- Demon=ديمن
- ONLINE ETYMOLOGY DICTIONARY:
- demon (n.)
- c.1200, from L. daemon "spirit," from Gk. daimon "deity,
divine power; lesser god; guiding spirit, tutelary deity"
(sometimes including souls of the dead); "one's genius, lot, or
fortune;" from PIE *dai-mon- "divider, provider" (of
fortunes or destinies), from root *da- "to divide" (see
tide).
Used (with daimonion) in Christian Greek translations and Vulgate for "god of the heathen" and "unclean spirit." Jewish authors earlier had employed the Greek word in this sense, using it to render shedim "lords, idols" in the Septuagint, and Matt. viii:31 has daimones, translated as deofol in O.E., feend or deuil in Middle English. Another Old English word for this was hellcniht, lit. "hell-knight."
The original mythological sense is sometimes written daemon for purposes of distinction. The Demon of Socrates was a daimonion, a "divine principle or inward oracle." His accusers, and later the Church Fathers, however, represented this otherwise. The Demon Star (1895) is Algol.
ARABIC ETYMOLOGY////// إتيمولوجيا// HISTORY///MYTHOLOGY///LANGUAGES OF THE PAST///SCRIPTS OF THE PAST/// COSTAS LEVENTOPOULOS
Friday, 23 November 2012
Demon=ديمن
-->
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment