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1 κεκλήγοντες
κλάζωmake a sharp piercing sound: pres part act masc nom /voc pl (epic) -
2 κλάζω
A (lyr.): [tense] aor.1ἔκλαγξα Il.1.46
, A. Ag. 201 (lyr.): [tense] aor.2ἔκλᾰγον h.Pan.14
, B.16.127, Theoc.17.71, etc.: [tense] pf.κέκλαγγα X.Cyn.3.9
, 6.23; subj. ; [dialect] Dor.κέκλᾱγα Alcm.7
; part. κεκληγώς, pl.κεκλήγοντες Il.17.756
, - ῶτες v.l.ib. 16.430,κεκλαγώς Plu.Tim.26
:—[voice] Pass., [tense] fut.κεκλάγξομαι Ar.V. 930
:— make a sharp piercing sound:1 of birds, scream, οὐκ ἴδον.., ἀλλὰ κλάγξαντος (sc. ἐρῳδιοῦ)ἄκουσαν Il.10.276
; of starlings and daws,οὖλον κεκλήγοντες 17.756
, etc.;γεράνου φωνὴν ἐνιαύσια κεκληγυίης Hes.Op. 449
; of the eagle, Il.12.207, S.Ant. 112 (lyr.), cf. OT 966, etc.2 of dogs, bark, bay,οἱ μὲν κεκλήγοντες ἐπέδραμον Od. 14.30
, cf. Ar.V. 929, X.ll.cc., etc.3 of things, as of arrows in the quiver, clash, rattle,ἔκλαγξαν δ ἄρ' ὀϊστοί Il.1.46
; of the wind, whistle,αἶψα γὰρ ἦλθε κεκληγὼς Ζέφυρος Od.12.408
; of wheels, creak, A. Th. 205 (lyr.): c.acc. cogn., κλάζουσι κώδωνες φόβον ring forth terror, ib. 386; τί νέον ἔκλαγε σάλπιγξ.. ἀοιδάν; B.17.3; of the sea, roar,ἔκλαγεν δὲ πόντος Id.16.127
; of the musician, (lyr.); of Pan on his pipes, h.Pan.14; κλάζεις μέλισμα λύρας (of the τέττιξ) AP7.196 (Mel.).4 of men, shout, scream,ὀξέα κεκληγώς Il.2.222
, 17.88: c. acc. cogn., shout aloud, ring forth,κλάζοντες Ἄρη A.Ag.48
(anap.); (lyr.); Ζεὺς ἔκλαγξε βροντάν pealed forth thunder, Pi.P.4.23; alsoἔκλαγξε κέαρ ὀλοαῖσι στοναχαῖς Id.Pae.8.20
.5 less freq. of articulate sound, ἄλλο μῆχαρ.. μάντις ἔκλαγξεν shrieked forth another remedy, A.Ag. 201 (lyr.); Ζῆνα.. ἐπινίκια κλάζων sounding loudly the song of victory in honour of Z., ib. 174 (lyr.). -
3 οὖλος
------------------------------------A woolly, of thick, fleecy wool,τάπητες Il.16.224
;χλαῖναι Od.4.50
, 299, etc.;χλανίδες Hermipp.47.1
(anap.);οὔλη λάχνη Il.10.134
;χιτὼν οὔλων ἐρίων Ar.Ra. 1067
;εἱμάτιον IG5(1).1390.21
(Andania, i B. C.); οὖλαι κόμαι crisp, close-curling hair, Od.6.231, 23.158, cf. Luc.Im.5;βόστρυχος οὖλος AP6.201
(Marc. Arg.); οὐλότατον τρίχωμα, of the crisp, woolly hair of the negro, Hdt.7.70; also of persons,οὖλος ἐθείραις Ἕσπερος Call.Del. 302
; σελίνων οὐλοτέρη, of a girl, AP5.120 (Phld.);τοῖς τριχώμασιν οὖλοι D.S.3.8
; of sheep, ;ὥσπερ σέλινον οὖλα τὰ σκέλη φορεῖν Com.Adesp. 208
.2 of plants, twisted, twined, curly, crinkled,ἴων κορωνίδες οὖλαι Stesich.29
; οὔλης.. σκολιὸν πλέγμα.,. ἕλικος, of the vine, Simon.183. 2;σέλινον Hp.Mul.2.181
;φύλλον Thphr.HP9.4.3
;θρίδακες AP9.412
(Phld.): neut. pl. as Adv., of smoke, curling,οὖλα κυλινδόμενον Call. Fr.1.41P.
3 of wood, compact, tough, close-grained, Thphr.HP3.11.1,4.2.7, 5.3.7, Ph.Bel.66.51;ξύλα οὔλας ἔχοντα συστροφάς Thphr. HP5.5.1
; δένδρον -ότερον τῇ ὄψει ib.3.9.6; οὖ. ὄστρακον tough, Babr. 115.10: hence metaph., like πυκνός, of speech, compact, concise, ; of dancing, rapid, in quick tempo,πόδεσσι οὖλα κατεκροτάλιζον Call.Dian. 247
, cf. Jou.52; of rowing, Id.Epigr.6.5; and so perh. οὖλον κεκλήγοντες uttering quick (frequent) cries, Il.17.756, 759, cf. Sch. T and Eust.ad loc.; v. οὖλος (C). (Perh. cogn. with εἴλλω 'pack tightly together'.)------------------------------------A = ὀλοός, destructive, baneful, cruel, epith. of Ares, Il.5.461, 717; of Achilles, 21.536; ; ;οὖλος Ὄνειρος Il.2.6
,8; cruel,Ἔρως A.R.3.297
, 1078.2 οὖλον κεκλήγοντες, of the death-cry of birds flying from the hawk, Il. 17.756, 759 (but v. οὖλος (B) 3 fin.); so laterοὖλον γεράνων νέφος AP 7.543
; οὖλον ἀείδειν ib.27 (Antip. Sid.);κνυζηθμὸν κυνὸς οὖλον Nic. Th. 671
.------------------------------------οὖλος (D), ὁ,A corn-sheaf, = ἴουλος 11 (q.v.), Hsch.: hence, a cry or song in honour of Demeter, who was herself from this word named [full] Οὐλώ, Semus 19, Did. ap. Sch.A.R.1.972. -
4 ἐπιτρέχω
A- δρᾰμοῦμαι X.Cyn.9.6
, D.17.19 : [tense] aor. 2- έδρᾰμον Il. 4.524
, al. (rarely [tense] aor. I- έθρεξα 13.409
): [tense] pf.- δεδράμηκα X.Oec.15.6
; poet.- δέδρομα Od.
, etc. (v. infr. 11.2):—[voice] Pass., [tense] pf.- δεδράμημαι X.Oec.15.1
: —run upon or at, mostly for the purpose of attack, abs.,ὁ δ' ἐπέδραμεν Il.4.524
, cf. 18.527 ; of dogs,οἱ μὲν κεκλήγοντες ἐπέδραμον Od.14.30
; make an assault upon,τινί Th.4.32
, X.Cyn.9.6,ἐπί τινα Id.HG5.4.51
.b approach, εἰς ἃς (sc. μοίρας)ἐπιτρέχει ἡ Σελήνη, τούτοις συνάπτει Serapio
in Cat.Cod.Astr.8(4).228.2 run after, be eager or greedy,οὔτι ἐπιδραμὼν πάντα τὰ διδόμενα ἐδέκετο Hdt.3.135
; in haste,Pl.
Lg. 799c ; : c. dat., to be greedy for, App.Pun.94.II run over a space, τόσσον ἐπεδραμέτην, of horses, Il.23.433, cf. 418, 447 ; run over or graze the surface, : c. dat.,ἀσταχύεσσιν Call.Aet.3.1.46
.2 to be spread over,λευκὴ δ' ἐπιδέδρομεν αἴγλη Od.6.45
;κακὴ δ' ἐπιδέδρομεν ἀχλύς 20.357
: c. dat.,τῷ..ἐπιδέδρομεν ὀδμή Hermipp.82.3
(hex.);ἐπιδέδρομε νυκτὶ φέγγος A.R.2.670
;οἱ ἔρευθος ἐπιτρέχει Arat.834
, cf. Opp.C.3.94;ἐξανθήματα ἐ. τοῖς σώμασιν Plu.2.671a
; ὄρεσι..ἀφ' ἡλίου μορφαὶ ἐ. ib.934f ;σημείων τῷ νεκρῷ μοχθηρῶν ἐπιδραμ. Id.TG13
, etc.: c. acc., οἶδμα ὅταν ἔρεβος ὕφαλον ἐπιδράμῃ when the billow runs over the darkness of the deep, S. Ant. 588(lyr.); τὴν χώραν, of lava, Arist. Mir. 840a5;ψυχὴν ἐπιδέδρομε λήθη A.R.1.645
; Πώμην ἐπέδραμε λόγος c. acc. et inf., Plu.Aem. 25.3 of a musician, run over, play upon,ἐ. καλάμους χείλεσι Longus 1.24
;τὴν σύριγγα τῇ γλώττῃ Alciphr.3.12
;τῷ πλήκτρῳ τὰς χορδάς Ath.4.139e
.4 overrun, as an army does a country,ἐ. πεδίον πᾶν Hdt.1.161
;τὰς κώμας πάσας Id.8.23
; τὴν χώρην πᾶσαν ib. 32 ;τὰ ἔξω Th.4.104
.5 run over, treat lightly or summarily of, X.Oec.25.1 ([voice] Pass.) ; τῷ λόγῳ ib.6 ;εὐπόρως ἐ. περί τινος Isoc.Ep.9.6
;μικρὰ περὶ αὐτῶν D.17.19
;τὰς ἀπορίας ἐ. Arist.Pol. 1286a7
;Ἡροδότου.. ἡ λέξις..ῥᾳδίως ἐπιτρέχουσα τοῖς πράγμασιν Plu.2.854e
; ἐ. διὰ βραχυτάτων ib.119e ;τὸ ἐπιτρέχον σχῆμα Hermog.Id.1.11
.6 of a country, spread, extend,ἐπὶ.. D.P.809
; μέσην ἐ. νῆσον ib. 1092.III run close after,ἅρματα..ἵπποις ὠκυπόδεσσιν ἐπέδραμον Il.23.504
; ἐ. τὰ ἴχνη, of hounds, X.Cyn.3.6 : c. dat., follow, Arat.316 ; ἐ. τοῖς θήλεσιν, of the male, Plu.2.965e.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐπιτρέχω
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5 κλάζω
κλάζω, aor. ἔκλαγξα, perf. part., w. pres. signif., κεκληγώς, pl. κεκλήγοντες: scream, properly of birds, Il. 16.429; then of animals, Od. 14.30; applied also to warriors and to men under other circumstances, Il. 5.591, Od. 12.256, Il. 2.222; to things, as arrows, the wind, etc., Il. 1.46, Il. 17.88, Od. 12.408. The verb may be translated according to the context in the several passages, but its original and proper application shows its force. Cf. κλαγγή.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > κλάζω
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6 κλαγγή
Grammatical information: f.Other forms: Dat. also κλαγγ-ί (Ibyc. 56; s. below)Derivatives: κλαγγηδόν `with crying' (Β 463; Haas Μνήμης χάριν 1, 133), κλαγγώδης `full of sound, shrill' (Hp., Gal.). Besides κλάζω, also with prefix, e. g. ἀνα-, ἐκ-, aor. κλάγξαι `sound, resound, cry' (Il.), also κλαγεῖν (B. 16, 127, h. Hom. 19, 14, E. u. a.), fut. κλάγξω (A.), perf. κεκλήγοντες (Aeolising) and κεκληγώς, - ῶτες (Hom.; Schwyzer 540 n. 4, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 430f.), κέκλᾱγα (Alcm. 7), κέκλαγγα (Ar., X.), perfect future κεκλάγξομαι (Ar.