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1 μέμβλωκα
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > μέμβλωκα
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2 μέμβλωκα
βλώσκωgo or come: perf ind act 1st sg -
3 βλώσκω
A (lyr.), S.OC 1742 (lyr.): [tense] aor. 2ἔμολον Pi.O.14.18
, etc., [dialect] Ep. μόλον ([etym.] ἐκ-, προ-) Il.11.604, Od. 15.468, freq. in Trag., also [dialect] Dor. (as [tense] aor. of [tense] pres. ἕρπω 'go') IG4.952.14 (Epid.), SIG558.26 ([place name] Ithaca), and sts. in Prose, X.An.7.1.33, Plb.30.9.5, Plu.Cleom.38; imper.μόλε Cratin.111
: [tense] pf.μέμβλωκα Od.17.190
, E.Rh. 629; part.- κώς Call.Aet.1.1.7
(cf. βέβλωκεν· ἠρεμεῖ, φύεται, Hsch.): later [tense] fut. βλάξω ([etym.] κατα-) Lyc.1068: [tense] aor.1ἔβλωξα Id.448
, 1327: [tense] aor. 2 ἔβλω· ᾤχετο, Hsch., cf. μολέω:— go or come, mostly Poet. in [tense] aor. 2,δεῦρο μολόντες Od.3.44
; μολοῦσα ποτὶ μέγαρ' ll.6.286; of Time,πρὶν δωδεκάτη μόλῃ ἠώς 24.781
; μέμβλωκε μάλιστα ἦμαρ has passed, Od.17.190;ὅτε τὸ κύριον μόλῃ A.Ag. 766
(lyr.): freq. with Preps., μολεῖν εἰς οἴκους, ἐπὶ δόμον, S.OT 1010, E.Or. 176 (lyr.);πρὸς χθόνα S.Ph. 479
; ἀπὸ Στρυμόνος, ἐκ Διός, A.Ag. 192 (lyr.), Pr. 667;κατὰ γαίας E.Alc. 107
(lyr.): c. acc. only,ἔμολεν Ἥρας λαόν Pi.N.10.36
;γῆν μολόντες Ἑλλάδα A. Pers. 809
, cf. Ag. 968, Supp. 239, S.Ph. 1332, E.Rh. 289; πρὶν φάος μολεῖν χθόνα ib. 223;ἥβης τέλος μ. Id.Med. 921
, cf. IT 1421: c. dat. pers.,μηδέ μοι.. θάνατος μόλοι Sol.21
, cf. S.OC70, Ant. 233, etc.; δι' ἔχθρας μ. τινί, διὰ μάχης μολεῖν τινί, E.Ph. 479, IA 1392; εἰς ὕποπτα μ. τινί, = ὑποπτεύειν τινά, Id.El. 345.—Rare in Prose (v. supr.); used by Ar. only in lyr. (Av. 404, Th. 1146, 1155, al.), or in the mouth of a Laconian, Id.Lys. 984, cf. Plu.2.220e, 225d (both from Apophth.Lac.). -
4 μεμαίκυλον
A v. μιμαίκυλον. [full] μεμαῖνα· ἀληλλιμένα, Hsch. [full] μεμακυῖα, v. μηκάομαι. [full] μεμαλισμένους· μεμαλαγμένους, ἢ παραφρονοῦντας, μαινομένους, Id. [full] μεμάποιεν, [full] μέμαρπον, v. μάρπτω. [full] μεμβλάσαι· συνδῆσαι, Id. [full] μέμβλεται, [full] μέμβλετο, v. μέλω. [full] μέμβλωκα, v. βλώσκω. [full] μεμβλώντων· τυχόντων, Id.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > μεμαίκυλον
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5 βλώσκω
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > βλώσκω
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6 βλώσκω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `go, come' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. μολεῖν, ἔβλω ἐφάνη, ὤχετο, ἔστη; fut. μολοῦμαι ( βλῶξαι, βλώξω Lyc.), perf. μέμβλωκα ( βέβλωκε ἠρεμεῖ, φύεται H.)Compounds: κατα-, προ-, ἐκ- etc. αὑτόμολος `deserter' (Hdt.); ἀγχίμολον ( ἦλθε, Il.), old absolutive Wackernagel, Mus. Helv. 1, 226ff.; ἀγχιβλώς ἄρτι παρών H.Etymology: Pres. βλώσκω \< *μλώ-σκω (cf. μολ-εῖν, μέ-μβλω-κα) from *ml̥h₃-sk- is clear. The aor. stem βλω- will have the same origin, with the zero grade from the plural. The nominal forms with - μολ- will have o-grade, * molh₃-. The aor. stem μολ-ε\/ο- is explained from metathesis in *μελο-μ, -ς, -τ \< * melh₃-. Harðarson, Wurzelaorist 169f, 224f, also assumes stressed l̥h₃ \> ολο, which is doubtful; the existence of a development μλω- (in ἔβλω) beside μολο- is improbable. I would expect *l̥h₃ \> αλ, which was replaced by ολ after the predominant o-vocalism. The metathesis is not an independent phonetic development, but part of this process of morphological reorganisation. - Outside Greek perhaps in Slavic, e.g. Serb. iz-mòlīti *`let come out', i.e. `show', Slov. molíti `hinstrecken, hinhalten'. - Uncertain Toch. A mlosk-, mlusk- `escape' (B mlutk ?). - Connection with μέλλω is phonetically improbable (because of the laryngeal), with μολεύω `cut off and transplant the shoots of trees' is semantically impossible.Page in Frisk: 1,246-247Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βλώσκω
