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81 ἄν
1I. ἄν (after relatives ἐάν [q.v.] is oft. used for ἄν, but the mss. vary greatly, s. B-D-F §107; 377; Mlt. 42ff, 165ff; Mayser 152f; Crönert 130f; Thackeray 67; Dssm., NB 30ff [BS 202ff]). A particle peculiar to Gk. (Hom.+) denoting aspect of contingency, incapable of translation by a single English word; it denotes that the action of the verb is dependent on some circumstance or condition; the effect of ἄν upon the meaning of its clause depends on the mood and tense/aspect of the verb w. which it is used. The NT use of ἄν corresponds in the main to older Gk., although the rich variety of its employment is limited, as is generally the case in later Greek. In certain constructions (s. aβ) an aspect of certainty is indicated, suggesting the gloss would. In most other instances aspects of varying possibility or conditionality find expression in ways that can be rendered ever, but with other glosses required when ἄν is used in conjunction with other particles.ⓐ ἄν w. aor. or impf. indic.α. denoting repeated action in past time, but only under certain given conditions, esp. after relatives (B-D-F §367; Rob. index): aor. (Gen 30:42; Num 9:17; 1 Km 14:47; Ezk 10:11) ὅσοι ἂν ἥψαντο αὐτοῦ, ἐσῴζοντο whoever touched him was cured Mk 6:56. Impf. (Ezk 1:20; 1 Macc 13:20; Tob 7:11) ὅπου ἂν εἰσεπορεύετο εἰς κώμας wherever he went (as he was accustomed to do—ADebrunner, D. hellenist. Nebensatziterativpräteritum mit ἄν: Glotta 11, 1920, 1–28) into villages Mk 6:56. καθότι ἄν τις χρείαν εἶχεν as anyone was in need Ac 2:45; 4:35. Similarly ὡς ἂν ἤγεσθε (v.l. ἀνήγεσθε) 1 Cor 12:2. Cp. also ὅταν 1bγ and δ.β. in the apodosis of a contrary to fact (unreal) condition w. εἰ (B-D-F §360; but ἄν is not always used [s. the vv.ll. J 18:36]: §360, 1; Mlt. 199ff; PMelcher, De sermone Epicteteo 1905, 75); it is foundא. w. impf. (4 Macc 17:7; Bar 3:13; ParJer 5:20; GrBar 6:6; ApcMos 39) οὗτος εἰ ἦν προφήτης, ἐγίνωσκεν ἄν if he were a prophet, he would (now) know (but he does not) Lk 7:39. εἰ ἔχετε πίστιν …, ἐλέγετε ἄν if you had faith …, you would say 17:6. εἰ ἐπιστεύετε Μωϋσεῖ, ἐπιστεύετε ἂν ἐμοί J 5:46. εἰ ἐμὲ ᾔδειτε, καὶ τὸν πατέρα μου ἄν ᾔδειτε 8:19; cp. vs. 42; 9:41; 15:19. εἰ ἔτι ἀνθρώποις ἤρεσκον, Χριστοῦ δοῦλος οὐκ ἂν ἤμην Gal 1:10; cp. 3:21. εἰ ἑαυτοὺς διεκρίνομεν, οὐκ ἂν ἐκρινόμεθα 1 Cor 11:31. εἰ ἦν ἐπὶ γῆς, οὐδʼ ἂν ἦν ἱερεύς if he were on earth, he would not even be a priest Hb 8:4; cp. 4:8; 8:7; 11:15.ב. w. aor., placing the assumption in the past (Gen 30:27; Wsd 11:25; Jdth 11:2; 4 Macc 2:20; TestJob 7:9 al.; ParJer 5:5; GrBar 8:7; PGiss 47, 17) εἰ ἐγένοντο αἱ δυνάμεις, πάλαι ἂν … μετενόησαν if the miracles had been performed, they would long ago have repented Mt 11:21. εἰ ἔγνωσαν, οὐκ ἂν ἐσταύρωσαν 1 Cor 2:8; cp. Ro 9:29 (Is 1:9). εἰ ἐγνώκειτε, οὐκ ἂν κατεδικάσατε if you had recognized, you would not have condemned Mt 12:7. εἰ ἠγαπᾶτέ με, ἐχάρητε ἄν if you loved me, you would have rejoiced J 14:28; cp. 11:21. The plpf. for aor. indic. (PGiss 79 II, 6 εἰ δυνατόν μοι ἦν, οὐκ ἂν ὠκνήκειν; BGU 1141, 27f) εἰ ἦσαν, μεμενήκεισαν ἄν 1J 2:19; cp. J 11:21 v.l.—In κἀγὼ ἐλθὼν σὺν τόκῳ ἂν αὐτὸ ἔπραξα Lk 19:23, ἐλθών functions as an unreal-temporal protasis (B-D-F §360, 2); cp. καὶ ἐλθὼν ἐγὼ ἐκομισάμην ἂν τὸ ἐμόν Mt 25:27. Sim. ἐπεὶ οὐκ ἂν ἐπαύσαντο προσφερόμεναι; where ἐπεί functions as protasis, otherwise (i.e. if the sacrifices had really brought about a lasting atonement) would they not have ceased to offer sacrifices? Hb 10:2.ⓑ ἄν w. subjunc. after relatives, the rel. clause forming virtually the protasis of a conditional sentence (B-D-F §380, 1) of the future more vivid or present general type.α. w. fut. or impf. in apodosis, to show that the condition and its results are thought of as in the future, of single and repeated action (IG XIV, 865 [VI B.C.] ὸ̔ς δʼ ἄν με κλέψῃ, τυφλὸς ἔσται; TestAbr B 4 p. 109, 10 [Stone p. 66]). ὸ̔ς δʼ ἂν ποιήσῃ καὶ διδάξῃ, οὗτος μέγας κληθήσεται but whoever does and teaches=if a person does and teaches it Mt 5:19. ὸ̔ς ἂν ἐσθίῃ …, ἔνοχος ἔσται 1 Cor 11:27. οὓς ἐὰν (v.l. ἂν) δοκιμάσητε, τούτους πέμψω 16:3—Mt 10:11; 1 Cor 16:2.β. w. pres. in apodosis, to show that the condition and its results involve repeated action, regardless of the time element: ἃ ἂν ἐκεῖνος ποιῇ, ταῦτα καὶ ὁ υἱὸς ὁμοίως ποιεῖ whatever he does, the Son does likewise J 5:19. ὅπου ἐὰν (v.l. ἂν) αὐτὸν καταλάβῃ, ῥήσσει αὐτόν wherever it seizes him Mk 9:18. ὑμῖν ἐστὶν ἡ ἐπαγγελία …, ὅσους ἂν προσκαλέσηται κύριος Ac 2:39. ὸ̔ς ἐὰν (v.l. ἂν) βουληθῇ φίλος εἶναι τοῦ κόσμου, ἐχθρὸς τοῦ θεοῦ καθίσταται whoever wishes to be a friend of the world Js 4:4. Cp. ὅπου ἄν 3:4 v.l.—Where ὅς or ὅστις appears w. subj. without ἄν (but cp. IG XII/1, 671 ὸ̔ς ἀνασπαράξῃ τ. τάφον; CPR I, 24, 33; 25, 19; AcThom 93 [Aa II/2, 206], 19; Is 7:2; 31:4), the reading that gives the fut. ind. is prob. the right one: ὅστις τηρήσῃ (v.l.-σει) Js 2:10. ὅσοι (without ἄν PPetr I, 13, 3;5; CPR I, 237, 3; IPergamon 249, 26 ὅσοι … ἐγλίπωσι τὴν πόλιν; Vett. Val. 125, 16): ὅσοι μετανοήσωσιν καὶ καθαρίσωσιν Hs 8, 11, 3 (s. W. and Joly app. for the textual tradition). See Reinhold 108; B-D-F §380, 4.ⓒ In temporal clauses ἄν is found w. the subjunct. when an event is to be described which can and will occur, but whose occurrence cannot yet be assumed w. certainty. Soα. ὅταν (=ὅτε ἄν; s. ὅταν) w. pres. subjunct. to indicate regularly recurring action (Wsd 12:18): ὅταν ἄρτον ἐσθίωσιν whenever they eat bread Mt 15:2. ὅταν λαλῇ τὸ ψεῦδος whenever he tells a lie J 8:44. ὅταν λέγῃ τις whenever anyone says 1 Cor 3:4.—W. aor. subjunct. to express action in the future which is thought of as already completed (Sir Prol. ln. 22; Tob 8:21) ὅταν ποιήσητε πάντα when you have done Lk 17:10. ὅταν ἔλθῃ ὁ κύριος when the owner has come Mt 21:40; ὅταν ἔλθῃ ἐν τῇ δόξῃ Mk 8:38; cp. J 4:25; 16:13; Ac 23:35. ὅταν πάλιν εἰσαγάγῃ τὸν πρωτότοκον Hb 1:6.β. ἡνίκα ἄν every time that (Ex 1:10; 33:22; 34:24 al.; POxy 104, 26 [96 A.D.]; PTebt 317, 18 [174/75] ἡνίκα ἐὰν εἰς τὸν νόμον παραγένηται). ἡνίκα ἂν (also ἐάν mss.) ἀναγινώσκηται Μωϋσῆς every time that Moses is read aloud 2 Cor 3:15; cp. vs. 16.