Meaning of Graecity | Babel Free
/ˈɡɹiːsɪtɪ/Definitions
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Adoption of Greek naming and/or the Greek language. obsolete, uncountable
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Greek (especially linguistically Greek) character or style. uncountable
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Greek texts and other language materials, regarded as a corpus. collective, uncountable
Examples
“The territory and towns of Judæa…from the period of the Maccabees dated the era of their Græcity (suam receperunt Græcitatem).”
“[Hebrew] now possesses a series of prefixes to translate such elements as mono-, di-, tri-, sur-, sub-, inter-, etc., partly even simulating the Latinity or Graecity of the European morphemes by using Aramaic elements.”
“The overall climate of the Old Babylonian scribe school was as repressive as that seventeenth to nineteenth century Latin school which inculcated “Latinity” or “Graecity” into the sore backs of future priests and officials.”
“The k in skope is in effect a marker of graecity, and as such conserves the original Greek seme of sight.”
“A revised understanding of the Iliad and Odyssey…raises two…inescapable questions, namely: first, how did these works come into the Hellenic World? and, second, how did these works…become the very quintessence of Graecity?”
“Special areas of the Greek lexicon were worked on by specialists; the graecity treated was exactly described: the complete lexicon of Greek, including inscriptions and papyri until and including the sixth century AD, was to be recorded.”
“When it will be finished, the DGE will be the largest and most reliable dictionary of antique graecity.”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.