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θάμβος

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See also: θαμβός

Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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Uncertain. Often connected to such forms as θαῦμα (thaûma, wonder, marvel), θώψ (thṓps, flatterer, false friend), τάφος (táphos, amazement) and τέθηπα (téthēpa, to be astonished). Beekes rejects additional connections to Proto-Germanic *dōbnaną (to become dull), Middle English dabben (to strike), and German tappen (to frisk), and claims all the Greek terms are borrowed from non-Indo-European Pre-Greek.[1] The philologist Oswald Szemerényi has suggested a possible connection to *dʰembʰ-, itself possibly a nasalized variant of *dʰebʰ- (to harm), whence also perhaps Sanskrit द॒भ्नोति॑ (dabhnóti, to harm, deceive). According to the linguist Bilyana Mihaylova, this proposal is convincing semantically—compare Ancient Greek ἐκπλήσσω (ekplḗssō, to strike, frighten) for a possible parallel example of a development from "to strike" > "to frighten". However, according to Mihaylova, this proposal faces "serious phonetic difficulties".[2] The phonological issues concerning this term are linked to the issue of post-nasal deaspiration in Ancient Greek (see Miller's Law). According to the linguist Roberto Batisti, if such deaspiration is accepted, then the term could be derived from a neuter s-stem *dʰembʰ-es-.[3]

Pronunciation

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Noun

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θᾰ́μβος (thắmbosn (genitive θᾰ́μβεος or θᾰ́μβους or θᾰ́μβευς); third declension

  1. amazement, astonishment
  2. awe of the divine

Declension

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Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Byzantine Greek: θαμβός (thambós, astonished)

References

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  1. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010), “θάμβος”, in Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 532
  2. ^ Mihaylova, Bilyana (2024), “The Words for Fear in Ancient Greek from an Etymological Perspective”, in Балканско езикознание / Linguistique balkanique[1], volume 63, number 1, →ISSN, pages 10-11
  3. ^ Batisti, Roberto (2025), Post-Nasal Deaspiration in Ancient Greek: Mirage or Reality?[2], →DOI, →ISBN, page 1

Further reading

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