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1 ἄνεμος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `wind' (Il.).Derivatives: ἠνεμόεις `windy, windreich' (metr. length.); ἀνεμώλιος `idle, useless (Il.), after ἀποφώλιος (Bechtel Lex., Chantr. Form. 43; Risch 113 reminds of ἀπατήλιος); s. on μεταμώνιος. ἀνεμώτας ὄνος ἄφετος, ἱερός, τοῖς ἀνέμοις θυόμενος ἐν Ταραντίνοις H.; ἀνεμῶτις epithet of Athena (who calms the wind; Paus.). - ἀνεμώνη s. v.Etymology: Gr. ἄνεμος agrees with Lat. animus (\< * anamo, cf. Osc. anamúm-); Skt. ánila- m. `wind, air' has - lo-. Further Arm. hoɫm `wind' (with dissim. of n-m) with o-vocalism. In Celtic with tlo-suffix, W. anadl `breath'. - The root * h₂enh₁- in Skt. áni-ti `breathe', Goth. us-anan `expire'. - See ἄσθμα, ἄνται.Page in Frisk: 1,105Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄνεμος
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2 ἀπολαύω
Grammatical information: v.Etymology: Mostly connected with λεία, Dor. λᾱίᾱ (\< *λᾱϜ-ίᾱ) `booty', for which an IE root *lāu̯- `seize, enjoy' is assumed, found in isolated nouns. λᾱϜ- requires * leh₂u-. Lat. lucrum (\< * lu-tlo-m) `gain' could then be * lh₂u-tlom (Schrijver 1991, 240), Germ., Goth. laun n. `reward' could be * leh₂u-no-, but OCS lovъ `catch, chase', loviti `catch, chase' would require * lh₂eu-, which is an improbable formation. (Not to Skt. lotra-, lota- `booty' (lex.): from MInd. loptra-, Wackernagel Ai. Gramm. 1, 91). But - λαϜ could be *lh₂u̯-, but not *leh₂u̯- (\> *λᾱϜ)-), and in both cases the F would disappear; * leh₂u-s- would give *λαυσ-. Not to λᾱρός. S. λεία.Page in Frisk: 1,123-124Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀπολαύω
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3 ἀρόω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `plough, plant' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. ἀρόσαιDialectal forms: Myc. aroura.Derivatives: ἀροτήρ m. (Il.); ἄροτος m. `ploughing, (ploughed) land, sowing-land' (Il.); *ἀρατύς in the month name Άράτυος - ἄροτρον `plow' (Il.) - ἄρουρα `sowing-land' (Il.).Etymology: Primary verb from * h₂erh₃-; the - h₃- gave - ο-, the -ᾰ in the Doric forms ἄρατρον, Άράτυος, fut. Herakl. ἀράσαντι, Ther. Rhod. ἐνάρατον comes from a verb ἀράω. - Lat. arāre, i̯-presents MIr. airim, Goth. arjan, Lith. ariù (inf. árti), OCS. orjǫ (inf. orati). With ἄροτρον agree: Arm. arawr, Lat. arātrum (with secondary ā), MIr. arathar, ONo. arðr; other formations are: Lith. árklas, OCS ralo (* arH-tlo-, resp. - dhlo); Toch. AB āre (\< * h₂erh₃-o- or * h₂erh₃-es-?). ἄρουρα is a derivation with -ι̯α from a verbal noun *ἄρο-Ϝαρ `plowing'. With *ἄροϜαρ, an old r\/n-stem (*h₂erh₃-ur̥, gen. * h₂rh₃-uen-s, cf. MIr. arbor (\< *aru̯r̥), gen. (OIr.) arbe (\< *aru̯ens) `corn'; Lat. arvus (\< * h₂erh₃-uo-?).Page in Frisk: 1,147-148Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀρόω
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4 βακτηρία
βακτηρία, βάκτρονGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `staff, stick, scepter (as symbol of judges)' (Ar.).Other forms: Also βακτήριον (Ar.), βακτηρίδιον (H.), βακτηρίς, - ίδος f. (Achae. [?]). Cf. βάκτρον n. `stick, cudgel' (A.).Dialectal forms: Cypr. pakara LSJ Supp.Derivatives: βακτρεύω `prop' (arg. metr. in S. OC), βάκτρευμα (E.; βακτηρεύω (Suid.) influenced by βακτηρία.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur.Etymology: βακτηρία looks like an abstract formation from *βακτήρ, with βάκτρον like ἀροτήρ beside ἄροτρον. One compares βάκται ἰσχυροί H. (doubtful) and βακόν (improbable). - To Lat. baculum `staff, stick', from * bak-tlo-m (but s. Pisani REIE 3, 53); from baculum again βάκλον `stick, cudgel' (Aesop.); also OIr. bacc `hook, crook' etc. Pok. 93 gives other, quite doubtful, forms. A loanword; from Europe?Page in Frisk: 1,211-212Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βακτηρία
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5 βάκτρον (1)
βακτηρία, βάκτρονGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `staff, stick, scepter (as symbol of judges)' (Ar.).Other forms: Also βακτήριον (Ar.), βακτηρίδιον (H.), βακτηρίς, - ίδος f. (Achae. [?]). Cf. βάκτρον n. `stick, cudgel' (A.).Dialectal forms: Cypr. pakara LSJ Supp.Derivatives: βακτρεύω `prop' (arg. metr. in S. OC), βάκτρευμα (E.; βακτηρεύω (Suid.) influenced by βακτηρία.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur.Etymology: βακτηρία looks like an abstract formation from *βακτήρ, with βάκτρον like ἀροτήρ beside ἄροτρον. One compares βάκται ἰσχυροί H. (doubtful) and βακόν (improbable). - To Lat. baculum `staff, stick', from * bak-tlo-m (but s. Pisani REIE 3, 53); from baculum again βάκλον `stick, cudgel' (Aesop.); also OIr. bacc `hook, crook' etc. Pok. 93 gives other, quite doubtful, forms. A loanword; from Europe?Page in Frisk: 1,211-212Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βάκτρον (1)
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6 ἠθέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `sift, strain' (IA.).Derivatives: ἠθμός (hεθμος Sigeion VIa, Hdn.) `strainer' (Att.) with ἠθμάριον διυλιστήριον H., διηθμεύοντες s. v. διυλίζοντες; ( δι-)ἤθησις `straining' (Arist.), ( ἀπ-, δι-, παρ-)ἤθημα `what has been strained' (medic.), ἠθήνιον ἠθάνιον, ἠθμός H.; ἠθητήρ (Marc. Sid.), - τήριον (Str.) `strain'; ἠθητός `strained' (pap. IIIa), ἠθητικός `fit for straining' (Thphr.).Etymology: If we may from the aor. ptc. ἤσας and the noun ἠθμός conclude to a present *ἤθω, we have ἠθέω beside it as στερέω beside στέρομαι etc. (Schwyzer 721). If we separate the θ as in ἀλή-θω (: ἀλέ-ω), πλή-θω (: πλῆ-το) a. o. (Schwyzer 703; also ἠ-θμός like ῥυ-θμός etc.?), we can connect the OCS yot-present pro-sějǫ, inf. -sějati `strain', from which Lith. sijóju, -ti `id.' cannot be separated, but an ablaut sē(i)-: sī- (Pok. 889) is impossible. One further compares ONord. sāld = Welsh hidl `id.', both from IE * sē-tlo-. - Cf. also σήθω with the same meaning.Page in Frisk: 1,624Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἠθέω
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7 ὄχος
Grammatical information: m. (Pi. O. 6, 24 [ ὄκχος, s.u.], Hdt., A. usw.),Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1118] *u̯eǵʰ- `move, drive'Etymology: Old verbal noun to Ϝέχω `carry somewhere' (s. 2. ἔχω), ὀχέομαι `drive', so for *Ϝόχος (on the loss of the Ϝ- in Hom. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 125) and identical wit Slav., e.g. OCS vozъ m. `wagon', IE *u̯óǵho-s. The in an σ-stem epected ε-vowel is preserved in ἔχεσφι ἅρμασιν H.; ὄχεα after ὄχος, ὀχέομαι (cf. on ὄρος). With *Ϝέχος (and [F] όχεα) agrees (except for the vowel length) Skt. vā́has- n. `vessel' (metaph. for the song of praise); beside vāhá- m. `draught-animal', also `vessel', Av. vāza- m. `draught-animal' (: ὄχο-ς). A n-derivation with the same meaning was formed in the West, Celt., e.g. OIr. fēn `kind of wagon' (IE *u̯egh-no-), Germ. e.g. OHG wagan ' Wagen' (IE *u̯oǵh-no-). Diff. again Lat. vehi-culum n. `vessel', Skt. vahi-tra- n. `ship' with tlo-suffix; thus ὄχε-τλα ὀχήματα H., which may have dissimilated - θλα (Schwyzer 533). The geminate in ὄκχος, ὀκχέω (Pi.) is unexplained; hypotheses in Schwyzer 717 n. 4 and Meillet BSL 26, 15 f. -- Further forms w. rich lit. WP. 1, 249f., Pok. 1118ff., W.-Hofmann s. vehō, Fraenkel s. vèžti; see also Porzig Gliederung 120, 158 a. 170 (cf. the critical remarks by Humbach Gnomon 30, 622). -- Cf. ὀχέω, ὄχλος, γαιάοχος.Page in Frisk: 2,457-458Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄχος
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8 παῖς
παῖς, παιδόςGrammatical information: m. f.Meaning: `child, boy, son, slave, servant', more rarely `girl, daughter' (Il.).Other forms: (ep. Lesb. Boeot. also πάϊς).Compounds: Many compp., e.g. παιδ-αγωγός m. "child guide", `attendant of children, schoolteacher', ἄ-παις `childless' (IA.).Derivatives: A. Subst. Several hypocoristic diminutives, which partly replaced the base word. 1. παιδ-ίον n. (IA.) with - ιότης f. `childhood' (Aq.), - ιώδης `childish' (D.H.). 2. παιδ-ίσκος m., more usu. - ίσκη f. (Att.) with - ισκι-ωρός m. (Sparta) prop. "guard of girls" ?, (s Leumann Hom. Wörter 224, 2d), - ισκάριον n. (hell.), - ισκεῖος (IVa), - ισκεῖον n. `brothel' (Ath.); to παιδίσκη, - ος against παῖς, κόρη, υἱός etc. Wackernagel Glotta 2, 6ff. (= Kl. Schr. 2, 838ff.), 130 a. 315, Immisch ibd. 218f., Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 210 n. 3, Locker Glotta 22, 52f., Le Roy BCH 85, 226f. 3. παιδ-άριον n. (Att.) with - αρίσκος (Hld.), - αρίδιον (gloss.), - αριήματα παιδάρια H., - αρίων H. s. προυνικοί, - αριώδης `childish' (Pl., Arist. etc.), - αρικός `belonging to slaves' (pap. VIp), - αριεύομαι `to behave childishly' (Aristox.). 4. πάϊλλος m. `male child' (Tanagra; on - ιλλος Schwyzer 485; after v. Blumenthal 43 from *παιδ-λος). 5. Here παιδ-ία f. `childhood' (Hp.), - ιά f. `child's play, pleasantry, pastime' (Att.; cf. Koller Mus. Helv. 13, 123 f.); on - ία, - ιά, which cannot always be distinguished, Scheller Oxytonierung 78 ff.; - ιώδης `playful' (Ion Hist., Arist.). 6. παίγνιον, - ίη s. below on παίζω. B. Adj. 1. παιδ-νός `in infancy, infantile' (ep. Od.). 2. παίδ-ειος, - εῖος, -ήϊος `childlike' (Pi., trag., Pl.); τὰ -ήϊα name of a feast (Delph. V--IVa). 3. παιδ-ικός `concerning the child, childlike'; τὰ παιδικά `dear' (B., Att.; Chantraine Études 115 etc.). 4. παιδοῦς, - οῦσσα `having many children, pregnant' (Call., Hp.). C. Verbs. 1. παίζω, aor. παῖσαι, analog. also παῖξαι (Crates. Com., Ctes., hell.), also with ἐν- ( ἐμπαίκ-της, - γ-μός, - γ-μονή LXX, NT), κατα-, συν- a.o., `to behave like a child, to play, to jest' (Od.; on the meaning and use Meerwaldt Mnem. 56, 159 ff.) with παῖγ-μα n. `play, jest' (E. a.o.) and φιλο-παίγμων `fond of play' (ψ 134), - μοσύναι pl. `id.' (Stesich.); also παιγ-νίη f. `play' (Hdt.) with - νιήμων `playful' (Hdt., cf. Schwyzer 522), - νιον (Att.), - χ-νιον (Erinna, Theoc. in Pap. Antin., Call.) n. `play, jest'; prob. orig. for παιδ-ν- with - γν- from - δν-, but early connected with παίζω (s. Schwyzer 208, Lejeune Traité de phon. 68 n. 1, Scheller Oxyton. 80; on παίχνιον Scheidweiler Phil. 100, 43f.); ( συμ-)παίκ-της m. `player, teammate, playfellow' (AP). - τρια f. (Ant. Lib.), besides ( συμ-)παίσ-της m. (Pl. Min., pap.), - τικός `jocular' (Clearch.), - τρη f. `playground' (Herod.); συμπαίκ-τωρ, - παίσ-τωρ m. (X.,AP). 2. παιδ-εύω `to raise, to breed, to educate', also w. ἐκ-, συν- a.o. (IA.), with παιδ-εία f. `upbringing, education, breeding' (A., Democr., Att.; also `childhood, youth', s. Scheller 78 n. 1), - ευσις f. `(system of) upbringing, education' (Pi., trag., Pl.; Holt 129), - ευμα n. `subject, outcome of the upbringing, pupil' (Att.; on the meaning Kerényi Paideuma 1, 157 f., Röttger Substantivbild. 20 f.), - ευτής m. `instructor, teacher' (Pl.), - ευτικός `belonging to the upbringing' (Pl. etc.), - ευτήριον n. `school' (D. S., Str.). 3. *παιδ-όω in παίδ-ωσις f. `adoption' (Elis), s. Bechtel Gött. Nachr. 1920, 248.Etymology: From the disyll. πάϊς (on Hom. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1,29) appears an orig. *παϜ-ι-δ-; on the (dissimilatory?) loss of the F Schwyzer 260 w. lit., on the formation 465 a. 578. The unenlarged stem is still seen in Att. παῦς (vase inscr.) and in the Cypr. gen. Φιλό-παϜ-ος; uncertain Cypr. διπας, = δί-παις ? A parallel enlargement shows παῦρος; s.v. w. further combinations. Outside Greek we can compare first the first element in Lat. pau-per, if from *pau̯(o)- par-o-s `acquiring little' (basis doubted; s. W.-Hofmann s.v.); IE *pau̯o- is supposed also in Germ., e.g. Goth. faw-ai pl. `few'. -- Beside pau- (IE *ph₂u̯-?) stands perh. with lengthened grade πῶλος (s.v.) [hardly possible]; with zero grade Lat. puer (innovation after gener, socer; Risch Μνήμης χάριν 2, 109 ff.), thus, with old tlo-suffix, Ital., e.g. Osc. puklum `filium', Skt. putrá-, Av. puʮra-'son'. -- Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 75f. (partly dated), Pok. 842 f., W.-Hofmann s. puer, pullus and pauper, Mayrhofer s. putráḥ; older lit. also in Bq.Page in Frisk: 2,462-463Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > παῖς
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9 παιδός
παῖς, παιδόςGrammatical information: m. f.Meaning: `child, boy, son, slave, servant', more rarely `girl, daughter' (Il.).Other forms: (ep. Lesb. Boeot. also πάϊς).Compounds: Many compp., e.g. παιδ-αγωγός m. "child guide", `attendant of children, schoolteacher', ἄ-παις `childless' (IA.).Derivatives: A. Subst. Several hypocoristic diminutives, which partly replaced the base word. 1. παιδ-ίον n. (IA.) with - ιότης f. `childhood' (Aq.), - ιώδης `childish' (D.H.). 