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21 ἀτάσθαλος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `reckless, wicked' (Il., Aeol.).Derivatives: ἀτασθαλίαι pl. (Il.); ἀτασθάλλω (Od.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Frisk, Eranos 31, 21ff., from *ἄ-θαρστος = Skt. á-dhr̥ṣta- `irresistable', to θάρσος. - Not to ἄτη, which has a long ἀ- (Hesychios, Schwyzer); s. Frisk, Leumann Hom. Wörter 215 n. 10 (with other proposals); also Fur. 379.Page in Frisk: 1,177Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀτάσθαλος
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22 βίσταξ
Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Pers.Etymology: A Persian word for `viceroy', known from MPers. as bidaxš. Discussion by Szemerényi, Acta Iranica 5 (1975) 363ff [note the enigmatic numbering of this journal!]. Our gloss is not mentioned. I find no conclusion. Nyberg, Eranos 44 (1946) 2372 analyzed the firste part as Iran. *bitīya- `second'. (The σ of our gloss must be a mistake.) Amm. Marc.23, 614 has it in the form vitaxa. Later Greek has βιδαξης, πιτιάξης.Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βίσταξ
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23 βούλομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `want, wish' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Arc.-Cypr. Eretr. (also Hom., s. Chantr. Gramm. hom. 1, 311) βόλομαι, Lesb. βόλλομαι, Dor. (Cret.) βώλομαι; Thess. βέλλομαι, Boeot. βείλομη, Dor. (Heracl. etc.) δήλομαι, Locr. Delph. δείλομαι. - Other tempora are based on the present: βουλήσομαι, ἐβουλήθην, βεβούλημαι; to βέβουλα (Α 113) below.Derivatives: βουλή `will, decision, council' (Il.); Dor. Arc. βωλά, Lesb. βόλλα. Denomin. βουλεύω ( βωλ-, βολλ-εύω), - ομαι `deliberate' (Il.), with many deriv.: βούλευμα, βουλεία, βουλευτής, βουλευτήριον `council-chamber'.Etymology: The verb is much discussed and there is no agreement on its history. The root must have been *gʷel-\/gʷol-. - There may have been a perfect with present meaning *βέβολα, a trace of which could be προ-βέβουλα (Α 113) with newly introduced ου from βούλομαι. The o-vocalism and the β- may have been spread from the perfect. (There may also have been influence of βουλή, but this may itself have been derived from the present.) But it seems doubtful that the perfect alone is the source of all the o-vowels. - The central problem is the origin of the present. One has assumed an n- or an s-suffix; Ruijgh, Lingua 25 (1970) 315f. thinks only - λν- can explain the compensatory lengthening. S. Slings, Mnemosyne 28 (1975) 1-16. - Recently Peters, FS Risch 1986, 311, suggests a root in -h₃. This may help explain the o-vocalism. A nasal present * gʷl-n-h₃- would have given *βαλνο- [or βλανο-?] which was replaced by *βολν-. Pamphylian βΟλΕμενος would have βολε- \< *βελο- \< * gʷelh₃-. Many problems of detail remain. E.g. there is no evidence for βλω- and no basis for the introduction of the o-vocalism; in this view the e-vocalism is also problematic. - On the relation between βούλομαι, ἐθέλω and λῆν s. Braun Atti R. Ist. Veneto 98, 337ff.; Rödiger Glotta 8, 1ff.; Wifstrand Eranos 40, 16ff.Page in Frisk: 1,258-259Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βούλομαι
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24 δενδρύω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `dive into the water' (Epid.)Derivatives: Lengthened δενδρυάζειν τὸ καταδύνειν καὶ κρύπτεσθαι, κυρίως εἰς τὰς δρῦς, καταχρηστικῶς δε καὶ ἐπὶ τοῦ ἁπλῶς δύνειν καὶ κρύπτειν EM 255, 55; thus H. and Paus. Gr. Fr. 119: τὸ δρυσὶ σκέπεσθαι καὶ τὸ καθ' ὕδατος δύεσθαι κτλ.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Intensive reduplication to δρύεται κρύπτεται, δρυάσαι κατακολυμβῆσαι H. (not with Latte shortened from \< δεν\> δρύεται, \< δεν\> δρυάσαι). δρύεται may stand for *νρύεται, which could belong with a Balto-Slavic group, Lith. neriù, nérti `dive, slip into', Russ. CSlav. vъ-nьrǫ, vъ-nrěti `παρεισδύεσθαι' etc. (further Pok. 766, Vasmer Russ. et. Wb. s. norá). The connection with δρῦς may be folketymology (though I see no reasons to doubt the forms). - Frisk Eranos 40 (1942) 81ff.Page in Frisk: 1,366Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δενδρύω
