[Facts] Re: Euthargie
in reply to a message by Claire
If you receive another more competent answer, please ignore mine.
You know there is a word "lethargy" ("unenergetic apathetic inactivity") in English supposed to have Greek origins.
On an on-line Greek dictionary, I found "argos" meaning "laggard, late, leisurely, lingerer, slow". The initial "letha" of "lethargy" comes from the name of a mythic river.
Later, somebody perhaps composed the word "euthargia" (euthargy, Fr. euthargie) to mean "good activity" as the opposite of "lethargy". This word is not Greek, it only looks to be Greek.
You know there is a word "lethargy" ("unenergetic apathetic inactivity") in English supposed to have Greek origins.
On an on-line Greek dictionary, I found "argos" meaning "laggard, late, leisurely, lingerer, slow". The initial "letha" of "lethargy" comes from the name of a mythic river.
Later, somebody perhaps composed the word "euthargia" (euthargy, Fr. euthargie) to mean "good activity" as the opposite of "lethargy". This word is not Greek, it only looks to be Greek.
Replies
thank you so much
I absolutely agree with Christos...
...this is most probably a constructed name playing on "Lethargy" :)
...this is most probably a constructed name playing on "Lethargy" :)