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1 tanpa tema
athematic -
2 атематический
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3 athematisch
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4 κλύω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `hear, understand, obey' (Il.), also (with εὖ, κακῶς) `have the name' (trag.) (Hes. Op. 726)Other forms: Aor. ἔκλυον (Il.), athematic forms: ipv. κλῦθι, - τε (Hom., Pi., trag.), κέκλυθι, - τε (Hom.), also κέκλῠκε (Epich. 190; s. below), ptc. κλῠ́μενος `famous' (Antim., Theoc.), usu. PN Κλύμενος, Κλυμένη (Hom.).Derivatives: κλυτός m., also f. (s. Schwyzer-Debrunner 32 n. 5) `famous' (Il.), often as 1. member, e. g. κλυτό-τοξος `with famous bow' (of Apollon), κλυτό-πωλος `with famous foals' (of Hades; cf. Thieme Studien 48ff.); also Κλυται-μήστρα, - ρη (Il.), with 2. member to μήστωρ, 1. member reshaped after Κραται-, Παλαι- a. o.; Schwyzer 448, Sommer Nominalkomp. 147 w. n. 1. - With other ablaut κλειτός `famous' (Hom., Pi.) from *κλεϜετός; s. below.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [605] *ḱleu- `hear'Etymology: The thematic root-aorist ἔκλυον, to which the present κλύω is an innovation, agrees with Skt. aorist śruvam, grew like this from an older athematic aorist, which can still be seen in ipv. κλῦθι, - τε and the ptc. κλύμενος. To κλῦθι (in Hom. alway at verse beginning), with metrical lengthening for *κλύ-θι, Skt. śru-dhi is an exact comparandum; an innovation is κλῦτε (not for *κλεῦ-τε = Skt. śró-ta (details in Schwyzer 800 n. 6). Reduplicated κέ-κλυ-θι, - τε can be an innovation after τέ-τλᾰ-θι a. o. (s. on ἱλάσκομαι; diff. Schwyzer 804 with Schulze Q. 391ff.); on the hapax κέκλυκε (Epich.) ibd. 799 n. 2. - κλυτός too has agreements outside Greek, in several languages, e. g. Skt. śrutá- `heard', Lat. in-clutus `famous', Arm. lu `known', OIr. cloth n. `fame', IE. *ḱlŭ-tó-; (not here Germ., e. g. OHG hlūt `loud'). - The full grade eu can be seen in the athematic root-aorist, Skt. á-śrav-am, 3. sg. á-śro-t ; here *κλεϜετός \> κλειτός (cf. Schwyzer 502) and the old verbal noun κλέ(Ϝ)ος, s. v. - The other languages present many forms, e. g. the old nu-present in Skt. śr̥-ṇó-ti, Av. surunaoiti; note Lat. cluēre `be called'. Further there is the denominative κλέω `celebrate, praise', s. κλέος. - More forms Pok. 605ff., W.-Hofmann and Ernout-Meillet s. clueō, Feist Vgl. Wb. d. got. Spr. s. hliuma.Page in Frisk: 1,877-878Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλύω
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5 ἆσαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `satiate, take one's fill' (Il.)Other forms: Aor. Inf.; pr. ἄ̄-μεναι, subj. ἕωμεν (\< *ἥ-ο-μεν); fut. ἄσειν; thematic pres. ᾰεται Hes. Sc. 101 (cod. Laur.; the other mss. ἄαται, which may be athematic or for contracted *ἆ-ται; cf. ἆται πληροῦται H.)Dialectal forms: Myc. asesosi \/asēsonsi\/ fut.Etymology: Athematic root aorist. Cf. Solmsen Unt. 93f. See ἅ-δην and ἄ-ση. PIE * seh₂-\/ sh₂-. Lat. satis `enough', Lith. sótis `satiety' (* seh₂-), Goth. gasoÞjan `satiate' etc. (Not to Anat. has-, as * h₂sh₂- would give Gr. * aha-\> hā-, so that ἄδην could not be explained.)Page in Frisk: 1,159Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἆσαι
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6 ἵστημι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `set, position oneself, make stand' (Il.)Other forms: Dor. ἵστᾱμι, med. ἵσταμαι, aor. στῆσαι, στήσασθαι, fut. στήσω, aor. pass. σταθῆναι (Od.), fut. σταθήσομαι (Att.); intr. aor. στῆναι with fut. στήσομαι, perf. ἕστηκα.Derivatives: Several, partly inherited derivations are given s.v., s. ἱστός, σταθμός, σταμῖνες, στάσις, στατήρ, στήλη, στήμων, στοά etc.; s. also στάμνος, σταυρός.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1004] * steh₂- -stand, set'Etymology: With the intr. athematic root aorist ἔ-στη-ν agrees exactly Skt. á-sthā-m, IE *h₁é-steh₂-m. Beside it stands without agreement outside Greek already in Hom. a transitive σ-aorist ἔ-στη-σ-α like ἔ-φῡ-σ-α beside ἔ-φῡ-ν a. o.; the intrans. future στή-σομαι, was originally built to ἔ-στη-ν, but was associated with the σ-aorist. Also the trans. reduplicated athematic present ἵ-στη-μι is limited to Greek; cf. τί-θη-μι, ἵ-η-μι, βί-βη-μι; both Indo-Iranian and Italo-Celtic have thematic formations, e. g. Skt. tí-ṣṭh-ati `stands' (*- sth₂-e-ti), Lat. si-st-it. The intr. perf. ἕ-στη-κ-α, pl. ἕ-στᾰ-μεν is excep for the κ-enlargment old and represents together wiht Skt. ta-stháu, pl. ta-sthi-má, Lat. ste-ti-mus an IE perfect. Old is also the verbal adjective στᾰ-τός (Il.) = Skt. sthĭ-tá- `standing', Lat. stă-tus, OWNo. sta-ðr stc, IE * sth₂tos. Details in Schwyzer 686f., 742, 755f., 762, 775f., 782. - Other IE forms are irrelevant for Greek (e. g. Lat. stō \< *stā-i̯ō = Lith. stō-ju, OCS sta-jǫ, Germ., e. g. OS OHG stān, stēn ` stehen' after gān, gēn ` gehen'), see Bq, Pok. 1004ff., W.-Hofmann s. stō etc. S. also ἱστάνω.Page in Frisk: 1,739Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἵστημι
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7 κάμνω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `toil, labour, build; get tired, die' (euphem.; almost only ep. οἱ καμόντες, Att. οἱ κεκμηκότες); `be in danger, be in need' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. καμεῖν, fut. καμοῦμαι (Schwyzer 784), perf. κέκμηκα, Dor. (Theoc.) κέκμᾱκα, ep. ptc. κεκμηώς.Compounds: also with prefix, e. g. ἀπο-, ἐκ-, συγ-. - As 2. member in compunds: ἀ-κάματος `without fatigue' (Il.). ἀ-κάμα-ς, - α-ντ-ος `indefatigable' (Il.; on the formation Schwyzer 526); more usual - κμη-τ- (-κμᾱ-τ-), - κμη-το- (-κμᾱ-το-), e. g. ἀ-κμή-ς, - ῆτ-ος `id.', ἄ-κμη-τος `id.', πολύ-κμητος `with much labour prepared'.Derivatives: Verbal noun κάματος m. `labour, much demending labour, fatigue, pain' (Il.; on the meaning Radermacher RhM 87, 285f. [doubtful]). καματώδης `tiring' (Hes., Pi.), καματηρός `tiring, tired' (Ion., h. Ven. 246; after ἀνιηρός etc.; Chantraine Formation 232, Zumbach Neuerungen 15); καματηδόν `with fatigue' (Man.); also the verbal forms καματῶν κοπιῶν, ἐκαμάτευσε μετὰ κακοπαθείας εἰργάσατο H. (: καματάω, - τεύω).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [557] *ḱemh₂- `exert oneself, get tired'Etymology: Beside the thematic nasal present κάμνω Sanskrit has an athematic nā-present (type δάμ-νᾱ-μι): midd. śam-nī-te `exert onself, labour' (Schwyzer 693). The disyll. root form is seen in the impv. śamī̆-ṣva and the agent noun in śami-tár- `who prepares', which agree with Gr. κάμα-τος. Also the thematic aorist ἔ-καμ-ον, ἔ-καμ-ε has a parallel in Skt. a-śam-a-t, both with zero grade, *ḱm̥h₂-e\/o- (Schwyzer 747, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 391); the full grade can be seen in athematic Skt. aor. á-śami-ṣ-ṭa (RV), *e-ḱemh₂-t. The zero grade in Greek is κμη-, PGr. κμᾱ- \< *ḱm̥h₂- ( κέ-κμη-κα, ἄ-κμη-τος.), which in Sanskrit gave śān-tá- (ptc.); s. Rix, Hist. Gramm 1976, 73. κάματος derives from *ḱm̥h₂-etos. - Certain traces of the root in other languages have not been found; perhaps in some Celtic nouns, like MIr. cuma `trouble', cumal `slave (fem.)'. Pok. 557. - Cf. κομέω, κομίζω (\< *ḱomh₂-).Page in Frisk: 1,773-774Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κάμνω
