ὠνέομαι

Ancient Greek

Etymology

From ὦνος (ônos, price) +‎ -έομαι (-éomai).

The suppletive aorist ἐπρῐάμην (eprĭámēn) is from Proto-Indo-European *kʷreyh₂- (to buy). Cognates include Welsh prynu, Old Irish crenaid, Sanskrit क्रीणाति (krīṇā́ti) (root क्री (krī)), Old East Slavic крити (kriti).

Pronunciation

 

Verb

ὠνέομαι • (ōnéomai)

  1. to buy, purchase
    Synonym: πρίαμαι (príamai)
    Antonyms: πέρνημι (pérnēmi), πιπράσκω (pipráskō), πωλέω (pōléō)
    1. (in present and imperfect tenses) to offer to buy, deal for, bargain or bid for
    2. (with dative) to buy from
    3. (with genitive) to buy for such a price
    4. (with dative) to buy with
    5. (participial substantive, ὁ ὠνούμενος (ho ōnoúmenos)) the buyer, purchaser, owner
  2. to farm public taxes or tolls, or rather to bid for them
  3. to buy off, avert by giving hush money
  4. to buy a person, to bribe
    • 384 BCE – 322 BCE, Demosthenes 309.15
    • 384 BCE – 322 BCE, Demosthenes 122.21, (Compare Plutarch, Philopoemen 15.322):
      ὠνεῖται καὶ διαφθείρει τινάς
      ōneîtai kaì diaphtheírei tinás
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Inflection

References