διαίρεσις

Ancient Greek

FWOTD – 13 December 2014

Etymology

    From διαιρέω (diairéō, take apart, cleave, divide) +‎ -σις (-sis), from δια- (dia-, apart) +‎ αἱρέω (hairéō, take, grasp).

    Pronunciation

     

    Noun

    δῐαίρεσῐς • (dĭaíresĭsf (genitive δῐαιρέσεως); third declension

    1. divisibility
    2. (medicine) dissection
      1. (medicine) venesection
        • 320 CE – 403 CE, Oribasius, Collected Works 7.9
      2. (medicine) surgical operation
        • 110 BCE – 35 BCE, Philodemus, On Frank Criticism p.56O
      3. (medicine, in the plural) wounds
    3. division, distribution
    4. distinction
    5. (logic) division into logical genus and species (γένος (génos) and εἶδος (eîdos))
    6. (logic) separation of the subject and predicate
    7. (logic) the fallacy of division
    8. (rhetoric) division or distribution of an argument into its component subjects or subtopics (known formerly as "heads")
      • Hermogenes of Tarsus, Progymnasmata 7
      • Hermogenes of Tarsus, On legal issues 1
      • 1 CE – 100 CE, Onasander, Strategikos 2
    9. (grammar) the resolution of a diphthong into two syllables, diaeresis
    10. (grammar) the resolution of one word into two
      • 250 CE – 350 CE, Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae 11.492a
      • Tryphon, On Tropes 1.8
    11. (poetry) division of a poetic line when the end of a word and a metrical foot coincide, diaeresis
    12. (mathematics) transformation of a dividend yield
    13. (military) division of troops in the Roman cohors
    14. (music) division or separation between sounds, interval

    Inflection

    Antonyms

    Coordinate terms

    Descendants

    • Latin: diaeresis
      • English: diaeresis
      • French: diérèse
      • Portuguese: diérese
      • Spanish: diéresis

    Further reading