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|etymtx=Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: [[death]] (Il.).<br />Compounds: Compp., e. g. <b class="b3">ἀ-θάνατος</b> [[immortal]] (Il.), <b class="b3">θανατη-φόρος</b> [[death-bringing]] (A. ; <b class="b3">-η-</b> rhythmic and analog. conditioned, Schwyzer 438f.).<br />Derivatives: Adj.: | |etymtx=Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: [[death]] (Il.).<br />Compounds: Compp., e. g. <b class="b3">ἀ-θάνατος</b> [[immortal]] (Il.), <b class="b3">θανατη-φόρος</b> [[death-bringing]] (A. ; <b class="b3">-η-</b> rhythmic and analog. conditioned, Schwyzer 438f.).<br />Derivatives: Adj.: [[θανάσιμος]] [[bringing death]], [[going to die]] (IA; on the formation Arbenz Die Adj. auf <b class="b3">-ιμος</b> 17 and 70f.; rarely [[θανατήσιμος]], Arbenz 78f.); also [[θανατώδης]] (Hp.), [[θανατόεις]] (S., E.), [[θανατήσιος]] (Afric.; after [[βιοτήσιος]], [[βροτήσιος]]), [[θανατικός]] (D. S., Plu.), [[θανατηρός]] (Eust.); [[θανατούσια]] (sc. [[ἱερά]]) pl. [[feast for the dead]] (Luc.; after [[γερούσιος]]). Denomin. verbs: 1. [[θανατόω]] <b class="b2">kill, bring to death, sentence to death</b> (IA) with [[θανάτωσις]]; 2. [[θανατάω]] [[like to die]], also [[be dying]] (Pl.); 3. [[θανατιάω]] <b class="b2">id.</b> (Luc.). - The old perfect [[τέθνηκα]] [[am dead]], pl. [[τέθναμεν]], ptc. [[τεθνηώς]], [[τεθνεώς]], Aeol. inf. [[τεθνάκην]], with the thematic root aorist [[ἔθανον]] [[I died]] (Il.), the fut. [[θανοῦμαι]] (Il.) and an added present [[θνηισκω]] (inscr.), [[θνήσκω]] (mss.), Aeol. [[θναισκω]] (Hdn. Gr. 2, 79); in prose mostly <b class="b3">ἀπο-θνῄσκω</b>; also with other prefixes, e. g. <b class="b3">κατα-θνῄσκω</b>, <b class="b3">-θανεῖν</b>, <b class="b3">-τέθνηκα</b> (all Il.); on the function of the prefix Schwyzer-Debrunner 268f., Hermann Gött. Nachr. 1943, 617f. Verbal adj. [[θνητός]] [[mortal]] (Il.). - From there [[θνήσιμος]] (only Arg. to S. OT 7) with [[θνησιμαῖον]] [[cadaver]] (LXX; Chantraine Formation 49, Mélanges Maspéro 221); in the same meaning also [[θνασίδιον]], <b class="b3">θνησ(ε)ίδιον</b> (Lesbos, Ael.; Schwyzer 270). Verbalsubst. [[θνῆσις]] [[dying]], [[mortality]] (medic.); on [[εὑθνήσιμος]] [[preparing a soft death]] (A. Ag. 1294) from <b class="b3">εὖ θνῄσκειν</b>; cf. [[εὑθάνατος]], <b class="b3">-τέω</b>, <b class="b3">-σία</b>; diff., hardly correct, Arbenz 78 u. 84.<br />Origin: IE [Indo-European] [266] <b class="b2">*dʰ(u)enh₂-</b> [[die]]<br />Etymology: The form <b class="b3">θαν-</b> ([[εῖν]]) and <b class="b3">θάνα-(τος</b>) <b class="b3">θνα-(τός</b>) point to a form <b class="b2">*dhnh₂-</b>, <b class="b2">*dhnh₂-</b>e- beside <b class="b2">*dhnh₂-</b> before consonant. The comparison with Skt. aorist <b class="b2">á-dhvanī-t</b> [[he disappeared]] and the ptc. <b class="b2">dhvān-tá-</b> [[dark]] led to the reconstruction IE <b class="b2">dhu̯enǝ-</b>; the meaning [[die]] stems from a euphemism, cf. Chantraine Sprache 1, 146. See Pok. 266. But the <b class="b2">-u̯-</b> is not quite certain. | ||
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{{mdlsj | {{mdlsj |