μανδραγόρας

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Unexplained. Maybe from Old Persian *merdum gija (plant of humans), but it could be a folk-etymological adaptation of a foreign word.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

μᾰνδρᾰγόρᾱς • (mandragórās) m (genitive μᾰνδρᾰγόρου); first declension

  1. mandrake (Mandragora officinarum)
    Synonyms: ἀλοῖτις (aloîtis), μώριος (mṓrios)

Inflection

Derived terms

  • μανδραγοριζομένη (mandragorizoménē)
  • μανδραγορικός (mandragorikós)
  • μανδραγορίτης (mandragorítēs)

Descendants

  • Translingual: Mandragora
  • Classical Syriac: ܡܢܕܪܓܪܘܢ (mndrgrwn)
  • Latin: mandragorās (see there for further descendants)
  • Old Armenian: մանրագոր (manragor)
  • Old Georgian: მანდრაგორი (mandragori), მანდრაგური (mandraguri), მარდაგონი (mardagoni)

Further reading

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