Ancient Greek

edit

Etymology

edit

See σάνδαλον (sándalon).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Noun

edit

σάμβᾰλον (sámbalonn (genitive σαμβάλου); second declension

  1. Aeolic form of σάνδαλον (sándalon, sandal)
    • 630 BCE – 570 BCE, Sappho, Collected Works 98:
      θυρώρῳ πόδες ἐπτορόγυιοι,
      τὰ δὲ σάμβαλα πεμπεβόηα,
      πίσσυγγοι δὲ δέκ' ἐξεπόναισαν.
      thurṓrōi pódes eptoróguioi,
      tà dè sámbala pempebóēa,
      píssungoi dè dék' exepónaisan.
      The porter's feet are seven fathoms long,
      and his sandals are made of five ox-hides
      - ten cobblers laboured on them.

Derived terms

edit

Further reading

edit