below. The glosses in this article assume the first analysis.
The following tables show some of the most frequent stem alternations.
Before the pronominal suffixes, a suffix -/ed/ or -/d/ can be inserted (the /d/ is only realized if other vowels follow, in which case the /e/ in turn may be elided): e.g. ๐๐(๐)๐๐ i3-zaแธซ3(-e)-de3-en {i-zaแธซ-ed-en} "I will/must escape", ๐๐๐ i3-zaแธซ3-e {i-zaแธซ-ed} "he will/must escape". This suffix is considered to account for occurrences of -e in the third-person singular marรป of intransitive forms by those who do not accept the theory that -e itself is a marรป stem formant.
The function of the suffix is somewhat controversial. Some view it as having a primarily modal meaning of "must" or "can" or future meaning. Others believe that it primarily signals simply the imperfective status of a verb form, i.e. a marรป form, although its presence is obligatory only in intransitive marรป forms and in non-finite forms. In intransitive forms, it thus helps to distinguish marรป from แธซamแนญu; for instance, in the above example, ๐๐๐ i3-zaแธซ3-en alone, without -/ed/-, could have been interpreted as a แธซamแนญu form "I escaped". In contrast, in the analysis of scholars who do not believe that -/ed/- is obligatory in marรป, many intransitive forms like i3-zaแธซ3-en can be both แธซamแนญu and marรป.
The vowel /e/ of this suffix undergoes the same allophonic changes as the initial /e/ of the person suffixes. It is regularly assimilated to /u/ in front of stems containing the vowel /u/ and a following labial consonant, /r/ or /l/, e.g. ๐ง๐ฌ๐ ลกum2-mu(-d) (< {ลกum-ed}). It is also assimilated and contracted with immediately preceding vowels, e.g. ๐ gi4-gi4 /gi-gi-i(d)/ < {gi-gi-ed} "which will/should return". The verb ๐บ du "go" never takes the suffix.
Jagersma systematizes the use of the tense-aspect forms in the following patterns:
In addition, different moods often require either a แธซamแนญu or a marรป stem and either a แธซamแนญu or a marรป agreement pattern depending on various conditions, as specified in the relevant sections above and below.
In more general terms, modern scholars usually state that the difference between the two forms is primarily one of aspect: แธซamแนญu expresses perfective aspect, i.e. a completed action, or sometimes possibly punctual aspect, whereas marรป expresses imperfective aspect, i.e. a non-completed action, or sometimes possibly durative aspect. In contrast, the time at which the action takes place or at which it is completed or non-completed is not specified and may be either past, present or future. This contrasts with the earlier view, prevalent in the first half of the 20th century, according to which the difference was one of tense: แธซamแนญu was thought to express the past (preterite) tense, and marรป was considered to express present-future tense, while the use of marรป with past-tense reference was viewed as a stylistic device (cf. the so-called historical present use in other languages). Indeed, it has been pointed out that a translation of แธซamแนญu with past tense and marรป with present or future tense does work well most of the time; this may correspond to the cases in which the action was viewed by Sumerian speakers as completed or non-completed with respect to the present moment.
The imperative mood construction is produced with a แธซamแนญu stem, but using the marรป agreement pattern, by turning all prefixes into suffixes. In the plural, the second person plural ending is attached in a form that differs slightly from the indicative: it is /-(n)zen/, with the -/n/- appearing only after vowels. The stem is singular even in the plural imperative. Compare the following indicative-imperative pairs:
This may be compared with the French pair vous le lui donnez, but donnez-le-lui!
In addition, the prefix ๐ i3- is replaced by /-a/: ๐๐บ i3-gฬen "he went", but ๐บ๐พ gฬen-na "go!", ๐ ๐พ๐๐ in-na-ab-be2 "he will say it to him", but ๐ ๐ต๐ญ๐พ(๐) dug4-ga-an-na(-ab) 'say it to him!'. However, the vowel /e/ and possibly /i/ occasionally also occur if no further prefixes follow, perhaps as a characteristic of southern dialects. The ventive prefix mu-, if not followed by others, has the form ๐ -um in the imperative: ๐บ๐ ลe6-um 'bring it here!' In Old Babylonian texts, the reduced form -/u/ and the more regular -/am/ {-a-m} are also found: ๐ท๐ก gฬe26-nu, ๐บ๐๐ญ gฬen-am3, both "come here!"
Sumerian participles can function both as verbal adjectives and as verbal nouns. As verbal adjectives, they can describe any participant involved in the action or state expressed by the verb: for instance, ๐ง๐ ลกum2-ma may mean either "(which was) given (to someone)", "who was given (something)" or "who gave". As verbal nouns, they denote the action or state itself, so ๐ง๐ ลกum2-ma may also mean '(the act of) giving' or 'the fact that X gave Y'. Participles are formed in the following ways:
The copula verb /me/ "to be" is mostly used in an enclitic form. Its conjugation is as follows:
In addition, the initial vowel of the form -am3 is reduced to -/m/ after enclitics ending in a vowel: ๐๐ฌ๐ e2-gฬu10-um "it is my house". Like other final consonants, the -m may not be expressed in early spelling.
These enclitic forms are used instead of a simple sequence of finite prefix, root and personal suffix *i3-me-en, *i-me etc. For more complex forms, the independent copula form is used: ๐๐จ๐ i3-me-a "that he is", ๐ก๐ ๐จ๐ nu-u3-me-en "I am not". Unlike the enclitic, it typically uses the normal stem ๐จ -me- in the 3rd person singular (๐๐๐จ ba-ra-me "should not be"), except for the form prefixed with แธซa-, which is ๐ถ๐ แธซe2-em or ๐ถ๐๐ญ แธซe2-am3.
For a negative equivalent of the copula in the 3rd person, it seems that the word ๐ก nu "not" alone instead of *nu-um is used predicatively (e.g. ๐๐ก urud nu "it is not copper") although the form ๐ก(๐ฆ)๐ต๐๐ญ nu-(un)-ga-am3 "it is also not ..." is attested. A different word is used to express existence or being present/located somewhere: ๐ gฬal2.
A peculiar feature of the copula is that it seems to form a relative clause without the nominalizing suffix /-a/ and thus uses the finite form: thus, instead of ๐๐จ๐ i3-me-a, simply ๐๐ญ -am3 is used: ๐ฌ๐ป๐ต๐๐๐ ๐ ๐ญ๐ง kug nigฬ2-gur11-ra-ni-im ma-an-ลกum2 "he gave me silver (which) was his property", which appears to say "The silver was his property, he gave it to me". In the negative, the full form ๐ก๐จ๐ nu-me-a "which is not" is used, and likewise in non-relative functions.
Some scholars believe that it is possible to speak of a passive voice in Sumerian. Jagersma (2010) distinguishes three attested passive constructions. In each case, the ergative participant and the corresponding agreement marker on the verb are removed, so that the verb is inflected intransitively, but there may also be some additional cues to ensure a passive interpretation. The passive may be formed:
The agent is never expressed in the passive clause in Sumerian.
While the existence of such intransitive constructions of normally transitive verbs is widely recognized, some other scholars have disputed the view that these constructions should be called "passives". They prefer to speak of one-participant or agentless constructions and to limit themselves to the observation that the prefixes ba- and a- tend to be preferred with such constructions, apparently as a secondary effect of another, more subtle feature of their meaning. Concerning the history of the constructions, it has been claimed that the passive(-like) use of ba- does not appear before the Ur III period; Jagersma, on the contrary, states that it is attested already in the Old Sumerian period, although it becomes especially frequent in Ur III times.
A different construction has been posited and labelled "Sumerian passive voice" by a significant number of scholars. According to them, too, a passive is formed by removing the ergative participant and the verbal marker that agrees with it, but the verb is not inflected as an intransitive one: instead, it has a personal prefix, which refers to the "logical object": {e i-b-ลu} or {e ba-b-ลu} "the house is being built". The stem is always แธซamแนญu. Some consider this construction to have only the function and meaning of a marรป form, while others consider the tense-aspect opposition to be neutralized in it. The personal prefix is nearly always -b- in identified cases; views differ on whether it agrees in gender with an animate logical object, appearing as -n-, or whether it remains -b-. Critics have argued that most alleged examples of the construction are actually instances of the pre-stem personal prefix referring to the directive participant in an intransitive verb, at least before the Old Babylonian period. Pascal Attinger considers it plausible that the original construction was indeed a directive one, whereas its new passive function as described by him arose via a reinterpretation in the Old Babylonian period; Walther Sallaberger, on the contrary, believes this kind of passive to be characteristic of Neo-Sumerian and to have been lost in Old Babylonian. A further possibility is that at least some of these cases actually have an impersonal 3rd person inanimate subject: "'it' has / they have built the house".
