φαλλός

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Ancient Greek

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Etymology

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Uncertain. The meaning "penis" likely developed from a more concrete meaning, and has been compared to βαλλία (ballía, private parts) and the ethnonym Τριβαλλοί (Triballoí). Possible Indo-European cognates are Old Irish ball (member, body part) as well as dialectal German Bille (penis), all usually compared to words for "ball, sack, bull, testis" and similar, supposedly deriving from Proto-Indo-European *bʰel- (to blow, swell) (id est: *bʰl̥nós > *pʰəlnós > *pʰəllós). Probably akin to φάλλαινα (phállaina, whale), because of the body shape of whales.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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φαλλός (phallósm (genitive φαλλοῦ); second declension

  1. penis; phallus

Inflection

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Synonyms

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Descendants

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References

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Greek

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Etymology

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From Ancient Greek φαλλός (phallós).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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φαλλός (fallósm (plural φαλλοί)

  1. (anatomy) phallus

Declension

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singular plural
nominative φαλλός (fallós) φαλλοί (falloí)
genitive φαλλού (falloú) φαλλών (fallón)
accusative φαλλό (falló) φαλλούς (falloús)
vocative φαλλέ (fallé) φαλλοί (falloí)

Synonyms

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Derived terms

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Further reading

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