βάρβαρος

Ancient Greek

FWOTD – 31 May 2017

Etymology

Onomatopoeic: from the perceived βαρ-βαρ (bar-bar) sounds incomprehensible to Ancient Greeks and spoken by foreigners.[1] As an onomatopoeic construction, βαρ-βαρ is similar to modern English blah blah, but meaning gibberish, gabble; compare also babble from Proto-Indo-European *bʰa-bʰa-. Cognate to Mycenaean Greek 𐀞𐀞𐀫 (pa-pa-ro) and Sanskrit बर्बर (barbara, barbarian, non-Aryan, stammering, blockhead).

For the semantic development, compare Arabic عَجَم (ʿajam, non-Arab; Persian), from the root ع ج م (ʿ-j-m), referring to people who speak unclearly.

Pronunciation

 

Adjective

βᾰ́ρβᾰρος • (bárbaros) m or f (neuter βᾰ́ρβᾰρον); second declension

(Attic, Ionic, Koine)
  1. non-Greek-speaking, foreign
    1. (in the plural) non-Greek peoples
      1. Medes or Persians
        • 430 BCE – 354 BCE, Xenophon, Anabasis 1.2.14:
          καὶ λέγεται δεηθῆναι ἡ Κίλισσα Κύρου ἐπιδεῖξαι τὸ στράτευμα αὐτῇ: βουλόμενος οὖν ἐπιδεῖξαι ἐξέτασιν ποιεῖται ἐν τῷ πεδίῳ τῶν Ἑλλήνων καὶ τῶν βαρβάρων.
          kaì légetai deēthênai hē Kílissa Kúrou epideîxai tò stráteuma autêi: boulómenos oûn epideîxai exétasin poieîtai en tôi pedíōi tôn Hellḗnōn kaì tôn barbárōn.
          And it is said that the Cilician [queen] asked Cyrus to show her his troops. So since he wanted to show them to her, he held a review of the Greeks and Persians in the field.
  2. barbaric, brutal, rude

Inflection

Derived terms

  • βᾰρβᾰρῐκός (barbarikós)
  • βᾰρβᾰρῐστῐ́ (barbaristí)
  • βᾰρβᾰρῐ́ζω (barbarízō)
    • βᾰρβᾰρῐσμός (barbarismós)
    • ῠ̔ποβᾰρβᾰρῐ́ζω (hupobarbarízō)
  • βᾰρβᾰρόφωνος (barbaróphōnos)
    • βᾰρβᾰροφωνέω (barbarophōnéō)
  • βᾰρβᾰρόομαι (barbaróomai)
  • ἐκβᾰρβᾰρόω (ekbarbaróō)
  • μιξοβᾰ́ρβᾰρος (mixobárbaros)
  • μῑσοβᾰ́ρβᾰρος (mīsobárbaros)

Descendants

References

  1. Babiniotis, Georgios (2008) Λεξικό της νέας ελληνικής γλώσσας [Modern Greek Dictionary] (in Greek), 3rd edition, Athens: Lexicology Centre

Greek

Etymology

From Ancient Greek βάρβαρος (bárbaros)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈvarvaros/
  • Hyphenation: βάρ‧βα‧ρος

Noun

βάρβαρος (várvaros) m (plural βάρβαροι)

  1. barbarian
    Τι περιμένουμε στην αγορά συναθροισμένοι;
    Είναι οι βάρβαροι να φθάσουν σήμερα.
    Ti periménoume stin agorá synathroisménoi?
    Eínai oi várvaroi na fthásoun símera.
    What are we waiting for, assembled in the forum?
    The barbarians are due here today.
    Constantine Cavafy (1863-1933), Poem: Περιμένοντας τους Bαρβάρους [Waiting for the Barbarians] and audio at The official website of the Cavafy Archive

Declension

Adjective

βάρβαρος (várvaros) m (feminine βάρβαρη, neuter βάρβαρο)

  1. barbarous, barbaric, uncivilised
    Τι βάρβαρος άνθρωπος! Χτυπάει τη γυναίκα του.
    Ti várvaros ánthropos! Chtypáei ti gynaíka tou.
    What a barbaric man he is! He hits his wife.

Declension

Synonyms

Antonyms

  • πολιτισμένος (politisménos, civilised, participle)
  • βαρβαρικός (varvarikós, barbaric)
  • βαρβαρισμός m (varvarismós, grammatical mistake in the use of language)
  • βαρβαριστί (varvaristí, in foreign language, or with grammatical mistakes, adverb)
  • βαρβαρότητα f (varvarótita, barbarity)
  • εκβαρβαρίζω (ekvarvarízo, barbarize)
  • εκβαρβαρισμός m (ekvarvarismós, barbarization)
  • εκβαρβαρώνω (ekvarvaróno, barbarize)
  • εκβαρβάρωση f (ekvarvárosi, barbarization)
  • μειξοβάρβαρος (meixovárvaros, mixed, not genuine Greek)
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