From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From s- ( causative prefix ) + wnm ( “ to eat ” ) .
caus. 2-lit.
( transitive ) to feed (someone or something), to provide with food
( transitive ) to feed (a person or animal) (+ m : with (a food)) [since the Old Kingdom]
( transitive ) to fatten , to force-feed (poultry ) by gavage [Old Kingdom]
( transitive ) to ‘feed’ (gods or the dead) by providing offerings of food ; to sacrifice food to [since the Old Kingdom]
( transitive ) to feed into (a brazier ) (+ m : to supply a brazier with (frankincense )) [18th Dynasty]
( transitive ) to feed (food), to provide (food)
( transitive ) to feed (a food) (+ n : to (someone)) [New Kingdom]
( transitive ) to offer (food) as a sacrifice (+ ḥr : upon (an altar)) [Middle Kingdom]
( transitive ) to supply (necessities) [18th Dynasty]
( transitive ) to eat
( transitive or intransitive ) to eat , to feed on (food) (+ m : to eat of; + ḥr : to eat from (an altar)) [since Middle Kingdom literature]
Synonym: wnm
― snm ḫt ― to feed on offerings of food
( transitive , of fire, worms, etc.) to consume (corpses) [Greco-Roman Period]
Conjugation of snm (causative biliteral / caus. 2-lit. / caus. 2rad.) — base stem: snm
infinitival forms
imperative
infinitive
negatival complement
complementary infinitive1
singular
plural
snmt , snm
snmw , snm
snmt
snm
snm
‘pseudoverbal’ forms
stative stem
periphrastic imperfective 2
periphrastic prospective 2
snm
ḥr snm
m snm
r snm
suffix conjugation
aspect / mood
active
passive
contingent
aspect / mood
active
passive
perfect
snm.n
snmw , snm
consecutive
snm.jn
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
terminative
snmt
perfective 3
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
obligative1
snm.ḫr
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
imperfective
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
prospective 3
snmw , snm , snmy
snmw , snm , snmy
potentialis1
snm.kꜣ
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
subjunctive
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
verbal adjectives
aspect / mood
relative (incl. nominal / emphatic) forms
participles
active
passive
active
passive
perfect
snm.n
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
—
—
perfective
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
snm
snm , snmw 5 , snmy 5
imperfective
snm , snmy , snmw 5
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
snm , snmj 6 , snmy 6
snm , snmw 5
prospective
snm , snmtj 7
—
snmwtj 1 4 , snmtj 4 , snmt 4
Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian.
Used mostly since Middle Egyptian.
Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective.
Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f /.fj , feminine .s /.sj , dual .sn /.snj , plural .sn .
Only in the masculine singular.
Only in the masculine.
Only in the feminine.
Alternative hieroglyphic writings of snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
[Old Kingdom]
[Old Kingdom]
[Middle Kingdom]
[Middle Kingdom]
[since the Middle Kingdom]
Alternative hieroglyphic writings of snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
snm
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
Alternative hieroglyphic writings of snm
snm
snm
snm
snmm
snm
[New Kingdom]
[New Kingdom]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
in hieratic
3-lit.
( intransitive , of people or the heart/mind) to be(come) sad , to mourn , to grieve [18th Dynasty literature and Greco-Roman Period]
Conjugation of snm (triliteral / 3-lit. / 3rad.) — base stem: snm , geminated stem: snmm
infinitival forms
imperative
infinitive
negatival complement
complementary infinitive1
singular
plural
snm
snmw , snm
snmt
snm
snm
‘pseudoverbal’ forms
stative stem
periphrastic imperfective 2
periphrastic prospective 2
snm
ḥr snm
m snm
r snm
suffix conjugation
aspect / mood
active
passive
contingent
aspect / mood
active
passive
perfect
snm.n
snmw , snm
consecutive
snm.jn
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
terminative
snmt
perfective 3
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
obligative1
snm.ḫr
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
imperfective
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
prospective 3
snm
snmm
potentialis1
snm.kꜣ
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
subjunctive
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
verbal adjectives
aspect / mood
relative (incl. nominal / emphatic) forms
participles
active
passive
active
passive
perfect
snm.n
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
—
—
perfective
snm
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
snm
snm , snmw 5 , snmy 5
imperfective
snm , snmy , snmw 5
active + .tj 1 , .tw 2
snm , snmj 6 , snmy 6
snm , snmw 5
prospective
snm , snmtj 7
—
snmtj 4 , snmt 4
Used in Old Egyptian; archaic by Middle Egyptian.
Used mostly since Middle Egyptian.
Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective.
Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f /.fj , feminine .s /.sj , dual .sn /.snj , plural .sn .
Only in the masculine singular.
Only in the masculine.
Only in the feminine.
Alternative hieroglyphic writings of snm
snmm
snmm
snm
snm
snm
snm
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
[Greco-Roman Period]
m
mourning , grief , sorrow [Greco-Roman Period]
Declension of snm (masculine)
See under the verb above.
“snm (lemma ID 137400) ”, “snm (lemma ID 137420) ”, and “snm (lemma ID 500524) ”, in Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae [1] , Corpus issue 18, Web app version 2.1.5, Tonio Sebastian Richter & Daniel A. Werning by order of the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften and Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert & Peter Dils by order of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2004–26 July 2023
Erman, Adolf , Grapow, Hermann (1930 ) Wörterbuch der ägyptischen Sprache [2] , volume 4, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, →ISBN , pages 164.1–164.16, 165.4–165.9
Faulkner, Raymond Oliver (1962 ) A Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian , Oxford: Griffith Institute, →ISBN , page 232
James P[eter] Allen (2010 ) Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs , 2nd edition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN , page 35 .