-
1 सुभ्रु
su-bhru
su-bhrūf. a beautiful brow Amar. BhP. ;
mfn. (nom. sg. mf. -bhrǓs acc. mf. - bhruvam f. alsoᅠ -bhrǓm;
instr. f. - bhruvā;
dat. - bhruve orᅠ - vai;
abl. - bhruvas orᅠ - vās;
gen. pl. - bhrūvām orᅠ - bhrūṇām;
voc. sg. - bhrūs orᅠ generally - bhru, of. Vām. V, 2, 50)
lovely-browed MBh. Kāv. etc.;
(ūs) f. a (lovely. browed) maiden ib. ;
N. of one of the Mātṛis attending on Skanda MBh. ;
(-bhrǓ) -nāsâ̱kshi-keṡâ̱nta mfn. having handsome brows ( andᅠ) nose ( andᅠ) eyes ( andᅠ) hair MBh.
-
2 सुभ्रू
su-bhru
su-bhrūf. a beautiful brow Amar. BhP. ;
mfn. (nom. sg. mf. -bhrǓs acc. mf. - bhruvam f. alsoᅠ -bhrǓm;
instr. f. - bhruvā;
dat. - bhruve orᅠ - vai;
abl. - bhruvas orᅠ - vās;
gen. pl. - bhrūvām orᅠ - bhrūṇām;
voc. sg. - bhrūs orᅠ generally - bhru, of. Vām. V, 2, 50)
lovely-browed MBh. Kāv. etc.;
(ūs) f. a (lovely. browed) maiden ib. ;
N. of one of the Mātṛis attending on Skanda MBh. ;
(-bhrǓ) -nāsâ̱kshi-keṡâ̱nta mfn. having handsome brows ( andᅠ) nose ( andᅠ) eyes ( andᅠ) hair MBh.
-
3 brù
g. bronn, belly, so Irish, Old Irish brú, brond; Welsh bru: *brûs, *brus-nos, root brus, Indo-European bhrus, bhreus; Teutonic breust-, Norse bfjóst, English breast, German brust. Stokes refers it to the root bru, to swell, Greek $$G brúw, am full, $$Ge$$'m-bruon, embryo (whence English embryo), or to Sanskrit bhrûn$$.á, embryo. See bruinne. -
4 bruinne
breast, Old Irish bruinne, Welsh bron, Cornish and Middle Breton bronn, *brus-no, root bhrus, bhreus; Norse brjóst, German brust, English breast. Stokes gives the root as brend, from Indo-European $$grendh, swell, be haughty, Greek $$G brénqúomai, strut, bear oneself loftily, Latin grandis, Ch.Sl gra$$?di$$u, breast. Usually correlated with Gothic brunjô, breastplate, Middle High German brünne, Norse brynja, coat of mail, Middle English brynie, Scottish byrnie: a satisfactory enough derivation, and ultimatley from the same root as the first one given above (Indo-European bhru). Indeed Stokes says the Teutonic is borrowed from the Celtic. -
5 ὀφρῦς
ὀφρῦς, ύος, ἡ, acc. ὀφρῦν, in late Poets ὀφρύα, AP12.186 (Strat.), Opp.C.4.405, Q.S.4.361: acc. pl. ὀφρύας (in the fourth foot) Od.9.389; but ὀφρῦς (before caesura) Il.16.740, and so in [dialect] Att. (v. infr.). [[pron. full] ῡ in nom. and acc., which are accented ὀφρῦς, -ῦν by Hdn.Gr.2.937: the accentuation ὀφρύς, ὀφρύν may be admitted in late writers: compds. have ῠ, εὔοφρυς, λεύκοφρυς, etc.] (Cf. Skt.A bhrūs, gen. bhruvas, Slav. br[ucaron]v[icaron], OE. brú 'brow'.):—brow, eyebrow,τὸν.. ὑπ' ὀφρύος οὖτα Il.14.493
; ἡ ὀ. ἡ δεξιά, ἡ ἀριστερά, Arist.PA 671b32, cf. Pr. 878b28: elsewh. in pl.,ὑπ' ὀφρύσι δάκρυα λεῖβον Il.13.88
, al.;ὑπ' ὀ. πῦρ ἀμάρυσσεν Hes. Th. 827
, etc.: freq. of signs, ἐπ' ὀφρύσι νεῦσε Κρονίων, i.e. ἐπένευσε ὀφρύσι, nodded assent, Il.1.528, etc.; ἡ δ' ἄρ' ἐπ' ὀ. νεῦσε nodded to him to do a thing, Od.16.164; ἀνὰ δ' ὀφρύσι νεῦον ἑκάστῳ made a sign not to do, 9.468;ὀφρύσι νευστάζων 12.194
: in various phrases expressing emotions, τὰς ὀ. ἀνασπᾶν, in token of grief,τὰς ὀφρῦς ἀνεσπακώς, ὥσπερ τι δεινὸν ἀγγελῶν Ar.Ach. 1069
;ἀνασπάσας τις τὰς ὀφρῦς οἴμοι λαλεῖ Men.556.3
; of pride (cf. ὀφρυόομαι), D.19.314;οἱ τὰς ὀφρῦς αἴροντες Men.39
;ὀφρῦν ἐπαίρειν E.Fr. 1040
, cf. Amphis 13;τὰς ὀ. ἔχειν ἐπάνω τῆς κορυφῆς Alex.16.6
;ὑπὲρ αὐτοὺς κροτάφους ὑπεραίρειν Luc.Am.54
;ὀφρῦς ἔχειν Ar.Ra. 925
;ὀφρῦν ἐφέλκεσθαι AP7.440.6
(Leon., interpol.?); ἐρύσσαι ib.5.215 (Agath.);ἀνελκταῖς ὀφρύσι σεμνός Cratin.355
: contrariwise, τὰς ὀφρῦς συνάγειν knit the brows, frown, Ar.Nu. 582, Pl. 756, etc.;τὰς ὀ. συνέλκειν Antiph.307
;συσπᾶν Luc.Vit.Auct.7
;κατεσπακώς Alciphr.3.3
: on the other hand, καταβαλεῖν, λῦσαι, μεθεῖναι τὰς ὀ. or τὴν ὀ., let down or unknit the brow, become calm or cheerful again, E.Cyc. 167, Hipp. 290, IA 648;ὀ. μὴ καθειμένη Zeno Stoic.1.58
;σχάζεσθαι τὰς ὀ. Pl.Com.32
;καθέσθαι Plu. 2.1062f
: the brow was also the seat of smiles and joy,ἀγανᾷ χλοαρὸν γελάσσαις ὀφρύϊ Pi.P.9.38
, cf. h.Cer. 358; or gravity,στυγνὸν ὀφρύων νέφος E.Hipp.[172]
;ὁρᾶτε ὡς σπουδαῖαι μὲν αὐτοῦ αἱ ὀφρύες X.Smp.8.3
; on their physiognomical character, v. Arist.HA 491b14, Phgn. 812b26.2 ὀφρῦς alone, scorn, pride, AP7.409 (Antip.), 9.43 (Parmen.), 10.122 (Lucill.), etc.II from like ness of shape, brow of a hill, crag, Il.20.151, Pi.O.13.106; embankment,ὀ. ἀπότομος Plb. 36.8.3
; overhanging bank of a river, Id.2.33.7, etc.;ἐπ' ὀφρύων ποταμοῦ PAmh.2.68.9
(i A. D.); of the sea, A.R.1.178, etc.; of a ditch, Str.5.3.7 (cf. ὀφρύη); of the rim of joint-cavities, Gal.UP 1.15, al.; of the woodwork enclosing the bore of a torsion-engine, Ph.Bel.57.7: in Archit., architrave, Procop.Gaz.p.157 B.III a plant, Plin.HN26.164.
См. также в других словарях:
brow — [OE] In Old English, brow meant ‘eyelash’, but there seems little doubt, from related words in other languages (such as Sanskrit bhrūs and Greek ophrus), that the original underlying sense of the word is ‘eyebrow’, and this resurfaced, or was… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
brow — (n.) words for eyelid, eyelash, and eyebrow changed about maddeningly in Old and Middle English (and in all the West Germanic languages). Linguists have untangled the knot into two strands: 1. O.E. bræw (Anglian *brew) eyelid, from P.Gmc. *bræwi… … Etymology dictionary
bhreu-s-1 — bhreu s 1 English meaning: to swell Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘schwellen; sprießen” Note: (compare above bhreu ) Material: O.Ir. brū f., gen. bronn “belly, body” (*bhrus ō[n]: n os), brūach “ big bellied “ (*brusükos), Welsh bru… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
brow — [OE] In Old English, brow meant ‘eyelash’, but there seems little doubt, from related words in other languages (such as Sanskrit bhrūs and Greek ophrus), that the original underlying sense of the word is ‘eyebrow’, and this resurfaced, or was… … Word origins
Именительный падеж — представляет понятие, выраженное данным именем, как центр действия, означаемого глаголом. Таким образом самое частое употребление И. падежа в роли подлежащего. Реже И. падеж в предикативном употреблении (как сказуемое), а также и в качестве… … Энциклопедический словарь Ф.А. Брокгауза и И.А. Ефрона
Список праиндоевропейских корней — Для улучшения этой статьи желательно?: Найти и оформить в виде сносок ссылки на авторитетные источники, подтверждающие написанное … Википедия
brow — /brow/, n. 1. Anat. the ridge over the eye. 2. the hair growing on that ridge; eyebrow. 3. the forehead: He wore his hat low over his brow. 4. a person s countenance or mien. 5. the edge of a steep place: She looked down over the brow of the hill … Universalium
breast — [OE] Breast can be traced back via prehistoric Germanic *breustam to an Indo European base *bhrus or *bhreus , whose other descendants, including Old Saxon brustian ‘bud’, Middle High German briustern ‘swell’, and Irish brú ‘abdomen, womb’,… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
frustum — 1650s, from L. frustum piece broken off, from PIE *bhrus to , from root *bhreu to cut, break up … Etymology dictionary
bhreu-s-2 — bhreu s 2 English meaning: to break Deutsche Übersetzung: “zerbrechen, zerschlagen, zerkrũmeln under likewise” Note: extension from bhrē̆ u 1. Material: Alb. breshën, breshër “hail”, if eig. “granule, mica” (e = IE eu); Lat.… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
breast — [OE] Breast can be traced back via prehistoric Germanic *breustam to an Indo European base *bhrus or *bhreus , whose other descendants, including Old Saxon brustian ‘bud’, Middle High German briustern ‘swell’, and Irish brú ‘abdomen, womb’,… … Word origins