-
1 ἐπαοιδός
-οῦ + ὁ N 2 8-2-1-11-1=23 Ex 7,11.22; 8,3.14.15enchanter, charmer; neol.?Cf. LE BOULLUEC 1989, 36; WALTERS 1973, 69 -
2 μάγος
-ου + ὁ N 2 0-0-0-10-0=10 DnTh 1,20; Dn 2,2.10wizard, enchanter, magician→ NIDNTT; TWNT -
3 Μάγος
Μάγος [ᾰ], ου, ὁ, Magian, one of a Median tribe, Hdt.1.101, Str. 15.3.1: hence, as belonging to this tribe,2 one of the priests and wise men in Persia who interpreted dreams, Hdt.7.37, al., Arist.Fr. 36, Phoen.1.5, Ev.Matt.2.1.3 enchanter, wizard, esp. in bad sense, impostor, charlatan, Heraclit.14, S.OT 387, E.Or. 1498 (lyr.), Pl.R. 572e, Act.Ap.13.6, Vett. Val.74.17: also fem., Luc.Asin.4, AP 5.15 (Marc. Arg.).II μάγος, ον, as Adj., magical,μάγψ τέχνῃ πράττειν τι Philostr.VA1.2
;κεστοῦ φωνεῦσα μαγώτερα AP5.120
(Phld.). (Opers. maguš 'Magian'.) -
4 ἀοιδός
A singer, minstrel, bard, Il.24.720, Od.3.270, al., Hes.Th.95, Op.26, Sapph.92, etc.;ἀ. ἀνήρ Od.3.267
;θεῖος ἀ. 4.17
, 8.87, al.;τοῦ ἀρίστου ἀνθρώπων ἀ. Hdt.1.24
;πολλὰ ψεύδονται ἀ. Arist.Metaph. 983a4
: c.gen., γόων, χρησμῶν ἀοιδός, E.HF 110, Heracl. 403; πρᾶτος ἀ., of the cock, Theoc.18.56.2 fem., songstress,πολύϊδρις ἀ. Id.15.97
; of the nightingale, Hes.Op. 208; of the Sphinx, S.OT36, E.Ph. 1507 (lyr.);ἀοιδὸς Μοῦσα Id.Rh. 386
(lyr.).II as Adj., tuneful, musical,ἀοιδοτάταν ὄρνιθα E.Hel. 1109
(lyr.), cf. Theoc.12.7, Call.Del. 252, IG12(2).443.2 [voice] Pass., = ἀοίδιμος, famous,πολλὸν ἀοιδοτέρη Arcesil.
ap. D.L.4.30. -
5 ἐπῳδός
b Subst., enchanter,ἐ. καὶ γόης E.Hipp. 1038
(butγόης ἐ. Ba. 234
): c. gen., a charm for or against, ; ἐ. τῶν τοιούτων one to charm away such fears, Pl.Phd. 78a.c c. dat., assisting, profitable,ἐ. γίγνεσθαι νέοις πρὸς ἀρετήν Id.Lg. 671a
;δυσπραξίᾳ ληφθεὶς ἐ. ἐστι τῷ πειρωμένῳ Trag.Adesp.364.4
.2 [voice] Pass., sung to music,φωναί Plu.2.622d
; fit for singing,ποιητικὴν ἐ. παρέχειν S.E.M.6.16
.II in Metre, as Subst.,1 ἐπῳδός, ἡ, Sch.metr. Pi.O.4 (ὁ, Gal.UP17.3, dub. in D.H.Comp.19), epode, part of a lyric ode sung after the strophe and antistrophe, ib.26, Gal. l.c., Sch.metr. Pi.l.c., etc.2 ἐπῳδός, ὁ, verse or passage returning at intervals, in Alcaics and Sapphics, D.H.Comp.19 ; chorus, burden, refrain, Ph. 1.312 : metaph., ὁ κοινὸς ἁπάσης ἀδολεσχίας ἐ. the 'old story', Plu.2.507e. -
6 θέλγω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `enchant, beguile, cheat' (Il.)Compounds: rarely with prefix, δια-, ἐπι-, κατα, παρα-, iter. ipf. θέλγεσκ' (γ 264). θέλξι- as 1. member in governing compp., e. g. θελξι-επής `with enchanting word' (B.), θελξί-φρων `enchanting the mind' (E. in lyr.); s. Schwyzer 443.Derivatives: θελκτήρ `enchanter etc.' (h. Hom. 16, 4) with θελκτήριον `charm' (Il.), adj. θελκτήριος `enchanting' (A., E.); θέλκτωρ `id.' (A. Supp. 1040 [lyr.]; on semantic differences Benveniste Noms d'agent 31 a. 39; s. also Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 10 and 49); θέλκτρον = θελκτήριον (S. Tr. 585), θέλγητρον `charm, spell' (E.); θέλγμα `id.' (sch., H.); θέλκταρ (cod. θέρκαλ) θέλγμα H. (s. Fraenkel Glotta 32, 29); ( κατά-)θέλξις `charm' (Plu., Luc., Ael.). - On Τελχῖνες s. v.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Several hypotheses: to Lith. žvelgiù `look at' (de Saussure MSL 8, 443 A., Thumb IF, Anz. 11, 23; enchanting through he evil eye); to Skt. hvárate `go oblique' from ǵhu̯el-gō (?, Ehrlich Sprachgesch. 29); to Germ., e. g. OE dolg, OHG tolc `wound' (Havers IF 28, 190ff.; s. also ἀσελγής).Page in Frisk: 1,658-659Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θέλγω
-
7 κηλέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `charm, bewitch' (ion. att.).Other forms: Aor. κηλῆσαι,Derivatives: Verbal nouns: κηληθμός `enchantment' (λ 334 = ν 2; Chantraine Formation 137), κήλησις `id.' (Pl.), κήλημα `charm' (Ibyc., E.), κήληθρον `id.' (Phryn., H.); - Κηληδόνες f. pl. name of mythical songstresses, who resembled the Sirenes (Pi.; cf. v. Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 268), κηλήτωρ `enchanter' (Orph.), - ήτειρα f. (Hes. Op. 464 εὑκηλήτειρα; s. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 111; = ἡσυχάστρια H.), κηλητήριος `enchanting' (S., E.), - ητικός (Ath., Ael.).Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [551] *kēl- `enchant, deceive'Etymology: Deverbative formation (Schwyzer 720) of unknown origin. With Bugge Gurt. Stud. 4, 331f. one compares a diff. formed Germanic deverbat. with deviant meaning: Goth. (af)hōlōn `slender, συκοφαντεῖν' (would be Gr. *κωλάω as πωτάομαι) = OE. hōlian `id.', OHG huolen `deceive' (with as backformations OE. hōl n. `slender', OWNo. hōl n. `praise, ostentation', cf. Wissmann Nom. postv. 125). (With the Germanic word agrees semantically the formally different Lat. calvor, -ī `devide tricks, deceive' with calumnia `trickery, false accusation, malicious prosecution'. A primary verb is unknown. - Diff. Prellwitz Wb.: to κέλαδος, καλεῖν (s. vv. [ wrong]). Diff. Machek Slavia 16, 184ff.: to Russ. šalítь `be reckless', Czech. šáliti `deceive'; against this Vasmer Russ. et. Wb. s. šalítь. - Pok. 551, W.-Hofmann s. calumnia.Page in Frisk: 1,839Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κηλέω
-
8 ἐπαοιδός
ἐπαοιδός, οῦ, ὁ (Ionic form, dominant in the Koine [Manetho, Apot. 5, 138; Epict. 3, 24, 10; LXX; Philo, Migr. Abr. 83; SibOr 225] for the Attic ἐπῳδός; s. Lob., Phryn. p. 243) one who uses charms or incantations to get what one desires, enchanter D 3:4.—GWalsh, The Varieties of Enchantment ’84 (early Gk views of the function of poetry).—DELG s.v. ἀείδω.
См. также в других словарях:
enchanter — [ ɑ̃ʃɑ̃te ] v. tr. <conjug. : 1> • déb. XIIe; lat. incantare 1 ♦ Soumettre à une action surnaturelle par l effet d une opération magique. ⇒ charmer, ensorceler. Enchanter qqn au moyen de sortilèges, de formules magiques, d un philtre. «… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Enchanter — En*chant er, n. [Cf. F. enchanteur.] One who enchants; a sorcerer or magician; also, one who delights as by an enchantment. [1913 Webster] Like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing. Shelley. [1913 Webster] {Enchanter s nightshade} (Bot.), a genus… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
enchanter — ENCHANTER. v. a. Charmer, ensorceler par des sons, par des paroles, par des figures, par des opérations prétendues magiques. Le peuple croit qu il y a des Magiciens qui enchantent les hommes, les animaux, etc. f♛/b] Il signifie aussi figurément,… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
enchanter — Enchanter, act. acut. Est charmer par mots, oraison et halenement. Il est dit ainsi, parce que les charmes estoient au premier composez par formules, et prononcez avec le ton qui est dedié au demon, La source plus haute du mot, est de ce que l on … Thresor de la langue françoyse
enchanter — Enchanter. v. act. Charmer, ensorceler par des paroles, figures, caracteres, operations magiques. Ce Magicien les enchanta tellement qu ils ne purent se remuer de la place. il enchante les loups, les serpens. Il signifie aussi fig. Surprendre,… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
enchanter — late 13c., agent noun from ENCHANT (Cf. enchant) or from O.Fr. enchanteor … Etymology dictionary
Enchanter — An enchanter is a Magician (fantasy). The word may also refer to: *Enchanter (character class), used in fantasy role playing games * Enchanter (video game), a 1983 interactive fiction game by Infocom * Enchanter (manga), a manga series by Izumi… … Wikipedia
enchanter — (an chan té) v. a. 1° Produire une opération surnaturelle sur quelqu un ou quelque chose par des paroles magiques. Armide enchanta la forêt. Merlin enchanta le chevalier. • Assoupis le dragon, enchante la princesse, CORN. Tois. d or, v, 4.… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
ENCHANTER — v. a. Charmer, ensorceler par des sons, par des paroles, par des figures, par des opérations prétendues magiques. Des gens ignorants croient encore qu il y a des magiciens qui enchantent les hommes, les animaux, etc. Il signifie aussi… … Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)
enchanter — UK [ɪnˈtʃɑːntə(r)] / US [ɪnˈtʃæntər] noun [countable] Word forms enchanter : singular enchanter plural enchanters someone who uses magic on people or things … English dictionary
enchanter — enchant ► VERB 1) delight; charm. 2) put under a spell. DERIVATIVES enchanter noun enchantment noun enchantress noun. ORIGIN French enchanter, from Latin cantare sing … English terms dictionary