Speculatively, from Proto-Afroasiatic*ʕal-; as with other attempts at reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic, academic consensus is lacking. If so, perhaps compare Hebrewעָלָה(ʕālā, “to ascend, rise, go up”), Arabicعَلِيَ(ʕaliya, “to be high, exalted”), عَلَى(ʕalā, “to climb”), Tarifitaři(“to climb, ascend”), Central Atlas Tamazightⴰⵍⵢ(aly, “to climb, go up”)
Archaic or greatly restricted in usage by Middle Egyptian. The perfect has mostly taken over the functions of the perfective, and the subjunctive and periphrastic prospective have mostly replaced the prospective.
Declines using third-person suffix pronouns instead of adjectival endings: masculine .f/.fj, feminine .s/.sj, dual .sn/.snj, plural .sn.
“jꜥr (lemma ID 21770)”, in Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae[1], Corpus issue 18, Web app version 2.1.5, Tonio Sebastian Richter & Daniel A. Werning by order of the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften and Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert & Peter Dils by order of the Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2004–26 July 2023