χαραδριός

Ancient Greek

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

The formation is similar to other bird names, like αἰγυπιός (aigupiós), αἰγωλιός (aigōliós) and ἐρῳδιός (erōidiós). Traditionally derived from χαράδρα (kharádra, dry bed of a river), but it could be folk etymology.

Pronunciation

edit
 

Noun

edit

χαραδριός (kharadriósm (genitive χαραδριοῦ); second declension

  1. A bird, probably the Eurasian stone curlew, Burhinus oedicnemus.
  2. (Byzantine) caladrius (a mythical bird that had healing powers)
    • 2nd–4th centuries AD, Physiologus 6.1:[1]
      Ἔστι πετεινὸν, λεγόμενον χαλαδριός
      Ésti peteinòn, legómenon khaladriós
      • Translation by Gohar Muradyan
        There is a bird called chalandrius

Inflection

edit

Descendants

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Muradyan, Gohar (2005) Physiologus: The Greek and Armenian Versions with a Study of Translation Technique (Hebrew University Armenian Studies; 6)‎[1], Leuven – Paris – Dudley: Peeters, pages 95, 144

Further reading

edit