jnst

Egyptian

Other romanization schemes
Manuel de Codage inst
Gardiner 1927 ꞽnst
Erman & Grapow 1926 ꞽnśt
Lepsius 1874 (obsolete) ȧns-t

Etymology 1

  • Uncertain etymology. With different determinatives the word is associated with the soles of a human foot or the hoof of an animal, perhaps suggesting a correlation to its known anti-fungal properties, anethole still being used to treat athlete's foot and thrush.

    Pronunciation

    Noun



     f

    1. (medicine or literary) an edible plant, possibly anise, used medicinally [Middle Kingdom]
    Inflection
    Declension of jnst (feminine)
    singular jnst
    dual jnstj
    plural jnswt
    Alternative forms
    Descendants
    • Ancient Greek: ἄνισον (ánison) (see there for further descendants)

    Etymology 2

  • Pronunciation

    Noun


     f

    1. calf (of leg), thigh
      • c. 1800 BCE, Kahun Gynaecological Papyrus (UC 32057), page 1, line 4:







        kꜣp jrtj.sj ḥr jnst nt gnyw
        fumigating her eyes with goose leg fat.
    Inflection
    Declension of jnst (feminine)
    singular jnst
    dual jnstj
    plural jnswt

    References