Anonymous

Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

μανιάκης: Difference between revisions

From LSJ
m
Text replacement - "(<b class="b2">)([\w\s']+), ([\w\s']+)(<\/b>)" to "$2, $3"
m (Text replacement - "v. l." to "v.l.")
m (Text replacement - "(<b class="b2">)([\w\s']+), ([\w\s']+)(<\/b>)" to ", ")
Line 26: Line 26:
}}
}}
{{etym
{{etym
|etymtx=-ου (<b class="b3">-η</b> f.)<br />Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: <b class="b2">golden collar, worn by Persians and Gaulish</b> (Plb., LXX, Pln.),<br />Other forms: On [[μάννος]], [[μόννος]] s. below.<br />Compounds: <b class="b3">μαννο-φόρος</b> (Theoc. 11, 41; [[varia lectio|v.l.]] for <b class="b3">ἀμνο-</b>).<br />Derivatives: Dimin. <b class="b3">-ιάκιον</b> (sch. Theoc. 11, 41), also [[μανάκιν]] (pap.). Besides <b class="b3">μάννος μόννος</b> m. [[collar]] (Poll.),<br />Origin: XX [etym. unknown]<br />Etymology: Formation like [[μανδάκης]], [[γαυνάκης]] (s. vv.). Gaulish word (cf. e.g. OIr. [[muin-torc]] [[collar]], OWelsh [[minci]] [[collar for horses]] etc.) with cognates in Lat. [[monīle]] [[collar]], OHG [[menni]] [[neck ornament]] etc.; WP. 2, 305, Pok. 747 f., W.-Hofmann s. [[monīle]]. (Relation with [[μόναπος]] seems improbable; s.v.) - The other IE languages must then have it from the same or a related source. R. Schmidt Sprache 13(1967)61-64 connects Av. <b class="b2">zarǝnu-maini-</b> [[with golden collar]] (thus Belardi, Studia Pagliaro 1, 189-211); s. also Kronasser, St. Pagliaro 3, 61. Cf. Arm. [[maneak]] [[collar]], with IIr. suffix <b class="b2">-aka-</b>. So of Iranian origin. But the variants [[μάννος]], [[μόννος]] rather point to a non-IE word (as prob. the suffix -(<b class="b3">ι)ακ-</b>); note also the geminate <b class="b3">-νν-</b>. So quite unclear.
|etymtx=-ου (<b class="b3">-η</b> f.)<br />Grammatical information: m.<br />Meaning: [[golden collar]], [[worn by Persians and Gaulish]] (Plb., LXX, Pln.),<br />Other forms: On [[μάννος]], [[μόννος]] s. below.<br />Compounds: <b class="b3">μαννο-φόρος</b> (Theoc. 11, 41; [[varia lectio|v.l.]] for <b class="b3">ἀμνο-</b>).<br />Derivatives: Dimin. <b class="b3">-ιάκιον</b> (sch. Theoc. 11, 41), also [[μανάκιν]] (pap.). Besides <b class="b3">μάννος μόννος</b> m. [[collar]] (Poll.),<br />Origin: XX [etym. unknown]<br />Etymology: Formation like [[μανδάκης]], [[γαυνάκης]] (s. vv.). Gaulish word (cf. e.g. OIr. [[muin-torc]] [[collar]], OWelsh [[minci]] [[collar for horses]] etc.) with cognates in Lat. [[monīle]] [[collar]], OHG [[menni]] [[neck ornament]] etc.; WP. 2, 305, Pok. 747 f., W.-Hofmann s. [[monīle]]. (Relation with [[μόναπος]] seems improbable; s.v.) - The other IE languages must then have it from the same or a related source. R. Schmidt Sprache 13(1967)61-64 connects Av. <b class="b2">zarǝnu-maini-</b> [[with golden collar]] (thus Belardi, Studia Pagliaro 1, 189-211); s. also Kronasser, St. Pagliaro 3, 61. Cf. Arm. [[maneak]] [[collar]], with IIr. suffix <b class="b2">-aka-</b>. So of Iranian origin. But the variants [[μάννος]], [[μόννος]] rather point to a non-IE word (as prob. the suffix -(<b class="b3">ι)ακ-</b>); note also the geminate <b class="b3">-νν-</b>. So quite unclear.
}}
}}
{{mdlsj
{{mdlsj