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Sumerian language

Sumerian (Cuneiform: ๐’…ด๐’‚  Emegฬƒir "native tongue") is the language of ancient Sumer. It is one of the oldest attested languages, dating back to at least 2900 BC. It is accepted to be a local language isolate and to have been spoken in ancient Mesopotamia, in the area that is modern-day Iraq.

Sumerian
๐’…ด๐’‚ 
Emegir
Nativeย toSumer and Akkad
RegionMesopotamia (modern-day Iraq)
EraAttested from c.โ€‰2900ย BC. Went out of vernacular use around 1700 BC; used as a classical language until about 100 AD.
Dialects
Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform
Language codes
ISO 639-2sux
ISO 639-3sux
Glottologsume1241
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Akkadian, a Semitic language, gradually replaced Sumerian as a spoken language in the area c.โ€‰2000ย BC (the exact date is debated),[4] but Sumerian continued to be used as a sacred, ceremonial, literary and scientific language in Akkadian-speaking Mesopotamian states such as Assyria and Babylonia until the 1st century AD.[5][6] Thereafter it seems to have fallen into obscurity until the 19th century, when Assyriologists began deciphering the cuneiform inscriptions and excavated tablets that had been left by its speakers.

Stages

ย 
This proto-literate tablet (c. 3100ย โ€“ 2900 BC) records the transfer of a piece of land (Walters Art Museum, Baltimore)
ย 
The first known Sumerian-Akkadian bilingual tablet dates from the reign of Rimush. Louvre Museum AO 5477. The top half is in Sumerian, the bottom half is its translation in Akkadian.[7][8]

The history of written Sumerian can be divided into several periods:[9]

  • Archaic Sumerianย โ€“ c.โ€‰2900ย BC to c.โ€‰2600ย BC
  • Old or Classical Sumerianย โ€“ c.โ€‰2600ย BC to c.โ€‰2100ย BC
  • Neo-Sumerianย โ€“ c.โ€‰2100ย BC to c.โ€‰1700ย BC
  • Post-Sumerianย โ€“ after c.โ€‰1700ย BC.

Archaic Sumerian is the earliest stage of inscriptions with linguistic content, beginning with the Early Dynastic period from about 2900 BC to 2600 BC. It succeeds the proto-literate period, which spans roughly 3300 BC to 2900 BC.

The term "Post-Sumerian" is meant to refer to the time when the language was already extinct and preserved by Mesopotamians only as a liturgical and classical language for religious, artistic and scholarly purposes. The extinction has traditionally been dated approximately to the end of the Third Dynasty of Ur, the last predominantly Sumerian state in Mesopotamia, about 2000 BC. However, that date is very approximate, as many scholars have contended that Sumerian was already dead or dying as early as c.โ€‰2100ย BC, by the beginning of the Ur III period,[4][10] and others believe that Sumerian persisted, as a spoken language, in a small part of Southern Mesopotamia (Nippur and its surroundings) until as late as 1700 BC.[4] Whatever the status of spoken Sumerian between 2000 and 1700 BC, it is from then that a particularly large quantity of literary texts and bilingual Sumerian-Akkadian lexical lists survive, especially from the scribal school of Nippur. Sumerian school documents from the Sealand Dynasty were found at Tell Khaiber, some of which contain year names from the reign of a king with the Sumerian throne name Aya-dara-galama.[11]


Classification

Sumerian is a language isolate.[12][13][14][15] Ever since decipherment, it has been the subject of much effort to relate it to a wide variety of languages. Because it has a peculiar prestige as one of the most ancient written languages, proposals for linguistic affinity sometimes have a nationalistic background. Such proposals enjoy virtually no support among linguists because of their unverifiability.[16] Sumerian was at one time widely held to be an Indo-European language, but that view later came to be almost universally rejected.[17]

Among its proposed linguistic affiliates are:

It has also been suggested that the Sumerian language descended from a late prehistoric creole language (Hรธyrup 1992).[25][31] However, no conclusive evidence, only some typological features, can be found to support Hรธyrup's view.

A more widespread hypothesis posits a Proto-Euphratean language that preceded Sumerian in Southern Mesopotamia and exerted an areal influence on it, especially in the form of polysyllabic words that appear "un-Sumerian"โ€”making them suspect of being loanwordsโ€”and are not traceable to any other known language. There is little speculation as to the affinities of this substratum language, or these languages, and it is thus best treated as unclassified. Researchers such as Gonzalo Rubio[32] disagree with the assumption of a single substratum language and argue that several languages are involved. A related proposal by Gordon Whittaker[33] is that the language of the proto-literary texts from the Late Uruk period (c. 3350โ€“3100 BC) is really an early Indo-European language which he terms "Euphratic".

Writing system

Development

ย 
Letter sent by the high-priest Lu'enna to the king of Lagash (maybe Urukagina), informing him of his son's death in combat, c.โ€‰2400ย BC, found in Telloh (ancient Girsu)
ย 
Vase of Entemena, king of Lagash, with dedication. Louvre AO2674, c.โ€‰2400ย BC

From about 2900 BC, the cuneiform symbols were developed using a wedge-shaped stylus to impress the shapes into wet clay. This cuneiform ("wedge-shaped") mode of writing co-existed with the proto-cuneiform archaic mode. Deimel (1922) lists 870 signs used in the Early Dynastic IIIa period (26th century). In the same period the large set of logographic signs had been simplified into a logosyllabic script comprising several hundred signs. Rosengarten (1967) lists 468 signs used in Sumerian (pre-Sargonian) Lagash.

The cuneiform script was adapted to Akkadian writing beginning in the mid-third millennium. Over the long period of bi-lingual overlap of active Sumerian and Akkadian usage the two languages influenced each other, as reflected in numerous loanwords and even word order changes.[34]

Transcription

Depending on the context, a cuneiform sign can be read either as one of several possible logograms, each of which corresponds to a word in the Sumerian spoken language, as a phonetic syllable (V, VC, CV, or CVC), or as a determinative (a marker of semantic category, such as occupation or place). (See the article Transliterating cuneiform languages.) Some Sumerian logograms were written with multiple cuneiform signs. These logograms are called diri-spellings, after the logogram 'diri' which is written with the signs SI and A. The text transliteration of a tablet will show just the logogram, such as the word 'diri', not the separate component signs.

Not all epigraphists are equally reliable, and before publication of an important treatment of a text, scholars will often arrange to collate the published transcription against the actual tablet, to see if any signs, especially broken or damaged signs, should be represented differently.

Historiography

Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform syllabary
ย 
ย 
Left: Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform syllabary, used by early Akkadian rulers.[35] Right: Seal of Akkadian Empire ruler Naram-Sin (reversed for readability), c.โ€‰2250ย BC. The name of Naram-Sin (Akkadian: ๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’Š๐’„ ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’ช: DNa-ra-am DSรฎn, Sรฎn being written ๐’‚—๐’ช EN.ZU), appears vertically in the right column.[36] British Museum.

The key to reading logosyllabic cuneiform came from the Behistun inscription, a trilingual cuneiform inscription written in Old Persian, Elamite and Akkadian. (In a similar manner, the key to understanding Egyptian hieroglyphs was the bilingual [Greek and Egyptian with the Egyptian text in two scripts] Rosetta stone and Jean-Franรงois Champollion's transcription in 1822.)

In 1838 Henry Rawlinson, building on the 1802 work of Georg Friedrich Grotefend, was able to decipher the Old Persian section of the Behistun inscriptions, using his knowledge of modern Persian. When he recovered the rest of the text in 1843, he and others were gradually able to translate the Elamite and Akkadian sections of it, starting with the 37 signs he had deciphered for the Old Persian. Meanwhile, many more cuneiform texts were coming to light from archaeological excavations, mostly in the Semitic Akkadian language, which were duly deciphered.

By 1850, however, Edward Hincks came to suspect a non-Semitic origin for cuneiform. Semitic languages are structured according to consonantal forms, whereas cuneiform, when functioning phonetically, was a syllabary, binding consonants to particular vowels. Furthermore, no Semitic words could be found to explain the syllabic values given to particular signs.[37] Julius Oppert suggested that a non-Semitic language had preceded Akkadian in Mesopotamia, and that speakers of this language had developed the cuneiform script.

In 1855 Rawlinson announced the discovery of non-Semitic inscriptions at the southern Babylonian sites of Nippur, Larsa, and Uruk.

In 1856, Hincks argued that the untranslated language was agglutinative in character. The language was called "Scythic" by some, and, confusingly, "Akkadian" by others. In 1869, Oppert proposed the name "Sumerian", based on the known title "King of Sumer and Akkad", reasoning that if Akkad signified the Semitic portion of the kingdom, Sumer might describe the non-Semitic annex.

Credit for being first to scientifically treat a bilingual Sumerian-Akkadian text belongs to Paul Haupt, who published Die sumerischen Familiengesetze (The Sumerian family laws) in 1879.[38]

Ernest de Sarzec began excavating the Sumerian site of Tello (ancient Girsu, capital of the state of Lagash) in 1877, and published the first part of Dรฉcouvertes en Chaldรฉe with transcriptions of Sumerian tablets in 1884. The University of Pennsylvania began excavating Sumerian Nippur in 1888.

A Classified List of Sumerian Ideographs by R. Brรผnnow appeared in 1889.

The bewildering number and variety of phonetic values that signs could have in Sumerian led to a detour in understanding the language โ€“ a Paris-based orientalist, Joseph Halรฉvy, argued from 1874 onward that Sumerian was not a natural language, but rather a secret code (a cryptolect), and for over a decade the leading Assyriologists battled over this issue. For a dozen years, starting in 1885, Friedrich Delitzsch accepted Halรฉvy's arguments, not renouncing Halรฉvy until 1897.[39]

Franรงois Thureau-Dangin working at the Louvre in Paris also made significant contributions to deciphering Sumerian with publications from 1898 to 1938, such as his 1905 publication of Les inscriptions de Sumer et d'Akkad. Charles Fossey at the Collรจge de France in Paris was another prolific and reliable scholar. His pioneering Contribution au Dictionnaire sumรฉrienโ€“assyrien, Paris 1905โ€“1907, turns out to provide the foundation for P. Anton Deimel's 1934 Sumerisch-Akkadisches Glossar (vol. III of Deimel's 4-volume Sumerisches Lexikon).

In 1908, Stephen Herbert Langdon summarized the rapid expansion in knowledge of Sumerian and Akkadian vocabulary in the pages of Babyloniaca, a journal edited by Charles Virolleaud, in an article "Sumerian-Assyrian Vocabularies", which reviewed a valuable new book on rare logograms by Bruno Meissner.[40] Subsequent scholars have found Langdon's work, including his tablet transcriptions, to be not entirely reliable.

In 1944, the Sumerologist Samuel Noah Kramer provided a detailed and readable summary of the decipherment of Sumerian in his Sumerian Mythology.[41]

Friedrich Delitzsch published a learned Sumerian dictionary and grammar in the form of his Sumerisches Glossar and Grundzรผge der sumerischen Grammatik, both appearing in 1914. Delitzsch's student, Arno Poebel, published a grammar with the same title, Grundzรผge der sumerischen Grammatik, in 1923, and for 50 years it would be the standard for students studying Sumerian. Poebel's grammar was finally superseded in 1984 on the publication of The Sumerian Language: An Introduction to its History and Grammatical Structure, by Marie-Louise Thomsen. While much of Thomsen's understanding of Sumerian grammar would later be rejected by most or all Sumerologists, Thomsen's grammar (often with express mention of the critiques put forward by Pascal Attinger in his 1993 Elรฉments de linguistique sumรฉrienne: La construction de du11/e/di 'dire') is the starting point of most recent academic discussions of Sumerian grammar.

More recent monograph-length grammars of Sumerian include Dietz-Otto Edzard's 2003 Sumerian Grammar and Bram Jagersma's 2010 A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian (currently digital, but soon to be printed in revised form by Oxford University Press). Piotr Michalowski's essay (entitled, simply, "Sumerian") in the 2004 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages has also been recognized as a good modern grammatical sketch.

There is relatively little consensus, even among reasonable Sumerologists, in comparison to the state of most modern or classical languages. Verbal morphology, in particular, is hotly disputed. In addition to the general grammars, there are many monographs and articles about particular areas of Sumerian grammar, without which a survey of the field could not be considered complete.

The primary institutional lexical effort in Sumerian is the Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary project, begun in 1974. In 2004, the PSD was released on the Web as the ePSD. The project is currently supervised by Steve Tinney. It has not been updated online since 2006, but Tinney and colleagues are working on a new edition of the ePSD, a working draft of which is available online.

Phonology

Assumed phonological or morphological forms will be between slashes //, with plain text used for the standard Assyriological transcription of Sumerian. Most of the following examples are unattested.

Phonemic inventory

Modern knowledge of Sumerian phonology is flawed and incomplete because of the lack of speakers, the transmission through the filter of Akkadian phonology and the difficulties posed by the cuneiform script. As I. M. Diakonoff observes, "when we try to find out the morphophonological structure of the Sumerian language, we must constantly bear in mind that we are not dealing with a language directly but are reconstructing it from a very imperfect mnemonic writing system which had not been basically aimed at the rendering of morphophonemics".[42]

Consonants

Sumerian is conjectured to have at least the following consonants:

Sumerian consonant phonemes
Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Glottal
Nasal m โŸจmโŸฉ n โŸจnโŸฉ ล‹ โŸจgฬƒโŸฉ
Plosive plain p โŸจbโŸฉ t โŸจdโŸฉ k โŸจgโŸฉ ส”[a]
aspirated pสฐ โŸจpโŸฉ tสฐ โŸจtโŸฉ kสฐ โŸจkโŸฉ
Fricative s โŸจsโŸฉ สƒ โŸจลกโŸฉ x โŸจแธซ~hโŸฉ h[a]
Affricate plain tอกs โŸจzโŸฉ
aspirated tอกsสฐ โŸจล™~drโŸฉ
Tap ษพ โŸจrโŸฉ
Liquid l โŸจlโŸฉ
Semivowel j[a]

The existence of various other consonants has been hypothesized based on graphic alternations and loans, though none have found wide acceptance. For example, Diakonoff lists evidence for two l-sounds, two r-sounds, two h-sounds, and two g-sounds (excluding the velar nasal), and assumes a phonemic difference between consonants that are dropped word-finally (such as the g in zag > za3) and consonants that remain (such as the g in lag). Other "hidden" consonant phonemes that have been suggested include semivowels such as /j/ and /w/,[46] and a glottal fricative /h/ or a glottal stop that could explain the absence of vowel contraction in some words[47]โ€”though objections have been raised against that as well.[48] A recent descriptive grammar by Bram Jagersma includes /j/, /h/, and /ส”/ as unwritten consonants, with the glottal stop even serving as the first-person pronominal prefix.[49]

Very often, a word-final consonant was not expressed in writingโ€”and was possibly omitted in pronunciationโ€”so it surfaced only when followed by a vowel: for example the /k/ of the genitive case ending -ak does not appear in e2 lugal-la "the king's house", but it becomes obvious in e2 lugal-la-kam "(it) is the king's house" (compare liaison in French).

Vowels

The vowels that are clearly distinguished by the cuneiform script are /a/, /e/, /i/, and /u/. Various researchers have posited the existence of more vowel phonemes such as /o/ and even /ษ›/ and /ษ”/, which would have been concealed by the transmission through Akkadian, as that language does not distinguish them.[50][51] That would explain the seeming existence of numerous homophones in transliterated Sumerian, as well as some details of the phenomena mentioned in the next paragraph.[52] These hypotheses are not yet generally accepted.[44]

There is some evidence for vowel harmony according to vowel height or advanced tongue root in the prefix i3/e- in inscriptions from pre-Sargonic Lagash,[50] and perhaps even more than one vowel harmony rule.[53][51] There also appear to be many cases of partial or complete assimilation of the vowel of certain prefixes and suffixes to one in the adjacent syllable reflected in writing in some of the later periods, and there is a noticeable, albeit not absolute, tendency for disyllabic stems to have the same vowel in both syllables.[54] These patterns, too, are interpreted as evidence for a richer vowel inventory by some researchers.[50][51] What appears to be vowel contraction in hiatus (*/aa/, */ia/, */ua/ > a, */ae/ > a, */ue/ > u, etc.) is also very common.

Syllables could have any of the following structures: V, CV, VC, CVC. More complex syllables, if Sumerian had them, are not expressed as such by the cuneiform script.

Grammar

Ever since its decipherment, research of Sumerian has been made difficult not only by the lack of any native speakers, but also by the relative sparseness of linguistic data, the apparent lack of a closely related language, and the features of the writing system. Typologically, as mentioned above, Sumerian is classified as an agglutinative, split ergative, and subject-object-verb language. It behaves as a nominativeโ€“accusative language in the 1st and 2nd persons of the incomplete tense-aspect, but as ergativeโ€“absolutive in most other forms of the indicative mood. Sumerian nouns are organized in two grammatical genders based on animacy: animate and inanimate. Animate nouns include humans, gods, and in some instances the word for "statue". Case is indicated by suffixes on the noun. Noun phrases are right branching with adjectives and modifiers following nouns.[55]

Sumerian verbs have a tense-aspect complex, contrasting complete and incomplete actions/states. The two have different conjugations and many have different roots. Verbs also mark mood, voice, polarity, iterativity, and intensity; and agree with subjects and objects in number, person, animacy, and case. Sumerian moods are: indicative, imperative, cohortative, precative/affirmative, prospective aspect/cohortative mood, affirmative/negative-volitive, unrealised-volitive?, negative?, affirmative?, polarative, and are marked by a verbal prefix. The prefixes appear to conflate mood, aspect, and polarity; and their meanings are also affected by the tense-aspect complex. Sumerian voices are: active, and middle or passive. Verbs are marked for three persons: 1st, 2nd, 3rd; in two numbers: singular and plural. Finite verbs have three classes of prefixes: modal prefixes, conjugational prefixes, and pronominal/dimensional prefixes. Modal prefixes confer the above moods on the verb. Conjugational prefixes are thought to confer perhaps venitive/andative, being/action, focus, valency, or voice distinctions on the verb. Pronominal/dimensional prefixes correspond to noun phrases and their cases. Non-finite verbs include participles and relative clause verbs, both formed through nominalisation. Finite verbs take prefixes and suffixes, non-finite verbs only take suffixes. Verbal roots are mostly monosyllabic, though verbal root duplication and suppletion can also occur to indicate plurality. Root duplication can also indicate iterativity or intensity of the verb.[56]

Nominal morphology

Noun phrases

The Sumerian noun is typically a one or two-syllable root (igi "eye", e2 "house, household", nin "lady"), although there are also some roots with three syllables like ลกakanka "market". There are two grammatical genders, usually called human and non-human (the first includes gods and the word for "statue" in some instances, but not plants or animals, the latter also includes collective plural nouns), whose assignment is semantically predictable.

The adjectives and other modifiers follow the noun (lugal maแธซ "great king"). The noun itself is not inflected; rather, grammatical markers attach to the noun phrase as a whole, in a certain order. Typically, that order would be:

noun adjective numeral genitive phrase relative clause possessive marker plural marker case marker

An example may be /digฬƒir gal-gal-gฬƒu-ne-ra/ ("god great (reduplicated)-my-plural-dative" = "for all my great gods").[57] The possessive, plural and case markers are traditionally referred to as "suffixes", but have recently also been described as enclitics[58] or postpositions.[59]

The plural markers are /-(e)ne/ (optional) for nouns of the human gender. Non-human nouns are not marked by a plural suffix. However, plurality can also be expressed with the adjective แธซi-a "various", with the plural of the copula /-meลก/, by reduplication of the noun (kur-kur "all foreign lands") or of the following adjective (a gal-gal "all the great waters") (reduplication is believed to signify totality) or by the plurality of only the verb form. Plural reference in the verb form occurs only for human nouns.

The generally recognised case markers are:

case ending
absolutive /-ร˜/
ergative /-e/ (only with animates)
allative /-e/ (only with inanimates)
genitive /-ak/[b]
equative /-gin/
dative /-r(a)/
terminative /-(e)ลก(e)/
comitative /-da/
locative /-a/
ablative /-ta/[c]

More endings are recognised by some researchers; e.g. Bram Jagersma notes a separate adverbiative case in /-eลก/ and a second locative used mostly with infinite verb forms.[60]

Additional spatial or temporal meanings can be expressed by genitive phrases like "at the head of" = "above", "at the face of" = "in front of", "at the outer side of" = "because of" etc.: bar udu แธซad2-ak-a = "outer.side sheep white-genitive-locative" = "in the outer side of a white sheep" = "because of a white sheep".

The embedded structure of the noun phrase can be further illustrated with the phrase sipad udu siki-ak-ak-ene ("the shepherds of woolly sheep"), where the first genitive morpheme (-a(k)) subordinates siki "wool" to udu "sheep", and the second subordinates udu siki-a(k) "sheep of wool" (or "woolly sheep") to sipad "shepherd".[61]

Pronouns

The attested personal pronouns are:

independent possessive suffix/enclitic
1st person singular gฬƒe26-e -gฬƒu10
2nd person singular ze2-e -zu
3rd person singular animate a-ne or e-ne -(a)-n(i)
3rd person singular inanimate -b(i)
1st person plural -me
2nd person plural -zu-ne-ne
3rd person plural animate a/e-ne-ne -b(i)
3rd person plural inanimate -b(i)

For most of the suffixes, vowels are subject to loss if they are attached to vowel-final words.

Numerals

Sumerian has a combination decimal and sexagesimal system (for example, 600 is 'ten sixties'), so that the Sumerian lexical numeral system is sexagesimal with 10 as a subbase.[62] Numerals and composite numbers are as follows:

number name explanation notes
1 diลก, deลก,[63] dili
2 min, mina[64]
3 eลก[65]
4 limmu, lรญm[66]
5 ia, รญ[67]
6 aลก[68] รญa 'five' + aลก 'one'
7 imin[69]
8 ussu[70]
9 ilimmu[69] รญa/รญ (5) + limmu (4)
10 u, hร , hรน, a, u[67]
11 u-diลก (?)
20 niลก
30 uลกu
40 nimin 'less two [tens]'
50 ninnu 'less ten'
60 gฬƒiลก(d), gฬƒeลก(d)[71]
600 gฬƒeลก(d)u ten gฬƒeลก(d)
1000 lim
3600 ลกar

Verbal morphology

General

The Sumerian finite verb distinguishes a number of moods and agrees (more or less consistently) with the subject and the object in person, number and gender. The verb chain may also incorporate pronominal references to the verb's other modifiers, which has also traditionally been described as "agreement", although, in fact, such a reference and the presence of an actual modifier in the clause need not co-occur: not only e2-ลกe3 ib2-ลกi-du-un "I'm going to the house", but also e2-ลกe3 i3-du-un "I'm going to the house" and simply ib2-ลกi-du-un "I'm going to it" are possible.[59]

The Sumerian verb also makes a binary distinction according to a category that some regard as tense (past vs present-future), others as aspect (perfective vs imperfective), and that will be designated as TA (tense/aspect) in the following. The two members of the opposition entail different conjugation patterns and, at least for many verbs, different stems; they are theory-neutrally referred to with the Akkadian grammatical terms for the two respective forms โ€“ แธซamแนญu (quick) and marรป (slow, fat). Finally, opinions differ on whether the verb has a passive or a middle voice and how it is expressed.

The verbal root is almost always a monosyllable and, together with various affixes, forms a so-called verbal chain which is described as a sequence of about 15 slots, though the precise models differ.[72] The finite verb has both prefixes and suffixes, while the non-finite verb may only have suffixes. Broadly, the prefixes have been divided in three groups that occur in the following order: modal prefixes, "conjugation prefixes", and pronominal and dimensional prefixes.[73] The suffixes are a future or imperfective marker /-ed-/, pronominal suffixes, and an /-a/ ending that nominalizes the whole verb chain. The overall structure can be summarized as follows:

slot modal prefix conjugation prefix pronominal prefix dimensional prefix pronominal prefix stem future/imperfective pronominal suffix nominalizer
common

morphemes

ร˜-,
แธซa-
,
u-
,
ga-
mu-,
i- (e-,a-)
,
ba-
,
bi-
-ร˜-,
-e-/r-
,
-n-
,
-b-
-a-,
-da-
,

-ta-,
-ลกi-

-ร˜-,
-e-/r-
,
-n-
,
-b-
-e(d)- -en
-en
-ร˜, -e

-enden
-enzen
-ene, -eลก

-a

Note also that more than one pairing of a pronominal prefix and a dimensional prefix may occur within the verb chain.

Modal prefixes

The modal prefixes areย :

  • /ร˜-/ (indicative),
  • /nu-/ and /la-/, /li-/ (negative; /la/ and /li/ are used before the conjugation prefixes ba- and bi2-),
  • /ga-/ (cohortative, "let me/us"),
  • /แธซa-/ or /แธซe-/ with further assimilation of the vowel in later periods (precative or affirmative),
  • /u-/ (prospective "after/when/if", also used as a mild imperative),
  • /na-/ (negative or affirmative),
  • /bara-/ (negative or vetitive),
  • /nuลก-/ (unrealizable wish?) and
  • /ลกa-/ with further assimilation of the vowel in later periods (affirmative?).

Their meaning can depend on the TA.

"Conjugation prefixes"

The meaning, structure, identity and even the number of "conjugation prefixes" have always been a subject of disagreements. The term "conjugation prefix" simply alludes to the fact that a finite verb in the indicative mood must always contain one of them. Some of their most frequent expressions in writing are mu-, i3- (ED Lagaลก variant: e-), ba-, bi2- (ED Lagaลก: bi- or be2), im-, im-ma- (ED Lagaลก e-ma-), im-mi- (ED Lagaลก i3-mi or e-me-), mi- (always followed by pronominal-dimensional -ni-) and al-, and to a lesser extent a-, am3-, am3-ma-, and am3-mi-; virtually all analyses attempt to describe many of the above as combinations or allomorphs of each other.

The starting point of most analyses are the obvious facts that the 1st person dative always requires mu-, and that the verb in a "passive" clause without an overt agent tends to have ba-. Proposed explanations usually revolve around the subtleties of spatial grammar, information structure (focus[74]), verb valency, and, most recently, voice.[75] Mu-, im- and am3- have been described as ventive morphemes, while ba- and bi2- are sometimes analyzed as actually belonging to the pronominal-dimensional group (inanimate pronominal /-b-/ + dative /-a-/ or directive /-i-/).[76] Im-ma-, im-mi-, am3-ma- and am3-mi- are then considered by some as a combination of the ventive and /ba-/, /bi-/[76] or otherwise a variety of the ventive.[77] The element i3- has been argued to be a mere prothetic vowel, al- a stative prefix, ba- a middle voice prefix, etcetera.

Pronominal and dimensional prefixes

The dimensional prefixes of the verb chain basically correspond to, and often repeat, the case markers of the noun phrase. Like the latter, they are attached to a "head" โ€“ a pronominal prefix. The other place where a pronominal prefix can be placed is immediately before the stem, where it can have a different allomorph and expresses the absolutive or the ergative participant (the transitive subject, the intransitive subject or the direct object), depending on the TA and other factors, as explained below. However, this neat system is obscured by the tendency to drop or merge many of the prefixes in writing and possibly in pronunciation as well.

The generally recognized dimensional prefixes are shown in the table below; if several occur within the same verb complex, they are placed in the order they are listed in.

dative comitative ablative terminative directive
/-a-/?[d] -da- -ta- -ลกi- (early -ลกe3-) /-i-/?

The pronominal prefixes are:

prefix Notes
1st person singular -ร˜-?, -e-? Sometimes thought to represent a glottal stop /ส”/ (so Zรณlyomi, e.g. 2017, and Jagersma, e.g. 2009).
2nd person singular -e-, -r-
3rd person singular animate -n-
3rd person singular inanimate -b-
1st person plural -me- For a subject or object (immediately before the stem), the singular is used instead.
2nd person plural -re-?
3rd person plural -ne-

The morphemes /-n-/ and /-b-/ are clearly the prefixes for the 3rd person singular animate and inanimate respectively; the 2nd person singular appears as -e- in most contexts, but as /-r-/ before the dative (-ra-), leading some[78] to assume a phonetic /-ir-/ or /-jr-/. The 1st person may appear as -e-, too, but is more commonly not expressed at all (the same may frequently apply to 3rd and 2nd persons); it is, however, cued by the choice of mu- as conjugation prefix[77] (/mu-/ + /-a-/ โ†’ ma-). The 1st, 2nd and 3rd plural infixes are -me-, -re?- and -ne- in the dative[77] and perhaps in other contexts as well,[78] though not in the pre-stem position (see below).

An additional exception from the system is the prefix -ni- which corresponds to a noun phrase in the locative โ€“ in which case it doesn't seem to be preceded by a pronominal prefix โ€“ and, according to Gรกbor Zรณlyomi and others, to an animate one in the directive โ€“ in the latter case it is analyzed as pronominal /-n-/ + directive /-i-/. Zรณlyomi and others also believe that special meanings can be expressed by combinations of non-identical noun case and verb prefix.[79] Also according to some researchers[80] /-ni-/ and /bi-/ acquire the forms /-n-/ and /-b-/ (coinciding with the absolutiveโ€“ergative pronominal prefixes) before the stem if there isn't already an absolutiveโ€“ergative pronominal prefix in pre-stem position: mu-un-kur9 = /mu-ni-kur/ "he went in there" (as opposed to mu-ni-kur9 = mu-ni-in-kur9 = /mu-ni-n-kur/ "he brought in โ€“ caused [something or someone] to go in โ€“ there".

Pronominal suffixes and conjugation

The pronominal suffixes are as follows:

marรป แธซamแนญu
1st person singular /-en/
2nd person singular /-en/
3rd person singular /-e/ /-ร˜/
1st person plural /-enden/
2nd person plural /-enzen/
3rd person plural /-ene/ /-eลก/

The initial vowel in all of the above suffixes can be assimilated to the root.

The general principle for pronominal agreement in conjugation is that in แธซamแนญu TA, the transitive subject is expressed by the prefix, and the direct object by the suffix, and in the marรป TA it is the other way round; as for the intransitive subject, it is expressed, in both TAs, by the suffixes and is thus treated like the object in แธซamแนญu and like the subject in marรป (except that its third person is expressed, not only in แธซamแนญu but also in marรป, by the suffixes used for the object in the แธซamแนญu TA). A major exception from this generalization are the plural forms โ€“ in them, not only the prefix (as in the singular), but also the suffix expresses the transitive subject.

Additionally, the prefixes of the plural are identical to those of the singular โ€“ /-?-/ or /-e-/, /-e-/, /-n-/, /-b-/ โ€“ as opposed to the -me-, -re-?, -ne- that are presumed for non-pre-stem position โ€“ and some scholars believe that the prefixes of the 1st and second person are /-en-/ rather than /-e-/ when they stand for the object.[81] Before the pronominal suffixes, a suffix /-e(d)-/ with a future or related modal meaning can be inserted, accounting for occurrences of -e in the third-person singular marรป of intransitive forms; because of its meaning, it can also be said to signal marรป in these forms.[78]

The use of the personal affixes in conjugation can be summarised as follows:

แธซamแนญu marรป
Direct object Intransitive subject Transitive subject Direct object Intransitive subject Transitive subject
1st sing ...-en ...-en -ร˜/-e-... -ร˜/-e-... ...-en ...-en
2nd sing ...-en ...-en -e-... -e-... ...-en ...-en
3rd sing

animate

...-ร˜ ...-ร˜ -n-... -n-... ...-ร˜ ...-e
3rd sing inanimate ...-ร˜ ...-ร˜ -b-... -b-... ...-ร˜ ...-e
1st pl ...-enden ...-enden -ร˜/e-...-enden -ร˜/-e-...? ...-enden ...-enden
2nd pl ...-enzen ...-enzen -e-...-enzen -e-...? ...-enzen ...-enzen
3rd pl (animates only) ...-eลก ...-eลก -n-...-eลก -ne-...? ...-eลก ...-ene

Examples for TA and pronominal agreement: (แธซamแนญu is rendered with past tense, marรป with present): /i-gub-en/ ("I stood" or "I stand"), /i-n-gub-en/ ("he placed me" or "I place him"); /i-sug-enden/ ("we stood/stand"); /i-n-dim-enden/ ("he created us" or "we create him"); /mu-e?-dim-enden/ ("we created [someone or something]"); i3-gub-be2 = /i-gub-ed/ ("he will/must stand"); ib2-gub-be2 = /i-b-gub-e/ ("he places it"); /i-b-dim-ene/ ("they create it"), /i-n-dim-eลก/ ("they created [someone or something]" or "he created them"), /i-sug-eลก/ ("they stood" or "they stand").

Confusingly, the subject and object prefixes (/-n-/, /-b-/, /-e-/) are not commonly spelled out in early texts, although the "full" spellings do become more usual during the Third Dynasty of Ur (in the Neo-Sumerian period) and especially during the Late Sumerian period. Thus, in earlier texts, one finds mu-ak and i3-ak (e-ak in early dynastic Lagash) instead of mu-un-ak and in-ak for /mu-n-ak/ and /i-n-ak/ "he/she made", and also mu-ak instead of mu-e-ak "you made". Similarly, pre-Ur III texts also spell the first- and second-person suffix /-en/ as -e, making it coincide with the third person in the marรป form.

Stem

The verbal stem itself can also express grammatical distinctions. The plurality of the absolutive participant[77] can be expressed by complete reduplication of the stem or by a suppletive stem. Reduplication can also express "plurality of the action itself",[77] intensity or iterativity.[46]

With respect to TA marking, verbs are divided in four types; แธซamแนญu is always the unmarked TA.

