ἀράχνη

See also: Ἀράχνη and αράχνη

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Pre-Greek origin, although related to Latin arānea. Whether it is the source of the Latin term or they both originated from a different common source is unclear. Basque armiarma possibly may be distantly related to the substrate.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνη • (arákhnē) f (genitive ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνης); first declension

  1. Feminine form of ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνης (arákhnēs).
    • 458 BCE, Aeschylus, Agamemnon 1492:
      κεῖσαι δ᾽ ἀράχνης ἐν ὑφάσματι τῷδ᾽ ἀσεβεῖ θανάτῳ βίον ἐκπνέων.
      keîsai d᾽ arákhnēs en huphásmati tôid᾽ asebeî thanátōi bíon ekpnéōn.
    1. spider web
      Synonym: ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνῐον (arákhnion)
      • 497 BCE – 405 BCE, Sophocles, Fragments 286
    2. cow parsnip
      Synonym: σφονδῠ́λῐον (sphondúlion)
    3. A kind of sundial (mollusc).

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ᾰ̓ρᾰχνᾰ́ομαι (arakhnáomai)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰχνοειδής (arakhnoeidḗs)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰχνώδης (arakhnṓdēs)
  • σῠνᾰρᾰχνόομαι (sunarakhnóomai)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνης (arákhnēs)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνῐον (arákhnion)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνῐόω (arákhnióō)
  • ᾰ̓ρᾰ́χνῐώδης (arákhniṓdēs)

Descendants

  • > Greek: αράχνη (aráchni) (inherited)
  • > Pontic Greek: αράχνα (aráchna), 'ράχνα ('ráchna), 'ράχνα̤ ('ráchnä), αράνα (arána) (inherited)
  • > Tsakonian: αράχνα (aráchna), αράχλα (aráchla) (inherited)
  • ? Latin: arānea
  • Translingual: Arachnida

References

Further reading

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