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Epithet

An epithet (from Ancient Greek ἐπίθετον (epítheton) 'adjective', from ἐπίθετος (epíthetos) 'additional'),[1] also byname, is a descriptive term (word or phrase) known for accompanying or occurring in place of a name and having entered common usage. It has various shades of meaning when applied to seemingly real or fictitious people, divinities, objects, and binomial nomenclature. It can also be a descriptive title: for example, Pallas Athena, Phoebus Apollo, Alfred the Great, Suleiman the Magnificent, and Władysław I the Elbow-high. Many English monarchs have traditional epithets: some of the best known are Edward the Confessor, William the Conqueror, Richard the Lionheart, Æthelred the Unready, John Lackland and Bloody Mary.

The word epithet can also refer to an abusive, defamatory, or derogatory phrase.[2][3] This use as a euphemism is criticized by Martin Manser and other proponents of linguistic prescription.[4] H. W. Fowler complained that "epithet is suffering a vulgarization that is giving it an abusive imputation."[5]

Linguistics

Epithets are sometimes attached to a person's name or appear in place of their name, as what might be described as a glorified nickname or sobriquet, and for this reason some linguists have argued that they should be considered as pronouns.[6] It has also been argued that epithets are a phenomenon with the syntax-semantics interface, because they have components of both, and also a pragmatic dimension.[6]

An epithet is linked to its noun by long-established usage. Not every adjective is an epithet. An epithet is especially recognizable when its function is largely decorative, such as if "cloud-gathering Zeus" is employed other than in reference to conjuring up a storm. "The epithets are decorative insofar as they are neither essential to the immediate context nor modeled especially for it. Among other things, they are extremely helpful to fill out a half-verse", Walter Burkert has noted.[7]

Some epithets are known by the Latin term epitheton necessarium, as they are required to distinguish the bearers, as an alternative to numbers after a prince's name—such as Richard the Lionheart (Richard I of England), or Charles the Fat alongside Charles the Bald. The same epithet can be used repeatedly joined to different names, such as Alexander the Great as well as Constantine the Great.

Other epithets can easily be omitted without serious risk of confusion, and are therefore known as epitheton ornans. Thus the classical Roman author Virgil systematically called his main hero pius Aeneas, the epithet being pius, meaning religiously observant, humble and wholesome, as well as calling the armsbearer of Aeneas fidus Achates, the epithet being fidus, which means faithful or loyal.

There are also specific types of epithets, such as the kenning which appears in works such as Beowulf. An example of a kenning would be using the term whale-road instead of the word "sea".

Literature

Epithets are characteristic of the style of ancient epic poetry, notably in that of Homer or the northern European sagas (see above, as well as Epithets in Homer). When James Joyce uses the phrase "the snot-green sea" he is playing on Homer's familiar epithet "the wine-dark sea". The phrase "Discreet Telemachus" is also considered an epithet.

The Greek term antonomasia, in rhetoric, means substituting any epithet or phrase for a proper name, as "Pelides", signifying the "son of Peleus", to identify Achilles. An opposite substitution of a proper name for some generic term is also sometimes called antonomasia, as a Cicero for an orator. The use of a father's name or ancestor's name, such as "Pelides" in the case of Achilles, or "Saturnia" in the case of the goddess Juno in Virgil's Aeneid, is specifically called a patronymic device and is in its own class of epithet.

In William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, epithets are used in the prologue, such as "star-cross'd lovers" and "death-mark'd love."

Epithets were in layman's terms glorified nicknames that could be used to represent one's style, artistic nature, or even geographical reference. They originated to simply serve the purpose of dealing with names that were hard to pronounce or just unpleasant.[8] It from there went to something that could be very significant assigned by elders or counterparts to represent one's position in the community or it could be a representation of whomever one wanted to be or thought he was.[9] The elegance of this movement was used throughout history and even modern day with many examples ranging from "Aphrodite the Heavenly & Zeus the Protector of Guests" all the way to "Johnny Football & King James".[8]

American comic books tend to give epithets to superheroes, such as The Phantom being "The Ghost Who Walks", Superman called "The Man of Steel", and "The Dynamic Duo" Batman and Robin, who are individually known as "The Dark Knight" and "The Boy Wonder".[10]

Additionally, epíteto, the Spanish version of epithet, is commonly used throughout poems in Castilian literature.

