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1 μυιοσόβου
μυιοσόβοςflapping away flies: masc /fem /neut gen sg -
2 πτεροδόνητα
πτεροδόνητοςmoved by flapping wings: neut nom /voc /acc pl -
3 πτεροδόνητος
πτεροδόνητοςmoved by flapping wings: masc /fem nom sg -
4 πτερυγίσματα
πτερύγισμαflapping of the wings: neut nom /voc /acc pl -
5 μυιοσόβος
μυιο-σόβος, ον,A flapping away flies, AP9.764 (Paul. Sil.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > μυιοσόβος
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6 πτεροδόνητος
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > πτεροδόνητος
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7 πτερύγισμα
A flapping of the wings, cj. for πτέρισμα in Longin.Proll.Heph.p.83 C. (pl.); τερετίς ματα cj. Nauck ( Hermes 24.467).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > πτερύγισμα
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8 ῥιπή
A swing or force with which anything is thrown, ὅσση δ' αἰγανέης ῥιπὴ.. τέτυκται as far as is the flight of a javelin, Il.16.589;λᾶος ὑπὸ ῥιπῆς 12.462
, Od.8.192; πέτριναι ῥ. E. Hel. 1123 (lyr.); βελέων ῥ. Pi.N.1.68; ὑπὸ ῥιπῆς.. Βορέαο the sweep or rush of the N. wind, Il.15.171, 19.358, cf. B.5.46;κυμάτων ῥιπαὶ ἀνέμων τε Pi.P.4.195
, cf. Parth.2.20, Fr.88.2;ῥ. ἀνέμων Id.P.9.48
, S.Ant. 137 (lyr., here metaph. of gusts of passion, cf. 930); ῥ. Διόθεν τεύχουσα φόβον storm, A.Pr. 1089 (anap.), cf. A.R.1.1016; ῥ. πυρός rush of fire, Il.21.12;ἀνδρός 8.355
; , 849; κεραυνῶν, χαλάζης, Opp.H.3.21, Q.S.14.77; ὑπὸ ῥιπῇς Ἀφροδίτης, of love, Opp.H.4.141; νυχιᾶν ( ἐννυχιᾶν Lachm.) ἀπὸ ῥιπᾶν from the night storms, i.e. from the North, the land of darkness and storms, S.OC 1248 (lyr., but Sch. understands Ῥιπᾶν, v. Ῥῖπαι).2 πτερύγων ῥιπαί flapping of wings, A.Pr. 126 (anap.), cf. E.Fr.594.4; buzz of a gnat's wing, A.Ag. 893; of the lyre's quivering notes, Pi.P.1.10.b of any rapid movement,ῥ. ποδῶν E.IT 885
(lyr.); ῥ. ὠκυάλῳ, of a dolphin, Opp.H.2.535; of a bird's wing,οὐδὲ τινάσσει ῥιπήν A.R.2.935
; ἐν ῥ. ὀφθαλμοῦ the twinkling of an eye, 1 Ep.Cor. 15.52. -
9 πέτομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to fly' (Il.).Other forms: Aor. πτάσθαι, πτέσθαι (all Il.); to this pres. πέταμαι (poet. since Sapph., Arist.) with aor. πετασθῆναι (Arist., LXX), ἴπταμαι (late; s. v.); aor. act. πτῆναι, ptc. πτάς etc. (poet. Hes., also hell. prose); fut. πτήσομαι (IA.), πετήσομαι (Ar.), perf. κατ-έπτηκα (Men.).Compounds: Very often w. prefix, e.g. ἀνα-, ἀπο-, δια-, εἰσ-, ἐκ-, κατα-, ὑπερ-. Compounds: a. - πέτης, Dor. - πέτας m.., e.g. ὑψι-πέτης, - ας m. `flying high' (Hom., Pi.), enlarged - ήεις (Hom.); b. - πετής, e.g. ὑπερπετ-ής `flying over' (hell.); c. ἐκπετ-ήσιμος `ready to fly' (Ar. a.o.; hypothesis on the formation in Arbenz 60); d. ἀερσι-πότης and - πότη-τος `flying high' (Hes., AP, Norm.); in spite of Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 95 rather to ποτάομαι as from ποτή.Derivatives: 1. ποτή f. `flying, flight' (ε 337, h. Merc. 544 [v. l. πτερύγεσσι]); 2. πτῆσις f. `id.' (A., Arist.) with πτήσιμος (Jul.; Arbenz 61); πτῆμα n. `id.' (Suid.). 3. Adj. w. νο-suffix: a. πτηνός, Dor. πτᾱνός `winged, fledged' (Pi., trag., Pl.); b. πετεινός, - ηνός `id.' (Thgn.; Πετήνη Att. shipsname [inscr.]), hardly from *πέτος (cf. Chantraine Form. 196, Benveniste Origines 14), but rather direct from πέτομαι after φαεινός, ὀρεινός a.o.; πετηνός after πτηνός?; c. πετε-ηνός, - εινός `id.' (Il.), w. diektasis (Risch $ 35 d); d. ποτᾱνός `id.' (Pi., Epich., trag. in lyr.; - ηνός ep. poetry in Pl. Phdr. 252 b), prob. rather after ποτάομαι as with Detschew KZ 63, 228 from the rare ποτή. -- 4. Deverbat.: ποτάομαι, - έομαι, also w. ἀμφι-, περι-, ἐκ- a.o., `to fly, to flap' (Il.); πωτάομαι, also w. ἐκ-, ἐπι-, ὑπερ-, `id.' (Μ 287, h. Ap. 442 a.o.; cf. Schwyzer 719 n. 3); to this πωτήεις `flapping' (Nonn.), also πωτήματα pl. `flight' (A. Eu. 250; usu. with Dindorf corrected in ποτ-). -- On πτερόν, πτέρυξ s. vv.Etymology: Beside the thematic πέτ-ο-μαι, πτ-έ-σθαι stands the athematic zero grade root-aorist πτά-σθαι, ἔ-πτα-το, πτά-μενος wie φθά-μενος ( φθί-μενος, φθί-σθαι, ἔ-φθι-το). The corresponding full grade in πτῆ-ναι, ἔ-πτᾱ-ν, πτή-σομαι can be old (s. however below). More doubtful is the originality of the disyll. πέτα-μαι, as analogy to πτά-σθαι after πτέ-σθαι: πέτο-μαι may be considered. Certain innovations are ἴπταμαι (after ἵσταμαι) and πετή-σομαι (after πέτομαι). Details w. lit. in Schwyzer 742 a. 681 w. n. 9. -- With πέτομαι agree formally, partly also semantically, Skt., OIr., Lat. a. Celt. forms, e.g. Skt. pátati, Av. pataiti `fly, fall, attack, hurry etc.', Lat. petō `move somewhere, hurry, look for, desire', OWelsh hedant `volant'; doubtful on the contrary the in any case diff. built Hitt. piddāi- (pittii̯ami, pittāizzi usw.) `run, hurry, flee'. Thus ποτέομαι and Skt. patáyati `fly, hurry' agree; however πωτάομαι is independent of Skt. pātáyati `let fall, throw down'. Further the Greek a. Skt. systems are apart. Beside the zero grade thematic Aorist πτ-έσθαι, ἐ-πτ-όμην stands in Skt. an also zero grade and thematic but reduplicated aor. a-pa-pt-at. The zero grade πτᾰ- in πτά-σθαι is found in forms like pa-pti-ma (pf. 1. pl.) (IE pth₂-); the corresponding full grade ptā- is however not represented in Skt. (so πτῆ-ναι analogical after φθῆ-ναι, στῆ-ναι a.o.?, Schwyzer 742). Thus the disyll. πετᾰ- in πέτα-μαι and pati- (e.g. fut. pati-ṣyáti) go without historical connection side by side. -- Further forms w. rich lit. in WP. 2, 19ff., Pok. 825f., W.-Hofmann s. petō. Cf. πίπτω, not πίτυλος.Page in Frisk: 2,521-522Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέτομαι
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