Ἐρύμανθος
Ancient Greek
[edit]Etymology
[edit]The name, Erymanthos, appears as o-ru-ma-te in a Linear B tablet from Pylos (Py Cn 3) listing members of a coast-watching unit, described in the Glossary of Ventris and Chadwick, Documents in Mycenaean Greek. The person is believed to have been named after his native region. Leonard Palmer proposed that this class of name, bearing the infix -nth-, derives from Luwian, and that the Luwians, an Anatolian-speaking people, preceded the Greeks in the region. This strongest and only theory of this class of name is re-presented by Fred C. Woodhuizen in The Luwians of Western Anatolia. Theorists of this school can etymologize the majority of the names in the Anatolian languages, Anatolian being Indo-European; however, o-ru-ma-te has not yet been credibly further etymologized.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (5th BCE Attic) IPA(key): /e.rý.man.tʰos/
- (1st CE Egyptian) IPA(key): /eˈry.man.tʰos/
- (4th CE Koine) IPA(key): /eˈry.man.θos/
- (10th CE Byzantine) IPA(key): /eˈry.man.θos/
- (15th CE Constantinopolitan) IPA(key): /eˈri.man.θos/
Proper noun
[edit]Ἐρῠ́μανθος • (Erŭ́manthos) m (genitive Ἐρῠμάνθου); second declension
- Mount Erymanthus
Inflection
[edit]Case / # | Singular | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | ὁ Ἐρῠ́μανθος ho Erŭ́manthos | ||||||||||||
Genitive | τοῦ Ἐρῠμάνθου toû Erŭmánthou | ||||||||||||
Dative | τῷ Ἐρῠμάνθῳ tôi Erŭmánthōi | ||||||||||||
Accusative | τὸν Ἐρῠ́μανθον tòn Erŭ́manthon | ||||||||||||
Vocative | Ἐρῠ́μανθε Erŭ́manthe | ||||||||||||
Notes: |
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Derived terms
[edit]- Ἐρῠμάνθῐος (Erŭmánthĭos)
Descendants
[edit]- Greek: Ερύμανθος (Erýmanthos)
- Latin: Erymanthus
References
[edit]- Ancient Greek 4-syllable words
- Ancient Greek terms with IPA pronunciation
- Ancient Greek lemmas
- Ancient Greek proper nouns
- Ancient Greek proparoxytone terms
- Ancient Greek masculine proper nouns
- Ancient Greek second-declension proper nouns
- Ancient Greek masculine proper nouns in the second declension
- Ancient Greek masculine nouns