ῥαφανίς

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • ῥεφανίς (rhephanís) later

Etymology

From the same set of Proto-Indo-European roots meaning turnip, radish as ῥάφυς (rháphus), ῥάπυς (rhápus, turnip), though inconsistencies in the reflexes seem to point to heavy borrowing. Compare Latin rāpum, rāpa, rāpistrum, Old High German ruoba (German Rübe), Proto-Slavic *rěpa (Old Church Slavonic репа (repa)), and Lithuanian rópė. Also see ῥάφανος (rháphanos, cabbage).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ῥᾰφᾰνῑ́ς (rhaphanī́s) f (genitive ῥᾰφᾰνῖδος); third declension

  1. radish (Raphanus raphanistrum subsp. sativus syn. Raphanus sativus)
  2. (with ἀγρία) Raphanus raphanistrum

Usage notes

All sources point to the final iota being long but Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae 2.56e claims that a short iota is common.

Declension

Synonyms

  • ῥᾰ́φᾰνος (rháphanos)

Derived terms

  • ῥᾰφᾰνῖτῐς (rhaphanîtis) (perhaps)
  • ῥᾰφᾰνῑ́δῐον (rhaphanī́dion)
  • ῥᾰφᾰνῑδόω (rhaphanīdóō)
  • ῥᾰφᾰνῑδώδης (rhaphanīdṓdēs)
  • ῥᾰφᾰ́νη (rhaphánē)
  • ῥᾰ́φᾰνος (rháphanos)

References

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