όροφος
Lemma: όροφος
Translation: floor; story; storey; level (noun)
Etymology: From Ancient Greek ὄροφος (orophos) meaning 'roof' or 'ceiling'. The semantic shift from 'roof' to 'floor/story' reflects how buildings were conceptualized - each level was defined by its ceiling/roof above. This is cognate with English words through Latin, though no direct English cognate exists. The word shares the same root as 'orphan' through the concept of 'covering' or 'shelter', as orphans lack parental 'covering'. The architectural meaning developed as multi-story buildings became common in Byzantine and modern Greek urban planning.
Mnemonics
- Think 'Oh-roof-os' - each floor has a roof above it
- Remember 'orophos' sounds like 'or-roof-us' - we or the roof are on different levels
Example Wordforms
Cultural Context
In Greek urban architecture, especially in Athens and Thessaloniki, multi-story apartment buildings (πολυκατοικίες) are extremely common. Greeks often specify which floor they live on, and the ground floor is typically called 'ισόγειο' while upper floors are numbered starting from the first floor above ground level.
Easily Confused With
Explanation: πάτωμα refers specifically to the floor surface you walk on, while όροφος refers to the entire level or story of a building
Confused word:
Το πάτωμα είναι καθαρό.
The floor is clean.
Notes: όροφος is about building levels, πάτωμα is about the physical surface
Mnemonic: όροφος = whole story/level, πάτωμα = surface you step on (like 'pat' the ground)