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25 δοῦλος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `slave, servant', also as adj. with the comp. δουλότερος (Hdt.); δούλη f. `slave-woman, maid' (Il.); on the extension E. Kretschmer Glotta 18, 74f.Other forms: δῶλος Cret.;Compounds: many subst. and adj. compp.Derivatives: δουλίς f. (Hyp.; cf. Schwyzer 127 and 465) with δουλίδιον (H.), δουλάριον (Ar.). - δουλοσύνη `servanthood' (Ion., Od.; vgl. Porzig Satzinhalte 226) with δουλόσυνος (E. Hek. 448 [lyr.]); s. Frisk Eranos 43, 220. - δούλιος, - ειος `slavish, of a servant' (Hom.), δούλεος `id.' (A. R.), δουλικός `id.' (Att. etc.), δουλικά ( σώματα) n. pl. `slaves' (Peripl. M. Rubr., Pap.). - Denomin. δουλεύω `be slave, serve' (Ion.-Att.) with δουλεία, ion. - ηΐη `servanthood', δούλευμα `id.' (trag.; s. Chantr. Form. 186), δουλεύτρια `female servant' (Eust.); δουλόομαι, - όω `be made servant' (Ion.-Att.) with δούλωσις (Th.) and δουλωτικός (Plu.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The forms point to *δόελος, prob. from *δοhελος. One adduces: δοῦλος ἡ οἰκία, η την ἐπὶ τὸ αὑτὸ συνέλευσιν τῶν γυναικῶν H. (unclear δωλοδομεῖς οἰκογενεῖς; wrong Schulze Q. 95 A. 3); the word has been changed in δοῦμος (Latte after Wackernagel; aigainst the word order), but there is no conclusion. The word is in any case a loan, acc. to Lambertz Glotta 6, 1ff. from Carian or Lydian (thus Benveniste Rev. d. ét. lat. 10, 438f.); Risch, Kratylos 29 (1984) 96f. remarks that then the word would have appeared much later (than Myc), but it could as well be Pre-Greek. Neumann (FS Risch)1986, 489-496) started from *dm̥-sel-o- \> * doh-elo-, with sel- the root of ἑλεῖν. But `home-taken' does not give the right meaning (while Fr. domestique is perfect), and for o \< *m̥ in Attica etc. he gives only ὄπατρος as example.Page in Frisk: 1,412Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δοῦλος
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26 δύναμαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `be able, be equal, be equivalent' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. δυνήσασθαι, δυνασθῆναι (Il.), δυνηθῆναι (trag.), fut. δυνήσομαι (Od.), perf. δεδύνημαι (Att.)Derivatives: δύναμις f. `strength, power' (Il.; cf. θέμις and below) with δυναμικός `powerful, effective' (hell. and late), δυναμερός `id.' (medic.), δυναμοστόν a fraction (Dioph.); δυναμόω `make strong' (hell. and late), with δυνάμωσις, δυναμωτικός, δύνασις `id.' (Pi.). δυνάστης m. `lord, master' (ion.-att.) with δυναστικός (Arist.), δυναστεύω (Ion.-Att.), with δυναστεία, δυνάστευμα, δυναστευτικός; f. δυνάστις (Demetr. Eloc.), δυνάστειρα ( Tab. Defix. Aud. IIIp). δυνάστωρ `id.' (E. IA 280 [lyr.]). Verbal adj. δυνατός `potens, able; possible' (Sapph.,) with δυνατέω `be strong' (2 Ep. Kor. 13, 3); δυνητικός `potential' (A. D.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Prob. δύ-ν-αμαι, a present with nasal infix, which was generalized: δυ-ν-ά-σθην for *δυά-σθην (cf. λίναμαι: λιάσθην), δυ-ν-ήσομαι for *δυή-σομαι etc., and in nouns δύναμις etc. An inorganic - σ- in: δυνά-σ-θην, δυνά-σ-της. The disyllabic root δϜᾱ- formally agrees with that of δ(Ϝ)ά̄-ν, δ(Ϝ)ᾱ-ρός (s. δήν, δηρός), but semantically a connection is difficult. - Cret. νύναμαι (Gortyn) must be the same word. It may be due simply to assimilation. Hell. δύνομαι is a thematic re-formation. - Details in Schwyzer 495 n. 5, 693 w. n. 5, 762; cf Frisk Eranos 43, 223 w. n. 3.Page in Frisk: 1,423-424Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δύναμαι
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27 εἴρερον
Grammatical information: acc.Meaning: `emprisonment, servitude' (θ 529).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Etym. uncertain. Against connection with Lat. servus Frisk Eranos 50, 6ff., where a basis *ϜερϜερον is suggested connecting also Arm. gerem `take prisoner'. Prob. not to εὑρίσκω `find' and ἀρύω `scop' (s. vv.); for the meaning cf. Skt. gráha-, gráhaṇa- `taking, emprisonment, scooping'. - Other suggestions in Bechtel Lex. and Brugmann IF 19, 382ff. (s. Bq).Page in Frisk: 1,466Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > εἴρερον
