The reading /plerousa/ is in line though with the euphonic aspect of /moria/ (and far less suggestive than Lallot's). Leave a Reply Cancel replyYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment * Name * Email * Website Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Homeric Vocabulary, Heaps’ Law and the open-ended nature of epic tradition This paper makes a simple, but significant, observation. Vocabulary keeps growing in any corpus — there is no final, fixed…
Pausanias 9.23.2–4, on the tomb of Pindar 2022.05.02 | By Gregory Nagy §0. The three paragraphs of Pausanias that I quote and translate here are relevant to my ongoing…
Pausanias 10.12.1–11, Part II: on Sibyls in general 2022.04.25 | By Gregory Nagy [For the Greek text and for my working translation, see Part I.] §0. Here…