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The longest Greek word

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182 points by firloop a day ago · 94 comments

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rwmj a day ago

Contains Silphium, a plant which was a common ingredient in the classical world, but now no one knows exactly what it was. (The leading theory is that it's a real plant that went extinct.) There's much about that world that we don't really know.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/future/article/20170907-the-mystery-of...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silphium

  • civvv 2 hours ago

    Wow, thanks for sharing. That is very cool, so much history in that part of the world. I go to Crete every other year, coasting along its southern side, many ruins of "lost" harbour towns which supposedly were large trade hubs in the mediterranean. I wonder if Silphium played a large role in their economies.

    One of the great archeological finds of this decade(https://www.livescience.com/ancient-odeon-discovered-crete) was discovered in Lissus(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lissus_(Crete)) in 2022. A great hike from Sougia for those interested, the place truly is beautiful.

  • culi 17 hours ago

    I've looked into this a lot and I'd say the actual leading theory is that it's an infertile hybrid of two Ferula species that grew mostly in African Mediterranean. It likely went extinct from its overharvest and inability to reproduce through seeds.

    The Ferula genus contains fennel and asafoetida (aka hing). Ferula drudeana is suspected to be one of the species that was hybridized.

lillesvin a day ago

Aristophanes was such a troll. I can only recommend reading some of his plays, like The Assemblywomen (where this word is from), The Wasps, and The Clouds. They're almost 2500 years old but they've aged incredibly well both thanks to the many amazing translators that have worked on them and because the source material is also solid satire that in many cases is still relevant today.

Plato argued that The Clouds (which is sharp satire of Socrates and his school) was in part what got Socrates convicted and killed. This is obviously debatable but Aristophanes certainly didn't self-censor or mince words.

gsf_emergency_6 a day ago

https://youtu.be/GlGKwS3E3iA?t=77m37s

No bollocks

https://youtu.be/XUQ1xIbziP0

pankajdoharey a day ago

I think the ingredient Silphium described in this dish (Now considered extinct) could be Sea Holly (Eryngium spp). Its highly debated as many authors think it is some extinct variety of fennel, but from the images on the coins it doesnt look like a Fennel.

  • ithkuil a day ago

    I believe there are more descriptions of it other than rough depictions on coins

  • dr_dshiv a day ago
    • culi 17 hours ago

      The best explanation I've heard is that it was a sterile hybrid of two Ferula species. Many Ferula have a long history of mythology behind them. Asafoetida (aka hing) is probably where the heart symbol came from (its roughly heart-shaped root was used as an aphrodisiac).

      Silphium similarly had much demand as an aphrodisiac.

      This hybrid likely grew in the African Mediterranean and the high demand for it, alongside its inability to reproduce through seed, is probably what led to its extinction.

    • pankajdoharey a day ago

      Could be but the central bulb as made on the coins is unlike a fennel https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silphium , and since this imaginary recipe is a part of a comedy it is unlikely to be edible. If you look at other ingredients they can surely make someone sick.

  • nephihaha a day ago

    Romans had very different palates from the modern west.

cannonpr a day ago

I am a native Greek speaker with a fair bit of education in Homeric, Classical, and Medieval Greek. Trying to read that word hurts…

svat 17 hours ago

For comparison, one candidate for the longest word in Sanskrit: https://hellenisteukontos.blogspot.com/2010/03/what-is-longe...

> nirantarāndhakāritā-digantara-kandaladamanda-sudhārasa-bindu-sāndratara-ghanāghana-vr̥nda-sandehakara-syandamāna-makaranda-bindu-bandhuratara-mākanda-taru-kula-talpa-kalpa-mr̥dula-sikatā-jāla-jaṭila-mūla-tala-maruvaka-miladalaghu-laghu-laya-kalita-ramaṇīya-pānīya-śālikā-bālikā-karāra-vinda-galantikā-galadelā-lavaṅga-pāṭala-ghanasāra-kastūrikātisaurabha-medura-laghutara-madhura-śītalatara-saliladhārā-nirākariṣṇu-tadīya-vimala-vilocana-mayūkha-rekhāpasārita-pipāsāyāsa-pathika-lokān

It's not actually the longest though; e.g. here's someone asking how to get TeX to hyphenate a routine compound that would be about 1361 characters long in transliteration: https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/404690/how-to-make-a...

