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death+pit

  • 21 नरकः _narakḥ _कम् _kam

    नरकः कम् 1 Hell, infernal regions (corresponding to the realm of Pluto; there are said to be 21 different parts of these regions where different kinds of tortures are inflicted upon sinners तामिस्र, अन्धतामिस्र, महारौरव, रौरव, नरक, कालसूत्र, महानरक, संजीवन, माहवीचि, तपन, संप्रतापन, संहात, काकोल, कुड्मल, प्रतिमूर्तिक, लोहशङ्कु, ऋजीष, पन्था, शाल्मली, असितपत्रवन, लोहदारक are the 21 Narakas; cf. Ms.4. 88-9).
    -2 A liquor-vessel; नरकं मद्यभाजने Nm.
    -कः N. of a demon, king of Prāgjyotiṣa. [According to one account he carried off Aditi's ear-rings and Kṛiṣna at the request of the gods killed him in a single combat and recovered the jewels. According to another ac- count, Naraka assumed the form of an elephant and carried off the daughter of Viśvakarman and outraged her. He also seized the daughters of Gandharvas, gods, men and the nymphs themselves, and collected more than 16 damsels in his harem. These, it is related, were transferred by Kṛiṣṇa to his own harem after he had slain Naraka. The demon was born of earth, and hence called 'Bhauma']
    -Comp. -अन्तकः, -अरिः, -जित्, -रिपुः m. epithets of Kṛiṣṇa; नरकरिपुणा सार्धं तेषां सभीमकिरीटिनाम् Ve.3.24.
    -आमयः 1 the soul after death.
    -2 a ghost, spirit.
    -आवासः an inhabi- tant of hell.
    -कुण्डम् a pit in hell where the wicked are tormented (86 such places are enumerated).
    -देवता 'the deity of hell', Nirṛiti (निर्ऋति).
    -रूपिन् a. hellish.
    -वासः the abode in hell.
    -स्या the Vaitariṇī river.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > नरकः _narakḥ _कम् _kam

  • 22 भूमिः _bhūmiḥ

    भूमिः f. [भवन्त्यस्मिन् भूतानि, भू-मि किच्च वा ङीप्]
    1 The earth (opp. स्वर्ग, गगन or पाताल); द्यौर्भूमिरापो हृदयं यमश्च Pt. 1.182; R.2.74.
    -2 Soil, ground; उत्खातिनी भूमिः Ś.1; विदूरभूमिः Ku.1.24.
    -3 A territory, district, country, land; विदर्भभूमिः.
    -4 A place, spot, ground, plot of ground; प्रमदवनभूमयः Ś.6; अधित्यकाभूमिः N.22.41; R.1. 52;3.61; Ku.3.58.
    -5 A site, situation.
    -6 Land, landed property.
    -7 A story, the floor of a house; as in सप्तभूमिकः प्रासादः; प्रासादैर्नैकभूमिभिः Rām.4.33.8.
    -8 Attitude, posture.
    -9 A character or part (in a play); cf. भूमिका.
    -1 Subject, object, receptacle; विश्वासभूमि, स्नेहभूमि &c.; मात्राणि कर्माणि पुरं च तासां वदन्ति हैकादशवीर भूमिः Bhāg.5.11.9.
    -11 Degree, extent, limit; प्रकुपितमभिसारणे- $नुनेतुं प्रियमियती ह्यबलाजनस्य भूमिः Ki.1.58.
    -12 The tongue.
    -13 The number 'one'.
    -14 The area.
    -15 The base of any geometrical figure.
    -Comp. -अनन्तरः a king of an adjacent district.
    -अनृतम् false evidence concerning land; सर्वं भूम्यनृते हन्ति मा स्म भूम्यनृतं वदीः Ms.8.99.
    -आमलकी, -आली N. of a plant; स्याद् भूम्यामलकी तिक्ता कषाया मधुरा हिमा Bhāva. P.
    -इच्छा a desire for lying on the ground.
    -इन्द्रः, -ईश्वरः 1 a king, sovereign; सभा ते भाति भूमिन्द्र सुधर्मातो$धिका क्षितौ Sūktisundara 5.28.
    -2 a mountain; आस्ते गुरुः प्रायशः सर्वराज्ञां पश्चाच्च भूमीन्द्र इवा- भियाति Mb.6.2.11.
    -कदम्बः a kind of Kadamba.
    -कम्पः an earthquake.
    -कूश्मण्डः liquorice (Mar. ज्येष्ठी- मध).
    -खर्जूरिका, -खर्जूरी a variety of date tree; 'भूमि- खर्जूरिका...... दुरारोहा मृदुच्छदा' Bhāva. P.
    -गत a. fallen to the earth.
    -गर्तः, -गुहा a hole in the ground.
    -गृहम् a cellar, an underground chamber.
    -गोचरः a man.
    -चलः, -चलनम् an earthquake; दशग्रीवः समाधूतो यथा भूमिचले$चलः Rām.6.59.61.
    -छत्रम् a mushroom.
    - a. earth-born, born or produced from the earth.
    (-जः) 1 the planet Mars.
    -2 an epithet of the demon Naraka.
    -3 a man.
    -4 the plant भूनिम्ब. (
    -जा) an epithet of Sītā.
    -जीविन् a. living on (the produce of) land; an agricul- turist. (-m.) a Vaiśya.
    -(र्भि)जयः Uttara, the son of Virāṭa; Mb.4.
    -तनयः the planet Mars.
    -तलम् the surface of the earth.
    -दानम् a grant of land.
    -दुन्दुभिः 'earth-drum', as a pit covered over with skins.
    -देवः a Brāhmaṇa; शिष्ट्वा वा भूमिदेवानां नरदेवसमागमे Ms.11.82.
    -धरः 1 a mountain.
    -2 a king.
    -3 the number 'seven'.
    -नाथः, -पः, -पतिः, -पालः, -भुज् m.
    1 a king, sovereign; तत्तत् भूमिपतिः पत्न्यै दर्शयन् प्रियदर्शनः R.1.47.
    -2 a Kṣatriya.
    -पक्षः a swift or fleet horse.
    -परिमाणम् square measure.
    -पिशाचम् the wine-palm.
    -पुत्रः the planet Mars.
    -पुरंदरः 1 a king.
    -2 N. of Dilīpa.
    -प्रः a. filling the earth; भूमिप्रा$स्य कीर्तिर्भवति Ait. Ār.2.5.3.
    -बुध्न a. having the earth for a bottom; Ch. Up.
    -भागः a spot or portion of ground.
    -भृत् m.
    1 a mountain.
    -2 a king.
    -मण़्डा a kind of jasmine.
    -रक्षकः 1 a guardian of a country.
    -2 a swift or fleet horse.
    -रथिकः a ground charioteer; तद् यथा भूमिरथिको भूमौ रथमालिख्य योग्यां करोति । सा तस्य योग्या प्रयोगकाले सौकर्यमुत्पादयति ŚB. on MS.7.2.15.
    -रुहः a tree; A. Rām.7.4.21.
    -लाभः death (lit. returning to the dust of the earth).
    -लेपनम् cow-dung.
    -वर्धनः, -नम् a dead body, corpse; यो न याति प्रसंख्यानमस्पष्टो भूमिवर्धनः Mb.3.35.7.
    -शय a. sleeping on the ground.
    (-यः) 1 a wild pigeon.
    -2 a child, boy.
    -3 any animal living in the earth.
    -4 N. of Viṣṇu; भूशयो भूषणो भूतिः V. Sah.
    -शयनम्, -शय्या sleeping on the ground.
    -सत्रम् an offering of land; अक्षयान् लभते लोकान् भूमिसत्रं हि तस्य तत् Mb.
    -समीकृत a. thrown to the ground, floored (Mar. जमीनदोस्त), वानरै राक्षसाश्चापि द्रुमैर्भूमिसमीकृताः Rām.6.52.3.
    -संनिवेशः the general appearance of a country.
    -संभवः, -सुतः 1 the planet Mars.
    -2 an epithet of the demon Naraka. (
    -वा, -ता) an epithet of Sītā.
    -स्थ a. being, standing on the ground; भूमिष्ठं नोत्सहे योद्धुं भवन्तं रथमास्थितः Mb.5. 179.1.
    -स्नुः an earth-worm.
    -स्पृश् a.
    1 blind.
    -2 lame, cripple. (-m.)
    1 a man.
    -2 mankind.
    -3 a Vaiśya.
    -4 a thief.
    -स्पोटः a mushroom.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > भूमिः _bhūmiḥ

  • 23 a săpa groapa / mormântul cuiva

    fig. to dig a pit for smb.
    aprox. to be the death of smb.

    Română-Engleză dicționar expresii > a săpa groapa / mormântul cuiva

  • 24 ELDR

    I)
    (-s, -ar), m. fire; taka eld, drepa (upp) eld, to strike fire: kveikja (upp) eld, to light a fire; bregða (koma, skjóta) eldi í e-t, láta (leggja) eld í e-t, to set fire to, to set on fire; e. varð lauss ok lék skjótt, a fire broke out and spread rapidly; e. hraut af sverðum þeirra, sparks of fire flew from their swords.
    pp. grown old, worn by age; kvazt e. vera mjök frá úfriði, said that he was too old for fighting.
    * * *
    m., gen. ellds, also spelt ellz, [a word that may be taken as a test of Scandin. races; Dan. ild; Swed. äld; for the Teut. nations use the word feuer, fire, which is wanting in Scandin., though used by old Icel. poets, who probably borrowed it from A. S.; on the other hand, Ulf. constantly renders πυρ by fon, Icel. funi, q. v.; in A. S. poetry and in Hel. äled = incendiary occurs a few times, and älan = Lat. urere (Grein and Schmeller); Rask suggests a Finn. origin]:—fire. In cold climates fire and life go together; hence the proverb, eldr er beztr með ýta sonum, ok sólar sýn, fire is best among the sons of men, and the sight of the sun, Hm. 67: in reference to the healing power of fire, eldr tekr við sóttum, fire consumes ( cures) fevers, 138; sá er eldrinn heitastr er á sjálfum brennr, Grett. 136 new Ed.: allit., e. né járn, fire nor iron, Edda 82; hvárki egg né eld, 162; eldr ( sparks of fire) hraut or sverðum þeirra, Flóv. 29; e. þótti af hrjóta er vápnin kómu saman, Sturl. iii. 187, vide Fms. i. 292, vi. 153, vii. 338 (MS. ell), viii. 74, 202, x. 29. Nj. 74, Eluc. 19, 625. 178.
    β. the eruption of a volcano, Bs. i. 803, 804; jarð-eldr, ‘earth-fire,’ subterranean fire.
    COMPDS: eldsbruni, eldsdaunn, eldsgangr, eldsglór, eldsgneisti, eldsgólf, eldsgögn, eldshiti, eldskveykja, eldslitr, eldslíki, eldsljós, eldslogi, eldsmatr, eldsneyti, eldsstólpi, eldsuppkváma, eldsvélar, eldsvimr, eldsvirki.
    II. esp. in plur. a fire on the hearth; the proverbs, við eld skal öl drekka, by the fireside shalt thou drink ale, Hm. 82; allir eldar brenna út um síðir, all fires (beacons) burn out at last (of the death of an aged man): allit., eldr á arni (vide arinn). In the old halls in Scandinavia an oblong hearth was built in the middle of the hall, and the fires kindled were called langeldar, long fires, with an opening in the thatch called ljóri for a chimney; the benches in the hall were ranged on both sides of the langeldar, vide Edda 82 (the hall of king Adils); hence the phrase, bera öl um eld, to hand the ale round the fire, viz. to one’s cup fellow on the opposite bench, Fagrsk. ch. 219, Grett. ch. 10, new Ed. p. 23; elda-skálar vóru stórir á bæjuni, sátu menn við langelda á öptnum, þá voru borð sett fyrir menn fyrir (innan MS. Holm.), sváfu menn upp (út MS. Holm.) frá eldunum, Kristni S. ch. 2; þá vóru görvir eldar stórir eptir endilöngum skálanum, sem í þann tíma var títt, at drekka öl við eld, Bs. i. 42; cp. Orkn., eldar vóru á gólfinu, on the floor, ch. 18, where the fire seems to have been made in a pit (vide eldgróf) in the middle of the floor, cp. also kipti honum upp at pallinum, vide bakeldr: again, at the evening and morning meals people gathered round the ‘meal-fires’ (mál-eldar), hence the phrases, sitja við elda, to sit at the fire; vóru görfir máleldar hvert kveld í elda-skála sem siðr var til, sátu menn löngum við eldana áðr menn gengu til matar, Eb. ch. 52: máleldr, the ‘meal-fire’ or the small fire, is distinguished from langeldr, the great fire, 276; þat var í þann tíma er þeir Snorri sátu við málelda (yfir málborði, v. 1.), ch. 26; höfðu menn orðit vátir ok vóru görvir máleldar (langeldar, v. 1.), Nj. ch. 8; ok er skálabúinn var mettr sat hann við eld, Fs. 6; snýr at dyrum, er menn sátu við langelda ( in the evening), Korm. ch. 15; um kveldit er menn sátu við elda, Orkn. 448: the phrase, sitja milli elda, to sit between two fires, to be in a strait, vide Gm.
    COMPDS: eldahús, eldaskáli, eldaskára, eldsgörð.
    III. a beacon, bale-fire, Gs. 18.
    IV. in old poetry the fire of wounds or of Odin = weapons, the fire of the sea = gold; hauga-eldar, magical fire in old cairns; maur-ildi, a glow-worm; hrævar-eldr, a Will o’ the wisp, ignis fatuus.
    V. as a prefix to pr. names, Eld-grímr, Eld-járn, Eld-ríð, etc.: in names of places it denotes volcanic ground, Eld-borg, eld-fjall, eld-gjá, etc.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ELDR

