Ancient Greek edit

Etymology edit

Perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *kenk- (to burn, dry, pain, desire, hunger, thirst) and cognate with Lithuanian kenkti (to damage, blight), Sanskrit काङ्क्षति (kāṅkṣati, he wishes, desires) and Proto-Germanic *hungruz (hunger). However, Beekes finds the root structure typical of Pre-Greek and adds that the words compared mean hunger and pain and not primarily arid and dry.

Pronunciation edit

 

Adjective edit

κάγκᾰνος (kánkanosm or f (neuter κάγκᾰνον); second declension

  1. dry, arid, barren

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit