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Etymology

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Elymi +‎ -an.

Noun

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Elymian (plural Elymians)

  1. (historical) Any member of a people who inhabited western Sicily during the Bronze Age and Classical antiquity.
    • 2009, Jeff Champion, Pyrrhus of Epirus, Pen and Sword Books, unnumbered page:
      In 580 the Greeks attacked the Carthaginians and Elymians.
    • 2011, Irad Malkin, A Small Greek World: Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean, Oxford University Press, page 140:
      To the Elymians and the Phoenicians the change of names could have signified a welcome return to the older name of the colony (Makara = "Herakleia") before the Selinuntines seized it and named it "Minoa".

Adjective

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Elymian (comparative more Elymian, superlative most Elymian)

  1. Of or pertaining to the Elymian people or their society, language, etc.
    • 1892, E. A. Freeman, The History of Sicily from the Earliest Times, Volume III: The Athenian and Carthaginian Invasions, Clarendon Press, page 83:
      The exact relations which existed between Carthage and the Elymian towns, those again which existed between the two Elymian towns themselves, are nowhere clearly described.

Proper noun

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Elymian

  1. (linguistics) An extinct, undeciphered and unclassified language spoken by the Elymians.
    • 2005, Irad Malkin, Mediterranean Paradigms and Classical Antiquity[1], Taylor & Francis (Routledge), page 49:
      The chance find of a dump at Segesta has yielded more Elymian inscriptions (mostly single words, inscribed in Greek letters on potsherds) than all other sites combined.

Further reading

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