ETCSLtranslation : t.6.2.1 |
Ni 4166 (Alster 1997 pp. 293-294)Segment A1-3. 4-11. Segment B1-2. Get on with (?) your assigned work! 3-9. ...... more than a house ...... field ....... The dragon doesn't ...... its rival. In building a house ...... 10-13. 14-17. The palace's water is coming out ....... Segment C1-2. ...... not ...... to the house. He will not found a city. 3-4. ...... meadow grass is the milk of a lettuce. 5-6. A reed worker ...... the breast of a storm ...... are many. 7. ...... butting against ....... 8-13. N 4248 (Alster 1997 pp. 290-291)Segment A1-2. 3-7. 8-13. (cf. Ni 9824 Seg. B ll. 3-5, 6.1.09.d4, 6.2.3: UET 6/2 315 ll. 10-13) 14-15. ...... good ...... eat ....... Segment B1. 2-3. 4-9. N 3395 (Alster 1997 pp. 288-290)Segment A1-3. 4-8. The donkey of Ancan, the bear (?) of Marhaci, the cat of Meluha, the elephant of the eastern mountains, bite off Euphrates poplars as if they were leeks. 9. A pickaxe put in the ...... clay is a mongoose in its city. Segment B1-2. In a complaint, half a gur from the desert ...... seized like a lord ....... 3-5. He cannot ...... in his hand. He does not listen ....... He scratches on the ground. 6-7. A courtesan who ...... in the streets ...... doesn't give ...... to a fallen man. 8-9. Like a wild ass which has put ....... 10-11. He who rubbed (?) his nose against a beer vat or a large beer container (?) ....... 12-13. Ni 4469 (Alster 1997 pp. 295-296)Segment A1-4. (cf. 6.1.01.40, 6.1.19.f4) Let ...... be ....... Let his bread be foul food. No man should eat it. 5. 6-8. 9-12. (cf. 6.1.03.31, 6.1.09.b1, 6.1.11.18, 6.1.15.b8, 6.1.25.4) He captured Simurrum but did not destroy its walls. He built E-ana but then abandoned it. He did not see mighty kingship. Thus Nanni was carried off to the nether world despondent. Segment B1. 2-3. 4-5. 6. ...... someone ...... the mounds. 7. Why ......? Segment C1-3. Ni 13186 (Alster 1997 p. 297)Segment A1. 2-3. 4. 5-6. 7-8. (cf. 6.1.13.27) ...... accept ...... one-third ....... 9. Segment B1. ...... no-one ....... 2. (cf. 6.1.01.95) ...... you are not a man. 3. 4-5. 6. Ni 9697 (Alster 1997 p. 297)Segment A1. 2. 3. ...... seek out ....... 4. On his returning ....... 5. Like a ...... he won't return to his house. 6. ...... a strong man. 7. ...... he rolled ....... Segment B1-2. ...... cut it ...... you will be ill. 3-4. ...... bought ....... ...... dead ....... 5-6. ...... open ...... Ni 9824 (Alster 1997 p. 297)Segment A1-2. (cf. 6.1.02.1, 6.1.07.1, 6.2.3: UET 6/2 356 ll. 3-8) You should not eradicate their place in the universe. You should not move the oxen from their places! 3. (cf. 6.1.02.83) An ox is walking around (?); a mace is ....... 4. (cf. 6.1.02.4) I looked into the water. My destiny was drifting past. 5. Segment B1-2. 3-5. (cf. N 4248 Seg. A ll. 8-13, 6.1.09.d4, 6.2.3: UET 6/2 315 ll. 10-13) ...... because of ....... ...... because of ...... I am finished. Segment C1-3. (cf. 6.1.03.42, 6.1.22: ll. 278-279, 6.2.5: YBC 8713 l. 7) If there is a dispute at the mill, a slave girl reveals (?) what she has stolen. Ni 9832 (Alster 1997 p. 297)Segment A1-3. ...... my ....... Let there be ....... ...... my heart. 4. Segment B1-4. 5-7. (cf. 6.1.03.45, 6.1.07.43) ...... finger. You are forever pushing like a millstone torn out of its joint. N 6119 (Alster 1997 p. 292) and N 4047 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 8)1. 2-4. What is ...... your mockery to me? ...... whatever he will do ...... to my accounts. 5-6. Come on, clown! Just for once, say: "...... my hips are heavier than 50 mana weight." 8-10. A clown made fun of the city. They made fun of him and he wept. Ni 3318 (Alster 1997 p. 293)Segment A1. 2-5. (cf. 6.1.02.59-60) The vixen quenched her thirst but still her motherly teats were dry. Each fox is even more ...... than its mother. 6. (cf. 6.1.02.61, 6.2.5: P 374) If the hearing of the fox ....... Segment B1. 2. 3-4. Ni 4338 + 4340 (Alster 1997 pp. 294-295)1. 