αγυιά

Greek

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Katharevousa ἀγυιά (aguiá) from Ancient Greek ἀγυιᾱ́ (aguiā́), less common variant of ἄγυια (águia).[1] Loaned in the 19th century to substitute the Demotic σοκάκι (sokáki) which was a Turkish loanword.[2]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a.ʝiˈa/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: α‧γυι‧ά

Noun

αγυιά • (agyiá) f (plural αγυιές) (originally Katharevousa, now formal, archaic, often sarcastic)

  1. (dated) lane, back street, side street (small and narrow street or alley)
    informal, standard synonym: σοκάκι n (sokáki).
    Near-synonyms: δρόμος m (drómos), οδός f (odós, street)
    ανά τας οδούς και τας αγυιάς (from a Katharevousa set phrase)
    aná tas odoús kai tas agyiás
    everywhere, up every byroad
    (literally, “by the roads and lanes”)

Declension

Derived terms

  • αγυιόπαιδο n (agyiópaido, street urchin)
  • ανά τας οδούς και τας αγυιάς (aná tas odoús kai tas agyiás) (from Katharevousa)
  • ανά τας ρύμας και τας αγυιάς (aná tas rýmas kai tas agyiás) (from Katharevousa)

References

  1. αγυιά - Georgakas, Demetrius, 1908-1990 (1960-2009) A Modern Greek-English Dictionary [MGED online, 2009. letter α only], Centre for the Greek language
  2. αγυιά - Babiniotis, Georgios (2002) Λεξικό της νέας ελληνικής γλώσσας: [] [Dictionary of Modern Greek (language)] (in Greek), 2nd edition, Athens: Kentro Lexikologias [Lexicology Centre], 1st edition 1998, →ISBN.
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