ὀρείχαλκος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Looks like the dative singular of ὄρος (óros, mountain) + χαλκός (khalkós, copper), however the same way Latin has connected the first part as aurīchalcum to aurum (gold) this is also a folk-etymology and the first part is rather Akkadian 𒍏 (URUD /⁠ēru, wēru⁠/, copper), making a tautological compound.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ὀρείχᾰλκος • (oreíkhalkos) m (genitive ὀρειχᾰ́λκου); second declension

  1. brass made from yellow copper ore; an alloy of copper and "mock silver" (presumably zinc)
    • c. 23 CE, Strabo, chapter 1.56, in Γεωγραφικά, volume XIII:
      λίθος [...] μετὰ γῆς τινος καμινευθεὶς ἀποστάζει ψευδάργυρον͵ ἣ προσλαβοῦσα χαλκὸν τὸ καλούμενον γίνεται κρᾶμα͵ ὅ τινες ὀρείχαλκον καλοῦσι
      líthos [...] metà gês tinos kamineutheìs apostázei pseudárguron͵ hḕ proslaboûsa khalkòn tò kaloúmenon gínetai krâma͵ hó tines oreíkhalkon kaloûsi
      a stone [...] which heated in a furnace with a certain earth distils mock silver (zinc); and this, with the addition of copper, makes the so-called "mixture" (alloy), which by some is called "orichalcum"
  2. orichalcum, a natural or mythical valuable alloy of copper and perhaps gold
    • c. 7th century BCE, Homer (attributed, unlikely), Ὁμηρικὸς ὕμνος ε' "Εἰς Ἀφροδίτην":
      [...] ἐν δὲ τρητοῖσι λοβοῖσιν ἄνθεμ’ ὀρειχάλκου χρυσοῖό τε τιμήεντος
      [...] en dè trētoîsi loboîsin ánthem’ oreikhálkou khrusoîó te timḗentos
      [...] and in her perforated ears earrings of orichalcum and of precious gold

Inflection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Greek: ορείχαλκος (oreíchalkos) (learned)
  • Latin: orīchalcum
  • Latin: aurīchalcum
    • Spanish: auricalco (learned)
    • Russian: аврихальк (avrixalʹk) (learned)
  • German: Oreichalk (learned)
  • Russian: орихалк (orixalk) (learned)

Further reading

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