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1 BINDA
* * *(bind; batt, bundum; bundinn), v.1) to bind, tie, fasten, tie up;binda hest, hund, to tie up a horse, dog;binda skó, þvengi, to tie shoes, thongs;binda stein við háls e-m, to fasten a stone to one’s neck;binda fyrir augu e-m, to blindfold one;2) to bind in parcels, to pack up (binda varning til skips);binda hey á hest, to truss hay on a horse’s back;binda korn, to tie up sheaves of corn;binda klyf, to tie up a pack;3) binda e-t um e-t, to bind round;hann batt silkiræmu um fót sér, he bound a strip of silk round his leg;binda um e-t, to put a bandage on;batt Yngvildr um fót honum, bound up his (wounded) leg;binda um sár, to bind up a wound;fig., hefir margr hlotit um sárt at binda fyrir mér, many a man has had wounds to tie up by my means (i. e. inflicted by me);þykkir mér bezt um heilt at binda, to bind a sound limb, to keep safe and sound;binda sár = binda um sár;binda hönd e-s, to bind his hand;4) to make, form, contract, enter into (binda samfélag, vináttu, tengdir, hjúskap);binda sætt ok frið, to make a reconciliation and peace;binda ráð, to resolve;absol. with infin., to fix, engage (bundu þeir Þórir at hittast á ákveðnum stáð);5) refl., to bind or engage oneself;em ek þó eigi þess búinn, nema fleiri bindist, unless more persons bind themselves, enter the league;bindast á hendi (höndum) e-m, to bind oneself to serve another (bindast á hendi konungum);bindast fyrir e-u, to put oneself at the head of an undertaking;bindast (= binda sik) í e-u, to engage in a thing (bindast í heitum);bindast í banns atkvæði, to bring on oneself the sentence of excommunication;with gen. (bindast e-s = bindast af or frá e-u), to refrain from a thing;eigi bazt hann ferligra orða, he did not refrain from bad words.* * *batt, 2nd pers. bazt, pl. bundu, bundit; pres. bind; 3rd pers. reflex. bizt; imperat. bind, bind þú; 2nd pers. bittú, bitt þú, Fm. 40; battú, Bret. 32; bitzt, Post. 154: [Goth., A. S., Hel. bindan; Engl. bind; Germ. binden; Swed. binda, 2nd pers. bandt; in Icel. by assimilation batt; bant, however, Hb. 20, 32 (1865)]:— to bind:I. prop. to bind in fetters, (cp. bönd, vincula; bandingi, prisoner), Hom. 119, Fms. xi. 146, Gþl. 179:1. to tie, fasten, tie up, b. hest, Nj. 83; naut, Ld. 98, Bs. i. 171; b. hund, Grág. ii. 119; b. við e-t, to fasten to; b. stein við háls e-m, 655 xxviii; b. blæju við stöng, Fms. ix. 358; b. skó, þvengi, to tie the shoes, Nj. 143, Þorst. St. 53, Orkn. 430: to bind in parcels, to pack up, b. varning, Fms. iii. 91, ix. 241 (a pun); b. hey, to truss hay for carting, Nj. 74; klyf, Grett. 123; b. at, til, to bind round a sack, parcel, Fms. i. 10; to bind a book, (band, bindi, volume, are mod. phrases), Dipl. i. 5, 9, ii. 13.β. medic. to bind wounds, to bind up, b. sár, Eg. 33, Bs. i. 639, Fms. i. 46 (cp. Germ. verbinden); b. um, of fomentation, Str. 4. 72: metaph. phrase, eiga um sárt at b., to have a sore wound to bind up, one feeling sore; hefir margr hlotið um sárt at b. fyrir mér, i. e. I have inflicted deep wounds on many, Nj. 54: the proverb, bezt er um heilt at b., or eiga um heilt at b., to bind a sound limb, i. e. to be safe and sound; þykir mér bezt um heilt at b., I think to keep my limbs unhurt, to run no risk, Fms. vii. 263.2. with a notion of impediment; b. skjöld sinn, to entangle the shield: metaph., bundin (closed, shut) skjaldborg, Sks. 385.II. metaph. to bind, make obligatory; leysa ok b., of the pope, Fms. x. 11: to make, contract a league, friendship, affinity, wedding, fellowship, oath, or the like; b. ráð, to resolve, Ld. 4, Eg. 30; samfélag, lag, vináttu, eið, tengdir, hjúskap, Fms. i. 53, iv. 15, 20, 108, 210, ix. 52, Stj. 633, K. Á. 110: absol. with a following infin., binda ( fix) þeir Þórir at hittast í ákveðnum stað, Ísl. ii. 147.III. reflex, to bind, engage oneself, enter a league; leikmenn höfðu saman bundizt at setjast á kirkjueignir, Bs. i. 