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In places with rich ophidian faunas, dozens of antivenins may therefore need to be kept to hand.—The Economist, 30 Dec. 2020 Finally, though, Raymer does rise to the occasion, tracking down a hit-and-run driver and putting an end (with an ophidian exclamation point) to the criminal career of one of the book’s more unsavory characters.—T. Coraghessan Boyle, New York Times, 3 May 2016
Word History
Etymology
New Latin Ophidia, order or suborder name (from ophid-, probably taken mistakenly as stem of Greek óphis "snake" + -ia-ia entry 2) + -an entry 2; óphis (i-stem) going back to Indo-European *h3egwhi- "snake," whence also Sanskrit áhiḥ "snake," Avestan aži-, and perhaps Armenian iž "viper"
Note:
So reconstructed by R. Beekes (Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2010) and A. Sihler (New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, Oxford, 1995), partly on the grounds that an original o (*ogwhi-) would produce Sanskrit *ā́hiḥ by Brugmann's Law. However, the presumed Indo-European by-form *h2engwh-,*h2n̥gwh-, with a nasal, is generally reconstructed with *h2; this etymon is more widely attested, with various suffixal formations: Old High German unk "snake, lizard," Old Irish escung "eel" (from a compound meaning "water-snake" or "fish-snake"), Welsh llysywen "eel" (with llys- "somewhat, half, false"), Latin anguis "snake," Russian už "grass snake (Natrix natrix)," Polish wąż "snake," Lithuanian angìs "adder," Latvian odze, Armenian awj "snake." M. Weiss has proposed that Greek échis "snake" reflects the oblique case form of an original acrostatic paradigm with óphis "snake" representing the direct case form—see note at echinus.
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