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28 ἔλεγος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `mourning song (accompanied by flute)' (E., Ar.).Compounds: Comp. ἰαμβ-έλεγος and ἐλεγ-ίαμβος name of two verses (gramm.), s. Risch IF 59, 284f.Derivatives: ἐλεγεῖον a verse, `distichon', and a poem in it, poet. `inscription' (Att. etc.) with ἐλεγειο-ποιός, - γράφος (Arist.); diminutive ἐλεγ(ε)ίδιον and ἐλεγ(ε)ιδάριον (late); adj. ἐλεγειακός (D. H., Ath.); also ἐλεγεία (Str., Plu.) and, as adjective, ἐλεγεῖον ( δίστιχον, Ael.); - also a fish, ἐλεγῖνος (Arist. HA 610b 6), because of its sound?, s. Strömberg Fischnamen 74.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Anatolian (Phrygian?) origin, s. Hommel RhM 88, 194. Wrong Theander Eranos 15, 98ff. (to ἐλελεῦ, ὀλολύζω); cf. Kretschmer Glotta 9, 228; 12, 220. - From ἐλεγεῖον as LW [loanword] Lat. ēlogium (influenced by λόγος), W.-Hofmann s. v. Prob. Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,486Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἔλεγος
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29 ἐρεύγομαι 2
ἐρεύγομαι 2.Grammatical information: v.Meaning: in Hom. only of the sea ἐρευγομένης ἁλὸς (Ρ 265), κῦμα... δεινὸν ἐρευγόμενον (ε 403), ( κύματα) ἐρεύγεται ἤπειρόνδε (ε 438); the last two places to be translates with `roar' (cf. Ξ 394 κῦμα... βοάᾳ ποτὶ χέρσον), but here as in Ρ 265 a stranslation `belch out' (= 1.) is also possible. `roaring' seems certain in the aorist ἤρυγεν Υ 403f. ἤρυγεν ὡς ὅτε ταῦρος ἤρυγεν, 406 τόν γ' ἐρυγόντα λίπε... θυμός, thus also Theoc. 13, 58. Also the present and future in the LXX are used in the meaning `roar' ( σκύμνος ἐρευγόμενος, λέων ἐρεύξεται).Derivatives: ἐρύγμηλος Σ 580 (from ἐρυγμή [H.] or *ἐρυγμεῖν; cf. Risch 41; Frisk Eranos 41, 52) is also used as adjunct of ταῦρος; diff. EM 379, 27 ἐρυγμήλη (H. ἐρυγηλή) ἐπίθετον ῥαφανίου, ἴσως ἀπὸ τῆς ἐρυγῆς. H. mentions also ἐρυγμαίνουσα ἡ βοῦς (= `ruminator'?, cf. to 1.). καὶ ὁ ταῦρος ἐρυγμαίνων, ἀπὸ τῆς ἐρυγμῆς, and ἐρυγήτωρ βοητής.Etymology: Clearly both groups are not always kept separate. Cf. e.g. ἡμέρα τῃ̃ ἡμέρᾳ ἐρεύγεται ῥῆμα (LXX Ps. 18 [19], 2), ἐρεύξομαι κεκρυμμένα (Ev. Matt. 13, 35), where `belch out' are used as vulgar-expressive expressions for `to cry' etc. Clearly refer to `roar' etc. the ablauting ὀρυμαγδός (s. v.) and ὠρῡγή, ὠρυγμός, s. ὠρύομαι. Other languages have comparable words with this meaning, so Lat. rūgiō, rūgīre `roar'; in auslaut (IE k) different OCS rykati `roar', OE rȳn `id.' (PGm. * rūhjan), OHG rohōn (PGm. *rŭhōn; would be Lat. *rŭcāre; cf. runcāre `snore' s. ῥέγκω) s. Pok. 867f., W.-Hofmann s. rūgiō. - At last both 1. and 2. ἐρεύγομαι etc.refer to soundgiving.Page in Frisk: 1,554-555Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐρεύγομαι 2
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30 θέμεθλα
Grammatical information: n. pl.Meaning: `fundaments, basis' also metaph. (Il.).Etymology: Also θεμείλια n. pl. `id.' (Il.), metr. lengthening of θεμέλια, adj. θεμέλιος `belonging to the fundaments', as subst. (sc. λίθος) `foundation-stone' (Att.) with θεμελιόω `lay the basis' (X.), θεμελίωσις `fundament' (LXX). Through poetical-archaising backformation arose θέμειλον (AP) with the same meaning, -α (verse-inscr. Adana). Formations with θλο- and λο- from a nominal m-stem; cf. θεμούς s. θεμόω; on the formation of θεμέλιος also Frisk Eranos 41, 51ff. Cf. also θέμερος, θέμις.- S. also Rix in F. Steiner, Forsch. z. antiken Sklaverei (1994) 35-53Page in Frisk: 1,660Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θέμεθλα
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31 θεμέρη
