cogn▪ Orel&Stolbova1994#1272: Akk uṭṭuṭu, Ug ḥṭṭ, Hbr ḥiṭṭā, Aram ḥinṭ-ət-, Ar ḥinṭ-at-, Soq ḥinṭeh. Outside Sem: (HEC) hiṭe (in 2 langs), hanṭe (1 lang.)
▪ DRS 9 (2010)#ḤNṬ-1 Akk uṭṭat-, uṭṭet ‘orge’, Ug ḥṭt, Hbr ḥuṭṭa, Aram ḥinṭᵊtā, Palm ḥṭyn (pl.), Syr ḥeṭṭᵊtā, Ar ḥinṭaẗ, Soq ḥínṭeh, Śḥr ḥeyṭ (?), Gz ḥeṭṭat ‘froment’. – [?] -3 Hbr *ḥānaṭ ‘mûrir’, Ar ḥanaṭa ‘être mûr’, ḥāniṭ ‘rouge; arrivé à maturité’.
▪ Kogan 2011: Akk uṭṭetu ‘(some kind of cereal)’, Ug ḥṭt, Hbr ḥiṭṭā, Syr ḥeṭtā, Ar ḥinṭaẗ, Soq ḥinṭeh ‘wheat’, Mhr ḥəṭāt ‘grain’, Jib ḥíṭ ‘food, beans, staple food, any cereal’, ḥíṭét ‘an ear of rice’, Gz ḥəṭṭat, ḫəṭṭat ‘grain, seed’.
▪ Erman1892 compares Eg ḫnd, allegedly an old and rare word for ‘(sort of cereal)’. (This word is not attested in TLAe, which has, with unsecured meaning, ḫt.wj ‘corn, cereal (?)’ and ḫn.t.t ‘people who do s.th. with corn (?)’.) – Cohen1969, too, has this obscure ḫnd (#122, remarking that the ḫ in the Eg word would be unusual); he also adds Som ḥaḍuḍ ‘céréales’, ḥayḍ ‘orge’ as Cush cognates.