θάνατος
See also Θάνατος
Ancient Greek
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *dʰnh₂. Cognates include Sanksrit á-dhvanī-t, dhvān-tá- and Latin fīnis.
Pronunciation
- (5th BC Attic): IPA: /tʰánatos/
- (1st BC Egyptian): IPA: /tʰánatos/
- (4th AD Koine): IPA: /θánatos/
- (10th AD Byzantine): IPA: /θánatos/
- (15th AD Constantinopolitan): IPA: /θánatos/
Noun
θάνατος (genitive θανάτου) m, second declension; (thanatos)
Inflection
Second declension of θάνᾰτος, θᾰνάτου
| Case / # | Singular | Dual | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | ὁ θάνᾰτος | τὼ θᾰνάτω | οἱ θάνᾰτοι |
| Genitive | τοῦ θᾰνάτου | τοῖν θᾰνάτοιν | τῶν θᾰνάτων |
| Dative | τῷ θᾰνάτῳ | τοῖν θᾰνάτοιν | τοῖς θᾰνάτοις |
| Accusative | τὸν θάνᾰτον | τὼ θᾰνάτω | τοὺς θᾰνάτους |
| Vocative | θάνᾰτε | θᾰνάτω | θάνᾰτοι |
References
- Thanatos - Ancient Greek Personification of Death
- LSJ
- Bauer lexicon
- Strong’s concordance number: G2288
Greek
Etymology
From Ancient Greek θάνατος (thanatos).
Pronunciation
- IPA: [ˈθanatɔs]
- Hyphenation: θά‧να‧τος
Noun
θάνατος (thánatos) m, plural θάνατοι
Declension
declension of θάνατος