> Is there really a 797 character long word in Sanskrit?

> Yes its ! Some times even the book completely will be like this. What is the solution?

  • Guestmodinfo 12 hours ago

    I'm an Indian, but had sanskrit education only a little not much. It just looks like lots of adjectives bunched together. I mean yes it maybe one word but then it's not a single idea it's just lot of adjectives bunched together to show the entire personality of something or somebody

    • svat 9 hours ago

      • That applies to the Greek word too. Obviously these long “words” are compounds made up of distinct morphemes (similar with German examples like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rinderkennzeichnungs-_und_Rind... or for that matter even shorter English words like antidisestablishmentarianism), the whole thing is one “word” simply because there's a case ending only at the end; you need to read the whole thing as occupying a single role in the sentence it is a part of.

      • It is not merely a string of independent adjectives; there's a progression of ideas from one morpheme to the next, just as in any compound. Try here: https://dharmamitra.org/?target_lang=english-explained&input...

dmje a day ago

What’s mainly annoying is how this has broken HN layout. There’s some CSS for that.

  • whiteboardr a day ago

    It will go down in HN-history as the one exception, where it was ok to not use the page title verbatim.

    • anon_cow1111 a day ago

      I read the article and was disappointed that the full "word" got cut off, but I know that somewhere, there's a German out there who will post something even longer.

      • larusso a day ago

        I’m German and think the idea to compound words into one should not really count as the longest / a long word. I mean yes it is but also it isn’t. Like: “ Grundstücksverkehrsgenehmigungszuständigkeitsübertragungsverordnung” In the end it’s just slapping words together and count it as one.

  • blauditore a day ago

    Seems okay on mobile, how does it look for you?

    • Etheryte a day ago

      Jfyi the title has been edited now, it was the actual word previously which was not broken and just made the page super wide on mobile.

      • omnicognate a day ago

        It was fine on my iOS Safari with a small screen. It automatically hyphenated it, differently depending on orientation.

        Presumably not on other browsers, though, as lots of people were complaining.

        • Y-bar a day ago

          Safari on iOS 26.2 did not hyphenate it for me. I bet it has something to do with which languages are installed.

      • dmje a day ago

        Ta!

    • Y-bar a day ago

      Especially not working on mobile because the long word pushes for wider column and therefore a more zoomed out view.

  • red_Seashell_32 a day ago

    `word-break: break-all;` would solve that.

    • culi 17 hours ago

      "solve" is a strong word. The rest of HN would basically be unreadable

treetalker a day ago

Legend has it that someone posted the recipe years ago, but the double-whammy of the long title and the HN need to remove "How to make …" broke the site.

vunderba a day ago

This should have been an April Fools clue on Wheel of Fortune with Vanna White just about to die at the end of having to turn over all the letters.

dhosek 21 hours ago

I pulled my Liddel and Scott off the bookshelf to see the word in print (I have dictionaries and thesauri on shelves over my desk for easy reference) and discovered that I have the abridged edition.

  • alkyon 20 hours ago

    Probably it's Middle Liddel, I haven't decided to buy the unabriged version due to its unwieldy size, high prize and because it is 80 years old. Apart from this, it's fully available online.

    Just started relearning Ancient Greek after twenty years and I highly recommend Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

    • dhosek 12 hours ago

      Generally, I go with wiktionary which is reasonably comprehensive. I remember as an undergrad being stumped by a word in the Septuagint that I could not make any sense of and now I imagine I can search on the inflected form on wiktionary and know exactly where I went wrong. (I would note that as an undergrad I was also pretty thoroughly defeated by Attic Greek. I’ve since learned that the textbook we used, Hansen & Quinn, is pretty rough going, but I’ve also found that the approach taken by the Biblical Greek textbook I worked through (N. Clayton Croy) made what was nearly impossible forty years ago a breeze on the retry nine years ago.

cromulent a day ago

> is the longest word ever to appear in literature

Thank goodness Joyce doesn't have the record with his invented words in Finnegans Wake.

userbinator a day ago

HN cut it off at "karab" and I thought this was the generic name of some new drug.

alentred a day ago

The two words that struck me are this chemical compound [1] (quite artificial as a name if you ask me, but apparently considered as a word), and this perfectly real hill name [2]

[1] https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Protologisms/Long_wo...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taumatawhakatangi%C2%ADhangako...

