ομιλητής
Appearance
Greek
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Learned formation from ομιλώ (omiló) + -τής (-tís), with semantic loan from French orateur and semantic loan from German Redner. Related to, but not derived from, the phonetically identical Ancient Greek ὁμιλητής (homilētḗs, “disciple”).[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]ομιλητής • (omilitís) m (plural ομιλητές, feminine ομιλήτρια)
- speaker (one who speaks)
- speaker (one who uses a particular language)
- φυσικός ομιλητής ― fysikós omilitís ― native speaker
- lecturer, speaker
- ο ομιλητής ανέπτυξε το θέμα …
- o omilitís anéptyxe to théma …
- the speaker developed the theme …
Declension
[edit]singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | ομιλητής (omilitís) | ομιλητές (omilités) |
genitive | ομιλητή (omilití) | ομιλητών (omilitón) |
accusative | ομιλητή (omilití) | ομιλητές (omilités) |
vocative | ομιλητή (omilití) | ομιλητές (omilités) |
Related terms
[edit]- ομιλία f (omilía, “speech”)
References
[edit]- ^ ομιλητής, in Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], Triantafyllidis Foundation, 1998 at the Centre for the Greek language
Categories:
- Greek terms suffixed with -τής
- Greek semantic loans from French
- Greek terms derived from French
- Greek semantic loans from German
- Greek terms derived from German
- Greek terms with IPA pronunciation
- Greek lemmas
- Greek nouns
- Greek masculine nouns
- Greek terms with usage examples
- Greek nouns declining like 'νικητής'