σωλήν

Ancient Greek

Etymology

According to Beekes, the -ήν suffix renders a Pre-Greek source.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

σωλήν • (sōlḗn) m (genitive σωλῆνος); third declension

  1. channel, gutter, pipe
    1. syringe, squirt
  2. cylindrical box for keeping a broken limb straight
    • 460 BCE – 370 BCE, Hippocrates, Surgery 745, (Compare 763D, 766A)
  3. grooved tile, Latin imbrex
    • Hesychius Σ
  4. penis
    • Hesychius Σ
  5. cavity of the spine
    • ante 177 CE, Pollux, Onomasticon 2.180

Inflection

Derived terms

  • σωληνάριον (sōlēnárion)
  • σωληνεύομαι (sōlēneúomai)
  • σωληνίδιον (sōlēnídion)
  • σωληνίζω (sōlēnízō)
  • σωληνικός (sōlēnikós)
  • σωλήνιον (sōlḗnion)
  • σωληνίσκος (sōlēnískos)
  • σωληνισμός (sōlēnismós)
  • σωληνιστής (sōlēnistḗs)
  • σωληνοειδής (sōlēnoeidḗs)
  • σωληνοθήρας (sōlēnothḗras)
  • σωληνοκέντης (sōlēnokéntēs)
  • σωληνόομαι (sōlēnóomai)
  • σωληνώδης (sōlēnṓdēs)
  • σωληνωτός (sōlēnōtós)

Descendants

  • English: solen
  • Greek: σωλήνας (solínas)
  • Latin: sōlēn

Further reading

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