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1 θρηνή
θρηνέωsing a dirge: pres subj mp 2nd sgθρηνέωsing a dirge: pres ind mp 2nd sgθρηνέωsing a dirge: pres subj act 3rd sg -
2 θρηνῇ
θρηνέωsing a dirge: pres subj mp 2nd sgθρηνέωsing a dirge: pres ind mp 2nd sgθρηνέωsing a dirge: pres subj act 3rd sg -
3 ἀνθρηδών
ἀνθρηδών, - όνοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `hornet' (D. S.)Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: No doubt a substatum word. Beside ἀνθρηδών, ἀνθρήνη we find τενθρηδών f. (Arist.), τενθρήνη (Nik.); τενθρήνιον (Arist.). There are several forms which lack the first nasal: τεθρηνιώδης (Hp.), ἀθρήνη (Suidas etc.) and without red. or ἀ-, θρήνη, (Eust.), θρηνώδης (Democr. ap. Ael.); Winter Proth. Vok. 45. Cf. further θρῶναξ κηφήν. Λάκωνες H. (I know of no other cases with η\/ω). Note also πεμφρηδών f. `a wasp' (Nic.). So we have a root θρη\/ ων- with prothetic vowel or reduplication (cf. κεκρύφαλος, Σίσυφος) and prenasalization; Kuiper FS Kretschmer 221f. For ν\/δ cf. perhaps φληναφάω - φληδῶντα. Πεμφρηδών may show that the word had a labio-velar (Beekes Glotta 73, 1995\/6, 12f.). - There is no ground to assume that τενθρήνη, τενθρηδών are dissimilated from *τερθρ-. Relation with ἀθήρ, ἀνθέριξ is therefore improbable. Not to θρέομαι, θόρυβος. - τεθρηδών πρωρεύς H. rather a joking formation of the sailors' language after the animal names in - ηδών (Chantr. Form. 360f.). A difficult problem is the relation to Germanic and Balto-Slavic words: OS dren, drāno (Germ. Drohne), Lith. trãnas; s. Kuiper l.c. 222.Page in Frisk: 1,110Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀνθρηδών
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4 θρῆνος
Grammatical information: m.Compounds: Compp. e. g. θρην-ῳδός `who sings a lament' (Alciphr.) with - έω, - ία (E., Plu.), ἔν-θρηνος `full of lament' (Pap.).Derivatives: θρηνώδης `like a lament' (Pl.), θρήνωμα = θρῆνος (pap. Ia; - ωμα only enlarging, Chantraine Formation 186f.). Denomin. verb θρηνέω, aor. θρηνῆσαι, also with prefix, e. g. ἐπι-, κατα-, `start a lament, lament, wail for' (Ω 722) with several derivv.: θρήνημα `lament' (E.), θρηνη-τής, - ητήρ (A.; cf. Benveniste Noms d'agent 42) `lamentation', also θρηνήτωρ (Man.); θρηνητικός (Arist.); ἐπιθρήν-ησις (Plu.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: To θρῆνος in the first place ablauting θρώναξ κηφήν. Λάκωνες H. and reduplicated τενθρήνη `hornet' (cf. also on ἀνθρηδών; see Kuiper Μνήμης χάριν 1, 221f.). Also in other languages we find comparablewords denoting sounds: Skt. dhráṇati `sounds' (gramm.) and the Germanic word for ` Drohne', e. g. OS dreno, with which cf. also Goth. drunjus `sound', NGerm. drönen ` drōhnen' a. o., Lat. drēnsō, - āre the sound of swans (from Gaulic); in all these cases we have to assume an onomatopoetic elementary relation rather than a genetic connection. (Not here Arm. dṙnč̣im `blow the horn' (Mladenov Mélanges Pedersen 95ff.). Cf. with different anlaut Lith. trinkėti ! `drone'; uncertain Toch. A träṅk- `speak'. - Pok. 255f., W.-Hofmann s. drēnsō, Mayrhofer s. dhráṇati. (Hardly to θρέομαι, θόρυβος, θρῦλος.) - We have prob. a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 1,681-682Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θρῆνος
См. также в других словарях:
θρηνῇ — θρηνέω sing a dirge pres subj mp 2nd sg θρηνέω sing a dirge pres ind mp 2nd sg θρηνέω sing a dirge pres subj act 3rd sg … Greek morphological index (Ελληνική μορφολογικούς δείκτες)
dher-3, dhereu-, dhrē̆ n- — dher 3, dhereu , dhrē̆ n English meaning: expr. (to purr, murmur, etc.), onomatopoeic words Deutsche Übersetzung: Schallwurzel “murmur, brummen, dröhnen” Material: Gk. θόρυβος “ woozy noise”, θορυβέω “make a noise, bewilder”,… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
πενθητήρ — ῆρος, ο, θηλ. πενθήτρια, Α αυτός που πενθεί για κάτι («πάρειμι τῶν σων κακῶν πενθήτρια», Ευρ.). [ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < πενθῶ + επίθημα τήρ / τρια (πρβλ. θρηνη τήρ)] … Dictionary of Greek