Grammatical information: adj.Compounds: As 1. member in θεμερῶπις adjunct of Άρμονίη (Emp. 122, 2), of αἰδώς (A. Pr. 134 [lyr.]); θεμερόφρονας συνετούς, σώφρονας H.Etymology: As simplex only θεμέρᾳ ὀπί (v. l. Pi. N. 7, 83), θεμε[ρώτε]ρα (IG 14, 1018, 3, IVp; correctly completed?). Beside θέμερος ( θεμερός ?) `solid, firm' sands *θέμιστος in Θεμιστο-κλῆς (cf. Άριστο-κλῆς) as κράτιστος beside κρατερός (s. Frisk Eranos 48, 6). The basis is nominal θεμ- in θεμούς, θέμεθλα, θεμέλια, s. vv. - Whether because of the explanation σεμνός `honourable, serious' a second θέμερος must be posited, seems doubtful. Acc. to Fick 1, 464; 3, 201 it belongs in this meaning to OHG timber `dark'. - One keeps some doubts about this IE etymology.Page in Frisk: 1,660Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θεμέρη
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32 θέμις
Grammatical information: f. (n.)Meaning: `justice, law, custom', also personied as goddess of justice (Il.).Other forms: Diff. oblique forms: gen. θέμιστος (β 68; Thess. inscr.), dat. - ιστι (Ο 87; Thess. inscr.), acc. - ιστα (Ε 761, Υ 4); θέμιδος (A. Pr. 18), θέμιτος (Pi. O. 13, 8); rarely also θέμιος (Hdt. 2, 50; v. l. - ιδος), θέμεως (inscr. Metropolis); acc. θέμιν (Hes.), voc. Θέμι (Ο 93). Plur. θέμιστες, acc. - ιστας etc. `statutes, (divine) laws, oracles' (Hom., Hes., Thgn., Pi.).Compounds: As 1. member e. g. in θεμι-σκόπος `preserving justice' (Pi.), θεμισ-κρέων `ruling through justice' (Pi.), θεμιστο-πόλος `supporting the laws, obeying the oracles' (h. Cer. 103, inscr. Delphi IIIa);. As 2. member e. g. in ἄ-θεμις `lawless, unlawful' (Pi., E.), ἀ-θέμιτος `id.' (Hdt.), ἀ-θέμιστος `id.' (Il.), also ἀ-θεμίστιος (Od.; metr. by-form).Derivatives: θεμιστός (A. Th. 694 [lyr.]; after ἀ-θέμιστος); θεμιτός in οὑ θεμιτόν = οὑ θέμις (IA); Θεμίστιος surname of Zeus `Lord of the θέμιστες' (Plu.); also month name (Thessaly); θεμιστεῖος `regarding the θ.' (Pi.); θεμιστοσύναι = θέμιστες (Orph. H. 79, 6). Denomin. verbs: 1. θεμιστεύω `proclaim the θέμ., i. e. laws, oracles' (Od.) with θεμιστεία `giving oracles' (Str.). 2. θεμιτεύω `behave lawful' (E. Ba. 79 [lyr.]). 3. θεμιζέτω μαστιγούτω, νομοθετείτω. Κρῆτες H.; after Bechtel Dial. 2, 786 to be changed in θεμισσέτω (= Paus. Gr. Fr. 202); aor. ptc. θεμισσάμενος (Pi.). - Several PN, z. B. Θεμιστο-κλῆς (s. on θέμερος)Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: To θέμις seems to agree Av. dā-mi- f. `creation', also `creator' (m. a. f.); cf. the same diff. between θέ-σις, - θε-τος as opposed to - dā-ti-, dā-ta- `basis, justice, law' (= θέμις). A problem is formed by the remarkable plural-formations θέμι-στ-ες, θέμι-στ-ος etc.; the explanation by Schulze (also Fraenkel Glotta 4, 22ff.) as a compound θεμι- and στᾱ- `stand', gives almost unsurmountable difficulties ; s. Frisk Eranos 48, 1ff. The occasional neutral genus acc. to Fraenkel from synonymous expressions like δέον, καλόν, προσῆκον (possible, but rather inherited from the Pre-Greek origin). - On the meaning of θέμις H. Vos Themis. Diss. Univ. Rheno-Traj. 1956. - Ruijgh convinced me (pers. comm.) that the strange inflection points to a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 1,660-661Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θέμις
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33 θερμός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `warm' (Il.).Compounds: Often as 1, member, e. g. Θερμο-πύλαι (Hdt.; s. Risch IF 59, 267). On ἄ-, ἔκ-, ἔν-θερμος etc. s. below on θέρμη and θερμαίνω.Derivatives: A. Substantives. 1. θέρμη, also - μᾰ (s, Schwyzer 476 n. 2, Chantraine Formation 102 and 148) f. `warmth, heat, heat of fever' (IA) with ἄ-θερμος `without warmth' (Frisk Adj. priv. 11), ἔν-θερμος `with warmth inside, warm' (Strömberg Greek Prefix Studies 95); θερμίζω `be feverish' (Euboea). 2. θερμότης `warmth, heat' (IA). 3. θερμωλή `id.' (Hp.; Frisk Eranos 41, 52). 4. θερμέλη ἡ θέρμη Suid. (Strömberg Wortstudien 79). 5. θέρμασσα = κάμινος (Hdn. Gr. 1, 267; formation unclear, cf. Schwyzer 525f., Müller-Graupa Glotta 31, 129). - B. Adjectives: 1. θερμώδης `lukewarm' (Aret.); here Θερμώδων, - οντος river name (Boeotia, Pontos; s. Krahe Beitr. z. Namenforschung 2, 236; 3, 162). 