λάρυγξ

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Connected to Latin lurcō (to eat greedily, guzzle) and Middle High German slurc (throat) by Pokorny, possibly reshaped according to φᾰ́ρῠγξ (phárunx, throat; pharynx). Pre-Greek according to Beekes, due to the prenasalized suffix -υγγ-.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

λᾰ́ρῠγξ • (lárunx) m (genitive λᾰ́ρῠγγος or λᾰ́ρῠγος); third declension

  1. larynx, upper part of windpipe
  2. gullet, throat

Inflection

Derived terms

  • βδελλολᾰ́ρῠγξ (bdellolárunx)
  • λᾰρῠγγός (larungós)
  • λᾰρῠγγοτομέω (larungotoméō)
  • λᾰρῠγγόφωνος (larungóphōnos)
  • λᾰρῠγγῐ́ζω (larungízō)
  • λᾰρῠγγῐκός (larungikós)
  • λᾰρῠ́γγῐον (larúngion)
  • λᾰρῠγγῐᾰ́ω (larungiáō)
  • λᾰρῠγγισμός (larungismós)

Descendants

See also

References

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