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1 Ποσειδῶν
A , IG22.111.67; voc.Πόσειδον S. Fr.371.1
(lyr.), Ar.Ra. 664: [var] contr. (first in Hes. Th. 732 (s.v.l.)) from [dialect] Ep. form (also used by Pi.P.4.204, al., and S.Tr. 502 (lyr.)) [full] Ποσειδάων [pron. full] [ᾱ], άωνος, acc. άωνα, voc.Ποσείδᾱον Il.14.357
, Od.3.55, al.:—[dialect] Ion. [full] Ποσειδέων, έωνος, Hdt.1.148, al.:—[dialect] Aeol. [full] Ποσείδαν Alc.26; Lyr. [full] Ποσειδάν Pi.O.1.26, al., B.16.79; also in Crete, SIG56.15 (v B.C.); at Epidaurus, IG42(1).150 (v B.C.); at Lindus, ib. 12(1).809, etc.; and in Arc., SIG306.57 (Tegea, iv B.C.):—[dialect] Dor. [full] Ποτειδάν (oxyt., Hdn.Gr. 2.916) IG4.210, 219, al. ([place name] Corinth), SIG1000.17 (Cos, i B.C.), etc., prob. in Pi.O.13.5,40, Epich.54, 115, X.HG3.3.2; also [full] Ποτειδάϝων IG4.211, al. ([place name] Corinth), [full] Ποτειδάων GDI5085 (Crete, iii B.C.): also [full] Ποτῐδᾶς or [full] Ποτειδᾶς (codd. vary), gen. ᾶ Eup.140, acc. ᾶν Epich.81, dub. in Ar.Ach. 798 ([place name] Megarian), voc.ᾶSophr.131:—[dialect] Boeot. [full] Ποτειδάων (leg. [full] Ποτῑδάων) Corinn.1, cf. Corinn.Supp.2.26 ( BKT 5(2)p.31); gen. [Ποτ] ῑδάωνος ib.76; but dat.Ποτειδάονι IG7.2465
([place name] Thebes):— Arc. [full] Ποσοιδάν ib.5(2).95 ([place name] Tegea):—[dialect] Lacon. [full] Πὁοιδάν ib.5(1).1228, al.:—[dialect] Aeol. (?) [full] Ποτοίδαν Schwyzer 642 (Pergam., v B.C.):—Poseidon.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > Ποσειδῶν
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2 πούς
πούς, ποδόςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `foot', also metaph. in several. mean. (Il.).Compounds: Very often in compp., e.g. Πόδ-αργος m. n. of a horse (Il.; = Myc. podako n. of an ox [Chantraine Rev. de phil. 89, 13]?), also as appellative `swift- (white-?) footed' (Lyc.; cf. ἀργί-πους s. ἀργός); τρί-πους (- πος) `three-footed', m. `tripod' (Il.; Myc. tiripo; on ποδ- as 2. member extensiv. Sommer Nominalkomp. 28 ff.). With ιο-suffix (hypostases), e.g. ἐμ-πόδ-ιος `at one's feet, in the way, obstuctive' (IA.), ὑπο-πόδ-ιον n. `footstool' (LXX, hell. inscr. a. pap.).Derivatives: 1. Dimin. πόδ-ιον n. (Epich., Hp.; on ὑπο-πόδ-ιον ab.), - άριον n. (com.), - ίσκος m. (Herod.; Myc. tiripodiko). Further subst. 2. ποδ-εῖα n. pl. des. of a footware, approx. `leggings' (Critias, com.); 3. - εών, - εῶνος m. `foot-end of an animal skin, strip, sheet' (Ion., Theoc. a. o.); 4. - ία f. `sail-sheet' (Gloss., Serv. ad Verg.; Scheller Oxytonierung 29 n. 3, 54); 5. - ίδες f. pl. des. of a footware (Poll.); 6. - ότης f. `the property of being provided with feet' (Arist.; artificial formation, s. Scheller l.c.); 7. - ωμα n. `floor, base' (pap.; on the nomin. abl. Chantraine Form. 187). Adj. 8. - ιαῖος `measuring one foot' (IA.); - ικός `concerning a metrical foot' (Aristid. Quint.). Verbs 9. - ίζομαι `to be bound by the feet' (S., X.), also metr. `to divide in feet, to scan' (Eust.), with - ισμός m. `measuring by feet' (sp.), - ίστρα f. `foot-trap' (AP); also w. prefix, e.g. ἐμ-ποδ-ίζω `to bind the feet' (Hdt., A.), but usu. = `to hinder, to obstruct' (Att.) to ἐμποδ-ών (s.v.), ἐμπόδιος (s. ab.); ἀνα-ποδ-ίζω `to make to step back, to call back, to go back' (IA.; hypostasis); 10. - όω, - όομαι with - ωτός `to tighten the sail-sheet, to be provided with feet' (Lyc. a.o.).Etymology: Old des. of the foot, in most languages either unchanged as sonsonantstem or in