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Greek Feminines in -Ias: An Ovidian Predilection

The ordinary Latin words for ‘lonian’ are lonicus and lonius. Ovid does not use the former at all, and except for one problematical instance applies the latter only to the Ionian Sea (cf. OLD s. v.). Copyists, editors, and lexicographers, however, credit him, and him only, with Ioniacus, supposedly...

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Published in:Classical quarterly 1999-01, Vol.49 (1), p.330-332
Main Author: Kenney, E. J.
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description The ordinary Latin words for ‘lonian’ are lonicus and lonius. Ovid does not use the former at all, and except for one problematical instance applies the latter only to the Ionian Sea (cf. OLD s. v.). Copyists, editors, and lexicographers, however, credit him, and him only, with Ioniacus, supposedly attested in two passages of almost identical wording:
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Humanities Index; Cambridge University Press:JISC Collections:Full Collection Digital Archives (STM and HSS) (218 titles)
subjects Callimachus (305-240 BC)
Classical literature
Euripides (c 485-406 BC)
Greek language
Greek literature
Latin literature
Literary criticism
Ovid
Ovid (43 BC-17 AD)
Poetry
Shorter Notes
Suffixes
title Greek Feminines in -Ias: An Ovidian Predilection
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