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121 ἀεκήλιος
Grammatical information: adj.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: The form will have been based on the root *ueḱ- `to want' in ἑκών, ἕκηλος, Philipp, LfgrE. 1, 173.Page in Frisk: --Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀεκήλιος
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122 αἰκάλλω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `flatter, fondle' (trag.) specifically said of animalsOther forms: only present. αἰκάλος κόλαξ H; αἰκάλη ἀπάτη Zonar.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Looks like a denominative of forms like those given in the glosses (unless these are based on the verb). Etym. unknown.Page in Frisk: 1,38Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > αἰκάλλω
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123 ἀραρίσκω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `fit together, construct, equip' (Il.).Other forms: aor. 2 ἀραρεῖν, aor. 1 ἄρσαι, perf. ἄρᾱρα (intr.); aor. pass. ἤρθην; ἄρμενος `fitting, equipped', isolated med. root ptc. (Il.) with substantivized n. pl. ἄρμενα, s. v.Dialectal forms: Myc. ararowoa \/ ararwoha\/ n. pl.; araruja \/ araruia(i)\/; kakarea \/khalkāreha\/Derivatives: Many derivatives, so ἅρμα, ἁρμός, ἁρμονία, ἁρμόζω, ἁρμαλιά, ἀρτύς, ἄρθρον (s.s.vv.). From ἄραρα: ἀραρότως `well fitted' (A.). - Further ἀρθμός `union, friendship' (h. Merc. 524 u. a.). - ἁρμή `junction' (Hp.). - S. also ἀριθμός, ἀρείων, ἀρέσκω with ἀρετή, ἄρτι, ἁμαρτή, ὄαρ.Etymology: The pres. is based on the aor. ἀραρεῖν; old perfect ἄρᾱρα. Nearest cognate Arm. aorist arari `I made' (pres. ar̄nem). The root is found in other languages, e.g. Av. arǝm `fitting', Skt. r̥tá- `Order'.Page in Frisk: 1,128-129Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀραρίσκω
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124 ἁρπάζω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `snatch away' (Il.).Derivatives: ἅρπαξ f. `plunder' (Hes.), m. `robber' (Ar.); ἁρπαγή `robbery' (Sol.), ἁρπάγη `hook, rake' (E.); ἅρπαγος m. `hook' (A.); from here Lat. LW [loanword] harpagō `hook' (Plaut.), harpaga, harpax `rapacious'. - ἁρπακτήρ m. `robber' (Il.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: ἁρπάζω seems a denominative to a stem ἁρπαγ-. This may be based on ἅρπ- (from which ἁρπάζω can have been derived directly, s. Schwyzer 734); this is perhaps found in ἅρπη `sickle', and a bird of prey. - Cf. ἅρπυς, ἅρπυια, ἁρπαλέος. (Connection with ἐρέπτομαι, Szemerényi Syncope 210ff., is impossible because of the ἐ-.) No cognates. The suffix - αγ- cannot be explained from PIE; forms with it seem substr. words (Chantr. Form. 397). ἁρπ- too can hardly be explained from an IE form; *sr̥p- would have given ῥαπ-.Page in Frisk: 1,148-149Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἁρπάζω
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125 ἀταλός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `tender, delicate' (Il.).Derivatives: Denom. verb ἀτάλλω (pres. only) `skip in childish glee', trans. `bring up (a child)' (Il.); ἀτάλματα παίγνια H. - With internal reduplication (Schwyzer 648) ἀτιτάλλω `rear, tend' (Il.); aor. ἀτίτηλα· ἀτιτάλτας `foster father' (Gortyn).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unknown. Very extensive discussion in DELG. Leumann Glotta 15, 153ff. and Hom. Wörter 139ff. derives ἀταλός from the expression ἀταλὰ φρονέων, which arose from analysis of ἀταλαφρονέων. This again is based on ἀταλάφρων, and this again is the negation of ταλάφρων. Although it explains the composition vowel α, the whole is too complicated. Cf. Bolling, Lang. 27, 74 and Förstel, Glotta 48 (1970) 166f. - Derivation from ἄττα (Chantr., Benvenist, Instit. 2, 85ff.) seems also improbable. - Remains just an adj., ἀταλός, of unknown origin, with a verb `treat tenderly'. Fur. 262 compares ἀζαλαί νέαι καὶ ἀπαλαί and concludes to a subst. word (which is in itself probable), but the comparison is uncertain.Page in Frisk: 1,176Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀταλός
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126 βούλομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `want, wish' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Arc.-Cypr. Eretr. (also Hom., s. Chantr. Gramm. hom. 1, 311) βόλομαι, Lesb. βόλλομαι, Dor. (Cret.) βώλομαι; Thess. βέλλομαι, Boeot. βείλομη, Dor. (Heracl. etc.) δήλομαι, Locr. Delph. δείλομαι. - Other tempora are based on the present: βουλήσομαι, ἐβουλήθην, βεβούλημαι; to βέβουλα (Α 113) below.Derivatives: βουλή `will, decision, council' (Il.); Dor. Arc. βωλά, Lesb. βόλλα. Denomin. βουλεύω ( βωλ-, βολλ-εύω), - ομαι `deliberate' (Il.), with many deriv.: βούλευμα, βουλεία, βουλευτής, βουλευτήριον `council-chamber'.Etymology: The verb is much discussed and there is no agreement on its history. The root must have been *gʷel-\/gʷol-. - There may have been a perfect with present meaning *βέβολα, a trace of which could be προ-βέβουλα (Α 113) with newly introduced ου from βούλομαι. The o-vocalism and the β- may have been spread from the perfect. (There may also have been influence of βουλή, but this may itself have been derived from the present.) But it seems doubtful that the perfect alone is the source of all the o-vowels. - The central problem is the origin of the present. One has assumed an n- or an s-suffix; Ruijgh, Lingua 25 (1970) 315f. thinks only - λν- can explain the compensatory lengthening. S. Slings, Mnemosyne 28 (1975) 1-16. - Recently Peters, FS Risch 1986, 311, suggests a root in -h₃. This may help explain the o-vocalism. A nasal present * gʷl-n-h₃- would have given *βαλνο- [or βλανο-?] which was replaced by *βολν-. Pamphylian βΟλΕμενος would have βολε- \< *βελο- \< * gʷelh₃-. Many problems of detail remain. E.g. there is no evidence for βλω- and no basis for the introduction of the o-vocalism; in this view the e-vocalism is also problematic. - On the relation between βούλομαι, ἐθέλω and λῆν s. Braun Atti R. Ist. Veneto 98, 337ff.; Rödiger Glotta 8, 1ff.; Wifstrand Eranos 40, 16ff.Page in Frisk: 1,258-259Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βούλομαι
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127 βρῦν
Origin: ONOM [onomatopoia, and other elementary formations]Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βρῦν
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128 βωστρέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `call (to aid)' (Od.).Other forms: Only pres.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: To βοάω (q.v.) like ἐλαστρέω (Il.) to ἐλαύνω, ἐλά-σαι, καλιστρέω (Call.) to καλέω. Expressive formation, based on nominalsuffixes τερ-, τρο- (cf. Risch 266), but not quite clear.Page in Frisk: 1,280Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βωστρέω
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