TEANCUM

From Book of Mormon Onomasticon
Revision as of 23:30, 2 February 2011 by Squidge (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<pre>TEANCUM Lehite PN & GN 1. Soldier, ca. 67 BC (Alma 50:35; 62:37) 2. City, 4th c. AD (Mormon 4:3, 6–7, 14) No etymology is suggested. Perhaps tʾnq, tʾnk, tʾng, tʿ...")
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TEANCUM

Lehite PN & GN	1. Soldier, ca. 67 BC (Alma 50:35; 62:37)
		2. City, 4th c. AD (Mormon 4:3, 6–7, 14)

No etymology is suggested. Perhaps tʾnq, tʾnk, tʾng, tʿnq, tʿnk, tʿng.

It was the Nephite custom to name a city after the first person who settled there. Therefore it is possible that the GN came from a PN. It is also possible that a person 
could be named after a GN. The name may not even be Lehite, since it exhibits consonant clusters that resemble Jaredite names. See for example, Ripliancum and 
Moriancumer are the only other Book of Mormon names with the consonant cluster -nc, and both these names are exclusively Jaredite. 

However, if Teancum is not Jaredite, then several Hebrew suggestions can be made. It is possible to separate the element te from the unit -ancum(-). The demonstrative 
m.s. pronoun, zēh in Hebrew, is dā in Aramaic and dū in Ugaritic. It may be that the Mulekites pronounced the demonstrative pronoun [dē], or even [tē], and that Teancum 
means “The one of Ancum.” tʾnq, “she groans, cries, he of the crying.” ʿng, “to be soft, delicate, dainty”. ʿnq, necklace, to put on a necklace.” ʿnq, Anak, the eponymous 
ancestor of the Anakim, pre-Israelite Canaanites.   Akkadian  unqu, “neck.”

Cf. Book of Mormon Teomner, Cumorah, et al.