-
1 Armeen
n. Armenian, one of Armenian origin, resident of Armenia (country in western Asia) -
2 Armeniër
n. Armenian, resident of Armenia, person of Armenian origin (country in western Asia) -
3 по
1. предл. (дт.)1. ( на поверхности) on; ( вдоль) alongидти по полу, по траве — walk on the floor, on the grass
идти, ехать по дороге, тропинке, улице — walk, drive* along the road, the path*, the street
путешествовать по стране — journey through a country
по всему, по всей — all over:
книги, тетради и т. п. разложены по всему столу — the books, copy-books, etc., are lying all over the table
стаканы, чашки расставлены по всему столу — the glasses, cups are standing all over the table
2. ( посредством) byпо железной дороге — by rail / train
ехать по железной дороге — go* by rail / train
по радио, телефону — over the radio, the telephone
3. (на основании, в соответствии) by; ( согласно) according toпо природе, по крови — by nature, by blood
это по его адресу — that is meant for him, that is aimed at him
по положению — ( согласно предписанию) according to the regulations; ( согласно занимаемому положению) in accordance with one's position; ex officio офиц.
4. ( вследствие) by; ( из-за) throughпо невнимательности, рассеянности — through carelessness, absent-mindedness
по чьей-л. вине — through smb.'s fault
по обязанности — according to duty; as in duty bound идиом.
по выходным дням — on one's free / off days
♢
по пути (с кем-л.) см. путь2. предл. (дт., вн.; в разделительном знач.)по рукам! см. рука; тж. и др. особые случаи, не приведённые здесь, см. под теми словами, с которыми предлог по образует тесные сочетания
по два, по десяти — in twos, in tens
по двое — two by two, in twos
3. предл. (вн.)по десяти человек — in groups of ten, in tens
1. (до) to; up to2.:по сю, по ту сторону (рд.) — on this, on that, side (of)
4. предл. (пр.; после)по правую, левую руку см. рука
onпо прибытии — on one's arrival
-
4 по
I предл. (дт.)1) ( обозначает место движения или расположения) on; ( вдоль) alongидти́ по́ полу [траве́] — walk on the floor [grass]
идти́ [е́хать] по доро́ге [тропи́нке, у́лице] — walk [drive ] along the road [path, street]
путеше́ствовать по стране́ — journey through the country, tour the country
кни́ги разло́жены по всему́ столу́ — the books are lying all over the table
по всей стране́ — all over the country
он путеше́ствовал по всей стране́ — he has travelled all over the country
2) ( посредством) byпо по́чте — by post
по желе́зной доро́ге — by rail / train
е́хать по желе́зной доро́ге — go by rail / train
по во́здуху — by air
по ра́дио [телефо́ну] — over the radio [telephone]
3) (на основании, в соответствии) by; ( согласно) according toпо приказа́нию — by order
по пра́ву — by right
по приро́де / по кро́ви — by nature / by blood
по и́мени — by name
по происхожде́нию — by descent
он армяни́н по происхожде́нию — he is of Armenian origin
по его́ ви́ду мо́жно поду́мать — from [judging by] his looks one might suppose
по сове́ту — on [according to] smb's advice
по а́дресу — to the address
по его́ а́дресу — to his address
э́то по его́ а́дресу — that is meant [ment] for him, that is aimed at him
жить по сре́дствам — live within one's means
по положе́нию (согласно предписанию) — according to the regulations; ( согласно занимаемому положению) in accordance with one's position; ex officio [,eksə'fɪʃɪəʊ] офиц.
4) ( вследствие) by; ( из-за) throughпо оши́бке — by mistake
по невнима́тельности [рассе́янности] — through carelessness [absent-mindedness]
по боле́зни — through illness
по чьей-л вине́ — through smb's fault
не по его́ вине́ — through no fault of his
по обя́занности — according to duty; as in duty bound идиом.
5) (обыкн. дт. мн.; при обозначении времени) in, at, onпо утра́м — in the morning
по ноча́м — at night
по выходны́м дням — on one's free / off days
••II предл.по рука́м! — см. рука
(дт., вн.; в разделительном значении)по́ два [по десяти́] — in twos [in tens]
по́ двое — two by two, in twos
по десяти́ челове́к — in groups of ten, in tens
по пяти́ рубле́й шту́ка — at five roubles apiece
III предл. (вн.; при указании предела, границы)по два я́блока на челове́ка — two apples each
1) (до) to; up toпо по́яс — up to one's waist
по коле́но — knee-high (см. тж. колено)
с ию́ня по сентя́брь — from June to September
по 1 сентября́ — up to the first of September
2)по э́ту [ту] сто́рону (рд.) — on this [that] side (of)
IV предл.по пра́вую [ле́вую] ру́ку — см. рука
(пр.; сразу после) on, uponпо прибы́тии — on one's arrival
по (своём) прибы́тии он — on his arrival he
по оконча́нии — on the termination
по рассмотре́нии — on examination
опла́та по получе́нии — cash / payment on delivery
-
5 ἀλώπηξ
ἀλώπηξ, - εκοςGrammatical information: f. (on the gender DELG).Meaning: `fox' (Archil.).Other forms: A shortened form is ἀλωπά (Alc.), ἀλωπός (Hdn.); on its origin Sommer Nominalkomp. 5 A. 5. Denom. ἀλωπεύει ἀνιχνεύει H., cf. NGr. (Crete) λαγονεύω `trace' from λαγώς, Kukules Άρχ. Έφ. 27, 70f.Derivatives: ἀλωπεκέη, -ῆ `fox-skin' (Hdt.); ἀλωπεκία a disease of the skin (Arist.); ἀλωπεκίς f. = κυναλώπηξ (X.), also `head-gear from fox-skin' (X.) and `kind of vine' (Plin.), s. Strömberg Pflanzennamen 139Etymology: ἀλώπηξ can agree with Arm. aɫuēs, gen. - esu `fox'. Cf. further Lith. lãpė and Latv. lapsa. Schrijver, JIES 26, 1998, 421-434 connects the Celtic words W. llywarn etc., which he derives from * lop-erno-, and reconstructs * h₂lop-. The Greek long ō is explained from an old nom. * h₂lōp-s. (Skt. lopāśá- `jackal' and MP rōpās `fox' have an orig. diphthong in the root and cannot be connected. Lat. volpes `fox', Lith. vilpišỹs `wild cat' should also be kept apart; Schrijver starts from a root * ulp-). - The inflection ἀλώπηξ, - εκος is unique in Greek. There is no support for Rix's - ōk-s, - ek-os (1976,, 143). In the Armenian form, the ē presents difficulties and is prob. secondary, the word rather showing old short e; Clackson 1994, 95. De Vaan, IIJ 43, 2000, 279-293, disconnects the suffix from the Indo-Ir. one (as above the words were disconnected) and doubts that Skt. -āśa- etc. is of IE origin. He follows Chantr. Form. 376, in assuming that the Greek (and Armenian) suffix - ek- was taken from a non-IE language; Greek would have lengthened the vowel in the nominative. But this does not explain the Greek ablaut: one would expect that the long vowel was introduced everywhere. Rather the suffixes are IE, and the long vowel of Saskrit and the short of Armenian confirm the Greek ablaut as archaic. - See also Blažek, Linguistica Baltica 7, 1998, 25-31. Cf. Nehring Glotta 14, 184, Lidén KZ 56, 212ff., Fraenkel KZ 63, 189f., Hermann KZ 69, 66.Page in Frisk: 1,83Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλώπηξ
-
6 αὐχήν
αὐχήν, - ένοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `neck, throat; isthmus' (Il.).Other forms: Aeol. acc. ἄμφενα (Theoc. 30. 28). αὔφην in Jo. Gramm. Comp. 3, 16 is very doubtful, cf. Solmsen, Wortforsch. 118 n. 2. ἄμφην· αὐχήν, τράχηλος H.; also ἀμφήν· αὐλήν H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: On ἄμφην beside αὐχήν see Pisani, RiLi 1 (1950) 182f. Schwyzer 296 assumed for ἄμφην *ἀγχϜ-ήν, connecting Skt. aṃhú- `narrow' etc. (s. ἄγχω), which with anticipation of the labial would have given αὐχήν. This is an improbable construction, the process unparallelled. One connects Arm. awji-k` (pl.) `neck', but the connection is quite difficult, Clackson 1994, 107ff. - The variants cannot be explained as Greek or IE, so the word will come from the substr. Variation labial\/velar is rare (Fur. 388, φωριαμός \/ χ.; but cf. γέφυρα \/ βέφυρα); also α\/αυ is rare; m\/w occurs mostly before n or intervocalic (Fur. 242 - 247). Therefore I think we must compare the type δάφνη \/ δαυχνα-, which Furnée 229 - 233 explains as showing variation labial\/w. I think that these forms had a labio-velar, gʷ, which either gave φ (in Aeolic) or - υχ- with anticipation of the labial element (Beekes Pre-Greek). Thus we have *ἀφ-ην\/ αὐ-χήν; ἄμφ-ην then has the well-known prenasalisation. Whatever the exact development, it is clear that substr. origin, and only that, can explain the variants. The Armenian form does not prove IE origin, as it can be a loan from an Anatolian language, cf. γέφυρα - kamurǰ (Beekes, Glotta 2003?).Page in Frisk: 1,192Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > αὐχήν
-
7 Κέρβερος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `name of the dog that guarded hell' (Hes. 311, where he has fifty heads). -Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: No etym. Since long connected with Skt. karbara-, śárvara- `spotted', as adj. śabála- of the two dogs of the lower world (RV. 10, 14, 10). Doubted by Mayrhofer KEWA s. karbaraḥ, where for the Skt. word, after Kuiper, Austro-Asiatic origin is considered (s. also III 297). So it has nothing to do with the Greek word. - After Pisani Riv. degli studi or. 18, 91f. Κέρβερος and śabála- are of Mediterranean origin. (Von Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 314 n. considers Κέρβερος as the creation of a poet; "man hört in ihm das Knurren eines bissigen Köters", which nobody accepted.) The old connection in Pok. 578. Lincoln ( JIES 7, 1979, 273-285) follows Schlerath, who showed that there were two hellhounds in the IE conception; this is most clear in Armenian, where Spitak `white' is the dog of life, Siaw `black' the dog of death. He ends with unfounded speculations. He may come from the East, but we have no evidence. He may as well be Pre-Greek, but I see no indication for it.Page in Frisk: 1,828-829Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Κέρβερος
-
8 δέφω
δέφω, - ομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `soften (with the hand), masturbari' (Ar., Eub.),Other forms: Aor. ἐδέψατο in Hippon.?, s. Scheller Münch. Stud. z. Sprachwiss. 6, 88ff. - Pres. 3. sg. δέψει (- εῖ?) Hdt. 4, 64; aor. ptc. δεψήσας μ 48.Derivatives: δεφιδασταί m. pl. members of a guild of fullers (Argos), in - αστής, - ιστής (Chantr. Form. 317ff.), further unclear; on *δεφίς, *-ιδος? - δέψα `tanned skin' (Suid.); ἀδέψητος (υ 2; 142 u. a.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The present δέψω (cf. ἕψω) beside δέφω has an s-enlargement; the cases in Schwyzer 706 are not completely comparable H. Petersson KZ 47, 285 compares Arm. top`em `beat' (denomin.) and SCr. dépati `butt, slay', Pol. deptać `tread'. (Lat. depsō, -ĕre is a Greek LW [loanword].) One compares also διφθέρα(s.v.), which would certainly point to a Pre-Greek word. The variation - φ-\/- ψ- also points to such an origin (cf. esp. δέψα; Fur. 263 etc.). The form in Armenian is unproblematic; the European forms would be more difficult.Page in Frisk: 1,372-373Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δέφω
-
9 λύγξ 2
Grammatical information: m. f.Other forms: λυγγός E. fr. 683.Compounds: As 1. member in λυκό-λυγξ `wolflynx' (pap. in Sb. Heidelb. 1923: 2, 14, 13); λυγγούριον ( λυγκ-, λιγκ- u. a.) n. kind of amber (Thphr., Delos IIIa), s. v.Derivatives: λυγκίον dimin. (Callix.), λύγγιος `of the lynx' (Edict. Diocl.). On ambivalent PN Λυγκεύς (Hdt., Pi.) s. Boßhardt 130f.; from there λυγκεύς as name of an eye-salve (medic.).Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur. substr.Etymology: Old name of the lynx, found also in Armenian, German and Balto-Slavic. Except for the nasal λύγξ has a counterpart in Lith. consonant stem lūš-ų (gen. pl.), with as innovation the i-stem lū́š-is. The same transformation show the Slav. words, which however through influence of an other word (* rysъ `sotted, red'?) got an initial r-: Russ. rýsь etc. Also elsewhere transformstions have occurred: with thematic vowel in Swed. lō `lynx' (PGm. * luh-a-, IE *luḱ-o-); with s-sufflx in Westgermanic: OHG luhs, OE lox (cf. Germ. Fuchs, OE fox); with n-suffix in Arm. lus-an-un-k` (ἅπ. εἰρ.) pl., which also supposes old full grade (IE *leuḱ- or louḱ-). The Arm. n-fomation might be connected somehow with the Greek nasalinfix, which reappers also in Lith. dial. (Zem.) lųnšis. - Details and further connections in Bq, WP. 2, 411 f., Pok. 690, Fraenkel Wb. s. lū́šis, Vasmer Wb. s. rýsь. - Fur. 121 adduces considerations that show that it is in origin a non-IE word. The word has been connected with the root *leuḱ- `see' and would refer to the sharp sight of the animal. But this cannot explain the long ū of Balto-Slavic. Nor can the -n- be explained; nor the g of Gr. λύγγ-ιος. So the word is non-IE, prob. a loan from a Eur. substratum. - I see no reason to connect the gloss λουνόν λαμπρόν H. The PN Λυγκεύς may be cognate or not. S. also λυγγούριον.Page in Frisk: 2,141-142Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λύγξ 2
-
10 λυγκός
Grammatical information: m. f.Other forms: λυγγός E. fr. 683.Compounds: As 1. member in λυκό-λυγξ `wolflynx' (pap. in Sb. Heidelb. 1923: 2, 14, 13); λυγγούριον ( λυγκ-, λιγκ- u. a.) n. kind of amber (Thphr., Delos IIIa), s. v.Derivatives: λυγκίον dimin. (Callix.), λύγγιος `of the lynx' (Edict. Diocl.). On ambivalent PN Λυγκεύς (Hdt., Pi.) s. Boßhardt 130f.; from there λυγκεύς as name of an eye-salve (medic.).Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur. substr.Etymology: Old name of the lynx, found also in Armenian, German and Balto-Slavic. Except for the nasal λύγξ has a counterpart in Lith. consonant stem lūš-ų (gen. pl.), with as innovation the i-stem lū́š-is. The same transformation show the Slav. words, which however through influence of an other word (* rysъ `sotted, red'?) got an initial r-: Russ. rýsь etc. Also elsewhere transformstions have occurred: with thematic vowel in Swed. lō `lynx' (PGm. * luh-a-, IE *luḱ-o-); with s-sufflx in Westgermanic: OHG luhs, OE lox (cf. Germ. Fuchs, OE fox); with n-suffix in Arm. lus-an-un-k` (ἅπ. εἰρ.) pl., which also supposes old full grade (IE *leuḱ- or louḱ-). The Arm. n-fomation might be connected somehow with the Greek nasalinfix, which reappers also in Lith. dial. (Zem.) lųnšis. - Details and further connections in Bq, WP. 2, 411 f., Pok. 690, Fraenkel Wb. s. lū́šis, Vasmer Wb. s. rýsь. - Fur. 121 adduces considerations that show that it is in origin a non-IE word. The word has been connected with the root *leuḱ- `see' and would refer to the sharp sight of the animal. But this cannot explain the long ū of Balto-Slavic. Nor can the -n- be explained; nor the g of Gr. λύγγ-ιος. So the word is non-IE, prob. a loan from a Eur. substratum. - I see no reason to connect the gloss λουνόν λαμπρόν H. The PN Λυγκεύς may be cognate or not. S. also λυγγούριον.Page in Frisk: 2,141-142Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λυγκός
-
11 национальность
ж.1) (народность, нация) nationality, ethnic group2) ( этническая принадлежность) ethnic originармяни́н по национа́льности — ethnic Armenian
кто он по национа́льности? — what is his ethnic origin?
-
12 ἄντρον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `cave' (Od.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: ἄντρον cannot be connected with Arm. ayr `grotto'. The last attempt, from De Lamberterie, must be rejected. He starts from a form *antēr, which is improbable (substr. words in - ηρ are also extremely rare), but the supposed development in Armenian is quite improbable; s. Clackson 1994, 98. - Connection with ἄνεμος (Schwyzer 532) is impossible. Lat. antrum is a loan. So we can best return to Chantr. Form. 331 and assume the word may be a substr.word.Page in Frisk: 1,115Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄντρον
-
13 ἕψω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `kook, seethe' (Ion.-Att.).Derivatives: ἕψημα `what is cooked, meal, soupe' (Ion.-Att.) with ἑψηματώδης (Dsc.), hell. ἕψεμα (LXX; cf. Schwyzer 523), ἕψησις `cooking' (Ion.-Att.); ἑψητήρ, - τήριον, - τής, - τικός (hell.); ἑφθός `cooked' (Ion.-Att.; with ἄπ-εφθος a. o.), ἐψητός `id.', also name of a fish (Ar., X.; cf. Strömberg Fischnamen 89), ἑψανός `cooked, to be cooked' (Hp.), ἑψαλέος `id.' (Nic.; after ὀπταλέος [Hom.] a. o.); also ἑψέϊνα n. pl. meaning unclear ( PLond. 3, 1177, 217; IIp). - From ἄπεφθος NGr. ἀπόχτι (through ἀπόφθι(ον)) `dried food' (Crete), `salted meat' (Cyprus), s. Hatzidakis Glotta 3, 72f.; from ἑψανός NGr. ψανός `what is roasted', ψάνη `wheat', s. Georgakas ByzZ 41, 380f.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Cannot be separated from Arm. ep`em `cook'. As Arm. p` can hardly represent (with Pedersen KZ 39, 428) IE ps, we should posit IE * seph-, which would have had an s-enlargement in Greek (Schwyzer 706). The `new' (familiar?) Greco-Armenian word ousted old πέσσειν (s. v.). Cf. Porzig Gliederung 156. An other expression for `cook' is ζέω, s. v. The word is prob. Pre-Greek (Fur. 327, who compares δέφω \/ δέψω.Page in Frisk: 1,604-605Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἕψω
-
14 κάστανα
Grammatical information: n. pl.,Meaning: `sweet chestnuts' (Mnesith. ap. Ath. 2, 54b, Gal. Dsc. as v. l.)Compounds: As 2. member in βαλανο-κάστανον = βάλανος καστανικός (thus Gal.) and βολβο-κάστανον `earth-nut' (Alex. Trall.).Derivatives: καστάναια, - εια pl. = κάστανα (Att. inscr.), καστανέη `chestnut-tree', καστανεών `chestnut-forest' (Gp.), καστανικός (Gal.; s. above), κασταναϊκὸν κάρυον (Thphr.); Καστανὶς αἶα land in Anatolia (Nic. Al. 271; cf. Καστανέα = πόλις Μαγνησίας EM).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Unclear is the η in καστηνοῦ (gen.) `chestnut-tree' (Nic. Al. 269). Anatolian?; cf. except the GN mentioned Arm. kask `chestnut', kaskeni `chestnut-tree'. - From κάστανον, - άνεια Lat. castanea (cf. e. g. picea), from where a. o. OHG chestinna, through new borrowing NHG Kastan(i)e. Further s. W.-Hofmann s. castanea. Fur. 389 has a variation κ \/ τ, but there is no Pre-Greek material for this (the k in Armenian may be due to assimilation). The variation - αια \/ - εια may be a Pre-Greek feature (Beekes, Pre-Greek, Suffixes sub 6. - αι-\/- ε(ι)-.Page in Frisk: 1,799Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κάστανα
-
15 κί̄ων
κί̄ων, - ονοςGrammatical information: m. f. (on the gender Schwyzer 486, Schwyzer-Debrunner 37)Meaning: `column, pillar', also metaph. (Od.); as medic. terminus `cartiledge, wart' (Hp.).Compounds: As 1. member in κιονό-κρᾱνον `capital of a column' (Str. 4, 4, 6 [v. l.], D. S.) beside earlier and more usual κιό-κρᾱνον (Pl. Com., X., Delos IIIa etc.; syll. dissimilation). Further ἀκρο-, τετρα-, μετα-, προ-κιόν-ιον (Ph.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably], LW [loanword] Anat.Etymology: With Arm. siwn `column' identical, further isolated. One of the Graeco-Armenian agreements (Schwyzer 57). Specht KZ 66, 13 (also Lexis 3, 70) assumes a common Gr.-Arm. LW [loanword]; cf. on αἴξ and Porzig Gliederung 157; cf. also γέφυρα. Can the word be Pre-Greek?Page in Frisk: 1,863Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κί̄ων
-
16 μήτρως
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `male relative of the mother, uncle, grandfather' (Il.).Derivatives: μητρώϊος, -ῳ̃ος (Dor. μα-) prop. `belonging to the μήτρωες, i.e. to mothers family' (τ 410), then directly referring to μήτηρ `what belongs to the mother, maternal' (A.); τὸ Μητρῳ̃ον (sc. ἱερόν) `the temple of the Great Mother Cybele', in Athens used as state archive (Att.); τὰ Μητρῳ̃α (sc. ἱερά) `the temple-service of Cybele' (D. H.); with μητρῳακός `belonging to the service of Cybele' and μητρῴζω `celebrate the Cybele-feasts' (sp.) ; μητρωϊκός = μητρικός (Delos IIa). -- Side form μήτρων (Dor. μά-), - ωνος m. (Asia Minor inscr.; originating from the acc. μήτρων). -- μητρυιά, Dor. μα-, ion. - ιή f. `step-mother' (Il.) with μητρυι-ώδης `step-motherly' (Plu.), - άζω `act as step-moher' (Gloss.); as joking innovation μητρυιός m. `stepfather' (Theopomp. Com., Hyp.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [700] *meh₂tēr `mother', *meh₂tr-ōu-s `relative of the mother'Etymology: If one connects, acc. to the communis opinio, μητρυιά with μήτρως, for which there is in fact no decisive evidence, we must start from a long - ōu- ( \> ō), of which - υ- in μητρυιά would be the zero grade (cf. Schwyzer 479 f.). With μητρυιά (prob. for older *μήτρυιᾰ, gen. - υιᾶς; Wackernagel KZ 33, 574 [= Kl. Schr. 2, 1207] n. l, Schwyzer 469 w. n. 8) cf. the close Armenian form mawru, gen. mawrui (\< *mātruu̯i-) `stepmother, mother-in-law', perhaps also the far off Westgermanic form OE modrige `sister's mother' (PGm. *mōdruu̯i̯ōn- \< IE *mātruu̯i̯ā?) a direct correspondence; the formation must then be from pre-Greek. A hypothesis on the origin (after the old word for `mother-in-law', Lat. socrus = Gr. *ἑκρύς ?; s. ἑκυρός, -ά) by Wackernagel Festgabe Kaegi 44 (= Kl. Schr. 1, 472) n. 2. -- Cf. the lit. on μήτηρ. Cf. Kuiper, Notes 56ff.Page in Frisk: 2,233-234Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μήτρως
-
17 Ἄδωνις
Ἄδωνις, - ιδοςGrammatical information: PNMeaning: god's nameOrigin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Supposed to be Semitic, Hebr. ādōn `Lord'. But there is no cult known in the Semitic world connected with this name, nor a myth parallel to that in Greece. Burkert, Gr. Rel. 176f. w. litt. against, e.g. Kretschmer Glotta 7, 29ff, and 10, 235f. Fur. 328 n. 21 points to ᾽Αδων as an Armenian general and a Phrygian flute-player.Page in Frisk: 1,22Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Ἄδωνις
