Asyndetic, Privative Adjectives

Compiled by Michael Gilleland

Greek | Latin | English

"Asyndetic" means not joined by conjunctions, and "privative" means altering the meaning of a term from positive to negative, by means of a prefix (e.g. a-, non-, un-) or suffix (e.g. -less). An example of a series of asyndetic, privative adjectives in English is John Milton, Paradise Lost 2.185: Unrespited, unpitied, unreprieved.

I am grateful to correspondents who have helped to compile the following list.

Greek Examples

Aeschylus Aristophanes Arrian Athenaeus Bacchylides Demosthenes Euripides Gorgias Herodotus Homer Homeric Hymns Inscriptions [Pseudo-] Lucian Mesomedes New Testament Nonnos Papyri Graecae Magicae (PGM), texts from Karl Preisendanz, ed. Papyri Graecae Magicae, vol. 1 (Leipzig: Tuebner, 1928), English translations are from Hans Dieter Benz, ed. The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986). I've altered the translations where conjunctions, absent in Greek, were added in English. Parmenides Paulus Silentarius Phrynicus Sophocles Theopompus Xenophon

Latin Examples

Lucretius Plautus Pliny the Younger Rhetorica ad Herennium Seneca Tacitus Velleius Paterculus Vergil

English Examples

Matthew Arnold W.H. Auden Byron John Clare William Cowper Ben Jonson James Joyce Hugh MacDiarmid John Milton Hector Hugh Munro (Saki) Ogden Nash William Shakespeare Laurence Sterne Edwin Way Teale, William Wordsworth