πῶρος

See also: Πῶρος and πωρός

Ancient Greek

Etymology

It has no certain etymology. According to Haupt, it was borrowed from Akkadian; Furnée connects *ψώρος (*psṓros) in ψωρίτης (psōrítēs, kind of marble), suggesting a Pre-Greek origin. Likely a Wanderwort also found in Akkadian 𒉌𒌓𒈾𒁓 (/⁠pīlu, pūlu⁠/, limestone), Akkadian 𒁓𒊏 (pūru, literally stone bowl), Urartian 𒉌𒌓𒁍𒇻𒋛 (NA4.pu-lu-si /⁠pulus⁠/, stone, stele), Old Armenian բուռ (buṙ, lime, plaster, varnish). An ancient Anatolian or Mesopotamian origin is probable, with Sumerian 𒁓 (/⁠bur⁠/, stone (vessel)) as the likely source.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

πῶρος • (pôros) m (genitive πώρου); second declension

  1. tuff
  2. kind of marble used in building
  3. stalactite in caverns
  4. (pathology) stone in the bladder

Inflection

Derived terms

  • πωρεία (pōreía)
  • πωρίασις (pōríasis)
  • πωρίδιον (pōrídion)
  • πώρινος (pṓrinos)
  • πωρίον (pōríon)
  • πωρόμφαλον (pōrómphalon)
  • πωρόω (pōróō)
  • πωρώδης (pōrṓdēs)

Descendants

  • Latin: pōrus

Further reading

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