[44154] in linux-announce channel archive
BONUS: $100 HOME DEPOT Gift Card Opportunity
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Home Depot Shopper Gift Card Chanc)
Tue Nov 21 03:41:30 2023
Date: Tue, 21 Nov 2023 09:40:15 +0100
From: "Home Depot Shopper Gift Card Chance" <HomeDepotShopperGiftCardChance@redlobstr.shop>
Reply-To: "Home Depot Shopper Gift Opportunity" <HomeDepotShopperGiftOpportunity@redlobstr.shop>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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BONUS: $100 HOME DEPOT Gift Card Opportunity
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Being a society of independent city-states, the Phoenicians apparently did not have a term to denote the land of Phoenicia as a whole; instead, demonyms were often derived from the name of the city an individual hailed from (e.g., Sidonian for Sidon, Tyrian for Tyre, etc.) If the Phoenicians had an endonym to denote the land overall, some scholars believe that they would have used "Canaan" and therefore referred to themselves as "Canaanites". Krahmalkov reconstructs the Honeyman inscription (dated to c. 900 BCE by William F. Albright) as containing a reference to the Phoenician homeland, calling it P?t (Phoenician: ??).
The obelisks at Karnak describe a land belonging to the fn?w, which seems to be the plural form of the Ancient Egyptian word for "carpenter", fn?, befitting the crucial station Phoenicia served in the lumber trade of the Levant. The exonym was evidently borrowed into Greek as ?????? phoînix, which meant variably "Phoenician person", "Tyrian purple, crimson" or "date palm." Homer used it with each of these meanings. The word is already attested in Mycenaean Greek Linear B from the 2nd millennium BC, as po-ni-ki-jo. In those records, it means "crimson" or "palm tree" and does not denote a group of people. The name Phoenicians, like Latin Poen? (adj. poenicus, later p?nicus), comes from Greek ??????? (Phoiník?). Poenulus, a Latin comedic play written in the early 2nd century BCE, appears to preserve a Punic term for "Phoenicians
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:5px;">Being a society of independent city-states, the Phoenicians apparently did not have a term to denote the land of Phoenicia as a whole; instead, demonyms were often derived from the name of the city an individual hailed from (e.g., Sidonian for Sidon, Tyrian for Tyre, etc.) If the Phoenicians had an endonym to denote the land overall, some scholars believe that they would have used "Canaan" and therefore referred to themselves as "Canaanites". Krahmalkov reconstructs the Honeyman inscription (dated to c. 900 BCE by William F. Albright) as containing a reference to the Phoenician homeland, calling it P?t (Phoenician: ??). The obelisks at Karnak describe a land belonging to the fn?w, which seems to be the plural form of the Ancient Egyptian word for "carpenter", fn?, befitting the crucial station Phoenicia served in the lumber trade of the Levant. The exonym was evidently borrowed into Greek as φο?νιξ phoînix, which meant variably "Phoenician person", "Tyrian purple, crimson" or "date palm." Homer used it with each of these meanings. The word is already attested in Mycenaean Greek Linear B from the 2nd millennium BC, as po-ni-ki-jo. In those records, it means "crimson" or "palm tree" and does not denote a group of people. The name Phoenicians, like Latin Poen? (adj. poenicus, later p?nicus), comes from Greek Φοιν?κη (Phoiník?). Poenulus, a Latin comedic play written in the early 2nd century BCE, appears to preserve a Punic term for "Phoenicians</div>
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