Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The cuneiform ia sign, is a combined sign, containing i (cuneiform) ligatured with a (cuneiform); it has the common meaning in the suffix form -ia, for the meaning of \"-mine\". In the Amarna letters, the letters written to the Pharaoh of Egypt (Mizri/Misri in the letters), the Pharaoh is often referenced as \"Lord-mine\", or especially: King-Lord-mine: \"My King, My Lord\". In Akkadian, the form is \"Šarru-Bēlu-ia\"-(King-Lord-mine), since the spelling in some Amarna letters is sometimes ŠÁR-RI for Šarru, (LUGAL = ŠÁR).Ia is also used in the Epic of Gilgamesh. It is listed in Parpola's Glossary (Parpola, 1971), for Akkadian language words: meaning \"mine\", \"(to) me\", and \"me\", and one usage for the word \"battering ram\", iašubů."@en }
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- Ia_(cuneiform) abstract "The cuneiform ia sign, is a combined sign, containing i (cuneiform) ligatured with a (cuneiform); it has the common meaning in the suffix form -ia, for the meaning of \"-mine\". In the Amarna letters, the letters written to the Pharaoh of Egypt (Mizri/Misri in the letters), the Pharaoh is often referenced as \"Lord-mine\", or especially: King-Lord-mine: \"My King, My Lord\". In Akkadian, the form is \"Šarru-Bēlu-ia\"-(King-Lord-mine), since the spelling in some Amarna letters is sometimes ŠÁR-RI for Šarru, (LUGAL = ŠÁR).Ia is also used in the Epic of Gilgamesh. It is listed in Parpola's Glossary (Parpola, 1971), for Akkadian language words: meaning \"mine\", \"(to) me\", and \"me\", and one usage for the word \"battering ram\", iašubů.".