Sumerian doesn't have dedicated causative morphology. Causativity is expressed syntactically in two ways, depending on the transitivity of the verb.
In Old Babylonian Sumerian, new causative markers have been claimed to have arisen under the influence of Akkadian; this is explained in the section on Interference from Akkadian and other late phenomena.
A specific problem of Sumerian syntax is posed by the numerous phrasal verbs (traditionally called "compound verbs" in Sumerology in spite of the fact that they are not compounds, but idiomatic combinations). They usually involve a noun immediately before the verb, forming a lexical/idiomatic unit: e.g. ๐ ...๐ igi ...du8, lit. "open the eye" = "see, look". Their case government and agreement patterns vary depending on the specific verb. The component noun is usually in the absolutive case, but may be in the directive. If the phrasal verb takes another noun as a "logical object", the verbal infix is typically the directive, while the noun case is most commonly either the directive (dative if animate), which otherwise has the meaning "at / with respect to", or the locative (dative if animate), which otherwise has the meaning "on":
Less commonly, the case of the logical object and the pronominal infix may be:
Another possibility is for the component noun to be in the dative (directive if inanimate), while the object is in the absolutive:
The basic word order is subjectโobjectโverb; verb finality is only violated in rare instances, in poetry. The moving of a constituent towards the beginning of the phrase may be a way to highlight it, as may the addition of the copula to it. Modifiers (adjectives, genitive phrases etc.) are normally placed after the noun: ๐๐ e2 gibil "a new house" ๐๐๐ท e2 lugal-la "the house of the owner". However, the so-called anticipatory genitive (๐๐๐๐ e2-a lugal-bi "the owner of the house", lit. "of the house, its owner") is common and may signal the possessor's topicality. There are no adpositions, but noun phrases in a certain case may resemble prepositions and have a similar function:
There are various ways to express subordination. Many of them include the nominalization of a finite verb with the suffix -/a/, which is also used to form participles, as shown above. Like the participles, this nominalized clause can either modify a noun, as adjectives do, or refer to the event itself, as nouns do. It usually functions as a relative clause, corresponding to an English clause with "which ..." or "who ...", as in the following example:
lu
man
e
house
"the man who built the house"
Like the participles, the relative clauses can describe any participant involved in the action or state expressed by the verb, and the specific participant is determined by context: e.g. ๐ฌ๐ฆ๐พ๐ญ๐ง๐ {mu-nna-n-ลกum-a} can be "which he gave to him", "who gave (something) to him", etc. The nominalized clause can also be a complement clause, corresponding to an English clause with "that ...", e.g. e2 in-ลu2-a (in-zu) "(he knows) that he built the house". Like a noun, it can be followed by case morphemes:
The nominalized clause can directly modify a noun expressing time such as ๐ ud "day, time", ๐ฌ mu "year" and ๐ itid "month", and this in turn can then stand in the locative and ablative in the same meanings as the clauses themselves: ud e2 in-ลu2-a-a/ta "when/after he built the house". In this case, the particle -bi sometimes precedes the case morpheme: ud e2 in-ลu2-a-ba; the basic meaning is still of "when".
The nominalized clause can also be included in the various "prepositional constructions" mentioned above:
The structure is shown more clearly in the following example:
egir
back
amaru
flood
"after the Flood had swept over"
Several clauses can be nominalized by a single {-a} enclitic: {kaสพa ba-zaแธซ engar-e nu-i-b-dab-a b-i-n-dug} "he said that the fox had escaped and the farmer had not caught it".
Participles can function in a very similar way to the nominalized clauses and be combined with the same kinds of adjuncts. One peculiarity is that, unlike nominalized clauses, they may also express the agent as a possessor, in the genitive case: ๐๐๐๐๐ท e2 ลu2-a lugal-la "the house built by the king". However, when the head noun (e2) is specified as here, a more common construction uses the ergative: ๐๐๐๐๐ e2 lugal-e ลu2-a.