  • gilleain a day ago

    Yes, the Titin example is completely ridiculous. On the one hand, the protein Titin is one of the longest sequences. However you can form a 'word' out of any protein or DNA (or other macromolecue or polymer) this way.

    The key problem for me is that you would never refer to any polypeptide this way in a sentence. It would be like referring to a piece of software by concatenating its source code into one long 'word'. Meaningless.

    • fc417fc802 a day ago

      That's not a word that's a polypeptide sequence. How and why did that get entered into Wikitionary to begin with? It doesn't belong there.

      Next up will they start recording the corresponding DNA sequences as "words" that are a synonym?

curious_af a day ago

How to never have anyone play Hangman with you again

  • yallpendantools a day ago

    "Well actually..."

    As the word-setter this might be an own-goal. As a word guesser, a random haphazard tactic might get you the word.

    I'll Monte-Carlo my point but I have a warm bath tub waiting...

  • a022311 20 hours ago

    I do this like... every single time (although with a shorter and slightly more common ancient Greek word). It's quite fun actually!

  • nicexe a day ago

    Well. It contains every letter.

Schiphol a day ago

Learning some Attic Greek is one of those priority two goals I keep trying and failing to accomplish. Any tips you can share?

  • a022311 20 hours ago

    It will be much easier if you learn modern Greek first. Keep in mind that it's very hard, even for native Greek speakers. Be prepared to spend a few years doing that ;)

astrobe_ a day ago

AKA L181n.

PetitPrince a day ago

Fun false fact that I just invented : the Monty Python briefly considered to have Johann Gambolputty de von Ausfern-schplenden-schlitter-crasscrenbon-fried-digger-dingle-dangle-dongle-dungle-burstein-von-knacker-thrasher-apple-banger-horowitz-ticolensic-grander-knotty-spelltinkle-grandlich-grumblemeyer-spelterwasser-kurstlich-himbleeisen-bahnwagen-gutenabend-bitte-ein-nürnburger-bratwustle-gerspurten-mitzweimache-luber-hundsfut-gumberaber-shönendanker-kalbsfleisch-mittler-aucher von Hautkopft of Ulm to mutter Lopado­temacho­selacho­galeo­kranio­leipsano­drim­hypo­trimmato­silphio­karabo­melito­katakechy­meno­kichl­epi­kossypho­phatto­perister­alektryon­opte­kephallio­kigklo­peleio­lagoio­siraio­baphe­tragano­pterygon, but John Cleese, who play the man interviewing the last descendent of Johann Gambolputty de von Ausfern-schplenden-schlitter-crasscrenbon-fried-digger-dingle-dangle-dongle-dungle-burstein-von-knacker-thrasher-apple-banger-horowitz-ticolensic-grander-knotty-spelltinkle-grandlich-grumblemeyer-spelterwasser-kurstlich-himbleeisen-bahnwagen-gutenabend-bitte-ein-nürnburger-bratwustle-gerspurten-mitzweimache-luber-hundsfut-gumberaber-shönendanker-kalbsfleisch-mittler-aucher von Hautkopft of Ulm, being a fervent Latin teacher opposed the idea because he thought that was Greek nonsense.

dvrp a day ago

Dang, you should change it to "Lopado­temacho­selacho­galeo­kranio­leipsano­drim­hypo­trimmato­silphio­karabo­melito­katakechy­meno­kichl­epi­kossypho­phatto­perister­alektryon­opte­kephallio­kigklo­peleio­lagoio­siraio­baphe­tragano­pterygon" via your admin superpowers!

  • bryanrasmussen a day ago

    I doubt that can happen because that would go over the length limit, probably it should be "The Longest Word In Literature"

    as for it screwing with mobile site width, on desktop FF putting width small seems to work fine as the word seems to have soft hyphens in it? Because it splits at the window edge with a hyphen in place.

aewens a day ago

Reminds me of this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilico...

YeGoblynQueenne a day ago

Funny, but as a speaker of Greek I never realised that it's in principle possible to basically create infinitely many, infinitely long new Greek words by stitching together word-roots and connectives, like "λόπαδ-ο τέμαχ-ο", etc.

