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1 ισχνάνσει
ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἰσχνάνσεϊ, ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem dat sg (epic)ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem dat sg (attic ionic) -
2 ἰσχνάνσει
ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)ἰσχνάνσεϊ, ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem dat sg (epic)ἴσχνανσιςemaciation: fem dat sg (attic ionic) -
3 ίσχνανσιν
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4 ἴσχνανσιν
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5 ίσχνανσις
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6 ἴσχνανσις
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7 ισχνάνσεως
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8 ἰσχνάνσεως
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9 πλησμονή
-ῆς + ἡ N 1 6-0-11-6-5=28 Gn 41,30; Ex 16,3.8; Lv 25,19; 26,5in pos. sense: satiety Ps 77(78),25; repletion, surfeit (of food) Ex 16,3; satisfaction (of feelings) Is 55,2;abundance, plenty Gn 41,30in pejor. sense: surfeit, excess Is 1,14*Is 65,15 εἰς πλησμονήν to satiety?-בעהשׂל for MT בועהשׁ/ל as an oath, as a curse; *Ps 105(106),15πλησμονήν abundance-רוה? for MT רזון emaciationCf. HORSLEY 1987, 28 -
10 ὕβρις
-εως + ἡ N 3 1-0-32-16-13=62 Lv 26,19; Is 9,8; 10,33; 13,11(bis)insolence, pride, arrogance Est 4,17d; shame, insult, mistreatment Sir 10,8; hardship 3 Mc 3,25ἡ ὕβρις τῆς ἰσχύος αὐτῆς hybris, i.e. haughty behaviour, (on account) of her strength Ez 33,28Cf. BERTRAM 1964, 29-38; →NIDNTT; TWNT -
11 φθίσις
A wasting away, perishing, decay,καρποῦ Pi.Pae.9.14
; of the κόσμος, Ocell.1.4; opp. αὔξησις, Hp.VM6, Pl. Phd. 71b; opp. αὔξη, Id.R. 521e: pl., Id.Phlb. 42d.II of persons, atrophy, emaciation, Hp.Art.1.2 esp. consumption, Hdt.7.88, Hp.Epid.1.24, Aph.5.11 (pl.), Arist.HA 518b21 (pl.), EN 1150b33, IG42(1).122.69 (Epid., iv B. C.), cf. φθόη.3 contraction of the pupil of the eye, Gal.19.435, Aret.SD1.7, Aët.7.55. -
12 ἴσχνανσις
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἴσχνανσις
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13 σκέλλομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to dry up, to wither, to languish, to grow tired, to harden', act. `to dry up, to parch'.Other forms: ( κατεσκέλλοντο A. Pr. 481, σκελλόμενα σκελετευόμενα H.), fut. 3 pl. σκελοῦνται σκελετισθήσονται H., perf. ἔσκληκα, mostly with κατα-, ἀπο-, ἐν- a. o. (Epich., Hp., Choeril., hell. a. late), aor. κατα-, ἀπο-σκλῆναι, 3. sg. ἀπ-έσκλη (Ar., Men., Alciphr.), opt. ἀπο-σκλαίῃ (Moer., H., Suid.); fut. 2. sg. ἀπο-σκλήσῃ (AP); few act. forms: aor. opt. σκήλειε (Ψ 191), subj. ἐνι-σκήλῃ (Nic. Th. 694), ind. ἔσκειλα (Zonar.)Derivatives: 1. σκελετός m. `dried up body, mummy, skeleton' (Phryn. Com., Pl. Com. [appositive], Phld., Str. etc.), as attribute `dried up' (Nic. Th. 696), with σκελετ-ώδης `mummy-like' (Luc., Erot.), - εύω ( κατα σκέλλομαι) `to mummify, to dry up, to parch' (Teles, Dsc. a. o.), - εύομαι ( κατα-) `to dry up, to languish' (Ar. Fr. 851, Isoc., Gal. a. o.), to which - εία (- ίη) f. `the drying up, withering' (Gal., Aret.), - ευμα n. `that which has withered' (sch.); - ίζομαι = - εύομαι (H., Zonar.). 2. σκελιφρός `dried up, meagre, slender' (Hp., Erot. [v.l. - εφρός]); cf. σκληφρός, στιφρός (untenable on σκελε-: σκελι- Specht Ursprung 126; s. also below). 3. σκληρός `hard, brittle, harsh, severe' (Hes., also Dor.) with σκληρ-ότης, - ύνω, - υσμα, - υσμός, - όομαι etc. 4. σκληφρός `slender, weak, small, thin' (Pl., Theopomp. Com.; also Arist.); in form and meaning influenced by ἐλα-φρός (cf. below). 