a subject without any introductory particle only with a verb in the periphrastic prospective (the pseudoverbal construction with r).

In the sense referring to the king, this pronoun is conventionally translated as capitalized “One”.

Alternative forms
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Pronoun

tw

 m sg 2. enclitic (‘dependent’) pronoun

  1. alternative spelling of ṯw

References

  • James P[eter] Allen (2010), Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs, 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, pages 51, 54–55, 181.
  • Edel, Elmar (1955-1964), Altägyptische Grammatik, volume 1, Rome: Pontificium Institutum Biblicum, § 182 et seq., page 83 et seq.
  • Faulkner, Raymond Oliver (1962), A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian, Oxford: Griffith Institute, →ISBN
  • Loprieno, Antonio (1995), Ancient Egyptian: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN
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