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1 στόμιον
A mouth, Posidipp.26 16 codd. Ath.;στομίοισι δυσαλθές Nic.Al.12
; of a venomous beast, ib. 524, Th. 233.II mouth of a vessel,κέρασι χρυσᾶ σ. προσβεβλημένοις A.Fr. 185
; [sc. συρίγγων] Emp.100.3; mouth of a cave used as a grave, S.Ant. 1217: hence cave, vault, as if it were the entrance of the lower world, A.Ch. 807 (lyr., of Delphi), cf. Pl.R. 615d, 615e: of any aperture or opening, Ti.Locr.101d, Arist.HA 623a4; cavity from which winds issue, Id.Mu. 395b27;σ. γαστρός Nic.Al. 509
; σ. τῆς ὑστέρας ος uteri, Sor.1.9, al.; [ τῆς κύστεως] Gal.6.65, cf. 18(2).265, Aret. SD2.1, al.; socket of a bolt,στομίοις κλεῖθρα δέχοισθε AP7.391
(Bass.); mouth of a canal, CPR42.13 (iii A.D.), etc.III bridle-bit, bit,χαλινοὺς καὶ στόμια ἐμβαλεῖν Hdt.4.72
, cf. 1.215;χάλυβος.. στόμιον παρέχουσα S.Tr. 1261
(anap.); (anap.); δακὼν δὲ σ. ὡς νεοζυγὴς πῶλος ib. 1009;στόμια δέχεσθαι S.El. 1462
;ἐνδακοῦσαι στόμια E.Hipp. 1223
;συνδάκνειν X.Eq.6.9
; σ. Τροίας a bit or curb for Troy, of the Greek army, A.Ag. 132 (lyr.).2 = φορβειά, Eust.539.16.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > στόμιον
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2 σιαλιστήριον
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > σιαλιστήριον
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3 ἄξων
2 axis, of a cone, Arist.Mete. 375b22; of a conic section, Apollon.Perg.1 Def.7; of a cylinder, Archim.Con.Sph.1.260.4 metaph., course, path of action, LXXPr.2.9, 2.18.II οἱ ἄξονες the wooden tablets of the laws in Athens, made to turn upon an axis, Plu.Sol.25: sg. in IG1.61, D.23.31.2 in pl., door-jambs, Parm.1.19.IV the second cervical vertebra, Poll.2.132. (Cf. Skt. ák[snull ]as, Lat. axis, OHG. ahsa, Lith. ašìs 'axle'.) -
4 σίαλον
Grammatical information: n. (m.)Meaning: `spittle, slobber', metaph. `joint-fluid, synovitis' (Hp., Pherecr., X., Arist., hell. a. late).Derivatives: σιαλίς βλέννος (`slime') H., σιαλώδης `saliva-like' (Hp.), σιαλ-ίζω ( σιελ-) `to form spittle, slobber, to foam' (Hp., Archig.), - ισμός m. `waterbrash' (medic.), - ιστήριον n. `bridle-bit' (Gp.). Besides the verb σίαι πτύσαι (cod. πτῆσαι) Πάφιοι H. (cf. Schwyzer 752 n. 4).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin] (V)Etymology: Expressive-popular words as πτύαλον, πτύω, with which they have also genetically been connected; s. πτύω w. further lit. On the supposed but quite uncertain connection with Skt. kṣī́vati `spit' (Dhātup.) s. Wackernagel in Bechtel Dial. 1. 454 and Mayrhofer s. v. -- To be noted further the very rare and late attested σιαίνομαι, aor. σιάνθην `to meet antipathy, disgust' (pap. Vl--VIIp, H., Suid., Gloss.), σιαίνω `to cause antipathy' (sch.), which seems to be a transformation of the synonymous σικχαίνω, - ομαι (s. v.) after σίαι and similar unliterary forms. -- It cold derive from a Pre-Greek *syal-. S. also σίαλος.Page in Frisk: 2,699Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σίαλον
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5 χαλινός
Aχαλινά A.R.4.1607
, Opp.H.1.191, Plu.2.613c, Sor.1.100, etc.:—bit, once in Hom.,ἐν δὲ χαλινοὺς γαμφηλῇς ἔβαλον Il.19.393
;χαλινὸν ἐμβαλεῖν γνάθοις E.Alc. 492
;χ. ἐξαιρεῖται X.Eq.3.2
; of the horse, χ. οὐκ ἐπίσταται φέρειν (metaph. of Cassandra) A.Ag. 1066; χ. δέχεσθαι, λαμβάνειν, X.Eq.3.2, 6.10; λαβεῖν, ἔχειν, Arist.Rh. 1393b16, 21; τὸν χ. ἐνδακεῖν champ the bit, Pl.Phdr. 254d; of the rider, δοτέον τὸν χ. one must give a horse the rein, X.Eq.10.12; ὀπίσω σπάσαι, ξυνέχειν ἀνάγκῃ, Pl.Phdr. 254e, Luc.DDeor.25.1; [χ.] εἰς ἄκρον τὸ στόμα καθιέμενος X.Eq.6.9
.—Expld. of the bit, opp. reins ([etym.] ἡνίαι), by Poll.1.148; soἡνίας τε.. καὶ χ. Pl.R. 601c
;χ. τινα χαλκεῖ ἐκδιδόντα σκευάσαι Id.Prm. 127a
;κατὰ [τὸν κυνόδοντα] ἐμβάλλεται ὁ χ. Arist. HA 576b18
, cf. A.Th. 123 (lyr.), S.OC 1067 (lyr.); but distd. fr. στόμιον by Hdt.1.215, cf. A.Th. 207 (lyr.), X.Eq.6.9, 10.9, etc.; and may be used generally for bit and bridle, Hdt.3.118, 4.64, IG12.374.176, PCair.Zen.659.11 (iii B. C.).2 metaph., of anything which curbs, restrains, or compels, Ἀργοῦς χ., of an anchor, Pi.P.4.25; χ. λινόδετοι, = χαλινωτήρια, E.IT 1043; παρθενίας χ. λύειν, of the virgin zone, Pi.I.8(7).48; χαλινοῖς ἐν πετρίνοισιν, of Prometheus' bonds, A.Pr. 562 (anap.); Διὸς χ., of the will of Zeus, ib. 672; χαλινῶν ἀναύδῳ μένει, of forcible constraint, Id.Ag. 238 (lyr.); πολλῶν χαλινῶν ἔργον οἰάκων θ' ἅμα, i.e. it requires much skill and force to guide, S.Fr. 869; τῷ δήμῳ χ. ἐμβαλεῖν ὕβρεως a bridle to curb their violence, Plu.Comp.Per.Fab.1, cf. Luc.Herm.82;τῆς γλώττης τὰ χ. Plu.2.613c
;ἐπέστω τῷ στόματι χ. Lib.Ep.315.4
;χ. οὐδεὶς ὀμμάτων Philostr. VA6.11
.II generally, strap, thong, E.Cyc. 461 (dual).III part of the tackle of a ship, IG22.1610.11,14.IV corner of the horse's mouth, where the bit rests, Poll.2.90 (pl.); of the human mouth, Nic.Al. 117, 223, PUniv.Giss.44.7, (ii/i B. C.), Heliod. ap.Orib 48.31.4, Sor.1.100, PSI9.1016.25 (ii B. C.), Aret.SA1.9, Cael.Aur.TP1.4, Aët.8.27; but, = ἡ σύνδεσις τῶν γνάθων, Ruf.Onom. 53, cf. Aët.8.40.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > χαλινός
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6 χαλιναγωγίας
χαλιναγωγίᾱς, χαλιναγωγίαguiding as by bit and bridle: fem acc plχαλιναγωγίᾱς, χαλιναγωγίαguiding as by bit and bridle: fem gen sg (attic doric aeolic) -
7 χαλιναγωγόν
χαλῑναγωγόν, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem acc sgχαλῑναγωγόν, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: neut nom /voc /acc sg -
8 κημός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `muzzle, wicker top of the voting urn, vessel for fishing, cover for nose and mouth etc.' (A., S., Ar., X.; on the meaning Schenkl WuS 5, 172ff.).Dialectal forms: Dor. κᾱμόςDerivatives: κημόω `put on a muzzle, tie up a mouth' (X., 1 Ep. Kor. 9, 9, sch.) with κήμωσις φίμωσις H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Unexplained. The formally possible connection with Arm. k` amem `press (out)' (Petersson KZ 47, 284) is hard to combine with the further prob. basic meaning `wicker'. The same holds for wods from a Balto-Slavic and Germanic group with the meaning `press (together) etc.', which also differs in the vowel, e. g. Lith. kãmanos pl. `harness with bit', Russ. kom `clump', MHG hemmen, hamen `hold up, bind, hemmen' etc. etc. (Pok. 555, Fraenkel s. kãmanos, Vasmer s. kom). Lat. quālum `wicker basket' (Prellwitz1) has a diff. initial, s. W.-Hofmann s. v. Specht Ursprung 263 n. 4 to χάβος `muzzle' (sch.Ar.Eq. 1147). Diff. Wood ClassPhil. 21, 341 (to OHG hamo `cover' etc.). - From Dor. καμός came Lat. cāmus `muzzle', from κημός Osman. Arab. ǵem `bit, mouth-piece of the harness, bridle', from where NGr. τὸ γέμι `bridle' (Maidhof Glotta 10, 9). - The connection with χάβος is of course blameless; it points to μ \/ β in Pre-Greek (Fur. 203-227); Fur. 220 who cites χαβός - χαμός (s.v.) both adjectives; Furnée seems to suggest that these words are the same as our word (where he is clearly following Frisk's presentation), which is clearly wrong; also he is incomplete as he does not cite κημός.Page in Frisk: 1,841Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κημός
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9 χαλινός
-οῦ + ὁ N 2 0-1-3-2-1=7 2 Kgs 19,28; Is 37,29; Hab 3,14; Zech 14,20; Ps 31(32),9bit, bridle 2 Kgs 19,28; bridle, restraint Jb 30,11 *Zech 14,20 τὸν χαλινόν the bridle-צלא (Aram.) or alla (Arab.) leather for MT מצלות צלל bells, cpr. Hab 3,14Cf. MARGOLIS, M. 1911 314(Hab 3,14; Zech 14,20) -
10 χαλινόω
A bridle or bit a horse, X.Cyr.3.3.27, An.3.4.35, HG7.2.21:—[voice] Pass., Id.Eq.5.1, Plb.3.65.6, etc.II metaph., curb, bridle, check,τὴν ναῦν Philostr.VA3.23
; [φόβον, ἐπιθυμίαν] Epicur.Fr. 485; τὴν ὀργήν, τὸν θυμόν, Ps.-Phoc.57, Them.Or.34p.454Dind.;τὸ φιλόφωνον καὶ λάλον Plu.2.967b
;τὴν ἀλογίαν Hierocl. in CA8p.431M.
;τὴν ἑαυτῶν ἀπληστίαν Lib.Or.47.35
:—[voice] Pass., to be bridled, curbed,τῇ φρουρᾷ καὶ τοῖς ὁμήροις Plu.Arat.38
;ὑπὸ τοῦ λόγου Philostr.VA4.30
: abs., to be tongue-tied, Hp.Mul.1.2.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > χαλινόω
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11 ἡνία
A reins, Il.5.226, Od.3.483, Hes.Sc.95, Pi.P.4.18, I.1.15: rare exc. in Poets, ἐφ' ἡνία,= ἐφ' ἡνίαν (v. sq.), Ael.Tact.19.12.II sg., [full] ἡνίον, τό, bit, Poll.1.148. (I.-E. [nmacrnull]siyo-, cf. Skt. nāsyam 'nose-rein', Ir. éssi 'reins'.)------------------------------------A bridle, reins, in pl., Pi. P.5.32, A.Pers. 193, etc.;πρὸς ἡνίας μάχεσθαι Id.Pr. 1010
; εἰς τοὐπίσω ἑλκύσαι τὰς ἡ. Pl.Phdr. 254c: less freq. in sg., Ἥλιε.. ἐπισχὼν χρυσόνωτον ἡ. S.Aj. 847;ἡ. χαλᾶν E.Fr. 409
: the sg. for one rein,ἔπειτα λύων ἡ. ἀριστεράν S.El. 743
.2 metaph.,Ἔρως.. ἡνίας ηὔθυνε παλιντόνους Ar.Av. 1739
; ;ἐφεῖναι καὶ χαλάσαι τὰς ἡ. τοῖς λόγοις Pl.Prt. 338a
; παραλαβοῦσαι τῆς πόλεως τὰς ἡ. Ar.Ec. 466; τούτῳ παραδώσω τῆς πυκνὸς τὰς ἡ. Id.Eq. 1109;γαστρὸς πᾶσαν ἡ. κρατεῖν Men.Mon.81
;τῷ δήμῳ τὰς ἡ. ἀνείς Plu.Per.11
; ἐνδιδόναι τοῖς βουλήμασι τὰς ἡ. D.H.7.35;παρὰ τὴν ἡ. πράττειν Philostr.Im.2.18
; πρὸς ταῖς ἡ., of high officials, BCH32.431 ([place name] Delos); ἐπὶ τῶν ἡ. LXX 1 Ma.6.28.3 as a military term, ἐφ' ἡνίαν wheeling to the left ( the left being the bridle hand), Plb. 10.23.2, Ascl. Tact.10.2, Polyaen.4.3.21; [τὸν ἵππον] περισπάσας ἐφ' ἡνίαν τῷ χαλινῷ Plu.Marc.6
; ἐξ ἡνίας, opp. ἐκ δόρατος, Plb.11.23.6. -
12 χαλιναγωγέω
χαλιναγωγέω (χαλινός, ἄγω) fut. χαλιναγωγήσω; 1 aor. ἐχαλιναγώγησα (‘guide with a bit and bridle, hold in check’ Rhet. Gr. I 425, 19 ἵππον) in our lit. only fig. bridle, hold in check (Lucian, Tyrannic. 4 τὰς τῶν ἡδονῶν ὀρέξεις, Salt. 70 πάθη; Poll. 1, 215) τὶ someth. γλῶσσαν Js 1:26 (cp. Philo, Somn. 2, 165). τὸ σῶμα 3:2 (in extended imagery, s. vs. 3; cp. Ath., R. 15 p. 66, 34 [s. ὑπείκω]; also of the horse Philo, Op. M. 86). τὴν ἐπιθυμίαν Hm 12, 1, 1 (Leutzsch, Hermas 464 n. 279 reff.). ἑαυτὸν ἀπό τινος restrain oneself from someth. Pol 5:3.—DELG s.v. χαλινός. M-M. -
13 μασάομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `chew, bite' (Hp., com., Arist.).Other forms: aor. μασήσασθαι.Derivatives: ( δια-) μάσημα `bite' (Hp., Antiph., Thphr.), ( δια-)μάσησις `chewing' (Thphr., Dsc.), μασητήρ "chewer", `muscle of the lower jaw' (Hp.), παρα-μασήτης "help-chewer", ' παράσιτος, parasite' (midd. Com.). Besides παραμασύντης `id.' (midd. Com.; μασύντης H.), Μασυντίας PN (Ar.) from *μασύνω; cf. μοσσύνειν μασᾶσθαι βραδέως H. and Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 61 (Chantr. corrects to μασ-, which may be right or wrong; the variation might point to Pre-Greek.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The meaning of μασάομαι suggests an iterative -intensive deverbativ, from a primary yot-present (cf. φῡράω to φύ̄ρω from *φῠρ-ι̯ω, Schwyzer 719). Besides *μασύνω as innovation (after ἁπαλύνω etc.; diff. interpretation s. ματτύη). From μάθυιαι γνάθοι H. (cf. αἴθυια: αἴθω) we get a stem μαθ-, which got a το-suffix in μάσταξ (\< μαθ-τ-); s. v. -- A remarkable formal similarity is shown by synonymous Lat. mandō, - ere `chew', which can represent a nasalized IE * madh- (= μαθ-), cf. Leumann Lat. Gr. 313). If Germ., e.g. OHG mindel, OWNo. mēl n. `bit of the bridle' (IE * ment-), Goth. munÞs 'mouth' (IE *mn̥t-) would belong here, μαθ- could be the zero grade of it (with aspiration of the tenuis); but they must rather be connected with Welsh mant `jaw, mouth', Lat. mentum `jaw'. Doubtful is the rendering of Skt. math- (mostly `beat up, stir, rub') with `tear up, feed on' in AV 5, 8, 4 etc. (Specht Ursprung 254 after Oertel), s. Narten IIJ 4, 121 f., where a math-'tear away, rob' is assumed. An IE * menth- `chew, bit, mouth' (WP. 2, 270, Pok. 732f.), then, is not at all ascertained. -- Quite diff. on μασάομαι Sommer IF 11. 266 (from IE *mad-si̯ā- to Goth. mats `food' etc.; morphologically doubtful). Albanian combinations in Mann Lang. 17, 20. - However, the form μοσσυνειν seems to prove Pre-Greek origin.Page in Frisk: 2,179-180Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μασάομαι
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14 στόμα
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `mouth, muzzle, front, peak, edge' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. Tomako, Tumako \/ στόμαργος\/ (Mühlestein Studi Micenei 2 (1967), 43ff. w. lit.; Killen, Minos 27-8, 1992-1993 [95],101-7Compounds: Many compp., almost all from the shorter stem (cf. below), e.g. στόμ-αργος `chattering, high-sounding' (trag.), to ἀργός (Willis AmJPh 63, 87 ff.: `shining' \> `bright' \> `loud'?), if not after γλώσσ-αργος, which could stand for γλώσσ-αλγος (s. on γλῶσσα w. lit.); Blanc RPh. 65, 1991, 59-66 analyses the word as στόμα + μάργος `furious', also BAGB 1996\/1, 8-9; cf. also Πόδ-αργος (s. πούς); on στομα-κάκη s. κακός; εὔ-στομος `with a beautiful mouth, speaking nicely', also = `silent' (Hdt., X. etc.); beside it, quite rarely, στοματ-ουργός `working with one's mouth, grandiloquent' (Ar.). κακο-στόματος (AP) for κακό-στομος (E. a.o.).Derivatives: 1. στόμ-ιον n. `mouth, opening, denture, bit, bridle' (IA.), rarely `mouth' (Nic.), with - ίς f. `halter' (Poll.); ἐπι-στομ-ίζω `to put in a bit' (Att.), also `to shut up one's mouth' (late). 2. στόμ-ις m. `hard-mouthed horse' (A. Fr. 442 = 649 M.; cf. Schwyzer 462 n. 3), also - ίας `id.' (Afric., Suid.). 3. - ώδης `speaking nicely' (S.), `savoury' (Sor.). 4. - ίζομαι `to take in the mouth' (Aq.), w. prefix, e.g. ἀπο-στομίζω `to remove the edge' (Philostr.). 5. - όω ( ἀνα- στόμα a.o.) `to stop the mouth, to provide with an opening, edge, to harden' (IA.) with - ωμα n. `mouth' (A.), `hardening, which is hardened, steel' (Cratin., Arist., hell. a. late), - ωμάτιον (Gloss.), - ωσις f. `hardening' (S., hell a. late), - ωτής = indurator (gloss.). -- Besides στομάτ-ιον n. dimin. (Sor.), - ικός `belonging to the mouth' (medic. a.o.), ἀπο-στοματ-ίζω `to repeat, to interrogate etc.' (Pl., Arist. etc.). -- On στόμαχος, στωμύλος s. vv.Etymology: The etymol. unclear στόμα has secondarily joined the verbal nouns in - μα (Schwyzer 524 w. n. 5), with which the strong predilection for the short form στομ- in compp. and derivv. may be connected (cf. Georgacas Glotta 36, 163). But the n-stem is old and is found not only in Av. staman- m. `mouth (of a dog)' but also in Celtic, e.g. Welsh safn `jaw-bone'. So we must reconstruct * steh₃m-, which was in Greek replaced by the zero grade (* sth₃m-); on the short a of Avestan see Lubotsky Kratylos 42(1997) 56f. -- Far remain however the Germ. words for `voice', Goth. stibna, OHG stimna, stimma etc. and the Hitt. word for `ear', ištam-ana-, - ina-, prob. denominativ from ištamašzi `hear' (Frisk GHÅ 57, 19ff. = Kl. Schr. 79ff. w. lit.; diff. Kronasser Etymologie II 399).Page in Frisk: 2,800-801Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στόμα
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15 χαλιναγωγώ
χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres subj act 1st sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres ind act 1st sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem /neut gen sg (doric aeolic) -
16 χαλιναγωγῶ
χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres subj act 1st sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres ind act 1st sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶ, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem /neut gen sg (doric aeolic) -
17 χαλιναγωγών
χαλῑναγωγῶν, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres part act masc nom sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶν, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem /neut gen pl -
18 χαλιναγωγῶν
χαλῑναγωγῶν, χαλιναγωγέωguide with: pres part act masc nom sg (attic epic doric)χαλῑναγωγῶν, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem /neut gen pl -
19 χαλιναγωγίαν
χαλιναγωγίᾱν, χαλιναγωγίαguiding as by bit and bridle: fem acc sg (attic doric aeolic) -
20 χαλιναγωγός
χαλῑναγωγός, χαλιναγωγόςguiding as with bit and bridle: masc /fem nom sg
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
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Bit (horse) — For other uses, see bit (disambiguation). A horse wearing an English bridle with a snaffle bit and a cavesson A bit is a type of horse tack used in equestrian activities, usually made of metal or a synthetic material, and is placed in the mouth… … Wikipedia
Bit mouthpiece — This article is about the part of a bit that goes into the mouth of a horse. For an overview of bits in general, see Bit (horse). For types of bridles, see Bridle. Single jointed pelham. The mouthpiece is the part of a horse s bit that goes into… … Wikipedia
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bit — I. n. 1. Mouthful, morsel, crumb, fragment, scrap, piece, small piece. 2. Whit, tittle, jot, iota, particle, atom, grain, mite, ace, scintilla. 3. Bridle bit, mouth piece. 4. Boring tool, borer. 5. Coin (of small value), piece. II. v. a … New dictionary of synonyms
Bridle — Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with other… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bridle cable — Bridle Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bridle hand — Bridle Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bridle path — Bridle Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bridle port — Bridle Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bridle rein — Bridle Bri dle, n. [OE. bridel, AS. bridel; akin to OHG. britil, brittil, D. breidel, and possibly to E. braid. Cf. {Bridoon}.] 1. The head gear with which a horse is governed and restrained, consisting of a headstall, a bit, and reins, with… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English