-φι
See also: φι and Appendix:Variations of "fi"
Ancient Greek
Alternative forms
- -φῐν (-phin) – with movable nu, before a vowel
Etymology
Possibly from the Proto-Indo-European instrumental plural inflection *-bʰi, reanalyzed as a suffix. Cognate with Old Armenian -ւ (-w).
Suffix
-φῐ • (-phi)
(Epic)
- Creates a transnumeral case-form used with several different meanings:
- instrumental
- 800 BCE – 600 BCE, Homer, Odyssey 9.407–408:
- τοὺς δ' αὖτ' ἐξ ἄντρου προσέφη κρατερὸς Πολύφημος·
ὦ φίλοι, Οὖτίς με κτείνει δόλῳ οὐδὲ βίηφιν.- toùs d' aût' ex ántrou proséphē krateròs Polúphēmos;
ô phíloi, Oûtís me kteínei dólōi oudè bíēphin. - Mighty Polyphemus addressed [the other Cyclopes] back out of his cave:
"Friends, No One [i.e., Odysseus] is killing me by neither cunning nor force."
- toùs d' aût' ex ántrou proséphē krateròs Polúphēmos;
- τοὺς δ' αὖτ' ἐξ ἄντρου προσέφη κρατερὸς Πολύφημος·
- locative
- 800 BCE – 600 BCE, Homer, Odyssey 9.237–239:
- αὐτὰρ ὅ γ' εἰς εὐρὺ σπέος ἤλασε πίονα μῆλα,
πάντα μάλ', ὅσσ' ἤμελγε, τὰ δ' ἄρσενα λεῖπε θύρηφιν,
ἀρνειούς τε τράγους τε, βαθείης ἔντοθεν αὐλῆς.- autàr hó g' eis eurù spéos ḗlase píona mêla,
pánta mál', hóss' ḗmelge, tà d' ársena leîpe thúrēphin,
arneioús te trágous te, batheíēs éntothen aulês. - And [Polyphemus] drove into the wide cave his fat sheep,
all of them that he would milk, but left the males at the door, the rams and billy-goats, inside the deep courtyard.
- autàr hó g' eis eurù spéos ḗlase píona mêla,
- αὐτὰρ ὅ γ' εἰς εὐρὺ σπέος ἤλασε πίονα μῆλα,
- ablative, often with the prepositions ἐκ (ek) and ἀπό (apó)
- (rare) genitive
- (rare) dative
- instrumental
Derived terms
► <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Ancient_Greek_words_suffixed_with_-%CF%86%CE%B9' title='Category:Ancient Greek words suffixed with -φι'>Ancient Greek words suffixed with -φι</a>
References
- Smyth, Herbert Weir (1920), “Part II: Inflection”, in A Greek grammar for colleges, Cambridge: American Book Company, § 280
- William Bedell Stanford (1959) [1947]. "Introduction, Grammatical Introduction". Homer: Odyssey I-XII 1 (2nd ed.). Macmillan Education Ltd. p. lx.
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