κακκάβη

Ancient Greek

Pronunciation

 

Etymology 1

Technical loanword of unknown origin. Given the variations and the variant in Latin cascabus, cited by Furnée, the word is likely to be Pre-Greek.

Alternative forms

  • κᾰκᾰ́βη (kakábē)
  • κᾰκκᾰ́βος (kakkábos), κᾰ́κᾰβος (kákabos)

Noun

κᾰκκᾰ́βη • (kakkábē) f (genitive κᾰκκᾰ́βης); first declension

  1. three legged pot
Inflection
Derived terms

Etymology 2

For the ending, Chantraine compared ὄτοβος (ótobos), κόναβος (kónabos) and θόρυβος (thórubos). Maybe of onomatopoeic origin. On the other hand, Akkadian 𒆕𒅗𒁀𒉡𒄷 (/⁠kakkabānu⁠/, a bird, potentially the Barbary partridge for its neck pattern, literally covered with stars; speckled) has also been compared. Alternatively, the Akkadian is derived as an Anatolian loan or of onomatopoeic origin with phono-semantic matching to designate such a native name. Günther Neumann suggests a Lydian origin, as there is Hittite 𒆕𒅗𒉺𒄷 (/⁠kakkapa⁠/) and with Ancient Greek κακκαβίς (kakkabís) the earliest form, which is reported to be onomatopoeic in nature, was attested by the poet Alcman suspected to originally been a native of Sardis.

Note also Proto-Georgian-Zan *ḳaḳab-.

Noun

κᾰκκᾰ́βη • (kakkábē) f (genitive κᾰκκᾰ́βης); first declension

  1. partridge
Inflection
Synonyms
Descendants
  • Classical Syriac: ܩܩܒܐ (qaqqəḇāʼ), ܩܩܒܢܐ (qaqqəḇānāʼ)

References

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