Recently i came across a very interesting fact, that there existed a Gigas (it means Giant) in ancient Greek Mythology who was half-man and half-bear, and his name was Agrios.
This was interesting to me since Agrios is a word still in common use today, in fact it is the main word that means "savage". It always struck me, therefore, as a particularly wild term, and i was pleased to note its foundation being equally savage and dangerous, that of the Thracian giant Agrios.
Having ancient Greek terms survive in modern Greek is nothing new, but many times we use words which are not synthetic, they are not made up of more terms, and therefore their origin of meaning seems to be unknown. In the case of Agrios it is traced back to mythology, and i wonder how many terms have a similar, even pre-historic foundation.
And it so happens that most (although not all) of the mythological beings have as names terms which are not synthetic. Other times they are, such as the Ekatogxeirai (literally means one hundred-handed), or the known cyclops Polyphemos, whose name comes from Poly (a lot) and Pheme (reputation) but a large amount of mythological beings have names that seem to have lost the ties to obvious meaning.
If you want to you can mention other examples from whatever real language that has this effect. I realize this topic is a bit too specific, but hopefully it could generate some discussion.
This was interesting to me since Agrios is a word still in common use today, in fact it is the main word that means "savage". It always struck me, therefore, as a particularly wild term, and i was pleased to note its foundation being equally savage and dangerous, that of the Thracian giant Agrios.
Having ancient Greek terms survive in modern Greek is nothing new, but many times we use words which are not synthetic, they are not made up of more terms, and therefore their origin of meaning seems to be unknown. In the case of Agrios it is traced back to mythology, and i wonder how many terms have a similar, even pre-historic foundation.
And it so happens that most (although not all) of the mythological beings have as names terms which are not synthetic. Other times they are, such as the Ekatogxeirai (literally means one hundred-handed), or the known cyclops Polyphemos, whose name comes from Poly (a lot) and Pheme (reputation) but a large amount of mythological beings have names that seem to have lost the ties to obvious meaning.
If you want to you can mention other examples from whatever real language that has this effect. I realize this topic is a bit too specific, but hopefully it could generate some discussion.