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7 οἴχομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to go (away), to leave, to disappear, to die' (Il.), mostly to indicate an entered situation, where the accompanying or preceding action is expressed by a pres. ptc.: `gone away, vanished, be away, gone thither'; on the aspect Schwyzer-Debrunner 274 a. 392, Bloch Suppl. Verba 28ff.;Other forms: fut. οἰχήσομαι (Att.), perf. ᾤχωκα, οἴ- (Κ 252), ᾤχηκα (Κ 252 v. l., hell.), midd. ᾤχημαι, οἴ- (Ion.).Derivatives: Besides οἰχνέω `to go, to come, to walk, to approach', also with ἐξ-, εἰσ- a.o. (Hom., Pi., trag.), also = οἴχομαι (S.). -- No derivv. A hypothesis on the PlN Οἰχαλία in Ziehen Arch. f. Religionswiss. 24, 51 f.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: With οἴχ-ομαι: οἰχ-νέ-ω cf. ὑπ-ίσχ-ομαι: ὑπ-ισχ-νέ-ομαι and Schwyzer 696. The enlarging η of the fut. also came into the perfect; from some semant. close example ( μέμβλωκα?) came the early attested οἴχ-ω-κα (Schwyzer 774 w. n. 2 a. lit.; cf. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 424 w. n. 3). -- The main problem with οἴχομαι concerns the curious meaning, which seems to have been foreign to the durative-infective οἰχνέω (so οἴχομαι orig. aoristpres.?). An acceptable connection provides Arm. iǰanem (nasal pres. like οἰχνέω), aor. 3. sg. ēǰ (\< * oigh-e-t; cf. ᾤχετο) `come down, alight' (Scheftelowitz BB 28, 311); further there are some isolated Celt. and Lith. nouns: OIr. óegi `guest' (\< * oigh-ēt-; as γόης, πένης; meaning like Arm. iǰ-awor); Lith. eigà f. `course' (Pedersen Vergl. Gramm. 1, 101, Prellwitz s.v.). Polyinterpretable are Hitt. igāi- `perish' and Toch. B yku `gone'; cf. Kronasser Studies Whatmough 125. If one separates the velar media asp. gh, we get ei- `go', so hat the etymological analysis ends in a bloodless abstraction. Details w. further lit. in WP. 1, 104 (Pok. 296). S. also ἴχνος.Page in Frisk: 2,371-372Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οἴχομαι
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8 πορεῖν
Grammatical information: Aor.Meaning: `to provide, to donate, to offer, to grant' (ep. Il.).Other forms: πέπρωται perf. `it is (by fate) given, decided', ptc. πεπρωμένος (ep. Il.); ptc. πρωτός (Hdn. Gr.).Etymology: Formation like μολεῖν: μέμβλωκα (: βλώσκω), θορεῖν (: θρώσκω) a.o.; s. vv. and Schwyzer 747 a. 770, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 391 a. 433. The forms πρω- derive from the zero grade *pr̥h₃-. Not here the yot-present πείρω; s. v., nor the primary πέρνημι `sell' (which has h₂; s. v.). Skt. pí-par-ti `set over, bring over' will also rather have the root *perh₂-; here prob. also the frequentative Lat. portō, - āre `bring, carry'. Skt. pūrdhi `give' however belongs with πορεῖν (from *pr̥h₃-). The forms πέρᾱ, περάω clearly have h₂. Less clear is Lat. pars (W.Hofmann s. v.). -- Cf. also πόρις.Page in Frisk: 2,579-580Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πορεῖν
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9 συνοκωχότε
Grammatical information: ptc.Meaning: `grown together, bent together' (Β 218); after it συνοχωκότος (gen. sg.) `collapsed' (Q. S. 7, 502).Other forms: Perf. ptc. du.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: To συνέχω, but explanation further unclear. After Brugmann (e.g. IF 13, 280) reduplicated formation like συν-οκωχή, ἀνοκωχή (s. v.) a.o. As however the reading συνοχωκότε seems more reliable, Wackernagel Gött. Nachr. 1902, 738f. (Kl. Schr. 1, 128f.) assumes a denominative *συνοχόω (from σύνοχος), which is however not unproblematic; cf. Schwyzer 766 n. 6 (w. lit.), where συνοχωκότε is supposed to be an enlargement of *συνοχότε (to *[σ]ε[σ]οχα). The form is rather to be understood as an articial formation to συνέχω, which on the one hand through rhythmical parallels ( κεκορηότε, κεκοτηότι, βεβαρηότα a.o.), on the other hand through reduplicated forms as ὄρωρα and trough κ-perfects as μέμβλωκα could have been favoured. A natural word was συνοχωκότε certainly not. For intensive meaning Hartmann Festschr. Snell 250. -- Cf. also Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 424 m. n. 3.Page in Frisk: 2,820-821Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > συνοκωχότε
См. также в других словарях:
μέμβλωκα — βλώσκω go or come perf ind act 1st sg … Greek morphological index (Ελληνική μορφολογικούς δείκτες)
mel-8, melǝ- : mlō- — mel 8, melǝ : mlō English meaning: to appear, come up Deutsche Übersetzung: “hervorkommen, erscheinen, hochkommen; Erhöhung, Wölbung” Material: Perhaps O.Ind. maṇi “ pearl “, maṇika m. “(round) Wassertopf”; Gk. μολεῖν “go, come” … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary