Term that today describes a charge for road use.
1I stopped to look at them, and then they started, 'Willie brewed a peck o' maut,' and, 'pon my soul, I had to come away.
2Maut, the consort of Ammon, represented Nature.
4; With Mandaean "muta"; with Akkadian "m'tu"; with Arabic "maut"; with Ge'ez "mot".
5"Vell, you shut your --maut or I smash your --head, see?"
6The guides tell you it's all nonsense and the tower's name comes from Maut, meaning toll, for it was a toll-collecting post.
7In Egypt, in the eleventh, or twelfth dynasty, we do find a family of gods, the triad, father (Amun), mother (Maut), child (Khuns).
8The Egyptian trinities are well known: thus, from Amun by Maut proceeds Khonso; from Osiris by Isis proceeds Horus; from Neph by Saté proceeds Anouké.
9MAUT: A woman draped, and crowned with the pschent (the pschent was a double crown, worn by the king at his coronation), representing a vulture.