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1 узел-восьмёрка
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2 узел-восьмерка
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3 mogul
a husk, mesh (of a net), Irish mogal, cluster, mesh of a net, husk, apple of the eye, Early Irish mocoll (do.), Old Irish mocul, subtel: *mozgu-, Indo-European mozgho, knot, mesh; Lithuanian mázgas, knot, mesh; Old High German mascâ, German masche, English mesh; Greek $$G móshos, sprout, calf. Latin macula, a mush, is not allied. Dialect Gaelic mugairle, bunch of nuts (Glenmoriston). -
4 snaim
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5 bréid
a kerchief, so Irish, Early Irish bréit, *brenti-, roots brent, brat; Sanskrit granth, tie, knot, grathnâti; German kranz, garland, English crants (Rhys). The Sanskrit being allied to Greek $$G grónqos, fist, seems against this derivation (Stokes), not to mention the difficulty of Greek $$Gq and Sanskrit th corresponding to Celtic t. Possibly from root bhera, cut, Greek $$Gfa$$nros, cloth (Windisch). Cf. Welsh brwyd, braid. -
6 νάρκη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `numbness, deadness, electric ray' (IA.; on the fish s. Strömberg 57);Other forms: second. νάρκᾰ Men.; Solmsen Wortforsch. 268Compounds: As 2. member in θηριο-νάρκη f. name of a plant that paralyzes a snake (Plin.).Derivatives: ναρκώδης `paralysed' (Hp.); ναρκάω, also with ἀπο-, δια-, ἐκ-, `be paralysed' (Θ 328) with ἀπονάρκη-σις (Plu.); ναρκόω `paralyse, become fixed' (Hp.) with νάρκω-σις, - τικός (medic.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: As zero grade verbal noun with barytone accent (cf. πάθη, βλάβη a.o., Chantraine Form. 22 f.) νάρκη might belong to a primary German. verb, OHG sner(a)han, MHG snerhen `swing, knot, draw together'; beside it the deverbative OWNo. snara `turn, swing, wind' (PGgm. * snarhōn) and the verbal noun OHG snar(a)ha, OWNo. snara f. `swing' (Fick 1, 575). Here perh. also with Lidén Armen. Stud. 65 f. Arm. nergew `tenuis, gracilis, λεπτός', if pop. *'girded, drawn together', with ew-suffix from a nominal * nerg, IE * snerk- (WP. 2, 700f., Pok.976f.). The meaning `swing etc.' is supposed for ναρκίον ἀσκόν II. (prop. `turned, twined'); Fick 1, 503, Persson Beitr. 2, 817, Bechtel Lex. 211 f.). The supposed connection is semantically far from convincing; als we would expect *νδρακ-. Given the fish-name, we should rather assume a Pre-Greek word * nark-.Page in Frisk: 2, 290Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νάρκη
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