πίθηκος

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • πῐ́θᾱκος (pĭ́thākos)Doric
  • πῐ́θηξ (pĭ́thēx)

Etymology

Uncertain. Commonly connected with Latin foedus (ugly). Beekes argues for an origin as a substrate loan-word or perhaps Pre-Greek. The same suffix can be found in ἱέραξ (hiérax, falcon) and μύρμηξ (múrmēx, ant).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

πῐ́θηκος • (pĭ́thēkosm (genitive πῐθήκου); second declension

  1. ape, monkey
  2. trickster, jackanapes
  3. dwarf

Inflection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Greek: πίθηκος (píthikos)
  • English: pitheco-
  • Latin: pithēcus
  • Russian: пите́к (piték), -пите́к (-piték)
  • Translingual: Pithecus, -pithecus
  • Sicilian: pitecu, pitichinu

References

Greek

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πίθηκος (píthēkos).

Noun

πίθηκος • (píthikosm (plural πίθηκοι)

  1. ape, monkey
  2. an uncivilised person

Declension

Declension of πίθηκος
singular plural
nominative πίθηκος (píthikos) πίθηκοι (píthikoi)
genitive πίθηκου (píthikou)
πιθήκου (pithíkou)
πίθηκων (píthikon)
πιθήκων (pithíkon)
accusative πίθηκο (píthiko) πίθηκους (píthikous)
πιθήκους (pithíkous)
vocative πίθηκε (píthike) πίθηκοι (píthikoi)

Second forms are formal. 

Further reading