δάμαρ

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Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

Etymology

Unknown. Traditionally derived from Proto-Indo-European *dṓm (house, home), like δόμος (dómos, dwelling), and the root ἀρ- in ἀραρίσκω (ararískō, to join, fit together). Perhaps more likely from an -r/n-stem like Proto-Indo-European *dómh₂-r̥ (from Proto-Indo-European *demh₂- (tame)), with the -τ- taken over from the n-stem forms.[1]

However, the word could also be of Pre-Greek origin, in view of the suffix -αρ.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

δᾰ́μᾰρ (dámarf (genitive δᾰ́μᾰρτος); third declension

  1. wife, spouse
    Synonyms: γυνή (gunḗ), ἄλοχος (álokhos), σύνευνος (súneunos), ἄκοιτις (ákoitis), σύλλεκτρος (súllektros), εὖνις (eûnis), παράκοιτις (parákoitis), συνευνέτις (suneunétis), συνάορος (sunáoros), ὄαρ (óar), ὁμευνέτις (homeunétis), σύζυγος (súzugos), εὐνάτειρα (eunáteira), ευνήτρια (eunḗtria)

Inflection

References

  1. ^ Chow, Ludenna Fong (2012) The poetics of hierarchy: defining the semantic scope of Indo-European *demH2- in Homeric Greek (MA), pages 69-72

Further reading