νήπιος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

The word is presumably the negative prefix νη-, but the stem is unclear. Strong's Greek Lexicon (1890) suggests νη- (nē-, negative prefix) + ἔπος (épos, speech), compare Latin infans (infant) from in- (not) + fāns (speaking). But a 2010 review by Beekes favors instead a derivation from ἤπιος, as suggested by Lacroix in 1937, with a possible PIE root *h2ep meaning 'join,' from which we would also have ἅπτω.

Pronunciation

 

Adjective

νήπῐος (nḗpios) m (feminine νηπῐ́ᾱ, neuter νήπῐον); first/second declension

  1. childish, infantile, juvenile, young
    1. (of animals)
    2. (of the understanding) childish, untaught, silly, credulous
    3. (of bodily strength)

Inflection

Noun

νήπῐος (nḗpios) m (genitive νηπῐ́ου); second declension (Attic)

  1. infant, child

Declension

References

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