βρότος

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See also: βροτός

Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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Uncertain.

Perhaps related to Sanskrit मूर्त (mūrtá-, clotted, coagulated) (related to the verb मूर्छति (mūrchati, to congeal, thicken, become solid, stiffen); see मूर्छ् (mūrch) for more), from Proto-Indo-European *mr̥H-tó-, but this requires an unexplained loss of the laryngeal.

Various attempts to link this term with βροτός (brotós) and ἄμβροτος (ámbrotos) have been made; Frisk and Beekes following him reject these as improbable. Schulze proposes a common origin with ἀμφιβρότη (amphibrótē, covering the body on all sides) from an unattested *βροτόν (*brotón, body) which may be further related to Sanskrit मूर्ति (mū́rti-, body, figure, form); this is also rejected.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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βρότος (brótosm (genitive βρότου); second declension

  1. blood that has run from a wound, gore
    Synonym: λύθρον (lúthron)

Inflection

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Derived terms

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See also

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Further reading

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