κεράτιον

Ancient Greek

FWOTD – 19 April 2015

Etymology

From κέρᾰς (kéras, horn) + -ῐον (-ion, diminutive suffix). The sense of “carob“ stems from a Semitic loan and later mingled with the “hornlet” word, compare Arabic قَرَظ (qaraẓ, acacia), Classical Syriac ܩܸܪܲܛܵܐ (qerraṭṭā, acacia; carob).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

κερᾱ́τῐον • (kerā́tion) n (genitive κερᾱτῐ́ου); second declension

  1. small horn
    1. (zoology) antenna of the cerambycid or of the hermit crab
    2. (in the plural) curved ends of the womb
    3. (music) a musical instrument (perhaps a fife or clarionet)
  2. carat, 11728 of a pound (clarification of this definition is needed)
  3. a Byzantine coin of a certain value (clarification of this definition is needed)
  4. Alternative form of κερατωνία (keratōnía)
  5. fruit of the carob

Declension

Synonyms

Descendants

  • Arabic: قِيرَاط (qīrāṭ)
    • Amharic: ቂራጥ (ḳiraṭ)
    • English: kirat
    • Galician: quilate
    • Ge'ez: ቂራጥ (ḳiraṭ)
    • Italian: carato
    • Middle French: carat
    • Portuguese: quilate
    • Spanish: quilate (see there for further descendants)
    • Sicilian: caratu
  • Aramaic:
    Jewish Palestinian Aramaic: קרט
    Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: קִירָטָא (qīrāṭā)
    Classical Syriac: ܩܱܪܛܳܐ (qarṭā)
  • Hebrew: קָרָט (qārāṭ)
  • (4) Coptic: ϭⲁⲣⲁⲧⲉ (carate) (Sahidic)
  • Latin: cerātium

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.