2. θερμηρός adjunct of ποτήριον (H. s. κελέβη; to θέρμη?). - C. Verbs: 1. θέρμετο ipf. `became warm' (Il.), θέρμετε ipv. `warmeth!' (θ 426; after it Ar. Ra. 1339); on the formation cf. Schwyzer 722f. 2. θερμαίνω, aor. θερμῆναι `warm' (Il.), often with prefix, e. g. ἐκ-θερμαίνω `warm completely' (Hp., Arist.) with postverbal ἔκθερμος `very hot' (Vett. Val.); from there θέρμανσις `heating' (Arist.) with θερμαντικός `fit to make warm' (Pl., Arist.), θερμασία `heating, warmth' (Hp., Arist.; cf. Schwyzer 469), θέρμασμα `warming cuff' (medic.; s. Chantraine Formation 176), θερμάστρᾱ s. θερμάζω; θερμαντήρ "warmer", `kettle to cook water' (Poll.) with θερμαντήριος `warming' (Hp., inscr.). 3. θερμάζω `id.' only aor. opt. med. θερμάσσαιο (Nic. Al. 587) with θερμάστρα f. `furnace' (Call.; also to θερμαίνω); also θερμαύστρα written through confusion with θερμαυστρίς ( θέρμ-) `fire-tongs' (Arist., H.), cf. πυρ-αύστρα `id.' ( αὔειν `bring fire'); also metaph. as name of a dance (Poll., Ath.) with θερμαυστρίζω (Critias, Luc.); from θερμάστρα: θερμαστρίς ( θέρμ-) = θερμαντήρ (Eup., LXX); the forms in - αστρ-, - αυστρ- are not regularly distinguished, cf. Schulze Kl. Schr. 189 w. n. 6; through dissimilation θέρμαστις meaning unclear (Attica IVa) with θερμάστιον (Aen. Tact.).Etymology: Inherited adjective, identical with Arm. ǰerm `warm', Thrak.-Phryg. germo- (in GN, e.g. Γέρμη), IE * gʷʰermo-; also in substantivized funktion Alb. zjarm, zjarr `heat'. With o-vocalism, originally substantiv., IE * gʷʰormo- in Skt. gharmá- m. `heat', OPr. gorme `id.'; sec. also adjectival in Av. garǝma-, Lat. formus, Germ., e. g. NHG warm. Uncertain Toch. A śārme `heat (?)'. More forms in W.-Hofmann s. formus, Mayrhofer Wb. s. gharmáḥ; s. on θέρομαι, θέρος.Page in Frisk: 1,664-665Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θερμός
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34 θρίαμβος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: name of hymns sung at the feasts for Dionysos (Cratin. 36), also said of the god ( Trag. Adesp. 140 u. a.); hell.also rendering of Lat. triumphus (Plb., D. S.);Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Formation like διθύραμβος, ἴαμβος (s. vv.) and like these prob. Pre-Greek. Often (after Sommer Lautstud. 58ff.) connected with the numeral `three' ("Dreischritt" v.t.), which is impossible. Extensive treatment by v. Windekens Orbis 2, 489ff., who takes θρίαμβος as (Indo-European) "Pelasgian" and gives a quite arbitrary IE etymology. - Acc. to Sturtevant ClassPhil. 5, 323ff. from θριάζω, θρίασις influenced by ἴαμβος; further Theander Eranos 15, 126 n. 1. - Fur.191 connects τριάζω `conquer'. Clearly a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 1,682-683Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θρίαμβος
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35 θύω 2
θύω 2.Grammatical information: v.Derivatives: Derivations partly show the older meaning `smoke, incense' (s. below): 1. θῦμα `offer' (IA etc.); 2. ἔκ-, πρό-θυσις from ἐκ-, προ-θύω (late); 3. θυσία s. below on θύτης; 4. θύος n. with θυέστης a. o. `incense', s. v.; 5. θύον `life-tree', s. v.; 6. θυητά n. pl. `incense' (Aret.; on the formation cf. θυηλη s.v.); 7. θυ(ε)ία f. `strong smelling ceder, thuya' with θυῖον n. `resin' (Thphr.); formation unclear; to θύος (s. v.)? 8. θύτης m. `offerer' (hell.; ἐκ-θύτης from ἐκ-θύω E.); θύτας (Thess.), with θυτεῖον `offerplace' (Aeschin.), θυτικός `belonging to an offer' (hell., directly from θύω), θυσία `offer, offerfeast' (h. Cer.; cf. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 224, Porzig Satzinhalte 200); from there θυσιάζω `offer' with θυσίασμα, - αστήριος, - ον; 9. θυτήρ m. `id.' (trag.) with θυτήριον `sacrificial animal' (E.), also `altar', name of the constellation Ara (Arat.; Scherer Gestirnnamen 192); 10. θύστας ὁ ἱερεὺς παρὰ Κρησί H., f. θυστάς, - άδος `belonging to the sacrifice' (A., S.; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 182; 2, 37, E. Kretschmer Glotta 18, 85); 11. θύστρα n. = θύματα (Kos); 12. θυ\<σ\> τηρίοις θυμιατηρίοις H.; 13. θυσμικός `regarding the sacrifice' ( ἔτος; Paros, Tenos); the - σ- in the last words hardly with Schulze Q. 320 n. 1 and Fraenkel l. c. from the σ-stem in θύος, but rather with Solmsen KZ 29, 114 analogical [to what?] (cf. μύστης a. o.). - With λ-, resp. μ-suffix in θυηλη, θυμός, θύμον, [not in θυμάλωψ], s. vv.; with μελ-suffix (Frisk Eranos 41, 51) θῠμέλη `hearth, altar' (trag.; not with Aly Glotta 5, 60ff. prop. "practice-ground" from 1. θύω `storm') with θυμελικός.