The word recalls μῖσος (mîsos, “hatred”) but remains without certain etymology. Pokorny compares Irish mosach (“shaggy, bristly”), Low German mussig (“dirty”) and Russian му́слить (múslitʹ, “to suck, beslaver”). The group has been compared with the root of μαδάω (madáō, “to be moist”), but this remains hypothetical.
μύσος • (músos) n (genitive μύσους); third declension
Case / # | Singular | Dual | Plural | ||||||||||
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Nominative | τὸ μῠ́σος tò mŭ́sos |
τὼ μῠ́σει tṑ mŭ́sei |
τᾰ̀ μῠ́ση tằ mŭ́sē | ||||||||||
Genitive | τοῦ μῠ́σους toû mŭ́sous |
τοῖν μῠσοῖν toîn mŭsoîn |
τῶν μῠσῶν tôn mŭsôn | ||||||||||
Dative | τῷ μῠ́σει tôi mŭ́sei |
τοῖν μῠσοῖν toîn mŭsoîn |
τοῖς μῠ́σεσῐ / μῠ́σεσῐν toîs mŭ́sesĭ(n) | ||||||||||
Accusative | τὸ μῠ́σος tò mŭ́sos |
τὼ μῠ́σει tṑ mŭ́sei |
τᾰ̀ μῠ́ση tằ mŭ́sē | ||||||||||
Vocative | μῠ́σος mŭ́sos |
μῠ́σει mŭ́sei |
μῠ́ση mŭ́sē | ||||||||||
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