ETCSLglossingSignSign name: GUM (KUM)
Values: gum, kum, nag̃a4, qum

The lament for Urim (c.2.2.2), line c222.E.94
udtur-bi-še3bal-ĝu10udsag9-gabal-ĝu10udsag9-gai-bi2ba-ra-bi2-in-du8-a
UDTUR-BI-šE3BAL-ĝU10UDSAG9-GABAL-ĝU10UDSAG9-GAI-BI2BA-RA-BI2-IN-DU8-A
udturbaludsag9baludsag9igi (ES: i-bi2)du8
stormto be smallterm (in office)day(light)to be goodterm (in office)day(light)to be goodeyeto spread
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Paragraph t222.p16 (line(s) 85-94) Click line no. for paragraph-aligned layout of transliteration and translation.
The woman, after she had composed her song (?) for the tearful balaĝ instrument, herself utters softly a lamentation for the silent house: "The storm that came to be -- its lamentation hangs heavy on me. Raging about because of the storm, I am the woman for whom the storm came to be. The storm that came to be -- its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The bitter storm having come to be for me during the day, I trembled on account of that day but I did not flee before the day's violence. Because of this debilitating storm I could not see a good day for my rule, not one good day for my rule."
ePSD = The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary

Sumerian scribe

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Updated 2006-10-09 by JE

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