I mean, has any linguist noticed this? The ability to (again in principle) embed infinitely many sentences is AFAIK an argument for the infinite generativity of natural language. Can the same argument be supported at the word-level also? And does anyone know whether it has?

Also, I think in German it's very common to string together words like that to form longer words. Are there more languages with that characteristic?

  • BalinKing a day ago

    From what I've read, the German phenomenon isn't actually German-specific after all, and English does it too; the difference is just that English keeps the spaces when written. Like, linguists apparently consider "vending machine" to be a perfectly cromulent compound word (among other things, consider that the stress falls on "vending" instead of "machine," which wouldn't(?) happen if "vending" was being used as a bona fide standalone word). Turns out, there's not even an accepted general definition of what a "word" even is in the first place, because different languages vary so much.

    A slightly more thorough discussion from an actual linguist: https://youtu.be/tfnANe2YUwM?si=LAxriH-RuqmUgrxl.

  • willtemperley a day ago

    There are quite a few agglutinative languages:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agglutinative_language

    Important knowledge for those suffering from hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia.

  • thaumasiotes 16 hours ago

    > I mean, has any linguist noticed this?

    Yes.

    > Also, I think in German it's very common to string together words like that to form longer words. Are there more languages with that characteristic?

    Yes. All of them.

    > Can the same argument be supported at the word-level also?

    Here it depends what you mean by "the word-level". "Words" are commonly taken to be compositionally opaque. Compound expressions are not compositionally opaque and are not "words" in this sense.

eucyclos a day ago

I thought it was German and had an awful time trying to parse it. Makes so much more sense once one knows it's Greek.

gpvos a day ago

I'm mostly, and pleasantly, surprised that Firefox's hyphenation algorithm handles this reasonably.

m463 a day ago

antidisestablishmentarianism

supercalifragilisticexpialadocious

sapphicsnail a day ago

I wonder if this is in meter? I know Philoctetes' pain noises are.

rednafi a day ago

Oh I come across German words bigger than that every now and then.

KellyCriterion a day ago

The "context" section of this article is very interesting!

crm9125 a day ago

This is why I quit linguistics, Too many syllables.

thaumasiotes 16 hours ago

Why are we transliterating -κιγκλο­- as -kigklo- and not as -kinklo-?

JodieBenitez a day ago

An I thought it was about another obscure PHP error.

  • psychoslave a day ago

    Nah, just an average Java class name transliterated in Greek with single case.

dartharva a day ago

I want to taste it

imwally a day ago

Well this certainly mucked with the width of the mobile HN site.

  • whycome a day ago

    A css fix would prevent this.

    Also make the damn upvote buttons bigger on mobile.

    • MagnumOpus a day ago

      Hckrnews.com is a far better frontent. Implemented the long line fix, and also preserves topics that were upvoted to the top and subsequently flagged to death by bot farms or the owners.

  • compounding_it a day ago

    I was wondering what’s wrong with the HN site on mobile today. I thought something from my other safari settings carried over thinking is this another macOS / iOS problem. Good to know this time Apple is not to blame. Interesting psychology here how easy it was for me to go there.

  • NSPG911 a day ago

    Have you checked out Harmonic? It's an amazing Hacker News android client!

  • twhb a day ago

    This is an iOS 26 regression. There are a bunch of soft hyphens in there, which is why it works on other browsers and in previous versions of iOS.

  • RobotToaster a day ago

    It automatically hyphenates on Firefox mobile, must be a safari issue.

  • roansh a day ago

    Brain figured out this title being the culprit of horizontal scroll today. Brain predicted this being the top comment in this thread. Not disappointed.

  • sonu27 a day ago

    Can someone fix this? I don’t believe it is the first time

  • cubefox a day ago

    Not on Chrome or Firefox for me. So I assume you are using Safari.

  • phendrenad2 a day ago

    The long words must continue until word wrap increases.

jzellis a day ago

I thought this was a news site for tech, not a Red Hot Chili Peppers lyrics repository

ttul a day ago

I had ChatGPT spend a few kWh coming up with Algorithmo­startupo­venturecapito­open­sourco­licensio­privacy­securito­rustigo­golo­kuberneto­cloudio­saaso­distributedo­databaso­latencyphobo­showhn­askhn­commento­pedanto­longformo­ai­llmo­promptomancy­ethico­regulatio­controversio­burnoutikon, which apparently describes the vibe here on HN.

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