2. παιδ-ίσκος m., more usu. - ίσκη f. (Att.) with - ισκι-ωρός m. (Sparta) prop. "guard of girls" ?, (s Leumann Hom. Wörter 224, 2d), - ισκάριον n. (hell.), - ισκεῖος (IVa), - ισκεῖον n. `brothel' (Ath.); to παιδίσκη, - ος against παῖς, κόρη, υἱός etc. Wackernagel Glotta 2, 6ff. (= Kl. Schr. 2, 838ff.), 130 a. 315, Immisch ibd. 218f., Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 210 n. 3, Locker Glotta 22, 52f., Le Roy BCH 85, 226f. 3. παιδ-άριον n. (Att.) with - αρίσκος (Hld.), - αρίδιον (gloss.), - αριήματα παιδάρια H., - αρίων H. s. προυνικοί, - αριώδης `childish' (Pl., Arist. etc.), - αρικός `belonging to slaves' (pap. VIp), - αριεύομαι `to behave childishly' (Aristox.). 4. πάϊλλος m. `male child' (Tanagra; on - ιλλος Schwyzer 485; after v. Blumenthal 43 from *παιδ-λος). 5. Here παιδ-ία f. `childhood' (Hp.), - ιά f. `child's play, pleasantry, pastime' (Att.; cf. Koller Mus. Helv. 13, 123 f.); on - ία, - ιά, which cannot always be distinguished, Scheller Oxytonierung 78 ff.; - ιώδης `playful' (Ion Hist., Arist.). 6. παίγνιον, - ίη s. below on παίζω. B. Adj. 1. παιδ-νός `in infancy, infantile' (ep. Od.). 2. παίδ-ειος, - εῖος, -ήϊος `childlike' (Pi., trag., Pl.); τὰ -ήϊα name of a feast (Delph. V--IVa). 3. παιδ-ικός `concerning the child, childlike'; τὰ παιδικά `dear' (B., Att.; Chantraine Études 115 etc.). 4. παιδοῦς, - οῦσσα `having many children, pregnant' (Call., Hp.). C. Verbs. 1. παίζω, aor. παῖσαι, analog. also παῖξαι (Crates. Com., Ctes., hell.), also with ἐν- ( ἐμπαίκ-της, - γ-μός, - γ-μονή LXX, NT), κατα-, συν- a.o., `to behave like a child, to play, to jest' (Od.; on the meaning and use Meerwaldt Mnem. 56, 159 ff.) with παῖγ-μα n. `play, jest' (E. a.o.) and φιλο-παίγμων `fond of play' (ψ 134), - μοσύναι pl. `id.' (Stesich.); also παιγ-νίη f. `play' (Hdt.) with - νιήμων `playful' (Hdt., cf. Schwyzer 522), - νιον (Att.), - χ-νιον (Erinna, Theoc. in Pap. Antin., Call.) n. `play, jest'; prob. orig. for παιδ-ν- with - γν- from - δν-, but early connected with παίζω (s. Schwyzer 208, Lejeune Traité de phon. 68 n. 1, Scheller Oxyton. 80; on παίχνιον Scheidweiler Phil. 100, 43f.); ( συμ-)παίκ-της m. `player, teammate, playfellow' (AP). - τρια f. (Ant. Lib.), besides ( συμ-)παίσ-της m. (Pl. Min., pap.), - τικός `jocular' (Clearch.), - τρη f. `playground' (Herod.); συμπαίκ-τωρ, - παίσ-τωρ m. (X.,AP). 2. παιδ-εύω `to raise, to breed, to educate', also w. ἐκ-, συν- a.o. (IA.), with παιδ-εία f. `upbringing, education, breeding' (A., Democr., Att.; also `childhood, youth', s. Scheller 78 n. 1), - ευσις f. `(system of) upbringing, education' (Pi., trag., Pl.; Holt 129), - ευμα n. `subject, outcome of the upbringing, pupil' (Att.; on the meaning Kerényi Paideuma 1, 157 f., Röttger Substantivbild. 20 f.), - ευτής m. `instructor, teacher' (Pl.), - ευτικός `belonging to the upbringing' (Pl. etc.), - ευτήριον n. `school' (D. S., Str.). 3. *παιδ-όω in παίδ-ωσις f. `adoption' (Elis), s. Bechtel Gött. Nachr. 1920, 248.Etymology: From the disyll. πάϊς (on Hom. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1,29) appears an orig. *παϜ-ι-δ-; on the (dissimilatory?) loss of the F Schwyzer 260 w. lit., on the formation 465 a. 578. The unenlarged stem is still seen in Att. παῦς (vase inscr.) and in the Cypr. gen. Φιλό-παϜ-ος; uncertain Cypr. διπας, = δί-παις ? A parallel enlargement shows παῦρος; s.v. w. further combinations. Outside Greek we can compare first the first element in Lat. pau-per, if from *pau̯(o)- par-o-s `acquiring little' (basis doubted; s. W.