A special subordinating construction with the temporal meaning of an English when-clause is the so-called pronominal conjugation, which contains a verb nominalized with -/a/ and following possessive pronominal markers referring to the subject (transitive or intransitive). In the 3rd person, the form appears to end in the possessive pronominal marker alone: ๐ญ๐๐ kur9-ra-ni "when he entered", lit. "his entering", etc. It has been suggested that these forms actually also contain a final directive marker -e; in this example, the analysis would be {kur-a-ni-e}, "at his entering". Similarly, in Old Babylonian Sumerian, one sometimes finds the locative or ablative markers after the possessive (kur9-ra-na, kur9-ra-ni-ta). In contrast, in the 1st and 2nd persons, the 1st and 2nd person pronouns are followed by the syllable ๐ -ne: ๐ฃ๐ต๐ฌ๐ zig3-ga-gฬu10-ne "as I rose"). The verb itself may be in แธซamแนญu, as in the above examples, or in marรป followed by the modal/imperfective suffix -/ed/-: ๐ฃ๐ฃ๐๐ฌ๐ zi-zi-da-gฬu10-ne "when I rise". The same construction is used with the word ๐ธ dili "alone": ๐ธ๐ฌ๐ dili-gฬu10-ne "I alone", etc.
Subordinating conjunctions such as ๐๐ ud-da "when, if", ๐๐ป๐๐ฒ๐ tukum-bi "if" and ๐๐พ en-na "until" also exist.
Coordinating conjunctions are rarely used. The most common way to express the sense of "and" is by simple juxtaposition. Nominal phrases may be conjoined, perhaps emphatically, by adding ๐ -bi to the second one: ๐ญ๐๐ค๐ญ๐๐ค๐ en-lil2 nin-lil2-bi "both Enlil and Ninlil"; sometimes the enclitic is further reinforced by ๐ -da "with". More surprisingly, ๐ซ -ta "from" is also sometimes used in the sense of "and". The word ๐ u3 "and" was borrowed from Akkadian in the Old Akkadian period and occurs mostly in relatively colloquial texts; Old Babylonian Sumerian also borrowed from Akkadian the enclitic ๐ -ma "and". There is no conjunction "or" and its sense can also be expressed by simple juxtaposition; a more explicit and emphatic alternative is the repetition of ๐ถ๐ แธซe2-em, "let it be": ๐ป๐ถ๐ ๐ง๐ถ๐ udu แธซe2-em maลก แธซe2-em "(be it) a sheep or a goat".
A quotative particle -/(e)ลกe/ or -/ลกi/ "saying", variously spelt ๐ -eลกe2, ๐ -ลกi or ๐ช๐บ -e-ลกe, has been identified. Its use is not obligatory and it is attested only or almost only in texts from the Old Babylonian period or later. Another, rarely attested, particle, ๐(๐บ)๐ -gฬeลก(-ลกe)-en, apparently expresses irrealis modality: "were it that ...".
Highlighting uses of the copula somewhat similar to English cleft constructions are present: ๐๐๐ญ๐๐บ lugal-am3 i3-gฬen "It is the king who came", ๐๐พ๐ธ๐๐ญ๐๐บ a-na-aลก-am3 i3-gฬen "Why is it that he came?", ๐๐บ๐พ๐๐ญ i3-gฬen "It is the case that he came".
Sumerian generally links a nominal predicate to the subject using the copula verb, like English. However, it does use zero-copula constructions in some contexts. In interrogative sentences, the 3rd person copula is omitted: ๐๐พ๐ฌ๐ช a-na mu-zu "What is your name?", ๐๐๐ฌ๐ช ne-en mu-zu "Is this your name?". Sumerian proper names that consist of entire sentences normally lack a copula as well, e.g. ๐๐๐ญ๐๐ถ a-ba dutu-gen7 "Who is like Utu?" As explained above, negative sentences also omit the copula in *nu-am3/nu-um "isn't" and use simply ๐ก nu instead.
Yes/no-interrogative sentences appear to have been marked only by intonation and possibly by resulting lengthening of final vowels. There is no wh-movement to the beginning of the clause, but the interrogative words are placed immediately before the verb: e.g. ๐๐๐๐พ๐ฌ๐ฆ๐ lugal-e a-na mu-un-ak "What did the king do?", ๐๐๐๐๐ ๐ e2 a-ba-a in-ลu3 "Who built the temple?" Two exceptions from this are that the constituent noun of a phrasal verb is normally closer to the verb, and that an interrogative word emphasized with a copula such as ๐๐พ๐ธ๐๐ญ a-na-aลก-am3 "why is it that ...?" is placed at the beginning of the clause. In addition, as already mentioned, interrogative sentences omit the copula where a declarative would have used it.