transformed or. enlarged form maintained: Arm. ot-k` pl. = πόδες, to which acc. a. nom. sg. ot-n, prop. acc. = πόδα, IE *pód-m̥; with lenthened grade Germ., e.g. OWNo. fōtr, OE fēt pl. from PGm. * fōt-iz, IE *pṓd-es; to this with innovation after the u-st. e.g. Goth. fōt-u-s (acc. fōt-u \< IE *pṓd-m̥); with e-grade Lat. pēs, ped-is; with unrecogn. quality Skt. pā́t, acc. pā́d-am, gen. pad-ás; so old qualitative and quantitative ablaut IE *pē̆d-: pō̆d-. The e-grade is retained in Greek in a series of derivations: πέδη, πέζα, πεζός, πέδον, πέδιλον, πεδά (s. vv.); further old zero grade in ἔπιβδα (s. v.). -- Thematic enlargement in Lith. pãd-a-s `sole of the foot, threshing-floor etc.', Slav., e.g. Russ. pód `bottom, ground, plank-bed', perh. also in Hitt. pat(a)- (Luw. pati-) `foot'. Also Toch. A pe, B paiyye `foot' contains an enlargement, perh. a i̯o-suffix like πεζός a. o. (v. Windekens Orbis 10, 383 f.). -- The orig. lengthened grade of the nom. sg. is in Greek found only in Dor. πώς (only H.); for it Dor. πός, Hom. τρί-πος after the oblique forms; Att. etc. πούς like δούς a.o.; not certainly explained (Schwyzer 565 n. 3). -- Details from several languages with lit. in the dict.; cf WP. 2, 23ff., Pok. 790f.Page in Frisk: 2,587-588Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πούς
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3 ποδός
πούς, ποδόςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `foot', also metaph. in several. mean. (Il.).Compounds: Very often in compp., e.g. Πόδ-αργος m. n. of a horse (Il.; = Myc. podako n. of an ox [Chantraine Rev. de phil. 89, 13]?), also as appellative `swift- (white-?) footed' (Lyc.; cf. ἀργί-πους s. ἀργός); τρί-πους (- πος) `three-footed', m. `tripod' (Il.; Myc. tiripo; on ποδ- as 2. member extensiv. Sommer Nominalkomp. 28 ff.). With ιο-suffix (hypostases), e.g. ἐμ-πόδ-ιος `at one's feet, in the way, obstuctive' (IA.), ὑπο-πόδ-ιον n. `footstool' (LXX, hell. inscr. a. pap.).Derivatives: 1. Dimin. πόδ-ιον n. (Epich., Hp.; on ὑπο-πόδ-ιον ab.), - άριον n. (com.), - ίσκος m. (Herod.; Myc. tiripodiko). Further subst. 2. ποδ-εῖα n. pl. des. of a footware, approx. `leggings' (Critias, com.); 3. - εών, - εῶνος m. `foot-end of an animal skin, strip, sheet' (Ion., Theoc. a. o.); 4. - ία f. `sail-sheet' (Gloss., Serv. ad Verg.; Scheller Oxytonierung 29 n. 3, 54); 5. - ίδες f. pl. des. of a footware (Poll.); 6. - ότης f. `the property of being provided with feet' (Arist.; artificial formation, s. Scheller l.c.); 7. - ωμα n. `floor, base' (pap.; on the nomin. abl. Chantraine Form. 187). Adj. 8. - ιαῖος `measuring one foot' (IA.); - ικός `concerning a metrical foot' (Aristid. Quint.). Verbs 9. - ίζομαι `to be bound by the feet' (S., X.), also metr. `to divide in feet, to scan' (Eust.), with - ισμός m. `measuring by feet' (sp.), - ίστρα f. `foot-trap' (AP); also w. prefix, e.g. ἐμ-ποδ-ίζω `to bind the feet' (Hdt., A.), but usu. = `to hinder, to obstruct' (Att.) to ἐμποδ-ών (s.v.), ἐμπόδιος (s. ab.); ἀνα-ποδ-ίζω `to make to step back, to call back, to go back' (IA.; hypostasis); 10. - όω, - όομαι with - ωτός `to tighten the sail-sheet, to be provided with feet' (Lyc. a.o.).Etymology: Old des. of the foot, in most languages either unchanged as sonsonantstem or in transformed or. enlarged form maintained: Arm. ot-k` pl. = πόδες, to which acc. a. nom. sg. ot-n, prop. acc. = πόδα, IE *pód-m̥; with lenthened grade Germ., e.g. OWNo. fōtr, OE fēt