-Hofmann s.v.); IE *pau̯o- is supposed also in Germ., e.g. Goth. faw-ai pl. `few'. -- Beside pau- (IE *ph₂u̯-?) stands perh. with lengthened grade πῶλος (s.v.) [hardly possible]; with zero grade Lat. puer (innovation after gener, socer; Risch Μνήμης χάριν 2, 109 ff.), thus, with old tlo-suffix, Ital., e.g. Osc. puklum `filium', Skt. putrá-, Av. puʮra-'son'. -- Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 75f. (partly dated), Pok. 842 f., W.-Hofmann s. puer, pullus and pauper, Mayrhofer s. putráḥ; older lit. also in Bq.Page in Frisk: 2,462-463Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > παιδός
См. также в других словарях:
tlo — tlȍ sr <G tlȁ, N mn tlȁ, G tálā, D L I tlȉma> DEFINICIJA 1. površina zemljišta ili druga osnovna površina (po kojoj se hoda, na kojoj se što podiže i sl.) [čvrsto tlo; sklisko tlo; na hrvatskom tlu; na rodnom tlu] 2. geol. površinski sloj… … Hrvatski jezični portal
tło — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. n I, Mc. tle; lm D. teł, zwykle w lp {{/stl 8}}{{stl 20}} {{/stl 20}}{{stl 12}}1. {{/stl 12}}{{stl 7}} dalszy plan przestrzeni, przed którym umieszczone są przedmioty znajdujące się bliżej osoby obserwującej lub dalszy… … Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień
TLO — can also mean Technology Licensing Office, a branch of many universities.:T. Lo is also the nickname of SmackDown! general manager Theodore Long:T.L.O. also refers to an unnamed high school student involved in the U.S. Supreme Court case New… … Wikipedia
TLO — abbr. total loss only. * * * … Universalium
tło — n III, Ms. tle; lm D. teł 1. «dalszy plan w przestrzeni, przed którym występują przedmioty znajdujące się bliżej osoby obserwującej; część obrazu na dalszym planie» Tłem obrazu były pola i daleki las. przen. Wyglądała korzystnie na tle innych… … Słownik języka polskiego
tlò — tlà s (ȍ ȁ) knjiž. tla: nizka soba z ilovnatim tlom / to je ugodno tlo za rastline; peščeno, skalnato tlo … Slovar slovenskega knjižnega jezika
TLO — Texas Legislature Online (Governmental » State & Local) * Technology Licensing Organization (Computing » Software) * Technology Licensing Office (Business » General) * Terminal Learning Objective (Academic & Science » Universities) * Terminal… … Abbreviations dictionary
tlȍ — tl|ȍ sr 〈G tlȁ, N mn tlȁ, G tálā, D L I tlı̏ma〉 1. {{001f}}površina zemljišta ili druga osnovna površina (po kojoj se hoda, na kojoj se što podiže i sl.) [čvrsto ∼o; sklisko ∼o; na hrvatskom ∼u; na rodnom ∼u]; tle 2. {{001f}}geol. površinski… … Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika
tlo — ISO 639 3 Code of Language ISO 639 2/B Code : ISO 639 2/T Code : ISO 639 1 Code : Scope : Individual Language Type : Living Language Name : Talodi … Names of Languages ISO 639-3
tło — 1. Być, pozostawać w tle «być mało znaczącym, mało widocznym»: Ojciec pozostawał często w tle – kochany i kochający, dobry i uroczy, ale nie główny sprawca wszystkiego, co się działo. D. Koral, Wydziedziczeni. 2. Na tle czegoś, na jakimś tle «z… … Słownik frazeologiczny
TLO — abbr. Terminal Learning Objective … Dictionary of abbreviations