Antu
See also: antu
English
Etymology 1
Akkadian đđ.
Proper noun
Antu
- A Mesopotamian goddess, the feminine counterpart of Anu.
- 2019 January 8, Christine Proust, John Steele, Scholars and Scholarship in Late Babylonian Uruk, Springer, âISBN, page 248:
- [...] since the goddess Antu did not hold a prominent status at Uruk before the fifth century. The primary purpose of MLC 1890 was evidently to present Antu as universal goddess and all-encompassing cosmic location.
- 2021 April 13, Angelika Berlejung, Divine Secrets and Human Imaginations: Studies on the History of Religion and Anthropology of the Ancient Near East and the Old Testament, Mohr Siebeck, âISBN, page 212:
- Line 3 of MLC 1890 clearly introduces Antu as the goddess par excellence by juxtaposing [âŠ]
- 2021 November 8, Paul-Alain Beaulieu, The Pantheon of Uruk During the Neo-Babylonian Period, BRILL, âISBN, page 310:
- There is no mention of the goddess Antu in texts from Uruk prior to the first millennium. In the Neo - Babylonian period she occurs only in YOS 3,62, a letter sent to the ĆĄatammu of Eanna.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Antu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ËÉnËtu/, /ËĂŠn-/, enPR: Ă€nÊčtoÍoÊč[1]
Proper noun
Antu
- A county of Yanbian prefecture, Jilin, China.
- 1954 December 1, âChinese Cite Airlift Methods of U.S. Spiesâ, in Daily Workerâ, volume XXI, number 239, New York, page 2, column 2:
- The map was of the Antu county of Laoling with a scale of one to 250,000, âthe locality where Downey and Fecteau were scheduled to pick up agent Li Chun Ying from their aircraft,â the broadcast said and added that the spot was "clearly marked with a pencil."
- 1954 December 25, âUniformed Spy is a Spy, Says Legal Expert Châen Tâi-châiangâ, in Jerome Alan Cohen, Hungdah Chiu, editors, People's China and International Law: A Documentary Studyâ, volume 1, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, published 1974, âISBN, âLCCN, âOCLC, page 636:
- On their persons they had a detailed map of Antu County in Kirin Province of China and a Chinese-English conversation sheet. Downey admitted that earlier he had trained agents who were air-dropped into China and had contacted them.
- 1969, Bong Baik, âLarge-Troop Circling Operations that Terrified Japanese Imperialismâ, in Kim Il Sung Biography: From Birth to Triumphant Return to Homelandâ, volume I, Tokyo: Miraisha, âOCLC, page 464:
- The tactics of the General culminated in victory in the battle of Hualatzu, Antu county in March 1940, the battle of Yangtsaokou, Tungnancha, Antu county in April, the battle of Shihliping, Holung county in May and the subsequent battle of Yulangtsun, Holung county.
- 1972, Chi Hsin, âWhere the Sunghua River Flowsâ, in The Seeds and Other Storiesâ, Peking: Foreign Languages Press, âOCLC, page 145:
- Our first stop is in Antu County, Kirin Province, a rugged and hilly extension of the Changpai foothills. The temperature in midsummer lingers around 20° C.
- 1980 [1937 March 29], Kim Il-sung, âLet Us Inspire the People with Hopes of National Liberation by Advancing with Large Forces into the Motherlandâ, in Kim Il Sung Worksâ, volume 1, Pyongyang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, âOCLC, page 126:
- In this large-scale operation of advance into the homeland we plan to dispatch the KPRA in three directions: The main unit will cross the Amnok River and push towards Hyesan, a strongpoint of frontier guards of the Japanese imperialists; another unit is to skirt Mt. Paektu and push on, by way of Antu and Helong, to the northern border area adjoining the Tuman River; and the third unit is to advance as far as the Linjiang and Changbai areas on the shore of the Amnok River.
- 2017 September 6, Stephen Chen, âChina detects rising radiation levels in areas close to North Korean nuclear blast siteâ, in South China Morning Postâ, âISSN, âOCLC, archived from the original on 06 September 2017, Diplomacy & Defenseâ:
- The radiation level in Changbai Korean autonomous county â the closest Chinese urban area to the Punggye-ri test facility â climbed gradually from an average of 104.9 nanograys per hour immediately after the test on Sunday to 108.5 on Tuesday, according to figures released by Chinaâs environment ministry. [âŠ]
Similar upward trends were reported by monitoring stations in other regions, including in Antu county at the foot of Changbai Mountain and in Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture further north.
- 2018 September 20, Joonho Kim, Joshua Lipes, âNorth Korea Shuts Down Illegal Cell Phone Access to Chinese Networks Amid Kim-Moon Summitâ, in Leejin Jun, transl., Radio Free Asiaâ, archived from the original on 20 September 2018:
- The source said that a friend from Jilinâs Antu county had told him that only border crossing between the two nations by land, across North Koreaâs sacred Mt. Paekduâknown in China as Mt. Changbaiâhad been closed from Sept. 17-21.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Antu.
References
- Leon E. Seltzer, editor (1952), âAntu or An-tâuâ, in The Columbia Lippincott Gazetteer of the Worldâ, Morningside Heights, NY: Columbia University Press, âOCLC, page 80, column 1
Further reading
- Saul B. Cohen, editor (2008), âAntuâ, in The Columbia Gazetteer of the Worldâ, 2nd edition, volume 1, New York: Columbia University Press, âISBN, âLCCN, âOCLC, page 154, column 1
Etymology 3
Mexican surname of unexplained origin.
Statistics
- According to the 2010 United States Census, Antu is the 41038th most common surname in the United States, belonging to 531 individuals. Antu is most common among Hispanic/Latino (90.58%) individuals.
Further reading
- Hanks, Patrick, editor (2003), âAntuâ, in Dictionary of American Family Names, volume 1, New York City: Oxford University Press, âISBN, page 46.
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