-
1 ακαλλιέρητον
ἀκαλλιέρητοςnot accepted: masc /fem acc sgἀκαλλιέρητοςnot accepted: neut nom /voc /acc sg -
2 ἀκαλλιέρητον
ἀκαλλιέρητοςnot accepted: masc /fem acc sgἀκαλλιέρητοςnot accepted: neut nom /voc /acc sg -
3 επίδεκτον
-
4 ἐπίδεκτον
-
5 παραδεκτόν
παραδεκτόςaccepted: masc /fem acc sgπαραδεκτόςaccepted: neut nom /voc /acc sg -
6 ὄρχος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `row of vines or fruit trees' (η 127, ω 341, Hes. Sc. 296, B., Ar., X., Thphr.);Other forms: ὀρχός m. `border of the eyelid, ταρσός' (Poll. 2, 69); ὀρχάς περίβολος, αἱμασιά H., ὀρχάδος στέγης (S. Fr. 812); ὀρχηδόν (Hdt. 7, 144), after H., = ἡβηδόν, usu. explained as `in a row, general'.Derivatives: Besides ὄρχατος m. `ordened plantation, garden' (η 112, ω 222, AP), pl. `rows of garden plants, fruit trees, vines' (Ξ 123, E. Fr. 896, 2, Moschio Trag. 6, 12), metaph. ὀδόντων, κιόνων ὄρχατος (AP, Ach. Tat.). With μ-suffix: ὀρχμαί φραγμοί, καλαμῶνες, φάραγγες, σπῆλυγξ H.; ὀρχμούς λοχμῶδες καὶ ὄρειον χωρίον οὑκ ἐπεργαζόμενον ( Lex.); in the same meaning ὀρχάμη (Poll. 7, 147).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: If the ἅπ. λεγ. ὀρχηδόν is rightly understood as `following the row', is for ὄρχος also the general meaning `row' to be accepted; from there, prob. as collective abstract, ὄρχατος prop. `order of rows (of plants)'. Then it seems hardly possible, to bring the above words together under a notion `fence, enclosure', which, thought obvious for ὄρχατος in the sense of `garden' and acceptable for the rare ὀρχός, ὀρχάς, hardly fits ὄρχος (pace Porzig Satzinhalte 310). Thus the connection with IE *u̯er-ǵh- `turn, wind together, fence in' in Lith. veržiù `fence in, string' (diff. s. εἴργω), Germ., e.g. OWNo. virgill `snare', NHG er-würgen a.o. (Brugmann IF 15, 84ff., WP. 1, 272f., Pok.1154 f.) is weakened; doubtful as well becomes the comparison with Lith. sérgmi `preserve, watch over' (Fraenkel KZ 72, 193 ff. with Prellwitz). Attractive Mann Lang. 26, 385: to Alb. varg `row, wreath, chain'. -- Commonly accepted is the connection with the town-name Όρχομενός (older Έρχ-, cf. Schwyzer 255; Illyr. Όργομεναί, Krahe ZNF 7, 25 n. 4 a. 11, 81). S. also εἴργω, ἔρχατος, ὄρχαμος. - As there is no IE etymon, it seems more probable that the word (note the meanings!; and th name of the town) is Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 2,434Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄρχος
-
7 ὕσσωπος
ὕσσωπος, ου, ἡ and ὁ, also ὕσσωπον, τό (in wr. outside our lit. [Nicander: II B.C., Ther. 872; Alexiph. 603; Chaeremon 44, 6 al.; ins, pap] all three genders are quotable; for the LXX the masc. and fem. are certain; Philo, Vi. Cont. 73 excludes the neut. for that author; in Jos., Bell. 6, 201, Ant. 2, 312; 4, 80 the matter is not clear. In our lit. the neut. is certain only for Barnabas.—אֵזוֹב) the hyssop (acc. to Zohary, Plants 96f = the Origanum Syriacum, not the European Hyssopus), a small bush w. blue flowers and highly aromatic leaves; used in purificatory sacrifices (Ex 12:22; Lev 14:4; Num 19:6, 18.—SIG 1218, 16 [V B.C.], where the word is beyond doubt correctly restored, the hyssop serves to purify a house in which a corpse had lain; Chaeremon also mentions its purifying power) Hb 9:19; 1 Cl 18:7 (Ps 50:9); B 8:1, 6.—In J 19:29 hyssop appears as a plant w. a long, firm stem or stalk, which creates some difficulty. The conjecture by JCamerarius († 1574), ὑσσῷ (=javelin [s. ὑσσός]: ὑσσῷ is actually found in mss. 476 and 1242, both antedating the conjecture) προπεριθέντες, has been accepted by many (e.g. Dalman, Jesus 187; Lagrange, JBernard; Field, Notes 106–8; M-M.; Goodsp., Probs. 