συνάδελφος
Appearance
Greek
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- συνάδερφος (synáderfos)
Etymology
[edit]Learned borrowing from Byzantine Greek συνάδελφος (sunádelphos, “member of a (military) company”), from Ancient Greek συνάδελφος (sunádelphos, “who has siblings”), with semantic loan from French confrère.[1] By surface analysis, συν- (syn-) + αδελφός (adelfós).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]συνάδελφος • (synádelfos) m or f (plural συνάδελφοι, feminine συναδέλφισσα)
Declension
[edit]singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | συνάδελφος (synádelfos) | συνάδελφοι (synádelfoi) |
genitive | συνάδελφου (synádelfou) συναδέλφου (synadélfou) |
συνάδελφων (synádelfon) συναδέλφων (synadélfon) |
accusative | συνάδελφο (synádelfo) | συνάδελφους (synádelfous) συναδέλφους (synadélfous) |
vocative | συνάδελφε (synádelfe) | συνάδελφοι (synádelfoi) |
Second forms are formal.
References
[edit]- ^ συνάδελφος, in Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], Triantafyllidis Foundation, 1998 at the Centre for the Greek language
Categories:
- Greek terms borrowed from Byzantine Greek
- Greek learned borrowings from Byzantine Greek
- Greek terms derived from Byzantine Greek
- Greek terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Greek semantic loans from French
- Greek terms derived from French
- Greek terms prefixed with συν-
- Greek terms with IPA pronunciation
- Greek lemmas
- Greek nouns
- Greek nouns of mixed gender
- Greek masculine nouns
- Greek feminine nouns
- Greek nouns with multiple genders
- Greek nouns declining like 'μέτοικος'
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