Ancient Greek

edit

Etymology

edit

Within Greek, a connection may be drawn with some glosses found in Hesychius:

Nikolaev rejects a pre-Greek etymology and instead reconstructs Proto-Indo-European *merkʷ-, to which he also assigns Latin merx (goods, merchandise) (with delabialization before s generalized throughout its paradigm) and Tocharian A märk- (to take away).[1] Additionally assignable to this root would be Sanskrit मृच् (mṛ́c, snare) Sanskrit मर्चयति (marcáyati, seize, grasp, take)

Pronunciation

edit
 

Verb

edit

μᾰ́ρπτω (márptō)

  1. to take hold of, catch, grasp
  2. to lay hold of, seize, overtake

Inflection

edit

Derived terms

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Nikolaev, Alexander (2021) “Etyma Graeca II”, in Indo-European Linguistics and Classical Philology, number 25, Institute for Linguistic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, →DOI, →ISSN, pages 953–976

Further reading

edit
  NODES
Note 5