οὐ
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Possibly οὐκί (oukí, “not so, never”), from Proto-Hellenic *oyuki, from Proto-Indo-European *(ne) h₂óyu kʷíd (“(not) ever, (not) on your life”).[1][2] Compare Sanskrit उद् (ud), Old Armenian ոչ (očʻ) and Albanian as.
οὐ • (ou) (negative particle)
οὐ is the indicative negator (i.e. of facts, statements), where μή (mḗ) is the subjunctive negator (i.e. of will, thought). It usually immediately precedes the word (most often a verb) which it negates. Negative concord (also known as double negatives) is frequent in Ancient Greek.
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