"[1] A late text offers an esoteric bilingual explanation, "AN-tum gāmilat (ŠU.GAR) napišti (ZI) dA-nim," "the goddess (alternatively: Antu) who saves the life of Anu.
[8] According to god lists, under their collective name Šassūrātu they were equated with groups of foreign goddesses of similar character, Hurrian Hutena and Hutellura and Ugaritic and Mariote Kotharāt.
[12] She was also one of the fourteen deities worshiped in Eurusaga, the temple of Gula, alongside the likes of Urmah, Ninimma, Belet-Seri, Sirash and Ningirzida.
[3] It is also possible that a joint temple dedicated to her and Enlil, E-kiaggashudu (Sumerian: "perfect beloved house") known from a theological text was located in Nippur.
[13] Additionally, while the E-kurigigal (Sumerian: "house, mountain endowed with sight") in Nippur was dedicated to Enlil and his primary wife Ninlil, one text indicates that it was also where rites connected to the marriage between him and Shuzianna were celebrated.