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The regular stemformation of θύω will be the resultof inner-Greek adjustment. The original paradigma can no longer be reconstructed. As the nearest parallel is given Lat. suf-fiō, - īre `incense', explained from *-dhu̯-ii̯ō, which is of course very far away. - It is often supposed that 1. θύω and 2. θύω were originally identical, but this is far from clear; one assumes a development like `stieben, stäuben, wirbeln, stürmen, rauchen' v. t., but this can well be wrong. The different languages show a mass of formations and meanings which can no longer be interpreted, see Pok. 261-267, (268-271). - S. further τύφω. θάνατος, θολός, ἀθύρω have nothing to do with our verb.- P. Pagot, RPh LXXV (2001) 144 connects Hitt. tuhhae `pant, sigh' from * dʰ(e)uh₂-, which is however very far as regards the meaning.Page in Frisk: 1,698-699Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θύω 2
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36 ἴαμβος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: name of a metrical foot and a verse, `iambus, mocking verse' (Archil., Hdt., Att.).Compounds: Compp., e. g. ἰαμβο-ποιός (Arist.), χωλ-ίαμβος `choliambus' (Demetr. Eloc.; cf. Risch IF 59, 284f.).Derivatives: ἰαμβικός `iambical, mocking' (Arist., D. H.), ἰαμβώδης `mocking' (Philostr.), ἰαμβύλος `mocking poet' (Hdn.), ἰαμβύκη name of an instrument (Eup., H.; cf. σαμβύκη), ἰαμβεῖος `iambic', ἰαμβεῖον n. `iambic verse' (Att.). Denominative verbs: ἰαμβίζω, - ιάζω `speak, mock in iambi' (Gorg., Arist.; cf. v. Wilamowitz Glaube 2, 53) with ἰαμβιστής `mocking-poet' (Ath.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Cf. διθύραμβος, θρίαμβος (also ἴθυμβος); of Pre-Greek origin. Older attempts to give an explanation from Indo-European in Bq (with Add. et corr.) ; s. on διθύραμβος. - Acc. to Theander Eranos 20, 1ff. to ἰά; on this Kretschmer Glotta 13, 243ff. (s. also on ἔλεγος). See Hester, Lingia 13 (1965) 354f.Page in Frisk: 1,704Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἴαμβος
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37 ἰάομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `heal'.Other forms: Aor. ἰάσασθαι, Ion. ἰήσασθαι (Il.), pass. ἰάθην, ἰήθην (IA), fut. ἰάσομαι, ἰήσομαι (Od.), perf. ἴαμαι (Ev. Marc. 5, 29),Dialectal forms: Myc. ijateDerivatives: 1. ἴαμα, ἴημα (Ion. forms not esp. noted) n. `medicine, healing' (IA) with ἰαματικός (Cyran.); 2. ἴασις `healing' (IA) with ἰάσιμος `curable' (Arbenz Die Adj. auf - ιμος 71f.), prob. also ἰασιώνη plant-name, `Convolvulus sepium (?)' (Thphr., Plin.); Strömberg Pflanzennamen 81 because of the medical (though unknown) use; 3. Ίασώ f. name of a healing goddess (Ar., Herod.), from ἴασις or from the aor., cf. Καλυψώ. 4. ἰατήρ `physician' (Il., Cypr., with ἰήτειρα adj. f. `healing' (Marc. Sid.), ἰατήριον`medicine, healing' (medic., Q. S.); 5. ἰάτωρ `id.' (Alcm., Thess. inscr.) with ἰατορία `medical art' (B., S. in lyr.); 6. ἰατής `id.' (LXX) with ἰατικός (Str.) 7. usu.. ἰατρός `id.' (Il.), with ἰατρικός, ἡ ἰατρική ( τέχνη) `art of healing' (IA), ἰάτρια f. `midwife' (Alex.), ἰατρίνη `id.' (Rom. empire, cf. Schulze Kl. Schr. 428 m. n. 3), ἰατρεύω `heal' (Hp.) with ἰατρεία, - εῖον, ἰάτρευσις, - ευμα, - ευτικός; 8. ἴατρα n. pl. `payment for healing' (Epidauros, Herod.). More on ἰατήρ, ἰάτωρ, ἰατρός in Fraenkel Nom. ag. (s. index); on the diff. ἰατήρ: ἰάτωρ Benveniste Noms d'agent 46, also Schwyzer 531. - Here Ἰάσων? (s.v.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Compared with ἰαίνω, Brugmann Grundr. 21, 1086 (= 22: 3, 199) proposes: ἰῶμαι \< *isā-i̯o-mai beside ἰαίνω = Skt. iṣaṇ-yá-ti like δρῶ \< *drā-i̯ō beside δραίνω (but δραίνω is rather an innovation, s. on δράω. Schwyzer 681 a. 683 explains ἰάομαι as thematic tansformation of an athematic *ἴᾰ-μαι (in Ία-μενόν Μ 139, 193 and in Cypr. ἰϳασθαι?); but such a form can hardly be IE. Diff. Wißmann Nom. postv. 1, 127 n. 1: ἰάομαι deverbative. - Doubts on the connection with ἰαίνω in Schulze Q. 381f.; wrong Ehrlich Betonung 136 (to Lat. sānus) and Theander Eranos 20, 33 (from ἰά). On the quantity of the ἰ- (in Hom. ῑ-, later also ῐ-) Schulze l. c., Sommer Lautstud. 9f. See N. van Brock, Vocab. médic. 9ff. Laryngalbetrachtungen bei Sturtevant Lang. 16, 86f.Page in Frisk: 1,704-705Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἰάομαι
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38 ἱερός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: "holy", `dedicated to a god, divine', also in gen. praising `glorious, excellent, strong, quick etc.' (cf. below); ἱερόν n. `consecrated area, temple' (posthom.), ἱερά n. pl., rarely sg. `Weihgeschenk, sacrifice(animal)' (Il.).Compounds: As 1. member in many compp., not mentioned here.Derivatives: (Dialectforms not noted): 1. ἱερεύς (Il.), Arc. Cypr. ἱερής, Ion. also ἱέρεως (hardly taken from ἀρχιέρεως, Sommer Nominalkomp. 129, Egli Heteroklisie 111f. with new explan.) m. `who performs the sacrifices (τὰ ἱερά), offerer, priest' (Schulze KZ 52, 193 = Kl. Schr. 573; after Boßhardt Die Nom. auf - ευς rather backformation from ἱερεύω; on meaning and spread E. Kretschmer Glotta 18, 81f.). From ἱερεύς: a) several feminines (cf. on βασιλεύς): ἱέρεια (Il.), Cypr. ἰερήϜιϳα, Ion. ἱερέη, -ῆ; ἱερηΐς (Megar.), ἱέρισσα (pap. IIa); b) the nouns ἱερεία `priest-ship' (Thyateira; cf. Bechtel Dial. 1, 311), ἱερεῖον, -ήϊον `sacrif. animal' (Il.), ἱερ(ε)ωσύνη `priest-ship' (IA) with ἱερ(ε)ώσυνος `priesterly' (hell.); c) the adjective ἱερευτικός `priesterly (pap.); d) the denominatives ἱερεύω `offer, devote' (Il.) with ἱέρευσις (sch.) and ἱερεύσιμος (Plu. 2, 729d, besides θύσιμος; Arbenz Die Adj. auf - ιμος 94), or from ἱερός, ἱερά; ἱερεώομαι, ἱερεώσασθαι `be priest' (hell.; Schulze Symb. phil. Danielsson 304 = Kl. Schr. 325). - 2. ἱερόλας = ἱερεύς (S. Fr. 57; uncertain; on the formation Chantraine Formation 238). - 3. ἱερῖτιν καθαρμοῦ δεομένην, ἱκέτιν H. (A. Fr. 93). - 4. ἱερατικός `priesterly, hieratic' (Pl. Plt. 290d, Arist.; cf. also ἱερατεύω, ἱερατεία below). - 5. Ι῝ερυς PN (Leumann Glotta 32, 220). - 6. Several denomin.: a) ἱερεύω, cf. om ἱερεύς; b) ἱεράομαι care for the victims ( ἱερά)' (Hdt., Th.); c) ἱεράζω `id.' (Ion. islands), Boeot. ἱαρειάδδω, prob. from ἱαρεία; d) ἱερόω `consecrate' (Att., Locr. etc.) with ἱέρωμα `consecration' (Cret., Epid. etc.), ἱερωτός (Thess.); e) ἱερίζω = καθαίρω H. (s. ἁγνίτης) with ἱεριστής `who cares for the ἱερα' and ἱερισμός `holy service' (hell.); f) ἱερατεύω `be priest' with ἱερατεία, ἱεράτευμα, ἱερατεῖον; ἱεριτεύω `id.'; ἱερωτεύω `id.' with ἱερωτεία; all dialectical, hell.; on the formation Schwyzer 732, Solmsen Glotta 1, 80.Etymology: The different meanings, partly also the variation in form induced many scholars to split ἱερός in two or even in three words. Thus one has because of the long anlaut in ἱ̄ερὸν ἰχθύν Π 407, ἱαρὸς ὄρνις (Alkm. Fr. 26) and ἱερὸς ὄρ. (AP 7, 171), which can be easily explained as metr. lengthening, assumed a special Ϝῑερός `rapid, quick', from where ἱέραξ `hawk' (s. v.). In the meaning `strong, forceful' ἱερός would however be identical with Skt. iṣirá- etwa `strong, active'; here also Celtic river names like Isara (Krahe Beitr. z. Namenforschung 4, 121f.). A third ἱερός, as `holy', would have connections with Italic and Germanic, e. g. Osc. aisusis `sacrifiis', Paelign. aisis, Umbr. erus `dis', OHG ēra ` Ehre'. Thus esp. Schulze Q. 207ff. after Ahrens Phil. 27, 585ff., Solmsen Unt. 147ff. For uniform origin, though in parts different, Kuhn KZ 2, 274, Meillet Zeitschr. celt. Phil. 10, 309, Devoto Studi etr. 5, 316, v. Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 21f., Specht in Schaeder ZDMG 94, 408, Duchesne-Guillemin Mélanges Boisacq 1, 333ff., who as support of the old comparison with Skt. iṣirá- pointed to the agreement between ἱερὸν μένος and Skt. iṣiréṇa mánasā (instr.). On which now R. Schmitt Dichtung u. Dichtersprache 111-114. - Kretschmer Glotta 11, 278ff. (s. also Glotta 30, 88) considered ἱερός as cross of Gr. * aisaros, * eiseros `divine' (with Etr. aesar `god' and Osc. aisusis etc.) and an IE word for `strong' (= Skt. iṣirá-). - See P. Wülfing von Martitz, Glotta 38 (1960) 272-307 and 39 (1961)24-43; s. also Belardi Doxa 3, 207. J.P. Locher, Unters. zυ ἱερός haupts. bei Homer (Berne 1963). The change ἱερός, ἱαρός, ἰ̄ρός (IE * iseros, *isr̥os, *isrós ?) Schwyzer 482 and 243; Ramat, Sprache 8 (1962) 4-28 connects Skt. iṣṇāti `set in movement', which gives * ish₁ro-. Lesbian ἶρος must be due to assimilation. Dot. ἱαρός is due to dev. before r. On the aspiration ibd. 219f. On the meaning (against ἅγιος, ἁγνός) Nilsson Gr. Rel. 1, 61ff.; also J. Chr. Bolkestein Ο῝σιος en εὑσεβής. diss. Amsterdam 1936, Palmer Eranos 53, 4ff., Defradas Rev. de phil. 81, 208ff. - Older lit. in Bq. García Ramón, Akten VII. Fachtagung, Innsbruck 1992, 183-205, connects 1. eis- (Pok. 299f.) `set in motion', i. e. Skt. iṣṇāti, Gr. ἰνάω (ῑ-), which gives * h₁ish₂-ro-, but assumes that between s and cons. a laryngeal was lost, giving ἰ̃ ρος etc.; - ερος and - αρος would be replacements.Page in Frisk: 1,713-714Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἱερός
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39 ἰ̄θύς
ἰ̄θύςGrammatical information: adj.Meaning: `straight, just', also adv. (beside rare ἰθύ, ἰθέως) `straightforward' (Il.; cf. on εὑθύς); superl. ἰθύντατα (Hom.; after ἰθύνω?, diff. Schwyzer 534).Compounds: Often as 1. member (s. Strömberg Prefix Studies 156), e. g. ἰθυ-ωρίη, see on εὑθυωρία. ἰθυ-βέλεια epithet of Artemis `whose arrows go straight' (ZPE 88, 1991, 70 l. 11, Ia).Derivatives: 1. ἰθύ̄ς f. `straight direction, enterprise', only in acc. ἀν' ἰθύν, πᾶσαν ἐπ' ἰθύν etc. (Hom.); for the explanation Schwyzer 463 w. n. 8, Frisk Eranos 43, 221. 2. ἰθύτης f. `id.' (Aret.). Denomin. verbs: 1. ἰθύω, aor. ἰθῦσαι, also with ἐπι-, `go straight, be eager, desire' (Il.); 2. ἰθύνω, aor. ἰθῦναι, pass. ἰθυνθῆναι, also with prefix, δι-, ἐξ-, ἐπ-, κατ-ιθύνω etc., `make straight, direct, steer, lead' (Il.; Schwyzer 733) with ἰθυντήρ `who steers, leader' (Theoc., A. R.), f. ἰθύντειρα (Orph. A. 352), adj. - τήριος `steering, leading' (S. Ichn. 73); also ἰθύντωρ (Orph.), ἰθύντης (H.) `id.'; postverbal ἴθυνα = εὔθυνα (Chios V-IVa).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The comparison with Skt. sādhú- `straight, just' (beside sā́dhati, sādhnoti `come to a goal') with Skt. zero grade in sídhyati `id.', ptc. siddha-, gives * s(e)Hdh-; Pok. 892. (Earlier reconstructions with a long diphtong can now be forgotten.) Here perhaps also Arm. aǰ `dexter, straight' \< *seh₂dhi̯o-, poss. *sHdhi̯o- (Lidén Armen. Stud. 75f.). Older lit. in Bq. Wrong Sommer IF 11, 208, Wood ClassPhil. 7, 324, id. Mod. langu. notes 18, 13f. From this form the Greek forms cannot be explained. A Cret. fem. εἰθεῖα confirmes a form *εἰθύς, Lamberterie (1990) 287f. Cf. εἶθαρ, εὐθύς.Page in Frisk: 1,716Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἰ̄θύς
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40 ἰόμωροι
Grammatical information: pl.Meaning: adjunct of the Άργεῖοι (Δ 242, Ξ 479).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The explanation of the scholl. as `famous for their arrows' fails for the shortness of the ἰ- (on the contents also Bechtel Lex. s. v.). The added epithet ἀπειλάων ἀκόρητοι suggests (?) ἰά, ἰή `crying'; so does the expression βοην ἀγαθός and ὑλακό-μωροι ( κύνες ξ 29, π 4). Thus Ehrlich Sprachgeschichte 48, Bechtel Lex. s. v., Theander Eranos 15, 99ff. a. n. Cf. also Leumann Hom. Wörter 37 and 272 n. 18. On the 2. member s. ἐγχεσί-μωρος.Page in Frisk: 1,729Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἰόμωροι
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Eranos — (griechisch ἔρανος) war im antiken Griechenland ursprünglich (etwa bei Homer oder Pindar) ein Freundschaftsmahl mit einer besonderen „Atmosphäre“, an dessen Kosten sich alle Teilnehmer gleichermaßen beteiligten. Dabei bedeutet „Kosten“ nicht,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
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