dwꜣt

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Egyptian

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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d wA t
dwAt

 f

  1. The Duat, the Egyptian afterworld [since the Pyramid Texts]
    1. In early conceptions, the region in the eastern sky where the sun and stars rise, which serves as the abode of the dead king
      • c. 2255 BCE – 2246 BCE, Pyramid Texts of Merenre — south wall of the vestibule, line 6–7, spell 610.20–610.21:[1]
        s q
        Aa7
        T2 n
        k
        r
        d
        rd rd rd d A t
        dwAt
        i r b w n
        t
        s sAH dwA i m
        O43
        p
        i H F1 p t
        pt
        dwA a
        Z1
        k
        sqr n.k r(w)dw ⟨jr⟩ d(w)ꜣt jr bw nt(j) sꜣḥ jm šzp jḥ-pt ꜥ.k
        Stairways have been beaten out for you to the afterworld, to the place where Orion is, and the Bull of Heaven will take your hand.
    2. Later, the region underneath the earth through which the sun passes at night, in which Osiris and the dead dwell
      • c. 1550 BCE – 1295 BCE, Great Hymn to Osiris (Stela of Amenmose, Louvre C 286) lines 6–7:
        imi
        Z2ss
        dwA
        t pr
        m z
        n
        fnD
        N17
        N21 Z1
        Tz
        t
        tyw Z2ss
        H_SPACE
        m k
        A16 Z3
        Dr
        r
        tyw Z2ss
        H_SPACE
        m T
        H
        w bH
        Z2
        U3 z
        n
        Z2
        sw w n
        t
        tyw Z2ss
        H_SPACE
        i m A51 Z3 Hr
        Z1
        n
        r
        nr
        D40
        n
        f
        jmjw dwꜣt m sn-tꜣ ṯztjw m ksw
        ḏrtjw m ṯḥw mꜣ.sn sw ntjw jm ḥr nr n.f
        Those in the afterworld kiss the earth, and those in the desert hills bow down.
        The ancestors are in joy when they see him, and the dead are in awe of him.
      • c. 1401 BCE, Amduat of Amenhotep II (tomb of Amenhotep II, KV35) Second Hour, closing text:
        Szp
        p
        D40
        n
        n
        z
        dwA t
        pr
        i f
        F51 Z1
        N33A
        A40 i r p t
        pt
        r
        Y1
        anx n
        x
        k i f
        F51 Z1
        N33A
        A40 m tA
        N23 Z1
        d
        z
        r
        Y1 n
        k
        šzp.n n.s dwꜣt j(w)f jr(j) pt r ꜥnḫ.k j(w)f m tꜣ dsr n.k
        The afterworld has received to itself the flesh belonging to the sky in order that you live, flesh, in the ground set aside for you.
  2. The underworld of a city as a place of dead gods [Late Period]
  3. Epithet for the grave [since the New Kingdom]
  4. Epithet for the crypt in the Temple of Dendera [Greco-Roman Period]

Alternative forms

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Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Old Coptic: ⲧⲏ ()
  • English: duat

Proper noun

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d
wA
t
H8

 f

  1. a hippopotamus goddess personifying the afterworld [Greco-Roman Period]

Noun

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dwA
t
A30

 f

  1. praise, adoration, worship [New Kingdom]

Inflection

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Noun

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d
wA
dwA
t

 f

  1. adoratrice [Old Kingdom, New Kingdom, Greco-Roman Period]

Inflection

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Alternative forms

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Noun

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dwA t
Z1
M2
Z2

 f

  1. (medicine) a type of medicinal plant

Inflection

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Noun

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d wA dwA
t

 f

  1. Used in the phrase
    pr
    Z1
    d wA dwA
    t
    pr
    pr-dwꜣt (‘House of Morning’, a place of purification)
    [since the Old Kingdom]
  2. Used in the phrase
    Hr
    r
    s S
    t U30
    n pr
    Z1
    d wA dwA t
    pr
    , referring to a royal cloakroom official
    [since the Old Kingdom]

References

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  1. ^ Allen, James (2013) A New Concordance of the Pyramid Texts, volume V, Providence: Brown University, PT 610.20–610.21 (Pyr. 1717a–1717b), M