γιος

Greek

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Medieval Byzantine Greek γιός < ὑγιός (hugiós) with deletion of the unstressed vowel, from Ancient Greek υἱός (huiós, son, child) (see its Koine pronunciation), from earlier υἱύς (huiús), from Proto-Indo-European *suHyús.[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈʝos/ (compare to ιός (iós))
  • Hyphenation: γιος

Noun

γιος (gios) m (plural γιοι)

  1. son, a male child

Declension

Coordinate terms

and see: Appendix:Greek vocabulary/Family

Derived terms

From the ancient υἱός (huiós, son, child)

  • υιοθετώ (yiothetó, to adopt)
  • υιοθεσία f (yiothesía, adoption)
  • υιοθέτηση f (yiothétisi, adoption)
  • υιικός m (yiikós, filial)
  • άσωτος υιός m (ásotos yiós, prodigal son)

References

  1. γιος - Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], 1998, by the "Triantafyllidis" Foundation.
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