Terpsimbrotos
Terpsimbrotos is a type of compound (inflectional verbal compounds, German verbales Rektionskompositum), on a par with the bahuvrihi and tatpurusha types. It is derived from a finite verbal phrase, the verbal inflection still visible at the juncture of the compound members. terpsimbrotos is itself a Greek example of such a compound, consisting of terpsi (either from terp-ti- or from terp-si-) "gladdens" and mbrotos "mortals" (c.f. a-mbrosia), a terpsimbrotos is thus something or somebody that "gladdens mortals". The word appears in the Odyssey and in the Homeric hymn to Apollo as an epitheton of Helios.
Opinions as to what form exactly is reflected by this type of compounds are divided. Dunkel (1992) compares the Vedic -si- imperatives, connected with the aorist system, apparently by haplology along the lines of vak-sa-si > vaksi.
Bē-t-harmōn "?driving the wheel", a Homeric compound was also postulated as a similiar type of Greek compound, lacking the -i- of terpsimbrotos. If correctly analyzed, this would support the -ti- analysis of terpsi-.
Phere-oikos "house-carrier", "carries-his-house" is a term used for a snail by Hesiod's Works and Days is another Greek variant of the type, with a thematic -e- instead of the -si-.
Literature
- George Dunkel, Two old problems in Greek: ptolemos and terpsimbrotos, Glotta 70 (1992).