  • The stems of the 1st type, regular verbs, do not express TA at all according to most scholars, or, according to M. Yoshikawa and others, express marรป TA by adding an (assimilating) /-e-/ as in gub-be2 or gub-bu vs gub (which is, however, nowhere distinguishable from the first vowel of the pronominal suffixes except for intransitive marรป 3rd person singular).
  • The 2nd type express marรป by partial reduplication of the stem, e.g. kur9 vs ku4-ku4.
  • The 3rd type express marรป by adding a consonant, e.g. te vs tegฬƒ3.
  • The 4th type use a suppletive stem, e.g. dug4 vs e. Thus, as many as four different suppletive stems can exist, as in the admittedly extreme case of the verb "to go": gฬƒen ("to go", แธซamแนญu sing.), du (marรป sing.), (e-)re7 (แธซamแนญu plur.), sub2 (marรป plur.)

Other issues

The nominalizing suffix /-a/ converts non-finite and finite verbs into participles and relative clauses: ลกum-ma "given",[82][e] mu-na-an-ลกum-ma "which he gave to him", "who gave (something) to him", etc.. Adding /-a/ after the future/modal suffix /-ed/ produces a form with a meaning similar to the Latin gerundive: ลกum-mu-da = "which will/should be given". On the other hand, adding a (locative-terminative?) /-e/ after the /-ed/ yields a form with a meaning similar to the Latin ad + gerund (acc.) construction: ลกum-mu-de3 = "(in order) to give".

The copula verb /me/ "to be" is mostly used as an enclitic: -men, -men, -am, -menden, -menzen, -(a)meลก.

The imperative mood construction is produced with a singular แธซamแนญu stem, but using the marรป agreement pattern, by turning all prefixes into suffixes: mu-na-an-sum "he gave (something) to him", mu-na-e-sum-mu-un-ze2-en "you (plur.) gave (something) to him" โ€“ sum-mu-na-ab "give it to him!", sum-mu-na-ab-ze2-en "give (plur.) it to him!" Compare the French vous le lui donnez, but donnez-le-lui![77]

Syntax

The basic word order is subjectโ€“objectโ€“verb; verb finality is only violated in rare instances, in poetry. The moving of a constituent towards the beginning of the phrase may be a way to highlight it,[83] as may the addition of the copula to it. The so-called anticipatory genitive (e2-a lugal-bi "the owner of the house/temple", lit. "of the house, its owner") is common and may signal the possessor's topicality.[83] There are various ways to express subordination, some of which have already been hinted at; they include the nominalization of a verb, which can then be followed by case morphemes and possessive pronouns (kur9-ra-ni "when he entered"[f]) and included in "prepositional" constructions (egฬƒer a-ma-ru ba-ur3-ra-ta "back โ€“ flood โ€“ conjugation prefix โ€“ sweep over โ€“ nominalizing suffix โ€“ [genitive suffix?] โ€“ ablative suffix" = "from the back of the Flood's sweeping-over" = "after the Flood had swept over"). Subordinating conjunctions such as ud-da "when, if", tukum-bi "if" are also used, though the coordinating conjunction u3 "and", a Semitic adoption, is rarely used. A specific problem of Sumerian syntax is posed by the numerous so-called compound verbs, which usually involve a noun immediately before the verb, forming a lexical or idiomatic unit[84] (e.g. ลกu...ti, lit. "hand-approach" = "receive"; igi...du8, lit. "eye-open" = "see"). Some of them are claimed to have a special agreement pattern that they share with causative constructions: their logical object, like the causee, receives, in the verb, the directive infix, but in the noun, the dative suffix if animate and the directive if inanimate.[79]

Dialects

The standard variety of Sumerian was Emegir (๐’…ด๐’‚  eme-girโ‚โ‚…). A notable variety or sociolect was Emesal (๐’…ด๐’Šฉ eme-sal), possibly to be interpreted as "fine tongue" or "high-pitched voice" (Rubio 2007, p.ย 1369). Other terms for dialects or registers were eme-galam "high tongue", eme-si-sa "straight tongue", eme-te-na "oblique[?] tongue", etc.[85]

Emesal is used exclusively by female characters in some literary texts (that may be compared to the female languages or language varieties that exist or have existed in some cultures, such as among the Chukchis and the Garifuna). In addition, it is dominant in certain genres of cult songs such as the hymns sung by Gala priests.[86] The special features of Emesal are mostly phonological (for example, m is often used instead of gฬƒ [i.e. [ล‹]], as in me instead of standard gฬƒe26 for "I"), but words different from the standard language are also used (ga-ลกa-an rather than standard nin, "lady").[87]

Syllabary

The table below shows signs used for simple syllables of the form CV or VC. As used for the Sumerian language, the cuneiform script was in principle capable of distinguishing at least 16 consonants,[88][89] transliterated as

b, d, g, gฬƒ, แธซ, k, l, m, n, p, r, ล™, s, ลก, t, z

as well as four vowel qualities, a, e, i, u. The Akkadian language had no use for gฬƒ or ล™ but needed to distinguish its emphatic series, q, แนฃ, แนญ, adopting various "superfluous" Sumerian signs for the purpose (e.g. qe=KIN, qu=KUM, qi=KIN, แนฃa=ZA, แนฃe=Zร, แนญur=DUR etc.)[clarification needed] Hittite, as it adopted the Akkadian cuneiform, further introduced signs such as wi5=GEล TIN.

ย 
Sale of a number of fields, probably from Isin, c. 2600 BC.
Cylinder of Antiochus I
(c.250 BC)
ย 
The Antiochus cylinder, written by Antiochus I Soter as great king of kings of Babylon, restorer of gods E-sagila and E-zida, circa 250 BC. Written in traditional Akkadian (with the same text in Babylonian and Assyrian given here for comparison).[90][91][92][93]
ย 
Antiochus I Soter with titles in Akkadian on the cylinder of Antiochus:
"Antiochus, King, Great King, King of multitudes, King of Babylon, King of countries"
Akkadian and Sumerian CV and VC syllabic glyphs
Ca Ce Ci Cu aC eC iC uC
a ๐’€€,

รก ๐’€‰

e ๐’‚Š,

รฉ ๐’‚

i ๐’„ฟ,

รญ=Iร ๐’Š

u ๐’Œ‹,

รบ ๐’Œ‘,
รน ๐’…‡

a ๐’€€,

รก ๐’€‰

e ๐’‚Š,

รฉ ๐’‚

i ๐’„ฟ,

รญ=Iร ๐’Š

u ๐’Œ‹,

รบ ๐’Œ‘,
รน ๐’…‡

b- ba ๐’€,

bรก=PA ๐’‰บ,
bร =Eล  ๐’Œ

be=BAD ๐’,

bรฉ=BI ๐’‰,
bรจ=NI ๐’‰Œ

bi ๐’‰,

bรญ=NE ๐’‰ˆ,
bรฌ=PI ๐’‰ฟ

bu ๐’,

bรบ=KASKAL ๐’†œ,
bรน=Pร™ ๐’…ค

ab ๐’€Š,

รกb ๐’€–

eb=IB ๐’…,

รฉb=TUM ๐’Œˆ

ib ๐’…,

รญb=TUM ๐’Œˆ

ub ๐’Œ’,

รบb=ล รˆ ๐’‚ 

-b
d- da ๐’•,

dรก=TA ๐’‹ซ

de=DI ๐’ฒ,

dรฉ ,
dรจ=NE ๐’‰ˆ

di ๐’ฒ,

dรญ=Tร ๐’„ญ

du ๐’บ,

dรบ=TU ๐’Œ…,
dรน=GAG ๐’†•,
du4=TUM ๐’Œˆ

ad ๐’€œ,

รกd ๐’„‰

ed=ร ๐’€‰ id=ร ๐’€‰,

รญd=A.ENGUR ๐’€€๐’‡‰

ud ๐’Œ“,

รบd=รล  ๐’€พ

-d
g- ga ๐’‚ต,

gรก ๐’‚ท

ge=GI ๐’„€,

gรฉ=KID ๐’†ค,
gรจ=DIล  ๐’น

gi ๐’„€,

gรญ=KID ๐’†ค,
gรฌ=DIล  ๐’น,
gi4 ๐’„„,
gi5=KI ๐’† 

gu ๐’„–,

gรบ ๐’„˜,
gรน=KA ๐’…—,
gu4 ๐’„ž,
gu5=KU ๐’†ช,
gu6=NAG ๐’…˜,
gu7 ๐’…ฅ

ag ๐’€,

รกg ๐’‰˜

eg=IG ๐’……,

รฉg=E ๐’‚Š

ig ๐’……,

รญg=E ๐’‚Š

ug ๐’ŠŒ -g
แธซ- แธซa ๐’„ฉ,

แธซรก=แธชI.A ๐’„ญ๐’€€,
แธซร =U ๐’Œ‹,
แธซa4=แธชI ๐’„ญ

แธซe=แธชI ๐’„ญ,

แธซรฉ=GAN ๐’ƒถ

แธซi ๐’„ญ,

แธซรญ=GAN ๐’ƒถ

แธซu ๐’„ท aแธซ ๐’„ด,

รกแธซ=ล Eล  ๐’‹€

eแธซ=Aแธช ๐’„ด iแธซ=Aแธช ๐’„ด uแธซ=Aแธช ๐’„ด,

รบแธซ ๐’Œ”

-แธซ
k- ka ๐’…—,

kรก ๐’†,
kร =GA ๐’‚ต

ke=KI ๐’† ,

kรฉ=GI ๐’„€

ki ๐’† ,

kรญ=GI ๐’„€

ku ๐’†ช/๐’‚ ,

kรบ=GU7 ๐’…ฅ,
kรน ๐’†ฌ,
ku4 ๐’†ญ

ak=AG ๐’€ ek=IG ๐’…… ik=IG ๐’…… uk=UG ๐’ŠŒ -k
(Akkadian Only) q- qa ๐’‹ก,

qร =KA ๐’…—,
qรก ๐’‚ต

qe=KIN ๐’†ฅ,

qรฉ=KI ๐’† ,
qรจ=GI ๐’„€,
qeโ‚„=GIโ‚„ ๐’„„

qi=KIN ๐’†ฅ,

qรญ=KI ๐’† ,
qรฌ=GI ๐’„€,
qiโ‚„=GIโ‚„ ๐’„„

qu=KUM ๐’†ช,

qรบ=KI ๐’„ฃ,
qรน=GU ๐’„–

aq=AG ๐’€ eq=IG ๐’…… iq=IG ๐’…… uq=UG ๐’ŠŒ -q
l- la ๐’†ท,

lรก=LAL ๐’‡ฒ,
lร =NU ๐’‰ก

le=LI ๐’‡ท,

lรฉ=NI ๐’‰Œ

li ๐’‡ท,

lรญ=NI ๐’‰Œ

lu ๐’‡ป,

lรบ ๐’‡ฝ

al ๐’€ ,

รกl=ALAM ๐’€ฉ

el ๐’‚–,

รฉl=IL ๐’…‹

il ๐’…‹,

รญl ๐’…

ul ๐’ŒŒ,

รบl=NU ๐’‰ก

-l
m- ma ๐’ˆ ,

mรก ๐’ˆฃ

me ๐’ˆจ,

mรฉ=MI ๐’ˆช,
mรจ ๐’€ž/๐’… 

mi ๐’ˆช,

mรญ=MUNUS ๐’Šฉ,
mรฌ=ME ๐’ˆจ

mu ๐’ˆฌ,

mรบ=SAR ๐’Šฌ

am ๐’„ /๐’‚”,

รกm=รG ๐’‰˜

em=IM ๐’…Ž im ๐’…Ž,

รญm=KAล 4 ๐’ฝ

um ๐’Œ,

รบm=UD ๐’Œ“

-m
n- na ๐’ˆพ,

nรก ๐’ˆฟ,
nร =AG ๐’€,
na4 ("NI.UD") ๐’‰Œ๐’Œ“

ne ๐’‰ˆ,

nรฉ=NI ๐’‰Œ

ni ๐’‰Œ,

nรญ=IM ๐’‰Ž

nu ๐’‰ก,

nรบ=Nร ๐’ˆฟ

an ๐’€ญ en ๐’‚—,

รฉn,
รจn=LI ๐’‡ท

in ๐’…”,

in4=EN ๐’‚—,
in5=NIN ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†

un ๐’Œฆ,

รบn=U ๐’Œ‹

-n
p- pa ๐’‰บ,

pรก=BA ๐’€,
pร =PAD3 ๐’…†๐’Š’

pe=PI ๐’‰ฟ,

pรฉ=BI ๐’‰

pi ๐’‰ฟ,

pรญ=BI ๐’‰,
pรฌ=BAD ๐’

pu=BU ๐’,

pรบ=TรšL ๐’‡ฅ,
pรน ๐’…ค

ap=AB ๐’€Š ep=IB ๐’…,

รฉp=TUM ๐’Œˆ

ip=IB ๐’…,

รญp=TUM ๐’Œˆ

up=UB ๐’Œ’,

รบp=ล รˆ ๐’‚ 

-p
r- ra ๐’Š,

rรก=DU ๐’บ

re=RI ๐’Š‘,

rรฉ=URU ๐’Œท,
rรจ=LAGAB ๐’†ธ

ri ๐’Š‘,

rรญ=URU ๐’Œท
rรฌ=LAGAB ๐’†ธ

ru ๐’Š’,

rรบ=GAG ๐’†•,
rรน=Aล  ๐’€ธ

ar ๐’…ˆ,

รกr=UB ๐’Œ’

er=IR ๐’…• ir ๐’…•,

รญr=A.IGI ๐’€€๐’…†

ur ๐’Œจ,

รบr ๐’Œซ

-r
s- sa ๐’Š“,

sรก=DI ๐’ฒ,
sร =ZA ๐’,
sa4 ("แธชU.Nร") ๐’„ท๐’ˆพ

se=SI ๐’‹›,

sรฉ=ZI ๐’ฃ

si ๐’‹›,

sรญ=ZI ๐’ฃ

su ๐’‹ข,

sรบ=ZU ๐’ช,
sรน=SUD ๐’‹ค,
su4 ๐’‹œ

as=AZ ๐’Š es=GIล  ๐’„‘,

รฉs=Eล  ๐’‚ 

is=GIล  ๐’„‘,

รญs=Eล  ๐’‚ 

us=UZ,

รบs=Uล  ๐’‘
usโ‚… ๐’‡‡

-s
ลก- ลกa ๐’Šญ,

ลกรก=NรG ๐’ผ,
ลกร  ๐’Šฎ

ลกe ๐’Šบ,

ลกรฉ,
ลกรจ ๐’‚ 

ลกi=IGI ๐’…†,

ลกรญ=SI ๐’‹›

ลกu ๐’‹—,

ลกรบ ๐’‹™,
ลกรน=ล รˆ ๐’‚ ,
ลกu4=U ๐’Œ‹

aลก ๐’€ธ,

รกลก ๐’€พ

eลก ๐’Œ/๐’,

รฉลก=ล รˆ ๐’‚ 

iลก ๐’…–,

รญลก=KASKAL ๐’†œ

uลก ๐’‘,

รบลก=BAD ๐’

-ลก
t- ta ๐’‹ซ,

tรก=DA ๐’•

te ๐’‹ผ,

tรฉ=Tร ๐’Šน

ti ๐’‹พ,

tรญ ๐’Šน,
tรฌ=DIM ๐’ด,
ti4=DI ๐’ฒ

tu ๐’Œ…,

tรบ=UD ๐’Œ“,
tรน=DU ๐’บ

at=AD ๐’€œ,

รกt=GรR gunรป ๐’„‰

et=ร ๐’€‰ it=ร ๐’€‰ ut=UD ๐’Œ“,

รบt=รล  ๐’€พ

-t
z- za ๐’,

zรก=NA4 ๐’‰Œ๐’Œ“

ze=ZI ๐’ฃ,

zรฉ=ZรŒ ๐’ข

zi ๐’ฃ,

zรญ ๐’ข,
zรฌ ๐’ฅ

zu ๐’ช,

zรบ=KA ๐’…—

az ๐’Š ez=GIล  ๐’„‘,

รฉz=Eล  ๐’‚ 

iz= GIล  ๐’„‘,

รญz=Iล  ๐’…–

uz=ล E&HU ๐’Šป

รบz=Uล  ๐’‘,
รนz ๐’š

-z
(Sumerian Only) gฬƒ- gฬƒรก=Gร ๐’‚ท gฬƒe26=Gร ๐’‚ท gฬƒi6=MI ๐’ˆช gฬƒu10=MU ๐’ˆฌ รกgฬƒ=รG ๐’‰˜ รจgฬƒ=รG ๐’‰˜ รฌgฬƒ=รG ๐’‰˜ รนgฬƒ=UN ๐’Œฆ (Sumerian Only) -gฬƒ
(Sumerian Only) ล™- ล™รก=DU ๐’บ ล™e6=DU ๐’บ -ล™

Sample text

Inscription by Entemena of Lagaลก

This text was inscribed on a small clay cone c.โ€‰2400ย BC. It recounts the beginning of a war between the city-states of Lagaลก and Umma during the Early Dynastic III period, one of the earliest border conflicts recorded. (RIME 1.09.05.01)[94]

ย 
Cone of Enmetena, king of Lagash, Room 236 Reference AO 3004, Louvre Museum.[95][94]
I.1โ€“7

๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค

den-lil2

๐’ˆ—

lugal

๐’†ณ๐’†ณ๐’Š

kur-kur-ra

๐’€Š๐’€

ab-ba

๐’€ญ๐’€ญ๐’Œท๐’‰ˆ๐’†ค

digฬƒir-digฬƒir-re2-ne-ke4

๐’…—

inim

๐’„€๐’ˆพ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ

gi-na-ni-ta

๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข

dnin-gฬƒir2-su

๐’€ญ๐’‡‹๐’‰

dลกara2-bi

๐’† 

ki

๐’‚Š๐’‰ˆ๐’‹ฉ

e-ne-sur

๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค ๐’ˆ— ๐’†ณ๐’†ณ๐’Š ๐’€Š๐’€ ๐’€ญ๐’€ญ๐’Œท๐’‰ˆ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’„€๐’ˆพ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ ๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข ๐’€ญ๐’‡‹๐’‰ ๐’†  ๐’‚Š๐’‰ˆ๐’‹ฉ

den-lil2 lugal kur-kur-ra ab-ba digฬƒir-digฬƒir-re2-ne-ke4 inim gi-na-ni-ta dnin-gฬƒir2-su dลกara2-bi ki e-ne-sur

"Enlil, king of all the lands, father of all the gods, by his firm command, fixed the border between Ningirsu and ล ara."

8โ€“12

๐’ˆจ๐’ฒ

me-silim

๐’ˆ—

lugal

๐’†ง๐’† ๐’†ค

kiลกki-ke4

๐’…—

inim

๐’€ญ๐’…—๐’ฒ๐’ˆพ๐’‹ซ

diลกtaran-na-ta

๐’‚ 

eลก2

๐’ƒท

gana2

๐’‰๐’Š

be2-ra

๐’† ๐’€

ki-ba

๐’ˆพ

na

๐’‰ˆ๐’†•

bi2-ru2

๐’ˆจ๐’ฒ ๐’ˆ— ๐’†ง๐’† ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’€ญ๐’…—๐’ฒ๐’ˆพ๐’‹ซ ๐’‚  ๐’ƒท ๐’‰๐’Š ๐’† ๐’€ ๐’ˆพ ๐’‰ˆ๐’†•

me-silim lugal kiลกki-ke4 inim diลกtaran-na-ta eลก2 gana2 be2-ra ki-ba na bi2-ru2

"Mesilim, king of Kiลก, at the command of Iลกtaran, measured the field and set up a stele there."

13โ€“17

๐’‘

uลก

๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›

ensi2

๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’†ค

ummaki-ke4

๐’‰†

nam

๐’…—๐’ˆ 

inim-ma

๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‚ 

diri-diri-ลกe3

๐’‚Š๐’€

e-ak

๐’‘ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’†ค ๐’‰† ๐’…—๐’ˆ  ๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‚  ๐’‚Š๐’€

uลก ensi2 ummaki-ke4 nam inim-ma diri-diri-ลกe3 e-ak

"Ush, ruler of Umma, acted unspeakably."

18โ€“21

๐’ˆพ๐’†•๐’€€๐’‰

na-ru2-a-bi

๐’‰Œ๐’‰ป

i3-pad

๐’‚”

edin

๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’‚ 

lagaลกki-ลกe3

๐’‰Œ๐’บ

i3-gฬƒen

๐’ˆพ๐’†•๐’€€๐’‰ ๐’‰Œ๐’‰ป ๐’‚” ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’‚  ๐’‰Œ๐’บ

na-ru2-a-bi i3-pad edin lagaลกki-ลกe3 i3-gฬƒen

"He ripped out that stele and marched toward the plain of Lagaลก."

22โ€“27

๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข

dnin-gฬƒir2-su

๐’Œจ๐’Š•

ur-sag

๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’†ค

den-lil2-la2-ke4

๐’…—

inim

๐’‹›๐’ฒ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ

si-sa2-ni-ta

๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’•

ummaki-da

๐’ฎ๐’„ฉ๐’Š

dam-แธซa-ra

๐’‚Š๐’•๐’€

e-da-ak

๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข ๐’Œจ๐’Š• ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’‹›๐’ฒ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’• ๐’ฎ๐’„ฉ๐’Š ๐’‚Š๐’•๐’€

dnin-gฬƒir2-su ur-sag den-lil2-la2-ke4 inim si-sa2-ni-ta ummaki-da dam-แธซa-ra e-da-ak

"Ningirsu, warrior of Enlil, at his just command, made war with Umma."

28โ€“31

๐’…—

inim

๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’‹ซ

den-lil2-la2-ta

๐’Š“

sa

๐’Œ‹

ลกu4

๐’ƒฒ

gal

๐’‰ˆ๐’Œ‹

bi2-ลกu4

๐’…–๐’‡ฏ๐’‹บ๐’‰

SAแธชAR.DU6.TAKA4-bi

๐’‚”๐’ˆพ

eden-na

๐’† 

ki

๐’€๐’‰Œ๐’‘๐’‘

ba-ni-us2-us2

๐’…— ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’‹ซ ๐’Š“ ๐’Œ‹ ๐’ƒฒ ๐’‰ˆ๐’Œ‹ ๐’…–๐’‡ฏ๐’‹บ๐’‰ ๐’‚”๐’ˆพ ๐’†  ๐’€๐’‰Œ๐’‘๐’‘

inim den-lil2-la2-ta sa ลกu4 gal bi2-ลกu4 SAแธชAR.DU6.TAKA4-bi eden-na ki ba-ni-us2-us2

"At Enlil's command, he threw his great battle net over it and heaped up burial mounds for it on the plain."

32โ€“38

๐’‚๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’บ

e2-an-na-tum2

๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›

ensi2

๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† 

lagaลกki

๐’‰บ๐’„‘๐’‰‹๐’‚ต

pa-bil3-ga

๐’‚—๐’‹ผ๐’ˆจ๐’ˆพ

en-mete-na

๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›

ensi2

๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’…—๐’†ค

lagaลกki-ka-ke4

๐’‚๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’บ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’†  ๐’‰บ๐’„‘๐’‰‹๐’‚ต ๐’‚—๐’‹ผ๐’ˆจ๐’ˆพ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’…—๐’†ค

e2-an-na-tum2 ensi2 lagaลกki pa-bil3-ga en-mete-na ensi2 lagaลกki-ka-ke4

"Eannatum, ruler of Lagash, uncle of Entemena, ruler of Lagaลก"

39โ€“42

๐’‚—๐’€‰๐’†—๐’‡ท

en-a2-kal-le

๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›

ensi2

๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’•

ummaki-da

๐’† 

ki

๐’‚Š๐’•๐’‹ฉ

e-da-sur

๐’‚—๐’€‰๐’†—๐’‡ท ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’• ๐’†  ๐’‚Š๐’•๐’‹ฉ

en-a2-kal-le ensi2 ummaki-da ki e-da-sur

"fixed the border with Enakale, ruler of Umma"

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Not usually transcribed
  2. ^ In some cases k is omitted. For example as in "e2 lugal-la (The house of the king, originally it should be e2-lugal-ak but because of auslaut and k omission, it turned into e2 lugal-la)". However k reappears if another grammatical marker is added as in "e2 lugal-la-ke-ne (with the plural marker -ene)"
  3. ^ The naming and number of cases vary according to differing analyses of Sumerian linguistics.
  4. ^ But apparently -e in the plural, see below.
  5. ^ The reduplication of the consonants m in this example is an auslaut. Find more info in this link #
  6. ^ A newer interpretation is that the last syllable in such examples is to be read -ne, i.e. 3rd person possessive -ni plus directive -e. In contrast, in the 1st and 2nd persons, we find this apparent -ni attached to 1st and 2nd person pronouns (zig-a-gฬƒu-ni 'as I rose'), which leads Jagersma to interpret it as an otherwise obsolete locative ending: lit. 'at my rising' (Jagersma 2009: 672โ€“674).

Citations

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  70. ^ Halloran pdf 1999, p.ย 20.
  71. ^ Jagersma (2010: 244)
  72. ^ See e.g. Rubio 2007, Attinger 1993, Zรณlyomi 2005 ("Sumerisch". In: Sprachen des Alten Orients, ed. M. Streck), PPCS Morphological model October 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  73. ^ E.g. Attinger 1993, Rubio 2007
  74. ^ Rubio 2007 and references therein
  75. ^ Zรณlyomi 1993; Also Woods, Cristopher, 2008: The Grammar of Perspective: The Sumerian Conjugation Prefixes as a System of Voice
  76. ^ a b E.g. Zรณlyomi 1993
  77. ^ a b c d e f Rubio 2007
  78. ^ a b c Zรณlyomi 2005
  79. ^ a b Zรณlyomi (2000). "Structural interference from Akkadian in Old Babylonian Sumerian" (PDF). Acta Sumerologica. 22. (PDF) from the original on 2021-02-28. Retrieved 2008-07-20.
  80. ^ Zรณlyomi 1993, Attinger 1993
  81. ^ Attinger 1993, Khachikyan 2007: ("Towards the Aspect System in Sumerian". In: Babel und Bibel 3.)
  82. ^ "Epsd2/Sux/ลกum[give]". from the original on 2021-09-26. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  83. ^ a b Zรณlyomi 1993
  84. ^ Johnson 2004:22
  85. ^ Sylvain Auroux (2000). History of the Language Sciences. Vol.ย 1. p.ย 2. ISBNย 9783110194005.
  86. ^ Hartmann, Henrike (1960). Die Musik der Sumerischen Kultur. p.ย 138.
  87. ^ Rubio (2007). Morphology of Asia and Africa. p.ย 1370. ISBNย 9781575061092.
  88. ^ Foxvog, Daniel A. Introduction to Sumerian grammar (PDF). pp.ย 16โ€“17, 20โ€“21. (PDF) from the original on January 3, 2017 (about phonemes gฬƒ and ล™ and their representation using cuneiform signs).
  89. ^ Jagersma, A. H. A descriptive grammar of Sumerian (PDF) (Thesis). pp.ย 43โ€“45, 50โ€“51. (PDF) from the original on November 25, 2015 (about phonemes gฬƒ and ล™ and their representation using cuneiform signs).
  90. ^ Haubold, Johannes (2013). Greece and Mesopotamia: Dialogues in Literature. Cambridge University Press. p.ย 135. ISBNย 978-1-107-01076-5.
  91. ^ Andrade, Nathanael J. (2013). Syrian Identity in the Greco-Roman World. Cambridge University Press. p.ย 46. ISBNย 978-1-107-24456-6.
  92. ^ "Antiochus cylinder". British Museum. from the original on 2019-04-01. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  93. ^ Wallis Budge, Ernest Alfred (1884). Babylonian Life and History. Religious Tract Society. p.ย 94.
  94. ^ a b "CDLI-Found Texts". cdli.ucla.edu. from the original on 2018-03-13. Retrieved 2018-03-12.
  95. ^ "Cone of Enmetena, king of Lagash". 2020. from the original on 2020-02-27. Retrieved 2020-02-27.

Bibliography

  • Attinger, Pascal (1993). Elรฉments de linguistique sumรฉrienne: La construction de du11/e/di. Gรถttingen: Vandenhoeck&Ruprecht. ISBNย 3-7278-0869-1.
  • Delitzsch, Friedrich (1914). Grundzรผge der sumerischen Grammatik. J. C. Hinrichs. OCLCย 923551546.
  • Dewart, Leslie (1989). Evolution and Consciousness: The Role of Speech in the Origin and Development of Human Nature. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBNย 0-8020-2690-7.
  • Diakonoff, I. M. (1976). "Ancient Writing and Ancient Written Language: Pitfalls and Peculiarities in the Study of Sumerian" (PDF). Assyriological Studies. 20 (Sumerological Studies in Honor of Thorkild Jakobsen): 99โ€“121. (PDF) from the original on 2019-08-03. Retrieved 2018-09-23.
  • Edzard, Dietz Otto (2003). Sumerian Grammar. Leiden: Brill. ISBNย 90-04-12608-2. (grammar treatment for the advanced student)
  • Halloran, John (11 August 1999). "Sumerian Lexicon" (PDF). Sumerian Language Page. (PDF) from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
  • Halloran, John Alan (2006). Sumerian Lexicon: A Dictionary Guide to the Ancient Sumerian Language. Logogram Pub. ISBNย 978-0978-64291-4.
  • Hayes, John (1990; 3rd revised ed. 2018), A Manual of Sumerian: Grammar and Texts. UNDENA, Malibu CA. ISBNย 978-0-9798937-4-2. (primer for the beginning student)
  • Hayes, John (1997), Sumerian. Languages of the World/Materials #68, LincomEuropa, Munich. ISBNย 3-929075-39-3. (41 pp. prรฉcis of the grammar)
  • Jagersma, B. (2009), A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian, Universitet Leiden, The Netherlands.
  • Jestin, J. (1951), Abrรฉgรฉ de Grammaire Sumรฉrienne, Geuthner, Paris. ISBNย 2-7053-1743-0. (118pp overview and sketch, in French)
  • Langdon, Stephen Herbert (1911). A Sumerian Grammar and Chrestomathy, with a Vocabulary of the Principal Roots in Sumerian, and List of the Most Important Syllabic and Vowel Transcriptions, by Stephen Langdon ... P. Geuthner. OCLCย 251014503.
  • Michalowski, Piotr (1980). "Sumerian as an Ergative Language". Journal of Cuneiform Studies. 32 (2): 86โ€“103. doi:10.2307/1359671. JSTORย 1359671. S2CIDย 164022054.
  • Michalowski,Piotr, (2004), "Sumerian", The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages pp 19โ€“59, ed. Roger Woodward. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBNย 978-05-2156-256-0.
  • Pinches, Theophilus G., "Further Light upon the Sumerian Language.", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1914, pp. 436โ€“40
  • Prince, John D. (1908). Materials for a Sumerian lexicon with a grammatical introduction. Assyriologische Bibliothek, 19. Hinrichs. OCLCย 474982763.
  • Prince, J. Dynely (October 1914). "Delitzsch's Sumerian Grammar". American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures. U of Chicago. 31 (1): 67โ€“78. doi:10.1086/369755. ISSNย 1062-0516. S2CIDย 170226826.
  • Rubio, Gonzalo (2007), "Sumerian Morphology". In Morphologies of Asia and Africa, vol. 2, pp.ย 1327โ€“1379. Edited by Alan S. Kaye. Eisenbrauns, Winona Lake, IN, ISBNย 1-57506-109-0.
  • Thomsen, Marie-Louise (2001) [1984]. The Sumerian Language: An Introduction to Its History and Grammatical Structure. Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag. ISBNย 87-500-3654-8. (Well-organized with over 800 translated text excerpts.)
  • Volk, Konrad (1997). A Sumerian Reader. Rome: Pontificio Istituto Biblico. ISBNย 88-7653-610-8. (collection of Sumerian texts, some transcribed, none translated)
  • Zรณlyomi, Gรกbor. 2017. An Introduction to the Grammar of Sumerian. Open Access textbook, Budapest.

Further reading

  • Friedrich Delitzsch (1914). Sumerisches glossar. J. C. Hinrichs. p.ย 295. Retrieved 2011-07-05.
  • Ebeling, J., & Cunningham, G. (2007). Analysing literary Sumerianย : corpus-based approaches. London: Equinox. ISBNย 1-84553-229-5
  • [5] 2023-03-11 at the Wayback MachineGeng, Jinrui, "An Outline of the Synchronic and Diachronic Variations of Sumerian", 2nd International Conference on Education, Language and Art (ICELA 2022). Atlantis Press, 2023.
  • Halloran, J. A. (2007). Sumerian lexicon: a dictionary guide to the ancient Sumerian language. Los Angeles, Calif: Logogram. ISBNย 0-9786429-1-0
  • Shin Shifra, Jacob Klein (1996). In Those Far Days. Tel Aviv, Am Oved and The Israeli Center for Libraries' project for translating Exemplary Literature to Hebrew. This is an anthology of Sumerian and Akkadian poetry, translated into Hebrew.