Religion

In many polytheistic religions, such as those of ancient India[11] and Iran[12] (the most ancient of which go back to a common Indo-Iranian period),[13] Greece and Rome, a deity's epithets generally reflected a particular aspect of that god's essence and role, for which their influence may be obtained for a specific occasion: Apollo Musagetes is "Apollo, [as] leader of the Muses" and therefore patron of the arts and sciences while Phoibos Apollo is the same deity, but as shining sun-god. "Athena protects the city as polias, oversees handicrafts as ergane, joins battle as promachos and grants victory as nike."[14]

Alternatively, the epithet may identify a particular and localized aspect of the god, such as a reference to the mythological place of birth or numinous presence at a specific sanctuary: sacrifice might be offered on one and the same occasion to Pythian Apollo (Apollo Pythios) and Delphic Apollo (Apollo Delphinios). A localizing epithet refers simply to a particular center of veneration and the cultic tradition there, as the god manifested at a particular festival, for example: Zeus Olympios, Zeus as present at Olympia, or Apollo Karneios, Apollo at the Spartan Carneian festival.

Often the epithet is the result of fusion of the Olympian divinity with an older one: Poseidon Erechtheus, Artemis Orthia, reflect intercultural equations of a divinity with an older one, that is generally considered its pendant; thus most Roman gods and goddesses, especially the Twelve Olympians, had traditional counterparts in Greek, Etruscan, and most other Mediterranean pantheons, such as Jupiter as head of the Olympian Gods with Zeus, but in specific cults, there may be a different equation, based on one specific aspect of the divinity. Thus the Greek word Trismegistos ("thrice grand") was first used as a Greek name for the Egyptian god of science and invention, Thoth, and later as an epitheton for the Greek Hermes and, finally, the fully equated Roman Mercurius Mercury (both were messenger of the gods). Among the Greeks, T. H. Price notes[15] the nurturing power of Kourotrophos might be invoked in sacrifices and recorded in inscription, without specifically identifying Hera or Demeter.

Some epithets were applied to several deities of the same pantheon rather accidentally if they had a common characteristic, or deliberately, emphasizing their blood- or other ties; thus in pagan Rome, several divinities gods, and heroes were given the epitheton Comes as companion of another (usually major) divinity. An epithet can even be meant for collective use, e.g. in Latin pilleati 'the felt hat-wearers' for the brothers Castor and Pollux. Some epithets resist explanation.[14]

Catholics, Eastern Orthodox Christians, and Christians of other churches practice the use of epithets in the veneration of Jesus (e.g., "Christ"; "Prince of Peace"; "The Good Shepherd"), of Mary, Mother of Jesus (e.g. "Mother of God"; "Panagia"), and of the saints (e.g. "Pope Saint John Paul the Great, Saint Theophan the Recluse"). "Our Lady of Lourdes" is essentially periphrasis, except where some aspect of the Virgin is invoked.[citation needed]

Rhetoric

An epithet is an adjective or adjectival phrase that characterizes a place, a thing, or a person that helps make the characteristics of this thing more prominent. These descriptive phrases can be used in a positive or negative way that benefits the orator. "It will generally happen, that the Epithets employed by a skillful orator, will be found to be, in fact, so many abridged arguments, the force of which is sufficiently conveyed by a mere hint; e.g. if any one says, 'We ought to take warning from the bloody revolution of France,' the Epithet suggests one of the reasons for our being warned; and that, not less clearly, and more forcibly, than if the argument had been stated at length."[16] With persuasion being a key component of rhetoric, it is rational to use epithets. The use of persuasive wording gives leverage to one's arguments. Knowledge along with descriptive words or phrases can be a powerful tool. This is supported in Bryan Short's article when he states, "The New Rhetoric derives its empiricist flavor from a pervasive respect for clarity and directness of language."[17] Rhetoricians use epithets to direct their audience to see their point of view, using verbal forms of imagery as a persuasive tactic.

Orators have a variety of epithets that they can employ that have different meanings. The most common are fixed epithets and transferred epithets. A fixed epithet is the repetitive use of the same word or phrase for the same person or object. A transferred epithet qualifies a noun other than the person or thing it is describing. This is also known as a hypallage. This can often involve shifting a modifier from the animate to the inanimate; for example, "cheerful money" and "suicidal sky".