γ. ὁσάκις ἐάν as often as: ὁσάκις ἐὰν (also ἄν mss.) πίνητε 1 Cor 11:25. ὁσάκις ἐὰν (also ἄν mss.) ἐσθίητε vs. 26.δ. ὡς ἄν as soon as (PHib 59, 2 [c. 245 B.C.] ὡς ἂν λάβῃς; 66, 4; PEleph 9, 3 [III B.C.]; PParis 46, 18 [143 B.C.]; BGU 1209, 13 [23 B.C.]; Josh 2:14; Jdth 11:15; 1 Macc 15:9): ὡς ἂν πορεύωμαι as soon as I travel Ro 15:24. ὡς ἂν ἔλθω as soon as I come 1 Cor 11:34. ὡς ἂν ἀφίδω τὰ περὶ ἐμέ as soon as I see how it will go with me Phil 2:23. ὡς ἐάν (PFay 111, 16 [95/96]) Hv 3, 8, 9; 3, 13, 2.—ἀφʼ οὗ ἄν after Lk 13:25.—In the case of temporal particles indicating a goal, viz. ἕως οὗ, ἄχρις (οὗ), μέχρις (οὗ), the mss. show considerable variation; the addition of ἄν is prob. correct only in rare cases (see B-D-F §383, 2). Only ἕως ἄν (PPetr II, 40a, 28 [III B.C.] ἕως ἂν ὑγιαίνοντας ὑμᾶς ἴδωμεν; Gen 24:14, 19; 49:10; Ex 23:30 al.) has certain attestation: μείνατε ἕως ἂν ἐξέλθητε stay until you go away Mt 10:11. ἕως ἂν ἴδωσιν τὴν βασιλείαν τοῦ θεοῦ Lk 9:27.—Mt 2:13; 5:26. ἕως ἂν λάβῃ Js 5:7 v.l.—ἄχρις οὗ (+ ἄν v.l.) ἔλθῃ 1 Cor 11:26. ἄχρις οὗ (+ ἄν v.l.) θῇ 15:25; ἄχρις οὗ ἂν ἥξω Rv 2:25 (v.l. ἄχρι). ἄχρις ἂν ἔλθῃ (cp. BGU 830, 13 [I A.D.] ἄχρις ἄν σοι ἔλθω) Gal 3:19 v.l.—πρὶν ἄν: πρὶν ἢ ἂν (vv.ll. πρὶν ἄν, πρὶν ἢ, only πρὶν or ἕως ἂν) ἴδῃ τὸν Χριστόν Lk 2:26 (B-D-F §383, 3).ⓓ In purpose clauses the Attic (EHermann, Griech. Forschungen I, 1912, 267f; JKnuenz, De enuntiatis Graec. finalibus 1913, 13ff; 26ff) ὅπως ἄν, esp. freq. in earlier ins (Meisterhans3-Schw. 254), has become quite rare (LXX still rather often: Gen 18:19; 50:20; Ex 33:13; Jer 7:23 al.) ὅπως ἂν ἀποκαλυφθῶσιν διαλογισμοί Lk 2:35. ὅπως ἂν ἔλθωσιν καιροί Ac 3:20.—15:17 (Am 9:12 v.l.); Ro 3:4 (Ps 50:6); Mt 6:5 v.l.ⓔ The opt. w. ἄν in a main clause (potential opt.) has almost wholly disappeared; a rare ex. is εὐξαίμην (v.l. εὐξάμην) ἄν Ac 26:29 in Paul’s speech before Agrippa (literary usage; s. B-D-F §385, 1; also Rob. 938; Themist. 6 p. 80 D.—On the rarity of the potential opt. in pap, LXX, Apost. Fathers see CHarsing, De Optat. in Chartis Aeg. Usu, diss. Bonn 1910, 28; Reinhold 111). Cp.—also in the literary lang. of Lk—direct rhetor. questions (Gen 23:15; Job 19:23; Sir 25:3; 4 Macc 7:22; 14:10 v.l.; TestJob 13:5 τίς ἄν δώῃ 35:5) πῶς γὰρ ἂν δυναίμην; Ac 8:31. τί ἂν θέλοι οὗτος λέγειν; 17:18. Dg has also preserved the opt. as a mark of elegant style (2:3, 10; 3:3f; 4:5; 7:2f; 8:3). MPol 2:2 has τίς οὐκ ἂν θαυμάσειεν;—More freq. in an indirect question, after an impf. or histor. pres. (B-D-F §386, 1; Rob. 938f) τὸ τί ἂν θέλοι καλεῖσθαι αὐτό what he wanted the child’s name to be Lk 1:62. τίς ἂν εἴη περὶ οὗ λέγει J 13:24. τὸ τίς ἂν εἴη μείζων αὐτῶν which of them was the greatest Lk 9:46; cp. 18:36 v.l. τί ἂν ποιήσαιεν τῷ Ἰησοῦ what they should do to Jesus 6:11. τί ἂν γένοιτο τοῦτο Ac 5:24. τί ἂν εἴη τὸ ὅραμα 10:17. (IMagnMai 215 [I A.D.] ἐπερωτᾷ … τί ἂν ποιήσας … ἀδεῶς διατελοίη; Esth 3:13c πυθομένου δέ μου … πῶς ἂν ἀχθείη τοῦτο.)ⓕ The use of ἄν w. inf. and ptc., freq. in earlier Gk., is not found in the NT at all (B-D-F §396); ἵνα μὴ δόξω ὡς ἂν (or ὡσὰν, q.v.) ἐκφοβεῖν ὑμᾶς 2 Cor 10:9 is surely to be expl. in such a way that ὡς ἂν=Lat. quasi: I would not want it to appear as if I were frightening you; s. B-D-F §453, 3; Mlt. 167.—On εἰ μήτι ἂν (sc. γένηται) ἐκ συμφώνου except perhaps by agreement 1 Cor 7:5 s. B-D-F §376; Mlt. 169.—M-M.2II. ἄν for ἐάν is rare in Hellen. Gk. (B-D-F §107; Mlt. 43 n. 2; cp. Hyperid. 4, 5; 5, 15; Teles p. 31, 6; Plut., Mor. 547a; Epict., index Schenkl; pap [Mayser 152]; ins, esp. of the Aegean Sea [Rdm.2 198, 3; s. also SIG index IV 204]; 1 Esdr 2:16; 4 Macc 16:11; Jos., Ant. 4, 70; 219; Test12Patr; Mel. Fgm. 8b 24), but appears J 13:20; 16:23; 20:23; as v.l. 5:19; 9:22; 12:32; 19:12; Ac 9:2; and IMg 10:1.—Mlt. 63, 1.—M-M. -
82 ὧδε
ὧδε (Hom.+) adv. of ὅδε, in our lit. adv. of place (Hippocr. [Kühner-G. I p. 444, 3] et al.; Hdt. 1, 49; 5, 48; Pla., Protagoras 328d; Herodas 7, 113; 126; ins, pap, LXX; pseudepigr.; Ar. 17, 1; Ath. 13, 1).① a position or point that is relatively near, hereⓐ in the sense to this place, hither (as early as Od. 1, 182; also PSI 599, 3 [III B.C.]; POxy 295, 3; LXX; En 14:24 al.; TestAbr A 16 p. 96, 16 [Stone p. 40]; 98, 8 [St. p. 44]; TestAbr B 7 p. 111, 4 [St. p. 70], B 11 p. 115, 17 [St. p. 78]; ParJer 7:4; ApcEsdr 5:10 p. 30, 3 Tdf.; ApcSed 9:4.—B-D-F §103) ἦλθες ὧδε Mt 8:29. Cp. 14:18; 17:17; 22:12; Mk 11:3; Lk 9:41; 14:21; 19:27; J 6:25; 20:27; Ac 9:21; Rv 4:1; 11:12; Hs 5, 1, 1; GJs 4:3. ἕως ὧδε to this place, this far (TestAbr A 18 p. 100, 16 [Stone p. 48]; Ar. 17, 1; cp. ἕως 3b) Lk 23:5; 1 Cl 20:7. ὧδε κἀκεῖ here and there, hither and thither Hm 5, 2, 7; Hs 9, 3, 1; cp. 6, 1, 6; 6, 2, 7.—Temporal sense: ὡς τοῦ σωτῆρος μέχρι ὧδε εἰρηκότος inasmuch as the Savior has spoken up to this point GMary 463, 4.ⓑ in the sense in this place (Herodas 2, 98; 3, 96; SIG 985, 54; PHib 46, 15 [III B.C.]; PGrenf II, 36, 17 [95 B.C.]; BGU 1097, 11; 14; PFay 123, 10; LXX; TestAbr A 13 p. 92, 7 [Stone p. 32]; ParJer 3:16; Apion in Jos., C. Ap. 2, 10; B-D-F §103; Rob. 299; BKeil, Her 43, 1908 p. 553, 1) Mt 12:6, 41f; 14:17; 16:28; 17:4ab; 20:6; 24:2; Mk 9:1, 5; 13:2; 16:6; Lk 9:33; 11:31f; 15:17; J 6:9; Ac 9:14; Hs 9, 11, 1b. ὧδε= here on earth Hb 13:14. τὰ μὲν ὧδε … τὰ δὲ ἐκεῖ AcPl Ha 2, 23. καθίζειν ὧδε (cp. καθίζω 3) Mk 14:32; Hv 3, 1, 8. τὰ ὧδε Col 4:9. ὧδε … ἐκεῖ here … there (Plut., Mor. 34a; Celsus 2, 43) Mk 13:21; Lk 17:21, 23; Js 2:3. ὧδε … ὧδε Mt 24:23 (Callim., Epigr. 282 Pf.; Herodas 4, 42 ὧδε καὶ ὧδε). Made more definite by a prepositional phrase ὧδε πρὸς ἡμᾶς Mk 6:3. Cp. 8:4; Lk 4:23.② a ref. to a present event, object, or cicumstance, in this case, at this point, on this occasion, under these circumstances (Herodas 5, 85; Crates, Ep. 6; Quint. Smyrn. 13, 5; PFay 117, 12 [108 A.D.]; PMeyer 22, 6) ὧδε λοιπόν (cp. Epict. 2, 12, 24) in this case moreover 1 Cor 4:2. ὧδε ἡ σοφία ἐστίν (lit. there is wisdom [i.e. someth. deep] here) this calls for discernment Rv 13:18; cp. 17:9. ὧδέ ἐστιν ἡ ὑπομονή this calls for endurance or here is (an opportunity for) endurance (s. ὑπομονή 1) 13:10; 14:12. ὧδε … ἐκεῖ in one case … in the other Hb 7:8. λάχετέ μοι ὧδε now, cast lots for me GJs 10:2.—DELG s.v. 2 ὥς. M-M. -
83 νῦν
1 now, referring to present, immediate past, or immediate future.1 adv. of time.aνῦν πέφανται οὐκ ἄμμορος ἀμφὶ πάλᾳ κυναγέτας N. 6.13
“ ὥσπερ τόδε δέρμα με νῦν περιπλανᾶται θηρός” (Stephanus: μίμνοι codd.) I. 6.47 combined with δέ and καί, εἰ δ' ἀριστεύει μὲν ὕδωρ, κτεάνων δὲ χρυσὸς αἰδοιέστατος, νῦν δὲ Θήρων ἅπτεται Ἡρακλέος σταλᾶν ( νῦν γε v. l.) O. 3.43νῦν δὲ πὰρ Αἰγιόχῳ κάλλιστον ὄλβον ἀμφέπων ναίει I. 4.58
“ νῦν δ' εὐρυλείμων πότνιά σοι Λιβύα δέξεται εὐκλέα νύμφαν soon P. 9.55 ἦ μάλα δὴ μετὰ καὶ νῦν afterwards as now P. 4.64μάκαρ δὲ καὶ νῦν, ὅτι P. 5.20
ἤτοι μεταίξαις σὲ καὶ νῦν N. 5.43
[ νῦν codd., νυν corr. Er. Schmid. N. 6.8]καὶ νῦν ἐν Ἄρει μαρτυρήσαι κεν πόλις Αἴαντος I. 5.48
τὸ καὶ νῦν φέρει λόγον I. 8.61
b c. impv., exclam., simm., emphasising urgency.ἔπεχε νῦν σκοπῷ τόξον, ἄγε θυμέ O. 2.89
ὄτρυνον νῦν ἑταίρους O. 6.87
ἀλλὰ νῦν ἐπίνειμαι O. 9.5
μὴ νῦν λαλάγει τὰ τοιαῦτ O. 9.40
ἴσθι νῦν O. 11.11
ἐπακοοῖτε νῦν (Bergk: ἐπάκοοι νῦν codd.) O. 14.15 μελαντειχέα νῦν δόμον Φερσε-φόνας ἔλθ, Ἀχοῖ O. 14.20
γνῶθι νῦν τὰν Οἰδιπόδα σοφίαν P. 4.263
ἔλα νῦν μοι πεδόθεν I. 5.38
κλῦτε νῦν Pae. 6.58
ἰὴ ἰῆτε νῦν μέτρα παιηόνων ἰῆτε, νέοι Pae. 6.121
Δαμαίνας πα[ῖ, ἐ]να[ισίμ]ῳ νῦν μοι ποδὶ στείχων ἁγέο Παρθ. 2.. μὴ νῦν νεκτα[ρ Παρθ. 2.. θνατῶν. νῦν ψᾶφον ἑλισσομέναν ὁπᾷ κῦμα κατακλύσσει ῥέον (the crux may conceal an impv.) O. 10.9ἰὴ, ἰὴ, νῦν ὁ παντελὴς Ἐνιαυτὸς ὧραί τ' ἐπῆλθον Pae. 1.5
c opposed to some other time, or hypothetical situation.νῦν ἐν καὶ τελευτᾷ O. 7.26
“ ὁ δὲ καμὼν προτέρᾳ πάθᾳ νῦν ἀρείονος ἐνέχεται ὄρνιχος ἀγγελίᾳ” P. 8.49 εἴ ποτ' ἐμᾶν, ὦ Ζεῦ πάτερ, θυμῷ θέλων ἀρᾶν ἄκουσας, νῦν σε, νῦν εὐχαῖς ὑπὸ θεσπεσίαις λίσσομαι” (bis) I. 6.44 combined with various particles,νῦν δ' ἐν αἱμακουρίαις ἀγλααῖσι μέμικται O. 1.90
τεά κεν ἀκλεὴς τιμὰ κατεφυλλορόησεν ποδῶν. νῦν δ' Ὀλυμπίᾳ στεφανωσάμενος O. 12.17
νῦν δ' ἔλπομαι μέν, ἐν θεῷ γε μὰν τέλος O. 13.104
οἱ μὲν πάλαι νῦν δ I. 2.9
τόν ποτε Κιλίκιον θρέψεν πολυώνυμον ἄντρον· νῦν γε μὰν P. 1.17
ἦ κεν ἀμνάσειεν, οἵαις ἐν πολέμοισι μάχαις. νῦν γε μὰν P. 1.50
τότε γὰρ. νῦν γε μὲν ἀλλοδαπᾶν κριτὸν εὑρήσει γυναικῶν ἐν λέχεσιν γένος P. 4.50
ἔτλαν δὲ πένθος οὐ φατόν. ἀλλὰ νῦν μοι Γαιάοχος εὐδίαν ὄπασσεν ἐκ χειμῶνος I. 7.37
ἀλλ' ἁμέρᾳ γὰρ ἐν μιᾷ. νῦν δ αὖ μετὰ χειμέριον ζόφον I. 4.18
, cf. Pae. 2.80 infra.ἐν Νεμέᾳ μὲν πρῶτον νῦν αὖτε Ἰσθμοῦ δεσπότᾳ I. 6.5
ἐν κρυοέσσᾳ συντυχίᾳ. νῦν δ' αὖτις ἀρχαίας ἐπέβασε Πότμος συγγενὴς εὐαμερίας I. 1.39
οὐρανῷ προσπαλαίει νῦν γε πατρῴας ἀπὸ γᾶς. ἐν δὲ χρόνῳ for the present it is true... but.. P. 4.290νῦν μὲν αὐτῷ O. 8.65
2 c. art., pro subs., τῶν νῦν δὲ καὶ Θρασύβουλος πατρῴαν μάλιστα πρὸς στάθμαν ἔβα (byz.: τῶν δὲ νῦν codd.) P. 6.43 τίμαθεν γὰρ τὰ πάλαι τὰ νῦν τ' Παρθ. 2.. ξένον μή τιν κυριώτεροντῶν γε νῦν O. 1.105
παίδων δὲ παῖδες ἔχοιεν αἰεὶ γέρας τό περ νῦν καὶ ἄρειον ὄπιθεν N. 7.101
pro adv.,τὸ νῦν τε καὶ τὸ λοιπὸν P. 5.117
3 fragg. ν]ῦν δ' αὖ γλυκυμάχανον[ (supp. von Arnim) Πα. 2.. νῦν[ Πα. 13. a. 12 ]ει καὶ νῦν τέρας δι[ Πα. 13. c. 9. νῦν δεδ[ Θρ. 2. 5. -
84 ἄλλυδις
A elsewhither, in Hom. only with ἄλλος, ἄ. ἄλλος one hither, another thither, Il.11.486, Od.5.71, cf.A.R.2.980, etc.; τρέπεται χρὼς ἄ. ἄλλῃ his colour changes now one way, now another, Il.13.279; imitated from Hom. by Eup.159.11; later by itself, AP15.24.1 (Simm.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἄλλυδις
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85 ἄφενος
Grammatical information: n.Other forms: m. (after πλοῦτος, Fehrle Phil Woch. 46, 700f).Compounds: εὐηφενής (Il.; the better attested v. l. εὐηγενής is hardly correct; Bechtel, Lex.); also in the PN Δι-, Κλε-, Τιμ-αφένης.Derivatives: (with loss of vowel and remarkable final stress) ἀφνειός (Il.), later ἀφνεός `rich' (Il.). From here retrograde ἄφνος n. (Pi. Fr. 219).Etymology: Uncertain. The connection with Skt. ápnas- n. `possessions, riches' (Bréal MSL 13, 382f.; cf. ὄμπνη; also Pisani Ist. Lomb. 73, 515) is now generally rejected (also as * apsnos). - The word was one of the corner stones of the Pelasgian theory, which can now be abandoned (also Heubeck's variant, the Minoan-Minyan language: Praegraeca 70). The agreement with Hitt. happina(nt)- `rich', is remarkable. The postulated verb hap-(zi) is improbable (Puhvel HED 3, 124f). The Hittite word could be IE (Szemerényi Glotta 33, 1954, 275 - 282). Puhvel's h₁op- is impossible ( h₁- disappears in Hittite); but Lat. opulentus \< * op-en-ent- is improbable: - ulentus is a frequent suffix in Latin, and - ant is very productive in Hittite so that it cannot be projected back into PIE; with it disappears the explanation of - ulentus (I also doubt the dissmilation n - nt, with t after the second n; there are other difficulties in the theory, as the author indicated); the - en- has no clear function and is not found elsewhere after op-; thus the connection of opulentus with the Hittite word disappears. - Irene Balles (HS 110, 1997) starts from *n̥-gʷʰn-o-, parallel to - io- in Skt. ághnyā- `(the valuable animal which is) not to be killed'. (She explains the adj., and the accent, from *n̥gʷʰn-es-o- \> ἀφνεό-, with metrical lengthening in Homer). But she has to explain the full grade from analogy after σθένος, which is improbable; the whole construction is not convincing. - The Greek word is rather IE (cf. archaic εὐηφενής). For Greek a root * h₂bʰen- is the obvious reconstruction. The accent and the form ἀφνεός may be explained following Balles: *h₂bʰnes-ó-, with ablaut as in ἄλγος - ἀλεγεινός (metr. lengthening in Homer is probable as *ἀφνεοιο is impossible in the hexameter and *ἀφνεος, -ν etc. are difficult). Thus the word seem perfectly IE. It cannot be connected with the Hittite word (reading *ḫpina- is doubtful). A loan from Anatolian would have κ-, the φ would be unclear, the s-stem, and the adjective.Page in Frisk: 1,195Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄφενος
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86 πατέω
πατέω fut. πατήσω; 1 aor. ἐπάτησα LXX. Pass. fut. 3 sg. πατηθήσεται (TestZeb); aor. ἐπατήθην (Hom. et al.; pap, LXX; En 1:4; TestLevi 18:12; TestZeb 9:8 v.l.; JosAs 23:8 [cod. A for ἐπάταξε]; AscIs 3:3; Philo, Just.) tread (on) w. feet.① to set foot on, tread, walk, trans.ⓐ tread τὶ someth. (Herodas 8, 74) τὴν ληνόν (s. ληνός) Rv 19:15; pass. 14:20. Of a stone ὁ πατούμενος what is trodden under foot Dg 2:2.ⓑ set foot on, tread of a place (Aeschyl. et al.; LXX) τὴν αὐλήν the court B 2:5 (Is 1:12). τὸ ἁγνευτήριον Ox 840 12; τὸ ἱερόν ibid. 17; 20.② to tread heavily with feet, with implication of destructive intent, trample, trans.ⓐ tread on, trample (Iambl., Vi. Pyth. 31, 193) of the undisciplined swarming of a victorious army through a conquered city. Its heedlessness, which acknowledges no limits, causes π. to take on the sense ‘mistreat, abuse’ (so πατέω in Plut., Tim. 14, 2; Lucian, Lexiph. 10 al.; Philo, In Flacc. 65) and ‘tread contemptuously under foot’ (s. 2b; in Heliod. 4, 19, 8 π. πόλιν actually means plunder a city). τὴν πόλιν πατήσουσιν Rv 11:2; pass. (Jos., Bell. 4, 171 πατούμενα τὰ ἅγια) Lk 21:24 (ὑπὸ ἐθνῶν).ⓑ fig. ext. of a: trample in contempt or disdain (Il. 4, 157 ὅρκια; Soph., Aj. 1335, Antig. 745 al.; Herodian 8, 5, 9; Jos., Bell. 4, 258 τ. νόμους) τὸ τῆς αἰσχύνης ἔνδυμα πατεῖν despise (=throw away w. disdain) the garment of shame (s. αἰσχύνη 1) GEg 252, 57.③ move on foot, walk, tread (not in the sense of ‘taking a walk’) (since Pind., P. 2, 85 ἄλλʼ ἄλλοτε πατέων ὁδοῖς σκολιαῖς, of one who moves against an opponent like a fox, stepping now here and now there, in no straight line) with implication that the experience is not planned, intr. πατεῖν ἐπάνω ὄφεων Lk 10:19 (ἐπάνω 1b and cp. TestLevi 18:12.—Diod S 3, 50, 2f speaks of the danger of death in πατεῖν on ὄφεις).—DELG. M-M. TW. -
87 ὁτέ
ὁτέ adv. (Hom. et al.; ins) marker of a point of time that coincides w. another point of time, anticipating a correlative, at one point, on one occasion. This use is ordinarily found in the structure ὁτὲ μὲν … ὁτὲ δὲ … ‘now’ … ‘now’ … (Aristot., Pol. 2, 2, 16; Parthenius 27, 2; Dio Chrys. 50 [67], 5; Polyaenus 5, 22, 4; SIG 679, 83f), but ὁτὲ μὲν … at one point 2:4 has as its correlative λέγει δὲ πάλιν (for variations in earlier Gk. s. L-S-J-M s.v. ὅτε C; on the text s. Hdb, ad loc.). -
88 τίθημι
τῐθημι (τιθεῖς, -ησι; τιθείς: τιθέμεν: fut. θήσω, -εις; θησέμεν: impf. τίθεν: aor. ἔθηκας, (ἔ) θηκε(ν), θέσαν, θέν coni.: med. fut. θήσομαι, -ονται: aor. θέτο, (ἔ)θεντο; θέμενος, -οι, -αν, -αι; θηκάμενος, -οι; θέσθαι: pass. τιθεμένων.)1 lay, placeaτρία ἔργα ποδαρκὴς ἁμέρα θῆκε κάλλιστ' ἀμφὶ κόμαις O. 13.39
ἐπεὶ τείχει θέσαν ἐν ξυλίνῳ σύγγονοι κούραν P. 3.38
med., χρυσότοξον θέμεναι παρὰ Πύθιον Ἀπόλλωνα θρόνους (sc. αἱ Μοῖραι) O. 14.10ἐπεὶ δ' ἄλκιμον νέκυν ἐν τάφῳ πολυστόνῳ θέντο Πηλείδαν Pae. 6.99
[ταὶ δ ἐπιγουνίδιον θαησάμεναι βρέφος αὐταῖς (Bergk: θα- vel θηκάμεναι, θησάμενοι codd.: κατθηκάμενοι Mosch.) P. 9.62]b med., put upon oneself, assume “ φαιδίμαν ἀνδρὸς αἰδοίου πρόσοψιν θηκάμενος” P. 4.29 met., “ κᾶδος ὡσείτε φθιμένου δνοφερὸν ἐν δώμασι θηκάμενοι” P. 4.113 ἀλλ' ὅ γε Μέλαμπος οὐκ ἤθελεν λιπὼν πατρίδα μοναρχεῖν Ἄργει θέμενος οἰωνοπόλον γέρας ( ἀποθέμενος interpr. Schr.) Pae. 4.302 lay, place, establish in various senses.a act. & med., build, fashion δόμον ἔθεντο πρῶτον i. e. for themselves O. 9.44κελήσατό μιν θέμεν Ἱππίᾳ βωμὸν εὐθὺς Ἀθάνᾳ O. 13.82
( νεφέλα)ἅντε δόλον αὐτῷ θέσαν Ζηνὸς παλάμαι P. 2.39
εἰ δέ τοι μάτρῳ μ' ἔτι Καλλικλεῖ κελεύεις στάλαν θέμεν N. 4.80
ἢ γαῖαν κατακλύσαισα θήσεις ἀνδρῶν νέον ἐξ ἀρχᾶς γένος; (Barnes: θήσει codd. Dion. Hal.: sc. ἀκτὶς ἀελίου) Pae. 9.19b act. & med., establish, found festivals, simm., πενταετηρίδ' θῆκε ζαθέοις ἐπὶ κρημνοῖς Ἀλφεοῦ (sc. Ἡρακλέης) O. 3.22 Ζηνὸς ἐπ' ἀκροτάτῳ βωμῷ χρηστήριον θέσθαι (sc. Ἴαμον) κέλευσεν i. e. for himself and his descendants. O. 6.70ἱππίων ἀέθλων κορυφάν, ἅ τε Φοίβῳ θῆκεν Ἄδραστος ἐπ' Ἀσωποῦ ῥεέθροις N. 9.9
τιθεμένων ἀγώνων πρόφασις ἀρετὰν ἐς αἰπὺν ἔβαλε σκότον fr. 228.c establish, set up as a prize ( χαλκὸν) ὅν τε Κλείτωρ καὶ Λύκαιον πὰρ Διὸς θῆκε δρόμῳ σὺν ποδῶν χειρῶν τε νικᾶσαι σθένει (ed. Morel.: ἔθηκεν codd.) N. 10.48d met., establish, instil (in the mind)εἰ δὲ τί οἱ φίλτρον ἐν θυμῷ μελιγάρυες ὕμνοι ἁμέτεροι τίθεν P. 3.65
cf. P. 1.40e lay met. τιθεῖς ὕβριν ἐν ἄντλῳ (sc. Ἡσυχία) P. 8.11ἀλλὰ χρονίῳ σὺν Ἄρει πέφνεν τε ματέρα θῆκέ τ' Αἴγισθον ἐν φοναῖς P. 11.37
τὸ κοινόν τις ἀστῶν ἐν εὐδίᾳ τιθεὶς ἐρευνασάτω ( καταθεὶς v. l.) fr. 109.f act. & med., place, put esp. c. abstract subject [ Πίσας χάρις νόον ὑπὸ γλυκυτάταις ἔθηκε φροντίσιν (v. ὑποτίθημι) O. 1.19] κόρος τὸ λαλαγῆσαι θέλων κρυφόν τε θέμεν ἐσλῶν καλοῖς ἔργοις (Aristarchus: κρύφιον codd.: τιθέμεν Hermann: locus varie temptatus) O. 2.97 μαστεύει δὲ καὶ τέρψις ἐν ὄμμασι θέσθαι πιστόν (τουτέστι θεωρῆσαι Σ.) N. 8.433 makea act. & med., performσεμνὰν θυσίαν θέμενοι O. 7.42
Ζεὺς ἄμπαλον μέλλεν θέμεν O. 7.61
καὶ κεῖνος ὅσα χάρματ' ἄλλοις ἔθηκεν O. 2.99
b med., make for oneself, undertake εὔχομαι ἀμφὶ καλῶν μοίρᾳ νέμεσιν διχόβουλον μὴ θέμεν (sc. Δία) O. 8.86 ἀγώνιον ἐν δόξᾳ θέμενος εὖχος, ἔργῳ καθελών having made himself a now O. 10.63καὶ τὰν πατρὸς ἀντία Μήδειαν θεμέναν γάμον αὐτᾷ O. 13.53
c c. abstract subs. in periphrasis τλᾶθι τᾶς εὐδαίμονος ἀμφὶ Κυράνας θέμεν σπουδὰν ἅπασαν (= σπουδάζειν) P. 4.276 Ὀρτυγία, σέθεν ἁδυεπὴς ὕμνος ὁρμᾶται θέμεν αἶνον ἀελλοπόδων μέγαν ἵππων (= αἰνεῖν) N. 1.5d act. & med., c. pr. adj., subs. ἄφθιτον θέν νιν (Mommsen: θέσαν αὐτόν codd.: θῆκαν Rauchenstein) O. 1.64ἀποίητον οὐδ' ἂν χρόνος δύναιτο θέμεν ἔργων τέλος O. 2.17
ἀρχομένου δ' ἔργου πρόσωπον χρὴ θέμεν τηλαυγές O. 6.4
θῆκέ μιν ζαλωτὸν ὁμόφρονος εὐνᾶς O. 7.6
ὃς σὲ μὲν Νεμέᾳ πρόφατον, Ἀλκιμέδοντα δὲ πὰρ Κρόνου λόφῳ θῆκεν Ὀλυμπιονίκαν O. 8.18
τὸ δὲ κύκλῳ πέδον ἔθηκε δόρπου λύσιν O. 10.47
Ἰσθμοῖ τά τ' ἐν Νεμέᾳ παύρῳ ἔπει θήσω φανέῤ ἀθρ O. 13.98
πάντα λόγον θέμενος σπουδαῖον making his every word earnest P. 4.132νιν θῆκε δέσποιναν χθονὸς P. 9.7
“ ἔνθα νιν ἀρχέπολιν θήσεις” P. 9.54 “ θήσονταί τέ νιν (“utrum recte iam vett. gramm. ad θῆσθαι rettulerint necne dubitare possis, quamquam θρέψουσι schol. 113,” Schr.) P. 9.63ἔθηκε καὶ βαθυλείμων ὑπὸ Κίρρας πετρᾶν ἀγὼν κρατησίποδα Φρικίαν P. 10.15
ἔλπομαι δ' τὸν Ἱπποκλέαν ἔτι καὶ μᾶλλον σὺν ἀοιδαῖς ἕκατι στεφάνων θαητὸν ἐν ἅλιξι θησέμεν ἐν καὶ παλαιτέροις, νέαισίν τε παρθένοισι μέλημα P. 10.58
