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81 ἄγριππος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: Laconian name for a `wild olive' (Zen.)Other forms: ἄγριφος γένος τι ἀγρίας ἐλείας H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Fur. 158 notes that these words have the characterictic variation of Pre-Greek words.Page in Frisk: --Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄγριππος
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82 ἀλθαίνω
ἀλθαίνω, - ομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `become whole and sound' (Hp.)Other forms: ἄλθετο (Il.). Fut. ἀλθήσομαι, - σω (Il.). ἀλθεῖν ὑγιάζειν (Hp. ap. Gal. 19, 76). ἄλθα θερμασία η θεραπεία H.; ἄλθος φάρμακον EM; ἀλθεύς ἰατρός H.; ἀλθαίνει αὔξει, θεραπεύει, ὑγιαίνει φάρμακον γὰρ ἄλθος H.Derivatives: The fut. ἀλθέξομαι (Aret.) perh. formed after its opposite πυρέξομαι of πυρέσσω (but Chantr. comments: "l'hypothése reste en l'air"; cf. συναλθάσσομαι; ἄλθεξις. On these forms Van Brock, Vocab. médical 198 - 207 ("capricieuses formations", all late). ἀλθεστήρια `medicine' (Nic.), cf. χαριστήρια, etc. (Chantr. Form. 63f.). - ἀλθαία plant name `marsh mallow', Thphr.; cf. Strömberg Pflanzennamen 81 (partly incorrect). On Ἄλθηπος, also Ἄλθηφος, Bechtel Hermes 56, 228 and the mythical name Άλθαία, s. below.Etymology: Άλθαίνω is connected with the root in ἄναλτος (q.v.) (Schwyzer 703 β). Cf. ἀλδαίνω. Chantr. notes that the word is originally used of the growth of damaged tissue; he translates ἄλθετο χείρ with "le bras se guérit". - However, the meaning `heal' is not evidently connected with ἀλ- `grow, feed'; the glosses give systematically the meaning `heal' etc.; θεραπεία means also `medical or surgical treatment'; θερμασία is less clear (false reading?); αὔξει also deviates (is it for ἀλδαίνω?). - The name Ἄλθηπ\/ φος is clearly Pre-Greek (cf. the river Αἴσηπος); so may be Άλθαία (the suffix - αια, - εια is also known in Pre-Greek); but we cannot be sure that the names belong to the verb. - An alternative etymology connects Skt. r̥dhnóti `obtain luckily', Rix MSS 27 (1970) 88 and Mayrhofer EWAia 1, 118.Page in Frisk: 1,72Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλθαίνω
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83 ἀλλᾶς
ἀλλᾶς, - ᾶντοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `force-meat, sausage, black pudding' (Hippon.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unknown. Kretschmer Glotta 1, 323 compares ἄλλην λάχανον. Ίταλοί, καὶ ἐπὶ τοῦ ἀρτυνθέντος περικόμματος, ἐξ οὖ ἀλλαντοπώλης H. So it would contain an Oscan word (Messapian acc. to v. Blumenthal Hesychst. 15), cf. Lat. ālium `garlic'. K. assumes *ἀλλᾱ-Ϝεντ-. But Szemerényi, Gmomon 43 (1971) 653, notes that origin in southern Italy is implausible for a word from Hipponax.Page in Frisk: 1,75Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλλᾶς
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84 ἀξί̄νη
ἀξί̄νηGrammatical information: f.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Compared with Lat. ascia `axe' and Germanic words for `axe', Goth. aqizi etc., which does not lead to an IE reconstruction. Cf. Specht Ursprung 150, 239, 326f.; also Vasmer Zeitschr. f. slav. Phil. 15, 119f. Ruijgh BiOr 54 (1997) 540, n. 11 notes that - īn- is a typical substr. suffix, and that the sign for a is a double axe; Wind. compares ὑσμίνη (his connection with σίνομαι is no doubt wrong). Szemerényi Gnomon 43 (1971) 656 remarks that Accadian haṣṣinu and Aram. ḥaṣṣīnā are so close that they must be the same word. I propose that the Semitic and Greek words are loans from an Anatolian language.Page in Frisk: 1,115-116Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀξί̄νη
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85 ἄοζος
