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1 ἀΐσσω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `move quickly, dart, rush (upon)' (Il.)Compounds: ἀ- always long in Hom. except ὑπαΐξει (Φ 126; incidental shortening? Chantr. Gramm. hom. 110; ἀΐξῃ (A. R. 3, 1302), elsewhere mostly short. - πολυ-άϊξ, κορυθ-άϊξ; also τριχ-άϊκες? (q.v.).Derivatives: ἀῑκ-ή `Ansturm' (Ο 709); a root noun ἄϊξ in ἀνέμων ἄικας ( ἀίκας?; α and ι long) A.R. 4, 820.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Since Osthoff PBBeitr. 8, 271 taken as intensive *Ϝαι-Ϝικ-ι̯ω and compared with Skt. ve-vij-yá-te `to raise, flee, move quickly'. But there is no trace of a F (Solmsen Unt. 189) and the long ι remains unexplained. Danielsson IF 14, 386ff. reconstructs *αἰϜ-ῑκ- and compares αἰόλος.Page in Frisk: 1,45-46Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀΐσσω
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2 ἐγχεσί-μωρος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: usually understood as `famous for his spear' (Il.).Derivatives: Cf. ἰό-μωρος, adj. of the Αργεῖοι (Δ 242, Ξ 479). Imitation in ὑλακό-μωρος, of κύνες (ξ 29, π 4; cf Porzig Satzinhalte 239); s. also σινάμωρος.Etymology: The 2. member is since Osthoff PBBeitr. 13, 431ff. combined with Celtic, Germanic and Slavic PN, e. g. Welsh Nerto-mārus, OHG Volk-mār, Slav. Vladi-měrъ, IE *- mōros, *- mēros. Further are compared a denominative Germ. verb `proclaim', Goth. merjan etc. with the adj. Goth. waila-mereis `εὔφημος', OHG māri `famous' etc., and a Celt. adjective `great', e. g. OIr. mār. The ō-vocalism in Greek and Celt. agrees with the type ἄ-φρων: φρήν (Schwyzer 355). The form of the 1 member may be metrically determined (cf. ἐγχέσπαλος). Ruijgh, Elément achéen 93, asks whether it could contain μωρός `foolish'. - Cf. Leumann Hom. Wörter 37 and 272 n. 18.Page in Frisk: 1,440Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐγχεσί-μωρος
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3 κάλως
Grammatical information: m.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: No etymology, techn. loan (Debrunner Eberts Reallexikon 4, 525, Hermann Gött. Nachr. 1943, 1f.). IE. etymologies by Mansion PBBeitr. 33, 547ff. (to Dutch halen `fetch' \> Fr. haler etc.; or rather to OHG halōn `call, fetch', cf. on καλέω); by Persson Stud. 30 a. o. (to κλώθω etc.; cf. s. v.).Page in Frisk: 1,769-770Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κάλως
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4 λάσιος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `shaggy, woolly, overgrown with' (Il.).Derivatives: λασιών, - ῶνος m. `thicket' (Nic.). Also GN; λασιῶτις, adjunct of ὕλη ( Epic. Alex. Adesp.), cf. δενδρῶτις (E.) a. o.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: If from *Ϝλατ-ι̯ος, λάσιος can be connected with some words for `hair etc.' (Fick 2, 263): Celt., e. g. OIr. folt `hair' (IE *u̯olto-), Balt., OPr. wolti `ear (of corn)', Lith váltis `bunch of oats', Slav., e. g. Russ. a. Smallruss. vólotь `thread, ear; raceme', Serb. vlât `ear' (IE *u̯olti-); with (Solmsen KZ 42, 214 n. 4) Germ., e. g. NHG Wald (IE *u̯óltu-; diff. Fick 2, 277); from the words mentioned λάσιος from IE *u̯l̥ti̯os would differ in ablaut. More forms w. lit. and farreaching combinations in Bq, WP. 1, 297, Pok. 1139 f.; s. also λῆνος and λάχνη. - Diff. on λάσιος Lidén PBBeitr. 15, 521 f. (s. Bq). Speculations by A.Blanc in RPh. 73(1999)Page in Frisk: 2,88Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λάσιος
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5 μηχανή
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `means, tool, contrivance, apparatus, machine, device' (IA, Dor.).Other forms: Dor. μαχανά.Compounds: Compp., e.g. μηχανο-ποιός `machine-builder, engineer, machinist' (Att.), ἀ-μήχανος (Dor. - ά-) `without means etc., helpless; who cannot be helped with means, irresistible, impossible' (Il.; partly associated with μηχανάομαι) with ἀμηχαν-ία, - ίη (ι 295), - έω (Ion.).Derivatives: 1. Uncertain Μαχα-νεύς surn. of Zeus (Argos, Tanagra, Cos, since Va; s.v. Wilamowitz Glaube 2, 172), also name of a month (Corcyra), Μαχανεῖος name of a month (Chalcedon); Μαχαν-ίς surn. of Athena (Cos), - ῖτις surn. of Aphrodite and Athena (Megalopolis). -- 2. μηχανιώτης `contriver', of Hermes (h. Merc. 436; after ἀγγελι-ώτης a.o., Zumbach Neuerungen 7). -- 3. μηχανάριος `machinist' (pap.). -- 4. μηχαν-όεις `full of means, inventive' (S.), - ικός `id., belonging to machines, mechanical', subst. `machinebuilder' (X., Arist.; Chantraine Études 101 a. 141). -- 5. μηχάνωμα (Dor. μα-) n. `apparatus, crane' (Thphr., Delphi; enlarged from μηχανη, Chantraine Form. 187). -- 6. Denomin. μηχανάομαι (- άω), aor. μηχανήσασθαι etc., also with prefix, e.g. ἐπι-, ἀντι-, προσ-, `realize, construct, manufacture artificially, devise (with ruse)' (Il.); from this μηχάν-ημα `invention, apparatus, mechanical device' (Hp., D., trag.), - ησις `id.' (Hp., Plb.), - ητής m. `inventor of warmaschines' (Sch.), - ητικός `inventive' (X.). -- Besides μῆχαρ n. indecl. `means, tool' (A., Lyc.), μῆχος (Dor. μᾶ-) n. `id.' (Il., also Hdt.), both as opposed to μηχανή dying words without compp. a. abl.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Not with Frisk from a heteroclitic *μᾶχαρ, *μάχαν-ος, from which with added -ā (cf. Schwyzer 459) the almost absolute reigning μαχαν-ά, μηχαν-ή arose; accent after the verbal nouna ( φυλακ-ή, κομιδ-ή etc.). Beside the r-n-stem as so often an s -stem, μῆχος. -- As cognate are usually with Osthoff PBBeitr. 15, 211 ff. (after Bopp, Pott a.o.) considered some short-vowel verbal forms with accompanying nouns in Germanic and Slavic: Germ., e.g. Goth. mag `can, is able, mag', Slav., e.g. OCS mogǫ, mošti, Russ. mogú, močь `can, be able' with Goth. mahts `power, Macht' etc. = OCS moštь, Russ. močь `id.'. Beside this ti-derivation stands in Germ. a n-formation in OHG magan, megin, OWNo. magn, megin `power, might', which may belong directly to μηχανή. Here also (with v. Windekens Lex. etym.) Toch. A mokats `mighty' (like tsop-ats `great' etc.). -- Diff. Prellwitz (as alternative), Fraenkel Lexis 2, 170 a. Wb. s.v.: to Lith. móku, mokė́ti `can, understand, pay' assuming a IE tenuis asp. kʰ; mag, mogǫ etc. are then classified diff. (to Lith. magù, -ė́ti `please, be pleasant', mė́gstu, mė́gti `love, like' etc.). To connect the last mentioned Lith. words also with μηχανή (W.-Hofmann s. mactus, Vasmer s. mogú) is, apart from the meaning, doubtful already because of the ablaut ē: ā one would have to assume. In 1998, 10f [MKNAW Afd. Lett. 61, 9] I pointed out that in Slavic a laryngeal cannot have been vocalized; so the Germ. and Slavic forms cannot go back to * mh₂gh-. The Greek word then remains isolated. The suffix - αν- is typical for Pre-Greek words; note still that Greek has no forms with *μαχ-. -- From Dor. μαχανά Lat. māchina, from μηχανή Pashto mēčan `handmill' (Morgenstierne Acta Or. 7, 200; 18, 143); on the meaning cf. VLat. māchina also `millstone, handmill', Alb. (through Illyrian) mókërë `millstone'. -- WP. 2, 227, Pok. 695; further W.-Hofmann, Vasmer and Fraenkel (s. above).Page in Frisk: 2,234-235Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μηχανή
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6 ὀκτώ
Grammatical information: numeralMeaning: `eight' (Hom.).Compounds: As 1. element beside ὀκτω- in ὀκτω-καίδεκα, ὀκτω-δάκτυλος `with a breadth of eight fingers' (Hp., Ar.) a.o. usu. ὀκτα- (after ἑπτα-, ἑξα- etc.) in ὀκτα-κόσιοι and in many bahuvrihi's, e.g. ὀκτά-μηνος `eight months old, eight monthly' (Hp., X., Arist.).Derivatives: Besides ὀγδοή-κοντα, which like ἑβδομή-κοντα may have started from the basic word, s. v. and ὄγδοος w. lit. Through cross with ὀκτώ also ὀγδώ-κοντα (Β 568 = 652 a.o., s. Sommer Zum Zahlwort 25 n. 2). After ὀγδοήκοντα the late ὀγδοάς f. `a number of eight' (Plu.) for ὀκτάς f. (Arist.). -- Further derivv.: ὀκτά-κι(ς), - κιν `eight times' (Hdt.), ὀκτα-σσός `eightfold' (pap. III p; after δισσός etc.), - χῶς `in eight ways' (EM, Arist.-Comm.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [775] *h₃eḱtōu `eight'Etymology: Gr. ὀκτώ, Lat. octō, Skt. aṣṭā́(u), Germ., e.g. Goth. ahtau, Lith. aštuo-nì and other cognate forms go back on IE *oḱtṓ(u) (*h₃eḱt-?). Arm. ut` is like El. ὀπτω, reshaped after the word for `seven'. -- The IE word for `eight' was clearly an old dual, but further analysis is quite uncertain. Hypotheses e.g. by W.-Hofmann s. octō, with further lit.; see also Meisinger Gymnasium 57, 74 f. By Ebbinghaus PBBeitr. 72, 319 connected with the word for `four' (to be rejected).Page in Frisk: 2,374-375Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὀκτώ
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7 παλλω
παλλω, - ομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `to sway, to rock, to shake lots, to draw lots', midd. `to swing oneself', also `to jump, to hop'.Other forms: Aor. πῆλαι (Il.), midd. πήλασθαι (Call.), πάλτο ( ἀν-, κατ-έπαλτο s. bel.), redupl. ἀμ-πεπαλών (Hom.; also πεπάλ-εσθε, - έσθαι for - ασθε, - άσθαι resp. - αχθε, - άχθαι? s.bel.), aor. pass. ἀνα-παλείς (Str.), perf. midd. πέπαλμαι (A.).Compounds: Also w. prefix, late ἀνα- ( ἀμ-). -- As 2. member in ἐγχέσ-, σακέσ-παλος `swaying the spear, shield' (ep. Il.; Trümpy Fachausdrücke 28).Derivatives: 1. πάλος m. `(shaken) lot' (Sapph., Hdt., trag.), ἄμπαλ-ος m. `fresh casting' (of the lot, Pi.); ἀναπάλ-η f. name of a dance (Ath.); 2. παλτόν n. `javelin' (A., X.) with ἐπάλταξα παλτῳ̃ ἔβαλον H., - ός adj. (S.); 3. παλμός m. `vibration, pulsation' (Hp., Arist., Epicur.) with - ώδης `full of vibrations' (Hp.); παλματίας σεισμός `heavy earthquake' (Arist.; cf. βρασματίας s. βράσσω); 4. πάλσις ( ἀνά-, ἀπό- παλλω) f. `pulsation etc.' (Arist., Epicur.). -- Intensive παι-πάλλειν σείειν H. On a velar enlargement seem to go back *παλ-άσσομαι, πεπάλ-αχθε, - άχθαι (H 171, ι 331); for these difficult perfects perh. redupl. aor. - εσθε, - έσθαι must be posited (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 396 with Döderlein; diff. Bechtel Lex. 266).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: As common basis of all forms served παλ- (*πάλ-ι̯ω, *πάλ-σαι); through false analysis of the compounds κατ-επ-αλτο, ἀν-επ-αλτο (to ἅλλομαι `jump, hop') in κατ-, ἀν-έπαλτο one had an apparently augmented ἔ-παλτο, from where πάλτο and backformed πάλλομαι = ἅλλομαι arose (Geiss Münch. Stud. 11, 62ff. with Leumann Hom. Wörter 60 ff., with lit. a. further details). -- No cognates outside Greek. The connection with Lat. pellō, pe-pul-ī `set in movement with a push' (Curtius 268 with Fick, Ernout-Meillet) seems possible in spite of Solmsen Wortforsch. 18 f., Bq and WP. 2, 57; cf. παλμός = pulsus; further s. πελάζω (not ἀπελλαι)}. Here also Slav., e.g. Russ. polóch `revolt, commotion, confusion' (Solmsen PBBeitr. 27, 364, WP. 2, 52; further lit. in Vasmer s.v.)? Not with Fraenkel Mél. Bq 1, 358 and Pok. 801 to pel- `flow, swim' (cf. πολύς, πλέω, πίμπλημι); diff., also to be rejected, Palmer Glotta 27, 134ff., Richardson Trans. Phil. Soc. 1936, 101 ff. -- Hardly here πελεμίζω, πόλεμος, s. vv. - The analysis given is of course quite uncertain.Page in Frisk: 2,469Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > παλλω
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8 πέρθω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to destroy, to devastate' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. πέρσαι, πραθεῖν, fut. πέρσω (Il.). Inf. pass. πέρθαι (Π 708), prob. sigmat. aor. *περθσ-(σ)θαι (Wackernagel Unt. 90 n. 2, Schwyzer 751), if not simply haplolog. for πέρθεσθαι with Meillet MSL 22, 262 (agreeing Kretschmer Glotta 13, 263), unclear πέρθετο (Μ 15 a.o.), in sense in any case aoristic (Schwyzer 746 and Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 389f.).Compounds: Also w. δια-, ἐκ-, συν-. As 1. member in governing compp. περσέ-π(τ)ολις `destroying cities' (A. in lyr.); as 2. member in πτολί-πορθος `id.' (Il.), also - ιος (ι 504), - ης (A. in lyr.). Verbal noun πέρσις f. `destruction' as title of several poems (Arist., Paus.).Derivatives: Deverbative πορθέω, aor. πορθῆσαι, also m. δια-, ἐκ- a.o. `to destroy, to devastate, to pillage' (Il.) with ( εκ-)-πόρθησις (D.), - ημα (Pl.), ( ἐκ-)-ήτωρ (A., E.), - ητής (E.), *ητήριος (Tz.), - ητικός (H.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Without convincing etymology. By Uhlenbeck Et. Wb. d. aind. Spr. 187 and PBBeitr. 30, 276 connected with Skt. bardhaka- `cutting off', m. `carpenter' and with several Germ. words for `plate, table', e.g. OE bred a. bord (prop. *'slice, what is cut off'?); quite uncertain; cf. also Benveniste Origines 192 n. 1. Further connection with IE * bher- in φάραγξ (s. v.) a.o. by Persson Stud. 45 [impossible]. Lat. perdō is to be kept apart. -- WP. 1, 174, Pok. 138; s. also W.-Hofmann s. forceps.Page in Frisk: 2,512Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέρθω
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9 σανδαράκη
σανδαράκη, - άχηGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `sandarac, red arsenic sulphide, realgar, red orpiment' (Hp., Arist., Thphr. a.o.), `bee-bread' (Arist.).Compounds: σανδαρακ-ούργιον n. `sandarac pit' (Str.).Derivatives: - ινος `sandarac-coloured, bright red' (Hdt. α.ο.), - ίζω `to be sandarac-coloured' (Dsc.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Orient. LW [loanword] of unknown source. Nehring Glotta 14. 182 reminds of the PlN Σανδαράκη (harbour-town on the Black-Sea). Acc. to a quite uncertain supposition by Uhlenbeck PBBeitr. 19, 327ff. from OInd. * candra-rāga- `moon-coloured' (?), which Cuendet (s. Mayrhofer s. candanaḥ) would like to change in a as hypothetic * candana-rāga- `sand-coloured'. -- The variation κ\/χ points to a Pre-Greek word. Cf. on σάνδυξ.Page in Frisk: 2,675Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σανδαράκη
