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Excerpt from The Babylonian Expedition of the University of Pennsylvania, Vol. 10: Series A, Cuneiform Texts
Greatly facilitated as the researches of the Assyriologist occupied with a study of proper names at present are, compared with what they were but a few years ago, the difficulties confronting him at every step, as indicated in the Introduction to Vol. IX, p. 9, are still extraordinary. In some cases, therefore, no effort was made to analyze the names published in the following pages. In other instances the view set forth must be regarded merely as a first attempt to offer a solution, While in still other cases several theories have been proposed, each of which will have to be examined with regard to its own merits. In scarcely another branch of Semitic philology we have to confess our ignorance as often as in the interpretation of proper names, which to a certain degree may be compared with geological stratifications and petrifactions re¿ecting the Werde process of by-gone ages. We see the results of this process before us, but we are frequently at a loss to understand the causes which led to peculiar developments in certain directions, and to fix the historical order of the different stages through which it passed.
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