komast

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Ancient Greek κωμαστής (kōmastḗs, reveller), from κῶμος (kômos, merrymaking).

Noun

komast (plural komasts)

  1. A drunken reveller, especially as depicted in Ancient Greek art.
    • 1979, David West & Tony Woodman, Creative Imitation and Latin Literature (Cambridge University Press 2001, p. 55)
      The triple repetition of the god's name has a hymnic effect and so in form as well as function these lines are a modification of the standard appeal of the komast to a divinity for help.
    • 1994, Eric Csapo & Judith Barringer, The Context of Ancient Drama (University of Michigan Press 2005, p. 96)
      In later versions of this theme on vases, a komast is occasionally found instead of the protosatyr here.

Anagrams


Icelandic

Etymology

From the verb koma (to come) + -st (a suffix which turns verbs into middle voice verbs). See also the appendix about the Icelandic middle voice verbs.

Verb

komast

  1. to get there, to get, to be able to come
    Hún komst alla leið þótt hún væri fótbrotin.
    She got to the end despite her broken leg.
    Nei fyrirgefðu, ég kemst ekki.
    I'm sorry, I can't make it.

Derived terms


Norwegian Nynorsk

Verb

komast

  1. passive infinitive of koma and kome
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