Fame derives from the latin fama, which is a cognate to the Greek doric form fama (fame; φάμα) of feme (fame; φήμη) from the verb feme(say, speak; φημί).
From the same root
Famed, famous
In modern Greek a) feme: fame [φήμη] b) femesmenos: famous [φημισμένος]
Neos, did The Muppet Show ever make it to Greece? Kermit the Frog had to keep everything running and he was a bit, ah, high-strung. When very annoyed he’d yell and flail his arms around wildly. Imagine me doing that now.
The last time we discussed this at length you said you would be sure to include mainstream scholarship on these etymologies, and yet here you are again putting forth your antiquated theories without any references to current understanding.
No, it isn’t. L. fama and Gk. φήμη are both independently derivations from the IE stem *bha-.
I will ban you the next time you do this. Consensus scholarship must be included and identified.
The post has been corrected, according to your comments.
I did not mentioned my references, because they are not “mainstream scholars”.
There might has been the IE stem *bha- some five or ten thousands years ago. In any case we all are descendants of Adam and Eve. However, I still believe (and it is common sense) that L. fama derives from the Gr. doric form fama from the verb feme (φημί).
I am not a philologist, so please enlighten me: from which L. verb is the L. fama derived?
Thank you
I see that “related to” is synonym to “derived from”. It follows I guess…
First of all there is a Latin verb “fari” from the same root and one does not need to me a scholar in the language to find it out (I didn’t remember it at all and found out about it by a simple internet search for instance).
I have no idea whatsoever if “fama” derives from “feri” or “feri” is a derivate of"fama" or they have formed independently from the same IE root. Not all nouns derive from verbs as anyone who dabbles the least in etymology should know.
Romans used more than sign language and grunts to communicate with each other before they came in contact with the Greeks. This is common sense.
I completely fail to see the common sense of “fama” L. coming from “fama” Doric Gr.
P.S. I found a “wealth” of such examples of what I will charitably call folk-etymology. I really wish you guys spoke modern Greek because the sites I found them ridicule them as they deserve. In defense of Neos, he is not the only one who makes me cringe and wince and feel embarrassment by association . See the following (the words in the second column derive from the ones in the first according to a book called “English is a Greek dialect” :