• Upsila

    Origin

    From the Ancient Greek ὖ ψιλά, plural construction of ὖ ψιλόν.

    Noun

    noun form

    1. Plural of en
      • 1981, Jaan Puhvel, Analecta Indoeuropaea: Delectus Operum Minorum Plerumque Anglice Aliquando Francogallice Editorum Annos 1952–1977 Complectens (Institut für Sprachwissenschaft der Universität Innsbruck; , 9783851245639),
    page 134
      • Why there is no parallel ḫi- remains a mystery. It is idle to argue for some kind of parasitic origin, comparable to the rampage of spiritus asper over initial upsila in Attic Greek; the very contrast ḫu- : w- is distinctive.
      • 1991, Jaan Puhvel, Hittite Etymological Dictionary: Words beginning with H (
    Walter de Gruyter, , pages 303–304
      • Gk. ῦει ‘to rain’ may represent either *sEâ‚‚uHâ‚‚-ye- or *Eâ‚‚uHâ‚‚-ye- (spiritus asper being automatic on initial upsila), thus a -ye/o- derivative (stative like e. g. χαίρω?) from the zero grade of the root stem seen in Toch. A 3 pl. swiñc < *sEâ‚‚uHâ‚‚-énti.
      • 1993, Studia Varia from the J. Paul Getty Museum , 9780892362035),
    page 96
      • Serifs are a regular feature of letters in both the Getty and the PFayum 4 papyrus fragments. Upsila, similarly formed in all, are decorated with serifs on the base of the vertical stroke at PFayum 4.11, Getty recto line 1, and Getty verso line 7.
      • 1994, Adam Bülow-Jacobsen ed., Proceedings of the 20th International Congress of Papyrologists, Copenhagen, 23–29 August, 1992 (
    Museum Tusculanum Press, , page 286

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