σάρξ

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See also: σαρξ

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

Etymology

Originally meaning a piece of meat, it derives from Proto-Indo-European *twerḱ- (to cut).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

σάρξ (sárxf (genitive σαρκός); third declension

  1. The material which covers the bones of a creature; flesh
  2. body
  3. the edible flesh of a fruit
  4. The seat of animalistic, immoral desires and thoughts, such as lust
  5. (Christianity) The physical or natural order, which is opposed to the spiritual

Usage notes

Homer uses σάρξ almost entirely in the plural, with the singular usage specifying a specific part of the body. Later writers use the singular without this distinction.

Inflection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Coptic: ⲥⲁⲣⲝ (sarks)
  • Lua error in Module:etymology/templates/descendant at line 287: You specified a term in 4= and not one in 3=. You probably meant to use t= to specify a gloss instead. If you intended to specify two terms, put the second term in 3=.

References