Τάρταρος
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
According to Strabo, this word had been fancifully believed to have been invented by Homer with the city of Ταρτησσός (Tartēssós) in mind, with a slight change of letters, it being west of the Ἡράκλειοι Στῆλαι (Hērákleioi Stêlai), or Pillars of Heracles, beyond which the sun sinks past Oceanus as it enters into Tartarus. A semantic connection of Definition 2 with the doomed, sunken civilization of Atlantis has not been overlooked.
Klein suggests (at least partly) otherwise: "prob[ably] word of imitative origin, suggestive of something frightful."
Τάρτᾰρος • (Tártaros) m (genitive Ταρτᾰ́ρου); second declension
Case / # | Singular | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | ὁ Τάρτᾰρος ho Tártaros | ||||||||||||
Genitive | τοῦ Ταρτᾰ́ρου toû Tartárou | ||||||||||||
Dative | τῷ Ταρτᾰ́ρῳ tôi Tartárōi | ||||||||||||
Accusative | τὸν Τάρτᾰρον tòn Tártaron | ||||||||||||
Vocative | Τάρτᾰρε Tártare | ||||||||||||
Notes: |
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