ethe
English
Etymology 1
From the Ancient Greek ἤθη (ḗthē), the contracted nominative plural form of ἦθος (êthos).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈiːθiː/
Noun
ethe
- plural of ethos
- 1892: Bernhard Bosanquet, A History of Aesthetic, p72
- And it is a further proof of our view, that beginners in poetry attain completeness in expression and ethe [plural of ethos], before they are capable of composing the march of incidents; almost all the earliest poets are instances of this.
- 1942: International Universities Press, Journal of Legal and Political Sociology, p85
- The relation between social groups and their ethe is rational; they vary in fixed ratios.
- 2003: Patchen Markell, Bound by Recognition, p76
- […] it makes sense to say that these speeches are representations of their ethe.
- 1892: Bernhard Bosanquet, A History of Aesthetic, p72
Etymology 2
See eath.
Adjective
ethe (comparative more ethe, superlative most ethe)
- (obsolete) easy
- 1579, Edmund Spenser, "The Shepheardes Calender", The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser, Volume 4, Charles C. Little and James Brown (1839), page 330:
- Hereto, the hilles bene nigher heaven, / And thence the passage ethe; / As well can proove the piercing levin, / That seldome falles beneath.
- 1579, Edmund Spenser, "The Shepheardes Calender", The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser, Volume 4, Charles C. Little and James Brown (1839), page 330:
Albanian
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Albanian *aida(s), from Proto-Indo-European *h2eidh-o- 'burning fire'. Cognate to Ancient Greek αἶθος (aîthos, “burning, fire”)[1], Old English ád (“funeral pile”), Old Saxon ēd (“firebrand”).
References
- Albanische Etymologien (Untersuchungen zum albanischen Erbwortschatz), Bardhyl Demiraj, Leiden Studies in Indo-European 7; Amsterdam - Atlanta 1997, p.168
Kamba
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