Jump to content

ἄνθραξ

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by Vergencescattered (talk | contribs) as of 17:06, 28 November 2024.
See also: άνθραξ

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Uncertain; Strong's Concordance calls it a "primitive word". Possibly from a Mediterranean substrate; compare Old Armenian անթայր (antʻayr, spark; anthrax), անթեղ (antʻeł, hot coal, ember).

Others have connected the word to Old Norse sintr, German Sinter (sinter), Old English sinder (cinder, ashes, slag), all from *sindrą (dross, cinder, slag), and via Proto-Indo-European *sendʰro- (coagulating fluid, scale, cinder) cognate to Old Church Slavonic сядра (sjadra, lime cinder, gypsum) (compare Serbo-Croatian sadra, Czech sádra). Kölligan suggests a connection to Sanskrit अन्ध (andha, blind, darkness, etc.).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ἄνθραξ (ánthraxm (genitive ἄνθρακος); third declension

  1. charcoal
  2. a deep red precious stone, a carbuncle
  3. an abscess, a boil, a carbuncle

Inflection

Derived terms

(deprecated template usage)

Descendants

Further reading