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1 δάμνημι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `tame, subdue, conquer', esp. of horses.Other forms: 3. sg. also δαμνᾳ̃ (for Aeol. δάμνᾱ, Schwyzer 694), aor. δαμάσ(σ)αι, intr. δαμῆναι, perf. δέδμημαι (Il.); to δαμάσ(σ)αι new present δαμάζω (A.), fut. δαμάσσω, 3. sg. δαμᾳ̃ (Il.), aor. Pass. δαμα-σ-θῆναι (Il.), also (after δέδμημαι) δμηθῆναι (Il.)Compounds: ὑπο-. as first member in δάμν-ιππος (Orph.)Derivatives: δμητήρ ( ἵππων) `tamer' (h. Hom., Alkm.), f. δμήτειρα (Il.), δμῆσις ( ἵππων) `taming' (Il.); ἀ-δμής, - τος f. m. `untamed, unmarried' (Od.), also ἄ-δμη-τος `id.' (Il.) and ἀ-δάμα-σ-τος (Il.), ἀ-δάμα-τος (trag.), δμᾱτέα (Dor.). δαμαστέα H.; on ἀδάμας s. s. v. - Isolated δαμα- and δαμν-: Δαμαῖος `tamer' of Poseidon (Pi.), δαμάτειρα (AP), παν-δαμάτωρ `alltamer' (Il.), late f. πανδαμάτειρα; δάμασις and δαμαστικός (sch.), δαμάστης ([Epich.] 301 [?], gloss.); δαμνῆτις δαμάζουσα, τιμωρός; δάμνος ἵππος. Τυρρηνοί H. - δαμασώνιον and δαμναμένη plant names (Dsc., Ps.-Dsc.; for love, Strömberg Pflanzennamen 92). - On δαμάλης s. s. v. Not here δμώς, s. v.Etymology: The present δάμνημι, Aeol. δάμνᾱμι agrees with OIr. damnaim `bind, tame (horses)' from *dm̥-n-eh₂-mi, from a disyllabic root * demh₂- seen in δαμά-σαι, where *δεμα- was reshaped to δαμα-, partly after - δαμο- \< * dmh₂-o ; zero grade *dm̥h₂- in δμη-θῆναι (Dor. δμᾱ-). Many representatives (note Hitt. damaš-zi `he forces, urges'). Note παν-δαμάτωρ = Lat. domitor, Skt. damitár-; they may be independent parallel formations. As second member in compounds ἱππό-]δαμος (Il.) = Skt. ariṃ-] dama- `conquering the enemy' (from * domh₂-o-?); ( ἄ-)δμητος: Skt. dāntá- from *dm̥h₂-to- (independent Lat. domitus). - The old presents Lat. domāre = Skt. damāyáti and OHG zamōn, Goth. ga-tamjan, NHG zähmen = Skt. damáyati are not found in Greek. - Not to the old word for `house' (s. δόμος and δεσπότης).Page in Frisk: 1,346Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δάμνημι
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2 δέμω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `build' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. demeote \/ demeontes\/ ptc. fut. tokodomo \/ toikhodomos\/, naudomo \/ naudomos\/, etedomo \/ entesdomos\/?Derivatives: δέμας (nom. and acc.) `building of the body, outward appearance' (Il.; s. Vivante Arch. glottol. it. 40, 44f.) with analogical - ας, δομή `id.' (A. R.), also = `τεῖχος, οἰκοδομή' (H., uncertain J. AJ 15, 11, 3) with δομαῖος `to building useful' (A. R.); - δόμος ( δῶμα, δῶ), s.s.v. - Deverb. aorist δωμῆσαι, - ήσασθαι (A. R.; δωμήσουσιν οἰκοδομήσουσι H.), from *δωμάω (or *δωμέω?, Schwyzer 719 n. 5), with δώμημα (Lycia), ἐνδώμησις (Smyrna Ip etc.), δώμησις, δωμητύς H., δωμήτωρ (Man.). - With short vowel late forms: δομέοντι οἰκοδομοῦντι H., δεδομημένος (J., Aristid.) with δόμησις, δόμημα (J.), δομήτωρ (Anon. Prog. in Rh.); from οἰκο-δομέω (Ion.-Att.)? - S. also μεσό-δμη. Nomen agentis οἰκοδόμος with οἰκοδομέω `build'. Adj. ναο-, πυργο- `tempel, fortif. building'.Etymology: The present δέμω has a parallel in the German. verb Goth. ga-timan, OS teman, OHG zeman ` geziemen, fit'. To this group belongs the r-stem for `building wood', e. g. ONo. timbr, OHG zimbar, NHG Zimmer with the denomin. Goth. timrjan etc. ` zimmern', PGm. * tim(b)ra-, IE * demh₁-ro- (disyllabic root with germanic loss of the - h₁-; cf. νεό-δμᾱ-τος, δέ-δμᾱ-μαι), from *-dm̥h₁-. The root had - h₁-: Beekes, Development (291 Add. to p. 202), pointing to notations with η in Pindar; thus Ruijgh, Lingua 25 (1970) 316, who points to Myc. demeote. - Here further Hier.-Luw. ta+ mi-ha `I built' (Kronasser ΜΝΗΜΗΣ ΧΑΡΙΝ 1, 201). - See further δόμος, δῶμα, δεσπότης, μεσόδμη.Page in Frisk: 1,364Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δέμω
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3 μεσόδμη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `crossbeam', from wall to wall of a building or from side to side of a ship, in which the mast was let down (details in Bechtel Lex. s. v.; Od., Hp., Q. S.).Other forms: μεσόδμᾱ (Delph. IVa), μεσόμνη (Att. inscr.; on the phonetics Schwyzer 208).Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: Prop. "what belongs to the middle of the house", compound of μέσος and the zero grade of the word for `house', δεμ-, δμ-, seen in δεσ-πότης and δά-πεδον (s. vv.; cf. on δόμος) with ᾱ-suffix: μεσό-δμ-ᾱ like *ἑκατόμ-βϜ-ᾱ (J.Schmidt Pluralbild. 221f., Schwyzer 425 a. 449). From housebuilding the term was transferred to shipbuilding. Often the 2. member - δμη is directly derived from δέμω `build' as zero grade root-noun (cf. νέο-δμᾱ-τος, δέ-δμη-μαι), so "middle-building"; thus Prellwitz BB 17, 172, Persson Beitr. 648, Hermann Gött. Nachr. 1943, 7; cf. also Benveniste BSL 51, 18. Sommer Nominalbild. 76 does not decide the matter. The gloss μεσόδμα γυνή \< ὡς Λάκωνες\> is unclear (gl. 947 has μεσοδόμα).Page in Frisk: 2,213-214Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μεσόδμη
См. также в других словарях:
δάμνημι — (Α) 1. δαμάζω, καταβάλλω (α. «δάμνησι στίχας ἀνδρῶν» κατανικά τις σειρές των πολεμιστών β. «αλλά με χεῑμα δάμναται» αλλά μέ καταβάλλει η κακοκαιρία) 2. (μτχ. θηλ. ενεστ. ως ουσ.) δαμναμένη, η α) το φυτό κατανάγκη, ορνιθόπους β) το φυτό κήμος,… … Dictionary of Greek