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1 grave-yard
groblje -
2 grave-yard
• groblje -
3 grave yard
இடுகாடு -
4 graveyard grave·yard n
['ɡreɪvˌjɒːd] -
5 graveyard shift
grave.yard shift[gr'eivja:d ʃift] n sl turma que trabalha da meia-noite à madrugada, turno da noite. -
6 graveyard shift
ˈgrave·yard shift -
7 graveyard
'grave·yard nFriedhof m -
8 graveyard shift
'grave·yard shift n( fam) Nachtschicht f -
9 groblje
burying place, God s arce, burial ground, burying ground, cemetery* * *• cemetry• cementery• cemetery• cemetary• graveyard• grave-yards• grave-yard• barrow -
10 погост
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11 GRAVEYARD
• Peace is found only in the grave - yard - В ту пору будет досуг, как вон понесут (B), Покой нам только снится (П) -
12 graveyard
nounFriedhof, der* * ** * *ˈgrave·yardn* * *graveyard shift US sl zweite Nachtschicht* * *nounFriedhof, der* * *n.Friedhof -¨e m.Gottesacker m.Kirchhof -¨e m. -
13 погост
м.country churchyard / grave-yard -
14 graveyard
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15 погост
churchyard* * ** * *churchyard, grave-yard* * *cemeterychurchyardgraveyard -
16 groblje
• barrow; burial ground; burial-ground; burial-place; burying-ground; cemetary; cemetery; churchyard; graveyard; grave-yard; necropolis -
17 погост
муж.churchyard, grave-yard -
18 νεκρός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `corpse, the dead' (Il.), pl. `the dead' = `inhabitant of the Underworld' (Od., Th., LXX, NT), also attributive and adjectival (-ά, - όν) `dead' (hell.; Pi. Fr. 203 νεκρὸν ἵππον prob. predicative).Compounds: Often as 1. member, e.g. νεκρο-δέγμων `receiving dead' (Α῝ιδης, A. Pr. 153 [lyr.]); rarely as 2. member, e.g. μυριό-νεκρος `with uncountable dead' ( μάχη, Plu.).Derivatives: 1. Subst. νεκρών, - ῶνος m. (Tegea IIa, AP), νεκρια f. (hell. pap.; on the unknown accent Scheller Oxytonierung 46) `place of the dead, grave-yard'. 2. Adj. νεκρ-ιμαῖος `belonging to a corpse', τὸ ν. `corpse' (LXX; after θνησιμ-αῖος, Chantraine Form. 49, Mél. Maspero 2, 221); νεκρ-ικός `regarding the dead', τὰν. `inheritance' (Luc., Vett. Val.); νεκρ-ώδης `corpse-like' (Luc., Gal.). 3. Verb νεκρόομαι, - όω `die, kill, enervate' (late) with νέκρωσις `be dead, the killing' (late), - ώσιμα n. pl. = νεκύσια (church-writers, gloss.; Arbenz 93: θανάσιμος), - ώματα pl. `dead bodies' (Arist.-comm.), - ωτικός `causing death' (Gal.). -- In the same meaning νέκῡς (posthom. -ῠ-) m., also adj. `dead' (ep. poet Il., also Hdt. and Gortyn; νέκυρ νεκρός. Λάκωνες H.); some compp., e.g. νεκυο-μαντήϊον, - εῖον `oracle of the dead' (Hdt.), ἰσό-νεκυς `corpse-like' (E. Or. 200 [lyr.], after ἰσό-θεος, s. on ἴσος). Derivv.: νέκυια f. `offer to the dead, so as to call up the dead' (D. S., Plu., Nic.), abstractformation in - ιᾰ for -ίᾱ as ἀλήθεια for - εία etc. (cf. Solmsen Wortforsch. 