γοητεία
Greek
Etymology
From Ancient Greek γοητεία (goēteía, “charm, jugglery, sorcery”), from Ancient Greek γόης (góēs, “sorcerer, wizard”), from Ancient Greek γοάω (goáō, “to groan, bewail”), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *geh₃- (“to sing, cry”) or Proto-Indo-European *gewH- (“to call, invoke, cry out”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɣo.iˈti.a/
- Hyphenation: γο‧η‧τεί‧α
Declension
Related terms
- γοητεύω (goïtévo, “to charm”)
- γοητευτικός (goïteftikós, “charming”)
- γοητευμένος (goïtevménos, “charmed, beguiled”)
- αγοήτευτος (agoḯteftos, “unbeguiled, uncharmed”)
- απογοητεύω (apogoïtévo, “to disappoint, to let down”)
See also
- γούρι n (goúri, “charm, spell”)
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