ETCSLglossingSignSignSign name: A.LAGAB×ḪAL (A.ENGUR)
Values: id2

The lament for Nibru (c.2.2.4), line c224.R.266
a2kuš2-aigibi2-in-du8-uš-am3ib2-ta-an-ed3-de3-eš-am3
A2KUš2-AIGIBI2-IN-DU8-Uš-AM3IB2-TA-AN-ED3-DE3-Eš-AM3
a2kuš2igidu8ed3
armto be tiredeyeto spreadto go down or up
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Paragraph t224.p54 (line(s) 263-274) Click line no. for paragraph-aligned layout of transliteration and translation.
Although Sumer and Akkad had been desecrated by the foe, afterwards hearts were appeased, spirits soothed! All the great gods thus had compassion! They looked upon those sunk in exhaustion and brought them up out of it! They restored your city which had been razed to ruins! Enlil, king of all countries, restored its shining property which had been scattered, which had been devastated! There where the populace rested in the cool after building their nests, in Nibru, the mountain of the greatest divine powers, from where they had taken an unfamiliar path -- at Enlil's word the Anuna, those very lords who determine the fates, ordered that the temples which they had forsaken and the jewels, put there long ago, which had been carried off by the wind, should all be restored!
ePSD = The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary

Sumerian scribe

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Updated 2006-10-09 by JE

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