ρούχο

Greek

Etymology

Inherited from Byzantine Greek ροῦχον (roûkhon), borrowed from a Slavic language; see Proto-Slavic *ruxo (garments, clothing) (whence Serbo-Croatian ruho, Polish rucho) for more.[1] Despite superficially similar phonetics and semantics, not related to Late Latin roccus (ecclesiastical vestment) (the latter whence English rochet), which instead derives from Proto-Germanic *hrukkaz (tunic, robe).[2]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɾu.xo/
  • Hyphenation: ρού‧χο

Noun

ρούχο • (roúchon (plural ρούχα)

  1. garment
  2. (in the plural) clothes, clothing, dress

Declension

Declension of ρούχο
singular plural
nominative ρούχο (roúcho) ρούχα (roúcha)
genitive ρούχου (roúchou) ρούχων (roúchon)
accusative ρούχο (roúcho) ρούχα (roúcha)
vocative ρούχο (roúcho) ρούχα (roúcha)

Synonyms

Derived terms

  • ασπρόρουχο n (aspróroucho) (usually in the plural)
  • εσώρουχο n (esóroucho, underwear, undergarment)
  • πλυντήριο ρούχων n (plyntírio roúchon, washing machine)
  • ρουχαλάκι n (rouchaláki) (diminutive)
  • ρουχισμός m (rouchismós)
  • φύλαγε τα ρούχα σου να ’χεις τα μισά (fýlage ta roúcha sou na ’cheis ta misá, better safe than sorry)

See also

References

  1. ^ ρούχο, in Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], Triantafyllidis Foundation, 1998 at the Centre for the Greek language
  2. ^ roccus, in ΛΟΓΕΙΟΝ [Logeion] Dictionaries for Ancient Greek and Latin (in English, French, Spanish, German, Dutch and Chinese), University of Chicago, since 2011