Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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Usually taken as a cross of ψάμμος (psámmos, sand) and ἄμαθος (ámathos, sand). Furnée adduces Proto-Germanic *samdaz (sand), so it could also directly continue a word from Proto-Indo-European *sámh₂dʰos (sand).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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ψάμᾰθος (psámathosf (genitive ψᾰμάθου); second declension

  1. sand of the seashore
  2. (in the plural) grains of sand
  3. countless multitude

Inflection

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Derived terms

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Further reading

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