733; bindask (b. sik) í e-u, to engage in a thing; þótt hann væri bundinn í slíkum hlutum, 655; at b. sik í veraldligu starfi, id.; hann bazt í því, at sýslumenn yðrir skyldu eigi koma á mörkina, Eg. 71; em ek þó eigi þessa búinn, nema fleiri bindist, unless more people bind themselves, enter the league, Fær. 25, Valla L. 216; bindast í banns atkvæði, H. E. i. 465; binda sik undir e-t, with a following infin. to bind oneself to do, Vm. 25; b. sik við e-t, id., N. G. L. i. 89; bindask e-m á hendi, to bind oneself to serve another, esp. of the service of great personages; b. á hendi konungum, Fms. xi. 203, x. 215, Bs. i. 681, Orkn. 422; bindast fyrir e-u, to place oneself at the head of an undertaking, to head, Hkr. iii. 40; Öngull vildi b. fyrir um atför við Gretti, Grett. 147 A.2. with gen., bindask e-s, to refrain from a thing; eigi bazt harm ferligra orða, i. e. he did not refrain from bad language, 655. 12; b. tára (only negative), to refrain from bursting into tears, Fms. ii. 32; hlátrs, Sks. 118; b. við e-t, id., El. 21; b. af e-u, Stj. 56. -
2 बन्ध्
bandh
cl. 1. P. Ā. bandhati, - te MBh. ;
cl. 4. P. badhyati Hariv. ;
Impv. badhāna AV., bandhāna MBh., - badhnīhi BhP., bandha R. ;
pf. P. babándha, 3. pl. bedhús AV., babandhus MBh. ;
Ā. bedhé, - dhiré AV., babandhe Gr.;
fut. bhantsyati Br. etc., bandhishyati, - te MBh. ;
banddhā Gr.;
aor. abhāntsīt Gr.;
Prec. badhyāt ib. ;
inf. banddhum, orᅠ bandhitum R., bádhe AV. ind. p. baddhvā́ AV., -dhvā́ya Br., - badhya ib. ;
- bandham Pāṇ. 3-4, 41 Sch.),
to bind, tie, fix, fasten, chain, fetter RV. etc. etc.;
to bind round, put on (Ā;
later alsoᅠ P. « on one's self») AV. ṠBr. MBh. etc.;
to catch, take orᅠ hold captive, met. = to attach to world orᅠ to sin Mn. MBh. Kap. ;
to fix, direct, fasten, rivet (eyes, ears orᅠ mind) on (loc. orᅠ inf.) MBh. Kāv. Kathās. ;
to arrest, hold back, restrain, suppress, stop, shut, close Yājñ. MBh. Kathās. ;
to bind a sacrificial victim, offer, sacrifice (with dat. of the deity to whom it is presented) RV. Br.:
KātyṠr. ;
to punish, chastise Hit. ;
to join, unite, put together orᅠ produce anything in this way,
e.g.. fold (the hands), clench (the fist), knit orᅠ bend (the eyebrows),
arrange, assume (a posture), set up (a limit), construct (a dam orᅠ a bridge), span, bridge over (a river), conceive orᅠ contract (friendship orᅠ enmity), compose, construct (a poem orᅠ verse) MBh. Kāv. etc.. ;
to form orᅠ produce in any way, cause, effect, do, make, bear (fruit), strike (roots), take up (one's abode) ib. ;
to entertain, cherish, show, exhibit, betray (joy, resolution etc.) ib.:
Pass. badhyáte (- ti Hariv.), to be bound etc. etc.;
(esp.) to be bound by the fetters of existence orᅠ evil, sin again Mn. BhP. ;
to be affected by i.e. experience, suffer (instr.) Pañcat.:
Caus. bandhayati (aor. ababandhat), to cause to bind orᅠ catch orᅠ capture, imprison ṠBr. etc. etc.;
to cause to be built orᅠ constructed Ragh. Rājat. ;
to cause to be embanked orᅠ dammed up Rājat. ;
to bind together ( alsoᅠ bādhayati) Dhātup. XXXII, 14:
Desid. bibhantsati Gr.:
Intens. bābanddhi, bābadhyate ib. ;
+ cf. Zd. band;
Gk. πενθερύς, πεῖσμα;
Lat. foedus, fides;
Lit. béndras;
Goth. Angl. Sax. bindan;
Germ. binden;
Eng. bind
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3 πενθερός
πενθερός, ὁ,A father-in-law, Il.6.170, Od.8.582, Lex Draconisap.D. 43.57 (pl.), Hdt.3.52, PCair.Zen.369.2 (iii B. C.) ; λαβὼν Ἄδραστον π. S.OC 1302 : in pl., parents-in-law, E.Hipp. 636.II generally, connexion by marriage, e.g. brother-in-law, Id.El. 1286 ; also, = γαμβρός, son-in-law, S.Fr. 305 (pl.). (Cf. Skt. bándhus 'kinsman', Lith. beñdras 'comrade', Goth. bindan 'bind'.)Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > πενθερός
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4 πεῖσμα
A ship's cable, usu. the stern-cable by which the ship was made fast to the land,λιμήν.., ἵν' οὐ χρεὼ πείσματός ἐστιν—οὔτ' εὐνὰς βαλέειν, οὔτε πρυμνήσι' ἀνάψαι Od.9.136
