Τάρταρος

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Ancient Greek[edit]

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Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

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."

Pronunciation[edit]

 

Proper noun[edit]

Τάρτᾰρος (Tártarosm (genitive Ταρτᾰ́ρου); second declension

  1. Tartarus
  2. (Christendom) metaphor for Hell

Inflection[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

Descendants[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]