πελαργός

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Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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The origin is Pre-Greek. Folk-etymologically explained as πελλός (pellós, dark) +‎ ἀργός (argós, white). Has been linked with Old Armenian արագիլ (aragil).

Witczak (1991) suggests that the word is a compound, with second term continuing otherwise unattested *ἁργός (*hargós), from Proto-Indo-European *sr̥ǵos (stork), akin e.g. to Proto-Germanic *sturkaz (stork).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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πελᾱργός (pelārgósm (genitive πελᾱργοῦ); second declension

  1. stork

Inflection

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Descendants

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  • Greek: πελαργός (pelargós)
  • Arabic: بِلَّارِج (billārij) (Tunisian, Algerian, Moroccan)
  • Classical Syriac: ܦܝܠܪܓܐ (pīlargā)

Further reading

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Greek

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Etymology

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From Ancient Greek.

Noun

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πελαργός (pelargósm (plural πελαργοί)

  1. stork (bird)

Declension

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singular plural
nominative πελαργός (pelargós) πελαργοί (pelargoí)
genitive πελαργού (pelargoú) πελαργών (pelargón)
accusative πελαργό (pelargó) πελαργούς (pelargoús)
vocative πελαργέ (pelargé) πελαργοί (pelargoí)

See also

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Further reading

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