Sappho

Hypernyms

 * ; - subfamily

Hyponyms

 * - sole species

Etymology
From.

Proper noun

 * 1) An Ancient Greek female name, particularly borne by a poetess from Lesbos who lived between 630 and 570 BC (exact dates unknown).
 * , a main belt asteroid.

Translations

 * Armenian: Սապփո
 * Danish: Sapfo
 * Dutch: Sappho
 * Esperanto: Sapfo
 * Finnish: Sapfo
 * French:
 * German: Sappho
 * Greek:
 * Ancient Greek: Σαπφώ
 * Hebrew: סאפפו
 * Hungarian: Szapphó
 * Irish: Safó
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: サッポー
 * Latin:
 * Polish: Safona
 * Portuguese: Safo
 * Russian:, Сафо́
 * Slovak: Sapfo
 * Spanish: Safo
 * Swedish: Sapfo

Etymology
From.

Proper noun

 * , Plinius, Naturalis Historia, lib. XXII, cap. IX, num. 20; in: Pliny Natural History with an English translation in ten volumes Volume VI Libri XX-XXIII By W. H. S. Jones, 1951, page 308f.:
 * "la"
 * "la"

- ob hoc et Phaonem Lesbium dilectum a Sappho, multa circa hoc non Magorum solum vanitate, sed etiam Pythagoricorum.


 * , Guntherus Cisterciensis, De oratione jejunio et eleemosyna libri tredecim, lib. III, cap. V; in: Patrologiae cursus completus sive bibliotheca universalis, integra, uniformis, commoda, oeconomica, omnium SS. patrum, doctorum scriptorumque ecclesiaticorum. Series secunda. Patrologiae tomus CCXII, edited by J.-P. Migne, 1855, col. 131:
 * "la"

- Curiose afficiunt, quae ipso auditu libidinem incitant, ut lyrica Sapphonis, elegiae Nasonis, comoediae Menandri, Plauti vel Terentii.

Declension

 * In Late Latin a genitive Sapphō is attested.
 * Hieronymus, Praefatio in Job; in: Mélanges théologiques historiques et moraux empruntés des œuvres de Saint Jérome, et traduits en français, avec le texte en regard, par F.-Z. Collombet. Tome second, 1842, p. 138:
 * Quod si cui videtur incredulum, metra scilicet esse apud Hebraeos, et in morem nostri Flacci, Graecique Pindari, et Alcaei, et Sappho, vel Psalterium, vel Lamentationes Jeremiae, vel omnia ferme Scripturarum cantica comprehendi, legat Philonem, Josephum, Originem, Caesariensem Eusebium, et eorum testimonio me verum dicere comprobabit.
 * And if it seem incredible to any one that the Hebrews really have metres, and that, whether we consider the Psalter or the Lamentations of Jeremiah, or almost all the songs of Scripture, they bear a resemblance to our Flaccus, and the Greek Pindar, and Alcæus, and Sappho, let him read Philo, Josephus, Origen, Eusebius of Cæsarea, and with the aid of their testimony he will find that I speak the truth. (Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (series II, volume 6))

In Medieval and New Latin it is also declined like this: