Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at suti.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Suti.

Examples

  • The inhabitants were transported, and "Suti" Aramaean peoples settled in their homes.

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • The Aramaean tribes are referred to, at various periods and by various peoples, not only as the "Suti", but also as the "Achlame", the

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • As we have seen, he combined forces with his distinguished and powerful kinsman, and laid a heavy hand on the "Suti".

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • Indeed the difficulties under which traders operated were then still further increased, for the caravan roads were infested by plundering bands of "Suti", to whom references are made in the Tell-el-Amarna letters.

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • Such glimpses of early architects as we have confirm this inference, as, for example, the noble hymn to the Sun-god written by Suti and Hor, two architects employed by

    The Builders A Story and Study of Masonry Joseph Fort Newton 1913

  • That your messengers were late in reaching you, (the reason is that) if the Suti had waylaid them, they would have been dead men.

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • For if I had sent them, the Suti would have sent bands to waylay them; therefore I have retained them.

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • This young monarch co-operated with his grandfather in suppressing the Suti, who infested the trade routes towards the west, and plundered the caravans of merchants and the messengers of great monarchs with persistent impunity.

    Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Donald Alexander Mackenzie 1904

  • Nomads of the _Suti_ tribes had long been raiding from the western deserts into Akkad; and the first king set up by the victorious peoples of the Sea-Land had to expel them and to repair their ravages before he could seat himself on a throne which was menaced by Elam on the east and

    The Ancient East 1894

  • Osiris may come forth triumphant over Suti [and over] the night-watchers of Suti, and over the night-watchers of the Crocodile, yea the night-watchers of the Crocodile, whose faces are hidden and who dwell in the divine Temple of the King of the North in the apparel of the gods on the sixth day of the festival, whose snares are like unto everlastingness and whose cords are like unto eternity.

    Egyptian Literature Comprising Egyptian tales, hymns, litanies, invocations, the Book of the Dead, and cuneiform writings Epiphanius Wilson 1880

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.