γλουτός

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Compared with Slovene glûta (lump, swelling); further with Old English clūd (rock, boulder), which is semantically less evident. Without t-suffix, there is Sanskrit ग्लौ (glaú, round lump, wen-like excrescence). The Indo-European material is not very convincing. Beekes does not dismiss a Pre-Greek origin.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

γλουτός • (gloutósm (genitive γλουτοῦ); second declension

  1. (anatomy) rump, buttock
    Synonym: πῡγή (pūgḗ)
    1. (of a horse) a haunch (contrasted with ἰσχίον (iskhíon, hip-joint))

Declension

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Greek: γλουτός (gloutós)
  • New Latin: glūtæus

Further reading

Greek

Etymology

Ancient Greek γλουτός (gloutós)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɣluˈtos/

Noun

γλουτός • (gloutósm (plural γλουτοί)

  1. (anatomy) buttock, rump, gluteus maximus

Declension

Declension of γλουτός
singular plural
nominative γλουτός (gloutós) γλουτοί (gloutoí)
genitive γλουτού (gloutoú) γλουτών (gloutón)
accusative γλουτό (gloutó) γλουτούς (gloutoús)
vocative γλουτέ (glouté) γλουτοί (gloutoí)

Synonyms