2-5. ...... when his ...... looks around, who ...... child? ...... without ...... raise ....... 6-10. ...... sit ...... his hands for me. I will ....... How can I ......? ...... make it strong for you ...... make it strong ...... Ni 4122 (Alster 1997 p. 293)1. 2-5. (cf. 6.1.03.8) To spit without covering it up with dust, to kiss with the tongue at midday without providing shade, 6-9. Ni 4300 (Alster 1997 p. 294)Segment A1. 2. 3. 4-6. (cf. 6.1.02.6) My fate is her voice: my mother can change it. 7. 8. Segment B1. Ni 5327 (Alster 1997 pp. 296-297)1-2. (cf. 6.2.3: UET 6/2 247) The ...... bird ...... town square ....... 3-6. The ...... bird ...... may it ...... my ...... 7-9. The ...... bird ...... Ni 4099 (Alster 1997 p. 293)1-2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. ...... you ....... 8. ...... yours. N 3059 (Alster 1997 p. 430)1. ...... no-one has ....... 2. 3. ...... a modest wife ....... 4-5. ...... he will cause a fight ...... 6-7. N 5225 (Alster 1997 pp. 291-292)1. ...... ploughing ...... not ...... a gur. 2-3. Let great men stir up the conflict for lesser men to fight out. 4-6. The little fellow loves his mother; an older brother ...... an older brother. The man in charge of the offerings (?) ...... a proper (?) offering. 7. Ni 9829 (Alster 1997 p. 297)1. 2-7. Ni 5271 (Alster 1997 p. 296)1. 2. 3. ...... that smells, really smells. 4. ...... smells, cheese of the anus. 5. ......, one born into debt (?). 6. ...... who sleeps ...... of the fire. N 7577 + N 7578 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 10)1. 2. 3-4. ...... my god's heart ...... 5. Ni 3981 (Alster 1997 p. 293)1. Prayer has given birth to his life. 2-4. Where ...... you ....... Where ...... you ....... The son of the just man lies hungry. 5. CBS 12666 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 3)1. 2-4. N 1905 (Alster 1997 pl. 114)1. 2. 3-4. N 3884 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 7)1. 2. 3-4. CBS 14213 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1-3. You ...... a single instruction: "Let me please your heart, let me ...... my strength!" IM 58660 = 3N-T 731 (Alster 1997 p. 305)1-3. Thus speaks a widow, a man's junior wife: "What can widows become? They cannot be principal wives!" N 4909 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 9)1. 2-3. N 5569 (Veldhuis 2000 p. 395)1-3. Do not be hostile to the weakling; do not cry for the strong one. To the craftsman his arm ....... CBS 3811 (Alster 1997 p. 303)1-2. The ox has broken its sinews and is lying in its yoke. CBS 5971 (Alster 1997 pl. 114)1-2. CBS 7968 (Alster 1997 p. 303)1-2. I prostrate myself for the sake of Gula, my lady, but in my own eyes I don't have a place to stand. IM 58400 = 3N-T 242 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1-2. Don't cause the oven in a man's house to smoke. The smoke will ruin (?) the bread. N 6194 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1-2. Come, you are our son, even from when you did not exist! UM 55-21-38 = 2N-T 172 (Alster 1997 p. 305)1-2. It went up to heaven, it rose to heaven. UM 55-21-278 = 3N-T 179 (Alster 1997 p. 305)1-2. The fox gnashed its teeth and shook its head. 3N-T 232 + 244 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1-2. The ditches of the garden should not flow with water, or there will be vermin. CBS 6551 (Alster 1997 p. 303)1. Is my ox to provide milk for you? CBS 7867 (Alster 1997 p. 303)1. Like a man who eats sesame oil, his anus farts. CBS 11372 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1. Talking endlessly is what humankind has most on its mind. N 2182 (Veldhuis 2000 fig. 5)1. N 5925 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1. He wipes his bread on the pig. UM 29-16-394 (Alster 1997 p. 305)1. May the king live in his favourite city. 3N-T 161 (Alster 1997 p. 304)1. Your role in life is unknown. 3N-T 772 = TIM 10/1 132 (Alster 1997 p. 305)1. Your ox with its large horns will always return to you. |
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