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10 σαργάνη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `plaited basket' (since IVa).Derivatives: σαργαν-ίς f. (Cratin. [coni.]), - ιον, - ίδιον n. (pap.) `id.'. Besides ταργάναι πλοκαί, συνδέσεις, πέδαι H. with τεταργανωμένη = συμπεπλεγ-μένη, συνειλημμένη (H. EM); hyperatticistic? (cf. Schwyzer 319).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin] (V)Etymology: Instrument name without etymology, perh. LW [loanword] (cf. Chantraine Étrennes Benveniste 23f.); formation as πλεκτάνη, ὁρκάνη etc. The traditional connection with σορός (s. v.) a. cogn. (Kögel PBBeitr. 7, 191) leaves the - γ- unexplained. Cf. also on τάρπη. -- The variation is Pre-Greek (s. Furnée 124 s.v. ταργάναι) and points to *tyarg-an-.Page in Frisk: 2,677Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σαργάνη
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11 σκόπελος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `cliff, rock, mountain-peak' (mostly ep. poet. Β 396), `watch-tower' (pap.), - ον n. `earth wall, hill' (LXX).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The prob. later meaning `watch-tower' originated clearly through the association with σκοπ-ός, - ιά, - έω, but also in the sense of `clif, rock' one has since antiquity connected the word with σκοπός, - έω and interpreted as "look out", an etymolog, which because of its good achoring in the Greek vocabulary seems to earn preference above the connection with IE * skep- `cut' (Solmsen Wortforsch. 210 f.; cf. σκέπαρνος [but se s.v.] and κόπτω). Cf. also Chantraine Form. 244 w. lit. -- An agreeing Illyr. * skapela- `cliff' Krahe PBBeitr. 69, 486 ff. wants to find in the river-name Schefflenz (OHG Scaflenza from * Scapi-lantia); cf. on this Porzig Gliederung 150 f. Lat. LW [loanword] scopulus. -- An IE root * skep- `cut' seems not to exist. That a word for `cliff, rock' developed from `watch-tower' may be possible in reality but is linguistically not very probable.Page in Frisk: 2,737Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σκόπελος
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12 στερομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `be robbed, lack, loose (Hes., IA.), aor. be robbed, loose: ipv. σταρέστω (Delph. IVa)? (cf. below), further high grade with η-enlargement: ptc. στερείς (E.), στερ-ηθῆναι (Pi, IA.), fut. - ήσομαι, - ηθήσομαι(Att.; στεροῦμαι And.), perf. ἐστέρημαι (IA.); act. rob, snatch from': aor. στερ-ῆσαι ( στερέσαι ν 262, pap. a.o.), fut. - ήσω ( στερῶ A. Pr. 862, - έσω (pap.), perf. ἐστέρηκα (Att.); pass. στερέω, simplex only ipv. στερείτω (Pl.), otherwise with ἁπο- (as also very often in non-present empora esp. in prose) to this midd. στερέομαι (certain only hell. a late); also στερίσκω, - ομαι Hdt., Att.; ἁπο- στερομαι S.), aor. στερίσαι (metr. inscr. Eretria IV-IIIa, AP: ἁποστερίζω Hp.?).Derivatives: Few deriv. ( ἁπο-)στέρησις f. `robbery, confiscation' (Hp., Att. etc.), also - εσις (pap.; after αἵρ-, εὕρ-εσις a.o), with στερ-ήσιμος, - έσιμος `which can be confiscated' (pap. inscr. II-IIIp; Arbenz 89), - ημα n. `id.' (Ps.