External links

  • General
    • Akkadian Unicode Font (to see Cuneiform text)
  • Linguistic overviews
    • A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian by Abraham Hendrik Jagersma (preliminary version)
    • Sumerisch (An overview of Sumerian by Ernst Kausen, in German)
    • (1874) by Franรงois Lenormant: the state of the art in the dawn of Sumerology, by the author of the first ever [6] grammar of "Akkadian"
  • Dictionaries
    • Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary (EPSD)
    • Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary (EPSD) 2
    • Elementary Sumerian Glossary by Daniel A. Foxvog (after M. Civil 1967)
    • The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature (ETCSL). Includes translations.
    • CDLI: Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative a large corpus of Sumerian texts in transliteration, largely from the Early Dynastic and Ur III periods, accessible with images.
  • Research
    • (PDF)
    • Structural Interference from Akkadian in Old Babylonian Sumerian by Gรกbor Zรณlyomi (PDF)
    • (PDF)
    • The Life and Death of the Sumerian Language in Comparative Perspective by Piotr Michalowski
    • (PDF)
    • Elรฉments de linguistique sumรฉrienne (by Pascal Attinger, 1993; in French), at the digital library RERO DOC: Parts 1โ€“4, Part 5.
    • at the Internet Archive

sumerian, language, sumerian, cuneiform, ๐’…ด๐’‚ , emeg, native, tongue, language, ancient, sumer, oldest, attested, languages, dating, back, least, 2900, accepted, local, language, isolate, have, been, spoken, ancient, mesopotamia, area, that, modern, iraq, sumeria. Sumerian Cuneiform ๐’…ด๐’‚  Emeg ir native tongue is the language of ancient Sumer It is one of the oldest attested languages dating back to at least 2900 BC It is accepted to be a local language isolate and to have been spoken in ancient Mesopotamia in the area that is modern day Iraq Sumerian๐’…ด๐’‚  EmegirNative toSumer and AkkadRegionMesopotamia modern day Iraq EraAttested from c 2900 BC Went out of vernacular use around 1700 BC used as a classical language until about 100 AD Language familyLanguage isolateDialectsEmesal 1 Emesisa 2 Emetena 2 Emesukudda 2 Emesuha 2 Emesidi 2 Emeku 3 Writing systemSumero Akkadian cuneiformLanguage codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks sux span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code sux class extiw title iso639 3 sux sux a Glottologsume1241This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Akkadian a Semitic language gradually replaced Sumerian as a spoken language in the area c 2000 BC the exact date is debated 4 but Sumerian continued to be used as a sacred ceremonial literary and scientific language in Akkadian speaking Mesopotamian states such as Assyria and Babylonia until the 1st century AD 5 6 Thereafter it seems to have fallen into obscurity until the 19th century when Assyriologists began deciphering the cuneiform inscriptions and excavated tablets that had been left by its speakers Contents 1 Stages 2 Classification 3 Writing system 3 1 Development 3 2 Transcription 4 Historiography 5 Phonology 5 1 Phonemic inventory 5 1 1 Consonants 5 1 2 Vowels 6 Grammar 6 1 Nominal morphology 6 1 1 Noun phrases 6 1 2 Pronouns 6 1 3 Numerals 6 2 Verbal morphology 6 2 1 General 6 2 2 Modal prefixes 6 2 3 Conjugation prefixes 6 2 4 Pronominal and dimensional prefixes 6 2 5 Pronominal suffixes and conjugation 6 2 6 Stem 6 2 7 Other issues 6 2 8 Syntax 7 Dialects 8 Syllabary 9 Sample text 9 1 Inscription by Entemena of Lagas 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksStages Edit This proto literate tablet c 3100 2900 BC records the transfer of a piece of land Walters Art Museum Baltimore The first known Sumerian Akkadian bilingual tablet dates from the reign of Rimush Louvre Museum AO 5477 The top half is in Sumerian the bottom half is its translation in Akkadian 7 8 The history of written Sumerian can be divided into several periods 9 Archaic Sumerian c 2900 BC to c 2600 BC Old or Classical Sumerian c 2600 BC to c 2100 BC Neo Sumerian c 2100 BC to c 1700 BC Post Sumerian after c 1700 BC Archaic Sumerian is the earliest stage of inscriptions with linguistic content beginning with the Early Dynastic period from about 2900 BC to 2600 BC It succeeds the proto literate period which spans roughly 3300 BC to 2900 BC The term Post Sumerian is meant to refer to the time when the language was already extinct and preserved by Mesopotamians only as a liturgical and classical language for religious artistic and scholarly purposes The extinction has traditionally been dated approximately to the end of the Third Dynasty of Ur the last predominantly Sumerian state in Mesopotamia about 2000 BC However that date is very approximate as many scholars have contended that Sumerian was already dead or dying as early as c 2100 BC by the beginning of the Ur III period 4 10 and others believe that Sumerian persisted as a spoken language in a small part of Southern Mesopotamia Nippur and its surroundings until as late as 1700 BC 4 Whatever the status of spoken Sumerian between 2000 and 1700 BC it is from then that a particularly large quantity of literary texts and bilingual Sumerian Akkadian lexical lists survive especially from the scribal school of Nippur Sumerian school documents from the Sealand Dynasty were found at Tell Khaiber some of which contain year names from the reign of a king with the Sumerian throne name Aya dara galama 11 Classification EditSumerian is a language isolate 12 13 14 15 Ever since decipherment it has been the subject of much effort to relate it to a wide variety of languages Because it has a peculiar prestige as one of the most ancient written languages proposals for linguistic affinity sometimes have a nationalistic background Such proposals enjoy virtually no support among linguists because of their unverifiability 16 Sumerian was at one time widely held to be an Indo European language but that view later came to be almost universally rejected 17 Among its proposed linguistic affiliates are Kartvelian languages 18 19 Nicholas Marr Austroasiatic languages specifically Munda languages Igor M Diakonoff 20 Dravidian languages A Sathasivam 21 Uralic languages Simo Parpola 22 or more generally Ural Altaic languages Simo Parpola 22 C G Gostony 23 Andras Zakar 24 Ida Bobula 25 26 Basque language 25 Nostratic languages Allan Bomhard 25 27 Sino Tibetan languages specifically Tibeto Burman languages Jan Braun 28 following C J Ball V Christian K Bouda 29 and V Emeliyanov Dene Caucasian languages John Bengtson 30 It has also been suggested that the Sumerian language descended from a late prehistoric creole language Hoyrup 1992 25 31 However no conclusive evidence only some typological features can be found to support Hoyrup s view A more widespread hypothesis posits a Proto Euphratean language that preceded Sumerian in Southern Mesopotamia and exerted an areal influence on it especially in the form of polysyllabic words that appear un Sumerian making them suspect of being loanwords and are not traceable to any other known language There is little speculation as to the affinities of this substratum language or these languages and it is thus best treated as unclassified Researchers such as Gonzalo Rubio 32 disagree with the assumption of a single substratum language and argue that several languages are involved A related proposal by Gordon Whittaker 33 is that the language of the proto literary texts from the Late Uruk period c 3350 3100 BC is really an early Indo European language which he terms Euphratic Writing system EditSee also Cuneiform This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Development Edit Letter sent by the high priest Lu enna to the king of Lagash maybe Urukagina informing him of his son s death in combat c 2400 BC found in Telloh ancient Girsu Vase of Entemena king of Lagash with dedication Louvre AO2674 c 2400 BC From about 2900 BC the cuneiform symbols were developed using a wedge shaped stylus to impress the shapes into wet clay This cuneiform wedge shaped mode of writing co existed with the proto cuneiform archaic mode Deimel 1922 lists 870 signs used in the Early Dynastic IIIa period 26th century In the same period the large set of logographic signs had been simplified into a logosyllabic script comprising several hundred signs Rosengarten 1967 lists 468 signs used in Sumerian pre Sargonian Lagash The cuneiform script was adapted to Akkadian writing beginning in the mid third millennium Over the long period of bi lingual overlap of active Sumerian and Akkadian usage the two languages influenced each other as reflected in numerous loanwords and even word order changes 34 Transcription Edit Depending on the context a cuneiform sign can be read either as one of several possible logograms each of which corresponds to a word in the Sumerian spoken language as a phonetic syllable V VC CV or CVC or as a determinative a marker of semantic category such as occupation or place See the article Transliterating cuneiform languages Some Sumerian logograms were written with multiple cuneiform signs These logograms are called diri spellings after the logogram diri which is written with the signs SI and A The text transliteration of a tablet will show just the logogram such as the word diri not the separate component signs Not all epigraphists are equally reliable and before publication of an important treatment of a text scholars will often arrange to collate the published transcription against the actual tablet to see if any signs especially broken or damaged signs should be represented differently Historiography EditSumero Akkadian cuneiform syllabary Left Sumero Akkadian cuneiform syllabary used by early Akkadian rulers 35 Right Seal of Akkadian Empire ruler Naram Sin reversed for readability c 2250 BC The name of Naram Sin Akkadian ๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’Š๐’„ ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’ช DNa ra am DSin Sin being written ๐’‚—๐’ช EN ZU appears vertically in the right column 36 British Museum The key to reading logosyllabic cuneiform came from the Behistun inscription a trilingual cuneiform inscription written in Old Persian Elamite and Akkadian In a similar manner the key to understanding Egyptian hieroglyphs was the bilingual Greek and Egyptian with the Egyptian text in two scripts Rosetta stone and Jean Francois Champollion s transcription in 1822 In 1838 Henry Rawlinson building on the 1802 work of Georg Friedrich Grotefend was able to decipher the Old Persian section of the Behistun inscriptions using his knowledge of modern Persian When he recovered the rest of the text in 1843 he and others were gradually able to translate the Elamite and Akkadian sections of it starting with the 37 signs he had deciphered for the Old Persian Meanwhile many more cuneiform texts were coming to light from archaeological excavations mostly in the Semitic Akkadian language which were duly deciphered By 1850 however Edward Hincks came to suspect a non Semitic origin for cuneiform Semitic languages are structured according to consonantal forms whereas cuneiform when functioning phonetically was a syllabary binding consonants to particular vowels Furthermore no Semitic words could be found to explain the syllabic values given to particular signs 37 Julius Oppert suggested that a non Semitic language had preceded Akkadian in Mesopotamia and that speakers of this language had developed the cuneiform script In 1855 Rawlinson announced the discovery of non Semitic inscriptions at the southern Babylonian sites of Nippur Larsa and Uruk In 1856 Hincks argued that the untranslated language was agglutinative in character The language was called Scythic by some and confusingly Akkadian by others In 1869 Oppert proposed the name Sumerian based on the known title King of Sumer and Akkad reasoning that if Akkad signified the Semitic portion of the kingdom Sumer might describe the non Semitic annex Credit for being first to scientifically treat a bilingual Sumerian Akkadian text belongs to Paul Haupt who published Die sumerischen Familiengesetze The Sumerian family laws in 1879 38 Ernest de Sarzec began excavating the Sumerian site of Tello ancient Girsu capital of the state of Lagash in 1877 and published the first part of Decouvertes en Chaldee with transcriptions of Sumerian tablets in 1884 The University of Pennsylvania began excavating Sumerian Nippur in 1888 A Classified List of Sumerian Ideographs by R Brunnow appeared in 1889 The bewildering number and variety of phonetic values that signs could have in Sumerian led to a detour in understanding the language a Paris based orientalist Joseph Halevy argued from 1874 onward that Sumerian was not a natural language but rather a secret code a cryptolect and for over a decade the leading Assyriologists battled over this issue For a dozen years starting in 1885 Friedrich Delitzsch accepted Halevy s arguments not renouncing Halevy until 1897 39 Francois Thureau Dangin working at the Louvre in Paris also made significant contributions to deciphering Sumerian with publications from 1898 to 1938 such as his 1905 publication of Les inscriptions de Sumer et d Akkad Charles Fossey at the College de France in Paris was another prolific and reliable scholar His pioneering Contribution au Dictionnaire sumerien assyrien Paris 1905 1907 turns out to provide the foundation for P Anton Deimel s 1934 Sumerisch Akkadisches Glossar vol III of Deimel s 4 volume Sumerisches Lexikon In 1908 Stephen Herbert Langdon summarized the rapid expansion in knowledge of Sumerian and Akkadian vocabulary in the pages of Babyloniaca a journal edited by Charles Virolleaud in an article Sumerian Assyrian Vocabularies which reviewed a valuable new book on rare logograms by Bruno Meissner 40 Subsequent scholars have found Langdon s work including his tablet transcriptions to be not entirely reliable In 1944 the Sumerologist Samuel Noah Kramer provided a detailed and readable summary of the decipherment of Sumerian in his Sumerian Mythology 41 Friedrich Delitzsch published a learned Sumerian dictionary and grammar in the form of his Sumerisches Glossar and Grundzuge der sumerischen Grammatik both appearing in 1914 Delitzsch s student Arno Poebel published a grammar with the same title Grundzuge der sumerischen Grammatik in 1923 and for 50 years it would be the standard for students studying Sumerian Poebel s grammar was finally superseded in 1984 on the publication of The Sumerian Language An Introduction to its History and Grammatical Structure by Marie Louise Thomsen While much of Thomsen s understanding of Sumerian grammar would later be rejected by most or all Sumerologists Thomsen s grammar often with express mention of the critiques put forward by Pascal Attinger in his 1993 Elements de linguistique sumerienne La construction de du11 e di dire is the starting point of most recent academic discussions of Sumerian grammar More recent monograph length grammars of Sumerian include Dietz Otto Edzard s 2003 Sumerian Grammar and Bram Jagersma s 2010 A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian currently digital but soon to be printed in revised form by Oxford University Press Piotr Michalowski s essay entitled simply Sumerian in the 2004 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages has also been recognized as a good modern grammatical sketch There is relatively little consensus even among reasonable Sumerologists in comparison to the state of most modern or classical languages Verbal morphology in particular is hotly disputed In addition to the general grammars there are many monographs and articles about particular areas of Sumerian grammar without which a survey of the field could not be considered complete The primary institutional lexical effort in Sumerian is the Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary project begun in 1974 In 2004 the PSD was released on the Web as the ePSD The project is currently supervised by Steve Tinney It has not been updated online since 2006 but Tinney and colleagues are working on a new edition of the ePSD a working draft of which is available online Phonology EditAssumed phonological or morphological forms will be between slashes with plain text used for the standard Assyriological transcription of Sumerian Most of the following examples are unattested Phonemic inventory Edit Modern knowledge of Sumerian phonology is flawed and incomplete because of the lack of speakers the transmission through the filter of Akkadian phonology and the difficulties posed by the cuneiform script As I M Diakonoff observes when we try to find out the morphophonological structure of the Sumerian language we must constantly bear in mind that we are not dealing with a language directly but are reconstructing it from a very imperfect mnemonic writing system which had not been basically aimed at the rendering of morphophonemics 42 Consonants Edit Sumerian is conjectured to have at least the following consonants Sumerian consonant phonemes Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Velar GlottalNasal m m n n ล‹ g Plosive plain p b t d k g ส” a aspirated pสฐ p tสฐ t kสฐ k Fricative s s สƒ s x แธซ h h a Affricate plain t s z aspirated t sสฐ r dr Tap ษพ r Liquid l l Semivowel j a a simple distribution of six stop consonants in three places of articulation distinguished by aspiration though later stages may have featured voicing p voiceless aspirated bilabial plosive t voiceless aspirated alveolar plosive k voiceless aspirated velar plosive As a rule p t and k did not occur word finally 43 b voiced unaspirated bilabial plosive d voiced unaspirated alveolar plosive g voiced unaspirated velar plosive a phoneme usually represented by r sometimes written dr that was probably a voiceless aspirated alveolar affricate This phoneme later became d or r in northern and southern dialects respectively a simple distribution of three nasal consonants in similar distribution to the stops m bilabial nasal n alveolar nasal g frequently printed ฤ due to typesetting constraints increasingly transcribed as ล‹ ล‹ likely a velar nasal as in sing it has also been argued to be a labiovelar nasal ล‹สท or a nasalized labiovelar 44 a set of three sibilants s likely a voiceless alveolar fricative z likely a voiceless unaspirated alveolar affricate t s as shown by Akkadian loans from s t s to Sumerian z In early Sumerian this would have been the unaspirated counterpart to r 45 s generally described as a voiceless postalveolar fricative สƒ as in ship แธซ a velar fricative x sometimes written h two liquid consonants l a lateral consonant r a rhotic consonant The existence of various other consonants has been hypothesized based on graphic alternations and loans though none have found wide acceptance For example Diakonoff lists evidence for two l sounds two r sounds two h sounds and two g sounds excluding the velar nasal and assumes a phonemic difference between consonants that are dropped word finally such as the g in zag gt za3 and consonants that remain such as the g in lag Other hidden consonant phonemes that have been suggested include semivowels such as j and w 46 and a glottal fricative h or a glottal stop that could explain the absence of vowel contraction in some words 47 though objections have been raised against that as well 48 A recent descriptive grammar by Bram Jagersma includes j h and ส” as unwritten consonants with the glottal stop even serving as the first person pronominal prefix 49 Very often a word final consonant was not expressed in writing and was possibly omitted in pronunciation so it surfaced only when followed by a vowel for example the k of the genitive case ending ak does not appear in e2 lugal la the king s house but it becomes obvious in e2 lugal la kam it is the king s house compare liaison in French Vowels Edit The vowels that are clearly distinguished by the cuneiform script are a e i and u Various researchers have posited the existence of more vowel phonemes such as o and even ษ› and ษ” which would have been concealed by the transmission through Akkadian as that language does not distinguish them 50 51 That would explain the seeming existence of numerous homophones in transliterated Sumerian as well as some details of the phenomena mentioned in the next paragraph 52 These hypotheses are not yet generally accepted 44 There is some evidence for vowel harmony according to vowel height or advanced tongue root in the prefix i3 e in inscriptions from pre Sargonic Lagash 50 and perhaps even more than one vowel harmony rule 53 51 There also appear to be many cases of partial or complete assimilation of the vowel of certain prefixes and suffixes to one in the adjacent syllable reflected in writing in some of the later periods and there is a noticeable albeit not absolute tendency for disyllabic stems to have the same vowel in both syllables 54 These patterns too are interpreted as evidence for a richer vowel inventory by some researchers 50 51 What appears to be vowel contraction in hiatus aa ia ua gt a ae gt a ue gt u etc is also very common Syllables could have any of the following structures V CV VC CVC More complex syllables if Sumerian had them are not expressed as such by the cuneiform script Grammar EditEver since its decipherment research of Sumerian has been made difficult not only by the lack of any native speakers but also by the relative sparseness of linguistic data the apparent lack of a closely related language and the features of the writing system Typologically as mentioned above Sumerian is classified as an agglutinative split ergative and subject object verb language It behaves as a nominative accusative language in the 1st and 2nd persons of the incomplete tense aspect but as ergative absolutive in most other forms of the indicative mood Sumerian nouns are organized in two grammatical genders based on animacy animate and inanimate Animate nouns include humans gods and in some instances the word for statue Case is indicated by suffixes on the noun Noun phrases are right branching with adjectives and modifiers following nouns 55 Sumerian verbs have a tense aspect complex contrasting complete and incomplete actions states The two have different conjugations and many have different roots Verbs also mark mood voice polarity iterativity and intensity and agree with subjects and objects in number person animacy and case Sumerian moods are indicative imperative cohortative precative affirmative prospective aspect cohortative mood affirmative negative volitive unrealised volitive negative affirmative polarative and are marked by a verbal prefix The prefixes appear to conflate mood aspect and polarity and their meanings are also affected by the tense aspect complex Sumerian voices are active and middle or passive Verbs are marked for three persons 1st 2nd 3rd in two numbers singular and plural Finite verbs have three classes of prefixes modal prefixes conjugational prefixes and pronominal dimensional prefixes Modal prefixes confer the above moods on the verb Conjugational prefixes are thought to confer perhaps venitive andative being action focus valency or voice distinctions on the verb Pronominal dimensional prefixes correspond to noun phrases and their cases Non finite verbs include participles and relative clause verbs both formed through nominalisation Finite verbs take prefixes and suffixes non finite verbs only take suffixes Verbal roots are mostly monosyllabic though verbal root duplication and suppletion can also occur to indicate plurality Root duplication can also indicate iterativity or intensity of the verb 56 Nominal morphology Edit Noun phrases Edit The Sumerian noun is typically a one or two syllable root igi eye e2 house household nin lady although there are also some roots with three syllables like sakanka market There are two grammatical genders usually called human and non human the first includes gods and the word for statue in some instances but not plants or animals the latter also includes collective plural nouns whose assignment is semantically predictable The adjectives and other modifiers follow the noun lugal maแธซ great king The noun itself is not inflected rather grammatical markers attach to the noun phrase as a whole in a certain order Typically that order would be noun adjective numeral genitive phrase relative clause possessive marker plural marker case markerAn example may be dig ir gal gal g u ne ra god great reduplicated my plural dative for all my great gods 57 The possessive plural and case markers are traditionally referred to as suffixes but have recently also been described as enclitics 58 or postpositions 59 The plural markers are e ne optional for nouns of the human gender Non human nouns are not marked by a plural suffix However plurality can also be expressed with the adjective แธซi a various with the plural of the copula mes by reduplication of the noun kur kur all foreign lands or of the following adjective a gal gal all the great waters reduplication is believed to signify totality or by the plurality of only the verb form Plural reference in the verb form occurs only for human nouns The generally recognised case markers are case endingabsolutive O ergative e only with animates allative e only with inanimates genitive ak b equative gin dative r a terminative e s e comitative da locative a ablative ta c More endings are recognised by some researchers e g Bram Jagersma notes a separate adverbiative case in es and a second locative used mostly with infinite verb forms 60 Additional spatial or temporal meanings can be expressed by genitive phrases like at the head of above at the face of in front of at the outer side of because of etc bar udu แธซad2 ak a outer side sheep white genitive locative in the outer side of a white sheep because of a white sheep The embedded structure of the noun phrase can be further illustrated with the phrase sipad udu siki ak ak ene the shepherds of woolly sheep where the first genitive morpheme a k subordinates siki wool to udu sheep and the second subordinates udu siki a k sheep of wool or woolly sheep to sipad shepherd 61 Pronouns Edit The attested personal pronouns are independent possessive suffix enclitic1st person singular g e26 e g u102nd person singular ze2 e zu3rd person singular animate a ne or e ne a n i 3rd person singular inanimate b i 1st person plural me2nd person plural zu ne ne3rd person plural animate a e ne ne b i 3rd person plural inanimate b i For most of the suffixes vowels are subject to loss if they are attached to vowel final words Numerals Edit Sumerian has a combination decimal and sexagesimal system for example 600 is ten sixties so that the Sumerian lexical numeral system is sexagesimal with 10 as a subbase 62 Numerals and composite numbers are as follows number name explanation notes1 dis des 63 dili2 min mina 64 3 es 65 4 limmu lim 66 5 ia i 67 6 as 68 ia five as one 7 imin 69 8 ussu 70 9 ilimmu 69 ia i 5 limmu 4 10 u ha hu a u 67 11 u dis 20 nis30 usu40 nimin less two tens 50 ninnu less ten 60 g is d g es d 71 600 g es d u ten g es d 1000 lim3600 sarVerbal morphology Edit General Edit The Sumerian finite verb distinguishes a number of moods and agrees more or less consistently with the subject and the object in person number and gender The verb chain may also incorporate pronominal references to the verb s other modifiers which has also traditionally been described as agreement although in fact such a reference and the presence of an actual modifier in the clause need not co occur not only e2 se3 ib2 si du un I m going to the house but also e2 se3 i3 du un I m going to the house and simply ib2 si du un I m going to it are possible 59 The Sumerian verb also makes a binary distinction according to a category that some regard as tense past vs present future others as aspect perfective vs imperfective and that will be designated as TA tense aspect in the following The two members of the opposition entail different conjugation patterns and at least for many verbs different stems they are theory neutrally referred to with the Akkadian grammatical terms for the two respective forms แธซamแนญu quick and maru slow fat Finally opinions differ on whether the verb has a passive or a middle voice and how it is expressed The verbal root is almost always a monosyllable and together with various affixes forms a so called verbal chain which is described as a sequence of about 15 slots though the precise models differ 72 The finite verb has both prefixes and suffixes while the non finite verb may only have suffixes Broadly the prefixes have been divided in three groups that occur in the following order modal prefixes conjugation prefixes and pronominal and dimensional prefixes 73 The suffixes are a future or imperfective marker ed pronominal suffixes and an a ending that nominalizes the whole verb chain The overall structure can be summarized as follows slot modal prefix conjugation prefix pronominal prefix dimensional prefix pronominal prefix stem future imperfective pronominal suffix nominalizercommon morphemes O แธซa u ga mu i e a ba bi O e r n b a da ta si O e r n b e d en en O e enden enzen ene es aNote also that more than one pairing of a pronominal prefix and a dimensional prefix may occur within the verb chain Modal prefixes Edit The modal prefixes are O indicative nu and la li negative la and li are used before the conjugation prefixes ba and bi2 ga cohortative let me us แธซa or แธซe with further assimilation of the vowel in later periods precative or affirmative u prospective after when if also used as a mild imperative na negative or affirmative bara negative or vetitive nus unrealizable wish and sa with further assimilation of the vowel in later periods affirmative Their meaning can depend on the TA Conjugation prefixes Edit The meaning structure identity and even the number of conjugation prefixes have always been a subject of disagreements The term conjugation prefix simply alludes to the fact that a finite verb in the indicative mood must always contain one of them Some of their most frequent expressions in writing are mu i3 ED Lagas variant e ba bi2 ED Lagas bi or be2 im im ma ED Lagas e ma im mi ED Lagas i3 mi or e me mi always followed by pronominal dimensional ni and al and to a lesser extent a am3 am3 ma and am3 mi virtually all analyses attempt to describe many of the above as combinations or allomorphs of each other The starting point of most analyses are the obvious facts that the 1st person dative always requires mu and that the verb in a passive clause without an overt agent tends to have ba Proposed explanations usually revolve around the subtleties of spatial grammar information structure focus 74 verb valency and most recently voice 75 Mu im and am3 have been described as ventive morphemes while ba and bi2 are sometimes analyzed as actually belonging to the pronominal dimensional group inanimate pronominal b dative a or directive i 76 Im ma im mi am3 ma and am3 mi are then considered by some as a combination of the ventive and ba bi 76 or otherwise a variety of the ventive 77 The element i3 has been argued to be a mere prothetic vowel al a stative prefix ba a middle voice prefix etcetera Pronominal and dimensional prefixes Edit The dimensional prefixes of the verb chain basically correspond to and often repeat the case markers of the noun phrase Like the latter they are attached to a head a pronominal prefix The other place where a pronominal prefix can be placed is immediately before the stem where it can have a different allomorph and expresses the absolutive or the ergative participant the transitive subject the intransitive subject or the direct object depending on the TA and other factors as explained below However this neat system is obscured by the tendency to drop or merge many of the prefixes in writing and possibly in pronunciation as well The generally recognized dimensional prefixes are shown in the table below if several occur within the same verb complex they are placed in the order they are listed in dative comitative ablative terminative directive a d da ta si early se3 i The pronominal prefixes are prefix Notes1st person singular O e Sometimes thought to represent a glottal stop ส” so Zolyomi e g 2017 and Jagersma e g 2009 2nd person singular e r 3rd person singular animate n 3rd person singular inanimate b 1st person plural me For a subject or object immediately before the stem the singular is used instead 2nd person plural re 3rd person plural ne The morphemes n and b are clearly the prefixes for the 3rd person singular animate and inanimate respectively the 2nd person singular appears as e in most contexts but as r before the dative ra leading some 78 to assume a phonetic ir or jr The 1st person may appear as e too but is more commonly not expressed at all the same may frequently apply to 3rd and 2nd persons it is however cued by the choice of mu as conjugation prefix 77 mu a ma The 1st 2nd and 3rd plural infixes are me re and ne in the dative 77 and perhaps in other contexts as well 78 though not in the pre stem position see below An additional exception from the system is the prefix ni which corresponds to a noun phrase in the locative in which case it doesn t seem to be preceded by a pronominal prefix and according to Gabor Zolyomi and others to an animate one in the directive in the latter case it is analyzed as pronominal n directive i Zolyomi and others also believe that special meanings can be expressed by combinations of non identical noun case and verb prefix 79 Also according to some researchers 80 ni and bi acquire the forms n and b coinciding with the absolutive ergative pronominal prefixes before the stem if there isn t already an absolutive ergative pronominal prefix in pre stem position mu un kur9 mu ni kur he went in there as opposed to mu ni kur9 mu ni in kur9 mu ni n kur he brought in caused something or someone to go in there Pronominal suffixes and conjugation Edit The pronominal suffixes are as follows maru แธซamแนญu1st person singular en 2nd person singular en 3rd person singular e O 1st person plural enden 2nd person plural enzen 3rd person plural ene es The initial vowel in all of the above suffixes can be assimilated to the root The general principle for pronominal agreement in conjugation is that in แธซamแนญu TA the transitive subject is expressed by the prefix and the direct object by the suffix and in the maru TA it is the other way round as for the intransitive subject it is expressed in both TAs by the suffixes and is thus treated like the object in แธซamแนญu and like the subject in maru except that its third person is expressed not only in แธซamแนญu but also in maru by the suffixes used for the object in the แธซamแนญu TA A major exception from this generalization are the plural forms in them not only the prefix as in the singular but also the suffix expresses the transitive subject Additionally the prefixes of the plural are identical to those of the singular or e e n b as opposed to the me re ne that are presumed for non pre stem position and some scholars believe that the prefixes of the 1st and second person are en rather than e when they stand for the object 81 Before the pronominal suffixes a suffix e d with a future or related modal meaning can be inserted accounting for occurrences of e in the third person singular maru of intransitive forms because of its meaning it can also be said to signal maru in these forms 78 The use of the personal affixes in conjugation can be summarised as follows แธซamแนญu maruDirect object Intransitive subject Transitive subject Direct object Intransitive subject Transitive subject1st sing en en O e O e en en2nd sing en en e e en en3rd sing animate O O n n O e3rd sing inanimate O O b b O e1st pl enden enden O e enden O e enden enden2nd pl enzen enzen e enzen e enzen enzen3rd pl animates only es es n es ne es eneExamples for TA and pronominal agreement แธซamแนญu is rendered with past tense maru with present i gub en I stood or I stand i n gub en he placed me or I place him i sug enden we stood stand i n dim enden he created us or we create him mu e dim enden we created someone or something i3 gub be2 i gub ed he will must stand ib2 gub be2 i b gub e he places it i b dim ene they create it i n dim es they created someone or something or he created them i sug es they stood or they stand Confusingly the subject and object prefixes n b e are not commonly spelled out in early texts although the full spellings do become more usual during the Third Dynasty of Ur in the Neo Sumerian period and especially during the Late Sumerian period Thus in earlier texts one finds mu ak and i3 ak e ak in early dynastic Lagash instead of mu un ak and in ak for mu n ak and i n ak he she made and also mu ak instead of mu e ak you made Similarly pre Ur III texts also spell the first and second person suffix en as e making it coincide with the third person in the maru form Stem Edit The verbal stem itself can also express grammatical distinctions The plurality of the absolutive participant 77 can be expressed by complete reduplication of the stem or by a suppletive stem Reduplication can also express plurality of the action itself 77 intensity or iterativity 46 With respect to TA marking verbs are divided in four types แธซamแนญu is always the unmarked TA The stems of the 1st type regular verbs do not express TA at all according to most scholars or according to M Yoshikawa and others express maru TA by adding an assimilating e as in gub be2 or gub bu vs gub which is however nowhere distinguishable from the first vowel of the pronominal suffixes except for intransitive maru 3rd person singular The 2nd type express maru by partial reduplication of the stem e g kur9 vs ku4 ku4 The 3rd type express maru by adding a consonant e g te vs teg 3 The 4th type use a suppletive stem e g dug4 vs e Thus as many as four different suppletive stems can exist as in the admittedly extreme case of the verb to go g en to go แธซamแนญu sing du maru sing e re7 แธซamแนญu plur sub2 maru plur Other issues Edit The nominalizing suffix a converts non finite and finite verbs into participles and relative clauses sum ma given 82 e mu na an sum ma which he gave to him who gave something to him etc Adding a after the future modal suffix ed produces a form with a meaning similar to the Latin gerundive sum mu da which will should be given On the other hand adding a locative terminative e after the ed yields a form with a meaning similar to the Latin ad gerund acc construction sum mu de3 in order to give The copula verb me to be is mostly used as an enclitic men men am menden menzen a mes The imperative mood construction is produced with a singular แธซamแนญu stem but using the maru agreement pattern by turning all prefixes into suffixes mu na an sum he gave something to him mu na e sum mu un ze2 en you plur gave something to him sum mu na ab give it to him sum mu na ab ze2 en give plur it to him Compare the French vous le lui donnez but donnez le lui 77 Syntax Edit The basic word order is subject object verb verb finality is only violated in rare instances in poetry The moving of a constituent towards the beginning of the phrase may be a way to highlight it 83 as may the addition of the copula to it The so called anticipatory genitive e2 a lugal bi the owner of the house temple lit of the house its owner is common and may signal the possessor s topicality 83 There are various ways to express subordination some of which have already been hinted at they include the nominalization of a verb which can then be followed by case morphemes and possessive pronouns kur9 ra ni when he entered f and included in prepositional constructions eg er a ma ru ba ur3 ra ta back flood conjugation prefix sweep over nominalizing suffix genitive suffix ablative suffix from the back of the Flood s sweeping over after the Flood had swept over Subordinating conjunctions such as ud da when if tukum bi if are also used though the coordinating conjunction u3 and a Semitic adoption is rarely used A specific problem of Sumerian syntax is posed by the numerous so called compound verbs which usually involve a noun immediately before the verb forming a lexical or idiomatic unit 84 e g su ti lit hand approach receive igi du8 lit eye open see Some of them are claimed to have a special agreement pattern that they share with causative constructions their logical object like the causee receives in the verb the directive infix but in the noun the dative suffix if animate and the directive if inanimate 79 Dialects EditThe standard variety of Sumerian was Emegir ๐’…ด๐’‚  eme gir A notable variety or sociolect was Emesal ๐’…ด๐’Šฉ eme sal possibly to be interpreted as fine tongue or high pitched voice Rubio 2007 p 1369 Other terms for dialects or registers were eme galam high tongue eme si sa straight tongue eme te na oblique tongue etc 85 Emesal is used exclusively by female characters in some literary texts that may be compared to the female languages or language varieties that exist or have existed in some cultures such as among the Chukchis and the Garifuna In addition it is dominant in certain genres of cult songs such as the hymns sung by Gala priests 86 The special features of Emesal are mostly phonological for example m is often used instead of g i e ล‹ as in me instead of standard g e26 for I but words different from the standard language are also used ga sa an rather than standard nin lady 87 Syllabary EditThe table below shows signs used for simple syllables of the form CV or VC As used for the Sumerian language the cuneiform script was in principle capable of distinguishing at least 16 consonants 88 89 transliterated as b d g g แธซ k l m n p r r s s t z as well as four vowel qualities a e i u The Akkadian language had no use for g or r but needed to distinguish its emphatic series q แนฃ แนญ adopting various superfluous Sumerian signs for the purpose e g qe KIN qu KUM qi KIN แนฃa ZA แนฃe ZI แนญur DUR etc clarification needed Hittite as it adopted the Akkadian cuneiform further introduced signs such as wi5 GESTIN Sale of a number of fields probably from Isin c 2600 BC Cylinder of Antiochus I c 250 BC The Antiochus cylinder written by Antiochus I Soter as great king of kings of Babylon restorer of gods E sagila and E zida circa 250 BC Written in traditional Akkadian with the same text in Babylonian and Assyrian given here for comparison 90 91 92 93 Antiochus I Soter with titles in Akkadian on the cylinder of Antiochus Antiochus King Great King King of multitudes King of Babylon King of countries Akkadian and Sumerian CV and VC syllabic glyphs Ca Ce Ci Cu aC eC iC uCa ๐’€€ a ๐’€‰ e ๐’‚Š e ๐’‚ i ๐’„ฟ i IA u ๐’Œ‹ u ๐’Œ‘ u ๐’…‡ a ๐’€€ a ๐’€‰ e ๐’‚Š e ๐’‚ i ๐’„ฟ i IA u ๐’Œ‹ u ๐’Œ‘ u ๐’…‡b ba ๐’€ ba PA ๐’‰บ ba ES ๐’Œ be BAD ๐’ be BI ๐’‰ be NI ๐’‰Œ bi ๐’‰ bi NE ๐’‰ˆ bi PI ๐’‰ฟ bu ๐’ bu KASKAL ๐’†œ bu PU ๐’…ค ab ๐’€Š ab ๐’€– eb IB ๐’… eb TUM ๐’Œˆ ib ๐’… ib TUM ๐’Œˆ ub ๐’Œ’ ub SE ๐’‚  bd da ๐’• da TA ๐’‹ซ de DI ๐’ฒ de de NE ๐’‰ˆ di ๐’ฒ di TI ๐’„ญ du ๐’บ du TU ๐’Œ… du GAG ๐’†• du4 TUM ๐’Œˆ ad ๐’€œ ad ๐’„‰ ed A ๐’€‰ id A ๐’€‰ id A ENGUR ๐’€€๐’‡‰ ud ๐’Œ“ ud AS ๐’€พ dg ga ๐’‚ต ga ๐’‚ท ge GI ๐’„€ ge KID ๐’†ค ge DIS ๐’น gi ๐’„€ gi KID ๐’†ค gi DIS ๐’น gi4 ๐’„„ gi5 KI ๐’†  gu ๐’„– gu ๐’„˜ gu KA ๐’…— gu4 ๐’„ž gu5 KU ๐’†ช gu6 NAG ๐’…˜ gu7 ๐’…ฅ ag ๐’€ ag ๐’‰˜ eg IG ๐’…… eg E ๐’‚Š ig ๐’…… ig E ๐’‚Š ug ๐’ŠŒ gแธซ แธซa ๐’„ฉ แธซa แธชI A ๐’„ญ๐’€€ แธซa U ๐’Œ‹ แธซa4 แธชI ๐’„ญ แธซe แธชI ๐’„ญ แธซe GAN ๐’ƒถ แธซi ๐’„ญ แธซi GAN ๐’ƒถ แธซu ๐’„ท aแธซ ๐’„ด aแธซ SES ๐’‹€ eแธซ Aแธช ๐’„ด iแธซ Aแธช ๐’„ด uแธซ Aแธช ๐’„ด uแธซ ๐’Œ” แธซk ka ๐’…— ka ๐’† ka GA ๐’‚ต ke KI ๐’†  ke GI ๐’„€ ki ๐’†  ki GI ๐’„€ ku ๐’†ช ๐’‚  ku GU7 ๐’…ฅ ku ๐’†ฌ ku4 ๐’†ญ ak AG ๐’€ ek IG ๐’…… ik IG ๐’…… uk UG ๐’ŠŒ k Akkadian Only q qa ๐’‹ก qa KA ๐’…— qa ๐’‚ต qe KIN ๐’†ฅ qe KI ๐’†  qe GI ๐’„€ qe GI ๐’„„ qi KIN ๐’†ฅ qi KI ๐’†  qi GI ๐’„€ qi GI ๐’„„ qu KUM ๐’†ช qu KI ๐’„ฃ qu GU ๐’„– aq AG ๐’€ eq IG ๐’…… iq IG ๐’…… uq UG ๐’ŠŒ ql la ๐’†ท la LAL ๐’‡ฒ la NU ๐’‰ก le LI ๐’‡ท le NI ๐’‰Œ li ๐’‡ท li NI ๐’‰Œ lu ๐’‡ป lu ๐’‡ฝ al ๐’€  al ALAM ๐’€ฉ el ๐’‚– el IL ๐’…‹ il ๐’…‹ il ๐’… ul ๐’ŒŒ ul NU ๐’‰ก lm ma ๐’ˆ  ma ๐’ˆฃ me ๐’ˆจ me MI ๐’ˆช me ๐’€ž ๐’…  mi ๐’ˆช mi MUNUS ๐’Šฉ mi ME ๐’ˆจ mu ๐’ˆฌ mu SAR ๐’Šฌ am ๐’„  ๐’‚” am AG ๐’‰˜ em IM ๐’…Ž im ๐’…Ž im KAS4 ๐’ฝ um ๐’Œ um UD ๐’Œ“ mn na ๐’ˆพ na ๐’ˆฟ na AG ๐’€ na4 NI UD ๐’‰Œ๐’Œ“ ne ๐’‰ˆ ne NI ๐’‰Œ ni ๐’‰Œ ni IM ๐’‰Ž nu ๐’‰ก nu NA ๐’ˆฟ an ๐’€ญ en ๐’‚— en en LI ๐’‡ท in ๐’…” in4 EN ๐’‚— in5 NIN ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ† un ๐’Œฆ un U ๐’Œ‹ np pa ๐’‰บ pa BA ๐’€ pa PAD3 ๐’…†๐’Š’ pe PI ๐’‰ฟ pe BI ๐’‰ pi ๐’‰ฟ pi BI ๐’‰ pi BAD ๐’ pu BU ๐’ pu TUL ๐’‡ฅ pu ๐’…ค ap AB ๐’€Š ep IB ๐’… ep TUM ๐’Œˆ ip IB ๐’… ip TUM ๐’Œˆ up UB ๐’Œ’ up SE ๐’‚  pr ra ๐’Š ra DU ๐’บ re RI ๐’Š‘ re URU ๐’Œท re LAGAB ๐’†ธ ri ๐’Š‘ ri URU ๐’Œท ri LAGAB ๐’†ธ ru ๐’Š’ ru GAG ๐’†• ru AS ๐’€ธ ar ๐’…ˆ ar UB ๐’Œ’ er IR ๐’…• ir ๐’…• ir A IGI ๐’€€๐’…† ur ๐’Œจ ur ๐’Œซ rs sa ๐’Š“ sa DI ๐’ฒ sa ZA ๐’ sa4 แธชU NA ๐’„ท๐’ˆพ se SI ๐’‹› se ZI ๐’ฃ si ๐’‹› si ZI ๐’ฃ su ๐’‹ข su ZU ๐’ช su SUD ๐’‹ค su4 ๐’‹œ as AZ ๐’Š es GIS ๐’„‘ es ES ๐’‚  is GIS ๐’„‘ is ES ๐’‚  us UZ us US ๐’‘ us ๐’‡‡ ss sa ๐’Šญ sa NIG sa ๐’Šฎ se ๐’Šบ se se ๐’‚  si IGI ๐’…† si SI ๐’‹› su ๐’‹— su ๐’‹™ su SE ๐’‚  su4 U ๐’Œ‹ as ๐’€ธ as ๐’€พ es ๐’Œ es SE ๐’‚  is ๐’…– is KASKAL ๐’†œ us ๐’‘ us BAD ๐’ st ta ๐’‹ซ ta DA ๐’• te ๐’‹ผ te TI ๐’Šน ti ๐’‹พ ti ๐’Šน ti DIM ๐’ด ti4 DI ๐’ฒ tu ๐’Œ… tu UD ๐’Œ“ tu DU ๐’บ at AD ๐’€œ at GIR gunu ๐’„‰ et A ๐’€‰ it A ๐’€‰ ut UD ๐’Œ“ ut AS ๐’€พ tz za ๐’ za NA4 ๐’‰Œ๐’Œ“ ze ZI ๐’ฃ ze ZI ๐’ข zi ๐’ฃ zi ๐’ข zi ๐’ฅ zu ๐’ช zu KA ๐’…— az ๐’Š ez GIS ๐’„‘ ez ES ๐’‚  iz GIS ๐’„‘ iz IS ๐’…– uz SE amp HU ๐’Šป uz US ๐’‘ uz ๐’š z Sumerian Only g g a GA ๐’‚ท g e26 GA ๐’‚ท g i6 MI ๐’ˆช g u10 MU ๐’ˆฌ ag AG ๐’‰˜ eg AG ๐’‰˜ ig AG ๐’‰˜ ug UN ๐’Œฆ Sumerian Only g Sumerian Only r ra DU ๐’บ re6 DU ๐’บ rSample text EditInscription by Entemena of Lagas Edit See also Entemena and Lagash This text was inscribed on a small clay cone c 2400 BC It recounts the beginning of a war between the city states of Lagas and Umma during the Early Dynastic III period one of the earliest border conflicts recorded RIME 1 09 05 01 94 Cone of Enmetena king of Lagash Room 236 Reference AO 3004 Louvre Museum 95 94 I 1 7๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†คden lil2๐’ˆ—lugal๐’†ณ๐’†ณ๐’Škur kur ra๐’€Š๐’€ab ba๐’€ญ๐’€ญ๐’Œท๐’‰ˆ๐’†คdig ir dig ir re2 ne ke4๐’…—inim๐’„€๐’ˆพ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซgi na ni ta๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ขdnin g ir2 su๐’€ญ๐’‡‹๐’‰dsara2 bi๐’† ki๐’‚Š๐’‰ˆ๐’‹ฉe ne sur๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค ๐’ˆ— ๐’†ณ๐’†ณ๐’Š ๐’€Š๐’€ ๐’€ญ๐’€ญ๐’Œท๐’‰ˆ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’„€๐’ˆพ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ ๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข ๐’€ญ๐’‡‹๐’‰ ๐’†  ๐’‚Š๐’‰ˆ๐’‹ฉden lil2 lugal kur kur ra ab ba dig ir dig ir re2 ne ke4 inim gi na ni ta dnin g ir2 su dsara2 bi ki e ne sur Enlil king of all the lands father of all the gods by his firm command fixed the border between Ningirsu and Sara 8 12๐’ˆจ๐’ฒme silim๐’ˆ—lugal๐’†ง๐’† ๐’†คkiski ke4๐’…—inim๐’€ญ๐’…—๐’ฒ๐’ˆพ๐’‹ซdistaran na ta๐’‚ es2๐’ƒทgana2๐’‰๐’Šbe2 ra๐’† ๐’€ki ba๐’ˆพna๐’‰ˆ๐’†•bi2 ru2๐’ˆจ๐’ฒ ๐’ˆ— ๐’†ง๐’† ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’€ญ๐’…—๐’ฒ๐’ˆพ๐’‹ซ ๐’‚  ๐’ƒท ๐’‰๐’Š ๐’† ๐’€ ๐’ˆพ ๐’‰ˆ๐’†•me silim lugal kiski ke4 inim distaran na ta es2 gana2 be2 ra ki ba na bi2 ru2 Mesilim king of Kis at the command of Istaran measured the field and set up a stele there 13 17๐’‘us๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›ensi2๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’†คummaki ke4๐’‰†nam๐’…—๐’ˆ inim ma๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‚ diri diri se3๐’‚Š๐’€e ak๐’‘ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’†ค ๐’‰† ๐’…—๐’ˆ  ๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‹›๐’€€๐’‚  ๐’‚Š๐’€us ensi2 ummaki ke4 nam inim ma diri diri se3 e ak Ush ruler of Umma acted unspeakably 18 21๐’ˆพ๐’†•๐’€€๐’‰na ru2 a bi๐’‰Œ๐’‰ปi3 pad๐’‚”edin๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’‚ lagaski se3๐’‰Œ๐’บi3 g en๐’ˆพ๐’†•๐’€€๐’‰ ๐’‰Œ๐’‰ป ๐’‚” ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’‚  ๐’‰Œ๐’บna ru2 a bi i3 pad edin lagaski se3 i3 g en He ripped out that stele and marched toward the plain of Lagas 22 27๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ขdnin g ir2 su๐’Œจ๐’Š•ur sag๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’†คden lil2 la2 ke4๐’…—inim๐’‹›๐’ฒ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซsi sa2 ni ta๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’•ummaki da๐’ฎ๐’„ฉ๐’Šdam แธซa ra๐’‚Š๐’•๐’€e da ak๐’€ญ๐’Šฉ๐’Œ†๐’„ˆ๐’‹ข ๐’Œจ๐’Š• ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’†ค ๐’…— ๐’‹›๐’ฒ๐’‰Œ๐’‹ซ ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’• ๐’ฎ๐’„ฉ๐’Š ๐’‚Š๐’•๐’€dnin g ir2 su ur sag den lil2 la2 ke4 inim si sa2 ni ta ummaki da dam แธซa ra e da ak Ningirsu warrior of Enlil at his just command made war with Umma 28 31๐’…—inim๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’‹ซden lil2 la2 ta๐’Š“sa๐’Œ‹su4๐’ƒฒgal๐’‰ˆ๐’Œ‹bi2 su4๐’…–๐’‡ฏ๐’‹บ๐’‰SAแธชAR DU6 TAKA4 bi๐’‚”๐’ˆพeden na๐’† ki๐’€๐’‰Œ๐’‘๐’‘ba ni us2 us2๐’…— ๐’€ญ๐’‚—๐’†ค๐’‡ฒ๐’‹ซ ๐’Š“ ๐’Œ‹ ๐’ƒฒ ๐’‰ˆ๐’Œ‹ ๐’…–๐’‡ฏ๐’‹บ๐’‰ ๐’‚”๐’ˆพ ๐’†  ๐’€๐’‰Œ๐’‘๐’‘inim den lil2 la2 ta sa su4 gal bi2 su4 SAแธชAR DU6 TAKA4 bi eden na ki ba ni us2 us2 At Enlil s command he threw his great battle net over it and heaped up burial mounds for it on the plain 32 38๐’‚๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’บe2 an na tum2๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›ensi2๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† lagaski๐’‰บ๐’„‘๐’‰‹๐’‚ตpa bil3 ga๐’‚—๐’‹ผ๐’ˆจ๐’ˆพen mete na๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›ensi2๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’…—๐’†คlagaski ka ke4๐’‚๐’€ญ๐’ˆพ๐’บ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’†  ๐’‰บ๐’„‘๐’‰‹๐’‚ต ๐’‚—๐’‹ผ๐’ˆจ๐’ˆพ ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’‰ข๐’“๐’†ท๐’† ๐’…—๐’†คe2 an na tum2 ensi2 lagaski pa bil3 ga en mete na ensi2 lagaski ka ke4 Eannatum ruler of Lagash uncle of Entemena ruler of Lagas 39 42๐’‚—๐’€‰๐’†—๐’‡ทen a2 kal le๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹›ensi2๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’•ummaki da๐’† ki๐’‚Š๐’•๐’‹ฉe da sur๐’‚—๐’€‰๐’†—๐’‡ท ๐’‰บ๐’‹ผ๐’‹› ๐’„‘๐’†ต๐’† ๐’• ๐’†  ๐’‚Š๐’•๐’‹ฉen a2 kal le ensi2 ummaki da ki e da sur fixed the border with Enakale ruler of Umma See also Edit Languages portal Asia portalList of extinct languages of Asia List of languages by first written accounts Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary Sumerian literatureReferences EditNotes Edit a b c Not usually transcribed In some cases k is omitted For example as in e2 lugal la The house of the king originally it should be e2 lugal ak but because of auslaut and k omission it turned into e2 lugal la However k reappears if another grammatical marker is added as in e2 lugal la ke ne with the plural marker ene The naming and number of cases vary according to differing analyses of Sumerian linguistics But apparently e in the plural see below The reduplication of the consonants m in this example is an auslaut Find more info in this link A newer interpretation is that