Definitions of abāru

Alternative forms of abāru

Helpful external links about abāru

Citation

Dedović, B. "abāru - eHammurabi." OMNIKA Foundation, 27 Feb. 2024, ehlaw.org/dictionary/word/abāru. [Accessed 3 Nov. 2024]

MLA 9

Dedović, B. (2024, February 27). abāru - eHammurabi. OMNIKA Foundation. https://ehlaw.org/dictionary/word/abāru

APA 7

Dedović, Boban. "abāru - eHammurabi." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation. Created February 27, 2024. Modified February 27, 2024. Accessed November 3, 2024. https://ehlaw.org/dictionary/word/abāru.

CMS 16

Bibliography

Huehnergard, John. A Grammar of Akkadian (Third Edition). Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2011.

HAG3

Lauffenburger, Olivier. "AAF Assyrian Dictionary." France: Association Assyrophile de France. Accessed August 28, 2023. https://www.assyrianlanguages.org. [Visit]

AAF

OMNIKA Foundation Contributors. "PsychLing: Psycholinguistics Portal." Las Vegas, NV: OMNIKA Foundation. Accessed February 28, 2024. https://psycholinguistics.org. [Visit]

PsyLng

Richardson, Mervyn E.J. A Comprehensive Grammar to Hammurabi's Stele. Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press, 2014.

CGHS

Richardson, Mervyn E.J. Hammurabi's Laws: Text, Translation and Glossary. New York, NY: T & T Clark International, 2004.

RHL

Introducing MultiViewSM

MultiViewSM for eHammurabi allows you to compare up to seven different sources for a given law's content: cuneiform, transliteration, normalization, and the English translation.

eHammurabi Glossary

The term Akkadian commonly means "an ancient language spoken and written in Mesopotamia between c. 3200 BCE – 200 CE."

Read more

eHammurabi Glossary

Click here to learn more about Verb and find other relevant terms related to the Law Code of Hammurabi.

Read more

eHammurabi Glossary

Click here to learn more about eHammurabi and find other relevant terms related to the Law Code of Hammurabi.

Read more