Ad. anâ n. (weak-II gendered common) “human being” (Category: Human Being)
A noun translated “human being” (SD/426) given as an example of a noun ending in a long vowel that (archaically) uses the declension for a strong-noun (SD/437), an example of the extremely rare class of Strong-IIb nouns. By the time of Classical Adûnaic, it could be declined as an ordinary weak-noun instead. It also had masculine and feminine variants anû “(human) man” and anî “(human) woman” (SD/434) but in ordinary speech it seems likely that more specific words would be used: narû “man, male”, zinî “female”, kali “woman”.
References ✧ SD/426, 434, 437-438
Glosses
Variations
Inflections
anāt | dual | ✧ SD/437 | |
anī | fem | “a female” | ✧ SD/434 |
anū | masc | “a male, man” | ✧ SD/434 |
anū- | objective; archaic-strong-objective | ✧ SD/437 | |
anāi | plural | ✧ SD/437: weak | |
anī | plural; archaic-strong-plural | ✧ SD/437 | |
anīm | plural subjective; archaic-strong-plural | ✧ SD/437 | |
anān | subjective | ✧ SD/437 |