Orators take special care when using epithets so as to not use them as smear words. Orators could be accused of racial or abusive epithets if used incorrectly. American journalist William Safire discussed the use of the word in a 2008 column in The New York Times: "'I am working on a piece about nationalism with a focus on epithet as a smear word,' writes David Binder, my longtime Times colleague, 'which was still a synonym for 'delineation' or 'characterization' in my big 1942 Webster's but now seems to be almost exclusively a synonym for 'derogation' or 'smear word.' ... In the past century, [epithet] blossomed as 'a word of abuse,' today gleefully seized upon to describe political smears."[18]

Usage prior to surnames

Descriptive bynames were given to a person to distinguish them from other people of the same name.[19] In England bynames were used during the period when the use of surnames had not been extensively adopted. As an example the Domesday Book of 1086 identifies 40 individuals with the given name of "Richard". Most (40%), such as "Richard of Coursey" are identified with a locational byname, indicating where they came from, or in some cases where they lived. Others (25%), such as "Richard the butler" and "Richard the bald" are identified with an occupational or a personally descriptive byname. Some of the individuals, such as Richard Basset, made use of what we would recognize as a surname.

The distinction between a byname and a surname lies in the fact that the byname is not usually heritable, and may change for any given person as his circumstances change. Richard the bald, for example, was presumably not always bald, and Richard of Brampton may not have always lived at Brampton.

The use of bynames did not end with the adoption of surnames. In some cases, before the adoption of middle names, government records, such as taxes lists, included people with both the same given name and the same surname. This led to the use of bynames to further distinguish the person. For example, one "John Smith" might be described as "John Smith of the mill", while another might be described as "John Smith the short".

See also

References

  1. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (eds.). "Epithetos". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus Project.
  2. ^ "epithet". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  3. ^ Herzfeld, Michael (2016). Cultural Intimacy: Social Poetics and the Real Life of States, Societies, and Institutions. Routledge. p. 73. ISBN 978-1-317-29755-0.
  4. ^ Manser, Martin H. (2007). Good Word Guide (6th ed.). A & C Black. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-7136-7759-1.
  5. ^ Fowler. H. W. (1965) [1926]. A Dictionary of Modern English Usage. (2nd ed.) Rev. By Sir Ernest Gowers. New York; Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 161.
  6. ^ a b Patel-Grosz, P. (2015). Epithets at the Syntax-semantics Interface, ch. 1. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  7. ^ Burkert, W. The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture of the Early Archaic Age, 1992, p.116.
  8. ^ a b Wheeler, L. K. "Epithets", web.cn.edu, Carson-Newman College; accessed 25 October 2013.
  9. ^ Headlam, W. "The Classic Review." jstor.org. Cambridge University Press, accessed 25 October 2013.
  10. ^ Thompson, Don. All in Color for a Dime, Volume 25, p. 77. Arlington House, 1970. ISBN 0870000624
  11. ^ Gonda, J. (1959-12-31). Epithets in the Rgveda. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110908916. ISBN 978-3-11-090891-6.
  12. ^ For the most ancient Iranian divine epithets, cf. Sadovski, Velizar: Epitheta und Götternamen im älteren Indo-Iranischen. Die hymnischen Namenkataloge im Veda und im Avesta (Stilistica Indo-Iranica, I.). Fascicle II of: Panaino, Antonio – Sadovski, Velizar: Disputationes Iranologicae Vindobonenses, I. (Sitzungsberichte der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Phil.-hist. Klasse, 764: Veröffentlichungen zur Iranistik 41). Wien 2007, 37–74 [with three registers, p. 75–108], ISBN 978-3-7001-3963-8. Print Edition: ISBN 978-3-7001-3990-4. Online Edition: doi:10.1553/0x0016ae99.
  13. ^ On their relation of the epithets of the Old Iranian Avesta to the ones attested in the Indic Vedas, and on their Indo-Iranian origin, see Sadovski, Velizar: Zur Morphologie und Semantik von Namen und Epitheta im Indo-Iranischen. Sadovski, Velizar / Panaino, Antonio: Disputationes Iranologicae Vindobonenses, II. (Sitzungsberichte der ÖAW. Philosophisch-historische Klasse, 845. Band / Veröffentlichungen zur Iranistik, Nr. 65). Wien. ISBN 978-3-7001-7140-9.
  14. ^ a b Burkert, Walter. Greek Religion (Harvard University Press, 1985) III.4.4. "The special character of Greek anthropomorphism", especially p.184.
  15. ^ Price, T. H. Kourotrophos, 1978, noted by Burkert 1985:184.
  16. ^ Whately, Richard (1841). "Elements of Rhetoric". 6. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ Short, Bryan (2000). "Figurative Language in the Scottish New Rhetoric Figurative Language in the Scottish New Rhetoric". Language Sciences. Elsevier. 22. doi:10.1016/S0388-0001(00)00005-X.
  18. ^ Safire, William (June 22, 2008). "Presents of the Mind". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Scott, Brian M.; Mittleman, Joshua (1999). "A Brief Introduction to Medieval Bynames". The Academy of Saint Gabriel. from the original on 30 July 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.

External links

  • Homer's Epitheta ornantia Bibliotheca Augustana

epithet, confused, with, epitaph, taxonomic, usage, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, . Not to be confused with Epitaph For the taxonomic usage see Epithet disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Epithet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message An epithet from Ancient Greek ἐpi8eton epitheton adjective from ἐpi8etos epithetos additional 1 also byname is a descriptive term word or phrase known for accompanying or occurring in place of a name and having entered common usage It has various shades of meaning when applied to seemingly real or fictitious people divinities objects and binomial nomenclature It can also be a descriptive title for example Pallas Athena Phoebus Apollo Alfred the Great Suleiman the Magnificent and Wladyslaw I the Elbow high Many English monarchs have traditional epithets some of the best known are Edward the Confessor William the Conqueror Richard the Lionheart AEthelred the Unready John Lackland and Bloody Mary The word epithet can also refer to an abusive defamatory or derogatory phrase 2 3 This use as a euphemism is criticized by Martin Manser and other proponents of linguistic prescription 4 H W Fowler complained that epithet is suffering a vulgarization that is giving it an abusive imputation 5 Contents 1 Linguistics 2 Literature 3 Religion 4 Rhetoric 5 Usage prior to surnames 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksLinguistics EditEpithets are sometimes attached to a person s name or appear in place of their name as what might be described as a glorified nickname or sobriquet and for this reason some linguists have argued that they should be considered as pronouns 6 It has also been argued that epithets are a phenomenon with the syntax semantics interface because they have components of both and also a pragmatic dimension 6 An epithet is linked to its noun by long established usage Not every adjective is an epithet An epithet is especially recognizable when its function is largely decorative such as if cloud gathering Zeus is employed other than in reference to conjuring up a storm The epithets are decorative insofar as they are neither essential to the immediate context nor modeled especially for it Among other things they are extremely helpful to fill out a half verse Walter Burkert has noted 7 Some epithets are known by the Latin term epitheton necessarium as they are required to distinguish the bearers as an alternative to numbers after a prince s name such as Richard the Lionheart Richard I of England or Charles the Fat alongside Charles the Bald The same epithet can be used repeatedly joined to different names such as Alexander the Great as well as Constantine the Great Other epithets can easily be omitted without serious risk of confusion and are therefore known as epitheton ornans Thus the classical Roman author Virgil systematically called his main hero pius Aeneas the epithet being pius meaning religiously observant humble and wholesome as well as calling the armsbearer of Aeneas fidus Achates the epithet being fidus which means faithful or loyal There are also specific types of epithets such as the kenning which appears in works such as Beowulf An example of a kenning would be using the term whale road instead of the word sea Literature EditEpithets are characteristic of the style of ancient epic poetry notably in that of Homer or the northern European sagas see above as well as Epithets in Homer When James Joyce uses the phrase the snot green sea he is playing on Homer s familiar epithet the wine dark sea The phrase Discreet Telemachus is also considered an epithet The Greek term antonomasia in rhetoric means substituting any epithet or phrase for a proper name as Pelides signifying the son of Peleus to identify Achilles An opposite substitution of a proper name for some generic term is also sometimes called antonomasia as a Cicero for an orator The use of a father s name or ancestor s name such as Pelides in the case of Achilles or Saturnia in the case of the goddess Juno in Virgil s Aeneid is specifically called a patronymic device and is in its own class of epithet In William Shakespeare s play Romeo and Juliet epithets are used in the prologue such as star cross d lovers and death mark d love Epithets were in layman s terms glorified nicknames that could be used to represent one s style artistic nature or even geographical reference They originated to simply serve the purpose of dealing with names that were hard to pronounce or just unpleasant 8 It from there went to something that could be very significant assigned by elders or counterparts to represent one s position in the community or it could be a representation of whomever one wanted to be or thought he was 9 The elegance of this movement was used throughout history and even modern day with many examples ranging from Aphrodite the Heavenly amp Zeus the Protector of Guests all the way to Johnny Football amp King James 8 American comic books tend to give epithets to superheroes such as The Phantom being The Ghost Who Walks Superman called The Man of Steel and The Dynamic Duo Batman and Robin who are individually known as The Dark Knight and The