; ;πεῖσμα.. κίονος ἐξάψας μεγάλης 22.465
: pl.,ἀπὸ πείσματ' ἔκοψα νεός 10.127
, cf. A.Supp. 765, Ag. 195 (lyr.); πίσυνοι λεπτοδόμοις π., of Xerxes' bridge of boats, Id.Pers. 112(lyr.): metaph., ἐχόμενοι ὥς τινος ἀσφαλοῦς π. Pl.Lg. 893b;ἔλυσεν οἷον νεὼς πείσματα Id.Ti. 85e
;τύχης π. λυσάμενος BCH25.327
([place name] Mysia); of the marriage- tie, Ph.1.563 : prov.,πᾶν πεῖσμα διέρρηκται Hld.7.25
: metaph., of reins, νέμειν πείσματα Θήβης Epic. in BKT5 (1) p.115.2 generally, rope, Od.10.167; boat-rope, painter, Theophil.6.------------------------------------A persuasion, confidence, μετὰ βεβαίου π. S.E.P.1.18, cf. Arr.Epict.2.20.26 (pl.), Porph.Abst.2.37; μετὰ πείσματος τ εθαρρηκότος confidently, Plu.2.106d. -
5 πενθερός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `father-in-law = father of the wife' (cf. ἑκυρός), also `brother-in-law, son-in-law' (Il.; cf. Chantraine Études 15).Derivatives: From it πενθερ-ά, Ion. -ή f. `mother-in-law' (D., Call.), - ιδεύς m. `son-in-law' (inscr. As. Minor, imper. time.), - ίδης m. `id.' (pap. VIp; Schwyzer 510); - ιος (Arat.), - ικός (Man.) `belonging to the π.'.Etymology: Old name of relatives, formally almost completely agreeing with Lith. beñdras `participant, sharer'; beside it with u-suffix Skt. bándhu- m. `relative'; on the variation ero: u s. Schwyzer 482 n. 3 w. lit., Leumann Hom. Wörter 115. Derivations of the verb for `bind' in Skt. badhnā́ti, perf. ba-bándh-a, Av. bandayeiti, Germ., e.g. Goth. bindan; so prop. "the allied". The verb was lost in Greek as in most IE languages, but left several nouns, s. πεῖσμα, [not φάτνη] and W.-Hofmann s. offendix. -- The oxytonation of πενθερός after ἑκυρός; s. v. and Schwyzer 381.Page in Frisk: 2,504Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πενθερός
См. также в других словарях:
bindan — *bindan germ., stark. Verb: Verweis: s. *bendan s. bendan; … Germanisches Wörterbuch
bindan — bindan1 sv/t3 3rd pres bindeþ past band/bundon ptp gebunden to tie, bind, fetter, fasten, restrain; adorn … Old to modern English dictionary
bindan — [akin to Eng bind] : bind. Deriv. bandi fetters, bandja captive, bandwa sign, bandwjan give a sign, bandwo sign, bansts barn, binda (*) band, bundnan (*) be bound. Comp. andbindan set free, andbundnan break loose, bibindan wrap, eisarnabandi iron … Gothic dictionary with etymologies
bindan — bind … The Old English to English
bind — bindan … English to the Old English
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Germanic strong verb — In the Germanic languages, a strong verb is one which marks its past tense by means of ablaut. In English, these are verbs like sing, sang, sung. The term strong verb is a translation of German starkes Verb , which was coined by the linguist… … Wikipedia
bind — {{11}}bind (n.) anything that binds, in various senses, late O.E., from BIND (Cf. bind) (v.). Meaning tight or awkward situation is from 1851. {{12}}bind (v.) O.E. bindan to tie up with bonds (literally and figuratively), also to make captive; to … Etymology dictionary
band — There are two distinct words band in English, but neither of them goes back as far as Old English. The one meaning ‘group of people’ [15] comes from Old French bande, but is probably Germanic in ultimate origin; the specific sense ‘group of… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
binden — Vst. std. (8. Jh.), mhd. binden, ahd. bintan, as. bindan Stammwort. Aus g. * bend a binden auch in gt. bindan, anord. binda, ae. bindan, afr. binda; dieses aus ig. * bhendh binden , auch in ai. badhnāti bindet , in den anderen Sprachen nur… … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
band — There are two distinct words band in English, but neither of them goes back as far as Old English. The one meaning ‘group of people’ [15] comes from Old French bande, but is probably Germanic in ultimate origin; the specific sense ‘group of… … Word origins