See also: οὖρος

Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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Formerly connected to ὅρος (hóros, frontier) and ὀρύσσω (orússō, to dig). Recently, however, García Ramón has analyzed this word as an agent noun *uoru-ó- built on the same root as ἐρύω (erúō, to drag), thus from Proto-Indo-European *rewH- (to tear, dig, burrow, gather).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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οὐρός (ourósm (genitive οὐροῦ); second declension

  1. trench or channel for hauling up and launching ships

Inflection

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References

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