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1 κεντέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `sting' (Pi.).Other forms: aor. κένσαι (Ψ 337), κεντῆσαι (Hp., κέντᾱσα Theoc. 19, 1), pass. κεντηθῆναι (Arist.) with κεντηθήσομαι (Hdt.), κεντήσω (S.), κεκέντημαι (Hp.),Derivatives: 1. κένσαι for *κέντ-σαι (Schwyzer 287) points to κεντ- (present or aorist?; s. below) of which the dental before dental gave κεσ-. Thus κεσ-τός (\< *κεντ-τός) `stitched' (ep.; Ammann Μνήμης χάριν 1, 17); κέσ-τρον `pointed iron ' (Plin.) with κεστρωτός and κέστρωσις (H.; *κεστρόω), κέσ-τρος `kind of arrow etc.' (Plb., D. H., H.) with dimin. κεστρίον (Attica) and κέστρειον `stock of arrows (?)' (Delos IIIa); κέσ-τρα f. `sharp hammer, arrow' (S., Ph. Bel., Hero), also a fishname = σφύραινα (Ar.; after te form of the body, Strömberg Fischnamen 35); here κεστρεύς `mullet' (IA.; Bosshardt Die Nom. auf - ευς 51) and κεστρῖνος, - ινίσκος `id.' (Com.). - 2. Through reshaping after κεντ-έω (not with ρο-suffix as Fraenkel KZ 42, 118 n. 1) rose κέντρον `sting', as geometrical term. techn. `resting bone of a compass, center of a cirkel' (Il.), with many compounds and derivv., e. g. κεντρ-ηνεκής `driven by the sting' (Il.; cf. with diff. function δουρ-, ποδ-ηνεκής); subst. κέντρων s. v.; adj. like κεντρικός, κεντρώδης, κεντρήεις; fish- and plant names as κεντρίνης, κεντρίσκος, κεντρίτης (Strömberg Fischnamen 47, Redard Les noms grecs en - της 83, 111); denomin. verbs κεντρόω `with a sting, sting' (IA), κεντρίζω `sting' (X.); from κέντρον as backformation κέντωρ m. `goader, driver' (Il., AP; Fraenkel Glotta 2, 32). - 3. From κεντέω ( κεντῆ-σαι, - σω): κέντημα `the sting, the mosaic' (Arist., inscr. Smyrna [Rom. Emp.]), κεντητής `mosaic-worker' ( Edict. Diocl.), κεντητήριον `picker' (Luc.), κεντητικός `stingy' (Thphr.), κεντητός `stitched, with mosaic' (Epikt., pap.). - 4. With old ablaut κοντός m. "the stinger", `pole, crutch, staf to drive on cattle' (ι 487; LW [loanword] Lat. contus with percontor) with κοντά-κιον, - άριον, - ίλος, - ωτός a. o.; here κοντός `short' (Adam.) from κοντο-μάχος, - βόλος, - βολέω, where κοντός was taken as `short'; thus in κοντο-πορεία (Plb.), s. Hatzidakis Festschrift Kretschmer 35ff.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [567] *ḱent- `sting'Etymology: To the sigmatic aorist κένσαι \< *κέντ-σαι was after unknown example a present κεντ-έω created (cf. Schwyzer 706), to which came κεντῆ-σαι, κεντή-σω etc. - Other languages have only isolated nominal formations: OHG hantag `pointed', deriv. from PGm. * handa- (formally = κοντός), Latv. sīts `hunting spear' (= Lith. *šiñtas \< IE. *ḱentos- n.?), and some Celtic words, e. g. Bret. kentr `spur', Welsh cethr `nail', but these are all prob. loans from Lat. centrum. - See W.-Hofmann 2, 423, Pok. 567.Page in Frisk: 1,820-821Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κεντέω
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2 κέντρον
κέντρον, ου, τό (κεντέω ‘prick, spur on’; Hom. et al.; BGU 544, 12; LXX; PsSol 16:4; JosAs 16:13; Philo; Jos., Bell. 2, 385, Ant. 7, 169; Ath. 13:1) gener. ‘sharp point’.① the sting of an animal (Aristot. et al.; Aelian, NA 16, 27 σκορπίου) Rv 9:10 (s. Ctesias: 688 Fgm. 45 p. 490, 1 Jac. [Indica 7], a strange beast of India τὸ πρόσωπον ἐοικὸς ἀνθρώπῳ … ὥσπερ λέων … horrible teeth … σκορπίος … τὸ κέντρον in its tail, whose sting is deadly). In imagery (Aesop, Fab. 276 P. [also H-H. 273 app.]=Babr. no. 185 Cr. κ. τῆς λύπης) of death 1 Cor 15:55f after Hos 13:14 (s. ESellin, RSeeberg Festschr. I 1929, 307–14, cp. Straub 35; the imagery is transcultural: a friend of a teacher named Theodoros records in an epitaph that he felt a κέντρον ἄπαυστον, ‘unceasing sting’ because of his death [Kaibel 534, 8=Peek, GVI 1479, 8, s. New Docs 4, 157 no. 64]).② a pointed stick that serves the same purpose as a whip, a goad (Hom. et al.; Pr 26:3), in a proverbial expr. (Pind., P. 2, 94 [173] [s. Ael. Aristid. 45 p. 70 D.]; Aeschyl., Ag. 1624, Prom. 323; Eur., Bacch. 795 [WNestle, Anklänge an Eur. in AG: Philol. 59, 1900, 46–57]; Fgm. Iamb. Adesp. 13 in AnthLG [D-B.] III 75: ἵππος ὄνῳ• ‘πρὸς κέντρα μὴ λακτιζέτω’ ‘a horse to an ass: “No kicking against the goads!”’ [The cj. λάκτιζέ πω proposed by Crusius—s. JEdmonds, ed., Greek Elegy and Iambus II, ’31, repr. ’79, p. 310 no. 64—is unnecessary]; ins fr. Asia Minor [JHS 8, 1887, 261]: λακτίζεις πρὸς κέντρα; AOtto, D. Sprichwörter d. Römer 1890, 331f) πρὸς κέντρα λακτίζειν kick against the goads of a balking animal, fig. of one who resists a divine call Ac 9:4 v.l.; 26:14 (on the pl. cp. Eur., loc. cit., the iambic fragment, the ins, and PGM 4, 2911 κέντροισι βιαίοις of the stings of passion; Herm. Wr. p. 482, 26 Sc.; Philo, Det. Pot. Ins. 46 πάθους κέντροις).—FSmend, Αγγελος I 1925, 34–45, esp. 41ff, but s. WKümmel, Rö 7 u. die Bekehrung des Paulus 1929, 155–57; HWindisch, ZNW 31, ’32, 10–14; further lit. in Haenchen ad loc.—B. 864. DELG s.v. κεντέω. M-M. TW. -
3 βέλος
A missile, esp. arrow, dart, freq. in Hom.; of the piece of rock hurled by the Cyclops,τόντονδε βαλὼν β. Od.9.495
; of an ox's leg thrown by one of the suitors at Ulysses, 20.305; of a stool, 17.464; ὑπὲκ βελέων out of the reach of darts, out of shot, Il.4.465;ἐκ βελέων 11.163
;ἔξω βελῶν X.Cyr.3.3.69
, etc.;ἔξω βέλους Arr.An. 2.27.1
, Luc.Hist.Conscr.4; opp. ἐντὸς βέλους, D.S.20.6, Arr.An. 1.2.5; εἴσω β. παρελθεῖν ib.1.6.8.2 used of any weapon, as a sword, Ar.Ach. 345, cf. S.Aj. 658; an axe, E.El. 1159; the sting of a scorpion, A.Fr. 169; of the gad-fly, Id.Supp. 556.3 ἀγανὰ βέλεα of Apollo, Il.24.759, Od.3.280, and of Artemis, ib.5.124, denote sudden, easy death of men and women respectively; βέλος ὀξύ, of Ilithyia, pangs of childbirth, Il.11.269, cf. Theoc.27.29.4 after Hom. of anything swift-darting, Διὸς βέλη the bolts of Zeus, lightnings, Pi.N.10.8, cf. Hdt.4.79, etc.;Ζηνὸς ἄγρυπνον β. A.Pr. 360
; πύρπνουν β. ib. 917; βέλεσι πυρπνόου ζάλης, of a storm, ib. 373;πάγων δύσομβρα β. S.Ant. 358
: metaph., ὀμμάτων β. glance of the eye, A.Ag. 742; φίλοικτον β. a piteous glance, ib. 241 (lyr.); ἱμέρου β. the shaft of love, Id.Pr. 649;θυμοῦ βέλη S.OT 893
(s.v.l.); of arguments,πᾶν τετόξευται β. A.Eu. 679
, cf. Pl.Phlb. 23b; β. τὰ ἀπὸ τοῦ στόματος, of invective, Lib.Or.51.8; of mental anguish or fear,ἄτλατον β. Pi.N. 1.48
(v.l. δέος) . -
4 οιστροβολούσι
οἰστροβολέωstrike with the sting: pres part act masc /neut dat pl (attic epic doric)οἰστροβολέωstrike with the sting: pres ind act 3rd pl (attic epic doric) -
5 οἰστροβολοῦσι
οἰστροβολέωstrike with the sting: pres part act masc /neut dat pl (attic epic doric)οἰστροβολέωstrike with the sting: pres ind act 3rd pl (attic epic doric) -
6 μάννα
μάννα, τό indecl. (מָן. The Gk. form μάννα [LXX—only Ex 16 μάν; GrBar 6:11; Philo, Leg. Alleg. 2, 84, Det. Pot. Insid. 118; Jos., Ant. 3, 32; Just.] is prob. explained by the influence of the Gk. word ἡ μάννα=‘little grain, granule’ [Hippocr. et al.; POxy 1088, 21; PGM 4, 1874]. The fem. inflection also Jos., Ant. 3, 296; 5, 21; SibOr 7, 149.) ‘manna’, often identified with the sweetish exudate of the manna tamarisk and related trees, produced by the sting of an insect; it dries and falls down in the form of small grains. S. AKaiser, Der heutige Stand der Mannafrage: Mitteilungen d. Thurgauischen Naturforsch. Gesellschaft, Heft 25, 1924, Wanderungen u. Wandlungen in d. Sinaiwüste 1886–1927: ibid. 1928, 21ff; HDarlington, Open Court 42, 1928, 372–81; FBodenheimer and OTheodor, Ergebnisse d. Sinai-Exped. 1927 der hebr. Univers. Jerus. 1930; BMalina, The Palestinian Manna Tradition, ’68.① a food esp. associated with Israel’s experience, mannaⓐ supplied to the Israelites during their wanderings J 6:31, 49.ⓑ kept, acc. to Ex 16:32ff, in the tabernacle Hb 9:4.ⓒ in imagery of honey eaten by John the Baptist: οὗ ἡ γεῦσις ἡ τοῦ μ. that tasted like manna GEb 13, 79.② a heavenly food, linked by name with the foregoing, manna τὸ μ. τὸ κεκρυμμένον the hidden manna, Rv 2:17.—W-S. 10a 2 p. 92; BHHW II 1141ff.—M-M. TW. -
7 ματεύω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `search, seek, strive to' (Ξ 110);Other forms: ματέω in μάτης (Theoc. 29, 15; Aeol. *μάτημι), ματεῖ ζητεῖ, ματῆσαι μαστεῦσαι, ζητῆσαι, μάσσαι ζητῆσαι H., ματεῖσθαι ζητεῖσθαι (Hp. ap. Erot.).Compounds: Also with preflx ἐσ- ματέομαι, - μάσασθαι (Hp.), ἐμ-, κατ-εμ-ματέω (Nik.) `feel in, stick in (the hand, the sting)'.Derivatives: μάτος n. `investigation' (Hp. ap. Gal.), ματήρ ἐπίσκοπος, ἐπιζητῶν, ἐρευνητής with ματηρεύειν μα\<σ\> τεύειν, ζητεῖν H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: To ματέω, from where prob. secondarily ματεύω (cf. Schwyzer 732), agree formally δατέομαι, πατέομαι; so we have probably to start from a nominal τ-stem (see Schwyzer 705 f.; cf. also Bechtel Lex. s. ματεύω). The verbal nouns ἄ-δασ-τος, ἄ-πασ-τος have a parallel in ἀ-προτί-μαστος; to the aorists δάσ(σ)ασθαι, πάσ(σ)ασθαι comform - μάσ(σ)ασθαι, μάσσαι. So the verbal σ-forms just like the nominal μαστύς, μαστήρ, μάστιξ etc., also μάσμα, can be connected with ματέω. From these σ-forms also μαστεύω may have got its σ. With δατέομαι: δαίομαι compare ματέω: μαίομαι. But while we have for the explanation of δαίομαι certain comparanda outside Greek, μαίομαι has no certain analysis; cf. s. v.Page in Frisk: 2,184Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ματεύω
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8 ἄπυρος
ἄπῠρος, ον,A without fire, in Hom. only of pots and tripods, that have not yet been on the fire, brand-new,ἕπτ' ἀπύρους τρίποδας Il.9.122
, cf. 23.267.c not wasted by fire, Max.Tyr. 41.4.2 ἄ. οἶκος fireless, i.e. cold, cheerless, Hes.Op. 525.4 ἄ. χρυσίον unsmelted, opp. ἄπεφθον, Hdt. 3.97, IG2.652B 28(but ἄ. χρυσός, of nuggets, or gold-dust, Arist.Mir. 833b8, D.S.2.50, al.);ἄ. κύανος Thphr.Lap.55
;ἄ. τέχναι Aristid.Or. 37(2).13
; θεῖον ἄ. native sulphur, Gal.12.903.5 ἱερὰ ἄ. sacrifices in which no fire was used, i. e. offerings of fruit, grain, and wine, Pi.O. 7.48, cf. A.Ag.70(lyr.), S.Fr. 417;θυσίαν ἄπυρον παγκαρπείας E.Fr. 912.4
;ἄ. βωμοί Ph.1.345
;ἱερουργία Plu.2.578b
.6 in A.Pr. 880 (lyr.) ἄ. ἄρδις an arrow-point but one not forged in fire, i. e. the sting of the gad-fly; ἄ. δάς, of love, Luc.DDeor.19.1.II Medic., without fever, Hp.Epid.1.1, cf. Aret.SD1.9. Adv.ἀπύρως Hp.Prorrh. 1.119
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9 σήπω
A : [tense] aor. ἔσηψα ([etym.] δι-) Ael.NA9.62:— make rotten or putrid, A.Fr.l.c.; of a serpent's poison, A.Ch.l.c.; of the sting of the σήψ, Ael.NA16.40.2 metaph., corrupt, waste,αἱ ἡσυχίαι σήπουσι καὶ ἀπολλύασι Pl.Tht. 153c
;σ. τὰ τῆς πόλεως πράγματα D.H.11.37
.II mostly in [voice] Pass. ([tense] pf. σέσηπα being used in pass. sense, Il.2.135, E.El. 319, ([etym.] κατα-) Ar. Pl. 1035, ([etym.] ἀπο-) X.An.4.5.12), [tense] fut.σᾰπήσομαι Gal.7.397
, ([etym.] κατα-) Pl. Phd. 86b, ([etym.] ἀπο-) Hp.Prorrh.2.1: [tense] aor. ἐσάπην [ᾰ] Hes.Sc. 152, Hdt.2.41, 3.66, Pl.Phd. 80d; σαπήῃ ([etym.] κατα-), [dialect] Ep. subj. for σαπῇ, Il.19.27: [tense] pf. σέσημμαι prob. in POxy.1449.51 (iii A.D.):—rot, moulder, of dead bodies,χρὼς σήπεται Il.24.414
, cf. 19.27, Hdt.2.41;περὶ ῥινοῖο σαπείσης Hes.Sc. 152
; of wood,δοῦρα σέσηπε Il.2.135
; .2 of live flesh, mortify,ὁ μηρὸς ἐσάπη Hdt.3.66
;σφακελίσαντος τοῦ μηροῦ καὶ σαπέντος Id.6.136
, cf. Pl.Phd. 80d;αἷμα σέσηπεν E.El. 319
; promote coction or formation of 'laudable' pus, in [voice] Act., Hp.Morb.1.6,28.3 of water, Id.Aër.8;οἶνος.. σαπὲν ἐν ξύλῳ ὕδωρ Emp.81
.4 of the food rejected after digestion, Arist.Mete. 381b12, al.; cf.σηπτός, σῆψις 11
.5 metaph.,σ. ὑπὸ τῆς ἡδονῆς Men. 23
;ὁ πλοῦτος ὑμῶν σέσηπε Ep.Jac.5.2
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10 οἰστροβολέω
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > οἰστροβολέω
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11 τρυγών
A turtle-dove, Columba turtur, Ar.Av. 302 (troch.), 979 (hex.), Ev.Luc.2.24, Gal.6.700, etc.; περιστεραὶ τρυγόνες Aristeas 145: prov. of a great talker,τρυγόνος λαλίστερος Men.416
, cf.Alex.92.3, Theoc. 15.88, Alciphr.3.29; πονηρὰ κατὰ τρυγόνα ψάλλεις, ἐπὶ τῶν ἐπιπόνως ζώντων, Diogenian.7.71, cf. Hsch. s.v. τρυγονοψάλλειν.II a kind of fish, the sting-ray,τρυγόνες ὀπισθόκεντροι Epich.66
, cf. Arist.HA 489b31, Antiph.26.23, Cels.6.9.6, Gal.Vict. Att.8; cf. τρυγόνιος. -
12 πυγμή
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `fist, fist-fight' (Il.); as measure of length = `the distance from the elbow to the knuckles', 18 δάκτυλοι (Thphr., Poll.).Derivatives: πυγμαῖος `as large as a π., dwarf-like' (Hdt., Arist.), nom. pl. "the fistlings", n. of a fable-tale people of dwarves, which was diff. localised (Γ 6, Hecat. etc.); πυγμ-ικός `belonging to fist-fight' (An. Ox.). Shortname Πυγμᾶς m. (Chantraine Études 18). -- On Πυγμαλίων, prob. popular correction of a foreign word, s. Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 136. -- πυγών, όνος m. measure of length = `the distance from the elbow to the first finger-joint', 20 δάκτυλοι (Hdt., X.); from this πυγούσιος `one π. long' (κ 517 = λ 25, Arat.), prob. analog. (Risch 115); a *πυγοντ- (cf. Schwyzer 526) is not credible; regular πυγον-ιαῖος `id.' (Hp., Thphr. a.o.). -- πύκτης m. `fist-fighter' (Xenoph., Pi., Att.) with πυκτ-ικός `belonging to fist-fight(ers), brave in fist-fight' (Att.), - οσύνη f. `skilfulness in fist-fight' (Xenoph.; Wyss - σύνη 31), - εύω `to be a fist-fighter, to have a fist-fight' (Att., Boeot.) with - ευσις, - ευτής (Gloss.), - εῖον (Suid.); also with analog. λ-enlargement - αλεύω (Sophr.), - αλίζω (Anacr.) `id.'. -- πύξ adv. `with the fist, in a fist-fight' (esp. ep. poet. Il.); from it πυγ-μάχος m. `fist-fighter', - μαχέω, - μαχία, - ίη (ep. poet. Hom.), univerbation from πὺξ μάχεσθαι; cf. Georgacas Glotta 36, 180.Origin: IE [Indo-European](X) [828] *puḱ-, puǵ- `sting'Etymology: The above words are all built on an element πυγ-, which function may have been both verbal or nominal. To πυγ-μή cf. in the first instance primary formations like παλάμη (s.v.), στιγ-μή, δραχ-μή, but also the ambivalente ἀκ-μή and he purely nominal ἅλ-μη. Of πυγ-ών remind ἀγκ-ών, λαγ-ών, the first perh. verbal, the last prob. nominal (s. on λαγαίω). Also πύκ-της can be taken both primary and secondarily; for πύξ nominal origin seems most probable (s. Schwyzer 620); cf. still πύξ πυγμή H. -- A corresponding l-deriv. is seen in Lat. pug-il m. `fistfighter', an n-formation in pug-nus m. `fist' (to which pugnāre, pugna; to be connected formally with πυγ-ών?). So we arrive at a Lat.-Gr. pug- `fist'. By Fick, Walde a.o. (s. Bq, WP. 2, 15 and W.-Hofmann s. pugil) this group is further connected with pu-n-g-ō, pu-pug-ī `sting', for which we would have to assume a specialisation of `sting' to `sting with clenched fist and knuckles stretched out forward' = 'box'; so pug- `fist' as suffixless nom. ag. prop. * "the stinger, the boxer"? The (orig.) meaning `sting' can still be seen in Lat. pūgiō `dagger', thus, with final tenuis, in πεύκη a. cogn. (s.v.). -- An original meaning `sting' is rather surprising but Lat. pugio seems a good argument; πεύκη may be unrelated.Page in Frisk: 2,619-620Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πυγμή
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13 οἴστρος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `gadfly, Tabanus bovinus' (χ 300, A., Arist.), also of a water-insect and a bird (Arist. perh. Sylvia trochilus; cf. Whitfield ClassRev. 69, 12f.), `sting, prick' (S., E.), `rage, madness, fierce desire' (Hdt., Pl., S., E.).Compounds: Compp., e.g. οἰστρο-πλήξ, - γος `stung by a gadly, driven by anger' (trag., of Io, also of the Bacchantes).Derivatives: οἰστρ-ώδης `enraged' (Pl., Epicur.), - ήεις `full of sting, stinging, stung' (Opp., Nonn.; cf. Schwyzer 527), - ηδόν `with rage' (Opp.); οἰστρ-άω (on the formation Schwyzer 731), also - έω (Theoc., Luc., Jul.), - ῆσαι (trag., Pl., Arist.), also with ἀν-, ἐξ-, παρ-, δι-, `to rouse; to rage, to roar' with οἴστρ-ημα n. `sting' (S., AP), ( παρ-)-ησις f. `rage, passion' ( Corp. Herm., PMag. Par.); backformation πάροιστρος `enraged, mad' (Simp.).Etymology: In the barytonesis agreeing with κέστρος, χύτρος a. o. (cf. Schwyzer 531 f.) οἶσ-τρος must orig. be a nom. instr. or -- what amounts to the same thing -- a nom. agentis. If, as seems probable, cognate with οἶμα (\< *οἶσ-μα) and like this derived from a verb `put in vehement movement, urge, irritate', the word meant originally "urger, irritator". The actual meanings `gadfly', `sting', `anger' can therefor go hand in hand (cf. v.Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 273); the changing meaning was still favoured by the myth of Io. -- An identical formation, except for the gender, is Lith. aistrà f. `vehement passion'; further cognates s. οἶμα; cf. also ὀϊστός w. lit. -- Diff. F. Hartmann KZ 54, 289 w. n. 1: to οἶδος, οἰδέω, OHG eittar `poison' etc. as `who causes an ulcer'; to be rejected. S. also Gil Fernandez Nombres de insectos 157. -- In ἰστυάζει ὀργίζεται H. Fick KZ 43, 136 wanted to find a parallel zero grade τυ-derivation *ἰσ-τύ-ς.Page in Frisk: 2,369-370Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οἴστρος
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14 οιστρομανή
οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: neut nom /voc /acc pl (attic epic doric)οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: masc /fem /neut nom /voc /acc dual (doric aeolic)οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: masc /fem acc sg (attic epic doric) -
15 οἰστρομανῆ
οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: neut nom /voc /acc pl (attic epic doric)οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: masc /fem /neut nom /voc /acc dual (doric aeolic)οἰστρομανήςmad from the gadfly's sting: masc /fem acc sg (attic epic doric) -
16 δάκνω
Aδήξομαι Hp.Nat.Mul.16
, Mul.1.18 (v.l. δάξεται): [tense] pf.δέδηχα Babr. 77
: [tense] aor. 1 ἔδηξα late, Luc.Asin.9: [tense] aor. 2 (the only tense in Hom.)ἔδᾰκον Batr.181
, Tyrt.10.32, etc., [dialect] Ep.δάκε Il.5.493
, redupl.δέδακε AP12.15
(Strat.): [dialect] Ep. inf.δακέειν Il.17.572
: —[voice] Pass.,δάκνομαι Thgn.910
: [tense] fut.δηχθήσομαι E. Alc. 1100
: [tense] aor. , Ar. Ach.18, etc.; laterἐδάκην Aret.SD2.2
: [tense] pf.δέδηγμαι Ar.Ach. 1
, etc.; [dialect] Dor.δεδαγμένος Pi.P.8.87
, Call.Epigr.50 codd.:—bite, of dogs,δακέειν μὲν ἀπετρωπῶντο λεόντων Il.18.585
; of a gnat,ἰσχανάᾳ δακέειν 17.572
; στόμιον δ. champ the bit, A.Pr. 1009; χεῖλος ὀδοῦσι δακών, as a mark of stern determination, Tyrt.l.c.: abs.,δακὼν ἀνάσχου Men. Sam. 141
; δ. στόμα bite one's tongue, so as to refrain from speaking,πρὸ τῶν τοιούτων χρὴ λόγων δ. στόμα A.Fr. 397
, cf. S.Tr. 976; δ. ἑαυτόν to bite one's lips for fear of laughing, Ar.Ra.43; so (by a joke παρὰ προσδοκίαν)δ. θυμόν Id.Nu. 1369
;δ. χόλον A.R.3.1170
.II metaph. of pungent smoke and dust, sting, Ar.Ach.18, Lys. 298, Pl. 822; δ. ὄμματα, of dry winds, Hp.Aph.3.17.III of the mind, bite, sting,δάκε δὲ φρένας Ἕκτορι μῦθος Il.5.493
, cf. Hes.Th. 567;ἔδακε λύπη Hdt.7.16
.a';συμφορὰ δ. A.Pers. 846
; λόφοι δὲ κώδωντ' οὐ δάκνουσ' ἄνευ δορός have no sting, Id.Th. 399;σαίνουσα δάκνεις S.Fr. 885
;τὸ δάκνον τῆς συμβουλῆς Jul.Or.7.207d
; of love, :—freq. in [voice] Pass.,δηχθεῖσα κέντροις.. ἠράσθη E.Hipp. 1303
;ἔρωτι δεδαγμένος Call.
l.c.; of vexation,δάκνομαι ψυχήν Thgn.910
; συμφορᾷ δεδαγμένοι Pi.l.c.;δέδηγμαι καρδίαν Ar.Ach.1
;ὑπὸ τῆς δαπάνης Id.Nu.12
; πρός τι, ἐπί τινι, at a thing, S.Ph. 378, X.Cyr.4.3.3;ὑπὸ τῶν ἐν φιλοσοφίᾳ λόγων Pl.Smp. 218a
: c.part.,ἐδήχθη ἀκούσας X.Cyr.1.4.13
. (Cf.Skt. dáśati 'bite', Goth. tahjan 'tear'.) -
17 πεύκη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `pine', esp. `Pinus Laricio' (Il.), metaph. `torch' (trag.).Derivatives: πευκ-ήεις, Dor. - άεις `made of pine, belonging to the torch, stinging, sharp' (trag. in lyr., D. P., Opp.); - ινος `made of pine' (S., E., Plb.); - ών, - ῶνος m. `forest of pines' (Hdn. Gr.); - ία f. `taste of pitch' (Tz.; prob. after πικρία, Scheller Oxytonierung 40). -- Besides πευκάλιμος adjunct of φρένες (Il.), also of πραπίδες, μήδεα (Orac. ap. D. L., inscr.); πευκεδανός adi. of πόλεμος (Κ 8), of βέλεμνα, ἀσπίς (Orph.), of θάλασσα (Opp.); with opposit. acc. πευκέδανον name of a bitter umbellifera, `sulphur weed' (Thphr.; Strömberg 147).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [828] *peuḱ- `sting'Etymology: Resembling names of the pine and the fir are found in Balt., Germ. and Celt.: OPr. peuse f. (IE *peuḱ-), Lith. pušìs (IE *puḱ-); uncertain on the stemformation Specht KZ 63, 96; after Skardzius IF 62, 162 old rootnoun; with t-enlargement OHG fiuhta, MIr. ochtach f. (IE *peuḱ-t- resp. *puḱ-tākā). If, as probable, to the 2. member in ἐχε-πευκής, περι-πευκής `stinging, sharp' (prop. *'provided with a sting, point'), πεύκη can be understood as a subst. adj. f. "the sharp, the stinging" from *πευκός `sharp, stinging' as λεύκη f. `white poplar' from λευκός; in Germ. OHG fiuhta `fine' as lioht `light'. Here also the islandname Πεύκη (in the Donau-delta; Skymn.; Mayer Glotta 24, 195) and the Illyr. PN Peucetii (Illyria, southern Italy; Krahe Die Spr. d. Illyr. 1, 112 f.) with formation like Gaul. Leucetius surn. of Mars, Lat.-Osc. Lūcetius surn. of Iupiter. -- ἐχε-πευκής may contain a noun *πεῦκος n. `stinging, point' (cf. s.v.); formation then like Av. raočah- n. `light' (IE * leukos). To this the adj. πευκάλιμος and πευκεδανός, for which a meaning `sharp, intrusive' resp. `sharp, stinging, bitter' must be posited; cf. e.g. εἰδάλιμος (: εἶδος) a.o. (Arbenz 28, Benveniste Origines 45 f.); λ-suffix also in πευκαλέον ξηρόν (as αὑαλέος a.o.), πευκαλεῖται ξηραίνεται H.; for πευκεδανός cf. ῥιγεδανός (: ῥῖγος) a.o. (Chantraine Form. 362 w. lit., Specht Ursprung 199 a. 345). -- WP. 2, 15, Pok. 828, Fraenkel s. pušìs w. further forms a. lit., Porzig Gliederung 118f.; older lit. also in Bq s. ἐχε-πευκές. On IIr. cognates s. Morgenstierne NTS 13(1942) 229 and Turner A comp. dict. of the Indo-Aryan languages (1966) No 8407 *pōśi. -- A byform with voiced velar in πυγμή (s. v.) a.o.Page in Frisk: 2,523-524Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πεύκη
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18 οἰστράω
οἰστρ-άω or [suff] οἰστρ-έω, the former in Pl. (v. infr.), Arist.HA 602a26, Men. (v. infr.), the latter in Theoc.6.28, Luc.Asin.33: [tense] fut.A- ήσω Gp. 17.5.3
: [tense] aor. οἴστρησα (Elmsl. ᾤστρησα) E.Ba.32, cf. Choerob. in Theod. 2.50 H.; part. οἰστρήσας (v. infr.):—[voice] Pass. (v. infr.):—sting. prop. of the gadfly ([etym.] οἶστρος): hence, metaph., sting to madness, αὐτὰς ἐκ δόμων ᾤστρησα I drove them raging out of the house, E.l.c.: —[voice] Pass., driven mad,S.
