Ancient Greek edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Possibly related to ἅλς (háls, salt), cf. Latin sāl (salt), salum (sea), Salacia (sea goddess). However, the element "-σσ-", as well as the local geographic meaning, points to a Pre-Greek origin; compare the possible cognate Luwian 𒀀𒆷𒀸 𒊭𒄠 (alaššamm(i)). According to Beekes, a Pre-Greek substrate borrowing tentatively reconstructed as *talakya.[1]

Pronunciation edit

 

Noun edit

θᾰ́λᾰσσᾰ (thálassaf (genitive θᾰλᾰ́σσης); first declension

  1. sea
    Synonyms: πέλαγος (pélagos), πόντος (póntos)
  2. the Mediterranean Sea
  3. channel
  4. salt water

Inflection edit

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

References edit

Further reading edit

Greek edit

Etymology edit

From Ancient Greek θάλασσα (thálassa). Cognate with Tsakonian θάσσα (thássa, sea), Mariupol Greek тъа́ласа (θálasa).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

θάλασσα (thálassaf (plural θάλασσες)

  1. sea
    Βαλτική Θάλασσα, Μεσόγειος ΘάλασσαValtikí Thálassa, Mesógeios ThálassaBaltic Sea, Mediterranean Sea
  2. sea (all the seas and oceans)
    Πήγε στη θάλασσα.
    Píge sti thálassa.
    He went to sea.
  3. storm
    πολύ θάλασσαpolý thálassaheavy seas, stormy weather

Usage notes edit

  • ωκεανός m (okeanós, ocean) (e.g. Atlantic, Pacific)
  • θάλασσα f (thálassa, larger sea) (e.g. Mediterranean, Baltic, Caribbean)
  • πέλαγος m (pélagos, smaller sea) (e.g. Adriatic, Aegean, Ionian)

Declension edit

Related terms edit

Further reading edit