pl. from PGm. * fōt-iz, IE *pṓd-es; to this with innovation after the u-st. e.g. Goth. fōt-u-s (acc. fōt-u \< IE *pṓd-m̥); with e-grade Lat. pēs, ped-is; with unrecogn. quality Skt. pā́t, acc. pā́d-am, gen. pad-ás; so old qualitative and quantitative ablaut IE *pē̆d-: pō̆d-. The e-grade is retained in Greek in a series of derivations: πέδη, πέζα, πεζός, πέδον, πέδιλον, πεδά (s. vv.); further old zero grade in ἔπιβδα (s. v.). -- Thematic enlargement in Lith. pãd-a-s `sole of the foot, threshing-floor etc.', Slav., e.g. Russ. pód `bottom, ground, plank-bed', perh. also in Hitt. pat(a)- (Luw. pati-) `foot'. Also Toch. A pe, B paiyye `foot' contains an enlargement, perh. a i̯o-suffix like πεζός a. o. (v. Windekens Orbis 10, 383 f.). -- The orig. lengthened grade of the nom. sg. is in Greek found only in Dor. πώς (only H.); for it Dor. πός, Hom. τρί-πος after the oblique forms; Att. etc. πούς like δούς a.o.; not certainly explained (Schwyzer 565 n. 3). -- Details from several languages with lit. in the dict.; cf WP. 2, 23ff., Pok. 790f.Page in Frisk: 2,587-588Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ποδός
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4 πυλεών
πυλεών, - εῶνοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `wreath' (Alcm., Call. fr., Pamphil. ap. Ath.); πύλιγγες αἱ ἐν τῃ̃ ἕδρᾳ τρίχες. καὶ ἴουλοι, βόστρυχοι, κίκιννοι H.Other forms: H. also πυλών.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: Formations like ποδ-εών, λυχν-εών resp. θώμ-ιγγες, λά-ιγγες a.o. from an unknown basis, approx. *πύλος. With this agree remarkably Skt. pulakāh m. pl. `the hairs (of the body) stand on end (das Sträuben der Körperhaare) ( pula- `id.' Lex.) and pulastí(n)-'with sparse hair (schlichthaarig)', which also presuppose a * pula-. From Iran. one further adduces Kurd. pūr `hair of the head', from Celt. MIr. ulcha `beard', ul-fota `with long beard'. Lidén Streitberg-Festgabe 226f. Older lit. in Bq and WP. 2, 84 (Pok. 850), also in W.-Hofmann s. 2. pĭlus `hair' (not to this). Doubts in Mayrhofer s. pulakāḥ. Untenable on the morphology Specht Ursprung 209 a. 217. -- Againt "hylläic" origin (to φύλλον etc.; Barić) Mayer Glotta 32, 75. -- All rather uncertain. Does the suffix - ιγγες point to a Pre-Greek word?Page in Frisk: 2,623Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πυλεών
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5 συχνός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `numerous, many, much, wide, long' (IA.).Derivatives: Few and rare derivv.: συχν-άκις adv. `frequently, often' (Luc.), - εών, - εῶνος m. `thicket' (Aq.), - άζω = θαμίζω (EM) with - ασμα n. (Poll.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. By Brugmann Sächs. Ges. Ber. 1901, 91ff., Grundr. 2I 311 supposedly as *'compact, solid' connected with σάττω `stuff' (s.v.). Basis *τυκ-σν-ός; on the phonetics Schwyzer 308 a. 327 w. lit.; older lit. also in Bq.Page in Frisk: 2,825Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > συχνός
См. также в других словарях:
-ιώνας — νεοελλ. κατάλ. η οποία προέρχεται από την αρχ. κατάλ. εών, εῶνος με συνίζηση τού ε (πρβλ. καλαμ εών > καλαμ ιώνας) απαντά σε περιληπτικά ουσ. και σε τοπωνύμια (πρβλ. περιστερ ιώνας, Ασπαλαθ ιώνας). Η αρχ. κατάλ. εών περιληπτικών ουσ.… … Dictionary of Greek
παπυλιών — και παπυλεών, εῶνος και αιῶνος, ό, ΜΑ σκηνή, τέντα. [ΕΤΥΜΟΛ. < λατ. papilio, ionis «σκηνή» (πρβλ. γαλλ. pavilion)] … Dictionary of Greek