γέννα

Etymology
A derivation from, though the exact morphological and phonological development is unclear.

Noun

 * 1) Ancient Greek
 * 2) descent, lineage
 * 3) origin
 * 4) * 2nd century CE, Secundus the Silent, Sententiae. 15.
 * "grc"
 * "grc"

- γῆ γέννα πάντων


 * 1) offspring, generation
 * 2) family (children), race
 * 3) coming forth
 * 4) Medieval  Greek:
 * 5) childbirth
 * 6) family
 * 7) “”: moonrise (literally: the birth of the Moon)
 * 8) also see  (6th century CE):  Christmas
 * 1) also see  (6th century CE):  Christmas

Descendants
From Medieval Greek:

Etymology 1
From from verb γεννῶ. The Ancient Greek noun had a different meaning:  “ancestry, descendant”).

Noun

 * 1) birth

Usage notes

 * The very rare genitive plural “των γεννών”, is either archaic (“τῶν γεννῶν”), or regional demotic, or used for veterinary archives “αρχείο γεννών” (archeío gennón, “archive of births/labours”) while the common “αρχείο γεννήσεων” (archeío genníseon, “archive of births”) has to do with childbirths and.

Etymology 2
Inflectional form of the verb /.

Verb

 * 1)  (also: γένναγε)
 * 2)  (also: γέννησε)