χαῦνος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Because of its basic meaning "loose, with holes, porous", is quite possible for this adjective to derive from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰan- / *gʰan- (to yawn, to gape), like χάος (kháos, abyss, chasm), χαίνω (khaínō) and χάσκω (kháskō, to gape, yawn).

Pronunciation

 

Adjective

χαῦνος • (khaûnos) m (feminine χαύνη, neuter χαῦνον); first/second declension

  1. (of tissues) porous, spongy
    Synonyms: πολῠ́τρητος (polútrētos), σομφός (somphós)
  2. (of timber) loose-grained
  3. (figuratively) empty, frivolous

Inflection

Derived terms

  • χαυνόγειον (khaunógeion)
  • χαυνολόγος (khaunológos)
  • χαυνοπολῑ́της (khaunopolī́tēs)
  • χαυνόπρωκτος (khaunóprōktos)
  • χαυνόσομφος (khaunósomphos)
  • χαυνότης (khaunótēs)
  • χαυνόφρων (khaunóphrōn)
  • χαυνόω (khaunóō)
  • χαύνωμᾰ (khaúnōma)
  • χαύνωσῐς (khaúnōsis)
  • χαυνωτῐκός (khaunōtikós)
  • χαῦνᾰξ (khaûnax)

Descendants

  • Translingual: Chauna

Further reading

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