βάλσαμον

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • βάρσαμον (bársamon), βλάσαμον (blásamon), πάλσαμον (pálsamon)

Etymology

Of Semitic origin, borrowed from Hebrew בָּשָׂם (bāśām, sweet spice, sweet smell), the consonant sequence in Greek being explained as an attempt of rendering שׂ (ś) sounding back then [ɬ]; the semantic development may later have been attached to Aramaic and Ancient North Arabian.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

βᾰ́λσᾰμον • (bálsamon) n (genitive βᾰλσᾰμου); second declension

  1. Arabian balsam tree (Commiphora gileadensis)
  2. balsam, the fragrant oil produced by this tree
  3. costmary (Tanacetum balsamita)

Inflection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Arabic: بَيْلَسان (baylasān), بَلَسَان (balasān), بَلْسَم (balsam), بِلْسَام (bilsām); بَشَام (bašām)
    • Amharic: በለሳን (bäläsan)
    • Old Armenian: բալասան (balasan)
    • Middle Armenian: պալասան (palasan)
    • Ge'ez: በለሳን (bäläsan), በልሳን (bälsan), በለሶን (bäläson)
    • Somali: bilsin
    • Tigrinya: በለሳን (bäläsan)
  • Aramaic:
    Jewish Palestinian Aramaic: בלזמה, בלסנה
    Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: בלסמון
    Classical Syriac: ܒܠܣܡܘܢ, ܒܠܣܝܡܘܢ, ܒܐܠܣܡܘܢ
  • Latin: balsamum (see there for further descendants)
  • Old Armenian: բաղսամոն (bałsamon)
  • Old Georgian: ბარსაბონი (barsaboni)

Further reading

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