-
1 αναδύσει
ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἀναδύσεϊ, ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (attic ionic)ἀναδύ̱σει, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
2 ἀναδύσει
ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἀναδύσεϊ, ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (attic ionic)ἀναδύ̱σει, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
3 ανασπάσει
ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἀνασπάσεϊ, ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (attic ionic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 3rd sg (epic doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind mid 2nd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 3rd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 3rd sg (epic)ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind mid 2nd sgἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 3rd sg -
4 ἀνασπάσει
ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἀνασπάσεϊ, ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (attic ionic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 3rd sg (epic doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind mid 2nd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σει, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 3rd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 3rd sg (epic)ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind mid 2nd sgἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 3rd sg -
5 αναδύσεις
ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc pl (attic epic)ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /acc pl (attic) -
6 ἀναδύσεις
ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc pl (attic epic)ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem nom /acc pl (attic) -
7 ανασπάσεις
ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc pl (attic epic)ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /acc pl (attic)ἀνασπά̱σεις, ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 2nd sg (epic doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σεις, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 2nd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 2nd sg (epic)ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 2nd sg -
8 ἀνασπάσεις
ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /voc pl (attic epic)ἀνάσπασιςdrawing back: fem nom /acc pl (attic)ἀνασπά̱σεις, ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 2nd sg (epic doric aeolic)ἀνασπά̱σεις, ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 2nd sg (doric aeolic)ἀνασπάωdraw: aor subj act 2nd sg (epic)ἀνασπάωdraw: fut ind act 2nd sg -
9 λόφος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `neck of drawing animals and men, crest of a helmet, crest of a hill' (Il.), also `crest or tuft on the head of birds, of feathers or flesh' (Simon., Hdt., Ar., Arist.).Compounds: Often as 2. member, e.g. γή-, γεώ-λοφος `earth-hill' (Pl., X.) with illuminating first member (Risch IF 59, 268); rarely as 1. member, e.g. (τὰ) λόφουρα `with crest-like tail', of drawing-animals and animals of burden (horses, asses, τὰ ὑποζύγια) as opposed to ruminants (Arist., Thphr., hell. inscr.). - Side-form λόφη f. `comb' (D.S.; after κόμη?).Derivatives: 1. Diminut.: λόφιον `small crest of helmet' (sch.), λοφίδιον `small hill' (Ael.). Other substant.: 2. λοφιά, Ion. - ιή f. `comb for manes, hair-, breast, back-fin etc.' (τ 446, also Hdt., Arist.; cf. Scheller Oxytonierung 72 f.); 3. λοφεῖον `crest-case' (Ar.), also λοφίς περικεφαλαίας θήκη H. 4. λοφίας m. `fish with back-fins', denomination of the φάγρος (Numen. ap. Ath.; like ἀκανθίας a.o., Chantraine Formation 94), also the first dorsal vertebra' (Poll.); in the last meaning also λοφαδίας (Poll.; *λοφάς, - άδιος); λοφιήτης m. `inhabitant of a hill' (AP, of Pan, after πολιήτης). 5. λόφωσις m. `crest ornament' (Ar. Av. 291; cf. ἀέτωσις [s. αἰετός]). - 6. Adjectives: λοφώδης `crest-like, hilly' (Arist.), λοφόεις `crested, hilly' (Tryph., Nonn.). - 7. Verbs: λοφάω `be crested' (Babr., Ar., H.; after κομάω, Leumann Hom. Wörter 307 n. 77); λοφίζω `have the λ. in the hight' (Zonar.); λοφόομαι `rise, form a hill' (Eust.). -- 8. Hypostasis: καταλοφάδεια adv. `hanging down from the neck' (κ 169 with metr. conditioned - εια, cf. κατωμάδιος, κατωμαδόν; Chantraine Form. 39, Gramm. hom. 1, 101 u. 176).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: As both Alc. (Z 65) and Hdt. (1, 171) consider the helmet-crest as a Carian invention, Schulze Q. 257, 4 sees in λόφος as `crest of the helmet' a Carian LW [loanword], which he, certainly wrongly, wants to separate from λόφος `neck'. - An acceptable connection gives Toch. A lap `head' (Schulze Kl. Schr. 252); CSl. ORuss. lъbъ `skull' with OCS lъbьnъ `belonging to the skull' (with Russ. lob `front', Ukr. ɫob `front, head') presents serious difficulties because of the vowel. Uncertain Illyr. PN Otto-(Atto-)lobus (Mayer Glotta 32, 83). - Lit. in Vasmer Wb. s. lob, Sadnik-Aitzetmüller Hwb. zu den aksl. Texten 264 (No. 486), v. Windekens Lex. étym. s. lap. Wrong IE etymologies are rejected by Bq.Page in Frisk: 2,139-140Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λόφος
-
10 ἐρωέω
A rush, rush forth,αἷμα κελαινὸν ἐρωήσει περὶ δουρί Il.1.303
, Od.16.441 ; ἠρώησαν ὀπίσσω, of horses, they started back, Il.23.433 ; escape harm, Nic.Th. 117.2 c. gen. rei, draw back or rest from,ἐρωῆσαι πολέμοιο Il.13.776
, cf. 17.422 ;ἐρωήσουσι δὲ χάρμης 14.101
;ἐρώησαν καμάτοιο h.Cer. 301
; οῐνου Epic. in Arch.Pap. 7.4 ; [νεφέλη] οὔ ποτ' ἐρωεῖ (sc. σκοπέλου ) the cloud never fails from it, never leaves it, Od.12.75 ; ἴθι νῦν κατὰ λαὸν Ἀχαιῶν, μήδ' ἔτ' ἐρώει (sc. τοῦ ἰέναι) Il.2.179 : c. acc., leave, quit, Theoc.13.74, 24.101.II trans., drive or force back, once in Hom., ;χεῖρας ὑσμίνης Theoc.22.174
; ;θηρὸς ὀλοὸν κέρας Id.Fr. 249
; δρόμον ἐλεφάντων cj. in Nonn. D.36.188 : c. acc. et inf.,Ἀχαιοὺς ἐ. κορέσασθαι Q.S.3.520
.—Dub. in late Prose, Ant.Lib.7.3. -ή, ἡ, [dialect] Ep. Noun (Hom. only in Il.), quick motion, rush, force,ἀνδρὸς ἐ. Il.3.62
, cf. 14.488 ; mostly of things,δουρὸς ἐ. 15.358
;βελέων ἐ. 4.542
; λείπετο δουρὸς ἐ. a spear's throw behind, 23.529, cf. 21.251 ; λικμητῆρος ἐ. the force or swing of the winnower's (shovel), 13.590 ;ἐκτὸς ἐρωῆς πετράων A.R.4.1657
;πυρός AP9.490
(Heliod.).2 impulse, desire, περὶ Κύπριν ἐ. ib.10.112, cf. Procl.H.3.10 ;γαστρὸς ἐ. Opp.C.3.175
. -
11 ἀνέλκω
A draw up, τάλαντα.. ἀνέλκει holds them up (in weighing), 1l.12.434; ἀνελκύσαι ναῦς haul them up high and dry, Hdt.7.59, Th. 6.44;νῆες ἀνελκυσμέναι Hdt.9.98
;δοκοὺς ἀ. Th.2.76
; haul up a sail, Epicr.10.2 drag up, drag out, ; κᾷτ' ἀνελκύσας ἐρωτᾷ having dragged him into open court, Id.Ach. 687; τὰ παιδάρι' εὐδὺς ἀνέλκει drags them into the witness-box, Id.V. 568: —[voice] Med., ἀνέλκεσθαι τρίχας tear one's own hair, Il.22.77:—[voice] Pass.,κύνα χερσὶν ἀνελκομενον D.P.790
