τρισύλλαβος

Greek

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Koine Greek τρισύλλαβος (trisúllabos).[1] By surface analysis, τρι- (tri-) +‎ συλλαβ(ή) (syllav(í)) +‎ -ος (-os).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tɾiˈsi.la.vos/
  • Hyphenation: τρι‧σύλ‧λα‧βος

Adjective

τρισύλλαβος • (trisýllavosm (feminine τρισύλλαβη, neuter τρισύλλαβο)

  1. trisyllabic (having three syllables)

Declension

Declension of τρισύλλαβος
singular plural
masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
nominative τρισύλλαβος (trisýllavos) τρισύλλαβη (trisýllavi) τρισύλλαβο (trisýllavo) τρισύλλαβοι (trisýllavoi) τρισύλλαβες (trisýllaves) τρισύλλαβα (trisýllava)
genitive τρισύλλαβου (trisýllavou) τρισύλλαβης (trisýllavis) τρισύλλαβου (trisýllavou) τρισύλλαβων (trisýllavon) τρισύλλαβων (trisýllavon) τρισύλλαβων (trisýllavon)
accusative τρισύλλαβο (trisýllavo) τρισύλλαβη (trisýllavi) τρισύλλαβο (trisýllavo) τρισύλλαβους (trisýllavous) τρισύλλαβες (trisýllaves) τρισύλλαβα (trisýllava)
vocative τρισύλλαβε (trisýllave) τρισύλλαβη (trisýllavi) τρισύλλαβο (trisýllavo) τρισύλλαβοι (trisýllavoi) τρισύλλαβες (trisýllaves) τρισύλλαβα (trisýllava)

Derived terms

  • τρισύλλαβο n (trisýllavo)

References

  1. ^ τρισύλλαβος, in Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], Triantafyllidis Foundation, 1998 at the Centre for the Greek language