  • 25 ORMR

    (-s, -ar), m. snake, serpent.
    * * *
    m. [Ulf. waurms = ὄφις; A. S. wyrm; Engl. worm: O. H. G. and Germ. wurm; Dan.-Swed. orm; Lat. vermis; cp. Orms-head in Wales]:—a snake, serpent, also including ‘worms’ (cp. maðkr), and even dragons, Hm. 85, Vsp. 44, 50, Gm. 34, Skm. 27, Akv. 31, Am. 22, 55. Fms. vi. 143, Hkr. i. 103, and passim; högg-ormr, a viper; eitr-ormr, the bane of snakes, i. e. the winter time. The abode of the wicked after death was a pit full of snakes (Hver-gelmir, Ná-strönd), Edda, Vsp. 44, which calls to mind the Gehenna in Mark ix. 43, 44, and one of the Bolgos in Dante’s Inferno, Canto 24. Serpents gnawed at the root of the world-tree Yggdrasil, Gm. 34. Pits of snakes were a place of punishment, Ragn. S. l. c., Am., Akv.; but only in mythological, not in historical records. Serpents brooded over gold and treasures, cp. the serpent Fafnir, Edda, Fm., Gullþ. ch. 4, Ragn. S. (begin.); whence in poetry gold is called orm-bekkr, -beðr, -ból, -garðr, -land, -látr, -láð, -reitr, -setr, -stallr, -torg, -vangr, -vengr, the bank, bed, abode, garden, land, litter, earth, etc. of snakes, Lex. Poët. For the world-serpent, see miðgarðr. orm-fellir, m. the snake-killer = the winter, Fms. vi. (in a verse): a sword is called a snake, blóð-ormr, rand-ormr, see Lex. Poët.; ketil-ormr, a sausage, Korm.: of ships of war with dragons’ heads, Ormr inn Langi, Ormr inn Skammi, Ó.T.
    II. pr. names, Ormr and Ormarr; and in compds, Hall-ormr, Ráð-ormr, Þór-ormr, Goð-ormr, Veðr-ormr. = the holy Serpent, a name which indicates serpent worship, although no record of such worship is found in the Sagas.
    COMPDS: ormsbit, ormabæli, ormstunga, ormaturn.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ORMR

  • 26 विषम


    vi-shama
    mf (ā)n. (fr. vi + sama) uneven, rugged, rough MBh. Hariv. Kāv. etc.;

    unequal, irregular, dissimilar, different, inconstant Br. ṠāṇkhGṛ. Mn. etc.;
    odd, not even (in numbers etc.) Var. Kāvyâd. ;
    that which cannot be equally divided (as a living sheep among three orᅠ four persons) Mn. IX, 119 ;
    hard to traverse, difficult, inconvenient, painful, dangerous, adverse, vexatious, disagreeable, terrible, bad, wicked (ibc. « terribly» Ṡiṡ.) Mn. MBh. etc.;
    hard to be understood Gol. Kāv. ;
    unsuitable, wrong Suṡr. Sarvad. ;
    unfair, dishonest, partial Mn. MBh. ;
    rough, coarse, rude, cross MW. ;
    odd, unusual, unequalled W. ;
    m. a kind of measure Saṃgīt. ;
    N. of Vishṇu MW. ;
    (ī) f. N. of various wks.;
    n. unevenness, uneven orᅠ rough ground orᅠ place ( sama-vishameshu, « on even andᅠ uneven ground» Ṡiṡ.), bad road VS. TS. ṠBr. etc.;
    oddness (of numbers) W. ;
    a pit, precipice Mn. MBh. etc.;
    difficulty, distress, misfortune MBh. R. etc.;
    unevenness, inequality ( eṇa ind. « unequally») Kāṡ. ;
    (in rhet.) incongruity, incompatibility Kāvyâd. Pratāp. Kuval.;
    pl. (with bharad-vājasya)
    N. of Sāmans SV. ĀrshBr. ;
    (am) ind. unequally, unfairly MW. ;
    - karṇa mfn. having unequal diagonals Col.;
    m. orᅠ n. (?) any four-sided figure with unequal diagonals MW. ;
    the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle (esp. as formed between the gnomon of a dial andᅠ the extremities of the shadow) W. ;
    - karman n. an odd orᅠ unequalled act W. ;
    a dissimilar operation;
    the finding of two quantities when the difference of their squares is given andᅠ either the sum orᅠ the difference of the quantities Col.;
    - kāla m. an unfavourable time, inauspicious season MW. ;
    - kriya mfn. undergoing unequal (medical) treatment (- tva n.) Suṡr. ;
    - khāta n. an irregular cavity orᅠ a solid with unequal sides Col.;
    - gata mfn. situated orᅠ placed on an uneven place (higher orᅠ lower) Āpast. ;
    fallen into distress ib. ;
    - cakra-vāla n. (in math.) an ellipse Sūryapr. ;
    - catur-aṡra, orᅠ - catur-bhuja orᅠ - catushkoṇa m. an unequal four-sided figure, trapezium Sūryapr. ;
    - cchada m. = sapta-cch-, Alstonia Scholaris L. ;
    Echites Scholaris W. ;
    - cchāyā f. « uneven-shadow», the shadow of the gnomon at noon when the sun is on the equinoctial line W. ;
    - jvara m. irregular (chronic) fever Suṡr. ;
    (-râ̱ntaka-lauha m. a partic. ferruginous preparation Rasêndrac. ;
    -râ̱ntaka-lauha m. id. L.);
    - tri-bhuja m. a scalene triangle Col.;
    - tva n. inequality, difference MaitrUp. ;
    dangerousness, terribleness Vishṇ. ;
    - dṛishṭi mfn. looking obliquely, squint-eyed ĀpGṛ. Sch. ;
    - dhātu mfn. having the bodily humors unequally proportioned, unhealthy MW. ;
    - nayana orᅠ - netra mfn. « having an odd number of eyes», « three-eyed»
    N. of Ṡiva L. ;
    - pada mf (ā)n. having unequal steps (as a path) Kir. ;
    having unequal Pādas (a stanza) RPrāt. RAnukr. VS. Anukr. ;
    - da-vṛitti f. N. of various commentaries;
    - palāṡa m. Alstonia Scholaris (= sapta-pal-) L. ;
    - pāda mf (ā)n. consisting of unequal Pādas Nidānas. ;
    - bāṇa m. « five-arrowed»
    N. of the god of love L. ;
    (- ṇa-līlā f. N. of a poem) - bhojana n. eating at irregular hours MW. ;
    - maya mf (ī)n. = vishamādāgataḥ L. ;
    - rāga mfn. differently nasalized (- f.). RPrāt. ;
    - rūpya mfn. unequal quantities orᅠ qualities W. ;
    - rca mfn. (fr. vishama + ṛic) having an unequal number of verses ṠāṇkhṠr. ;
    - lakshmī f. adverse fortune, bad luck VarBṛS. ;
    - vibhāga m. unequal division of property amongst co-heirs W. ;
    - vilocana m. « three-eyed»
    N. of Ṡiva (cf. - nayana above) Siddh. ;
    - viṡikha m. « five-arrowed»
    N. of the god of love Cat. ;
    - vṛitta n. a kind of metre with unequal Pādas Piṇg. ;
    - vyākhyā f. N. of Comm. ;
    - vyāptika mfn. furnishing an example of partial orᅠ one-sided invariable concomitance, Sāṃkhyas. Sch. ;
    - ṡara m. « five-arrowed»
    N. of the god of love Daṡ. ;
    - ṡāyin mfn. sleeping irregularly W. ;
    - ṡishṭa mfn. inaccurately prescribed (- tva n.) L. ;
    left-unfairly, unjustly divided (as property etc. at death) W. ;
    - ṡīla mfn. having an unequable disposition, cross-tempered, rough, difficult W. ;
    m. N. of Vikramâditya Kathās. ;
    of the 18th Lambaka of the Kathā-sarit-sāgara called after him;
    (w.r. for vishama-ṡilā, « an uneven rock» Pañcat. III, 310/311);
    - ṡloka-ṭīkā f. - ṡloka-vyākhyā f. N. of wks.;
    - sāhasa n. irregular boldness, temerity, W;
    - stha mf (ā)n. standing unevenly W. ;
    being in an inaccessible position ib. ;
    standing on a precipice, standing in a dangerous place Pañcat. ;
    being in difficulty orᅠ misfortune MBh. R. etc.;
    - spṛihā f. coveting wrongly another's property L. ;
    -mâ̱ksha m. « three-eyed»
    N. of Ṡiva Ṡivag. ;
    -mâ̱ditya m. N. of a poet Subh. ;
    -mâ̱nna n. irregular orᅠ unusual food MW. -mâ̱yudha m. « five-arrowed»
    N. of the god of love Siṇhâs. ;
    -mâ̱rtha-dīpikā f. N. of wk.;
    -mâ̱vatāra m. descending on uneven ground MW. ;
    -mâ̱ṡana n. eating irregularly (either as to quantity orᅠ time) Vāgbh. Siṇhâs. Bhpr. ;
    -mâ̱ṡaya mfn. having an unfair disposition, dishonest, crafty W. ;
    - mêkshaṇa m. « three-eyed»
    N. of Ṡiva Ṡiṡ. ;
    - mêshu m. « five-arrowed»
    N. of the god of love Ṡiṡ. Hit. ;
    - mônnata mfn. raised unevenly L. ;
    - môpala mfn. having rough stones orᅠ rocks MW.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > विषम

