Apollonius Dyscolus

Apollonius Dyscolus (fl. 2nd century AD) is considered one of the greatest of the early Greek grammarians. Nicknamed 'dyscolus', meaning 'hard to please', because of his irascible and heavily analytical personality he wrote extensively on the parts of speech. Of twenty books named in the Suda, four survive; on syntax, the adverb, the conjunction, and the pronoun. Son of Mnesitheus, and a lifelong resident of Alexandria, little more is known of his life. Although his own work was in fact quite careless he influenced later generations of grammarians including his own son Aelius Herodianus.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gaoliying, beijing
in the wake of poseidon
justice de thzier
groote schuur hospital
gun show
utility color code
list of naval officer designators
sebastian (movie)
fulani empire
silent heroes
list of half life mods
george ellis
chatten
3000 strikeout club
sicel language
herodian
codename eagle
fritz kortner
airolo
jimmer
cranganore
chiasso
still (album)
clip art
agno
papiermark
port william
grater
horgen
inman square
rate adaptive dsl
robert kennicott
michigan state highway 40
sargans
christian reconstructionism
dracunculus
hustler (disambiguation)
g.i. joe (game mod)
us (album)
nicholas chamberlaine technology college
jinghu expressway
merlin engine (rocket)
atticism
dirk brouwer