σάπων

Ancient Greek

Etymology

    Usually said to be from Latin sāpō, but borrowing from Galatian is also possible. Ultimately from Proto-Germanic *saipǭ (soap), from Proto-Indo-European *seyp-, *seyb- (to pour, strain, trickle). Cognate with Old English sāpe (soap). More at soap.

    Pronunciation

     

    Noun

    σᾱ́πων • (sā́pōnm (genitive σᾱ́πωνος); third declension

    1. (Koine) soap

    Inflection

    Derived terms

    • σαπώνιον (sapṓnion)

    Descendants

    • Classical Syriac: ܨܦܘܢܐ
      • Arabic: صَابُون (ṣābūn) (see there for further descendants)
    • Greek: σάπων (sápon)
    • Georgian: საპონი (saṗoni)
    • Middle Persian: *sābōn
    • Old Armenian: սապոն (sapon)
    • Koine Greek: σαπώνιον (sapṓnion) (diminutive)

    Further reading

    Greek

    Etymology

    Borrowed from Ancient Greek σᾱ́πων (sā́pōn, soap).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈsapon/
    • Hyphenation: σά‧πων

    Noun

    σάπων • (sáponm (plural σάπωνες)

    1. Katharevousa form of σαπούνι (sapoúni, soap)

    Declension

    Declension of σάπων
    singular plural
    nominative σάπων (sápon) σάπωνες (sápones)
    genitive σάπωνος (sáponos) σαπώνων (sapónon)
    accusative σάπωνα (sápona) σάπωνας (sáponas)
    vocative σάπων (sápon) σάπωνες (sápones)