  • 27 go’r

    (Persian) grave; tomb. go’ri amir Tamerlane?s tomb in Samarqand. go’r azobi the agonies of death; punishing, extremely difficult. go’r azobida with great difficulty. go’r kafan qil to bury with all the customary rites. ota go’ri qozixonami? Is it worth all this trouble? qay(si) go’rga Which way? Where to? Where in hell? hammasi baribir go’r To hell with all of ?em. (o’z) go’riga tort to lead s.o. into one’s own pit, to pull s.o. down with o.s. go’riga g’isht qala to talk about behind one’s back. bir oyog’i to’rda, bir oyog’i go’rda/ yo’lidan go’ri yaqin with one foot in the grave. go’rdami/go’rnimi Not at all! What in hell are you talking about? qay(si) go’rda Where in hell...? go’rga great, fine. sa go’rga Edi It would be great if..., If it would only..

    Uzbek-English dictionary > go’r

  • 28 cho|ry

    adj. 1. (odczuwający dolegliwości) ill, sick
    - chore drzewo/zwierzę a sick tree/animal
    - być chorym na raka to have cancer
    - być chorym na serce to have a. to suffer from a heart condition
    - być chorym na żołądek to have a stomach complaint
    - być chorym z przejedzenia/ze zmęczenia to be ill from overeating/overtiredness
    - być chorym z zazdrości to be sick with jealousy
    - być psychicznie/śmiertelnie chorym to be mentally/terminally ill
    - być chorym od upału to have sunstroke
    - obłożnie chory bedridden
    - chory z miłości/tęsknoty przen. lovesick/homesick
    - on jest chory he’s ill GB sick US
    - jest bardziej chory niż sądziłem his condition is worse than I thought
    - od tego twojego gadania jestem już chora pot. your chattering is driving me round the bend pot., I’m sick (to death) of your chattering pot.
    - jest chory na nowy samochód he’s dying for a. to get a new car
    - jest chora na punkcie modnych ciuchów she’s crazy about trendy clothes
    4. pot., przen. (na myśl o czymś) sick
    - jestem chora, jak pomyślę o załatwieniu tego odszkodowania the very thought of applying for that compensation makes me feel ill
    - na myśl o wypełnianiu PIT-u jestem chory I feel sick at the very thought of filling out USa. in GB my tax forms
    5. przen. [gospodarka, ustrój, prawo, wyobraźnia] sick
    - żyjemy w chorej rzeczywistości we live in a sick world
    6. pejor. (o osobie) mad; sick pot.
    - ty chyba chory jesteś you must be mad
    - to chory facet he’s (really) sick
    cho|ry m, chora f (chory człowiek) sick person; (pacjent) patient
    - chorzy the sick, patients
    - □ chory umysłowo psychiatric patient
    chory z urojenia a hypochondriac

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > cho|ry

  • 29 Аваддон

    библ.
    1) (в Ветхом Завете - ад, преисподняя, смерть) Abaddon; destruction

    "Аваддон и смерть говорят..." (Книга Иова 28:22) — "Destruction and death say..."

    "Преисподняя и Аваддон открыты пред Господом, тем более сердца сынов человеческих" (Притчи Соломоновы 15:11) — "Hell and destruction are before the Lord: how much more than the hearts of the children of men?"

    2) (в Новом Завете - ангел бездны, ангел ада) Abaddon, the angel of the bottomless pit, Apollyon, the angel of the Abyss

    Русско-английский словарь религиозной лексики > Аваддон

  • 30 mundus

    1.
    mundus, a, um, adj. [Sanscr. mund, purificari], clean, cleanly, nice, neat, elegant.
    I.
    Lit. (class.;

    syn.: lautus, nitidus, purus): supellex,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 5, 7:

    caena,

    id. C. 3, 29, 14:

    ager,

    Gell. 19, 12, 8:

    mundissimum cubile desiderat (animal),

    Col. 7, 9, 14:

    jam intus mundissimumst,

    Plaut. Truc. 2, 7, 7.— Poet., with abl., = ornatus: Ostia munita est: idem loca navibus pulchris Munda facit, adorned, Enn. ap. Tert. p. 258 Müll. (Ann. v. 146 Vahl.).—
    B.
    Transf.
    1.
    Of mode of living, neat, fine, elegant, smart, genteel:

    cultus justo mundior,

    too elegant dress, Liv. 8, 15.— As subst.: mundus, i, m. (sc. homo), an elegant or nice person, Cic. Fin. 2, 8, 23.—
    2.
    Of quality, not coarse, fine (post-class.):

    annonae, of wheat,

    Lampr. Alex. Sev. 42, 3:

    panis,

    id. ib. 37, 3.—
    II.
    Trop.
    A.
    Of speech, neat, fine, elegant ( poet. and in postclass. prose):

    verba, Ov A. A. 3, 479: versus, quibus mundius nihil reperiri puto,

    Gell. 19, 9, 10:

    in Gallos mundius subtiliusque est, quam cum Gallis aut contra Gallos,

    id. 17, 2 med.
    B.
    Subst.: mun-dum, i. n., only in the phrase: in mundo (esse or habere), in readiness (ante-class.): tibi vita seu mors in mundo est, Enn. ap. Charis. p. 181 P. (Ann. v. 457 Vahl.:

    in mundo pro palam et in expedito ac cito, Charis.): nempe habeo in mundo,

    Plaut. Pers. 1, 1, 46:

    mihi in mundo sunt virgae,

    id. As. 2, 1, 16; 2, 2, 50:

    nescio quid vero habeo in mundo,

    id. Stich. 3, 2, 23; id. Ps. 1, 5, 85 Ritschl.—
    C.
    In eccl. Lat., morally pure, upright, free from sin:

    cor mundum crea in me, Deus,

    Vulg. Psa. 50, 12:

    beati mundo corde,

    id. Matt. 5, 8.—Hence, adv., in two forms (both, for the most part, anteand post-class.).—
    a.
    mundē, cleanly, neatly, prettily:

    (copia) in suo quaeque loco sita munde,

    Plaut. Poen. 5, 4, 5: verrite aedes, spargite munde, Titin. ap. Charis. p. 183 P.:

    parum munde et parum decenter,

    Sen. Ep. 70, 20:

    munde facti versus,

    Gell. 10, 17, 2:

    quam mundissime purissimeque fiat,

    Cato, R. R. 66, 1.—
    b.
    mun-dĭter, cleanly, neatly.
    1.
    Lit.:

    cum sedulo munditer nos habeamus,

    Plaut. Poen. 1, 2, 26.—
    2.
    Trop., decently, with propriety:

    dicere,

    App. Mag. p. 296, 14.
    2.
    mundus, i, m. ( neutr. collat. form, mundum: legavit quidam uxori mundum omne penumque, all her toilet, Lucil. ap. Gell. 4, 1, 3, and ap. Non. 214, 17) [1. mundus], toilet ornaments, decorations, dress (of a woman).
    I.
    Lit.:

    mundus muliebris est, quo mulier mundior fit: continentur eo specula, matulae, unguenta, vasa unguentaria, et si qua similia dici possunt, veluti lavatio, riscus... Unguenta, quibus valetudinis causā unguimur, mundo non continentur,

    Dig. 34, 2, 25:

    munditiae et ornatus et cultus, haec feminarum insignia sunt: hunc mundum muliebrem appellārunt majores nostri,

    Liv. 34, 7, 9: virginalis, Att. ap. Paul. ex Fest. p. 142 Müll.:

    quamvis auro, veste, gemmis, omnique cetero mundo exornata mulier incedat,

    App. M. 2, p. 118. —
    II.
    Transf.
    A.
    In gen., an implement (ante- and post-class.):

    operae messoriae mundus,

    implements for the harvest work, App. M. 6 init.:

    Cereris,

    the mystical casket of Ceres, id. Mag. p. 282 (the expression in mundo esse and habere belongs to the adj. mundus, v. mundus, II. B.).—
    B.
    Like the Gr. kosmos, the universe, the world, esp. the heavens and the heavenly bodies: ut hunc hac varietate distinctum bene Graeci kosmon, nos lucentem mundum nominaremus, the heavens, Cic. Univ. 10: nam quem kosmos Graeci, nomine ornamenti appellaverunt. eum nos a perfectā absolutāque elegantiā, mundum, Plin. 2, 4, 3, § 8: concussit micantia sidera mundus, heaven shook, Cat. 64, 206:

    aetherius,

    Tib. 3, 4, 17:

    arduus,

    Verg. G. 1, 240:

    aestuat infelix angusto limite mundi,

    Juv. 10, 169. Also: mundus caeli, Enn. ap. Macr. S. 6, 2 (Sat. v. 10, p. 156 Vahl.):

    o clarissima mundi Lumina,

    Verg. G. 1, 5 sq.:

    immensi copia mundi,

    Ov. M. 2, 157:

    ipse mundus deorum hominumque causā factus est...Est enim mundus quasi communis deorum atque hominum domus, aut urbs utrorumque,

    the world, Cic. N. D. 2, 62, 154:

    innumerabiles,

    id. Ac. 2, 17, 55:

    e tabulā pictos ediscere mundos,

    parts of the world, Prop. 5, 3, 37.—
    2.
    Transf.
    a.
    The world, i. e. the earth, the inhabitants of the earth, mankind ( poet.):

    quicumque mundo terminus obstitit,

    Hor. C. 3, 3, 53:

    spes miseri mundi,

    Luc. 5, 469; Stat. S. 3, 3, 87:

    fastos evolvere mundi,

    Hor. S. 1, 3, 112:

    mundum laedere,

    mankind, Claud. Ruf. 1, 87:

    nullā in parte mundi cessat ebrietas,

    Plin. 14, 22, 29, § 149; 30, 1, 2, § 8; Flor. 2, 12, 1; Just. 30, 4, 9:

    (Alexander) scrutatur maria ignota, et, ut ita dicam, mundi claustra perrumpit,

    Sen. Ep. 119, 7:

    mundi principio,

    Juv. 15, 147.—
    b.
    The heavens, i. e. the sky, the weather (post-class.):

    tepida indulget terris clementia mundi,

    Grat. Fal. 288:

    ad Eoos tractūs mundique teporem,

    Luc. 8, 365.—
    c.
    The sun (perh. only in Manilius):

    quā mundus redit,

    Manil. Astron. 1, 36; id. ib. 3, 591.—
    d.
    Euphemistically for the Lower World, the infernal regions. The opening into this mundus was at Rome, in the Comitium, and was kept covered with a stone (lapis manalis); three times in the year, on the 24th of August, the 5th of October, and the 8th of November, days sacred to the gods of the infernal regions, this round pit was opened, and all sorts of fruits were thrown into it as offerings, Varr. ap. Macr. S. 1, 16, 18; Paul. ex Fest. s. v mundus, p. 154 Müll., and s. v. manalem lapidem, p. 128 ib.—
    e.
    Esp. (eccl. Lat.), the world as opposed to the church; this world, the realm of sin and death, as opposed to Christ's kingdom of holiness and life:

    non pro mundo rogo,

    Vulg. Johan. 17, 9:

    de mundo non sunt,

    id. ib. 17, 16:

    princeps hujus mundi (i. e. Satan),

    id. ib. 12, 31;

    14, 30: regnum meum non est de hoc mundo,

    id. ib. 18, 36; cf. id. Eph. 2, 2; 6, 12.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > mundus

  • 31 συμβάλλω

    συμβάλλω, [tense] fut. - βᾰλῶ: [tense] aor. - έβᾰλον, inf. - βᾰλεῖν: [tense] pf. - βέβληκα: [tense] aor. 1 [voice] Pass. - εβλήθην:—of these tenses Hom. uses only [tense] pres. [voice] Act., [tense] aor. [voice] Act. and [voice] Med., but most commonly [dialect] Ep. intr. [tense] aor. forms συμβλήτην, -βλήμεναι, [voice] Med. σύμβλητο, -βληντο, -βλήμενος, subj. [ per.] 2sg. - βλήεαι prob. cj. for - βλήσεαι in Il.20.335, [ per.] 3sg. [var] contr.
    A

    - βληται Od.7.204

    :—throw together, dash together, σύν ῥ' ἔβαλον ῥινούς, of men in close combat, Il.4.447, 8.61;

    ἀσπίδας E.Ph. 1405

    , Ar. Pax 1274 (hex.), X.HG4.3.19, etc.; bring together, unite, e.g. of rivers that fall into one another,

    ἐς μισγάγκειαν συμβάλλετον ὄβριμον ὕδωρ Il.4.453

    ;

    ῥοὰς Σιμόεις συμβάλλετον ἠδὲ Σκάμανδρος 5.774

    :— [voice] Med.,

    πολλοὶ ποταμοὶ σ. τὸ σφέτερον ὕδωρ Hdt.4.50

    (cf. δάκρυα δάκρυσι ς. E.Or. 336 (lyr., [voice] Act.)); ὁ Ἀκεσίνης τῷ Ἰνδῷ τὸ ὕδωρ ς. Arr.An.6.1.5; σ. τὰ ὦτα πρὸς τὴν γῆν have their ears reaching to.., Arist.HA 606a15:—[voice] Pass., κατὰ τὰς ῥᾶγας συμβεβλημένων [τῶν δακτύλων] Sor. 2.60.
    2 collect, X.Cyr.2.1.5; store up, accumulate,

    κριθὰς ἵπποις συμβεβλημένας πολλάς Id.An.3.4.31

    .
    3 jumble up together,

    διαφέροντα σ. εἰς ταὐτόν Pl.Plt. 285a

    .
    4 intr. in [voice] Act., fit (cf.

    σύμβολον 1.1

    ), Arist.EE 1239b14; to be suitable,

    τὰ χεδροπὰ σ. εἰς τὰς νέας Thphr.CP3.20.7

    (unless = sow, set).
    b to be profitable,

    σ. τῷ πολιτικῷ.. δικαίῳ εἶναι Phld.Rh.2.285

    S.;

    σ. ἀναμένειν ἡμέραν μίαν Gal.16.496

    .
    5 intr., come together, ἔνθα δίστομοι.. σ. ὁδοί where two roads join, S.OC 901, cf. Str.6.3.7; τὰ συμβάλλοντα the watersmeet, IG9(2) p.xi (Delph., iii/ii B.C.); [

    φλὲψ] σ. τῇ ἀποσχίσει Arist.HA 514a12

    ; collide,

    τοὺς τύπους ἀνάγκη συμβάλλειν ἑαυτοῖς Thphr.Sens.52

    : Geom., meet, τὸ σημεῖον, καθ' ὃ συμβάλλουσιν the point in which (the straight lines) meet, Archim.Sph.Cyl.1.23, etc.
    6 βλέφαρα σ. ὕπνῳ close the eyes in sleep, A.Ag.15; σ. ὄμμα, in death, ib. 1294 (but ποῖον ὄμμα συμβαλῶ; how shall I meet her eyes with mine? E.IA 455).
    7 generally, join, unite, σ. σχοινία twist ropes (cf. συμβολεύς), Ar. Pax 37; so

    τοπεῖα IG22.1672.311

    (iv B.C.);

    ὠμόλινον σ. πεντάπλουν Hp.Fist.4

    ;

    στέφανον Philostr.Her.Prooem.

    ; [

    αἱ φλέβες] σ. [τὸ σῶμα] εἰς ἕν Arist.PA 668b24

    ; fit together,

    ἁρμούς IG7.4255.23

    (Oropus, iv B.C.); σ. καὶ κολλῆσαι ib. 22.1668.73 (iv B.C.);

    κεραῖαι συμβεβλημέναι PCair.Zen.566.10

    (iii B.C.); δεξιὰς σ. ἀλλήλοισι join hands, E.IA58.
    8 σ. συμβόλαιά τινι or πρός τινα make a contract with a person, esp. lend him money on bond, D. 34.1, Pl.R. 425c, cf. Th.5.77 ([voice] Med.); συμβόλαιον εἰς τἀνδράποδα συμβεβλημένον money lent on the security of the slaves, D.27.27: abs., in same sense, Isoc.21.13; make a contract, Pl.Alc.1.125d, OGI669.21 (Egypt, i A.D.), Cod.Just.1.3.55.4; of a marriage contract, Mitteis Chr.372 vi 22, cf. 8 (ii A.D.); advance, lend,

    πέρα μεδίμνου κριθῶν Is.10.10

    ; ἱμάτια, χρυσία, etc., Ar.Ec. 446; ἐπί τισι on certain terms, D.H.6.29;

    σ. δανεισμῷ Pl.Lg. 921d

    ; ὁ συμβαλών the lender, creditor, D.56.2, cf. D.H.5.63 (but οἱ συμβ. the borrowers, debtors, Id.4.9):— [voice] Med., with [tense] pf. [voice] Pass., pay a share, contribute, ὁλκάδα οἱ συμβαλέεσθαι give him a merchant-vessel, Hdt.3.135, cf. Lys.32.24, X.Ages. 2.27; σ. χρήματά τινι εἰς τροφὴν τῶν στρατιωτῶν advance it, Id.An. 1.1.9, cf. IG7.2418 (Thebes, iv B.C.);

    τριήρεις εἰς κίνδυνον Isoc.4.98

    ;

    ἐφόδιον PSI4.407.12

    (iii B.C.).
    9 generally, contribute:— [voice] Pass.,

    συμβάλλεταί τις.. μερίς Alex.149.4

    :—in this sense mostly in [voice] Med., τέμενος συμβάλλεσθαι add thereto, Pi.I.1.59;

    ἡ τύχη οὐδὲν ἔλασσον ξυμβάλλεται ἐς τὸ ἐπαίρειν Th.3.45

    , cf. Hp.Aër.2, Sosip.1.37, Damox.2.11; τὸ μὴ ἀγανακτεῖν.. ἄλλα τέ μοι πολλὰ συμβάλλεται, καὶ.. many circumstances contribute to my feeling no vexation, and especially.., Pl.Ap. 36a;

    σ. βοήθειαν οὐ σμικρὰν πρός τι Id.Lg. 836b

    ; τιμὴν καὶ δόξαν τῇ πόλει ς. Isoc.Ep.8.6;

    οὐ δεῖ λογίζεσθαι, πότερος πλείω συμβέβληται X.Oec.7.13

    ; freq. with μέρος as obj., ἔργων οὐκ ἐλάχιστον μέρος ς. And.1.143;

    μέρος σ. πρὸς ἀρετήν Pl.Lg. 836d

    , cf. R. 331b, D.41.11;

    οὐκ ἐλάχιστον μέρος πρὸς εὐδαιμονίαν Isoc.7.79

    ;

    συμβαλλέσθω τὸ μέρος ἕκαστος εἰς τὸ ἀνάλωμα PHal.1.108

    , cf. 113 (iii B.C.);

    τὴν μεγίστην εἰς αὐτὰ μοῖραν Pl.Ti. 47c

    , cf. X.Cyr.6.1.28: also abs., οὔτε ποταμὸς οὔτε κρήνη οὐδεμία ἐσδιδοῦσα ἐς πλῆθός οἱ συμβάλλεται contributes to its volume, Hdt.4.50;

    σ. πρὸς τὸ λανθάνειν X.Cyr.2.4.21

    , cf. Isoc.7.21; συμβαλλόμενα contributory causes, Thphr.Sud.6: abs., to be helpful,

    πολλά ἐστι τὰ συμβαλλόμενα τοῖς βουλομένοις Antipho 5.79

    , cf. Pl.Lg. 905b, D.21.133; φόνου κηκὶς ξ. contributes to the proof, A.Ch. 1012: rarely c. gen. partit., ξυμβάλλεται πολλὰ τοῦδε δείματος many things contribute [ their share] of this fear, i.e. join in causing it, E.Med. 284.
    10 συμβάλλεσθαι γνώμας contribute one's opinion to a discussion, Hdt.8.61;

    περί τινος Pl.Plt. 298c

    ;

    συμβαλέσθαι περί τινος λόγους X.Cyr.2.2.21

    ; λόγον σ. περὶ βίου contribute an opinion about life, Pl.Lg. 905c; also συμβαλέσθαι τι to have something to say, Id. Ion 532c, cf. 533a; ταῦτά σοι περὶ Ἔρωτος ς. Id.Smp. 185c; συμβαλοῦ γνώμην contribute your opinion, help in judging, S.OC 1151; σ. τὴν γνώμην τῆς βουλῆς, with or without εἰς τὸν δῆμον, communicate it, IG22.79.6, 103.17, al.; cast votes, Schwyzer 84.15 (Tylisus, v B.C.).
    II συμβάλλειν (sc. λόγους) converse, σ. τινί or πρός τινα, Plu.2.222c, Act.Ap.4.15:—[voice] Med., ἀτὰρ τί ἐγὼ περὶ κλοπῆς ς.; X.An.4.6.14.
    II bring men together in hostile sense, pit them against each other, match them,

    ἀμφοτέρους θεοὶ σύμβαλον Il.20.55

    ;

    ἐμὲ.. καὶ Μενέλαον συμβάλετε.. μάχεσθαι 3.70

    ; σ. σκύμνον λέοντος σκύλακι κυνός set one to fight with the other, Hdt.3.32; ἄνδρα ἀνδρὶ καὶ ἵππον ἵππῳ ς. Id.5.1;

    τοὺς ἡβῶντας σ. εἰς ἔριν περὶ ἀρχῆς X.Lac.4.2

    ; ἀλεκτρυόνας ς. Id.Smp.4.9;

    ἄνδρας φίλους Id.Cyr.6.1.32

    ;

    εἰς χεῖρα δοῦλον δεσπότῃ μὴ συμβάλῃς Philem. 206

    : metaph., ἀναισχυντίᾳ σ. τινὰ καὶ προσγυμνάζειν make him contend with.., Pl.Lg. 647c.
    c intr., come together,

    σύμβαλον μάχεσθαι 16.565

    ; also ς. alone, come to blows, engage,

    πρίν γ' ἠὲ ξυμβλήμεναι ἠὲ δαμῆναι 21.578

    ; freq. in Hdt., either abs., as 1.77,82, or c. dat. pers., ib.80, 104;

    Ἄρης Ἄρει δυμβαλεῖ, Δίκα Δίκᾳ A.Ch. 461

    (lyr.); Ἕλληνες Μήδοις ς. Simon.136; also

    σ. πρός τινα X.Cyr.7.1.20

    , Isoc.4.69;

    εἰς μονομαχίαν πρός τινα Str.14.5.16

    ; συμβάλλων coming into collision, Pl.Plt. 273a, cf. Wilcken Chr.16.6 (ii A.D.).
    2 σ. πόλεμον καὶ δηϊοτῆτα engage in war, Il.12.181 (prob. interpol.); so in Trag.,

    σ. βάκχαις μάχην E.Ba. 837

    ;

    ἔχθραν τινί Id.Med.44

    ; ἔριν φίλοις ib. 521: metaph., συμβαλεῖν ἔπη κακά bandy reproaches, S. Aj. 1323;

    αἰσχρὸν δέ μοι γυναιξὶ συμβάλλειν λόγους E.IA 830

    .
    3 [voice] Med., fall in with one, meet him, c. dat., freq. in Hom., who uses [dialect] Ep. [tense] aor. forms beginning ξυμβλη- or συμβλη- solely in this sense,

    Νέστορι δὲ ξύμβληντο Il.14.27

    , cf. 39;

    εἰ δ' ἄρα τις.. ξύμβληται ὁδίτης Od.7.204

    ;

    ξυμβλήμενος ἄλλος ὁδίτης 11.127

    ; ὅτε κεν συμβλήσεαι (leg. - βλήεαι)

    αὐτῷ Il.20.335

    ;

    ξυμβλήτην ἀλλήλοιιν Od.21.15

    .
    4 so in [voice] Act., συμβαλών having met, A.Ch. 677; οἱ συμβάλλοντες those who come in contact with one, Plu.Marc.20; φιλοσόφῳ ς. Arr.Epict.3.9.13, cf. 12, POxy. 1063 (ii/iii A.D.), PFay.129.2 (iii A.D.).
    III compare,

    σμικρὰ μεγάλοισι Hdt.2.10

    ;

    ἑωυτόν τινι Id.3.160

    ;

    ἓν πρὸς ἕν Id.4.50

    ;

    τι πρός τι Lycurg.68

    ;

    πρὸς ἄλληλα Pl.Tht. 186b

    ;

    οὐδὲν ἦν τούτων.. πρὸς ἀτταγῆνα συμβαλεῖν Phoenicid.2.5

    :—[voice] Pass., Hdt.2.10, 3.125; τὸ ἀργύριον τὸ Βαβυλώνιον πρὸς τὸ Εὐβοικὸν συμβαλλόμενον τάλαντον the Babyl. talent being compared with, reduced to, the Euboic, ib.95.
    b compare for the purpose of checking, μέτρῳ συμβεβλημένῳ πρὸς τὸ χαλκοῦν Wilcken Chr.410.11 (iii B.C.), etc.
    2 [voice] Med., reckon, compute, Hdt.2.31, 4.15, 6.63,65:—[voice] Pass.,

    ἡ ὁδὸς ἡ ἡμερησίη ἀνὰ διηκόσια στάδια συμβέβληταί μοι Id.4.101

    .
    3 conclude, infer, conjecture, interpret,

    συμβαλεῖν τι Pi.N.11.33

    ; σ. ὅτι .. Pl.Cra. 412c; τοῦτο ς. S.OC 1474; τοῦτο σ., ὅτι.. Ar.V.50; τὰ πρὶν οὐκ εὔγνωστα ς. E.Or.[1394];

    εὖ ξυνέβαλεν αὐτά Ar.Eq. 427

    ;

    ἣν [νόσον] οὐδ' ἂν εἷς γνοίη ποτ' οὐδ' ἂν ξυμβάλοι Id.V.72

    ;

    σ. ἔπη E.Med. 675

    ;

    τοὖναρ Id.IT55

    ;

    τὴν μαντείαν Pl.Cra. 384a

    ;

    τὸν χρησμόν Arist.Fr. 532

    , cf. 76;

    σήματα σ., εἰ.. ἤ.. Arat.1146

    : abs., καθὼς συμβάλλομεν ἐκ τοὖ .. Sor.2.63:—[voice] Med., abs., Heraclit.47, freq. in Hdt., as 2.33, 4.87: c. acc., make out, understand, τὸ πρῆγμα ib. 111;

    σ. τι ἔκ τινος 6.107

    ; τῇδε, ὅτι .. from the fact that.., 3.68: c. acc. et inf., 1.68, 2.33, 112, al.; folld. by indirect question, 4.45.
    IV agree, arrange,

    καθάπερ ξυνέβαλον ἢ διέθεντο IG12.46.14

    ;

    πρὸς ἐμὲ πάντες συμβάλλετε X.Cyr. 6.2.41

    :—[voice] Med., make a treaty, Foed. ap. Th.5.77; agree upon, fix, settle,

    λόφον εἰς ὃν δέοι ἁλίζεσθαι X.An.6.3.3

    ;

    ἔδει σε, καθότι συνεβάλου ἡμῖν, Ἡρακλείδην.. ἀπεσταλκέναι PCair.Zen.314.1

    (iii B.C.).

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > συμβάλλω

  • 32 Cort, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1740 Lancaster, England
    d. 1800 Hampstead, near London, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster, inventor of the puddling process and grooved rollers for forming iron into bars.
    [br]
    His father was a mason and brickmaker but, anxious to improve himself, Cort set up in London in 1765 as a navy agent, said to have been a profitable business. He recognized that, at that time, the conversion of pig iron to malleable or wrought iron, which was needed in increasing quantities as developments in industry and mechanical engineering gathered pace, presented a bottleneck in the ironmaking process. The finery hearth was still in use, slow and inefficient and requiring the scarce charcoal as fuel. To tackle this problem, Cort gave up his business and acquired a furnace and slitting mill at Fontley, near Fareham in Hampshire. In 1784 he patented his puddling process, by which molten pig iron on the bed of a reverberatory furnace was stirred with an iron bar and, by the action of the flame and the oxygen in the air, the carbon in the pig iron was oxidized, leaving nearly pure iron, which could be forged to remove slag. In this type of furnace, the fuel and the molten iron were separated, so that the cheaper coal could be used as fuel. It was the stirring action with the iron bar that gave the name "puddling" to the process. Others had realized the problem and reached a similar solution, notably the brothers Thomas and George Cranage, but only Cort succeeded in developing a commercially viable process. The laborious hammering of the ball of iron thus produced was much reduced by an invention of the previous year, 1783. This too was patented. The iron was passed between grooved rollers to form it into bars. Cort entered into an agreement with Samuel Jellico to set up an ironworks at Gosport to exploit his inventions. Samuel's father Adam, Deputy Paymaster of the Navy, advanced capital for this venture, Cort having expended much of his own resources in the experimental work that preceded his inventions. However, it transpired that Jellico senior had, unknown to Cort, used public money to advance the capital; the Admiralty acted to recover the money and Cort lost heavily, including the benefits from his patents. Rival ironmasters were quick to pillage the patents. In 1790, and again the following year, Cort offered unsuccessfully to work for the military. Finally, in 1794, at the instigation of the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, Cort was paid a pension of £200 per year in recognition of the value of his improvements in the technology of ironmaking, although this was reduced by deductions to £160. After his death, the pension to his widow was halved, while some of his children received a pittance. Without the advances made by Cort, however, the iron trade could not have met the rapidly increasing demand for iron during the industrial revolution.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1787, A Brief State of Facts Relative to the New Method of Making Bar Iron with Raw Pit Coal and Grooved Rollers (held in the Science Museum Library archive collection).
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson, 1941, "Henry Cort's bicentary", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 21: 31–47 (there are further references to grooved rollers and the puddling process in Vol. 49 of the same periodical (1978), on pp. 153–8).
    R.A.Mott, 1983, Henry Con, the Great Finery Creator of Puddled Iron, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cort, Henry

  • 33 ὀρύσσω

    ὀρύσσω fut. 2 and 3 sg. ὀρύξεις and-ει LXX; 1 aor. ὤρυξα; 2 aor. pass. ὠρύγην (Hs 9, 6, 7; s. OGI 672, 7; 673, 6 ὠρύγη; POxy 121, 8 ὀρυγῆναι; Ps 93:13; En 98:13; Joseph.; Just., D. 97, 4)
    to loosen material by digging, w. focus on the activity as such, dig (up) τὶ someth. γῆν (cp. Pla., Euthyd. 288e; Achmes 94, 14) to hide someth. Mt 25:18. Pass. ὠρύγη τὸ πεδίον the plain was dug up and there were found … Hs 9, 6, 7.
    to prepare a place for someth. by digging, dig out, prepare by digging τὶ someth. (X., Cyr. 7, 3, 5; Diod S 1, 50, 5; Gen 26:21, 25; Jos., Ant. 8, 341; TestSol; TestZeb 2:7; ApcMos 40) ληνόν a wine-press Mt 21:33. Also ὑπολήνιον Mk 12:1 (cp. Is 5:2). βόθρον θανάτου a pit of death 11:2 (cp. Jer 2:13 and for ὀρ. βόθρ. Eccl 10:8; Pr 26:27).
    make a hole in someth. by digging, dig (a hole) (X., Oec. 19, 2) ἐν τῇ γῇ (i.e. to hide τὸ ἓν τάλαντον) Mt 25:18 v.l.—B. 497. DELG. M-M.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > ὀρύσσω

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