En este trabajo se estudia la distribución sintáctica de los términos griegos φόβος, δέος, αἰδώς y ἄλγος en Homero, Hesíodo, los tres tragediógrafos, Aristófanes, Heródoto, Tucídides y Jenofonte. El objetivo es el de hallar diferencias en su uso que reflejen una evolución de significado desde una concepción más animista y personalizada hasta una concepción como simples abstractos. Se analizan sobre todo los contextos verbales en que aparecen y, más en particular, cuando los términos son utilizados como Sujeto de la oración. Se comprueba que tales conceptos se unen con más frecuencia a verbos de carácter agentivo -aquellos que admiten una interpretación personalizada- en los textos más arcaicos o poéticos, mientras que este tipo de usos son ...
This article presents a research on the functional domain of classical Greek μάλιστα. The whole text...
In this text, partial product of the ongoing research Tragic in Homer? I propose to describe, from a...
One of the peculiarities, at lexical level, of Katomyomakhia is that the Greek term for the cat is n...
This paper explores aspects of what I shall call pity or compassion in Homer (especially Iliad 24) a...
Este artículo analiza la relación del acortamiento con la anástrofe en griego homérico. Dicho anális...
Since the beginnings of Grammar as systematic discipline in ancient Greece, the question of singular...
The LEXILOGON project (acronym for ΛΕΞΙκό ΛΟΓοτεχνικών όρΩΝ, Greek for “dictionary of literary terms...
In this paper I discuss the origin of the suffix -ώδης and its literary use from Homer to the 4th ce...
Greek lexical items transmitted by Ancient lexicographers and scholiasts are often more trustworthy ...
The aim of this paper is the study of αὖ and αὖθις in the texts of Greek historians. Αὖθις prototypi...
Οὐδέ shows a great multifunctionality and polysemy in ancient Greek, to such an extent that its incl...
The paper examines the linguistic configuration of ritualized-friendship through a contrastive analy...
Phraseological studies about modern Greek are still extremely few. That is why we decided to present...
This article analyzes the layer of philosophical meanings that were superimposed on the term daímon ...
The image of the great Cosmos and the perception that man has from himself in relation to it is in t...
This article presents a research on the functional domain of classical Greek μάλιστα. The whole text...
In this text, partial product of the ongoing research Tragic in Homer? I propose to describe, from a...
One of the peculiarities, at lexical level, of Katomyomakhia is that the Greek term for the cat is n...
This paper explores aspects of what I shall call pity or compassion in Homer (especially Iliad 24) a...
Este artículo analiza la relación del acortamiento con la anástrofe en griego homérico. Dicho anális...
Since the beginnings of Grammar as systematic discipline in ancient Greece, the question of singular...
The LEXILOGON project (acronym for ΛΕΞΙκό ΛΟΓοτεχνικών όρΩΝ, Greek for “dictionary of literary terms...
In this paper I discuss the origin of the suffix -ώδης and its literary use from Homer to the 4th ce...
Greek lexical items transmitted by Ancient lexicographers and scholiasts are often more trustworthy ...
The aim of this paper is the study of αὖ and αὖθις in the texts of Greek historians. Αὖθις prototypi...
Οὐδέ shows a great multifunctionality and polysemy in ancient Greek, to such an extent that its incl...
The paper examines the linguistic configuration of ritualized-friendship through a contrastive analy...
Phraseological studies about modern Greek are still extremely few. That is why we decided to present...
This article analyzes the layer of philosophical meanings that were superimposed on the term daímon ...
The image of the great Cosmos and the perception that man has from himself in relation to it is in t...
This article presents a research on the functional domain of classical Greek μάλιστα. The whole text...
In this text, partial product of the ongoing research Tragic in Homer? I propose to describe, from a...
One of the peculiarities, at lexical level, of Katomyomakhia is that the Greek term for the cat is n...