248ff.); in the same meaning νεκυϊσμός (Man.; *νεκυΐζω; on the formations in - ισμός Chantraine Form. 142 ff.); νεκύσια n. pl. `feats of the dead' (hell. pap.; cf. θαλύσια, γενέσια and Stengel Herm. 43, 645ff.) with Νεκύσιος m. Cret. month-name (IIa); νεκυϊκός `belonging to the dead' (Cyran.); νεκύα f. plantname = φλόμος (Cyran.), because used in the conjuration of the dead; after καρύα, σικύα etc.; on νεκύδαλ(λ)ος s. v. -- Besides νέκες νεκροί H. with νεκ-άς, - άδος f. `heap of dead' (E 886, AP; like νιφάς etc. Bechtel Lex. s.v., Chantraine Form. 352). -- Not here νῶκαρ, - αρος n. s.v.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [762] *neḱ-(u-) `violent death, corpse'.Etymology: The monosyllabic stem νέκ-ες agrees formally excatly to Lat. nex, necis f. `violent death, murder' and to GAv. nas- f. `need, distress', IE *neḱ-s. Also the u-stem in νέκ-υ-ς returns on Iranian soil in Av. nas-u-š gen. nas-āv-ō f. m. `corpse'; orig. the Gr. υ is short beside Iran. ŭ: āv (\< ou̯), Beeekes-Cuypers, Mnemosyne LVI(2003)485-391; wrong Schwyzer 463. Here perh. Lat. nequālia `detrimenta'. The alternatings r(o)-formation in νεκ-ρό-ς has no parallel outside Greek. ( νῶκαρ will rather be non-IE, i.e. Pre-Greek; Fur. 133; s.v.) Greek has no parallels to the primary verbs (e.g. Skt. náś-ya-ti, Toch. A näk-näṣ-tär `disappear, perish'). -- WP. 2, 326, Pok. 762, W.-Hofmann s. necō with further forms, Mayrhofer s. náśyati. -- Not here νέκταρ.Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νεκρός
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19 אבולא
אִבּוּלָא, אִיבּוּלָאch. sam(אבול II איבול the gate, for carrying grain into the house, wagon-gate, gate-way.), esp. (corresp. to h. מבוא העיר) city gate-way which is opened for wagons ; fortified place where judges sit ; cmp. שַׁעַר.M. Kat. 22a begin to count the days of mourning מבבא דא׳ from the time ye turn your faces from the city gate-way (to go home while the corpse is carried to the grave-yard). Keth.17a; Meg.29a when people form a lane מא׳ ועד סיכרא from the city gate-way to the burial place. (Ar. house of mourning, v. אִבּוּל I. B. Bath.58a bot. there was written אבבא דא׳ Ms. M. (ed. incorr. בא׳) over the gate of the town entrance (where court was held).Pl. אִבּוּלֵי. Erub.6b. Yoma 11a. Targ. Y. Deut. 28:52 אבוליכון (ed. Vien. אכול׳). Targ. Jer. 50:26 אִיבּוּלָהָא (h. text מאבסיה; v. Pesh. a. l.). -
20 איבולא
אִבּוּלָא, אִיבּוּלָאch. sam(אבול II איבול the gate, for carrying grain into the house, wagon-gate, gate-way.), esp. (corresp. to h. מבוא העיר) city gate-way which is opened for wagons ; fortified place where judges sit ; cmp. שַׁעַר.M. Kat. 22a begin to count the days of mourning מבבא דא׳ from the time ye turn your faces from the city gate-way (to go home while the corpse is carried to the grave-yard). Keth.17a; Meg.29a when people form a lane מא׳ ועד סיכרא from the city gate-way to the burial place. (Ar. house of mourning, v. אִבּוּל I. B. Bath.58a bot. there was written אבבא דא׳ Ms. M. (ed. incorr. בא׳) over the gate of the town entrance (where court was held).Pl. אִבּוּלֵי. Erub.6b. Yoma 11a. Targ. Y. Deut. 28:52 אבוליכון (ed. Vien. אכול׳). Targ. Jer. 50:26 אִיבּוּלָהָא (h. text מאבסיה; v. Pesh. a. l.).
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