πάταγος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Possibly of onomatopoeic origin. The suffix in -γ- is found in semantically close forms, such as λαλαγή (lalagḗ), σμαραγέω (smaragéō) and οἰμωγή (oimōgḗ). Furnée compares σπαταγγίζειν (spatangízein); the word could also be of Pre-Greek origin.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

πάτᾰγος • (pátagos) m (genitive πατᾰ́γου); second declension

  1. clatter, crash (of trees falling)
  2. chattering of the teeth
  3. rattle or crash of thunder
  4. plash of a body falling into water

Inflection

Derived terms

  • παταγέω (patagéō)
  • παταγή (patagḗ)
  • πατάγημα (patágēma)
  • παταγοδρόμος (patagodrómos)

Descendants

  • Latin: patagus

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.