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1 διερριμμένως
διερρῑμμένως, διαρρίπτωshoot through: perf part mp masc acc pl (doric)διερριμμένωςin a disjointed way: indeclform (adverb) -
2 διεσπαρμένως
διασπείρωscatter: perf part mp masc acc pl (doric)διεσπαρμένωςin a disjointed manner: indeclform (adverb) -
3 κλάω
+ V 0-1-1-0-1=3 JgsB 9,53; Jer 16,7; 4 Mc 9,14A: to break [τι] JgsB 9,53P: to be disjointed 4 Mc 9,14→TWNT(→ἀνακλάω, ἀντανα-, διακλάω, ἐκκλάω, κατακλάω, περικλάω, συγ-,,) -
4 διαχαλάω
A loosen, relax,τὸ πῦρ δ. τὸ πεπηγός Arist.Pr. 886b2
;τὰς ἁρμονίας τοῦ σώματος Epicr. 3.19
;δ. μέλαθρα
unbar,E.
IA 1340.II make supple by exercise, X.Eq.7.11.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > διαχαλάω
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5 διερριμμένως
διερριμμένως, Adv.A in a disjointed way, Plb.3.58.3.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > διερριμμένως
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6 διεσπαρμένως
A in a disjointed manner, Aristid. Quint.1.2, v.l. for sq. in Gal.UP16.1.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > διεσπαρμένως
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7 διεσπασμένως
διεσπασμένως, Adv.A intermittently, δ. πνεῖν (al. διεσπαρμένως) Hp. Epid.1.1, 3.2; in a disjointed manner, Gal.UP16.1.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > διεσπασμένως
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8 ἀδιάρθρωτος
ἀδι-άρθρωτος, ον,3 of literary style, disjointed,ἀ. ἐν σχήμασι Hermog.Id.2.11
.IV Adv. - τως without distinction, Gal.16.240, cf. Alex.Aphr.in Metaph. 61.4, Plot 3.8.9.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀδιάρθρωτος
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9 ἀσύγκλωστος
ἀσύγκλωστος, ον,Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀσύγκλωστος
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10 ῥήγνυμι
Aἀναρ- Hp.Flat.10
: [tense] impf.κατ-ερρήγνυε D.21.63
, etc.); later [full] ῥήσσω, Gal.10.640, Orib.Fr.93, Gloss.;ῥήσσεσθαι PHolm.6.3
, cf. 4.22; ἀπο-, δια-ρρήσσεσθαι, Hp.Int.17,42; [full] ῥήττω, Str.11.14.8, Dsc.4.150 (v.l. ῥήσσει), ([etym.] περι-) Id.2.98, 3.18 (v.l. περιρρήσσει); ῥήττεσθαι Bito 45.8
, Str.7.3.18: [dialect] Ep. [tense] impf.ῥήγνυσκε Il.7.141
: [tense] fut.ῥήξω 12.262
, Hdt.2.2, ([etym.] ἐκ-) S.Aj. 775: [tense] aor.ἔρρηξα Il.3.348
, Pi.N.8.29, Ar.Nu. 960;ῥῆξα Il.6.6
: [tense] pf. ἔρρηχα ([etym.] δι-) LXX 2 Ki.14.30, 15.32:—[voice] Med. ῥήγνῠμαι, [tense] fut. ῥήξομαι, [tense] aor. ἐρρηξάμην, all in Il. (12.257, 224, 291), [tense] pres. also in Hp.VC4,12: [tense] aor. , ([etym.] κατ-) X.Cyr.3.1.13; [dialect] Ep. [ per.] 3pl.ῥήξαντο Il.11.90
:—[voice] Pass., subj.ῥήγνῡται Hippon.19.4
: [dialect] Ep. [ per.] 3sg. [tense] impf.ῥηγνύατο Arat.817
: [tense] fut.ῥᾰγήσομαι Plu.2.668a
, ([etym.] διαρ-, ἐκ-) Ar.Eq. 340, A.Pr. 369, etc.: [tense] aor. ἐρράγην [ᾰ] S.Fr. 578, Ar.Nu. 583, etc.; later ἐρρήχθην, Tryph.11; δια-ρρηχθῇ (v.l. -ρραγῇ) Hp.Int.29: [tense] pf. ἔρρηγμαι ([etym.] συν-) Od.8.137; but intr. [tense] pf. ἔρρωγα is more freq., v. infr. c. 1; [tense] pf. part. fem. ἐρρηγεῖα, v. infr. c. 2; masc. pl.κατ-ερρηγότας Hsch.
The word is hardly used by correct [dialect] Att. Prose-writers, exc. in [voice] Pass.:—break asunder, rend, shatter,τεῖχος Il.12.198
;πύλας 13.124
;σάκος 21.165
;θώρηκας 2.544
;ἱμάντα 3.375
;νευρήν 8.328
;ὀστέον 20.399
;χρόα 23.673
; only once in Od., :—later, esp. rend garments, in sign of grief,ῥ. πέπλους A.Pers. 199
, 468; ῥ. ἕλκεα make grievous wounds, Pi.N.8.29; ῥ. ὀστᾶ, σάρκας, E.HF 994, Ba. 1130;ἀρότροις γῆς δάπεδον Ar.Pl. 515
: in [dialect] Ion. and later Prose,ῥήγνυσι.. τὸν ἀμφὶ τὴν ὄψιν χιτῶνα Hp.VM19
;ῥήττειν νευράν Str.15.1.57
;τὰ δεσμά Luc.DDeor.17.1
;τὰς πύλας Id.Par.46
;μὴ στραφέντες ῥήξωσιν ὑμᾶς Ev.Matt.7.6
:—[voice] Med., break for oneself, get broken,ὄρνυσθ'.. ῥήγνυσθε δὲ τεῖχος Il.12.440
, cf. 224, 257, 291:—[voice] Pass., v. infr. B.2 break a line of battle or body of men, ῥ. φάλαγγα, ὅμιλον, στίχας ἀνδρῶν, Il.6.6, 11.538, 15.615; τὸ μέσον ῥῆξαι break through the centre, Hdt. 6.113: abs., ἐρρηξάτην ἐς κύκλα.. ὅπλων broke through, S.Fr.210.9:— [voice] Med., ῥήξασθαι φάλαγγας, στίχας, break oneself a way through the lines, Il.11.90, 13.680, cf. E.Heracl. 835;ῥηξαμένῳ θέσθαι παρὰ νηυσὶ κέλευθον Il.12.411
.4 after Hom., ῥῆξαι φωνήν let loose the voice, of children and persons who have been dumb or silent, break into speech, speak out, Hdt.1.85, 2.2, 5.93, cf. Ar.Nu. 357, 960;ῥῆξαι αὐδήν E.Supp. 710
; later ῥήξασθαι φωνήν, θρόον αὐδῆς, φθόγγον, utter, AP5.221 (Agath.), 7.597 (Jul.), 9.61: abs., ῥῆξον καὶ βόησον cry aloud, LXXIs.54.1; v. infr.c.5 also δακρύων ῥήξασα.. νάματα having let loose, having burst into floods of tears, S.Tr. 919; κλαυθμὸν ῥ. Plu.Per.36;ῥ. τὰ ὄρη εὐφροσύνην LXX Is.49.13
;ῥήγνυσι πηγὰς ὁ χῶρος Plu.Mar.19
;ῥ. νεφέλην ἔς τινας Philostr.Im.2.27
; v. infr. B.B [voice] Pass., break, break asunder, burst,κῦμα ῥήγνυτο Il.18.67
;κῦμα.. χέρσῳ ῥηγνύμενον 4.425
, Hes.Sc. 377; of clouds, Ar.Nu. 378; ῥαγῆναί τι τῆς γῆς, as in an earthquake, Pl.R. 359d;ῥαγεῖσα Θηβαίων κόνις S.Fr. 958
;ἱμάτια ῥαγέντα X.Cyr.1.6.16
; ; ῥήττονται ὑδρίαι (by the cold) Str.7.3.18; τοῖς βασκάνοις εἶναι ῥήγνυσθαι may the envious burst, Aristid.Or.50 (26).69;τοῖς εἴ τις εὐδοκιμήσειεν ἐπί τῳ ῥηγνυμένοις Lib.Or.29.13
, cf. Or.1.207.2 burst forth, like lightning, βροντὴ δ' ἐρράγη δι' , Ar.Nu. 583, cf. Plu.2.919b; soκαταμηνίων ῥαγέντων Hp.Aph.5.32
, cf. Nat.Mul.13, Arist.HA 582b10, etc.3 of ships, to be wrecked, D.56.21: metaph.,πολλῶν ῥαγεισῶν ἐλπίδων A.Ag. 505
.4 of a stone, γράμματι ῥηγνύμενον scored with lettering, i.e. inscribed, Puchstein Epigr.Gr.p.76 (Memphis, i B.C.).C intr., like [voice] Pass., break or burst forth,ἔρρηξεν ἔμετος Hp.Epid. 4.24
;τὸ πνεῦμα ῥήγνυσι Id.Nat.Puer.12
; : metaph.,ὁποῖα χρῄζει ῥηγνύτω S.OT 1076
(in answer to the words δέδοιχ' ὅπως μὴ.. ἀναρρήξει κακά): freq. in this signf. in [tense] pf. ἔρρωγα, to have broken out,ἔρρωγε παγὰ δακρύων Id.Tr. 852
(lyr.): metaph.,κακῶν πέλαγος ἔρρωγεν A.Pers. 433
;τάδ' ἐκ δυοῖν ἔρρωγεν.. κακά S.OT 1280
;σοὶ τάδ' ἔρρωγεν κακά E.Hipp. 1338
; broken, disjointed,Com.Adesp.
661.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ῥήγνυμι
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11 κῶλον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `member of an animal or a man, esp. leg' (IA.), also metaph., e.g. of a part of a periode (Rhet.), often plur., a. o. = `corpse' (LXX, NT).Compounds: Several compp., e.g. ἰσό-κωλος `with equal members' (Arist.), ἀκρο-κώλια `extremities', ὑπο-κώλια `thigh of an animal'Derivatives: Diminut. κωλάριον (Ael.), κωλύφιον (Phryn., Plaut.; cf. Lat. cōlyphium); κωλέα, -ῆ (Att.), κωλήν, - ῆνος f. (IA.), κωλεός f. (Epich., Hp.) `bones of the hip with its flesh, ham' (Solmsen Wortforsch. 124); κώληψ, - ηπος f. `hollow of the knee' (Ψ 726, Nic.); prop. ompound with ἅπτω? (Bechtel Lex. s.v. with Wackernagel), with suffixchange κώληξ `id.' (sch.) [this shows that it does prob. not contain a part of ἄπτω]; κωλώτης m. `lizard' (Hp., Arist., Babr.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 8; because he can break off his tail, which will grow on(?); cf. Lat. lacerta to lacertus (see W.-Hofmann s. v.); also Lidén KZ 40, 260 f. on Skt. pallī `small house-lizard' (to pad-'foot'; diff. Mayrhofer KEWA s. v.) and Holthausen KZ 71, 60 (Westfal. hacke-molle `salamander' to hacke `pricks'). Denomin. κωλίζομαι `be disjointed in κῶλα' (late).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: No cognate. Related words are perhaps found in Slavic and Baltic, but their relation to κῶλον cannot be specified: OCS, Russ. kolěno `knee, stem, lineage', Russ. člen `member, body-part', Lith. kelỹs `knee'; a fullgrade aorist with o-voc. is suspected by Specht KZ 55, 19 in κόλσασθαι ἱκετεῦσαι H. (but is this cognate?) - Details in WP. 2, 597 ff., Pok. 928. Vasmer and Fraenkel Wb. s. vv. - Cf. also σκέλος. - Unclear. One notes that Pre-Greek has a suffix - ηξ ( νάρθηξ, κύμηξ).Page in Frisk: 2,60-61Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κῶλον
См. также в других словарях:
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disjointed — [adj] loose, disconnected aimless, confused, cool, discontinuous, disordered, displaced, disunited, divided, far out, fitful, fuzzy, inchoate, incoherent, incohesive, irrational, jumbled, muddled, out of it*, out to lunch*, rambling, separated,… … New thesaurus
disjointed — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ lacking a coherent sequence or connection. DERIVATIVES disjointedly adverb disjointedness noun … English terms dictionary
disjointed — [dis joint′id, dis′joint΄id] adj. 1. out of joint 2. dismembered 3. disconnected; without unity or coherence disjointedly adv. disjointedness n … English World dictionary
Disjointed — Disjoint Dis*joint , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Disjointed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Disjointing}.] 1. To separate the joints of; to separate, as parts united by joints; to put out of joint; to force out of its socket; to dislocate; as, to disjoint limbs; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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disjointed — [[t]dɪsʤɔ͟ɪntɪd[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED Disjointed words, thoughts, or ideas are not presented in a smooth or logical way and are therefore difficult to understand. Sally was used to hearing his complaints, usually in the form of disjointed, drunken… … English dictionary
disjointed — adjective Date: circa 1586 1. a. being thrown out of orderly function < a disjointed society > b. lacking coherence or orderly sequence < an incomplete and disjointed history > 2. separated at or as if at the j … New Collegiate Dictionary
disjointed — disjointedly, adv. disjointedness, n. /dis joyn tid/, adj. 1. having the joints or connections separated: a disjointed fowl. 2. disconnected; incoherent: a disjointed discourse. 3. Entomol. disjunct (def. 3). [1580 90; DISJOINT + ED2] Sy … Universalium