Boy Wonder 10 Additionally epiteto the Spanish version of epithet is commonly used throughout poems in Castilian literature Religion EditMain article Names of God In many polytheistic religions such as those of ancient India 11 and Iran 12 the most ancient of which go back to a common Indo Iranian period 13 Greece and Rome a deity s epithets generally reflected a particular aspect of that god s essence and role for which their influence may be obtained for a specific occasion Apollo Musagetes is Apollo as leader of the Muses and therefore patron of the arts and sciences while Phoibos Apollo is the same deity but as shining sun god Athena protects the city as polias oversees handicrafts as ergane joins battle as promachos and grants victory as nike 14 Alternatively the epithet may identify a particular and localized aspect of the god such as a reference to the mythological place of birth or numinous presence at a specific sanctuary sacrifice might be offered on one and the same occasion to Pythian Apollo Apollo Pythios and Delphic Apollo Apollo Delphinios A localizing epithet refers simply to a particular center of veneration and the cultic tradition there as the god manifested at a particular festival for example Zeus Olympios Zeus as present at Olympia or Apollo Karneios Apollo at the Spartan Carneian festival Often the epithet is the result of fusion of the Olympian divinity with an older one Poseidon Erechtheus Artemis Orthia reflect intercultural equations of a divinity with an older one that is generally considered its pendant thus most Roman gods and goddesses especially the Twelve Olympians had traditional counterparts in Greek Etruscan and most other Mediterranean pantheons such as Jupiter as head of the Olympian Gods with Zeus but in specific cults there may be a different equation based on one specific aspect of the divinity Thus the Greek word Trismegistos thrice grand was first used as a Greek name for the Egyptian god of science and invention Thoth and later as an epitheton for the Greek Hermes and finally the fully equated Roman Mercurius Mercury both were messenger of the gods Among the Greeks T H Price notes 15 the nurturing power of Kourotrophos might be invoked in sacrifices and recorded in inscription without specifically identifying Hera or Demeter Some epithets were applied to several deities of the same pantheon rather accidentally if they had a common characteristic or deliberately emphasizing their blood or other ties thus in pagan Rome several divinities gods and heroes were given the epitheton Comes as companion of another usually major divinity An epithet can even be meant for collective use e g in Latin pilleati the felt hat wearers for the brothers Castor and Pollux Some epithets resist explanation 14 Catholics Eastern Orthodox Christians and Christians of other churches practice the use of epithets in the veneration of Jesus e g Christ Prince of Peace The Good Shepherd of Mary Mother of Jesus e g Mother of God Panagia and of the saints e g Pope Saint John Paul the Great Saint Theophan the Recluse Our Lady of Lourdes is essentially periphrasis except where some aspect of the Virgin is invoked citation needed Rhetoric EditAn epithet is an adjective or adjectival phrase that characterizes a place a thing or a person that helps make the characteristics of this thing more prominent These descriptive phrases can be used in a positive or negative way that benefits the orator It will generally happen that the Epithets employed by a skillful orator will be found to be in fact so many abridged arguments the force of which is sufficiently conveyed by a mere hint e g if any one says We ought to take warning from the bloody revolution of France the Epithet suggests one of the reasons for our being warned and that not less clearly and more forcibly than if the argument had been stated at length 16 With persuasion being a key component of rhetoric it is rational to use epithets The use of persuasive wording gives leverage to one s arguments Knowledge along with descriptive words or phrases can be a powerful tool This is supported in Bryan Short s article when he states The New Rhetoric derives its empiricist flavor from a pervasive respect for clarity and directness of language 17 Rhetoricians use epithets to direct their audience to see their point of view using verbal forms of imagery as a persuasive tactic Orators have a variety of epithets that they can employ that have different meanings The most common are fixed epithets and transferred epithets A fixed epithet is the repetitive use of the same word or phrase for the same person or object A transferred epithet qualifies a noun other than the person or thing it is describing This is also known as a hypallage This can often involve shifting a modifier from the animate to the inanimate for example cheerful money and suicidal sky Orators take special care when using epithets so as to not use them as smear words Orators could be accused of racial or abusive epithets if used incorrectly American journalist William Safire discussed the use of the word in a 2008 column in The New York Times I am working on a piece about nationalism with a focus on epithet as a smear word writes David Binder my longtime Times colleague