λυγρόν τ' ἔρανον Πολυδέκτᾳ θῆκε ματρός τ ἔμπεδον δουλοσύναν τό τ ἀναγκαῖον λέχος P. 12.15
παλίγγλωσσον δέ οἱ ἀθάνατοι ἀγγέλων ῥῆσιν θέσαν N. 1.59
κιόνων ὕπερ Ἡρακλέος ἥρως θεὸς ἃς ἔθηκε ναυτιλίας ἐσχάτας μάρτυρας κλυτούς N. 3.22
τό (sc. ῥῆμα)μοι θέμεν Κρονίδᾳ τε Δὶ καὶ Νεμέᾳ Τιμασάρχου τε πάλᾳ ὕμνου προκώμιον εἴη N. 4.9
ἐπαοιδαῖς δ' ἀνὴρ νώδυνον καί τις κάματον θῆκεν N. 8.50
Διομήδεα δ' ἄμ-βροτον ξανθά ποτε Γλαυκῶπις ἔθηκε θεόν N. 10.7
οὐ γνώμᾳ διπλόαν θέτο βουλὰν N. 10.89
μᾶτερ ἐμά, τὸ τεόν, χρύσασπι Θήβα, πρᾶγμα καὶ ἀσχολίας ὑπέρτερον θήσομαι I. 1.3
Ἰλίου δὲ θῆκεν ἄφαρ ὀψιτέραν ἅλωσιν (sc. Ἀπόλλων) Πα... λτ;τί δγτ; ἔθηκας ἀμάχανον ἰσχύν τ' ἀνδράσι καὶ σοφίας ὁδόν; (sc. ἀκτὶς ἀελίου) Pae. 9.3 in zeugma,ἐθελήσαις ταῦτα νόῳ τιθέμεν εὔανδρόν τε χώραν P. 1.40
4 fragg. ]θέμεν Δ. 1. 12. θῆ]κε (supp. Snell) Δ... πεπρωμέναν θῆκε μοῖραν μετατραπεῖν (Bergk: ἔθηκε codd.) fr. 177a. Φερσεφόνᾳ ματρί τε χρυσοθρόνῳ θῆ[κεν ἀστ]οῖσιν τελευτὰν ( τέλος Σ unde τελετὰν coni. Lobel) P. Oxy. 2622, fr. 1, 5 ad ?fr. 346c.5 in tmesis. ἐπὶ γὰρ τίθησι (v. ἐπιτίθημι) P. 2.10 ὑπὸ ἔθηκε (v. ὑποτίθημι) O. 1.19 -
89 κἄν
I for καὶ ἄν.., v.l. in Hes.Op. 357, freq. in [dialect] Att.: not often when καί is simply copul., Pl.Phd. 79a, Grg. 514d; but freq. when καί is intens., ὅ γε κ. μέγα δοίη even a great thing, Hes. l.c.;κακὸν δὲ κ. ἐν ἡμέρᾳ γνοίης μιᾷ S.OT 615
, cf. 591, Aj.45, Ar.Nu. 1130, Th.7.61, etc.; sts. repeated after or before a Verb withἄν, ἐπεὶ κ. σὺ.., εἴ τίς σε διδάξειεν.., βελτίων ἂν γένοιο Pl. Prt. 318b
, cf. R. 515e; freq. in the phrase κ. εἰ, where καί properly belongs to εἰ, even if, and ἄν to the Verb that follows in apodosi, νῦν δέ μοι δοκεῖ, κ. ἀσέβειαν εἰ καταγιγνώσκοι, τὰ προσήκοντα ποιεῖν (for καὶ εἰ καταγιγνώσκοι, ποιεῖν ἄν) D.21.51: hence,2 even when the Verb in apodosi was of a tense that could not be joined with ἄν, κ. εἰ πολλαὶ [ αἱ ἀρεταί]..εἰσιν, ἕν γέ τι εἶδος ταὐτὸν ἅπασαι ἔχουσι Pl.Men. 72c
;κ. εἰ μή τῳ δοκεῖ Id.R. 473a
, 579d, cf. 408b, Phd. 71b, Sph. 247e, Arist.Top. 136a31, al.3 in later Gr. without εἰ, simply as a stronger form of καί, even,εἴσελθε κ. νῦν Men.342
;κ. νεκρῷ Χάρισαι τὰ σὰ Χείλεα Theoc.23.41
, cf. 35 (v.l.) (and so with εἷς, μία, ἕν, κ. μίαν ἡμέραν δόντες αὐτοῖς v.l. in X.HG1.7.19;εἰ κ. ἕν τι φαίνοιτο S.E. P.2.195
, cf. Ph.2.29);ἐὰν ἅψωμαι κ. τῶν ἱματίων Ev.Marc.5.28
; κ. νῦν now at any rate, POxy.2151.7 (iii A.D.); κἂν ὧς even so, nevertheless, ib.123.7 (iii/iv A.D.);οἷς οὐδὲ κ. ὄνος ὑπῆρξε πώποτε Luc.Tim.20
codd., cf. DDeor.5.2, etc.II for καὶ ἄν ([etym.] ἐάν), even if, with the same moods as ἐάν, S.Aj.15, Pl.Prt. 319c, etc.: freq. used ellipt., ἄνδρα Χρὴ δοκεῖν πεσεῖν ἂν κ. (sc. πέσῃ)ἀπὸ σμικροῦ κακοῦ S.Aj. 1078
, cf. Ar.V.92, Ach. 1021, and so prob. in S.El. 1483: later folld. by ind.,κἂν γὰρ οὕτω φαμέν A.D.Synt.70.22
.2 κἄν.., κἄν.. , whether.., or.., . -
90 νυνί
A now, at this moment, mostly of the present, IG12.98.3, etc.: freq. in Com., Ar. Ach. 325, Ra. 290, Pherecr.41, Men.Her.27, etc.: less freq. with past tenses,ὧν ν. διέβαλλε D.18.14
;ν. συνεληλύθαμεν Isoc.6.7
;ν. ἐβουλήθη Is.1.20
;ν. βοηθήσαντες συνκατετάττοντο IG22.237.11
(iv B. C.) : also with [tense] fut.,ν. δὲ πειράσομαι Aeschin.2.25
, cf. Isoc.18.35 : c. [tense] aor. imper.,ν. μεταγνώτω Th.4.92
: rarely in the sense, as the case stands (cf.νῦν 1.4
), D.21.129, Lycurg.Fr.31.—Never in Trag. (E.Supp. 306 is corrupt): Com. also have νυνμενί, for νυνὶ μέν, Ar. Av. 448 ; νυνδί, for νυνὶ δέ, Id.Eq. 1357, Antiph.190.16 ; cf. νυνγαρί, for νυνὶ γάρ, Eust.45.3. -
91 ἥκω
Aἡξῶ Theoc.4.47
, Call.Fr.1.65 P. (in [dialect] Dor. and Hom. more commonly ἵκω): all other tenses late; [tense] aor. 1 part.ἥξας Paus.2.11.5
, Gal.6.56, 10.609: [tense] pf.ἧκα Philostr.VA3.24
, Scymn.62, [ per.] 1pl. (ii B.C.), CIG4762 (Egypt, i A.D.), [dialect] Dor. ἥκαμες f.l. in Plu.2.225b, [ per.] 2pl.ἥκατε PGrenf.2.36.18
(i B.C.), [ per.] 3pl. , Ev.Marc.8.3; inf. (ii B.C.): [tense] plpf.ἥκεσαν J.AJ19.1.14
: —[voice] Med., [tense] pres. subj.ἥκηται Aret.SD2.1
: [tense] fut. ἥξομαι v.l. in M.Ant. 2.4:—to have come, be present, prop. in a [tense] pf. sense, with [tense] impf. ἧκον as [tense] plpf., I had come, and [tense] fut. ἥξω as [tense] fut. [tense] pf., I shall have come,μάλα τηλόθεν ἥκω Il.5.478
, cf. Od.13.325, Pi.O.4.12 ( ἵκω codd. vett.): [tense] impf. , Th.1.91, al., Pl.R. 327c, Hdt.8.50, etc.: [tense] fut. , al., E.Andr. 738, Ar. Pax 265, Orac. ap. Th.2.54, etc.; ἧκε imper., S.Aj. 1116, Ar. Pax 275, X.Cyr.4.5.25; :—Constr. mostly with εἰς, Hdt.8.50, A.Ch.3, etc.;παρά τινα Hdt.7.157
, Th.1.137; ;πρὸς δαίμονα S.Fr. 770
; esp. in worship, (Egypt, i B.C.), cf. Ev.Jo.6.37;πρὸς πόλιν S.OC 734
; ἐπί τινα to set upon, attack, Pl.R. 336b, Aeschin. 2.178; but ἥ. ἐπὶ τὸ στράτευμα to have come to fetch the army, X. An.7.6.2;οἱ ἐπὶ ταῦθ' ἥκοντες D.18.28
;ἐπ' ὀλέθρῳ E.IA 886
(troch.);περὶ σπονδῶν X.An.2.3.4
: c. acc.,ἥξεις ποταμόν A.Pr. 717
, cf. 724, 730;ἥ. δῆμον τὸν Λυρκείου S.Fr.271.6
, cf. E.Ba.1;ἥκουσιν αὐτῷ ἄγγελοι X.Cyr.5.3.26
; ἐς ταὐτὸν ἥ. to have come to the same point, to agree, E.Hec. 748, Hipp. 273: with Adv. of motion, ἥ. ἐνθάδε, δεῦρο, S.Ph. 377, D.19.58; : c. neut. Pron.,αὐτὰ ταῦτα ἥκω παρά σε Pl.Prt. 310e
; ἐρωτώμενοι ὅ τι ἥκοιεν for what they had come, X.HG4.5.9: c. acc. cogn.,ὁδὸν μακρὰν ἥκειν Id.Cyr.5.5.42
: c.inf., μανθάνειν γὰρ ἥκομεν we are here to learn, S. OC12.2 to have reached a point, ἐς τοσήνδ' ὕβριν ib. 1030;εἰς τοῦτο ἀμαθίας E.Andr. 170
;εἰς τοσοῦτον ἀμαθίας Pl.Ap. 25e
;εἰς ὅσον ἡλικίας Id.Chrm. 157d
, etc.;πρὸς γάμων ἀκμάς S.OT 1492
; ὁρᾷς ἵν' ἥκεις; ib. 687, etc.; Geom., pass through a point,διὰ τῶν πόλων Autol.Sph.10
, cf. Archim.Con.Sph.9.c with an Adv. folld. by gen.,οὕτω πόρρω σοφίας ἥκεις Pl.Euthd. 294e
; εὖ ἥκειν τινός to be well off for a thing, have plenty of it, τοῦ βίου, χρημάτων, Hdt.1.30, 5.62;ἑωυτῶν Id.1.102
;θεῶν χρηστῶν Id.8.111
; πιθανότητος Demetr.Magn. ap.D.H.Din.1; οὐκ ὁμοίως ἥ. τινός not to be equally well off in respect of.., Hdt.1.149; πῶς ἀγῶνος ἥκομεν; how have we sped in the contest? E.El. 751; ὧδε γένους ἥ. τινί to be this degree of kin to him, Id.Heracl. 213;ὡς δυνάμεως ἥκεις Paus.4.21.10
;ἐς μῆκος εὖ ἥκων Ael.NA4.34
: abs., εὖ ἥκειν to be flourishing, Hdt.1.30: rarely c. gen. only, σὺ δὲ δυνάμιος ἥκεις μεγάλης thou art in great power, Id.7.157 (nisi leg. μεγάλως).3 to have come back, returned, D.20.73; from exile, And.2.13; αὐτίκα ἥξω I shall be back in a moment, X.An.2.1.9; ἧκέ νυν ταχύ come back soon, Ar. Pax 275;ἄψορρον ἥξεις A.Pr. 1021
;ἄψορρον ἥξομεν πάλιν S.El.53
.4 c. part., ἥκω φέρων I have come bringing (i.e. with), Id.OC 579, cf. 357, Ar. Pax 265, Eup.22 D., Pl.Grg. 518d; ;ἕτερόν τι ἥκεις ἕχων Id.Grg. 491c
, etc.: c. [tense] fut. part., like ἔρχομαι, ἥκω φράσων, ἀγγελῶν, etc., I am going, I intend to say, E.Ph. 706, 1075, etc.5 to have come to be,θεοῖς ἔχθιστος ἥκω S.OT 1519
(troch.), cf.Aj. 636(lyr.), El. 1201, etc.; take one's origin,ἀπὸ πολιτειῶν τοιούτων ἥκετε, ἐν αἷς.. Th.4.126
.II of things, in various uses: of meats, to have come to table, Alex.132;ὡς τὰ περιφερόμενα ἧκε πρὸς ἡμᾶς X.Cyr.2.2.3
; of reports,ἐμοὶ ἀγγελίη ἥκει παρὰ βασιλέος Hdt.8.140
.ά, cf. S.OC 1177; of events,πῆμα ἥκει τινί A.Pr. 103
, cf. Ar.Ra. 606, etc.; ; ἵν' ἥκειτὰ μαντ εύματα what they have come to, Id.OT 953; ὡς αὐτὸν ἥξοι μοῖρα ib. 713 codd.; ἥξει πόλεμος Orac. ap. Th.2.54;ἐς αὐτὸν ἥξει τὸ δεινόν Id.6.77
; of Time, ἥκει ἦμαρ, νύξ, A.Ag. 1301, E.IT42;ἥκει ὑμῖν ὁ καιρός Lys.12.79
;τὸ μέλλον ἥξει A.Ag. 1240
.2 concern, relate to, ποῖ λόγος ἥκει; to what do the words relate? E.Tr. 154 (lyr.);εἰς ἔμ' ἥκει.. τὰ πράγματα Ar.Pl. 919
; εἰς ἐμὲ τὸ ἐλλεῖπον ἥξει will fall upon me, X.Cyr.1.5.13: freq. in part., ; τὰ εἰς πλοῦτον ἥ. Pl.Erx. 392d; τὰ πρὸς ἔπαινον, εἰς φιλανθρωπίαν ἥ., Plb.12.15.9,28.17.2, etc.4 c. inf., ἧκέ μοι γένει.. πενθεῖν it has come to me by birth.., my birth lays it on me.., S.OC 738, cf. Ichn.356; καλῶς αὐτοῖς κατθανεῖν ἧκον βίου it being well for them at their age to die, E.Alc. 291.5 c. part., ὃ καὶ νῦν ἥκει γινόμενον which commonly happens even now, Plb.24.9.11 codd. (v.l. γενόμενον). (Prob. from same root as ἵκω.) -
92 ὑπισχνέομαι
ὑπισχνέομαι, [dialect] Ion. and [dialect] Ep. [full] ὑπίσχομαι Od.8.347, Hdt.5.30, al., also A.Eu. 804, Ar.Fr. 615, IG22.1126.11 (Delph. Amphict.), Schwyzer 323 A14 (Delph., iv B. C.); [tense] impf.Aὑπίσχετο Il.23.195
,ὑπίσχεο 20.84
,ὑπίσχοντο Hdt.7.168
; but Hdt. also hasὑπισχνέετο 9.109
(v.l. for -έεται);ὑπισχνεύμενος 2.152
;ὑπισχνοῦμαι S.Ichn.2
; imper. (anap.): [tense] fut.ὑποσχήσομαι D.19.324
: [tense] aor.ὑπεσχόμην Il.9.263
, etc.: [tense] pf.ὑπέσχημαι Th.8.48
, X.Oec.3.1, D. 7.33, etc.: plpt.ὑπέσχητο Id.19.121
:—[voice] Act.ὑπισχνέω Aesop.205
.— collat. form of ὑπέχομαι, which supplies several of its tenses, and even in [tense] pres. is used = ὑπισχνέομαι, App.Mith.16,20, PBrem.36.10, PRyl.96.9, PGiss.5.10 (all ii A. D.), etc. ( ὑπίσχομαι was replaced by ὑπισχνέομαι under the influence of the opposite ἀρνέομαι):—take upon oneself, i. e. undertake to do, ;τροφαῖσι βασιλικαῖσι καὶ παιδεύμασιν ἅπανθ' ὑπισχνεῖθ' ὡς ἀπὸ σπλάγχνων ἑῶν Ezek.Exag.38
(s.v.l.): more freq., promise,ὑποσχέσθαι δ' ἑκατόμβας Il.6.115
, cf. 23.195;ὅσσα τοι.. ὑπέσχετο δῶρα 9.263
;βουλέων, ἅς τέ μοι αὐτὸς ὑ. 12.236
, cf. 20.84;ὑ. δαπάνην τῇ στρατιῇ Hdt.5.30
; [πόλεσιν] ὀλιγαρχίαν Th.8.48
, etc.: with a thing as subject,τῆς τῶν ὀδόντων ἀναφυήσεως ὑπισχνουμένης τὴν τῶν στερεμνιωτέρων διαίρεσιν καὶ λείωσιν Sor.1.116
; τὰ στύφειν ὑπισχνούμενα ib. 120.b c. inf. [tense] fut.,ὑπό τ' ἔσχετο—καὶ κατένευσε—δωσέμεναι Il.13.368
, cf. Od.4.6; ὑ.—καὶ κατένευσεν—Ἴλιον ἐκπέρσαντ'.. ἀπονέεσθαι (for this Verb has a [tense] fut. sense) Il.2.112, 9.19;ὑ. Ἑλένην.. δωσέμεν Ἀτρεΐδῃσιν ἄγειν 22.114
;ὑ. δυοκαίδεκα βοῦς.. ἱερευσέμεν 6.93
; so in Trag. and [dialect] Att., S.Ph. 615, E.Tr. 930, Pl.Phdr. 235d, etc.; also ὑ. ἦ μὴν.., c. inf. [tense] fut., X.Cyr.6.2.3: c. acc. et inf. [tense] fut.,ἐγὼ δέ τοι αὐτὸν ὑπίσχομαι.. τείσειν Od.8.347
, cf. A.Eu. 804.c c. inf. [tense] aor., only f.l., as in X.An.1.2.2, 2.3.19 (where the variants παύσεσθαι, βουλεύσεσθαι are now accepted), while in Cyr.2.2.12, 6.1.21, An.7.2.24 he uses inf. [tense] fut.; in D.42.17, for ἀποφαίνειν Cobet restores ἀποφανεῖν.d freq. with a neut. Adj.,μεγάλα ὑ. Hdt. 2.152
, al.: without acc., ὑπίσχεται ἀνδρὶ ἑκάστῳ she makes promises to each man, Od.2.91;ὑπισχνέεται καὶ ὤμοσε Hdt.9.109
, cf. 5.51;ἠρώτα αὐτὴν εἰ ἐθελήσει διακονῆσαί οἱ, καὶ ἣ ὑπέσχετο τάχιστα Antipho 1.16
;ὑποσχόμενος.., ἃ ὑπεδέζατο οὐκ ἐπετέλει Th.2.95
.2 c. inf. [tense] pres., profess that one is, profess to be,ὑ. οἷός τε εἶναι Hdt.7.104
;οὐδεὶς ὑπέσχετο εἰδέναι Id.2.28
, cf. Pl.Sph. 234b, Tht. 178e; also, profess to do a thing,ὑ. ποιεῖν ἄνδρας ἀγαθοὺς πολίτας Id.Prt. 319a
, cf. Sph. 232d;θεοὺς ὑ. πείθειν Id.Lg. 909b
;ὑ. συστρατεύεσθαι X.An.7.7.31
(- σεσθαι Cobet); with .Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὑπισχνέομαι
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93 ὕστερος
A latter, last, [comp] Comp. and [comp] Sup. without any Posit. Adj. in use. (The Posit. must be looked for in Skt. úd 'up'; with ὕστερος, ὕστατος cf. Skt. [comp] Comp. and [comp] Sup. úttaras, uttamás 'higher, (later)', 'highest, (latest)'; cf. ὑστέρα.)A [full] ὕστερος, α, ον, latter:I of Place, coming after, behind,ὑστέρῳ ποδί E.Hipp. 1243
, HF 1040; ὑστέρας ἔχων πώλους keeping them behind, S.El. 734;ὕ. λόχος X.Cyr.2.3.21
;ἐν τῷ ὑ. λόγῳ Antipho 6.14
, cf. Pi.O.11(10).5, Pl.Grg. 503c, etc.; τὰ ὕ. the latter clauses, Plu.2.742d (s. v. l., δεύτερα Turnebus): c. gen., ὕστεροι ἡμῶν behind us, Pl.Ly. 206e, cf. Th.3.103; οὐδὲν ὑστέρα νεώς not a whit behind ( slower than) a ship, A.Eu. 251.II of Time, next,ὁ δ' ὕστερος ὄρνυτο χαλκῷ Il.5.17
, 16.479; τῷ ὑ. ἔτει in the next year, X HG7.2.10;τῇ ὑ. Ὀλυμπιάδι Hdt.6.103
; ὑ. χρόνῳ in after time, Id.1.130, A.Ag. 702 (lyr.), etc.;ἐν ὑ. χρόνοις Pl.Lg. 865a
;ἐν ὑστέραισιν ἡμέραις A.Ag. 1666
(troch.); δεκάτῃ ὑ. or ὑ. δεκάτῃ, on the [ per.] 21st day, Decr. ap. D.L.7.10, cf. Longin.Rh. p.192 H.: c. gen., later than, after,σεῦ ὕστερος εἶμ' ὑπὸ γαῖαν Il.18.333
, cf. Ar.Ec. 859, Pl.Phd. 87c, al.:ὑ. χρόνῳ τούτων Hdt.4.166
, 5.32, cf. Th.2.54.2 later, too late,ὕ. ἐλθών Il.18.320
;κἂν ὕ. ἔλθῃ Ar.V. 691
(anap.);μῶν ὕστεραι πάρεσμεν; Id.Lys.69
;ὑ. ἀφικνεῖσθαι Th.4.90
; ὕ. (sc. ἐλθών) S.OT 222, Tr.92;Διονύσιος ὁ ὕ. D.
