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1 ἀμπλακίσκω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `miss, fail; lose; sin' (Archil.).Other forms: also ἀμβλακίσκω; late and rare present to aor. ἤμπλακον ( ἤμβ-), perf. Pass. ἠμπλάκημαι. Note ἀπλακών (E. Alc. 242, IA 124), ἀναπλάκητος (S. OT 472).Dialectal forms: not AtticOrigin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Compared with ἀμβλίσκω, which DELG rejects both as regards the form and the meaning. Not to βλάξ either. S. J. Schmidt KZ 37, 28f., Schwyzer 210: 4. Both the presence \/ absence of the nasal and the variation voiced \/ voiceless is typical for substr. words; s. Fur. 281f. (to πλάζομαι Blanc, Nomina rerum 79-85.)Page in Frisk: 1,95-96Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀμπλακίσκω
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2 δεῖνα
δεῖνα, ὁ (ἡ, τό)Grammatical information: ?Meaning: `N. N., so-and-so' (Att.).Other forms: τοῦ δεῖνος, οἱ δεῖνες etc., sometimes indecl. τοῦ δεῖνα (more forms in Schwyzer 612), always with articleOrigin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unknown. The explanation from plur. *τάδε ἔνα (cf. ἐκεῖνος) `this (and) that' \> *ταδεῖνα, with anal. ὁ δεῖνα is now given up. The singular forms are much more usual than the plural forms. - S. Belardi, Doxa 3, 202f., Moorhouse Lang. 23 (1947) 207ff. Biraud, Nomina rerum 57-69: de + en-α `so-und-so'.Page in Frisk: 1,357Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δεῖνα
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3 πουκρίς
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `river perch, Perca fluviatilis' (inscr. Acraiphia before 224 - 210 B.C.)Origin: IE [Indo-European] [820] *perḱ- `motley'Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πουκρίς
См. также в других словарях:
nomina si nescis perit cognitio rerum; et nomina si perdas, certe distinctio rerum perditur — /nomana say nesas parat kognish(iy)ow riram et nomana say pardaes sartiy dastiijksh(iy)ow riram partatar/ If you know not the names of things, the knowledge of things themselves perishes; and, if you lose the names, the distinction of the things… … Black's law dictionary
nomina si nescis perit cognitio rerum; et nomina si perdas, certe distinctio rerum perditur — /nomana say nesas parat kognish(iy)ow riram et nomana say pardaes sartiy dastiijksh(iy)ow riram partatar/ If you know not the names of things, the knowledge of things themselves perishes; and, if you lose the names, the distinction of the things… … Black's law dictionary
nomina sunt note rerum — /nomana sant nowtiy riram/ Names are the notes of things … Black's law dictionary
nomina sunt symbola rerum — /nomana sant simbala riram/ Names are the symbols of things … Black's law dictionary
nomina sunt note rerum — /nomana sant nowtiy riram/ Names are the notes of things … Black's law dictionary
nomina sunt symbola rerum — /nomana sant simbala riram/ Names are the symbols of things … Black's law dictionary
Nomina si nescis perit cognitio rerum — If you do not know their names, the knowledge of things is lost … Ballentine's law dictionary
Nomina sunt notae rerum — Names are the distinguishing marks of things … Ballentine's law dictionary
Nomina sunt symbola rerum — Names are the symbols of things … Ballentine's law dictionary
ad recte docendum oportet, primum inquirere nomina, quia rerum cognitio a nominibus rerum dependet — /aed rektey dowsendam owportat, praymam inkwayrariy nomana, kwaya riram kognishiyow ey naminabas riram dapendat/ In order rightly to comprehend a thing, inquire first into the names, for a right knowledge of things depends upon their names … Black's law dictionary
ad recte docendum oportet, primum inquirere nomina, quia rerum cognitio a nominibus rerum dependet — /aed rektey dowsendam owportat, praymam inkwayrariy nomana, kwaya riram kognishiyow ey naminabas riram dapendat/ In order rightly to comprehend a thing, inquire first into the names, for a right knowledge of things depends upon their names … Black's law dictionary