Tr. 653, E.Ba. 119 (both lyr.); of sexual passion,οἰστρημένος ὑπὸ τοῦ ἔρωτος Iamb.VP31.195
;εἰς μεῖξιν Ael.NA15.9
, cf. Luc.Asin.33.II intr., go mad, rage, of Io driven by the gadfly, in frenzy, frantically,A.
Pr. 836 ; of Menelaus,καθ' Ἑλλάδ' οἰστρήσας E.IA77
; of the tunny when attacked by the οἶστρος (1.2), Arist.HA 602a26, cf. 598a18 : metaph.,ἡ ψυχὴ οἰστρᾷ καὶ ὀδυνᾶται Pl.Phdr. 251d
, cf. R. 573e ;τοῖς οἰστρῶσιν Id.Tht. 179e
;οἰστρῶντι πόθῳ Men.312
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > οἰστράω
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19 στόχος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `erected pillar, post, mark, fixed target', also `suspicion' (after στοχάζομαι)? (very rare, partly in the transmission blurred attestations in A., E., X., Poll., Att. inscr.).Compounds: Compp. ἄ-στοχος `missing the target', εὔ-στοχος `aiming well, hitting well' (Att., hell. a. late) with ἀ-, εὑ-στοχ-ία, - έω.Derivatives: στοχ-άς, - άδος f. `raising for the poles of fixing-nets' (Poll.); also adj. of unclear meaning (E. Hel. 1480 [lyr.], prob. false v. l. for στολάδες); - ανδόν adv. `by conjecture' (Theognost.). Normal denom. στοχάζομαι, also w. κατα- a.o., `to target at sthing, to shoot, to seek to achieve, to guess, to conjecture, to explore' (Hp., Att., hell. a. late) with ( κατα-) στοχασμός, - ασις, - αστής, - αστικός; also στόχασμα n. `instrument for aiming' = `javelin' (E. Ba. 1205; cf. Chantraine Form. 145).Etymology: Without certain non-Greek agreement. As the original meaning seems to have been `erected pillar, post', we can compare some Balt.-Slav. and Germ. words. Thus Russ. stóg m. `heap, heap of hay', Bulg. stéžer `post to bind horses to, bar (Germ. Schoberstange)', Russ. dial. stož-á, -ará, -erá `supporting pillar of a haystack', čech. stožár `mast(tree)', Lith. stãgaras `thin long stalk of a plant', Latv. stę̄ga `long bar' etc. Because of Germ., e.g. OE staca, NEngl. stake, OWNo. staki m. `bar, javelin' (PGm. * stak-an-) for stóg etc. IE * steg- is also possible [no, the short vowel requires an aspirate: Winter-Kortlandt's law]. Beside the words mentioned Germ. presents also another group, which cannot be well be distinguished from it, which goes back on IE * stegh- (\> Slav. steg-), mostly in the nasalized form ste-n-gh-: Swed. stagg `stiff and standing grass, sholder, stickleback' (-gg express. gemin.), ODan. stag `point, germ'; OHG stanga, OWNo. stǫng f. ' Stange, stick, pole' (with OWNo. stinga, OE stingan `sting') etc. (Not from here with zero grade (IE *stn̥gh-) στάχυς?)Page in Frisk: 2,804Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στόχος
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20 νύσσω
Grammatical information: v.Derivatives: 1. νύξις f. `push, sting' (Dsc., Plu.), κατάνυξ-ις `stupefaction, bewilderment' (: κατα-νύσσομαι `get a push in the heart, be stunned'; LXX, NT); 2. νύγμα (also - χμα) n. `push, prick' (Nic., Epicur., Gal.) with νυγμα-τικός `fit for pricking' (medic.), - τώδης `punctuated' (Arist., medic.); 3. νυγ-μός m. (D. S., Plu.), - μή f. (Plu.) `id.'; 4. νύγ-δην `by pricking' (A.D.). -- Further νυκχάσας = νύξας H. (expressive enlargement with geminate and aspiration; cf. Schwyzer 717 n. 4).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Without exact agreement outside Greek. Formal similarity show some westgerm. and Slav. expressions for `nod etc.', e.g. MLDu. nucken `move the head menacingly', nuck(e) `sudden for- and upward pushing of the head when frightened etc', OCS nukati, njukati `brighten', which are, assuming a velar enlargement, usually conneted with νεύω, Lat. nuō. Also νύσσω is since Brugmann IF 13, 153 ff. seen in this way, which means for νεύω, nuō the assumption of a basic meaning `make a pull, give a thrust'. -- WP. 2, 323f., Pok. 767, W.-Hofmann s. nuō.Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νύσσω
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