Φοῖνιξ

See also: φοῖνιξ

Ancient Greek

Etymology

The ethnonym is homophonous with φοῖνιξ (phoînix), the Greek name of Tyrian purple. There has been some debate as to whether the ethnonym was derived from the name of the dye or vice versa. The ethnonym is found in use in ancient Mycenaean as 𐀡𐀛𐀑𐀍 (po-ni-ki-jo). One theory is that it is derived from the genuinely Greek adjective φοινός (phoinós, blood-red). Another theory is that is borrowed from Egyptian fnḫw (fenkhu), probably their plural term for "woodcutters" or "carpenters", which would refer to the peoples of the land of Canaan in the region of the Levant to the north, who supplied Egypt with the cedar wood cut from their forests, although there is no evidence that the Egyptians referred to the Phoenicians by this name.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

Φοῖνῐξ • (Phoînix) m or f (genitive Φοίνῑκος); third declension

  1. Phoenician
  2. Carthaginian (as descendants of Phoenicia)

Proper noun

Φοῖνῐξ • (Phoînix) m (genitive Φοίνῑκος); third declension

  1. Phoenix, a city on the Mediterranean Sea.

Inflection

  • Inflection is the same for both noun and proper noun.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Greek: Φοίνιξ (Foínix)
  • Latin: Phoenīx
  • Ottoman Turkish: فنیكه (Finike)
    • Turkish: Finike
    • Armenian: Ֆինիքէ (Finikʻē)

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.