-
1 ὀλισθάνω
ὀλισθ-άνω (also [suff] ὀλισθ-αίνω Arist.Pr. 936a15, 939a26, A.R.1.377, etc., but never in good [dialect] Att.): [tense] fut.A , Nonn.D.36.458 : [tense] pf.ὠλίσθηκα Hp.Art.57
, 65 : [tense] plpf. ὠλισθήκειν (v. infr. 11.1): [tense] aor.ὠλίσθησα AP9.125
, Str.Chr.4.8 (p.476 Kr.), etc. ; [ per.] 3pl.ὠλίσθησαν Nic.Fr.74.51
(codd. Ath., ὠλίσθηναν cj. Schn.) ; part. fem.ὀλισθήνασα Id.Al.89
: but in classical [dialect] Att. always [tense] aor. 2 ὤλισθον, part. ὀλισθών, inf. ὀλισθεῖν (Hom. only in Il., in [dialect] Ep. [ per.] 3sg. ὄλισθε, v. infr.):—slip, fall upon a slippery path,ἔνθ' Αἴας μὲν ὄλισθε θέων Il.23.774
; ἐκ δέ οἱ ἧπαρ ὄλισθεν his liver fell from him, 20.470 ; ἐξ ἀντύγων ὤλισθε he slipped from.., S.El. 746 ;ὀ. τῆς χειρὸς ὁ σίδηρος Arist.Mech. 854a19
;νηὸς ὀλισθών AP9.267
(Phil.) ; ὐ. εἴσω, ἔξω, of a bone, slip out of the socket on one side or the other, Hp.Fract.14,37 ; slips, loses its force,S.
Fr. 960 : metaph.,ὀ. εἰς νοῦσον AP7.233
(Apollonid.);ἐς Ἅιδου IG14.1642
; in moral sense, make a slip, Ar.Ra. 690 ; in literary sense,εἰς τερατώδεις ὀ. ἀναπλασμούς Metrod.Herc.831.5
.2 slip or glide along,ὀ. ἐν τῷ λάβδα ἡ γλῶττα Pl.Cra. 427b
;βέλος διὰ σαρκὸς ὄλισθεν Theoc.25.230
.II causal, sprain by slipping,ὠλισθήκει τὸν γλουτόν Philostr.
V A3.39, cf. Gym.14.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὀλισθάνω
-
2 ὀλισθάνω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to slide, to slip, to glide' (Att.).Other forms: - αίνω (Arist., hell.), aor. ὀλισθ-εῖν (Il.), - ῆσαι (Hp., hell.), - ῆναι (Nic.), 2. sg. ὤλισθας (epigr. Ia--Ip), fut. ὀλισθήσω (hell.), perf. ὠλίσθηκα (Hp.).Derivatives: 1. Verbal subst.: ὀλίσθ-ημα n. `fall, sprain' (Hp., Pl.), - ησις (also ἀπ-, κατ-, περι-) f. `slipping, spraining' (medic., Plu.); on the meaning-difference between ὀλίσθ-ημα and - ησις Holt Les noms d'action en - σις 138; backformation ὄλισθος m. `lubricity' (Hp., hell.), also name of a slippery fish (Opp.; Strömberg Fischnamen 28). 2. Verbal adj.: ὀλισθ-ηρός `slippery,' (Pi., IA), - ήεις `id.' (AP; poet. formation cf. Schwyzer 527), - ανωτέρα `id.' (nom. f. sg.; Gal,; rather from ὀλισθάνω than with Thumb IF 14, 346 f. from ὄλισθος), ὀλισθός `id.' (Hdn. Gr. 1, 147; prob. first to ὄλισθος w. accentshift), - ητικός `making slippery' (Hp.). -- On its own stands ὀλισθράζω = ὀλισθάνω (Epich., Hp. ap. Gal. 19, 126) as if from *ὄλισθρος, cf. ὀλιβ(ρ)άξαι from ὀλιβρός (s.v.).Etymology: The themat. root-aorist ὀλισθεῖν, from which all other forms derive, direct or indirectly, and whose function as aorist was perh. connected with the rise of the present in - άνω (to which later - αίνω; Schwyzer 748 with Brugmann Grundr.2 II: 3, 365), recalls - δαρθεῖν (: δαρ-θάνω), αἰσθέσθαι (: αἰσθάνομαι) and can like this contain an enlarging IE dh-element with Gr. σθ from dh-dh. As source of σθ however, also IE dh-t can be considered, with βλαστεῖν (: βλαστάνω), ἁμαρτεῖν (: ἁμαρτάνω) as parallel (Schwyzer 703f.). -- Orig.. *ὀλιθ-, with prothet. ὀ- can well be sompared with a verb for `glide, shove' in Germ. and Balt., e.g. OE slīdan (NEngl. slide), MHG slīten, Lith. slýs-ti, pret. slýd-au (with second. y beside slidùs `smooth, slippery'). Here further isolated nouns in Slav. and Celt.: OCS slědъ, Russ. sled m. `trace' (IE * sloidh-o-), NIr. slaod `gliding mass' (formation unclear). Also the not certainly interpreted Skt. srédhati about `stumble, make a mistake' may belong here. When we analyse as sli-dh- (cf. Benveniste Origines 192) also ὀλιβρόν etc. may be connected, s. v. Furher forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 707f., Pok. 960f., Vasmer s. sled, Fraenkel s. slidùs. S. also 1. λοῖσθος.Page in Frisk: 2,377Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὀλισθάνω
Перевод: со всех языков на английский
с английского на все языки- С английского на:
- Все языки
- Со всех языков на:
- Английский