which was still a synonym for delineation or characterization in my big 1942 Webster s but now seems to be almost exclusively a synonym for derogation or smear word In the past century epithet blossomed as a word of abuse today gleefully seized upon to describe political smears 18 Usage prior to surnames EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Epithet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Descriptive bynames were given to a person to distinguish them from other people of the same name 19 In England bynames were used during the period when the use of surnames had not been extensively adopted As an example the Domesday Book of 1086 identifies 40 individuals with the given name of Richard Most 40 such as Richard of Coursey are identified with a locational byname indicating where they came from or in some cases where they lived Others 25 such as Richard the butler and Richard the bald are identified with an occupational or a personally descriptive byname Some of the individuals such as Richard Basset made use of what we would recognize as a surname The distinction between a byname and a surname lies in the fact that the byname is not usually heritable and may change for any given person as his circumstances change Richard the bald for example was presumably not always bald and Richard of Brampton may not have always lived at Brampton The use of bynames did not end with the adoption of surnames In some cases before the adoption of middle names government records such as taxes lists included people with both the same given name and the same surname This led to the use of bynames to further distinguish the person For example one John Smith might be described as John Smith of the mill while another might be described as John Smith the short See also EditAnimal epithet Bahuvrihi a Proto Indo European formation often used for epithets Cognomen Honorific List of monarchs by nickname Lists of people by epithet Makurakotoba Nickname Plant epithet Sobriquet Synecdoche Toponymic surname a surname derived from a place nameReferences Edit Liddell Henry George Scott Robert eds Epithetos A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Project epithet Merriam Webster Dictionary Herzfeld Michael 2016 Cultural Intimacy Social Poetics and the Real Life of States Societies and Institutions Routledge p 73 ISBN 978 1 317 29755 0 Manser Martin H 2007 Good Word Guide 6th ed A amp C Black p 147 ISBN 978 0 7136 7759 1 Fowler H W 1965 1926 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage 2nd ed Rev By Sir Ernest Gowers New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 161 a b Patel Grosz P 2015 Epithets at the Syntax semantics Interface ch 1 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Burkert W The Orientalizing Revolution Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture of the Early Archaic Age 1992 p 116 a b Wheeler L K Epithets web cn edu Carson Newman College accessed 25 October 2013 Headlam W The Classic Review jstor org Cambridge University Press accessed 25 October 2013 Thompson Don All in Color for a Dime Volume 25 p 77 Arlington House 1970 ISBN 0870000624 Gonda J 1959 12 31 Epithets in the Rgveda Berlin Boston De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110908916 ISBN 978 3 11 090891 6 For the most ancient Iranian divine epithets cf Sadovski Velizar Epitheta und Gotternamen im alteren Indo Iranischen Die hymnischen Namenkataloge im Veda und im Avesta Stilistica Indo Iranica I Fascicle II of Panaino Antonio Sadovski Velizar Disputationes Iranologicae Vindobonenses I Sitzungsberichte der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Phil hist Klasse 764 Veroffentlichungen zur Iranistik 41 Wien 2007 37 74 with three registers p 75 108 ISBN 978 3 7001 3963 8 Print Edition ISBN 978 3 7001 3990 4 Online Edition doi 10 1553 0x0016ae99 On their relation of the epithets of the Old Iranian Avesta to the ones attested in the Indic Vedas and on their Indo Iranian origin see Sadovski Velizar Zur Morphologie und Semantik von Namen und Epitheta im Indo Iranischen Sadovski Velizar Panaino Antonio Disputationes Iranologicae Vindobonenses II Sitzungsberichte der OAW Philosophisch historische Klasse 845 Band Veroffentlichungen zur Iranistik Nr 65 Wien ISBN 978 3 7001 7140 9 a b Burkert Walter Greek Religion Harvard University Press 1985 III 4 4 The special character of Greek anthropomorphism especially p 184 Price T H Kourotrophos 1978 noted by Burkert 1985 184 Whately Richard 1841 Elements of Rhetoric 6 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Short Bryan 2000 Figurative Language in the Scottish New Rhetoric Figurative Language in the Scottish New Rhetoric Language Sciences Elsevier 22 doi 10 1016 S0388 0001 00 00005 X Safire William June 22 2008 Presents of the Mind The New York Times Scott Brian M Mittleman Joshua 1999 A Brief Introduction to Medieval Bynames The Academy of Saint Gabriel Archived from the original on 30 July 2021 Retrieved 7 December 2021 External links EditHomer s Epitheta ornantia Bibliotheca Augustana Look up epithet in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Epithet amp oldid 1144436524, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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