No, you deliberately quoted a definition of a Theban god.
Thebes was part of the Egyptian/Aegyptian Kingdoms, "Amon" was an Aeyptian neteru/'g-d'.
I didn't give any cherry-picked religiously-based redefinition. Here is where the full extent of your utterly obvious stupidity will be revealed. Amen is derived from three Hebrew consonants: aleph (’), mem (m), and nun (n). The Hebrew usage of the word comes from the combined meanings of these consonants and the sounding ...
You did cherry-pick a religiously-based definition, (specifically, a hebrew one). So that will be designated as lie#1, (just in this context though, since this is not your first posted lie). "Amen/Amon/Amun" was an
Aegyptian word for one of their neters/'g-ds' which signficantly
preceded the hebrew plagiarism and alteration of that word. When words are appropriated by those speaking another language, (in this instance, by hebrews who apparently were translating the
egyptian word "Amon/Amen/Amun" into their hebrew-language version).
The word "aloha" in the Hawaiian language means affection, peace, compassion and mercy. Since the middle of the 19th century, it also has come to be used as an English greeting to say goodbye and hello. The Hawaiian usage preceded the English translation and alteration of meaning in exactly the same way that the preceding Egyptian word "Amon" was 'appropriated' and retranslated later by the hebrews into their language.
Your claim that the (A)egyptians stole the word "amon" from the "ethiopians" is not substantiated by evidence. Further, there is evidence that both what is now Sudan and Ethiopia partially formed what was Upper Egypt in pharoaic and earlier predynastic times. Language stems from the dominant culture which was not some mythical "ethiopian" vague culture but, the (A)egyptian one which spread out from along the Nile.
Actually I said they got it from an older culture and most likely Ethiopians. I believe Punt and Yam were already mentioned and it is known that the first Dynasty of Egypt had trade dealings with Punt and that they considered their place of origin to be the Land of Punt. You may also want to understand why the Triad of Thebes is often called the Trinity of Ethiopia.
There is no extant evidence that the word originated with predynastic ethiopians or punts either prior to, or after Thebes became an Aeyptian nome. Amun (also spelled Amon, Ammon, Amoun, Amen, and rarely Imen) was the name of a deity, in Egyptian mythology, who gradually rose to become one of the most important deities in Ancient Egypt, before fading into obscurity. Amun's name is first recorded in Egyptian records as imn, meaning "The hidden (one)".