ὕδερος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *úderos (abdomen, stomach) and cognate with Sanskrit उदर (udara, belly, abdomen), Latin uterus (womb) and Old Prussian weders (belly, stomach). This word must be separated from ὕδωρ (húdōr, water), since a full grade ὕδερ- is further unknown in Greek. The semantic shift from "belly" to "dropsy" is unproblematic, since Sanskrit उदर (udara) is also used in the sense of "pathologically swollen belly".

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ὕδερος • (húderos) m (genitive ὑδέρου); second declension

  1. (pathology) dropsy
    Synonym: ὕδρωψ (húdrōps)

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ὑδεραίνω (huderaínō)
  • ὑδερίασις (huderíasis)
  • ὑδεριάω (huderiáō)
  • ὑδερικός (huderikós)
  • ὑδερόομαι (huderóomai)
  • ὑδερώδης (huderṓdēs)

Further reading

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