CCP 7.2.u24 - Uncertain
This tablet belongs to the 80-11-12 consignment, a collection believed to have originated mostly in Babylon. It contains a tabular commentary on an unknown Sumerian text, perhaps an incantation or a lexical text.
This tablet belongs to the 80-11-12 consignment, a collection believed to have originated mostly in Babylon. It contains a tabular commentary on an unknown Sumerian text, perhaps an incantation or a lexical text.
This small fragment preserves meager remains of a commentary text. Only one equation is certain: luḫ = salāḫu, "luḫ means 'to sprinkle'," which is seemingly elsewhere unattested.
This small fragment, published in copy only as SpTU 1 164, contains some glosses on an unknown text.
Neither rubric nor colophon are preserved on this cola-type commentary from the British Museum’s Sippar Collection. The fragment is rather thick.
This small fragment, which probably originates from Babylon, appears to contain entries of the fifth tablet of the supplemental syllabary Diri.
This completely preserved commentary of sixty lines was found in area U XVIII 1 in Uruk.
This small fragment preserves remains of a commentary on the 14th pirsu of the series Aa. The section deals with the signs an and nab.
The present text, a small fragment in the British Museum’s “Sippar Collection,” but possibly originating from Babylon, contains short comments on entries from Aa II/3, II/4 and II/5.