Thoth
For other meanings of "Thoth", or of "Djehuti" and similar, see
Thoth (disambiguation). Thoth (his
Greek name derived from the Egyptian *, written by
Egyptians as ) was considered one of the most important
deities of the
Egyptian pantheon, often depicted with the head of an
Ibis. His feminine counterpart was
Ma'at. His chief shrine was at Khemennu, where he was the head of the local company of gods, later renamed
Hermopolis by the Greeks (in reference to him through the
Greeks' interpretation that he was the same as Hermes) and Eshmûnên by the
Arabs. He also had shrines in
Abydos, Hesert, Urit,
Per-Ab, Rekhui, Ta-ur, Sep, Hat, Pselket, Talmsis, Antcha-Mutet, Bah, Amen-heri-ab, and Ta-kens.
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Thoth
Thoth, Thot (Greek) Tehuti (Egyptian) Egyptian goddess of wisdom, equivalent to the Greek Hermes, Thoth was often represented as an ibis-headed deity, and also with a human head, especially in his aspect of Aah-Tehuti (the moon god), and as the god of Mendes he is depicted as bull-headed. Although best known in his character of the scribe or recorder of the gods, holding stylus and tablet, this is but another manner of showing that Thoth is the god of wisdom, inventor of science and learning; thus to him is attributed the establishment of the worship of the gods and the hymns and sacrifices, and the author of every work on every branch of knowledge both human and divine. He is described in the texts as "self-created, he to whom none hath given birth; the One; he who reckons in heaven, the counter of the stars; the enumerator and measurer of the earth [cosmic space] and all that is contained therein: the heart of Ra cometh forth in the form of the god Tehuti" -- for he represents the heart and tongue of Ra, reason and the mental powers of the god and the utterer of speech. It has been suggested that Thoth is thus the equivalent of the Platonic Logos. Many are his epithets: his best known being "thrice greatest" -- in later times becoming Hermes Trismegistus.
In The Egyptian Book of the Dead, the deceased must learn to master everything he encounters in the underworld, and does this through the instruction of Thoth, who also teaches the pilgrim the way of procedure.
to be continue "
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cà thọt
◊ adj ▪ Limping ◦ đi cà_thọt : to walk with a limp, to limp
thết
◊ verb ▪ to entertain, to treat to a feast
thịt
◊ noun ▪ meat, flesh pulp ◊ verb ▪ to kill, to murder; to slaughter
thọt
◊ verb ▪ to slip neatly ◊ adj ▪ lame
thốt
◊ verb ▪ to utter, to say
thụt
◊ verb ▪ to pull back, to recede to pump out; to shoot
thót
#I_C{width:18px;vertical-align:baseline;} #C_C{width:2000px;}tính từ hollow, sunkenđộng từ narrow, grow narrower, pull in anh ấy thót tim his heart sank into the pit of his stomatch trạng từ fast, quickly, rapidly, with speed tôi thót tim khi nhìn thấy đứa bé súyt thì bị xe cán mu heart missed a beat when I saw that child nearly get run over