Ta (cuneiform)

It also has a sumerogrammic usage for TA, for example in the Epic of Gilgamesh, for Akkadian language "ultu", English language for from, or since,[1] but in only (1) location in the 12 tablet Epic of Gilgamesh.

The photo shows the lower-left corner of the clay tablet letter, but what is of interest is the isolated cuneiform characters next to the "double-scribed paragraph lines".

The adjoining piece has the rest of the spelling of the words, making the line: "lā parāšu",[3] for Not Ceasing, or "Not Interrupting".

But the reason the verb is spelled across the entire line (EA 26, line 29), is that the subject of Para III concerns the history of "diplomatic missions" coming and going, between Tushratta's Mittani, and the Pharaoh's Egypt.

(not being interrupted as commonplace, previously) The verb form is a type of stressing, a form of a superlative; a similar last-line occurs in EA 19, Para II.

Approximate "digital form" of cuneiform ta .
(Identified easily by the 2-verticals, center-left.)
EA 26, fragment (Obverse).
(high-resolution expandable photo)
(Last flat-surface 5-lines on fragment (Para IV), lines 30–34.