-
1 στάχυς
στάχῡς, στάχυςear of corn: masc acc plστάχῡς, στάχυςear of corn: masc nom /voc plστάχῡς, στάχυςear of corn: masc nom sg -
2 στάχυι
στάχυϊ, στάχυςear of corn: masc dat sgστάχυςear of corn: masc dat sg -
3 λάσιος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `shaggy, woolly, overgrown with' (Il.).Derivatives: λασιών, - ῶνος m. `thicket' (Nic.). Also GN; λασιῶτις, adjunct of ὕλη ( Epic. Alex. Adesp.), cf. δενδρῶτις (E.) a. o.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: If from *Ϝλατ-ι̯ος, λάσιος can be connected with some words for `hair etc.' (Fick 2, 263): Celt., e. g. OIr. folt `hair' (IE *u̯olto-), Balt., OPr. wolti `ear (of corn)', Lith váltis `bunch of oats', Slav., e. g. Russ. a. Smallruss. vólotь `thread, ear; raceme', Serb. vlât `ear' (IE *u̯olti-); with (Solmsen KZ 42, 214 n. 4) Germ., e. g. NHG Wald (IE *u̯óltu-; diff. Fick 2, 277); from the words mentioned λάσιος from IE *u̯l̥ti̯os would differ in ablaut. More forms w. lit. and farreaching combinations in Bq, WP. 1, 297, Pok. 1139 f.; s. also λῆνος and λάχνη. - Diff. on λάσιος Lidén PBBeitr. 15, 521 f. (s. Bq). Speculations by A.Blanc in RPh. 73(1999)Page in Frisk: 2,88Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λάσιος
-
4 στάχυς
στάχυς, - υοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `ear (of corn)' (Ψ 598), metaph. `offshoot' (poet.), as plantname (Dsc. a. o.), `surgical bandage' (medic.) a. o.Other forms: (-ῡς E. HF 5, -ῠν Call., A. R.). See below.Compounds: Compp., e.g. σταχυο-βολέω `to put forth ears' (Thphr.), πολύ-σταχυς `rich of ears' (Theoc., Str.).Derivatives: σταχυ-ηρός `bearing ears' (Thphr.), - ώδης `ear-like, full of ears' (Thphr., Nonn.), - ῐνος `of ears' (Olympia), - ῖτις f. (- ίτης m.) plantname (Ps.-Dsc.; Redard 77), - όομαι `to develop into an ear' (Dsc.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin] (V)Etymology: No etymology. Since Fick (1, 569; 3, 481) connected with a German. verb. for `sting' in OWNo. stinga, OE stingan, to which belong a few nouns, e.g. OHG stanga f. `stick, pole, bar', MHG stunge `prickle'; here also a richly developed Balt. group of words, a. o. Lith. stangùs `stiff, fixed', stangà f. `effort', stìngti `get fixed, stiff'; IE * stengh- (zero grade stn̥gh- in στάχυς, MHG stunge, Lith. stìngti). Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 622 f., Pok. 1014 f., Fraenkel s. stangà. On the variant ἄσταχυς s. v. and Kretschmer Glotta 21, 89 (ἀ- Anatolian?). -- Cf. στόνυξ and στόχος. - The variant shows that the word is Pre-Greek (Furnée 373).Page in Frisk: 2,779Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στάχυς
-
5 στάχυς,-υος
+ ὁ N 3 12-3-2-2-0=19 Gn 41,5.6.7(bis).22ear of corn Gn 41,5; corn Jgs 15,5Cf. CAIRD 1969=1972 146-147(JgsB 12,6); WEVERS 1990 343(Ex 22,5) -
6 ἄνθεριξ
II = ἀνθέρικος1.1(q.v.), stalk of asphodel, v.l. in Theoc.1.52.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἄνθεριξ
-
7 ἀκτή 2
ἀκτή 2.Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `corn' (Il.), often Δημήτερος or ἀλφίτου ἀκτή; but DELG rightly points out that it cannot mean `flour' because of ἀλφίτου ἀκτή; cf. ἀκτή τροφή H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: No trace of digamma. Fur. 127 compares *ὀχθη, in εὔοχθος (see s.v.); also 320 on ὁχή. This evidence cannot be ignored. So a substr. word. Skoda, Phytonymes 275-283 thinks that the word means `ear (of corn)' and belongs to ἀκ- `sharp'.Page in Frisk: 1,61Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀκτή 2
-
8 άσταχυν
-
9 ἄσταχυν
-
10 άσταχυς
-
11 ἄσταχυς
-
12 ασταχύεσι
-
13 ἀσταχύεσι
-
14 ασταχύεσιν
-
15 ἀσταχύεσιν
-
16 ασταχύεσσι
-
17 ἀσταχύεσσι
-
18 ασταχύεσσιν
-
19 ἀσταχύεσσιν
-
20 ασταχύων
См. также в других словарях:
ear — for hearing and ear of corn seem in some way to belong together, but in fact they are two quite distinct words etymologically. Ear for hearing [OE] is an ancient term that goes right back to the Indo European roots of the language. Its ancestor… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
ear — for hearing and ear of corn seem in some way to belong together, but in fact they are two quite distinct words etymologically. Ear for hearing [OE] is an ancient term that goes right back to the Indo European roots of the language. Its ancestor… … Word origins
ear — W2S2 [ıə US ır] n ↑ear, ↑nose, ↑tooth, ↑eye ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(part of your body)¦ 2¦(hearing)¦ 3¦(grain)¦ 4 smile/grin etc from ear to ear 5 6 a sympathetic ear 7 close/shut your ears to something … Dictionary of contemporary English
Corn smut — Huitlacoche Scientific classification Kingdom: Fungi Subkingdom … Wikipedia
corn on the cob — corn cooked and eaten on the cob * * * corn on the cob A cob of maize with grains still attached, cooked whole and eaten as a vegetable • • • Main Entry: ↑corn * * * corn on the cob UK US noun [countable/uncountable] [singular corn on the cob … Useful english dictionary
corn — S3 [ko:n US ko:rn] n [Sense: 1 2; Origin: Old English] [Sense: 3; Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: corne horn, corner ; CORNER1] 1.) [U] BrE plants such as wheat, ↑barley … Dictionary of contemporary English
corn silk — corn′ silk n. bot the long, threadlike, silky styles on an ear of corn … From formal English to slang
corn silk — ☆ corn silk n. the long, silky fibers that are the styles of an ear of corn: the longer fibers hang out of the husk in a tuft which catches pollen … English World dictionary
corn|cob — «KRN KOB», noun. 1. the central, woody part of an ear of corn, on which the kernels grow in rows; cob. 2. Also, corncob pipe. a tobacco pipe with a bowl hollowed out of a piece of dried corncob, often polished on the outside … Useful english dictionary
corn|husk — «KRN HUHSK», noun. the husk of coarse leaves enclosing an ear of corn … Useful english dictionary
corn silk — noun each of the long filamentous styles that grow as a silky tuft at the tip of an ear of Indian corn • Syn: ↑cornsilk • Hypernyms: ↑style * * * noun : the silky styles on an ear of Indian corn * * * the long, threadlike, silky styles on an ear… … Useful english dictionary