Ancient Greek edit

Etymology edit

Traditionally connected to Sanskrit अभ्र (abhrá), Latin imber, and Old Armenian ամբ (amb), but formal derivation from Proto-Indo-European *n̥bʰrós presents several problems. *n̥, *bʰ would be expected to yield ᾰ, φ (a, ph), although Miller’s deaspiration rule would explain this. The accent would likely be on the ultima. Possibly related to Mycenaean Greek 𐀃𐀖𐀪𐀍 (o-mi-ri-jo), 𐀃𐀖𐀪𐀍𐀂 (o-mi-ri-jo-i, dat. pl.). Szemerényi assumes a loanword, so it is possibly a Pre-Greek word. Compare Latin Umbri.

Pronunciation edit

 

Noun edit

ὄμβρος (ómbrosm (genitive ὄμβρου); second declension

  1. storm of rain, thunderstorm, sent by Zeus
  2. (in general) water, as an element
  3. inundation, flood, deluge
  4. (figuratively) storm, shower

Inflection edit

Derived terms edit

References edit