ἀκόνιτον

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Derived by the ancients from ᾰ̓κόνῑτος (akónītos, without dust, without struggle), therefore "invincible", because of its deadly effect. Semantically, this is hardly possible. Furnée connects it with κονή (konḗ, murder) and κῶνος (kônos, cone), suggesting a Pre-Greek origin, which is in any case probable.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ᾰ̓κόνῑτον • (akónīton) n (genitive ᾰ̓κονῑ́του); second declension

  1. leopard's bane, Aconitum anthora
  2. wolf's bane, Aconitum napellus

Inflection

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.