Examples of using Mut in English and their translations into Malay
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
When doing something like: let mut sum= 5+ 10;
Mut, wearing the double crown, stands behind him.
She stated that she was a descendant of Mut.
Nineteenth dynasty statue of Mut, part of a double statue, c.
Mut, also known as Maut and Mout, was a mother goddess worshipped in ancient Egypt.
The center of her cult in Sudan became the Mut Temple of Jebel Barkal and in Egypt the temple in Karnak.
Mut was the consort of Amun, the patron deity of pharaohs during the Middle Kingdom c.
At the Temple of Karnak in Egypt's capital city of Thebes,the family of Amun-Ra, Mut and Khonsu were worshipped together as the Theban Triad.
Mut was involved in many ancient Egyptian festivals such as the Opet Festival and the Beautiful Festival of the Valley.
Tutankhamun later re-established her worship and his successors continued to associate themselves with Mut afterward.
Jebel Barkal Temple of Mut: Amun accompanied by Mut pictured inside Jebel Barkal.
So, the family forked out RM810 to the'bomoh' to get rid of the ninespirits," Johor tribunal head Samuel Mut John Brody said in an interview.
Mut was considered a primal deity, associated with the primordial waters of Nu from which everything in the world was born.
During the reign of Rameses II a follower of the goddess Mut donated all his property to her temple and recorded in his tomb.
And he[Kiki] found Mut at the head of the gods, Fate and fortune in her hand, Lifetime and breath of life are hers to command.
Amaunet and Wosret may have beenAmun's consorts early in Egyptian history, but Mut, who did not appear in texts or art until the late Middle Kingdom, displaced them.
In art, Mut was usually depicted as a woman wearing the double crown of the kings of Egypt, representing her power over the whole of the land.
Alternatively, as a result of her assimilations, Mut is sometimes depicted as a cobra, a cat, a cow, or as a lioness as well as the vulture.
Mut was sometimes said to have given birth to the world through parthenogenesis, but more often she was said to have a husband, the solar creator god Amun-Ra.
Its location is unknown; in 2019, a previously little-researched site at Türkmen-Karahöyük, near Çumra on the Konya Plain, was investigated and put forward by Michele Massa and James Osborne. [1][2] Previously proposed locations include Konya, somewhere near Cilicia, the Göksu valley, the vicinity of Kayseri,[3]Kilise Tepe(near Mut, formerly known as Maltepe), and Kızıldağ(north of Karaman).
In the New Kingdom, Amun and Mut were the patron deities of Thebes, a major city in Upper Egypt, and formed a cultic triad with their son, Khonsu.
Although Mut was believed by her followers to be the mother of everything in the world, she was particularly associated as the mother of the lunar child god Khonsu.
Ramesses II added more work on the Mut temple during the nineteenth dynasty, as well as rebuilding an earlier temple in the same area, rededicating it to Amun and himself.
In art, Mut was pictured as a woman with the wings of a vulture, holding an ankh, wearing the united crown of Upper and Lower Egypt and a dress of bright red or blue, with the feather of the goddess Ma'at at her feet.
Kushite pharaohs expanded the Mut temple and modified the Ramesses temple for use as the shrine of the celebrated birth of Amun and Khonsu, trying to integrate themselves into divine succession.