-Callisth.), ( ἁπο-) - ητικός `robbing, removing, negative, privative (Ar, Arist., hell. a. late), - ητής m. who snatches sth. from smb., withholds, deceiver' (Pl., Arist., a.o.), f. - ητρίς (Ar. Nu. 730; parody).Etymology: The above forms prob. all go back on the themat. present στέρομαι. Also the isolated ipv. σταρέστω, which Bechtel Dial. 2, 231 (agreeing Schwyzer 747 and Thumb-Kieckers Dial. 1, 275) wants to see as a zero grade root-aorist can be explained (with Schwyzer 274) as purely phonetical from στερέσθω (with ε \> α before ρ), unless one prefers to see in it an analogical formation after NGr. hαρέσται. To the present στέρομαι came first the initially intransitive στερ-ῆναι, - ήσομαι (if old, one would expect σταρ-) - ηθῆναι, - ηθήσομαι; to these came the active στερῆσαι ( στερέσαι after ὀλέ-σαι a.o.), - ήσω etc., to which came at last στερ-έω, - ίσκω (cf. e.g. εὑρ-ήσω: - ίσκω; Schwyzer 709 a. 721; on the forms still Brunel Aspect verbal 115 f.). -- Certain cognates are missing. A possible connection is MIr. serb `theft', which can stand for *ster-u̯ā; further one connects since Osthoff PBBeitr. 13, 460 f. the Germ. verb for `steal', Goth. stilan, OHG. stelan etc., which may have l for r from hehlen. Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 636, Pok. 1028; s. also W.-Hofmann s. 2. stēlliō (w. lit.).Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στερομαι
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13 στόμαχος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `throat' (Il.), `gullet' (Hp., Arist. a.o.), `mouth (of the bladder, uterus)' (Hp.), `(upper orifice of the) stomach' (late), `anger' (Vett. Val., pap.II--IIIp; cf. below).Derivatives: στομαχ-ικός `belonging to σ., suffering in the σ.', also `useful for the σ.', with - ικεύομαι `suffering in the σ.' (late medic.); - έω = stomachor (Dosith.).Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: From στόμα with the same suffix as in οὑραχός, οὑρίαχος (s. οὑρά), κύμβαχος and other orig. popular formations (Schwyzer 498, Chantraine Form. 403). To be rejected Hirt PBBeitr. 22, 228 (s. Bechtel Lex. s. v.) and Lagercrantz (s. Idg. Jb. 13, 201). -- Lat. LW [loanword] stomachus `gullet, stomach' with stomachor, - āri`be indignant', to which through semant. backformation stomachus `annoyance'; as loan from there στόμαχος `annoyance' with - έω. -- On στόμαχος, γαστήρ, κοιλία a. their rendering in the vulgata Benveniste Rev. de phil. 91, 7ff.Page in Frisk: 2,801-802Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στόμαχος
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14 Άρέθουσα
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: Name of several springs, e. g. on Ithaca (ν 408); cf. v. Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 186Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: Two hypotheses: 1. to ἀρέσκω, ἀρετή as " die Gefällige", cf. Schönbrunn (Aly Glotta 5, 57f.); semantically and formally improbable; 2. to an IE. * redhō [further unknon] `quellen, flow', supposed in European river names, e. g. Radantia (\> NHG. Rednitz), Krahe PBBeitr. 71, 476f. But Krahe's river names are non-IE, and hardly found in Greece. Rather pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,135Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Άρέθουσα
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