-
18 αἴξ
αἴξ, αἰγόςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `goat' rarely m. `he-goat' (Il.). Also a waterbird (Janzén [s. below] 17), a meteor (Arist.) and a star (Aratos).Compounds: αἰπόλος `goatherd' \< *αἰγ-πολος s. s.v. πέλω (cf. Meier-Brügger Gr. Sprachw. 1, 92). αἰγί-βοτος `browsed by goats' (Od.) Unclear αἰπόλος κάπηλος παρὰ Κυπρίοις H (see Leumann Hom. W. 271ff; to be rejected Latte's corr. ἀί- = ἀεί).Derivatives: αἰγίς `goatskin', q.v.;Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [13] *h₂eiǵ-Etymology: The compounds in - ι- are unexplained (unclear Heubeck IF 69 (1963) 13-21); old is in any case the type αἰπόλος. αἴξ is cognate with Arm. ayc `goat' (i-stem); see Clackson 88-90, who reconstructs, with Meillet, *h₂eiǵ-ih₂. Zero grade is mostly supposed in Av. ī̆zaēna- `of leather', but it is not certain that it refers to the skin of a goat. If the connection is correct, the word would be IE; the word is often considered as an Anatolian loanword in both Greek and Armenian. - See A. Janzén Bock und Ziege (GHÅ 43 [1937: 5]) 9ff.and EIEC s.v. - The gloss αἶγες τὰ κύματα, Δωριεῖς H. may be a metaphor, s. αἰγιαλός. In Greek geogr. names ( Αἰγαί, Αἰγαῖος, Αἴγινα etc.) we may have not the word for `goat', Sommer IF 55, 259f. (Pre-Greek), V. Burr Nostrum mare (Würzb. Stud. zur Altertumswiss.) Stuttgart 1932. Connection with * h₂eig- as `to jump' is rejected by Mayrhofer EWAia 1, 264 as éjati had a labio-velar (also it does not mean `jump'). Not to Skt. ajá- `goat'.Page in Frisk: 1,41-42Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > αἴξ
-
19 αἰγός
αἴξ, αἰγόςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `goat' rarely m. `he-goat' (Il.). Also a waterbird (Janzén [s. below] 17), a meteor (Arist.) and a star (Aratos).Compounds: αἰπόλος `goatherd' \< *αἰγ-πολος s. s.v. πέλω (cf. Meier-Brügger Gr. Sprachw. 1, 92). αἰγί-βοτος `browsed by goats' (Od.) Unclear αἰπόλος κάπηλος παρὰ Κυπρίοις H (see Leumann Hom. W. 271ff; to be rejected Latte's corr. ἀί- = ἀεί).Derivatives: αἰγίς `goatskin', q.v.;Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [13] *h₂eiǵ-Etymology: The compounds in - ι- are unexplained (unclear Heubeck IF 69 (1963) 13-21); old is in any case the type αἰπόλος. αἴξ is cognate with Arm. ayc `goat' (i-stem); see Clackson 88-90, who reconstructs, with Meillet, *h₂eiǵ-ih₂. Zero grade is mostly supposed in Av. ī̆zaēna- `of leather', but it is not certain that it refers to the skin of a goat. If the connection is correct, the word would be IE; the word is often considered as an Anatolian loanword in both Greek and Armenian. - See A. Janzén Bock und Ziege (GHÅ 43 [1937: 5]) 9ff.and EIEC s.v. - The gloss αἶγες τὰ κύματα, Δωριεῖς H. may be a metaphor, s. αἰγιαλός. In Greek geogr. names ( Αἰγαί, Αἰγαῖος, Αἴγινα etc.) we may have not the word for `goat', Sommer IF 55, 259f. (Pre-Greek), V. Burr Nostrum mare (Würzb. Stud. zur Altertumswiss.) Stuttgart 1932. Connection with * h₂eig- as `to jump' is rejected by Mayrhofer EWAia 1, 264 as éjati had a labio-velar (also it does not mean `jump'). Not to Skt. ajá- `goat'.Page in Frisk: 1,41-42Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > αἰγός
