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1 ἑκατόμβη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: name of a great, official feast acrifice (Il.).Derivatives: Έκατόμβαια n. pl. (Delph., Arg.) with the month name Έκατομβαιών, - ῶνος (Att. a. o.), also Έκατομβεύς (Lac.); Έκατόμβαιος surname of Zeus and Apollon (H., EM).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [191] *dḱm̥tom-gʷ-eh₂- `sacrifice of hundred cows'Etymology: Collective bahuvrihi with ā-suffix (Schwyzer 450, Sommer Nominalkomp. 76) of ἑκατόν and the zero grade of βοῦς, βο(Ϝ)ός: *ἑκατόμ-βϜ-ᾱ. A counterpart in Indo-Iranian, e. g. Skt. śata-gu- `possessing hundred cows',, evtl. through *śata-gv-a-, śata-gv-ín- `id.'; with thematic vowel in the PN Dáśa-gv-a-, Náva-gv-a- for `having ten, nine cows'. - Of old explained as `sacrifice of hundred cows'. Diff. Thieme Studien 62ff.: `winning hundred cows' (scil. δαίς). On the form s. Wackernagel IF 45, 319 (= Kl. Schr. 2, 1259). - After ἑκατόμβη late (Jul.) χιλιόμβη.Page in Frisk: 1,474-475Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἑκατόμβη
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2 βουκάτια
Grammatical information: pl. n.Meaning: a feast in Delphi (inscr.)Derivatives: Βουκάτιος monthnameOrigin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [00] *tḱen- `slay'Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βουκάτια
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3 βαρύφθογγος
βᾰρῠ-φθογγος, ον,A loud-roaring, , B.8.9; deep-lowing, of cows, Arist.GA 787a33; β. νευρά loud-twanging bowstring, Pi.I.6(5).34; deep-toned,αὐλοί AP6.51
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > βαρύφθογγος
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4 βδάλλω
Aβδάλας Alciphr.3.16
: [tense] aor. opt. [voice] Med., βδήλαιο Nic.Al. 262:— milk cows, πολὺ βδάλλων milking many kine, rich in kine, Pl.Tht. 174d; β. τινά ibid.; ὁ βδάλλων the milker, Arist.HA 522b17;β. γάλα Procop.Aed.3.6
:—[voice] Med., yield, of the cow,βοΐδια.. ὧν ἕκαστον βδάλλεται γάλα πολύ Arist.HA 522b15
; βόες βδάλλονται ἑκάστη ἀμφορέα ib. 16: also in sense of [voice] Act., νέον γλάγος Nic.l.c. -
5 ταυράω
ταυρ-άω (A v.l. ταυριάω), want the bull, of cows, Arist.HA 572a31. -
6 ταύρειος
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ταύρειος
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7 τίκτω
Aτέξω 11.249
, h.Merc. 493, Orac. ap. Hdt.5.92.β, A.Pr. 851, 869, E.Tr. 747, Ar.Eq. 1037 (Orac.), Th. 509; alsoτέξομαι Il.19.99
, Hes.Th. 469, 898, h.Ap. 101, A.Pr. 768, Hdt.7.49, Ar.Lys. 744, etc.; poet. inf. also ; pl.τεξείεσθε Arat.124
: [tense] aor. ἔτεκον, [dialect] Ep. τέκον, Il.1.352, 5.875, etc.: [tense] aor. 1 ἔτεξα only late, Orph.H.41.8 codd. (for ἐντήξῃ is prob. l. in Ar.Lys. 553): [tense] pf. , Hp.Aph.5.39, Ar. Pax 757, Pl.Com.64.5, X.Cyn.5.13, cf. ἐντίκτω:—[voice] Med., in same sense as [voice] Act., only in Poets, A.Ch. 127, Fr.44: [tense] fut. (v. supr.): [tense] aor. (lyr.), [dialect] Ep.τεκόμην Il.4.59
, al.; subj.τέκηαι A.R.1.905
:—[voice] Pass., [tense] pres. indic. ; inf.τίκτεσθαι Sor.2.53
; part. τικτόμενος ib.54: [tense] fut.τεχθήσομαι J.AJ2.9.2
, Gp.17.6.1, etc.: [tense] aor.ἐτέχθην Hp.Superf.18
, Ps.-E.Fr.1132.44, LXX Nu.26.60 (v.l.),al., Gp.17.6.2, etc.: [tense] pf. τέτεγμαι, inf. τετέχθαι, Ael.NA2.12, Paus.3.7.7, etc.--These pass. tenses seem not to have been used in correct [dialect] Att.:—bring into the world, engender; of the father, beget, of the mother, bring forth.I [tense] impf. [voice] Act. τίκτε, ἔτικτε, in Hom. usu. of the father, Il.2.628, 6.155, 206, 11.224, cf. Hes.Fr. 44 (of the mother, Il.16.180, 22.428, 24.497, Od.23.325); in Hes. (Frr.17,142), Lyr., and Trag. the [tense] pres. and [tense] impf. are also used of the mother,ἃ Θήβαν ἔτικτεν Pi.O.6.85
, cf. B.18.50;μᾶτερ, ἅ μ' ἔτικτες A.Eu. 321
(lyr.), cf. Ag. 763 (lyr., of Υβρις), S.El. 533; δεινὸν τὸ τίκτειν ib. 770, cf. Pl.Tht. 151a, etc.;τ. καὶ γεννᾷ Id.Smp. 206d
; of both parents.Στάσις δὲ καὶ Κρόνος.. τίκτετον τύραννον Cratin.240
.2 [tense] aor. [voice] Act. τέκε, ἔτεκε, mostly of the mother, Il.1.36, 352, 2.513, etc. (also [tense] fut. [voice] Med.τέξεσθαι 19.99
);τεκεῖν τινά τινι 2.658
, 6.22, etc.;ὑπό τινι 2.714
, 728, etc.;τ. ἔκ τινος Plu.Thes.20
;παρά τινος Luc. Alex.42
;παρά τινι E.El.62
: but τέκεν of the father, Il.13.450, Od.3.489, al., Hes. Th. 208, Fr.99.2: metaph.,τῷ τεκόντι ἀρετήν Pl. Smp. 212a
.3 the [tense] aor. [voice] Med. τέκετο is commonly used of the father, as Il.2.741, 6.154, al., Hes.Fr.19: but τέκετο of the mother, Il.2.742, 15.187, 22.48, Hes.Fr.46; so τῶν τεκομένων of the mother, A.Ch. 419 (lyr.).4 the two are conjoined,ὃν τέκετο θάνατος, ἔτεκε δ' αἰόλος δράκων S.Tr. 834
(codd., lyr.).5 [tense] aor. [voice] Act. is used in pl. of both parents, Od.7.55, 8.554 (οὓς Ἑκάβη ἠδὲ Πρίαμος τέκε παῖδας Il. 22.234
); [tense] aor. [voice] Med. τεκόμεσθα, Od.23.61,24.293.b οἱ τεκόντες the parents, A.Th.49, S.OT 999, etc.; the Art. is rarely omitted,πατέρων τε καὶ τεκόντων A.Ch. 329
(lyr.): c. gen.,κιόντων τοῖς τεκοῦσι Id.Pers. 245
(troch.): ὁ τεκών the father, Id.Ch. 690, S.OC 1108; ἁ τεκοῦσα the mother, A.Th. 926 (lyr.), cf. Ch. 133, etc. (rarely ἡ τίκτουσα, S. OT 1247, El. 342); in Prose, Lys.10.8; ἡ τ. αὐτόν his mother, Hdt. 1.116;ὅ τ' ἐκεῖνον τεκών E.El. 335
.6 freq. in Medic. and other Prose, of women,τίκτουσι ῥηϊδίως Hp.
Aër.5, cf. Sor.2.54, al., Gal. 16.670;κόρον ἔτεκε IG42(1).121.5
, cf. 21 (Epid., iv B.C.).II of female animals, bear young, breed, of mares, Il.16.150, 20.225; of cows, Hes.Op. 591; of sheep, Od.4.86, etc.;τὰς τετοκυίας τοκάδας PCair.Zen.292.305
, cf. 710.4 (iii B.C.); ἐὰν τέκῃ ἵππος ib.635.2 (iii B.C.); of the hare,τὰ μὲν τέτοκε, τὰ δὲ τίκτει, τὰ δὲ κύει X.Cyn.5.13
; of birds, hatch, Il.2.313; ᾠὰ τ. lay eggs, Hdt.2.68, Ar.Fr. 185, Arist.GA 718b23, etc.; of fish, spawn, Id.HA 568a16, Gal.6.718, etc.III of the earth, bear, produce, ἔμπεδα μῆλα (sheep) Od. 19.113;ἡ γῆ.. τίκτουσα ποίαν E.Cyc. 333
:—[voice] Med.,γαῖαν.., ἣ τὰ πάντα τίκτεται A.Ch. 127
, cf. Fr.44.4:—[voice] Pass.,τίκτεσθαι δὲ φόρους γᾶς.. εὐχόμεθ' ἀεί Id.Supp. 674
(lyr.).IV metaph., generate, engender, produce,λέγω τὴν χώρην λιμὸν τέξεσθαι Hdt.7.49
; ἐπειχθῆναι πρῆγμα τίκτει σφάλματα ib.10.ζ; of impiety, (lyr.), cf. 763 (lyr., cf. supr. 1.1), Ch. 805 (lyr.);ἡ ἐπιθυμία τ. ἁμαρτίαν Ep.Jac.1.15
;μὴ θράσος τέκῃ φόβον A.Supp. 498
; of Night as the mother of Day,τῆς.. τεκούσης φῶς τόδ' εὐφρόνης Id.Ag. 279
;ὃν αἰόλα νὺξ.. τίκτει.., Ἅλιον αἰτῶ S.Tr.95
(lyr.): generally, τ. [νόμους] Id.OT 870 (lyr.); ;τ. ἀοιδάς E.HF 767
(lyr.);ὕδωρ δὲ πίνων οὐδὲν ἂν τέκοι σοφόν Cratin.199
;τ. ῥήματα Ar.Ra. 1059
(anap.); also in Prose,νουσήματα Hp.Hum.12
; ;πολλοὺς καὶ καλοὺς λόγους Id.Smp. 210d
; [δὰς] πῦρ τέξεται X.Cyr.7.5.23
, etc.:—[voice] Pass., τῷδε κέρδει (sic codd.)κέρδος ἄλλο τίκτεται A.Th. 437
. ( τίκτω fr. τί-τκ-ω redupl. fr. τεκ ( τέκνον, etc.).) -
8 τίνω
τίνω, Il.3.289, al., ([etym.] ἀπο-) IG5(1).1390.76 (Andania, i B.C.), etc.: [dialect] Ion. [tense] impf.Aτίνεσκον A.R.2.475
: [tense] fut. τείσω ([etym.] ἐκ-) IG22.412.6 (iv B.C.), ([etym.] ἀπο-) Epigr.Gr. 1132 ([dialect] Att. vase, iv B.C.), PPetr.3p.55 (iii B.C.), IG7.3073.1 (Lebad., ii B.C.), etc.; Cypr. [ per.] 3sg.πείσει Inscr.Cypr.135.12
H.: [tense] aor. ἔτεισα ([etym.] ἀπ-) SIG47.15 ([dialect] Locr., v B.C.), 663.25 (Delos, iii/ii B.C.), PPetr.3p.41 (iii B.C.), etc.: freq. written τίσω ἔτισα in Hellenistic and later Inscrr. and Pap., and in codd. of all authors ([tense] fut., Od.8.348, A.Ch. 277, S.Aj. 113, etc.; [tense] aor., Od. 24.352, Pi.O.2.58, S.OT 810, etc.): in Hom. confused (both in codd. and printed texts) with τίσω ἔτισα [tense] fut. and [tense] aor. of τίω, and only to be distd. by the sense: [tense] pf. τέτεικα ([etym.] ἀπο-) SIG437.6 (Delph., iii B.C.); part.τετεικώς Lyc.765
(τετικώς, τεθεικώς codd.) (v. ἐκτίνω):—[voice] Med., [tense] pres. first in Thgn.204 (only τίνυμαι in Hom.): [tense] fut.τείσομαι Od.13.15
, al.: [tense] aor.ἐτεισάμην 3.197
, 15.236, al. ( τις- codd.):—[voice] Pass., [tense] aor.ἐξ-ετείσθην IG22.1613.198
, D.39.15, 59.7: [tense] pf. [ per.] 3sg.ἐκ-τέτεισται Pl.Phdr. 257a
, D.24.187. [[pron. full] τῑνω (from Τίνϝω ) in [dialect] Ep., also Thgn.204, Herod.2.51, AP7.657 (Leon.); τῐνω in Trag., as A.Pr. 112, S.OC 635, E.Or.7; also in Pi.P.2.24 ([voice] Med. ) and Sol. 13.31; also in some Epigrammatists, as Simm.25.1, AP9.286 (Marc. Arg.).]I [voice] Act., pay a price by way of return or recompense, mostly in bad sense, pay a penalty, with acc. of the penalty,τ. θωήν Od.2.193
;τιμήν τινι Il.3.289
;ποινάς Pi.O.2.58
, A.Pr. 112, Theodect. 8.9; , El. 298, Fr.107.9, 2 Ep.Thess.1.9, etc.; also τ. ἴσην (sc. δίκην) S.OT 810; ; τὸ ἥμισυ ib. 767e (s. v.l.); μείζονα τὴν ἔκτ<ε>ισίν τινι ib. 933e; τὴν προσήκουσαν τιμωρίαν ib. 905a, cf. Trag.Adesp.490:—but alsob in good sense, pay a debt, acquit oneself of an obligation, ζωάγρια τ. Il.18.407;τείσειν αἴσιμα πάντα Od.8.348
; εὐαγγέλιον (reward for bringing good news) 14.166; τ. χάριν τινί render one thanks, A.Pr. 985;τ. γῇ δασμόν S.OC 635
;ἰατροῖς μισθόν X.Mem.1.2.54
:—also simply,c repay, c. acc. rei,τροφάς τινι E.Or. 109
:—in various phrases, τ. ἀντιποίνους δύας repay equivalent sorrows, A.Eu. 268 (lyr.); φόνον φόνου ῥύσιον τ. S.Ph. 959; αἱμάτων παλαιτέρων τ. μύσος send one pollution in repayment for another, A.Ch. 650(lyr., Lachm., for τείνει); ἀρᾶς τ. χρέος Id.Ag. 457
(lyr.).--Constr.:1 c. acc. of the thing paid or of the thing repaid (v. supr.).2 less freq. c. dat., κράατι τείσεις with thy head, Od.22.218; .3 c. dat. of pers. to whom payment is made (v. supr.).4 c. dat. of the penalty,τ. θανάτῳ ἅπερ ἦρξεν Id.Ag. 1529
(anap.); τύμμα τύμματι ib. 1430 (lyr.).5 with gen. of the thing for which one pays, τ. ἀμοιβὴν βοῶν τινι pay him compensation for the cows, Od.12.382; τ. τινὶ ποινήν τινος pay one retribution for.., Hdt.3.14, 7.134; τ. μητρὸς δίκας for thy mother, E.Or. 531; ἀντὶ πληγῆς πληγὴν τ. A.Ch. 313 (anap.): also with acc. of the thing for which one pays, the price being omitted, pay or atone for a thing, ;τ. ὕβριν Od.24.352
; τ. φόνον or λώβην τινός, Il.21.134, 11.142;κακά Thgn.735
; : less freq. c. acc. pers., τείσεις γνωτὸν τὸν ἔπεφνες thou shalt make atonement for the brother thou hast slain, Il.17.34.6 abs., make return or requital, Sol.13.29; , cf. 230 (lyr.).II [voice] Med., have a price paid one, make another pay for a thing, avenge oneself on him, punish him, freq. from Hom. downwards.--Constr.:2 c. gen. criminis, τείσασθαι Ἀλέξανδρον κακότητος punish him for his wickedness, Il.3.366, cf. Od.3.206, Thgn. 204 (where ἀμπλακίης, v.l. -ίας), Hdt.4.118, etc.;τ. τινὰ ἐφ' ἁμαρτωλῇ Thgn.1248
;ὑπέρ τινος Hdt.1.27
,73.3 c. acc. rei, take vengeance for a thing, τείσασθαι φόνον, βίην τινός, Il.15.116, Od.23.31;λώβην Il.19.208
, etc.4 c. dupl. acc. pers. et rei, ἐτείσατο ἔργον ἀεικὲς ἀντίθεον Νηλῆα he made Neleus pay for the misdeed, visited it on his head, Od.15.236;Ζεῦ ἄνα, δὸς τείσασθαι, ὅ με πρότερος κάκ' ἔοργε, δῖον Ἀλέξανδρον Il.3.351
; τείσασθαί τινα δίκην exact retribution from a person, E.Med. 1316 (dub.l.).5 c. dat. modi, τίνεσθαί τινα ἀγαναῖς ἀμοιβαῖς, φυγῇ, repay or requite with.., Pi.P.2.24, A.Th. 638.6 abs., repay oneself, indemnify oneself, ἡμεῖς δ' αὖτε ἀγειρόμενοι κατὰ δῆμον τεισόμεθ' Od.13.15. (Root q[uglide][icaron]- [alternating with q[uglide]ei- and q[uglide]oi-] 'pay': τῐ-νϝ-ω, τῐ-σις, τεί-σω [Cypr. πείσει], ἔ-τει-σα [cf. ἀππεισάτου s.v. ἀποτίνω], ποι-νή (q.v.): Skt. cáy-ate 'avenge, punish': ápa-ci-tis 'vengeance':—not related to τίω.) -
9 ἤνις
ἤνῑς, ἡ, epith. of cows, of uncertain meaning ( -
10 βαΰζω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `bark', of dogs; of persons `revile, cry etc.' (A.).Dialectal forms: Dor. βαΰσδωDerivatives: Also βαυβύζω (pap.).Origin: ONOM [onomatopoia, and other elementary formations]Etymology: Onomatop. from βαύ βαύ (Com. adespota 1304). Cf Lat. baubor `bark', Lith. baũbti `cry', of cows etc. Schwyzer 716, W.-Hofmann s. baubor, Pok. 95.Page in Frisk: 1,228Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βαΰζω
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11 βδάλλω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `milk (cows)' (Pl.).Other forms: mostly present (rare aorists βδάλας, βδήλαιο). Also βδέλλω (sch. Theocr. 11, 34). Cf. βδέλλα `leech'.Derivatives: βδάλσις `suction' (Gal.). Difficult βδαλοί ῥαφίδες (`garfish, Belone acus') θαλάσσιαι. καὶ φλέβες κρισσώδεις (`varicose veins') H. (not a mistake for βελόνη); βελλαι `id.' H., misread for βδαλοί, or a variant of *βδελλαι?.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: That βδάλλω looks like a zero grade of βδέλλ-(α) is no doubt deceptive. The meaning `leech' and the group βδ- show that it is a Pre-Gr. word, as does the - λλ- (perh. bdaly-, or *byaly-). If βδαλοί does belong here, it shows Pre-Gr. - λλ\/λ-.Page in Frisk: 1,229Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βδάλλω
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12 βοῦς
βοῦς, βοόςGrammatical information: f. m.Meaning: `bovid, cow, bull, ox' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. qoo \/gʷōns\/? (Ruijgh Études 131). Acc. Dor. and Η 238 βῶν, with Dor. nom. βῶς; Att. acc. βοῦν after βοῦς (Schwyzer 577; s. below)Compounds: As first member βου-, βο(Ϝ)- (before vowel): βουκόλος, βούβοτος, βούτυρον, βοηλάτης, βοῶπις. On augment. βου- s.v. and βούβρωστις, βουγάιε, βουλιμία. On ἑκατόμβη s.v. As second member also - βοιος, e. g. ἐννεά-βοιος (Il.) \< *-βοϜιο- = Skt. gávya- (below).Derivatives: Demin. βοΐδιον (Ar.). - βούτης `cowherd', and adj. `of a cow' (A.), with πολυ-βούτης `rich in cows'; βοεύς `strap of cow-leather' (β 426). - Adj.: βοειος, βόεος (Il.), subst. f. βοείη, βοέη `cow-hide' (Il.). - On Βοῦκος, βουκαῖος s. βουκόλος. S. βοῦα and βουσός.Etymology: Old word preserved in many languages: Skt. gaúḥ, acc. gā́m (= βῶν), Lat. bōs (from Osc.-Umbr.), gen. pl. boum = βοῶν = Skt. gávām, Umbr. acc. bum = βῶν; Arm. kov (u-Stamm), OIr. bó, Germ., e. g. OHG. chuo, Toch.A ko, ki, B keu, Latv. gùovs `cow', OCS gov-ę-do. Adj. *guou̯-io- in - βο(Ϝ)ιος = Skt. gávya-, Arm. kogi `butter'. S. also ἑκατόμβη. - The root will have been * gʷeh₃- seen in βόσκω. The original inflection is still not clear: we expect * gʷeh₃-u-s, gen. gʷh₃-eu-s (as in the proterodynamic inflection); the latter form explains Av. gaoš (and Gr. βοϜ-ος), but not Skt. gauš, nor the acc. gā́m, βών. The Gr. nom. can be * gʷeh₃-us \> βοῦς; the acc. may have *gʷōm \< older * gʷoum,Page in Frisk: 1,260-261Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βοῦς
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13 βοός
βοῦς, βοόςGrammatical information: f. m.Meaning: `bovid, cow, bull, ox' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. qoo \/gʷōns\/? (Ruijgh Études 131). Acc. Dor. and Η 238 βῶν, with Dor. nom. βῶς; Att. acc. βοῦν after βοῦς (Schwyzer 577; s. below)Compounds: As first member βου-, βο(Ϝ)- (before vowel): βουκόλος, βούβοτος, βούτυρον, βοηλάτης, βοῶπις. On augment. βου- s.v. and βούβρωστις, βουγάιε, βουλιμία. On ἑκατόμβη s.v. As second member also - βοιος, e. g. ἐννεά-βοιος (Il.) \< *-βοϜιο- = Skt. gávya- (below).Derivatives: Demin. βοΐδιον (Ar.). - βούτης `cowherd', and adj. `of a cow' (A.), with πολυ-βούτης `rich in cows'; βοεύς `strap of cow-leather' (β 426). - Adj.: βοειος, βόεος (Il.), subst. f. βοείη, βοέη `cow-hide' (Il.). - On Βοῦκος, βουκαῖος s. βουκόλος. S. βοῦα and βουσός.Etymology: Old word preserved in many languages: Skt. gaúḥ, acc. gā́m (= βῶν), Lat. bōs (from Osc.-Umbr.), gen. pl. boum = βοῶν = Skt. gávām, Umbr. acc. bum = βῶν; Arm. kov (u-Stamm), OIr. bó, Germ., e. g. OHG. chuo, Toch.A ko, ki, B keu, Latv. gùovs `cow', OCS gov-ę-do. Adj. *guou̯-io- in - βο(Ϝ)ιος = Skt. gávya-, Arm. kogi `butter'. S. also ἑκατόμβη. - The root will have been * gʷeh₃- seen in βόσκω. The original inflection is still not clear: we expect * gʷeh₃-u-s, gen. gʷh₃-eu-s (as in the proterodynamic inflection); the latter form explains Av. gaoš (and Gr. βοϜ-ος), but not Skt. gauš, nor the acc. gā́m, βών. The Gr. nom. can be * gʷeh₃-us \> βοῦς; the acc. may have *gʷōm \< older * gʷoum,Page in Frisk: 1,260-261Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βοός
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14 βουσός
Grammatical information: f.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]X [probably]Etymology: From *βου-σόϜος (Schwyzer 450), to σεύω (s. v.). Cf. μηλοσόη ὁδός, δι' ἧς πρόβατα ἐλαύνεται. ` Ρόδιοι H.; also βοῦα. Not with Schwyzer Glotta 12 (1923) 5 n.. 1, Fraenkel, Glotta 32 (1953) 22: = Ion. βυσσός `depth, bottom'.Page in Frisk: 1,261Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βουσός
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15 δώδεκα
Grammatical information: num.Meaning: `twelve' (Il.).Compounds: δυωδεκά-βοιος `worth twelve cows' (Il.) etc.Derivatives: δωδέκατος ( δυω-; on δυνδεκάτῃ s. v.) `the twelfth' (Il.) with δωδεκαταῖος `of twelve days' (Hes.) from δωδεκάτη ( ἡμέρα), and δυωδεκατεύς ( μήν) `the twelfth month' (Tauromenion); δωδεκάς ( δυω-) f. `group of twelve, the twelfth part' (Pl.) with δυωδεκαδικός; δωδεκαΐς, - ηΐς ( δυω-) `sacrifice of twelve animals', also name of a a festive deputation (Delphi Va etc.; cf. Πυθαΐς); δωδεκεύς χοεύς H.; δωδεκάκις `twelve times' (Ar.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [228] *du̯ōdeḱm̥ `twelve'Etymology: Old contraction of *δϜώ-δεκα = Skt. dvā́-daśa. Also δυώδεκα as in Lat. doudecim. See δύο.Page in Frisk: 1,429Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δώδεκα
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16 εἴκοσι
Grammatical information: num.Meaning: `twenty'.Compounds: As 1. member often εἰκοσα-, e. g. ἐεικοσάβοιος `worth twenty cows' (Od.; after ἑπτα-, τετρα- etc.). On εἰκοσινήριτος Χ 349 s. νήριτος.Derivatives: εἰκοσάκις `twenty times' (Il.), εἰκοσάς f. `twenty pieces' (late; cf. εἰκάς below), ( ἐ)εἰκοστός (Boeot. Ϝικαστός) `the tentieth' (Il.); f. εἰκοστή `the twentieth' with εἰκοσταῖος `belonging to the 20. day' (Hp.; as δευτεραῖος a. o.); - also εἰκάς f., Dor. ἰκάς, Ther. hικάς `thenumber twenty, the 20th day of the month' (Hes.), after δεκάς, τριακάς etc. (not with Schwyzer 597 original formtion to ( ἐ)ἴκατι); from here εἰκαδεῖς the members of a society, that met on the 20th, eponymous founder Εἰκαδεύς (Athens; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 71 a. 180, v. Wilamowitz Glaube 2, 368 n. 1), εἰκαδισταί surame of the Epicureans (Ath.), cf. δεκαδισταί to δεκάς (s. δέκα).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1177] *du̯i-dkm̥t-iH `twenty'Etymology: Hom. ἐείκοσι for ἐ-(Ϝ)ί̄κοσι (wit prothetic vowel from the glottalic feature of the *d-; Korlandt, MSS 42 (1983)97-104); graphically influenced by kontracted εἴκοσι; thus Herakl. Ϝείκατι. The ο-vowel in εἴκοσι from εἰκοστός (diff. Meillet MSL 16, 217ff.; s. Schwyzer 344), this after τριακοστός etc. with - ο- after τριάκοντα etc. - PGr. (ʔ)Ϝί̄κατι, (ʔ)Ϝῑκαστός (= Dor., Boeot.), as in Av. vīsaiti. Skt. viṃśatí- f. with secondary nasalisation and i-flexion, and sec. stress (Schulze KZ 28, 277 n. 1 = Kl. Schr. 99 n. 3; cf. Schwyzer 381), Lat. vīgintī with sec. g; IE *ʔu̯i-ʔḱm̥t-ī̆ prop. du. `two dekades' (from *-dḱm̥t-), to IE *du̯i- `two' and δέκα, s. v. and ἑκατόν. - Details Schwyzer 591, Wackernagel-Debrunner Aind. Gramm. 3, 366f., W.-Hofmann s. vīgintī.Page in Frisk: 1,453-454Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > εἴκοσι
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17 κόλος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: of cows and goats `hornless, with not fullgrown horns' (Hdt., TheoC., Nic., H.), of a spear `without point' (Π 117), of battle `broken off' (sch. as name of Θ).Compounds: As 1. member in κόλουρος `with short tail' (Plu.), as mathem. and astron. term `stump' (Hipparch. Astr., Hero, Nicom.); with κολουραῖος `broken off, steep' ( πέτρα, Call.), κολούρα `hill etc.' (Hermione, Epid.), κολουρίᾳ τῃ̃ ἀποτομίᾳ, κολουρῖτις γῆ. Σικελοί H., κολούρωσις = κολόβωσις (Iamb.); Lat. LW [loanword] clūra `ape' (W.-Hofmann s. v., Leumann Sprache 1, 206 n. 8). -Derivatives: After κόλ-ουρος prob.(?) κόλ-ερος `with short-sheared wool-fleece' (Arist.; oppos. εὔ-, ἔπ-ερος; s. εἶρος); further κολόχειρ χείραργος H. - Derived from κόλος or closely related two verbs: 1. κολάζω, κολάσαι, rarely with συν-, ἀντι-, προ-, `wring in, chastise, punish, cut' (IA); prob. denomin. κόλασις `chastisment' (IA.), - ασμα (Ar., X.), - ασμός (Plu.) `id.'; κολαστής `punisher' (trag., also Pl., Lys.; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 36f.), also κολαστήρ `id.' (Arr.), with f. κολάστρια (Ezek.), κολάστειρα (AP); κολαστήριον, adj. - ος `punishment, punishing' (X., Ph.), κολαστικός `punishing' (Pl.). - 2. κολούω, κολοῦσαι, somet. with περι-, κατα-, ἀπο-, `mutilate, limit' (Il.); formation unclear; (cf. Schwyzer 683, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 374; s. also on κωλύω). From it κόλουσις `docking, cutting short' (Arist.), κολούσματα κλάσματα H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The archaic and dying κόλος, which was in a way replaced by the expressive form κολοβός, partly also by κόλ-ουρος, belongs as verbal noun to a Balto-Slavic, in Greek replaced by κολάπτω (s. v.) primary verb meaning `beat, hew, cut off, break off', which left in Greek several continuants, s. κλάω, κελεός m. (uncertain, improbable). The remarkable barytonesis (Schwyzer 459) may be connected with the passive meaning; perhaps κόλος was like stump orig. a substantive. A formal parallel is OCS kolъ `πάσσαλος', Russ. kol `pole' (prop. "splitoff, cut off piece of wood"?; cf. σκῶλος `pointed pole' to σκάλλω?); with lengthened grade Lith. kuõlas `pole'. - The further history of κόλος is uncertain because the word is not often attested; so we don't know, whether we must start from a general meaning like `stump' or from a word with a special meaning, like `hornless' (from *`broken off' v. t.); cf. the history of κόλουρος.- The parallels adduced are not very convincing; the verbs κολάπτω, κολούω, of unclear formation, point rather to a Pre-Greek complex.Page in Frisk: 1,902-903Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κόλος
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18 ὁμαλός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `equal, level, smooth' (ι 327).Other forms: ὁμαλής `id.' (Pl., X., Arist.; innovation, Schwyzer 513).Compounds: As 2. member e.g. in ἀν-ώμαλος `unequal' (IA.; comp. length.).Derivatives: ὁμαλ-ότης, - ητος f. `equality, even surface' (Pl., Arist.), - εύς m. `leveller' (who levels the bottom of the acker, pap. IIIa; Mayser I: 3, 15). Denominative Verbs: 1. ὁμαλ-ίζω, also w. δι-, ἐξ- a.o., `to level, to balance' (X., Arist.) with ὁμαλ-ισμός m. `levelling' (LXX, S.E.), - ιξις f. `levelling' (Delph., Didyma, - ιστῆρες m. pl. `instruments for levelling' ( Gloss.), - ιστρον H.; hardky to λίστρον. 2. ὁμαλ-ύνω, also w. δι-, προ-, συν-, `to make equal, to make level' (Hp., Pl., Arist.; Fraenkel Denom. 36f.) with - υντικός `equational' (Gal.). 3. *ἀν-ομαλ-όω in ἀνομάλω-σις f. `equalisation' (Arist.).Etymology: Identical with Lat. similis `similar' (if - lis \< - los) in formation; in any case with o -ablaut from the l-stem in Lat. semel `once', Goth. simle `one time' = `once' etc.; beside it an n-stem in Germ., e.g. OWNo. saman `together etc.' (Benveniste Origines 43). Arm. amol `harnessed pair of cows' (Adontz Mél. Boisacq 1, 10) must remain far for its meaning, cf. Dumézil BSL 39, 241 f.Page in Frisk: 2,384Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὁμαλός
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19 πίμπρημι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to blow (on), to blow up, to stoke up, to kindle, to burn' (Il.).Other forms: Inf. - άναι (IA.), also - άω (X., Plb.), ipf. ἐν-έπρηθον (I 589), fut. πρήσω, aor. πρῆσαι (Il.), pass. aor. πρησθῆναι, perf. πέπρησμαι, - ημαι (IA., also Epid.), perf. act. πέπρηκα (Hp.).Compounds: Often w. prefix, esp. ἐν-.Derivatives: 1. πρηστήρ, - ῆρος m. `heavy gale, hurricane, sparking bolt, lightning' (Hes.), also `bellows, jugular' and name of a snake that causes inflammation (Arist., Ds.; Fraenkel IF 32, 108 f. a. 120) with πρηστηριάζω `to burn by lightning' (Hdn. Epim.); ἐμπρηστής m. `incendiary' (Aq., Ptol.). 2. πρῆσις (mostly ἔμ-πίμπρημι) f. `blowing up, ignation, inflammation' (IA., Aret.); 3. ἐμπρησμός m. `ignation, inflammation' (hell.); 4. πρῆσμα n., - μονή f. `id.' (Gal., Hippiatr.); παραπρή(σ)ματα n. pl. `inflammations on the legs of horses' (pap.). 5. πρηστικός `blowing up' (Hp. ap. Gal.). Also 6. πρηδών, - όνος f. `inflammatory swelling' (Nic., Aret.; Chantraine Form. 361) and, with μ-suffix, πρημαίνω `blowing intensively' (Ar. Nu. 336 [lyr.], Herod.), πρημονάω about `to snore, to roar' (Herod.), as from *πρῆ-μα, *πρη-μονή. -- As 2. member in βού-πρηστις, - ιδος. - εως f. "inflammatress of cows" name of a poisonous insect (Hp.); on the formation cf. βού-βρωστις. On the simplex πρῆστις, which a.o. is attested as fishname beside πρίστις, s. Strömberg Fischn. 44 w. lit., also Thompson Fishes s. v.Etymology: The series πίμπρημι: πιμπράναι: πρήσω: πρῆσαι: πρησθῆναι: πρήθω agrees exactly to that of πίμπλημι: πιμπλάναι etc.; s.v. and Schwyzer 688f., 703 a. 761 w. further details. How the individual forms are to be evaluated and how the system was formed, cannot be reconstructed as there are no agreeing forms outside Greek. For comparison many words with pr- have been adduced, e.g. Skt. próthati `cough, sneeze', pruṣṇóti `sprinkle', Germ., e.g. OWNo. frūsa, frysa, Swed. frusta `sneeze', Hitt. parāi- ( prāi-?) `breathe, blow, stir up'. Orig. onomatop. as still (with retained pr-) LG. prusten. -- Several further forms w. lit. in Bq s. v., WP. 2, 27 f., Pok. 809.Page in Frisk: 2,538-539Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πίμπρημι
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