μῖμος

See also: μίμος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

Probably a Pre-Greek loan. The traditional connection with Sanskrit माया (māyā́, art, illusion) now appears semantically unlikely.[1]

Pronunciation

 

Noun

μῖμος • (mîmosm (genitive μῑ́μου); second declension

  1. mime, actor
  2. imitation, mimicking
  3. mime (a drama of everyday life without choir)

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ἀρχίμῑμος (arkhímīmos)
  • μῑμάς (mīmás)
  • Μῑ́μας (Mī́mas)
  • μῑ́μαστα (mī́masta)
  • μῑμαυλέω (mīmauléō)
  • μῑ́μαυλος (mī́maulos)
  • μῑμεία (mīmeía)
  • μῑμέομαι (mīméomai)
  • μῑμηλός (mīmēlós)
  • μῑ́μημα (mī́mēma)
  • μῑ́μησις (mī́mēsis)
  • μῑμητέος (mīmētéos)
  • μῑμητής (mīmētḗs)
  • μῑμητικός (mīmētikós)
  • μῑμητός (mīmētós)
  • μῑμικός (mīmikós)
  • μῑμόβιος (mīmóbios)
  • μῑμογράφος (mīmográphos)
  • μῑμολογέομαι (mīmologéomai)
  • μῑμολόγος (mīmológos)
  • μῑμῳδός (mīmōidós)

Descendants

  • English: meme, English: mime, English: mimic
  • Latin: mīmus (see there for further descendants)
  • Old Armenian: միմոս (mimos)
  • Old Georgian: მიმოსი (mimosi)
  • Russian: мим (mim)

References

  1. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010) “μῖμος”, in Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 954-5

Further reading