The connection with νηρόν (nērón, “water”) is refuted by the forms with the vocalic anlaut “α-”. Furnée takes this initial variation as evidence for a Pre-Greek origin. Plevačová draws the term to Finnish nieriä (“saibling”) – which see for more relatives –, downplaying the semantic difference by noting that both are longish sea creatures caught in a fisher’s net and the contexts in which the Greek and Latin are attested may as well point to a fish.
νηρῑ́της • (nērī́tēs) m (genitive νηρῑ́του); first declension
Case / # | Singular | Dual | Plural | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | ὁ νηρῑ́της ho nērī́tēs |
τὼ νηρῑ́τᾱ tṑ nērī́tā |
οἱ νηρῖται hoi nērîtai | ||||||||||
Genitive | τοῦ νηρῑ́του toû nērī́tou |
τοῖν νηρῑ́ταιν toîn nērī́tain |
τῶν νηρῑτῶν tôn nērītôn | ||||||||||
Dative | τῷ νηρῑ́τῃ tôi nērī́tēi |
τοῖν νηρῑ́ταιν toîn nērī́tain |
τοῖς νηρῑ́ταις toîs nērī́tais | ||||||||||
Accusative | τὸν νηρῑ́την tòn nērī́tēn |
τὼ νηρῑ́τᾱ tṑ nērī́tā |
τοὺς νηρῑ́τᾱς toùs nērī́tās | ||||||||||
Vocative | νηρῖτᾰ nērîta |
νηρῑ́τᾱ nērī́tā |
νηρῖται nērîtai | ||||||||||
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