βάλσαμον

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • βάρσαμον (bársamon), βλάσαμον (blásamon), πάλσαμον (pálsamon)

Etymology

Of Semitic origin, borrowed from Hebrew בָּשָׂם (bāśām, sweet spice, sweet smell),[1] the consonant sequence in Greek being explained as an attempt of rendering שׂ (ś) sounding back then [ɬ]; the semantic development may later have been attached to Aramaic and Ancient North Arabian.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

βᾰ́λσᾰμον • (bắlsămonn (genitive βᾰλσᾰμου); second declension

  1. Arabian balsam tree (Commiphora gileadensis)
  2. balsam, the fragrant oil produced by this tree
  3. costmary (Tanacetum balsamita)

Inflection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Arabic: بَيْلَسان (baylasān), بَلَسَان (balasān), بَلْسَم (balsam), بِلْسَام (bilsām), بَشَام (bašām)
    • Amharic: በለሳን (bäläsan)
    • Old Armenian: բալասան (balasan)
    • Middle Armenian: պալասան (palasan)
    • Ge'ez: በለሳን (bäläsan), በልሳን (bälsan), በለሶን (bäläson)
    • Somali: bilsin
    • Tigrinya: በለሳን (bäläsan)
  • Aramaic:
    Jewish Palestinian Aramaic: בלזמה, בלסנה
    Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: בלסמון
    Classical Syriac: ܒܠܣܡܘܢ, ܒܠܣܝܡܘܢ, ܒܐܠܣܡܘܢ
  • Latin: balsamum (see there for further descendants)
  • Old Armenian: բաղսամոն (bałsamon)
  • Old Georgian: ბარსაბონი (barsaboni)

References

  1. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010) “βάλσαμον”, in Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 198-9

Further reading