κύμβαλον

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From κύμβη (kúmbē, hollow of a vessel), with a suffix -αλον which is found also in κρόταλον (krótalon, rattle). Yakubovich suggested a derivation from Hittite [script needed] (ḫuḫupal, kind of musical instrument, perhaps a lute or a drum); however, the unexplained dereduplication, the -μβ- instead of -β- and the still unclear meaning of the Hittite word exclude this proposal.[1]

Pronunciation

 

Noun

κῠ́μβᾰλον • (kúmbalon) n (genitive κῠμβᾰ́λου); second declension

  1. (chiefly in the plural) cymbal

Inflection

Derived terms

  • κῠμβᾰλῖτῐς (kumbalîtis)
  • κῠμβᾰλοκρούστης (kumbalokroústēs)
  • κῠμβᾰλῐ́ζω (kumbalízō)
  • κῠμβᾰ́λῐον (kumbálion)
  • κῠμβᾰλῐσμός (kumbalismós)
  • κῠμβᾰλῐστής (kumbalistḗs)
  • κῠμβᾰλῐ́στρῐᾱ (kumbalístriā)

Descendants

  • Latin: cymbalum (see there for further descendants)

References

  1. Zsolt Simon, (Munich: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), 396.

Further reading

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