.II draw back, ὁ δὲ τόξου πῆχυν ἄνελκεν (in act to shoot) Il.11.375, cf. Od.21.128:—[voice] Med., ἔγχος ἀνελκόμενον drawing back his spear [out of the corpse], ib.22.97;τόξον ἀνέλκεται τοξευτής Arat.305
:—[voice] Pass., [tense] pf. part.ἀνειλκυσμένος Procl.Hyp.7.39
. -
12 ἀναπάλλω
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > ἀναπάλλω
-
13 αὐερύω
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > αὐερύω
-
14 ἱμάς-
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `leathern strap, for drawing, lashing etc., thong of a sandal, of a door etc.', as building term `beam' (Il.; Delebecque Cheval 63, 187f.).Compounds: As 1. member e. g. in ἱμαντ-ελίκται pl. "pricker of tapes-", name of the sophists in Democr. 150, ἱμαντελιγμός name of a game (Poll. 9, 118), compounds of ἱμάντας ἑλίσσειν, cf. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 244 w. n. 1.Derivatives: Diminut. ἱμάντιον (Hp.), ἱμαντ-άριον (Delos IIa a. o.), - ίδιον (EM), - ίσκος (Herod.); adj. ἱμάντινος `of ropes' (Hdt., Hp.), ἱμαντώδης `rope-like' (Pl., Dsc., Gal.); denomin. verbs: 1. ἱμάσσω, aor. ἱμάσαι a) `lash' (Il.) with ἱμάσθλη `lash, whip' (Il.); also μάσθλης (through cross with μάστιξ?, cf. on μαίο-μαι; diff. on ἱμάσσω, ἱμάσθλη Schwyzer 533, 725 n. 3, Belardi Maia 2, 274ff.); b) `provide with ἱμάντες, i. e. beams' only in ἱμασσια `beams?' (IG 4, 823, 26, Troizen IVa; s. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 149 w. n. 1, Bechtel Dial. 2, 510, Scheller Oxytonierung 113 n. 1). 2. ἱμάσκω `wallop' (`fetter'?; Del.3 409, 7; cf. Brugmann IF 29, 214). 3. ἱμαντόω `provide with ἱμάντες, i. e. bed-clothes' in ἱμαντωμένην κλίνην (H. s. πυξ\< ίνην\>; from there ἱμάντωσις (LXX, Poll.), ἱμάντωμα H. - Besides, independent of ἱμάς, but cognate with it: 1. ἱμαῖος (sc. ᾠδή), ἱμαῖον ( μέλος, ᾳ῏σμα) `song at water scooping' (Call., Tryphon, Suid.) with ἱμαοιδός (haplolog. for ἱμαιο-αοιδός) `who sings an ἱμαῖον' (Poll., H.); 2. ἱμάω `bring (water) up with a ropel (from a well)', also metaph. (Arist., Ath.), usually ἀν-, καθ-ιμάω (Ar., X.) with ἱμητήρ ( κάδος, Delos IIa), ἱμητήριος (H. s. ἱβανατρίς), ἀν-, καθ-ίμησις (Plu.); 3. ἱμονιά `well-rope' (Com., Ph., Luc. a. o.; Scheller Oxytonierung 75f.); 4. ἱμανήθρη `id.' s. v.Etymology: As secondary formation in - ντ- (Schwyzer 526, esp. Kretschmer Glotta 14, 99f.) ἱμάς supposes a noun, that is found also in ἱμάω, ἱμαῖος, so e.g. *ἱμᾱ `rope' ( ἱμαῖος from ἱμάω like δαμαῖος from δαμάζω?; cf. Chantr. Form. 48f.); beside it we find in ἱμον-ιά (as in καθ-, κατ-ιμονεύει καθίησι, καθιεῖ H., if not free formed to ἱμονιά) an ν-stem, prob. *ἱμων; thus ἱμανήθρη through *ἱμανάω, perh. *ἱμαίνω goes back on *ἱμάνη (cf. πλεκτάνη, ἀρτάνη; this seems quite doubtful, however), or *ἷμα; cf. e. g. γνώμη: γνῶμα: γνώμων. Note the changing quantity of the anlauting vowel: against length in ἱμονιά, ἱμανήθρη, καθ-ιμάω stands a short in ἱμαῖος, mostly also in ἱμάς (except Φ 544, Κ 475 a. o., cf. Schulze Q. 181, 466 n. 1) with compp. and derivv. The change cannot go back on old ablaut (as Frisl says), but it will continue * sh₁i-, which with metathesis (to * sih₁m-) gives a long, without a short vowel; see Schrijver, Laryngals in Latin 519ff, who supposes that a stressed form resulted in the long vowel. With *ἱ̄μων agrees exactly a Germ. word for `rope', e. g. OWNo. sīmi, OS sīmo m.; with deviant meaning Skt. sīmán- m. f. `skull, boundary', IE * sī-mon-, sī-men- (note that for Germ. also * seh₁i-m- is possible); formally identical are *ἱμᾱ and Skt. sīmā f. `boundary'; an m-suffix also in Irish sim `chain'. The primary verb `bind' is still seen in Indo-Iranian, Baltic and Hittite, e. g. Skt. sy-ati, si-nā́-ti, Ptz. sĭ-ta-, Lith. sienù, siẽti, Hitt. išh̯ii̯a-, 3. sg. išh̯āi. The nominal derivv. are very numerous, a. o. OHG NHG seil (uncertain hypotheses in Specht Ursprung 227). More forms Pok. 891f. - (The group ἰβάνη, ἴβανος etc. (s. v. and s. εἴβω) is rather Pre-Greek (Kuiper Μνήμης χάριν 1, 212f.).Page in Frisk: 1,724-725Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἱμάς-
-
15 αναδύσεσι
-
16 ἀναδύσεσι
-
17 αναδύσεως
-
18 ἀναδύσεως
-
19 αναδύση
ἀναδύσηι, ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: aor part act fem dat sg (attic epic ionic)ἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: aor subj mid 2nd sgἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
20 ἀναδύσῃ
ἀναδύσηι, ἀνάδυσιςdrawing back: fem dat sg (epic)ἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: aor part act fem dat sg (attic epic ionic)ἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: aor subj mid 2nd sgἀναδύ̱σῃ, ἀναδύνωcome to the top of the water: fut ind mid 2nd sg
См. также в других словарях:
Drawing Restraint 9 — Poster for Drawing Restraint 9 Directed by Matthew Barney Produced by … Wikipedia
drawing board — n 1.) (go) back to the drawing board if you go back to the drawing board, you start again with a completely new plan or idea, after the one you tried before has failed ▪ The current system just isn t working we need to go back to the drawing… … Dictionary of contemporary English
back to the drawing board — If you have to go back to the drawing board, you have to go back to the beginning and start something again … The small dictionary of idiomes
drawing board — ► NOUN ▪ a board on which paper can be spread for artists or designers to work on. ● back to the drawing board Cf. ↑back to the drawing board … English terms dictionary
drawing board — n. a flat, smooth board on which paper, canvas, etc. is fastened for making drawings back to the drawing board Informal back to the beginning or to the planning stage for a fresh approach or to find out what went wrong on the drawing board in the … English World dictionary
Drawing Restraint 9 (album) — Drawing Restraint 9 Soundtrack album by Björk Released July 25, 2005 (U … Wikipedia
back to the drawing board — back to the beginning, back to square one If this plan fails, it s back to the drawing board. We start again … English idioms
Back to Basics (Christina Aguilera album) — Back to Basics Studio album by Christina Aguilera Released August … Wikipedia
drawing board — drawing boards (in AM, use drawing board) 1) N COUNT A drawing board is a large flat board, often fixed to a metal frame so that it looks like a desk, on which you place your paper when you are drawing or designing something. 2) PHRASE: PHR after … English dictionary
back to the drawing board — ► back to the drawing board a plan has failed and a new one is needed. Main Entry: ↑drawing board … English terms dictionary
drawing board — drawing ,board noun count a large board or table on which designers put their paper when they are working (go) back to the drawing board to try to think of a completely new idea because the one you tried before was not successful … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English