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8 атематический
Linguistics: athematic, nonthematic -
9 непрограммный
General subject: athematic (о музыке) -
10 czasownik
m Jęz. verb- odmiana czasowników verbal inflection- czasownik trzeciej koniugacji a third conjugation verb- □ czasownik atematyczny athematic verb- czasownik częstotliwy a. wielokrotny iterative verb- czasownik dokonany perfective verb- czasownik inchoatywny inchoative verb- czasownik jednokrotny momentary verb- czasownik kauzatywny causative verb- czasownik niedokonany imperfective verb- czasownik nieprzechodni a. intranzytywny intransitive verb- czasownik posiłkowy auxiliary verb- czasownik przechodni a. tranzytywny transitive verb- czasownik zwrotny reflexive verb- czasowniki nieregularne irregular verbs- czasowniki stanowe verbs of state- czasowniki ułomne defective verbs* * *JĘZ verb* * *miGen. -a gram. verb; czasownik modalny/posiłkowy modal/auxiliary verb; czasownik dokonany/niedokonany perfective/imperfective verb; osobowa forma czasownika finite verb.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > czasownik
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11 athematisch
adj. athematic -
12 atematico
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13 ὄρημι
Aὄρη Theoc.30.22
, cf. [dialect] Aeol. ἐπόρημι; part.ὄρεις Pittac.
ap. D.L.1.81 ; to this athematic stem ὁρη- (not from ὁρα-) prob. belong [ per.] 2sg. [voice] Med.ὅρηαι Od.14.343
and [ per.] 2sg. [voice] Act.ποθόρησθα Theoc.6.8
:—but many [dialect] Dor. forms have η by [var] contr. from ᾰε, as [dialect] Lacon. inf. , Syrac. imper.ὅρη Epich.170.12
, etc. ; v. ὁράω. -
14 ἀλέω
Grammatical information: v.Dialectal forms: Myc. uncertain ] artereu[.Derivatives: ἀλέ-ατα `wheat-groats' (inscr. Miletos, VIa) from *ἀλέ-Ϝατα, with metrical lengthening ἀλείατα (Hom.), cf. Schulze Q. 226 and Hdn. 2, 472, 12, who explains ἄλειαρ from ἄλεαρ. Thematized in ἄλευρ-ον, mostly pl. ἄλευρα `flour' (Hdt.). - ἄλητον `flour' (Hp.) with η after ἄμητος or contr. from ἀλεατ-. ἀλήσιον πᾶν τὸ ἀληλεσμένον H., Lacon. ἀληhιον (with s \< t before i!). - ἄλημα n. `flour' (S.). - ὄνος ἀλέτης `grinder (upper millstone)' (Gortyn, X., cf. Schwyzer 499, Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 57f.). - ἀλετρίς `woman who grinds corn' (Hom.). - On ἀλετρίβανος m. `pestle' (Ar.) cf. Schwyzer 263, 438. - Lengthened vb. stem ἀλήθω (Hp.; Schwyzer 682). Unclear ἀλίνω = λεπτύνω (Phot. ex S.); cf. ἀλιν[ν]όν ἀμυδρόν H., s. Güntert IF 45, 345.Etymology: ἀλέω is prob. an athematic present *ἀλε- \< * h₂elh₁-. - With *ἄλε-Ϝαρ cf. Arm. alewr `flour', *h₂leh₁-ur̥. The Arm. verb is aɫam. Further cognates in Indo-Iranian, e. g. MInd. (+ Hindi, Bengali) āṭā `flour', NPers. ārd `id.', Av. aša- (\< * arta-) `ground'. - The PIE root * melh₂-, same meaning, cf. μάλευρον.Page in Frisk: 1,70-71Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλέω
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15 ἄχνυμαι
