γεννάω

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From γέννα (génna) + -ᾰ́ω (-áō), poetic form of γένος (génos, offspring). Causal counterpart of γίγνομαι (gígnomai, to be born, to become).

Pronunciation

 

Verb

γεννᾰ́ω • (gennáō)

  1. to beget, give birth to
  2. to bring forth, produce, generate

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ἀναγεννάω (anagennáō)/ (ἀναγεννῶ (anagennô))
  • γέννημα (génnēma)
  • γέννησις (génnēsis)
  • γεννήτειρα (gennḗteira)
  • γεννητέον (gennētéon)
  • γεννητήρ (gennētḗr)
  • γεννητής (gennētḗs)
  • γεννητός (gennētós)
  • γεννήτρια (gennḗtria)
  • γεννήτωρ (gennḗtōr)

References

Greek

Etymology

From modern γενν(ώ) + -άω (-áo). Inherited from Ancient Greek γεννῶ (gennô), contracted form of γεννάω (gennáō). Also see γένος (génos), γενέτης (genétēs), γόνος (gónos) and the Proto-Indo-European root ǵenh₁.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʝeˈna.o/
  • Hyphenation: γεν‧νά‧ω

Verb

γεννάω • (gennáo) / γεννώ (imperfect γεννούσα/γένναγα, past γέννησα, passive γεννιέμαι, ppast γεννήθηκα, ppp γεννημένος)

  1. to give birth, beget

Conjugation

Compounds
  • αναγεννώ (anagennó, regenerate, rejuvenate)
  • απογεννώ (apogennó)
  • αρτιγέννητος (artigénnitos, newborn, adjective)
  • γεννοβολάω (gennovoláo), γεννοβολώ (gennovoló)
  • κακογεννάω (kakogennáo), κακογεννώ (kakogennó)
  • ξαναγεννάω (xanagennáo, give birth again), ξαναγεννώ (xanagennó)
  • ξεγεννάω (xegennáo), ξεγεννώ (xegennó)
Stem γενν-

Stems

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