the last syllable in such examples is to be read ne i e 3rd person possessive ni plus directive e In contrast in the 1st and 2nd persons we find this apparent ni attached to 1st and 2nd person pronouns zig a g u ni as I rose which leads Jagersma to interpret it as an otherwise obsolete locative ending lit at my rising Jagersma 2009 672 674 Citations Edit Michalowski Piotr 2012 Emesal Sumerian dialect The Encyclopedia of Ancient History doi 10 1002 9781444338386 wbeah24071 ISBN 9781405179355 Archived from the original on 2023 05 09 Retrieved 2023 05 09 a b c d e Prince J Dyneley 1919 Phonetic Relations in Sumerian PDF Journal of the American Oriental Society 39 265 279 doi 10 2307 592740 JSTOR 592740 Archived PDF from the original on 2023 05 09 Retrieved 2023 05 09 Prince J Dyneley 1904 The Vocabulary of Sumerian PDF Journal of the American Oriental Society 25 49 67 doi 10 2307 592549 JSTOR 592549 a b c Woods C 2006 Bilingualism Scribal Learning and the Death of Sumerian Archived 2013 04 29 at the Wayback Machine In S L Sanders ed Margins of Writing Origins of Culture 91 120 Chicago Joan Oates 1979 Babylon Revised Edition Thames and Hudston Ltd 1986 p 30 52 53 The A K Grayson Penguin Encyclopedia of Ancient Civilizations ed Arthur Cotterell Penguin Books Ltd 1980 p 92 THUREAU DANGIN F 1911 Notes Assyriologiques Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 8 3 138 141 ISSN 0373 6032 JSTOR 23284567 Site officiel du musee du Louvre cartelfr louvre fr Archived from the original on 2020 07 15 Retrieved 2020 05 10 Hallo William W On the Antiquity of Sumerian Literature Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 83 no 2 pp 167 76 1962 Michalowski P 2006 The Lives of the Sumerian Language Archived 2013 04 29 at the Wayback Machine in S L Sanders ed Margins of Writing Origins of Cultures Chicago 159 184 1 Archived 2021 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Eleanor Robson Information Flows in Rural Babylonia c 1500 BC in C Johnston ed The Concept of the Book the Production Progression and Dissemination of Information London Institute of English Studies School of Advanced Study January 2019 ISBN 9780992725747 Piotr Michalowski Sumerian The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages Ed Roger D Woodard 2004 Cambridge University Press Pages 19 59 Georges Roลญ 1993 Ancient Iraq 3rd ed London Penguin Books p 80 82 Joan Oates 1986 Babylon Rev ed London Thames and Hudson p 19 John Haywood 2005 The Penguin Historical Atlas of Ancient Civilizations London Penguin Books p 28 Piotr Michalowski Sumerian The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages 2004 Cambridge pg 22 Dewart Leslie 1989 Evolution and Consciousness The Role of Speech in the Origin and Development of Human Nature p 260 unige ch in French 16 November 2006 Archived from the original on 19 October 2014 Retrieved 10 February 2014 inrp fr in French Archived from the original on 2020 05 19 Retrieved 2014 02 10 DIAKONOFF Igor M 1997 External Connections of the Sumerian Language Mother Tongue 3 54 63 Sathasivam A 2017 Proto Sumero Dravidian The Common Origin of Sumerian and Dravidian Languages Kingston UK History and Heritage Unit Tamil Information Centre ISBN 9781852010249 a b Simo Parpola July 23 2007 Sumerian A Uralic language Language in the Ancient Near East Compte rendu de la 53e Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale Moscow work in process Gostony C G 1975 Dictionnaire d etymologie sumerienne et grammaire comparee Paris Zakar Andras 1971 Sumerian Ural Altaic affinities Current Anthropology 12 2 215 225 doi 10 1086 201193 JSTOR 2740574 S2CID 143879460 a b c d Aleksi Sahala 2009 2012 Sumero Indo European Language Contacts PDF University of Helsinki Archived PDF from the original on 2019 12 22 Retrieved 2014 10 07 Bobula Ida 1951 Sumerian affiliations A Plea for Reconsideration Washington D C Mimeographed ms Bomhard Allan R amp PJ Hopper 1984 Toward Proto Nostratic a new approach to the comparison of Proto Indo European and Proto Afroasiatic Current Issues in Linguistic Theory Jan Braun 2004 SUMERIAN AND TIBETO BURMAN Additional Studies Wydawnictwo Agade Warszawa ISBN 83 87111 32 5 Yurii Mosenkis Austro Asiatic Elamite and Tibeto Burman Sumerian the traces of the Eurasian Supermacrofamily Homeland in West Asia Archived from the original on 2022 01 21 Retrieved 2015 04 28 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Ruhlen Merritt 1994 The Origin of Language Tracing the Evolution of the Mother Tongue New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 143 Hoyrup Jens 1998 Sumerian The descendant of a proto historical creole An alternative approach to the Sumerian problem Published AIWN Annali del Dipartimento di Studi del Mondo Classico e del Mediterraneo Antico Sezione linguistica Istituto Universitario Orientale Napoli 14 1992 publ 1994 21 72 Figs 1 3 Available in http akira ruc dk jensh Publications Sumerian 20Creole pdf Archived 2023 04 20 at the Wayback Machine Rubio Gonzalo 1999 On the alleged pre Sumerian substratum Journal of Cuneiform Studies 51 1999 1 16 doi 10 2307 1359726 JSTOR 1359726 S2CID 163985956 Whittaker Gordon 2008 The Case for Euphratic PDF Bulletin of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences Tbilisi 2 3 156 168 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 11 December 2012 Edzard Dietz Otto Wann ist Sumerisch als gesprochene Sprache ausgestorben Acta Sumerologica 22 pp 53 70 2000 Krejci Jaroslav 1990 Before the European Challenge The Great Civilizations of Asia and the Middle East SUNY Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 7914 0168 2 Memoires Mission archeologique en Iran 1900 p 53 Kevin J Cathcart The Earliest Contributions to the Decipherment of Sumerian and Akkadian Archived 2011 06 16 at the Wayback Machine Cuneiform Digital Library Journal 2011 In Keilschrift Transcription und Ubersetzung nebst ausfuhrlichem Commentar und zahlreichen Excursen eine assyriologische Studie Leipzig J C Hinrichs 1879 Prince J Dyneley The Vocabulary of Sumerian Journal of the American Oriental Society vol 25 pp 49 67 1904 Sumerian Assyrian Vocabularies Kramer Samuel Noah 1961 1944 Sumerian Mythology Archived from the original on 2005 05 25 Retrieved 2005 09 23 Diakonoff 1976 112 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2019 08 03 Retrieved 2018 09 23 Keetman J 2007 Gab es ein h im Sumerischen In Babel und Bibel 3 p 21 a b Michalowski Piotr 2008 Sumerian In Woodard Roger D ed The Ancient Languages of Mesopotamia Egypt and Aksum Cambridge University Press P 16 Jagersma Bram January 2000 Sound change in Sumerian the so called dr phoneme Acta Sumerologica 22 81 87 Archived from the original on 2023 03 19 Retrieved 2015 11 23 a b Sumerian language The ETCSL project Faculty of Oriental Studies University of Oxford 2005 03 29 Archived from the original on 2008 09 02 Retrieved 2011 07 30 Attinger Pascal 1993 Elements de linguistique sumerienne p 212 2 Keetman J 2007 Gab es ein h im Sumerischen In Babel und Bibel 3 passim Jagersma Abraham Hendrik 4 November 2010 A descriptive grammar of Sumerian openaccess leidenuniv nl Thesis pp 33 388 Archived from the original on 2015 10 16 Retrieved 2018 03 13 a b c Smith Eric J M 2007 ATR Harmony and the Vowel Inventory of Sumerian Journal of Cuneiform Studies volume 57 a b c Keetman J 2013 Die sumerische Wurzelharmonie Babel und Bibel 7 p 109 154 Zolyomi Gabor 2016 An introduction to the grammar of Sumerian P 12 13 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 09 16 Retrieved 2018 09 16 Keetman J 2009 The limits of ATR vowel harmony in Sumerian and some remarks about the need of transparent data Archived 2016 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Nouvelles Assyriologiques Breves et Utilitaires 2009 No 65 Michalowski Piotr 2008 Sumerian In Woodard Roger D ed The Ancient Languages of Mesopotamia Egypt and Aksum Cambridge University Press P 17 Gabor Zolyomi An Introduction to the Grammar of Sumerian Archived 2017 04 06 at the Wayback Machine Open Access textbook Budapest 2017 Introduction to Sumerian grammar by Daniel A Foxvog Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine at CDLI Kausen Ernst 2006 Sumerische Sprache p 9 Archived from the original on 2009 09 27 Retrieved 2006 02 06 Zolyomi Gabor 1993 Voice and Topicalization in Sumerian PhD Dissertation 3 Archived 2008 10 01 at the Wayback Machine a b Johnson Cale 2004 In the Eye of the Beholder Quantificational Pragmatic and Aspectual Features of the bi Verbal Formation in Sumerian Dissertation UCLA Los Angeles 4 Archived 2013 06 22 at the Wayback Machine Jagersma 2010 137 Zolyomi Gabor 2014 Grzegorek Katarzyna Borowska Anna Kirk Allison eds Copular Clauses and Focus Marking in Sumerian De Gruyter p 8 ISBN 978 3 11 040169 1 Retrieved 21 July 2016 Stephen Chrisomalis 2010 Numerical Notation A Comparative History Cambridge University Press p 236 ISBN 9780521878180 Retrieved 2021 02 25 Halloran pdf 1999 p 46 Halloran pdf 1999 p 37 Halloran pdf 1999 p 8 Halloran pdf 1999 p 35 a b Halloran pdf 1999 p 11 Halloran pdf 1999 a b Halloran pdf 1999 p 59 Halloran pdf 1999 p 20 Jagersma 2010 244 See e g Rubio 2007 Attinger 1993 Zolyomi 2005 Sumerisch In Sprachen des Alten Orients ed M Streck PPCS Morphological model Archived October 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine E g Attinger 1993 Rubio 2007 Rubio 2007 and references therein Zolyomi 1993 Also Woods Cristopher 2008 The Grammar of Perspective The Sumerian Conjugation Prefixes as a System of Voice a b E g Zolyomi 1993 a b c d e f Rubio 2007 a b c Zolyomi 2005 a b Zolyomi 2000 Structural interference from Akkadian in Old Babylonian Sumerian PDF Acta Sumerologica 22 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 02 28 Retrieved 2008 07 20 Zolyomi 1993 Attinger 1993 Attinger 1993 Khachikyan 2007 Towards the Aspect System in Sumerian In Babel und Bibel 3 Epsd2 Sux sum give Archived from the original on 2021 09 26 Retrieved 2021 02 21 a b Zolyomi 1993 Johnson 2004 22 Sylvain Auroux 2000 History of the Language Sciences Vol 1 p 2 ISBN 9783110194005 Hartmann Henrike 1960 Die Musik der Sumerischen Kultur p 138 Rubio 2007 Morphology of Asia and Africa p 1370 ISBN 9781575061092 Foxvog Daniel A Introduction to Sumerian grammar PDF pp 16 17 20 21 Archived PDF from the original on January 3 2017 about phonemes g and r and their representation using cuneiform signs Jagersma A H A descriptive grammar of Sumerian PDF Thesis pp 43 45 50 51 Archived PDF from the original on November 25 2015 about phonemes g and r and their representation using cuneiform signs Haubold Johannes 2013 Greece and Mesopotamia Dialogues in Literature Cambridge University Press p 135 ISBN 978 1 107 01076 5 Andrade Nathanael J 2013 Syrian Identity in the Greco Roman World Cambridge University Press p 46 ISBN 978 1 107 24456 6 Antiochus cylinder British Museum Archived from the original on 2019 04 01 Retrieved 2023 05 09 Wallis Budge Ernest Alfred 1884 Babylonian Life and History Religious Tract Society p 94 a b CDLI Found Texts cdli ucla edu Archived from the original on 2018 03 13 Retrieved 2018 03 12 Cone of Enmetena king of Lagash 2020 Archived from the original on 2020 02 27 Retrieved 2020 02 27 Bibliography EditAttinger Pascal 1993 Elements de linguistique sumerienne La construction de du11 e di Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 3 7278 0869 1 Delitzsch Friedrich 1914 Grundzuge der sumerischen Grammatik J C Hinrichs OCLC 923551546 Dewart Leslie 1989 Evolution and Consciousness The Role of Speech in the Origin and Development of Human Nature Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 2690 7 Diakonoff I M 1976 Ancient Writing and Ancient Written Language Pitfalls and Peculiarities in the Study of Sumerian PDF Assyriological Studies 20 Sumerological Studies in Honor of Thorkild Jakobsen 99 121 Archived PDF from the original on 2019 08 03 Retrieved 2018 09 23 Edzard Dietz Otto 2003 Sumerian Grammar Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 12608 2 grammar treatment for the advanced student Halloran John 11 August 1999 Sumerian Lexicon PDF Sumerian Language Page Archived PDF from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 20 February 2021 Halloran John Alan 2006 Sumerian Lexicon A Dictionary Guide to the Ancient Sumerian Language Logogram Pub ISBN 978 0978 64291 4 Hayes John 1990 3rd revised ed 2018 A Manual of Sumerian Grammar and Texts UNDENA Malibu CA ISBN 978 0 9798937 4 2 primer for the beginning student Hayes John 1997 Sumerian Languages of the World Materials 68 LincomEuropa Munich ISBN 3 929075 39 3 41 pp precis of the grammar Jagersma B 2009 A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian Universitet Leiden The Netherlands Jestin J 1951 Abrege de Grammaire Sumerienne Geuthner Paris ISBN 2 7053 1743 0 118pp overview and sketch in French Langdon Stephen Herbert 1911 A Sumerian Grammar and Chrestomathy with a Vocabulary of the Principal Roots in Sumerian and List of the Most Important Syllabic and Vowel Transcriptions by Stephen Langdon P Geuthner OCLC 251014503 Michalowski Piotr 1980 Sumerian as an Ergative Language Journal of Cuneiform Studies 32 2 86 103 doi 10 2307 1359671 JSTOR 1359671 S2CID 164022054 Michalowski Piotr 2004 Sumerian The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages pp 19 59 ed Roger Woodward Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 05 2156 256 0 Pinches Theophilus G Further Light upon the Sumerian Language Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1914 pp 436 40 Prince John D 1908 Materials for a Sumerian lexicon with a grammatical introduction Assyriologische Bibliothek 19 Hinrichs OCLC 474982763 Prince J Dynely October 1914 Delitzsch s Sumerian Grammar American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures U of Chicago 31 1 67 78 doi 10 1086 369755 ISSN 1062 0516 S2CID 170226826 Rubio Gonzalo 2007 Sumerian Morphology In Morphologies of Asia and Africa vol 2 pp 1327 1379 Edited by Alan S Kaye Eisenbrauns Winona Lake IN ISBN 1 57506 109 0 Thomsen Marie Louise 2001 1984 The Sumerian Language An Introduction to Its History and Grammatical Structure Copenhagen Akademisk Forlag ISBN 87 500 3654 8 Well organized with over 800 translated text excerpts Volk Konrad 1997 A Sumerian Reader Rome Pontificio Istituto Biblico ISBN 88 7653 610 8 collection of Sumerian texts some transcribed none translated Zolyomi Gabor 2017 An Introduction to the Grammar of Sumerian Open Access textbook Budapest Further reading EditFriedrich Delitzsch 1914 Sumerisches glossar J C Hinrichs p 295 Retrieved 2011 07 05 Ebeling J amp Cunningham G 2007 Analysing literary Sumerian corpus based approaches London Equinox ISBN 1 84553 229 5 5 Archived 2023 03 11 at the Wayback MachineGeng Jinrui An Outline of the Synchronic and Diachronic Variations of Sumerian 2nd International Conference on Education Language and Art ICELA 2022 Atlantis Press 2023 Halloran J A 2007 Sumerian lexicon a dictionary guide to the ancient Sumerian language Los Angeles Calif Logogram ISBN 0 9786429 1 0 Shin Shifra Jacob Klein 1996 In Those Far Days Tel Aviv Am Oved and The Israeli Center for Libraries project for translating Exemplary Literature to Hebrew This is an anthology of Sumerian and Akkadian poetry translated into Hebrew External links EditGeneral Akkadian Unicode Font to see Cuneiform text Archive Linguistic overviews A Descriptive Grammar of Sumerian by Abraham Hendrik Jagersma preliminary version Sumerisch An overview of Sumerian by Ernst Kausen in German Chapter VI of Magie chez les Chaldeens et les origines accadiennes 1874 by Francois Lenormant the state of the art in the dawn of Sumerology by the author of the first ever 6 grammar of Akkadian Dictionaries Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary EPSD Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary EPSD 2 Elementary Sumerian Glossary by Daniel A Foxvog after M Civil 1967 The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature ETCSL Includes translations CDLI Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative a large corpus of Sumerian texts in transliteration largely from the Early Dynastic and Ur III periods accessible with images Research Online publications arising from the ETCSL project PDF Structural Interference from Akkadian in Old Babylonian Sumerian by Gabor Zolyomi PDF Other online publications by Gabor Zolyomi PDF The Life and Death of the Sumerian Language in Comparative Perspective by Piotr Michalowski Online publications by Cale Johnson PDF Elements de linguistique sumerienne by Pascal Attinger 1993 in French at the digital library RERO DOC Parts 1 4 Part 5 The Origin of Ergativity in Sumerian and the Inversion in Pronominal Agreement A Historical Explanation Based on Neo Aramaic parallels by E Coghill amp G Deutscher 2002 at the Internet Archive The Wikibook en Sumerian has a page on the topic of Sumerian language Wiktionary has a word list at Appendix Sumerian basic vocabulary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sumerian language amp oldid 1162163725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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