The character in archaic linear script.[ 1]
the pictogram as it was drawn around 5000 B.C.E. ;
the rotated pictogram as written around 2800 B.C.E. ;
the abstracted glyph in archaic monumental inscriptions, from ca. 2600 B.C.E. ;
the sign as written in clay, contemporary to stage 3;
late 3rd millennium (Neo-Sumerian);
Old Assyrian, early 2nd millennium, as adopted into Hittite;
simplified sign as written by Assyrian scribes in the early 1st millennium.
𒊕
Sign Number
MZL
184
Deimel
115
HZL
192
Components
𒃰 , 𒁹 , 𒄑
^ Budge, E. A. Wallis (Ernst Alfred Wallis) (1922 ) A guide to the Babylonian and Assyrian antiquities [1] , [ London] : Printed by order of the Trustees, page 22
R. Borger, Mesopotamisches Zeichenlexikon (MZL ), Münster (2003)
A. Deimel, Šumerisches Lexikon (Deimel ), Rome (1947)
Chr. Rüster, E. Neu, Hethitisches Zeichenlexikon (HZL ), Wiesbaden (1989)
Sign
𒊕
Sumerograms
SAG
Phonetic values
ris, riš, sag/sak/saq, san, šag/šak/šaq
Orthographic borrowing from Sumerian 𒊕 ( sag̃ , “ head ” ) .
𒊕 • (SAG )
Sumerogram of pūtum ( “ forehead, front ” )
( rare ) Sumerogram of qaqqadum ( “ head, top, person ” )
Sumerogram of rēštum ( “ beginning ” )
Sumerogram of rēšum ( “ head, top, slave ” )
𒊕 • (sag̃ )
head
front , fore , beginning
surface , top
man , person , human being
slave , servant
𒊕𒁺 ( sag̃-du , “ head ” ) 𒊕𒆗 ( sag̃-kal , “ first rank, preeminent, foremost ” ) 𒊕𒆠 ( sag̃-ki , “ forehead, brow ” ) 𒊕𒉺𒆸 ( zaraḫ , “ lamentation, wailing ” )
𒊕𒁍 ( sag̃ gid₂ /sag̃ gid/ , “ to get angry ” ) 𒊕𒅍 ( sag̃ il₂ /sag̃ il/ , “ to raise the head ” ) 𒊕𒈪𒂵 ( sag̃ gig₂-ga /sag̃ giga/ , “ Black Headed Ones ” )