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1 phw
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2 PHW
Религия: Proclaiming His Word -
3 phw
< mvhcl> ■ elektrische Scheinwerferwaschanlage f -
4 PhW
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5 phw
техн. тяжелая вода под давлением -
6 power headlamp washer
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7 Proclaiming His Word
Religion: PHWУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Proclaiming His Word
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8 fahama
understand [Mal fehem, maybe from a common Sem root p-h (see), cp. Uga phw, phy (see)] Ful fama, Ind faham, Swa fahamu borrowed from Ar -
9 elektrische Scheinwerferwaschanlage
German-english technical dictionary > elektrische Scheinwerferwaschanlage
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10 top hair
[tɔphwə]noundolga dlaka živalskega krzna -
11 ἀσάμινθος
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `bath-tub' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. asamito \/ asaminthos\/Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Substr. word with νθ-suffix, as in PlN Κόρινθος, ῎Ολυνθος etc.. (Chantr. Form. 371). - Gaerte PhW 1922, 888 and v. Blumenthal IF 48, 50 point to Sumer. asam, Akk. assammu(m), ansammum `earthenware vase for water'. Cf. further Alessio Stud. italfilclass. N. S. 20, 121ff.; Kretschmer Glotta 20, 25l; 22, 253. Improb. speculations Szemerényi, Gnomon 43, 1971, 657.Page in Frisk: 1,160Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀσάμινθος
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12 καμάρα
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `vault, vaulted room, wagon and bark with vaulted roof' (Hdt., LXX, Str.).Dialectal forms: Ion. - ρηDerivatives: - καμάριον (inscr.), καμαρία κοιτὼν καμάρας ἔχων H., καμαρικός `with a vault' (Ath. Mech.). Denomin. verbs: 1. καμαρόω `provide with a vault' with καμάρωσις `vault' (hell.), καμάρ-ωμα `vault' (Str., Gal.), - ωτός `vaulted' (Str.), - ωτικός `used in vaulting' (pap.); 2. καμαρεύω `bring together, exert oneself' (H.). - Further καμάρης δέσμης, καμάραι ζῶναι στρατιωτικαί, καμαρίς κοσμάριον γυναικεῖον H.; cf. below.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] from XEtymology: καμάρα recalls Av. kamarā `girdle', with different meaning, but which is found in the glosses of H. καμάρη, καμαρίς (Fick KZ 43, 137, Schwyzer WuS 12, 31 n. 3; cf. also Weber PhW 54, 1068ff., Kretschmer Glotta 26, 62f.). One adduces also Lat. camurus, -a, -um `curved (of hornes), vaulted'. Other comparisons remain uncertain: Skt. kmárati `be curved' (gramm.; s. Mayrhofer Wb. s. v.), gr. κμέλεθρον from *κμέρεθρον (?; cf. s. v.), the German. word for `heaven', e. g. Goth. himins. For a loan from an eastern language: Fick l. c. (from Iranian), Solmsen BphW 1906, 852f. (from Carian acc. to sch. Orib. 46, 21, 7; against it Bq 402 n.). - From Greek Lat. camera and from there into Germanic and Baltoslavic. Pok. 524, W.-Hofmann s. camera and camurus; s. also Bq. - Cf. κάμινος.Page in Frisk: 1,770-771Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > καμάρα
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13 λοιμός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `pest, deathly plague' (A 61), metaph. `mischievous man' (D.), also in adj. function (LXX, christl. lit.); on the meaning Pfister PhW 60, 222ff..Derivatives: λοιμώδης `plague-like' (Hp., Th.), λοιμικός `belonging to the pest' (Hp., hell.; Chantraine Études 121), λοίμιος surn. of Apollon in Lindos (Macr.); λοιμότης `plague-like situation' (LXX); λοιμεύομαι `contaminated with the pest' (LXX), λοιμώσσω, - ώττω `suffer from the pest' (Gal., Luc.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Mostly taken as ablauting with λῑμός (s. v.). Also λοιγός has been considered as a root-cognate, and as a third suffixal variant was considered λοιτός λοιμός H. (Persson Stud. 15, Specht Ursprung 218, 226). Or a cross of λιμός and λοιγός; all desperate attempts. λοιτός is by Schmidt s.v. on good grounds taken as wrong for λοιγός (other suggestion in WP. 2, 402). - Diff. on λοιμός (to λείβω?) Wackernagel KZ 30, 295 (= Kl. Schr. 1, 658); diff. again Prellwitz s. v. (s. WP. 2, 388).Page in Frisk: 2,134-135Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λοιμός
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14 νωθής
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `slow, indolent, stubborn' (Λ 559, orig. Ion. after v. Wilamowitz Eur. Her. 389, s. also Bechtel Dial. 3, 319 and Leumann Hom. Wörter 316).Derivatives: More usual νωθρός `id.' (IA.) with several derivv.: νωθρ-ία, - ίη (Hp., Herod., pap.), - ότης f. (Hp., Arist., LXX) `slowness, indifference'; - ώδης `laming' (Hp.); f. νωθράς, - άδος plantname, = βαλλωτή, also νωθ-ουρίς (Ps.-Dsc.). Denomin.: 1. νωθρεύω, - ομαι `be slow, slack, indifferent' (Hp., Hyp., pap.) with νωθρεία `slowness' (Erot.); 2. νωθρ-ιάω `id.' (Dsc.). νώθεια f. `indolence' (Pl., Luc.), νωθώδης `lethargic' (Aret.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Perh. with Doederlein and Bechtel Lex. s.v. from n̥-priv. (s. νωδός) and ὄθομαι "who cares for nothing" with formation of the second member after the σ-, resp. ρο-stems cf. Schwyzer 513 and 483). After Müller-Graupa PhW 63,94 to ὠθέω ("who does not let him pushed from his place); equally probable. -- Not with Johansson and Brugmann (s. Bq) to Skt. ādhrá- `weak, poor' (s. WP. 1, 57 n. 1 and Mayrhofer s.v.), also not with Mayrhofer Arch. Linguist. 2, 137 to Pāli dandha- `slow' (phonetically very difficult). Forssman, FS XXX defends connection with Skt. ādhra-. Fur. 390 connects νωφάλης and νωφρύς (but a variation χ\/φ is further unknown to me).Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νωθής
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15 οἰρών
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `furrow of a plough, ἡ χάραξις τοῦ ἀρότρου' (Eratosth., Hdn.), `straight line (in measuring fields), ἡ ἐκ τῆς κατα-μετρήσεως τῆς γῆς εὑθυωρία' H.; prob. also in Cypr. i-to-i-ro-ni i.e. ἰν (= ἐν) τῳ̃ οἰρῶνι `in the mark'.Etymology: Prob. deriv. in - ών, which is often used for place-indication, from a noun *οἷρος v.s. By Schulze PhW 1890, 1439 = Kl. Schr. 665 (agreeing Specht and Fraenkel KZ 66, 27 f. resp. 71, 42) compared with Skt. sī́tā f. `furrow', sī́ra- n. `plough', sīmā f. `frontier'; semantically and formally certainly possible. The relations of the Skt. words are however debated (cf. WP. 2, 463).Page in Frisk: 2,367Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οἰρών
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16 ὄνυξ 1
ὄνυξ 1., - υχοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `nail, claw, hoof', often metaph. in several meanings' (Il.).Compounds: Compp., e.g. ὀνυχο-γραφέομαι `to be carved by a nail' (Hp.), γαμψ-ῶνυξ and - ώνυχος ` with curved claws' (Il., also Arist.; on the stemformation Sommer Nominalkomp.96 ff.); on μῶνυξ s. v.Derivatives: Dimin. ὀνύχιον n. (Arist., pap.); ὀνυχιστήρ, - ῆρος m. `hoof' (LXX; cf. on βραχιονιστήρ and ὀνυχίζομαι below); ὀνυχ-ιμαῖος `of the size of nail-parings, tiny' (Com. Adesp.), - ιαῖος `as broad as a nail' (Eust.); ὀνυχ-ίζομαι `to cut one's nails' (Cratin., LXX) with - ισμός m. (Str.), - ιστήριον n. `nailscissors' (Posidipp. Com.); - ίζω `to test with one's nails' (Artem.); - όω `to equip with claws, to bend in a claw-like fashion' (Orib., sch.).Etymology: Old (popular s. Ernout-Meillet s. unguis) name of the nail and the hoof, which is in most language-groups, even if in strongly changed form, retained. With the disyllabic ὄνυξ ( ὀνυχ-) agrees best Arm. eɫungn `nail' with secondary n-stem (like ot-n `foot'; s. πούς), dissimilation n -- n \> ɫ -- n and inner nasalisation either from monosyllabic ongh- (Kortlandt assumes that * h₃nogh-\/* h₃ngh- yielded * onog\/* ong, which were contaminated in * onong; this became * enong by dissimilation, which gave eɫungn; Armeniaca 76). The other languages have a monosyllabic stem, either ongh-, n̥gh- (Lat. unguis, Celt., e.g. OIr. ingen f.) or nogh- (Germ., e.g. OHG nagal m. ' Nagel', Balt.-Slav., e.g. Lith. nãgas m. `nail, claw'); with ten. asp. Indo-Ir., e.g. Skt. nakhá- m. n. `nail, claw'; diff. suffixes, which are unimportant for Greek. On the ablaut cf. e.g. ὀμφαλός. -- Further details w. rich lit. in WP. 1, 180 f. and Pok. 780 as in the special. dict, W.-Hofmann a. Ernout-Meillet s. un-guis, Mayrhofer s. nakhám, Fraenkel s. nãgas, Vasmer s. nogá. Rootspeculations in Specht Ursprung 253 b. 1. Wrong Rogge PhW 44, 1004 (ὀ- from ὄγκος).Page in Frisk: 2,398-399Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄνυξ 1
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