ἄχνυμαι, ἄχομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `grieve, lament for' (Il.).Other forms: Ptc. also ἀχεύων, ἀχέων (Il.; s. below); aor. ἀκαχέσθαι, ἀκαχεῖν, ἀκαχῆσαι, perf. ἀκάχημαι ( ἀκηχεμένη m.c.?). ἄχομαι twice (Od.).Derivatives: Pres. ἀκαχίζομαι, - ίζω ; ἀχνάσδημι (Alk. 81), for a verb in - άζω from *ἄχνημι, *ἄχναμαι (beside ἄχνυμαι, s. Schwyzer 693 A. 4, 716 Mom. 4). - Old is ἄχος n. `sadness, pain' (Il.); ἀχνύς, - ύος f. (Kall.) after ἄχνυμαι.Etymology: With ἄχος agree Goth. agis n., OE. ege m. `fear', though there is difference in meaning. Further Goth. ptc. un-agands `fearless' (them. like ἄχομαι). - Pret.-pres. Goth. ōg `I feared' like OIr. ad-āgor id. (both from IE ā or ō) confirm zero grade in ἄχνυμαι. - In ἀχεύων we have an athematic participle, prob. from the aorist-stem (aor. *ἠ᾽χευ-α), beside pres. ἄχ-ν-υ-μαι. For ἀχέων: ἄχος cf. κρατέων ; κράτος, s. Schwyzer 696 β, 724 A.1. ἀχεύων not from *ἀχεύ-ι̯ων. S. Strunk, Nasalpräs. 105ff.Page in Frisk: 1,202-203Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄχνυμαι
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16 ἄχομαι
ἄχνυμαι, ἄχομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `grieve, lament for' (Il.).Other forms: Ptc. also ἀχεύων, ἀχέων (Il.; s. below); aor. ἀκαχέσθαι, ἀκαχεῖν, ἀκαχῆσαι, perf. ἀκάχημαι ( ἀκηχεμένη m.c.?). ἄχομαι twice (Od.).Derivatives: Pres. ἀκαχίζομαι, - ίζω ; ἀχνάσδημι (Alk. 81), for a verb in - άζω from *ἄχνημι, *ἄχναμαι (beside ἄχνυμαι, s. Schwyzer 693 A. 4, 716 Mom. 4). - Old is ἄχος n. `sadness, pain' (Il.); ἀχνύς, - ύος f. (Kall.) after ἄχνυμαι.Etymology: With ἄχος agree Goth. agis n., OE. ege m. `fear', though there is difference in meaning. Further Goth. ptc. un-agands `fearless' (them. like ἄχομαι). - Pret.-pres. Goth. ōg `I feared' like OIr. ad-āgor id. (both from IE ā or ō) confirm zero grade in ἄχνυμαι. - In ἀχεύων we have an athematic participle, prob. from the aorist-stem (aor. *ἠ᾽χευ-α), beside pres. ἄχ-ν-υ-μαι. For ἀχέων: ἄχος cf. κρατέων ; κράτος, s. Schwyzer 696 β, 724 A.1. ἀχεύων not from *ἀχεύ-ι̯ων. S. Strunk, Nasalpräs. 105ff.Page in Frisk: 1,202-203Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄχομαι
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17 γέντο
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `he took' (Il. 8, 43).Etymology: γέντο is like λέκτο `he laid down' either a middle root aorist, or an s- aorist with lost σ (*λέκ-σ-το, *γέμ-σ-το; on μ s. below), cf. Schwyzer 751 Zus. 2. Both verbs have analogical full grade. Not from *gm̥̄to (Wackernagel Unt. 175 A.). To γέντο \< *γέμτο probably ipv. ἀπό-γεμε ἄφελκε. Κύπριοι and ὕγ-γεμος συλλαβή. Σαλαμίνιοι H. From other languages have been compared MIr. gemel `fetter', Latv. gùmstu, gùmt `seize etc.'; OCS žьmǫ, žęti `σφίγγειν, comprimere'. This word has again been compared with Gr. γέμω `be full' (q. v.), which could be the thematic present beside athematic (sigmatic) aorist γέντο. - Pok. 368f. Not to γαμέω nor to γάγγαμον `net' (q. v.).Page in Frisk: 1,297-298Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γέντο
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18 διδράσκω
Grammatical information: v.Other forms: aor. ἀπ-έδρᾱν, perf. ἁποδέδρακα. Also ἐκ-διδράσκω; the simplex is hardly attested; s. DELG.Derivatives: ἀπόδρασις (Hdt.). δρᾱσμός `flight' (Hdt.). - ἄδρᾱστος intr. `who does not run away' (Hdt.), also as PN ῎Αδρηστος, - δραστος (Il.); fem. Άδρά̄στεια name of Nemesis `from whom one cannot flee' (A.; s. Schwyzer 475); - δρᾱπέτης m. `runaway (slave)' (Hdt.); the - π- is unclear. δραπετεύω `run away'. δρᾱ́ψ (Ar. fr. 768; old?). Also δρασκάζω `try to run away" (Lys.).Etymology: IE [204] * dreh₂- `run' The athematic root aorist ἔ-δρᾱ-ν agrees with Skt. drā́-ti `escapes'. Root * dr-eh₂- beside * dr-em- in δραμεῖν, δρόμος.See also: s. ἀποδιδράσκω.Page in Frisk: 1,387Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > διδράσκω
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19 δίεμαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: trans. `hasten, speed' in δίεσθαι (Μ 276 usw.), intr. `run' in δίενται (Ψ 475) and δίεσθαι (Μ 304);Other forms: Subj. δίωμαι, δίηται, δίωνται (Ο 681 etc.), opt. δίοιτο (ρ 317); act. ἐνδίεσαν. See DELG. - Active preterite forms δίον `I fled' (Χ 251; on δίε s. Chantr. Gramm. hom. 1, 388), ἐνδίεσαν `they pursued' (Σ 584); note περὶ γὰρ δίε (Ε 566 etc.) `he was afraid', s. below. - Rare forms in A.: δίομαι with inf. `I feared' ( Pers. 700f. [lyr.] bis), διόμενος `drive away' ( Supp. 819, Eu. 357 and 385 [lyr.]); in Gortyn ἐδδίηται (\< ἐσδ- = ἐκδ-), ἐπιδίεθθαι, - διόμενος `drive away, pursue' ( GDI 4997-8). - On διώκω s. v.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Apart from δίε `feared' which is rather a thematic root aorist of δέδοικα, δείδω, remain of the active forms only the ἅπ. λεγγ. δίον and ἐνδίεσαν. The forms, except ἐνδίεσαν and the hapax δίενται, can be thematic. As an athematic disyllabic δίε-μαι is found only in these two forms, one has explained them from ἵενται, ἵεσαν. But if one considers them as old (Schwyzer 686, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 293), the thematic forms are innovations. Note that an IE * dih₁- can hardly become διε-. On διερός `quick' s. v. - Skt. dī́yati `fly' is not certain enough. From other languages have been compared OIr. dīan `quick', Latv. diêt `dance' (Pok. 187). S. also δῖνος, δίζημαι, ζητέω.Page in Frisk: 1,389-390Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δίεμαι
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20 ἐάω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `let (go), permit, let in quiet'.Other forms: Ipf. εἴων, aor. ἐᾶσαι (ind. εἴασα), fut. ἐάσω (Il.; orig. ἐᾰ́σ(σ)αι, resp. ἐᾰ́σ(σ)ω?, s. below), perf. etc. εἴᾱκα, εἴαμαι, εἰάθην (D., Isoc.)Derivatives: None.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The glosses ἔβασον ἔασον. Συρακόσιοι H., EM, εὔα... ἔα H. assure for ἐάω a digamma; the diphthongal augment points to a consonantal beginning, probably σ-; but the absence of aspiration is unexplained (cf. Lejeune Traité de phonétique 78 n. 2). So a disyllabic root ( σ)εϜᾰ- like ἐλᾰ-, τελᾰ- etc., with in the aorist *(σ)εϜᾰ́-σαι \> ἐᾰ́σαι, or with analogical - σσ- (like ἐλάσ(σ)αι a. o.; after τελέσ-(σ)αι a. o.) ἐᾰ́σσαι, fut. ἐᾰ́σ(σ)ω, forms that can be found in Hom. (ἐᾰ́σουσιν φ 233, εἴᾰσεν Κ 299 as v. l.); so one could read ἐάσσαι for ἐᾶσαι (Δ 42) etc. like ἐάσσω (v. l.) in Parm. 8, 7. Also ἐάσομεν, ἔασον in Hdt. are understandable (cf. ἔησον ἔασον H.). The length in ἐᾶσαι etc. would then be from the denominatives in - άω. So unique ἔᾰ (Ε 256) would be 3. sing. of an athematic Aeolic ἔᾰ-μι. - Schwyzer 682 and 752, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 356. A good connection for ἐάω has not been found. Connection as IE seuH-; Skt. savi- in savi-tár- `Antreiber etc.' with pres. suváti `antreiben' does not fit well semantically. Cf. on εἱαμένη.Page in Frisk: 1,434Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐάω
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