The Homeric Greek word πρόγονος
Word πρόγονος
p r ο. ɟ o n o ς
Transliteration progonos
Meaning early-born, ancestor
Synonyms γενέτης, ἠριγένεια

Comments
Odyssey

Other words that might be of interest
ἄκοιτις ‘a spouse, wife’, ἄλοχος ‘partner of one's bed, wife’, ἄμβροτος ‘immortal, divine’, ἄνθρωπος ‘man’, ἄπαις ‘childless’, ἄρσην ‘male, masculine’, ἀδελφός ‘brother, son of the same mother’, ἀγηνορία ‘manliness, courage’, ἀκοίτης ‘bedfellow, husband’, ἀμβρόσιος ‘immortal, divine’, ἀμβροσία ‘immortality’, ἀμμά ‘mother’, ἀνδρίς ‘woman’, ἀνδρότης ‘manliness, manhood, courage’, ἀνήρ ‘man’, ἀθάνατος ‘undying, immortal’, αἰειγενέτης ‘immortal, eternal’, βροτός ‘mortal man’, δάμαρ ‘wife, spouse’, ἑδνωτής ‘father who portions a bride’, ἑκυρά ‘mother-in-law’, ἑκυρός ‘father-in-law’, φράτρα ‘brotherhood’, φώς ‘man’, γάλοως ‘husband's sister’, γάμος ‘wedding’, γενέθλη ‘race, stock, family’, γενεά ‘race, family’, γόνος ‘that which is begotten, child’, γονεύς ‘begetter, father’, γυνή ‘woman’, κασίγνητος ‘brother’, κασιγνήτη ‘sister’, κατακαίριος ‘mortal’, καταθνητός ‘mortal’, κόρη ‘girl’, κοῦρος ‘son’, κουρίδιος ‘wedded’, μήτηρ ‘mother’, μητροπάτωρ ‘mother's father, grandfather’, μητρυιά ‘stepmother’, μνηστός ‘wooed and won, wedded’, νεᾶνις ‘girl, maiden’, νήπιος ‘infant, child’, νηπίαχος ‘childish, infantine’, νηπιάα ‘childhood’, νηπιάζω ‘to be as a babe, childish’, νηπιέη ‘childhood, childishness’, νυός ‘daughter-in-law’, ὀπυίω ‘marry, take to wife’, ὀρφανικός ‘orphaned, fatherless’, παράκοιτις ‘wife’, παρακοίτης ‘one who lies beside, bedfellow, husband’, πατροκασίγνητος ‘father's brother’, πατρώιος ‘of one's fathers, ancestral’, πενθερός ‘father-in-law’, πόσις ‘husband, spouse’, θάλος ‘scion, child’, θῆλυς ‘female’, θνητός ‘liable to death, mortal’, θυγάτηρ ‘daughter’, τέκνον ‘child’, τέττα ‘father’, τόκος ‘childbirth, parturition’, τοκεύς ‘one who begets, father’, τοκεών ‘parent’, υἱωνός ‘grandson’, χήρα ‘widow’, ἄκουρος ‘childless, without male heir’, βρότειος ‘mortal, human’, βρότεος ‘mortal, of men’, νέποδες ‘young ones, children’, ὀρφανός ‘orphan, without parents, fatherless’, πάτρως ‘father's brother, uncle’, παιδνός ‘childish’, ἠνορέη ‘manliness, manly, prowess’