Words

Akkadian
piḫlu - (mng. unkn.) (CAD P 369, AHw 1582)
Hapax. No etymology can be suggested.
Akkadian
pīḫu - a standard-capacity jug of beer (CAD P 369, AHw. 862)
With AHw 853- and CDA 274, probably to be derived from peḫû ‘to seal, to block’.
Akkadian
pikallullu - vent (for an oven) (CAD P 371, AHw. 863)
No definitive etymology can be suggested.
Akkadian
piḳannu - dung pellet (CAD P 385, AHw. 865)
Var. piqqannu, piqānu. No etymology can be suggested.
Akkadian
pīḳat - perhaps, it may be that (CAD P 386, AHw. 864)
Var. pāḳat; pīḳa (CAD P 384, AHw. 864); piqtatti, piqtāte (CAD P 393).
Akk. pīḳat (and vars.) ‘perhaps’ is commonly derived from piāḳu ‘to (be) narrow’. This etymology is not improbable, but one has to admit that the semantic development from ‘to (be) narrow’ to ‘perhaps’ is not self-evident.
Akkadian
pīḳu - narrow (CAD P 394, AHw. 865)
See piāḳu ‘to be narrow’.
Akkadian
pilludû - ritual (CAD P 377, AHw. 853)
Or billudû. From Sum. bel(l)uda “rite, custom”. Sum. bel(l)uda “rite, custom” is probably an early loanword from Akk. bēlūtu ‘rule, dominion’ (Powell 1972:210, fn. 128).
Akkadian
piltu - (a container) (CAD P 380, AHw. 864)
Or peltu. Possibly from Elam. *pil-t, a derivation from the verbal base pil(i) “to deposit” (ElW 204) with the class-suffix -t.
Akkadian
piltu, peltu - a container (CAD P 380, AHw 864)
Possibly from Elam. *pil-t, a derivation from the verbal base pil(i) “to deposit” (ElW 204) with the class-suffix -t.
Akkadian
pīlu, pēlu, pūlu - limestone (CAD P 380, AHw 864)
No definitive etymology can be suggested. As argued by Greppin 1991, 204, the Akk. word is likely to be connected with Armenian buṙ “plaster, lime” (AB I 485; the Armenian word was further borrowed into Turkish, see Dankoff 1995, 31 f.), Greek πῶρος (Liddell; Scott 1561b; no Indo-European etymology in Frisk II 635), Urartian pulusi “stele” (the Urartian word can be analysed as the stem pul- and the suffix -usə, see Wilhelm 2008b, 112). According to Greppin, we are probably dealing with a “wandering word”, perhaps of “Anatolian or Mesopotamian origin”.