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Isolated presents: κλαγγαίνω (A. Eu. 131), - άνω (S.), - έω (Theoc. Ep. 6, 5), - άζω (Poll., Porph.). - To κλαγεῖν: κλαγερός `crying' (AP). As yot-present κλάζω may come from *κλάγγ-ι̯ω from a root noun κλάγγ-, which is seen in κλαγγ-ί (or innovation?); but it could also be a primary nasal present, with - ζω from the sound-verbs ( ὀλολύζω, οἰμώζω a. o.; cf. Schwyzer 716). The non-present forms κλάγξαι, κλάγξω, κέκλαγγα are anyhow innovations. In function κλαγγ-ή is a verbal noun (cf. Porzig Satzinhalte 11f.). In κλαγεῖν and κέκληγα original primary nasalless forms may have been preserved, but analogical innovation with loss of the nsal is not impossible (Leumann Celtica 3, 248). - A direct comparison (except for - ζω) is Lat. clangō `cry' (almost only present), with which OIc. hlakka `cry' (with assimilation nk \> kk) may agree. The words belong to a widespread group of soundword (but καλεῖν and κέλαδος do not belong here; cf. the material in Bq, Pok. 599f., W.-Hofmann s. clangō. Note that an IE * klag- is impossible (* klh₂g- wouldhave given in Greek *κλᾱγ-; a form * klh₂eng- gives *καλαγγ-). Schwyzer 692 assumes expressive nasalization, but this does not help as *κλαγ- cannot be generated. Cf. Fur. 274. Is the basic form Pre-Greek?See also: - S. auch κλώζω.Page in Frisk: 1,863-864Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλαγγή
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7 οὖλος 3
οὖλος 3.Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `baneful' adjunct of Ares and Achilles, also of Ὄνειρος (Il.; cf. below); of Eros (A. R.), also of χεῖμα (Bion), of στόμιον (Nic.); prob. also in οὖλον κεκλήγοντες (P 756, 759; after the sch. and McKenzie ClassQuart. 21, 206 `thick, loud, violent'; to 2.).Derivatives: With ιο-sufflx in the same meaning οὔλιος of ἀστήρ (Λ 62), of Ares a.o. (Hes. Sc., Pi., S.); also of Apollon a. Artemis (Delos, Miletos), prob. orig. as bringer of pest and death ( = λοίμιος), later connected with Apollon as healing god and connected with ὅλος (whence Άπ. Ὄλιος in Lindos; cf. on ὅλος). (On οὔλαφος s.v.)Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Mostly derived from ὄλλυμι, but in detail unclear; perh. from *ὄλ-Ϝος (prop. subst.?), as ὀλοός \< *ὀλε-Ϝός (Bechtel Lex. with Fick); other attempts by Brugmann IF 11, 266 ff. (s. Bq); so the etym. rests uncertain. -- As adjunct of Ὄνειρος οὖλος is by Fick and Bechtel Lex. 259 f. taken as `deceiving' and connected with Lith. vìlti `deceive', which Frisk calls "verlockend aber überflüssig". Diff. on οὖλος Ὄ. Thieme Studien 12A.1 (hesitating: prop. `transitory'?).Page in Frisk: 2,445Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οὖλος 3
См. также в других словарях:
κεκλήγοντες — κλάζω make a sharp piercing sound pres part act masc nom/voc pl (epic) … Greek morphological index (Ελληνική μορφολογικούς δείκτες)
ούλος — (I) η, ο (Α επικ και ιων. τ. οὖλος, η, ον) βλ. όλος νεοελλ. φρ. «είναι με τα ούλα του» δεν τού λείπει τίποτε, είναι τέλειος. (II) η, ο (ΑΜ οὖλος, η, ον) (για τρίχες) σγουρός, κατσαρός («οἱ ἐκ τῆς Λιβύης οὐλότατον τρίχωμα έχουσι πάντων ἀνθρώπων»,… … Dictionary of Greek