See also: alazon

English edit

 
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Proper noun edit

Alazon

  1. A ghost town in Elko County, Nevada, United States.

Latin edit

Etymology edit

This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.
Particularly: “Is there a masculine, third-declension Ancient Greek etymon of the form *Ἀλᾱζων (Alāzōn) attested?”

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

Alāzōn m sg (genitive Alāzonos); third declension

  1. the Alazani or Qanıx (a river in Caucasian Albania)
    • AD 70–79, Gaius Valerius Flaccus (author), Otto Kramer (editor), Argonautica (C. Valeri Flacci Setini Balbi Argonauticon Libri Octo, 1913), book VI, lines 99–101:
      nec procul albentes gemina ferit aclyde parmas, // hiberni qui terga Novae gelidumque securi // eruit et tota non audit Alazona ripa.
    • AD 77–79, Gaius Plinius Secundus (author), Harris Rackham (translator), Naturalis Historia, book VI, chapter xi, § 29 (volume II [1942], page 358):
      Planitiem omnem a Cyro usque Albanorum gens tenet, mox Hiberum discreta ab his amne Alazone in Cyrum Caucasis montibus defluente.
      All the plain from the Kur onward is occupied by the race of the Albani and then that of the Hiberes, separated from the Albani by the river Alazon, which flows down from Mount Caucasus into the Cyrus. ― translation from the same source, page 359

Declension edit

Third-declension noun (Greek-type, normal variant), singular only.

Case Singular
Nominative Alāzōn
Genitive Alāzonos
Dative Alāzonī
Accusative Alāzona
Ablative Alāzone
Vocative Alāzōn

References edit

  • Ălāzon”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • Alāzōn in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette, page 94/1.
  • ALA´ZON”, in William Smith, editor (1854, 1857), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography, volume 1 & 2, London: Walton and Maberly