Derivation by affixation is largely non-existent. An exception may be a few nouns ending in -/u/ denoting the object of a corresponding verb: ๐ฌ๐ sar-ru "document" < ๐ฌ sar "write". Compounding, on the other hand, is common in nouns. Compounds are normally left-headed. The dependent may be:
An older obsolete pattern was right-headed instead:
A participle may be the head of the compound, preceded by a dependent:
There are a few cases of nominalized finite verbs, too: ๐๐ ba-uลก4 "(who) has died" > "dead"
Abstract nouns are formed as compounds headed by the word ๐ nam- "fate, status": ๐ dumu "child" > ๐๐ nam-dumu "childhood", ๐ป tar "cut, decide" > ๐๐ป nam-tar "fate". Nouns that express the object of an action or an object possessing a characteristic are formed as compounds headed by the word ๐ป nigฬ2 "thing": ๐ ฅ gu4 "eat" > ๐ป๐ ฅ nigฬ2-gu7 "food", ๐ญ "good, sweet" > ๐ป๐ญ nigฬ2-dug "something sweet". The meaning may also be abstract: ๐...๐ฒ si...sa2 "straighten, put in order" > nigฬ2-si-sa2 "justice". A small number of terms of professions are derived with the preposed element ๐ก nu-: ๐๐ฌ gฬeลกkiri6 "garden" > ๐ก๐๐ฌ nu-gฬeลกkiri6-(k) "gardener".
Apparent coordinative compounds also exist, e.g. ๐ญ๐ an-ki "the universe", lit. "heaven and earth".
A noun can be formed from an adjective by conversion: for example, ๐ผ dagฬal "wide" also means "width".
On verbs acquiring the properties of adjectives and nouns (agent nouns and action nouns), see the section on Participles.
While new verbs cannot be derived, verbal meanings may be expressed by phrasal verbs (see above); in particular, new phrasal verbs are often formed on the basis of nouns by making them the object of the verbs ๐ dug4 "do" or ๐ ak "make": ๐...๐ a ...dug4, lit. "to do water" > "to irrigate", ๐๐ต...๐ฎ gฬeลกga-rig2 ...ak, lit. "to do the comb" > "to comb".
The standard variety of Sumerian was Emegir (๐ ด๐ : eme-gir15). A notable variety or sociolect was Emesal (๐ ด๐ฉ: eme-sal), possibly to be interpreted as "fine tongue" or "high-pitched voice". Other apparent terms for registers or dialects were eme-galam "high tongue", eme-si-sa2 "straight tongue", eme-te-na2 "oblique[?] tongue", emesukudda, emesuha, emesidi and emeku. Recently, a regional differentiation into a Northern and a Southern Sumerian dialect area has been posited.
Emesal is used exclusively by female characters in some literary texts. In addition, it is dominant in certain genres of cult songs such as the hymns sung by Gala priests. It has been argued that it might have been a female language variety of the kind that exists or has existed in some cultures, such as among the Chukchis and the Garifuna. Alternatively, it has been contended that it must have been originally a regional dialect, since instances of apparent Emesal-like forms are attested in the area of late 3rd millennium Lagash, and some loanwords into Akkadian appear to come from Emesal rather than Emegir. Apart from such isolated glosses, Emesal is first attested in writing in the early Old Babylonian period. It is typically written with syllable signs rather than logograms. A text is often not written consistently in Emesal, but contains apparent Emegir forms as well.
The special features of Emesal are mostly phonological and lexical. In terms of phonology, the following are some of the most common sound correspondences:
There are also specifically Emesal lexemes that do not seem to be cognate with their Emegir counterparts, for example:
In grammar, both the cohortative prefix ๐ต ga- and the precative prefix ๐ฉ แธซa- are replaced by the morpheme ๐ da- (with the allomorphs ๐ de3- and ๐ du5- conditioned by context in the same way as that of the corresponding Emegir prefixes).
Bram Jagersma and Gรกbor Zรณlyomi distinguish two regional dialects of Sumerian: the Southern Sumerian dialect of Lagash, Umma, Ur and Uruk, which eventually formed the basis for the common standard of the Neo-Sumerian (Ur III) period, and the Northern Sumerian dialect as seen in texts from Nippur, Adab, Isin and Shuruppak (although eventually texts in the standard variety begin to be produced in that area as well). The differences that he finds between the two varieties are:
The dominant Sumerian variety of the Old Babylonian period, in turn, reflected a different regional dialect from the standard Neo-Sumerian of the Ur III period:
In the Old Babylonian period and after it, the Sumerian used by scribes was influenced by their mother tongue, Akkadian, and sometimes more generally by imperfect acquisition of the language. As a result, various deviations from its original structure occur in texts or copies of texts from these times. The following effects have been found in the Old Babylonian period:
For Middle Babylonian and later texts, additional deviations have been noted:
The table below shows signs used for simple syllables of the form CV or VC. As used for the Sumerian language, the cuneiform script was in principle capable of distinguishing at least 16 consonants, transliterated as
as well as four vowel qualities, a, e, i, u.
This text was inscribed on a small clay cone c.โ2400 BC. It recounts the beginning of a war between the city-states of Lagaลก and Umma during the Early Dynastic III period, one of the earliest border conflicts recorded. (RIME 1.09.05.01)
๐ญ๐๐ค
den-lil2
๐
lugal
๐ณ๐ณ๐
kur-kur-ra
๐๐
ab-ba
๐ญ๐ญ๐ท๐๐ค
digฬir-digฬir-re2-ne-ke4
๐
inim
๐๐พ๐๐ซ
gi-na-ni-ta
๐ญ๐ฉ๐๐๐ข
dnin-gฬir2-su
๐ญ๐๐
dลกara2-bi
๐
ki
๐๐๐ฉ
e-ne-sur
"Enlil, king of all the lands, father of all the gods, by his firm command, fixed the border between Ningirsu and ล ara."
๐จ๐ฒ
me-silim
๐
lugal
๐ง๐ ๐ค
kiลกki-ke4
๐
inim
๐ญ๐ ๐ฒ๐พ๐ซ
diลกtaran-na-ta
๐
eลก2
๐ท
gana2
๐๐
be2-ra
๐ ๐
ki-ba
๐พ
na
๐๐
bi2-ลu2
"Mesilim, king of Kiลก, at the command of Iลกtaran, measured the field and set up a stele there."
๐
uลก
๐บ๐ผ๐
ensi2
๐๐ต๐ ๐ค
ummaki-ke4
๐
nam
๐ ๐
inim-ma
๐๐๐๐๐
dirig-dirig-ลกe3
๐๐
e-ak
"Ush, ruler of Umma, acted unspeakably."
๐พ๐๐๐
na-ru2-a-bi
๐๐ป
i3-pad
๐
edin
๐ข๐๐ท๐ ๐
lagaลกki-ลกe3
๐๐บ
i3-gฬen
"He ripped out that stele and marched toward the plain of Lagaลก."
๐ญ๐ฉ๐๐๐ข
dnin-gฬir2-su
๐จ๐
ur-sag
๐ญ๐๐ค๐ฒ๐ค
den-lil2-la2-ke4
๐
inim
๐๐ฒ๐๐ซ
si-sa2-ni-ta
๐๐ต๐ ๐
ummaki-da
๐ฎ๐ฉ๐
dam-แธซa-ra
๐๐๐
e-da-ak
"Ningirsu, warrior of Enlil, at his just command, made war with Umma."
๐
inim
๐ญ๐๐ค๐ฒ๐ซ
den-lil2-la2-ta
๐
sa
๐
ลกu4
๐ฒ
gal
๐๐
bi2-ลกu4
๐ ๐ฏ๐บ๐
SA๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝAR.DU6.TAKA4-bi
๐๐พ
eden-na
๐
ki
๐๐๐๐
ba-ni-us2-us2
"At Enlil's command, he threw his great battle net over it and heaped up burial mounds for it on the plain."
๐๐ญ๐พ๐บ
e2-an-na-tum2
๐บ๐ผ๐
ensi2
๐ข๐๐ท๐
lagaลกki
๐บ๐๐๐ต
pa-bil3-ga
๐๐ผ๐จ๐พ
en-mete-na
๐บ๐ผ๐
ensi2
๐ข๐๐ท๐ ๐ ๐ค
lagaลกki-ka-ke4
"Eannatum, ruler of Lagash, uncle of Entemena, ruler of Lagaลก"
๐๐๐๐ท
en-a2-kal-le
๐บ๐ผ๐
ensi2
๐๐ต๐ ๐
ummaki-da
๐
ki
๐๐๐ฉ
e-da-sur