-οι

See also: οι, οἱ, οἵ, and Appendix:Variations of "oi"

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From the pronominal declension.[1] Displaced -ες (-es) except in the third declension. For the same development, compare Latin .

Suffix

-οι • (-oi)

  1. Nominative plural of masculine and feminine second-declension nouns
  2. Masculine nominative plural of first- and second-declension adjectives
  3. Masculine and feminine nominative plural of second-declension adjectives
  4. Archaic locative singular of some second-declension nouns
  5. Dative singular of o-stem third-declension nouns

See also

References

  1. Sihler, Andrew L. (1995) New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 261
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