ζημία

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • ζᾱμῐ́ᾱ (zāmíā) Doric

Etymology

Sommer connected the word with ζῆλος (zêlos, fervour, zeal), ζητέω (zētéō, to inquire, search, investigate) and δίζημαι (dízēmai, to seek out, look for), suggesting a derivation from Proto-Indo-European *deyh₂, *dyeh₂; for the semantics "zeal", "fine" compare Old English anda (envy, jealousy) with Old High German antōn (to punish). Connection with Sanskrit दीन (dīna, poor, miserable, wretched) and δειλός (deilós, cowardly) is quite uncertain.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ζημῐ́ᾱ (zēmíā) f (genitive ζημῐ́ᾱς); first declension

  1. loss, damage
    Antonym: κέρδος (kérdos)
  2. penalty in money, fine
    Synonyms: θωή (thōḗ), ποινή (poinḗ)
  3. (in general) penalty
  4. expense, expenditure
  5. dead loss, bad bargain

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ἀζημῐ́ᾱ (azēmíā)
  • ἐπῐζήμῐος (epizḗmios)
  • ζημῐᾰ́ζω (zēmiázō)
  • ζημῐοπρᾰκτέω (zēmiopraktéō)
  • ζημῐόψῡχος (zēmiópsūkhos)
  • ζημῐόω (zēmióō)
  • ζημῐώδης (zēmiṓdēs)
  • ζημῐ́ωμᾰ (zēmíōma)
  • ζημῐ́ωσῐς (zēmíōsis)
  • ζημῐωτής (zēmiōtḗs)
  • ζημῐωτῐκός (zēmiōtikós)

Descendants

  • Latin: zāmia (through Doric)

Further reading

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