-
20 ἀπειλή
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `threat', also `promise' (Il.).Derivatives: ἀπειλέω `threaten' (Il.).Etymology: Unknown. - If to Latv. pel̂t `revile' it would be * h₂pel-. Further have been compared (with s- mobile) Goth. spill n. `fable' etc., also Arm. ar̄a-spel `legend, proverb' (Lidén GHÅ 39: 2, 46ff.), in which case the s- would be difficult (Armenian also vocalizes the initial laryngeal). LIV 525 assumes *( s)pelnH-, as nasal present (with secondary full grade) and compares Toch. A pällāntär, B pällātär `praise'.Page in Frisk: 1,119-120Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀπειλή
См. также в других словарях:
Armenian Origin of the Etruscans — The Armenian Origin of the Etruscans defines a link between the Armenians and the Etruscans. Some scholars also see in Urartean art, architecture, language and general culture traces of kinship to the Etruscans of the Italian peninsula. [A… … Wikipedia
Armenian nobility — has a long history with many interruptions, most notable of which was the Russian occupation. After Armenia regained her independence in 1991 efforts have been made to revive the influence of the traditional noble houses. TerminologyMembers of… … Wikipedia
Armenian — may refer to *Resident of or something associated with the Republic of Armenia. *It also refers to people of ethnic Armenian origin residing in other countries (e.g. Lebanese Armenians, American Armenians, French Armenians etc) *Armenian /… … Wikipedia
Armenian British — Infobox Ethnic group group = Armenian Britons caption= David Dickinson, Calouste Gulbenkian flagicon|UK flagicon|Armenia poptime = Armenian Born 589cite web|url=http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/18/23/34792376.xls|title=Country of birth data,… … Wikipedia
Armenian — Ar·me·ni·an || É‘r mɪËnɪən /É‘Ëm n. native or resident of Armenia adj. of Armenian origin, of or pertaining to Armenia (country in western Asia) n. language spoken in Armenia (country in Asia) … English contemporary dictionary
Armenian Genocide denial — Armenian Genocide Background Armenians in the Ottoman Empire … Wikipedia
Armenian Genocide reparations — Armenian Genocide Background Armenians in the Ottoman Empire … Wikipedia
Armenian-Dutch — ( nl. Armeense Nederlanders) are citizens of the Netherlands of Armenian ancestry. The exact number of Armenians in the country is unknown, since the Dutch Immigration Office only offers data on country of origin. It is unofficially estimated… … Wikipedia
Armenian — 1590s, a native of Armenia, from Armenia (late 14c. in English), place name traced to 521 C.E., but of uncertain origin. As the name of the language, by 1718; as an adjective, by 1727 … Etymology dictionary
Armenian language — Indo European language of the Armenians. It is spoken by perhaps five to six million people worldwide. Armenian has undergone phonetic and grammatical changes that make it completely distinct from other branches of Indo European; its closest… … Universalium
Armenian Genocide — Armenian civilians are marched to a nearby prison i … Wikipedia