ψηλαφάω

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Analyzed by Fick as a univerbation from the aorist form of ψάλλω (psállō, to pluck, pull, twitch) and ἀφάω (apháō, to handle). It remains unclear, however, why the aorist was preferred. Bechtel recognises a noun *ψᾱ́λα (*psā́la) in the first member, referring to μηλαφάω (mēlapháō, to touch with a probe); but this rare verb was created after the example of ψηλαφάω (psēlapháō), which is more common. If -αφ- is rather a suffix, the word could be Pre-Greek.

Pronunciation

 

Verb

ψηλᾰφᾰ́ω • (psēlapháō)

  1. to feel or grope about to find a thing, like a blind man
  2. to feel, touch, handle, stroke
  3. (figuratively) to test, examine

Conjugation

Derived terms

  • ἐπῐψηλᾰφᾰ́ω (epipsēlapháō)
  • ψηλᾰ́φημᾰ (psēláphēma)
  • ψηλᾰ́φησῐς (psēláphēsis)
  • ψηλᾰφητής (psēlaphētḗs)
  • ψηλᾰφητός (psēlaphētós)
  • ψηλᾰφητῐκῶς (psēlaphētikôs)
  • ψηλᾰφώδης (psēlaphṓdēs)
  • ψηλᾰφῐ́ζω (psēlaphízō)
  • ψηλᾰφῐ́ᾱ (psēlaphíā)

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.