5. - σκελής as 2. member referring to the verb after Schwyzer 513 (a noun *σκέλος `drought, emaciation, exhaustion; hardness, brittleness' is in any case not attested): περι-σκελής `very hard, brittle, inflexible' (Hp., S., hell. a. late) with περισκέλεια (- ία) f. `hardness, inflexibility' (Arist., medic., Porph.); κατασκελ-ής (: κατα-σκέλλομαι) `meagre' (of stile), `powerless, brittle' (D. H., Prol.); unclear ἀ-σκελής (Hom., Nic.), as adj. of people in ἀσκελέες καὶ ἄθυμοι (κ 463), approx. `powerless and despondent', elsewhere as adv. - ές, - έως of crying resp. be engry (δ 543; T 68 a. α 68), of suffering (Nic. Th. 278), approx. `incessantly, violently'. As ἀ- can be both privative and copulative and σκέλλομαι, ἔσκληκα refers both to fading away and to growing hard, diff. interpretations are thinkable (not convincing Bechtel Lex. s. v.; s. also above (Frisk) I 163 s. v. ἀσκελής and Bq w. lit.).Etymology: From the above survey we find a system ἔσκληκα: σκλῆναι like e.g. τέτλη-κα: τλῆ-ναι; to this the full grade yot-present σκέλλομαι as ἀνα-τέλλω. The aoristforms σκήλειε and ἐνι-σκήλῃ stand therefore for σκειλ- (\< σκελ-σ-), perh. as old analogy to σφήλειε a. o. (cf. Schwyzer 756 w. lit.). Other deviations are ἐσκληῶτες (A. R.), after τεθνηῶτες, ἑστηῶτες (cf. Kretschmer Glotta 3, 311 f.), ἀπο-σκλαίη after τεθναίη, σταίη a. o. Because of Dor. σκληρός, σκελε-τός (cf. ἔ-τλᾱν, τελα-μών) - αι- cannot be old. -- The verb has maintained itself best in the perf. ἔσκληκα, was however elsewhere as the ep. τέρσομαι, τερσαίνω by ξηραίνω, αὑαίνω pushed back and replaced. Of the few derivv. esp. the semant. emancipated σκληρός maintained itself. -- Nearer non-Greek cognates do not exist. From other languages have been adduced: Germ. NHG schal `faint, vapid', LG. also `dry, barren', MEngl. schalowe `faint, tired, shallow' (NEngl. shallow), Swed. skäll `meagre' (of the bottom), `thin, faint' (of food, soup, beer), `sourish' (of milk), PGm. * skala-, -i̯a-; without anl. s-: Latv. kàlss `meagre', kàlstu, kàlst `dry up'; Germ., e.g. LG. hal(l) `dry, meagre', NHG hellig `tired, exhausted (by thirst)', behelligen `tire, vex'; Toch. A kleps-, B klaiks- `dry up, languish' (v. Windekens Orbis 11, 342 f. with direct identification with σκελιφ-ρός, σκληφρός; dif. on this above. On the very doubtful connection of σκελετός with Lat. calidus Bloch Sprachgesch. u. Wortbed. 24. -- Older lit. in Bq and WP. 2, 597.Page in Frisk: 2,722-723Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σκέλλομαι
См. также в других словарях:
Emaciation — (pronEng|ɨˌmeɪʃiːˈeɪʃən or IPA|ɨˌmeɪsiːˈeɪʃən) occurs when a organism loses substantial amounts of much needed fat and often muscle tissue, making that organism look extremely thin. The cause of emaciation is a lack of nutrients from starvation… … Wikipedia
Emaciation — E*ma ci*a tion, n. [Cf. F. [ e]maciation.] 1. The act of making very lean. [1913 Webster] 2. The state of being emaciated or reduced to excessive leanness; an excessively lean condition. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
emaciation — index deterioration Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
emaciation — (n.) 1660s, from L. emaciationem, from emaciare (see EMACIATE (Cf. emaciate)), or perhaps a native noun of action formation from emaciate … Etymology dictionary
émaciation — émacié, iée [ emasje ] adj. • 1560; lat. emaciatus, de macies « maigreur » ♦ Très amaigri, marqué par un amaigrissement extrême. ⇒ hâve, 1. maigre, squelettique. Un visage émacié. N. f. ÉMACIATION , 1564 . ⊗ CONTR. Bouffi, gras. ● émaciation nom… … Encyclopédie Universelle
émaciation — (é ma si a sion) s. f. Terme didactique. Amaigrissement. HISTORIQUE XVIe s. • La cause de la claudication et de l emaciation [du membre] est que...., PARÉ XXI, 12. ÉTYMOLOGIE Voy. émacié … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
emaciation — emaciated ► ADJECTIVE ▪ abnormally thin and weak. DERIVATIVES emaciation noun. ORIGIN from Latin emaciare make thin … English terms dictionary
emaciation — noun see emaciate … New Collegiate Dictionary
emaciation — excessive leanness or wasting of body tissue … Dictionary of ichthyology
emaciation — /i may shee ay sheuhn, see /, n. 1. abnormal thinness caused by lack of nutrition or by disease. 2. the process of emaciating. [1655 65; < L emaciat(us) (see EMACIATE) + ION] * * * … Universalium
emaciation — noun a) The act of making very lean. b) The state of being emaciated or reduced to excessive leanness; an excessively lean condition. See Also: emaciate … Wiktionary