115f; Mft.; NEB; w. reserve, Bultmann). Against the rdg. ὑσσός (not accepted by Weymouth, NAB [the margin suggests probability of ‘symbolic’ usage], NRSV, REB [marginal ref. to ‘javelin’]; 20th Century ‘hyssop-stalk’) it has been urged (by WBauer et al.) that the purifying effect of the hyssop (used acc. to Ex 12:22 specif. at the Passover) is the most important consideration here.—ILöw, Die Flora der Juden II 1924, 72f; 84–101, on J 19:29 esp. 99–101; LFonck, Streifzüge durch die biblische Flora 1900, 109; EbNestle, Zum Ysop bei Johannes, Josephus u. Philo: ZNW 14, 1913, 263–65; LBaldensperger and GCrowfoot, Hyssop: PEF 63, ’31, 89–98; Metzger 253f; BHHW III 2197f.—DELG. M-M. -
8 ακαλλιερήτους
-
9 ἀκαλλιερήτους
-
10 ακαλλιερήτων
-
11 ἀκαλλιερήτων
-
12 ακαλλιέρητα
-
13 ἀκαλλιέρητα
-
14 ακαλλιέρητος
-
15 ἀκαλλιέρητος
-
16 επίδεκτος
-
17 ἐπίδεκτος
-
18 παραδεκτοίς
-
19 παραδεκτοῖς
-
20 παραδεκτά
παραδεκτόςaccepted: neut nom /voc /acc pl
См. также в других словарях:
accepted — accepted; un·accepted; … English syllables
accepted — index allowable, allowed, assumed (inferred), boiler plate, common (customary), conventional, c … Law dictionary
accepted — [adj] generally agreed upon accustomed, acknowledged, allowed, approved, arrived at, authorized, card carrying*, chosen, confirmed, conventional, credited, current, customary, endorsed, established, fashionable, in vogue, kosher*, legit*, normal … New thesaurus
accepted — [ak sep′tid, əksep′tid] adj. generally regarded as true, valid, proper, etc.; conventional; approved … English World dictionary
Accepted — Infobox Film name = Accepted caption = Movie poster for Accepted director = Steve Pink producer = Michael Bostick writer = Adam Cooper Bill Collage Mark Perez starring = Justin Long Jonah Hill Blake Lively Anthony Heald Lewis Black music = David… … Wikipedia
Accepted — Este artículo o sección sobre televisión necesita ser wikificado con un formato acorde a las convenciones de estilo. Por favor, edítalo para que las cumpla. Mientras tanto, no elimines este aviso puesto el 21 de junio de 2010. También puedes… … Wikipedia Español
Accepted — Accept Ac*cept ([a^]k*s[e^]pt ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Accepted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Accepting}.] [F. accepter, L. acceptare, freq. of accipere; ad + capere to take; akin to E. heave.] [1913 Webster] 1. To receive with a consenting mind (something… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
accepted — ac|cept|ed [əkˈseptıd] adj considered right or suitable by most people ▪ Having more than one wife is a normal and accepted practice in some countries. generally/widely/universally etc accepted ▪ generally accepted principles of fairness and… … Dictionary of contemporary English
accepted — [[t]ækse̱ptɪd[/t]] ♦♦ ADJ: oft adv ADJ Accepted ideas are agreed by most people to be correct or reasonable. → See also accept There is no generally accepted definition of life... It is accepted wisdom that the rise of science has been partly… … English dictionary
Accepted — Admis à tout prix Admis à tout prix, ou Accepté au Québec (Accepted en version originale), est un film américain réalisé par Steve Pink, sorti en 2006. Sommaire 1 Synopsis 2 Fiche technique 3 Distribution … Wikipédia en Français
accepted — acceptedly, adv. /ak sep tid/, adj. generally approved; usually regarded as normal, right, etc.: an accepted pronunciation of a word; an accepted theory. [1485 95; ACCEPT + ED2] * * * … Universalium