Learn Hieroglyphs

Introduction The Hieroglyphic writing Numbers Nouns Grammatical uses of the noun Adjectives and Comparison Demonstratives Personal Pronouns Titles in Ancient Egypt The Offering Formula Infinitive Possessive Adjectives Verbs in Ancient Egyptian language Relative in Ancient Egyptian Language Attribution Adjectives Comparative and Superlative Fractions Measures Interrogative pronouns Enclitic particles Non-Enclitic particles Prepositions Anticipation in the Ancient Egyptian Language Stative (Old Perfective) Active participles Passive participle The Passive Voice Verbal Sentence in Ancient Egyptian language Non-verbal Sentence in Ancient Egyptian language

Infinitive

The infinitive is a noun derived from a verb and treated as a noun indicating the action or state expressed by the verb-stem: it can also replace narrative verb forms which have a grammatical subject or a direct grammatical object of their own. Due to the double role of the infinitive, it is followed by a scribe as a verb. If derived from a transitive verb it is followed by an object.
 
When the performer is mentioned in an Egyptian caption, this is usually introduced by  in ‘by’:
 
sn tA n xnty-imntw m prt aAt….
Kissing the ground 10 Khentyimentu in the great procession
 
in imAx(w) m- r Sna imn-m-HAt
The overseer of the provisioning areas Amenemhet.
 
The owner of a stela often expressed a wish to participate in certain important festivals beyond death, particularly the Osiris Mysteries. He either wished to participate in them directly—through seeing ( mAA), adoring ( dwA), kissing the ground ( sn tA) or giving praise ( dit iAw) to the god—or through having offerings made to him at such times. For example:
The vertical columns of stela BM EA 580 comprise a hymn to Osiris which begins:
 
dit iAw Asir sn tA n wp- wAwt
Givingpraise to Osiris, kissing the ground to Wepwawet
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