Grammatical information: m.Other forms: ἄζος = θεράπων or θεράπαινα Seleucus et Gloss. ap. Ath. 6, 267c = Eust. 1024, 44 and 1090, 56.Dialectal forms: Myc. aozejo prob. not here.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: In the same sense ὄζος in epic ὄζος Ἄρηος, if = θεράπων Ἄ., cf. ὀζεία (cod. ὀζειέα) θεραπεία H. This ὄζος is considered to be identical with ὄζος `branch', as did the ancients: ὁ κλάδος τοῦ πολέμου H. Modern scholars take it as `sprout', but DELG notes that ὄζος does not have this meaning. Nevertheless one assumes the same etymology: * o-zd-o-, i.e. prefix o- and zero grade of sed- `sit (down)', so orig. `comes, companion'; not very convincing. ἄ-οζος could have α copulativum, perhaps under influence of ἀοσσέω (q. v.), ἄοσσος. Brugmann IF 19, 379 against Schulze Q. 498, who explains ἄοζος from *ἀ-σοδ-ι̯ο-ς, from ὁδός, what Frisk and DELG do not reject. - Fur. 341 cites the form ἄζος, and concludes from α\/ο that the word is Pre-Greek. He assumes (374) with Frisk that ἄοζος has a secondary α copulativum, which is uncertain, however; it could be a real Pre-Greek prothesis.Page in Frisk: 1,116Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄοζος
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86 ἀρειή
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `threat' (Il.).Derivatives: Denom. ἀρειάω `threaten' (Hippon.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Of old connected with Skt. irasyā́ `malevolence', īrṣ-, irasyáti `be angry, be envious', but the meaning is different; the form might be * h₂rh₁-es-; s. Peters, Sprache 32, 1986, 371f. Vgl. ἀρή. Not to ἐπ-ήρεια, as this has PGr. ē. One further compares ἄρος.... καί βλάβος ἀκούσιον H.; but damage is not the same as menace, notes DELG. S. also ἄρη.Page in Frisk: 1,135Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀρειή
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87 ἄσφαλτος
Grammatical information: f. (m.)Meaning: `asphalt, bitumen' (Hdt.).Other forms: - ον n.Derivatives: ἀσφάλτιον `treacle clover, Psoralea bituminosa' (Dsc.; after the smell, s. Strömberg Pflanzennamen 62); ἀσφαλτῖτις `bituminous' ( βῶλος etc., Str., Redard Les noms grecs en - ίτης 108); ἀσφαλτωδεύομαι `cover with a.'. - ἀσφαλτόω `smear with a.' (LXX).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Generally taken as negative verbal adjective of σφάλλεσθαι, as the material that protects walls from σφάλλεσθαι. Diels KZ 47, 207ff., who finds no Semitic etymologies. For the `causative' meaning of the verbal adjective one compares ἀμέθυστος; still, this point makes the etymology weak. Chantr. notes `qui empêche de glisser, de tomber, le produit étant employé comme mortier (ce qui n'est pas à l'origine un procédé grec).' The etymology is improbable; rather a substr. word; Diels noted that sources occur everywhere, e.g. on Zakynthos and near Dyrrhachium..Page in Frisk: 1,174Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄσφαλτος
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88 ἀσχέλιον
Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Latte notes "non coharens ideoque asperum", and corrects to ἀσχέδιον. DELG connects the corrected form with σχεδ-όν, ἔχω (which may be what Latte meant), which is quite uncertain. Latte's correction should not have been printed in the text; it is quite uncertain. - No etym.Page in Frisk: --Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀσχέλιον
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89 ἀφάκη
Grammatical information: f.,Meaning: `Wicke, Vicia angustifolia' (Pherekr.).Other forms: ἄφακος (Schwyzer-Debrunner 30)Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Dsc. and Galen think it comes from φακός `lentil'. The ἀ- is privative-pejorative acc. to Strömberg, Wortstudien 46f. (like Unkraut, but see Seiler, Studia Linguistica, 1952, 90f.). Frisk (Subst. priv. 20) proposed haplology from *ἀπο-φάκη (cf. ἀπό-λινον, ἀπό-μελι etc.). Chantr. notes: "L'emploi d'un thème en -η pour un thème en - ος attendu ne constitue pas une difficulté décisive et les hypothèses compliquées de Strömberg ne sont pas indispensable." This makes Fur. 373 more probable, who takes the ἀ- as a prothetic vowel and considers the word as a substr. word; note - ος: -η). Thus also Pisani, Paideia 11 (1956) 296.Page in Frisk: 1,194Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀφάκη
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90 βασσάρα
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `fox' (Sch. Lyk. 771), `dress of bacchante's' (EM, AB, H.) from the skin of a fox; `bacchante' (Sch. Lyk. 771, EM), `impudent woman' (Lyk., EM).Derivatives: βασσάριον `fox' (Hdt. 4, 192; Libyan), βασσαρεύς name of Dionysos (Hor.), βάσσαρος = βάκχος (Orph.); denom. ἀνα-βασσαρέω `break forth in Bacchic frenzy' (Anacr.).Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Egypt.Etymology: Herodotus calls the word Libyan. This seems confirmed by the etymology with Egypt. wasar, Copt. bašor (Szemerényi, Gnomon 43 (1971) 660, without reference). Szemerényi further wants to maintain the connection with Hitt. wassuwar `clothing' for the dress; rejected by Neumann, Weiterleben (1961) 19, I think rightly so. Fur. 257 n. 36 notes that βάσσος = βασσάρα (EM) and that - αρ(ος) is a frequent Pre-Gr. suffix.Page in Frisk: 1,224Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βασσάρα
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91 βήξ
βήξ, βηχόςGrammatical information: m. f.Meaning: `coughing' (Th.).Other forms: also βηκός, s. Schulze Kl. Schr. 703)Derivatives: Demin. βηχίον, also a plant `colt's-foot, ( Hustenkraut), Tussilago farfara', as medicine against coughing (Lehmann KZ 41, 94, Strömberg Pflanzennamen 8 5f.). Denomin. βήσσω, βήξω, ἔβηξα.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The root noun βήξ denotes the illness as active (though not necessarily as a demon, Radermacher WienAkSb 202, 1 S. 10 A. 2). Fur. 128 notes βήκιον and πήχιον as variants and concludes (hard to escape) to Pre-Gr.; hardly IE (Eng. cough) with Pisani Arch. glott. it 53 (1968) 63f. Ultimately onomatopoetic?.Page in Frisk: 1,233-234Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βήξ
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92 βηχός
βήξ, βηχόςGrammatical information: m. f.Meaning: `coughing' (Th.).Other forms: also βηκός, s. Schulze Kl. Schr. 703)Derivatives: Demin. βηχίον, also a plant `colt's-foot, ( Hustenkraut), Tussilago farfara', as medicine against coughing (Lehmann KZ 41, 94, Strömberg Pflanzennamen 8 5f.). Denomin. βήσσω, βήξω, ἔβηξα.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The root noun βήξ denotes the illness as active (though not necessarily as a demon, Radermacher WienAkSb 202, 1 S. 10 A. 2). Fur. 128 notes βήκιον and πήχιον as variants and concludes (hard to escape) to Pre-Gr.; hardly IE (Eng. cough) with Pisani Arch. glott. it 53 (1968) 63f. Ultimately onomatopoetic?.Page in Frisk: 1,233-234Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βηχός
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93 γλαῦξ
γλαῦξ, - κόςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `the little owl, Athene noctua' (Com., Arist.).Other forms: LSJ notes γλαύξ. There is also a γλαύξ `wart cress' (Dsc.) which is also given as γλάξ (Hdn. Gr. 1.395 etc.)Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: By the ancients derived from γλαυκός; rejected by Thompson Birds s. v. as folketymology; thus also Pötscher (s.s.v. γλαυκῶπις). Some bird names with k-suffix noted by Specht Ursprung 204 (IE?); note πέρδιξ and the many Pre-Greek words in -ξ (Beekes, Pre-Greek on word end). Etym. unknown. The variation in the word for `cress' points to a Pre-Greek word (which is anyhow probable), but it is not sure that the words have the same origin.Page in Frisk: 1,311Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γλαῦξ
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94 δορκάς
δορκάς, - άδοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `a kind of deer, roe, gazelle' (Hdt. 7, 69).Derivatives: Other forms: δόρξ (Call.; acc. δόρκᾱ̆ν E. H. F. 376 [lyr.]; δόρκα Dindorf), δόρκος (Dsc.), δόρκων (LXX); also ζορκάς (Hdt. 4, 192), ζόρξ (Call.); ἴορκος (Opp.), ἴορκες, ἴυρκες (H.). - Diminutives: δορκάδιον (LXX, Delos IIIa), also a plant (André, Notes lexicogr. botanique s.v.); δορκαλίς (Call.; on - αλ-ιδ- Chantr. Form. 251f., 344); δορκαλῖδες `dies from the bones of..' (Herod.; on -ῑδ- s. Chantraine 346f.); δορκαλίδες ὄργανόν ἐστι κολαστικόν τε η μάστιγες αἱ ἀπὸΏ ἱμάντων δορκάδων Suidas; δορκάδε(ι)ος `made from the bones of..' ( ἀστράγαλος, Thphr., inscr., pap.; s. Schmid -εος und -ειος 52), δόρκειος (Theognost.), δόρκιος (Edict. Diocl.). - PN Δορκεύς etc., s. Boßhardt Die Nomina auf - ευς 130.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Celt.Etymology: Built like κεμάς etc., δορκάς, like δόρκος and δόρκων was derived from the root noun δόρξ. If we start from the forms with ζ-, the word agrees with a Celtic word for `roe', Corn. yorch, Bret. iourc'h `roe', Welsh iwrch `caprea mas', IE *i̯ork-o-. The δ-forms perh. folketymological after δέρκομαι. ἴορκος etc. may be Celtic (Galatic) LW [loanword]. - Sommer Lautst. 147f.Page in Frisk: 1,410Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δορκάς
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95 εἰρήν
εἰρήν, - ένοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: name of the fullgrown youths in Sparta, `κόρος τέλειος' H. (IG 5 (1), 279, Plu. Lyc. 17 a. o.; on the meaning etc. Solmsen IF 7, 37ff.).Compounds: As 2. member in μελλ-είρην `youth becoming εἰρήν' (Plu. Lyc. 17) with μελλειρενεια (Sparta), τριτιρενες pl. `in the third year of Eiren' (Messen.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Uncertain. Acc. to Solmsen l. c. from *ἐρσήν and so differing only in accent from Ion. ἔρσην; the lengthening would be be due to the oxytonation (Wackernagel KZ 29, 127ff. = Kl. Schr. 1, 630ff.). Strict Laconian one would expect, as Bechtel Dial. 2, 370f. notes, *ἠρήν. - Not to ἦρι `early', nor to εἰρήνη (s. v.).Page in Frisk: 1,466Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > εἰρήν
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96 ἑλίκη 1
ἑλίκη 1.Grammatical information: f.Dialectal forms: Myc. erika \/helikā\/Derivatives: Έλικών, - ῶνος (Hes. Op. 639, Ϝελ- Korinna) "willow-mountain, Viminalis" (Boeotia) with Έλικών-ιος, f. - ιάς, - ίς (Υ 404 Έ-ιος ἄναξ of Poseidon, s. v. Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 213 and 336 n. 2, Nilsson Gr. Rel. 1, 447 n. 6) Hes., Pi.; on Έλικωνιάς as plant name Strömberg Pflanzennamen 126. - Myk. e-ri-ka?Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Boeot. Ϝελικών forbids the comparison with Lat. salix. One compares an old Westgermanic word for `willow', OE welig, OS wilgia, MHG wilge. But this again is impossible because of Mycenaean. DELG notes * swel-\/* sel- which solves nothing.Page in Frisk: 1,494Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἑλίκη 1
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97 ἔλυμος 1
ἔλυμος 1.Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `millet' (Hp., Ar.).Other forms: In H. also ἔλεμος σπέρμα ὅπερ ἕψοντες Λάκωνες ἐσθίουσιν. Frisk (s.v. εἰλύω notes that the word also means `Futteral': καὶ ἡ τῆς κιθάρας καὶ τοῦ τόξου θήκη H. (s.v. ἔλυμοι).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unknown (s. Schwyzer 494). Connection with ὄλυραι `rice-wheat', οὑλαί (`geschrotetes Getreide', Fick) is uncertain. Other doubtful connection in Prellwitz and Bq s. v. Fur. 246 suggests connection with ἐλίμαρ κέγχρῳ ὅμοιον [ ἐλινη] η μελίνῃ ὑπὸ Λακώνων H., assuming Ϝ- \> μ-; very unclear. May be Pre-Greek.See also: s. εἰλύω.Page in Frisk: 1,503Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἔλυμος 1
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98 ἐπείγω
ἐπείγω, - ομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `press, urge; hurry' (Il.);Other forms: Impf. ἔπειγον (Od.), ἤπειγον (Pi., S.); the non-present forms are a minority: aor. ἤπειξα (Hp. Ep. 17), pass. ἠπείχθην (Th., Pl.), fut. ἐπείξομαι (A.), perf. med. ἤπειγμαι (J.). - Hdn. Gr. 2, 436 notes as Aeol. ἐποίγω.Compounds: Also with prefix, notably κατ-επείγω (Att.).Derivatives: ἔπειξις `pressure, hurry' (J., Plu.) with ἐπείξιμος `urgent' ( POxy. 531, 9, IIp; epicism?, Arbenz Die Adj. auf - ιμος 102); ἐπείκτης `who urges, urgent' with ἐπεικτικός `urgent' (EM, Sch.); ἐπειγωλή `hurry' (EM); Έπειγεύς PN (Π 571; vgl. Boßhardt Die Nom. auf - ευς 99).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Uncertain. Acc. to Brugmann IF 29, 238ff. to οἴγνυμι `open' (from *Ϝο-(ε)ιγ-?, Lesb. ὀείγην).Page in Frisk: 1,533Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐπείγω
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99 θάλασσα
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `sea' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Att. θάλαττα, Lat Cretan θάλαθθα (Buck, Gr. Diall. $ 81b), Lac. in σαλασσο-μέδοισα Alc. 84.Compounds: Several compp., e. g. θαλασσο-κράτωρ (Hdt., Th.), ἀμφι-θάλασσος `surrounded by the sea' (Pi.; Bahuvrihi); often in hypostases, mostly with - ιος (- ίδιος), e. g. ἐπι-, παρα-θαλάσσιος, - ίδιος (IA).Derivatives: θαλάσσιος `belonging to the sea, maritime' (Hom.), - ία f. - ιον n. as plant name (Dsc.; Strömberg Pflanzennamen 114), θαλασσ-ίδιος (Hdt.), - αῖος (Simon., Pi.) `id.', θαλασσώδης `sea-like' (Hanno Peripl.), θαλασσερός m. `kind of eye-salve' (Gal.); θαλασσίτης ( οἶνος Plin.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 96). Denominatives: θαλασσ-εύω `be in the sea' (Th.), - όομαι, - όω `be filled by water from the sea, change into sea' (Arist., hell.) with θαλάσσωσις `inundation' (Thphr., Ph.), - ίζω `be like water from the sea, wash in water of the sea' (Ath., pap.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: For the notion sea, the Greeks used for the old word, limited to Italo-Celtic, Germanic, Balto-Slavic mare - Meer etc. partly old words with a new meaning, ἅλς, prop. `salt', πόντος, prop. `path', partly made others with IE elements like Greek πέλαγος. To θάλασσα belongs Maced. (?) δαλάγχαν θάλασσαν H. the attempts to explain it are doubtful: v. Windekens Beitr. z. Namenforschung 1, 200f., id. Le Pélasgique 89, Autran REIE 2, 17ff., Buck Class. Studies pres. to E. Capps (s. Idg. Jb. 22, 220), Battisti Studi etr. 16, 369ff., Pisani Rend. Acc. Lincei 7, 67ff., Vey BSL 51, 80ff., Steinhauser Μνήμης χάριν 2, 152ff. Acc. to Lesky Hermes 78, 258ff. θάλασσα was originally a foreign word for `salt water' and in this was replaced by synonymous IE ἅλς. Fur. 195 notes that it is not certain that δαλάγχαν is Macedonian (Kalléris does not give it). The word, with a prenasalized variant, is typically Pre-Greek. Furnée further connects σάλος, ζάλος, which seems possible but remains uncertain.Page in Frisk: 1,648-649Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θάλασσα
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100 θάμβος
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `amazement' (Il.).Compounds: As 2. member e. g. in ἀ-θαμβής `fearless, undaunted' (Ibyk., B.) with ἀθαμβία, - ίη `fearlessness, undauntedness' (Democr. 215); back formation ἄθαμβος `undaunted' (Democr. 216), also as PN (Delphi); cf. ἔκθαμβος below; s. Schwyzer 469.Derivatives: θαμβαλέος (Nonn.). Denomin. verbs: 1. θαμβέω, - ῆσαι, also with prefix, e. g. ἐκ-, `be amazed, be frightened' (Il.), hell. also trans. `set in amazement, frighten' (LXX) with θάμβ-ησις, - ημα (Aq.), ἔκθαμβος (Plb.). 2. θαμβαίνω intr. `id..' (Pi.). 3. θαμβεύω trans. `id.' with - ευτής (Aq.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Beside θάμβος there is the perfekt τέθηπα `am amazed' with the thematic root aorist ταφεῖν ( ταφών, τάφε; Il.); from the last τάφος n. = θάμβος (Od., Ibyk.). To τέθηπα sec. θήπω ἐπιθυμῶ, θαυμάζω; also θώψ. A nasal did not voice a following stop in Greek; wrong Schwyzer 692 and 333. - The group is further isolated. (Wood Mod. langu. notes 21, 227 connected Goth. ipv. afdobn `φιμώθητι, become speechless'. As doubtful is the connection with the Germ. group for `slay', e. g. MEng. dabben `slay slowly', NHG tappen (Fick, Pok. 233). Pelasgian etymology by v. Windekens Le Muséon 63, 106ff.; further see Szemerényi Glotta 33, 238ff. - The variation θαπ- ταφ- θαμβ- (with Pre-Greek prenasalization), also *θαϜ- in θαῦμα, cannot be IE, and the whole points to Pre-Greek origin. Thus Kuiper Gedenkschr. Kretchmer 1956, 225; thus Fur. passim.Page in Frisk: 1,651-652Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θάμβος
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Notes on the State of Virginia — Notes was the only full length book authored by Thomas Jefferson. Notes on the State of Virginia was a book written by Thomas Jefferson. He completed the first edition in 1781, and updated and enlarged the book in 1782 and 1783. Notes on the… … Wikipedia
Notes on a Scandal (film) — Notes on a Scandal Promotional movie poster Directed by Richard Eyre Produced by … Wikipedia
Notes (journal) — Notes Discipline Music librarianship Language English … Wikipedia
Notes Left Behind — The cover of Notes Left Behind … Wikipedia
Notes to the Financial Statements — are additional notes and information added to the end of the financial statements to supplement the reader with more information. Notes to Financial Statements help explain the computation of specific items in the financial statements as well as… … Wikipedia
Notes From New York — is a successful London (West End) based concert series, created primarily to showcase the output of contemporary musical theatre writers. Contents 1 Creators and Collaborators 2 Concert History 3 Not(es) From New York … Wikipedia
Notes from the Underground — may refer to: Notes from Underground, sometimes translated as Notes from the Underground, a 1864 novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky Notes from the Underground (album), the debut album by experimental jazz fusion trio Medeski Martin Wood Notes from the… … Wikipedia
Notes from the Road — is an American online travel journal and blog founded in 1999 by travel writer Erik Gauger which focuses primarily on North America.[1] Forbes Magazine praised the site for having Photos worthy of National Geographic and called it the best… … Wikipedia
Notes on Nationalism — is an essay written in May 1945 by George Orwell and published in the first issue of Polemic (October 1945). In this essay, Orwell discusses the notion of nationalism, and argues that it causes people to disregard common sense and become more… … Wikipedia
Notes from a Small Island — … Wikipedia
Notes on Novelists — Author(s) Henry James … Wikipedia