the second, Arist.Pol. 1312a4.3 c. gen. rei, too late for,ὕστεροι ἀπικόμενοι τῆς συμβολῆς Hdt.6.120
;ὕ. ἐλθεῖν τοῦ σημείου Ar.V. 690
(anap.);κακῶν ὕ. ἀφῖγμαι E.HF 1174
;ὕ. ἀφίκοντο τῆς μάχης μιᾷ ἡμέρᾳ Pl.Lg. 698e
.III of inferiority in Age, Worth, or Quality, γένει ὕ., i.e. younger, Il.3.215; c. gen., οὐδενὸς ὕ. second to none, S.Ph. 181(lyr.), cf. Th.1.91;γυναικὸς ὕ. S. Ant. 746
; μηδ' ἔμπροσθεν τῶν νόμων, ἀλλ' ὕ. πολιτεύου not putting yourself above the laws, but below them, Aeschin.3.23; σῶμα δεύτερον καὶ ὕ (sc. ψυχῆς) Pl.Lg. 896c; νομίσας πάντα ὕστερα εἶναι τἆλλα πρός τι that all things were secondary to.., Th.8.41.2 logically posterior,ὁ τόπος ὕ. τῆς ὕλης Plot.2.4.12
.IV Adv. ὑστέρως is found only in Eccl. writers, the ascription to Plato by Ammon. Diff.p.115V., Thom.Mag.p.284 R. being now corrected from Ptol. Ascal.p.405 H., where codd. have δευτέρως: the neut. ὕστερον was used, rarely of Place, behind,ὀπαδεῖν ὕ. A.Fr. 475
;ὕ. τῶν ἱππέων γίγνεσθαι X.Cyr.5.3.42
.2 of Time, later, afterwards, parm.8.10, Hdt.6.91, etc.; also τὸ ὕ., opp. τὸ παλαιόν, Lycurg.61;ὕστερα Od.16.319
; freq. with other words,ὕ. αὖτις Il.1.27
;οὔποτ' αὖθις ὕ. S.Aj. 858
; ἔπειτα δ' ὕ., after μέν, Antiph.270;εἶτα.. ὕ. Id.53.4
; χρόνῳ ὕ. πολλῷ a long time after, Hdt.1.171; ὕ. χρόνῳ or χρόνῳ ὕ. some time later, Th.1.8,64;χρόνοις ὕ. Lys.3.39
;βραχεῖ χρόνῳ ὕ. X.Cyr.5.3.52
;οὐ πολλαῖς ἡμέραις ὕ. Id.HG1.1.1
; ὀλίγῳ orὀλίγον ὕ. Pl.R. 327c
, Grg. 471c;πολλῷ ὕ. Th.2.49
, Pl.Phd. 58a;οἱ ἄνθρωποι οἱ ὕ.
posterity,Id.
R. 415d; τὰ ὕ. γράμματα the later inscriptions, Id.Chrm. 165a.b c. gen.,ὕ. τούτων Hdt.1.113
, etc.;ὕ. ἔτι τούτων Id.9.83
; τῆς ἐμεωυτοῦ γνώμης ὕ. after my own opinion was formed, Id.2.18; τοῦ δέοντος ὕ. later than ought to be, Ar.Lys.57: c. dat. et gen.,ἔτεσι πολλοῖσι ὕ. τούτων Hdt.6.140
, cf. 1.91;πολλῷ ὕ. τῶν Τρωϊκῶν Th.1.3
, cf. Isoc. 19.22: folld. byἤ, τεσσαρακοστῇ ἡμέρᾳ ὕ... ἢ ποτείδαια ἀπέστη Th. 1.60
, cf. 6.4.3 in Adv. sense with Preps.,ἐς ὕστερον Od.12.126
, Hes.Op. 351, Hdt.5.41,74, S.Ant. 1194, E.IA 720, Pl.Ti. 82b, etc.:ἐν ὑστέρῳ Th.3.13
, 8.27:ἐξ ὑστέρου D.S.14.109
, D.H.4.73; alsoἐξ ὑστέρης Hdt.1.108
, 5.106, 6.85.B [full] ὕστᾰτος, η, ον, last:I of Place,ἅμα θ' οἱ πρῶτοί τε καὶ ὕστατοι Il.2.281
; εὐθυντὴρ ὕστατος νεώς hindmost, of a rudder, A. Supp. 717;ἡμῖν τοῖς ὑ. κατακειμενοις Pl.Smp. 177e
.II of Time,τίνα πρῶτον, τίνα δ' ὕ. ἐξενάριξεν; Il.11.299
, cf. 5.703, E HF485, etc.;ὁ δ' ὕ. γε.. πρεσβεύεται A.Ag. 1300
; ἡλίου.. πρὸς ὕ. φῶς ib. 1324; τὸν ὕ. μέλψασα γόον ib. 1445;τοὔπος ὕ. θροεῖ S.Aj. 864
; ἡ ὑστάτη (sc. ἡμέρα) τῆς ὁρτῆς the last day of.., Hdt.2.151;ἐν τοῖσιν ὑ. φράσω Ar. Ra. 908
; οὐκ ἐν ὑστάτοις not among the last, E. Ion 1115;οἱ ὕστατοι εἰπόντες D.1.16
, etc.; ὕστατος ἁλώσιος ἀντάσαις meeting with his downfall at last, Pi.O.10(11).41.III of Rank or Degree,οὐκ ἐν ὑστάτοις S.Tr. 315
; τὰ ὕ. πάσχειν, like τὰ ἔσχατα, Luc.Phal.1.5.IV for regul. Adv. ὑστάτως (which occurs only in Hippiatr. 20), the neut. sg. and pl. are used,πύματόν τε καὶ ὕστατον Od.20.116
;ὕστατα καὶ πύματα 4.685
, 20.13;νῦν ὕστατα Il.1.232
, Od.22.78;ὕστατα ὁρμηθέντες Hdt.8.43
;καὶ πρῶτον καὶ ὕ. Pl.Mx. 247a
; ὕ. δή σε προσεροῦσι, τὸ ὕ. προσειπεῖν, Id.Phd. 60a, Luc.VH1.30.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὕστερος
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94 βυθός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `depth (of the sea)' (A.).Compounds: ἄβυσσος `bottomless' (Hdt.), subst. f. `abyss, underworld' (= Hebr. tǝhōm, LXX, NT, Pap.; cf. Schwyzer RhM 81, 203); βυσσοδομεύω `build in the deep \> brood over (in the deep of one's soul), ponder deeply' (Od.), m.c. for βυσσοδομέω (Eust., Suid.) like οἰκοδομέω etc., s. K. Meister, Hom. Kunstspr. 31, Chantr., Gramm. hom. 1, 368.Derivatives: βύθιος `of the depth' (late), fem. βυθῖτις ( ψάμμος AP; s. Redard Les noms grecs en - της 23). Denom. βυθίζω `sink' (S.). Ptc. βυθόωσα ( ῥίζα) `going in the deep' (Nic. Th. 505). - Further βυσσός m. `depth of the sea' (Il.), βυσσόθεν (S.). -- Also βύσσα (Opp.; after βῆσσα? so prob. secondary); further βύσσαλοι βόθροι, βυσσαλεύοντι τῳ̃ βυθῳ̃ ἐφικνουμένῳ H.; also βυθμός ἄντρον, πυθμήν, καὶ βυθμήν (perh. corrupt).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: A basis *βυθι̯ός or *βυθσός for βυσσός does not inspire confidence. Connecting βαθύς (and βῆσσα) one posited a labio-velar, but then the connection of βαθύς with βενθος must be abandoned, for which there is no reason. Also assuming a labio-velar would mean that the β- could not be regular (one expects γυ-): it would have to be introduced from βῆσσα, which a guess. Connecting γυθίσσων διορύσσων H. would give the same problem; the form can better be left aside. - The old attempts to connect βαθύς and βῆσσα (with α against υ) are most improbable and should now be abandoned. βυθός - βυσσός shows a typical variation of Pre-Greek words; see Fur.248-263, e.g. ἄνηθον\/ ἄνησον. The conclusion is confirmed by βυσσαλ- with a typical Pre-Greek suffix, cf. κόρυδος beside κορύδαλος\/ κορυδαλλός (Fur. 254) and perhaps ἄμυσσος κῆτος, and also ἀβυδόν βαθύ.Page in Frisk: 1,275-276Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βυθός
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95 λέσχη
λέσχη Bremmer WAAR?Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `room, builing as meeting place' (σ 329, Hes.); `grave' (Rhodos); see H. Bolkestein MAWNied. 84B: 3 (1937) 18ff.Compounds: ἔλ-λεσχος `commonly talked off' (Hdt. 1, 153; from ἐν λέσχῃ), πρό-λεσχος `eager to talk' (A. Supp. 200; cf. πρό-χειρος a.o.; ἀδο-λέσχης (s.s.v.).Derivatives: λεσχήν, - ῆνος m. `chatterer' (Timo 46); λεσχην-εῖ ὁμιλεῖ, μυθολογεῖ H. - λεσχαῖος ἐξηγητής, ὁμιλητής H.; λεσχάραι οἷον αἱ σχολαί... (EM561, 17). See Solmsen Wortforsch. 124 f. - Two month names of unclear formation: Λεσχανάσιος (Tegea), Λεσχανόριος (Thessal., Gortyn); also Άπόλλων Λεσχηνόριος (from the λέσχαι which were under his protection?).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Mostly connected with λέχος, from *λέχσκᾱ. As Greek has no nomin. suffix - sk-, and as a k-suffix from the zero grade *λεχσ- is also improbable, one assumes a σκ-present *λέχ-σκ-εται (\> *λέσχεται); but there is no trace of this verb. The same formation was assumed for OHG. lëscan ' löschen' (as `lie down'); also for Celtic, e. g. OIr. lesc `lazy', where it is quite uncertain. - As the room was not for lying down, this etymology (supposing *λεσχεται really existed) is improbable. - Long ago the agreement with Hebr. liškāh was observed. This cannot be ignored. It was assumed that Greek had the word from the Near East (West, East Face 38; not the other way round, ib.), but as the word is isolated in NWSemitic, Schrader (FS Jahrh.feier Univ. Breslau, 1911, 469) already assumed that both languages had it from Anatolia, which seems the most probable interpretation. Thus Fur. 295, 257, who points out that the suffix of λεσχάραι is non-Greek; he also points to the Hebr. variant niškāh, which may point to Anat. l\/n, as in Fur. 388. Thus now Bremmer, WAAR?See also: weitere Lit. s. λέχεται.Page in Frisk: 2,107-108Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λέσχη
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96 ὀδών
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `tooth'Compounds: Several compp., e.g. ὀδοντ-άγρα f. `tooth forceps' (Hp., Arist.), χαυλι-όδων (Hes. Sc. 387), ntr. - όδον and - όδουν (Arist.) `with protruding teeth'.Derivatives: 1. Subst. ὀδοντάριον `little cog' (Heliod. ap. Orib.), ὀδοντ-ίς f. name of a fish (pap. IIIa; on the motive of the name Strömberg Fischnamen 45), - ᾶς m. `dentatus', - ίας m. `dentiosus' (Gloss.); odontītis f. `toothwort, Dentaria' (Plin.; Redard 74). 2. Adj. ὀδοντ-ικός `belonging to the teeth' (medic.), - ωτός `equipped with teeth' (Hero, Luc., Gal.), with ὀδοντόομαι `to be equipped with teeth' (Poll.). 3. Verbs. ὀδοντ-ιάω `to teethe' (Gal.) with - ίασις f. `teetheing' (Dsc., Gal.), - ίζω `to equip with teeth' (Orib.), `to polish (with one tooth)' (pap.; cf. charta dentata and Lagercrantz on PHolm. 4, 40), with - ισμός (Poll.), - ισμα (Eust.) `the grinding of teeth'.Etymology: Aeol. ἔδοντες (with second. barytonesis) suggests that ὀδόντ- stands with vowelassimilation for *ἐδόντ-. However, a tooth does not `eat'; it only bites. The h₃ is confirmed by Arm. atamn (Kortlandt, Armeniaca, index). It is further confirmed by νωδός, which requires *n̥-h₃d- (not an assimilated vowel). And also by ὀδύνη `pain' (with which Arm. erkn cannot be cognate, if only because of the - rk-. The form od- `bite' is also seen in Lith. úodas, Latv. uôds `gnat', from * h₃ed- (with long vowel after Winter's Law). The Aeolic form can easily have ἑδ- after ἔδω. The younger ὀδούς for ὀδών is after διδούς (Solmsen Wortforsch. 30 ff.; hardly acceptable doubt by Schwyzer 566; on the nom. sg. still Gaar Gymnasium 60, 169 ff. [ ὀδούς Att.], Leroy Mél. Jos. Hombert = Phoibos 5 [1950--51] 102 ff.). -- ὀδών, ὀδόντ-ος agrees with the old name of the tooth in Skt. dán, acc. dánt-am m. ( = ὀ-δόντ-α), Lith. dant-ìs m. (f.), Germ., e.g. OHG zan(d), IE * h₃d-ont-; the zero grade (IE *h₃d-n̥t-) in Goth. tunÞ-us ( tund- still in Goth. aihwatundjai [één teken] `tooth of a horse', Lamberterie RPh. LXXIV (2000)278), Lat. dēns a.o.; the original ablaut is still alive in Skt., e.g. gen. sg. dat-ás (\< *h₃dn̥t-ós) beside dánt-am; cf. also the Germ. forms. The zero grade is now assumed in Myc. odakeweta, -- tuweta, - tweta `(wheels) with teeth'), wether a technical detail or an ornament; Dicc. Mic. 2, 16). -- Mostly interpreted as "the eating" ptc. pres. of the verb for `eat' in ἔδω (s. v.). Semantic doubts by Benveniste BSL 32, 74 ff. (with other etymology); against this Solmsen l.c. Further forms with rich lit. in WP. 1, 120 (Pok. 289), and in the etym dictionaries, esp. W.-Hofmann s. dēns. -- Cf. νωδός and αἱμωδέω.Page in Frisk: 2,352-353Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὀδών
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97 πυθμήν
πυθμήν, - ένοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `bottom of a vessel, the sea etc., ground, base, underlay, foot, e.g. of a cup, plant, i.e. root-end, stick, stem' (ep. Il., hell. a. late prose), `the lowest number (base) of an arithmetic series' (Pl. a.o.).Compounds: Tately as 2. member e.g. ἀ-πύθμεν-ος `bottomless, footless' (Thphr.; Sommer Nominalkomp. 99); besides (gramm.) withou them. vowel ἀ-πύθμην `id.' (Theognost.) a.o.Derivatives: Dimin. πυθμέν-ιον n. (pap.), - ικός `belonging to the base', - έω `to form a base' (late).Etymology: Formation like λιμήν, ποιμήν (Schwyzer 522, Chantraine Form. 174; not productive). Except for the suffix πυθ-μήν agrees with Skt. budh-ná- m. `bottom, ground, foot, root', IE * bhudh-. Also morphologically these words can be brought together, if one derived budh-na- from * bhudh-mn-o- (the m was soon lost). In Germ. * bhudh- became PGm. * bud- (seen in OE bodan, MLG bōdem(e) etc.); then, after mn \> n, * bud-n- became * butt- \> bot(t)- according to Kluge's law (seen in OE botem \> Engl. bottom), ONord. botn); we also find evidence for PGm. * buÞ- (OHG bodam, OS bothme, ME bothme) which is as yet unexplained; see now G. Kroonen, ABäG 61(2006)xxx-xxx. Further removed is Lat. fundus `bottom etc.', with which MIr. bond, bonn `sole, basis' can be identical (IE * bhund(h)o-). The inner nasal is prob. connected with the nasalsuffix in * bhudh-no- and can be due to old metathesis, as corresponding forms appear also on Indo-Iran. territory, e.g. Av. bū̆na m. `ground, bottom' (from * bundna-?), Prākr. bundha- m. `bottom of a vase'; s. Mayrhofer s. budhnáḥ w. lit.; cf. also πύνδαξ (s.v.). -- Hypotheses in Bq and Ernout-Meillet s. fundus (after Vendryes MSL 18, 305 ff.); further rich lit. in W.-Hofmann s. fundus (WP. 2, 190, Pok. 174). On the meaning in gen. Kretschmer Glotta 22, 115ff. (against Porzig WuS 15, 112 f.); for Greek esp. Furumark Eranos 44, 45 ff. Though some details remain difficult, the reconstruction can hardly be doubted.Page in Frisk: 2,620-621Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πυθμήν
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98 πῦρ
πῦρ, πῠρόςGrammatical information: n.Meaning: `fire' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. pukawo = *πυρ-καϜοι?Compounds: Many compp., e.g. πυρ-καϊά, Ion. -ϊή f. `fireplace, pyre' (Il.), from *πυρ-καϜ-ιά̄, compound of πῦρ and καίω ( καῦ-σαι) with ι̯ᾱ-suffix, acc. as in σποδιά, ἀνθρακιά a. o.; cf. Scheller Oxytonierung 93 w. diff. interpretation; cf. Myc. pukawo; πυρ-φόρος `fire- or torch-bearing, -bearer' (Pi.), later also πυρο-φόρος; cf. Schwyzer 440; πυρι-γενής `born, worked in fire' (E. a.o.); ἄ-πυρ-ος `untouched by fire, without fire' (Il.); on πυρ-πολέω s. πέλομαι; on πυρ-αύστης etc. s. 2. αὔω; on πυρι-ήκης s. v.Derivatives: Many derivv. A. Subst.: 1. πῠρά n. pl. `watch-fires' (Il.), dat. πυροῖς (X.), prop. plur. of πῦρ with transition in the ο-stems and accentshift (Egli Heteroklisie 18 a. 22 f.). 2. πυρ-ά̄, Ion. -ή f. `fireplace, pyre' (IL). 3. πυρ-σός m., pl. alo - σά n. `firebrand, fire-signal' (with remarkable oxytonesis) with - σώδης `firebrand-like' (E. in lyr.), - σεύω `to ignite, to give a fire-signal' (E.; X.), - σεία, - σευτήρ, σευτής (hell.), - σίτης `fire-colour' (Philostr.). 4. πυρ-ετός m. `burning heat, fever' (Χ 31; after νιφετός? Porzig Satzinhalte 245) with πυρ-έσσω, Att. - έττω, aor. - έξαι, adj. - εκτικός; - ετιάω, - εταίνω, - ετώδης, - έτιον, - ετικός. 5. πυρ-εῖα, Ion. -ήϊα n. pl. `lighter, firesticks' (h. Merc.; not with Zumbach Neuerungen 14 from πυρή `pyre'). 6. πυρ-ία, Ion. - ίη f. `vapour-, sweating-bath etc.' (Ion., Arist.), `fishing by torchlight' (Arist.), with - ιάω `to prepare a vapour-bath, to foment, to warm' (Hp.), from which - ίαμα, - ίασις, - ιατήρ, - ιατήριον (Scheller Oxyton. 55); also - ιάτη f. `warmed animal-milk' (com.). 7. πυρ-ίδιον n. `spark' (Thphr.). 8. πυρ-ίτης m. `copper ore, ore' (Dsc., pap.), "fireman", surn. of Hephaistos (Luc.); Redard 36, 60, 245. 9. πύρ-εθρον, - ος, - ωθρον `pellitory, Anthemis pyrethrum' (because of the warming effect; Strömberg Pfl.namen 82 a. 146f.). 10. πυρ-αλ(λ)ίς s. v. 11. Πυρ-ωνία surn. of Artemis (Paus.). -- B. Adj.: 1. πυρ-ώδης `fire-like, fiery' (IA.); 2. - ινος `fiery' (Arist., Plb.); 3. - όεις `id.' (hell.), also as n. of the planet Mars (Arist., hell.); 4. on πυρρός s. v. C. Verbs: 1. πυρ-όομαι, - όω, also w. ἐκ- a.o., `to catch fire, to set on fire' (Pi., Ion. Att.; Wackernagel Unt. 124) with πύρ-ωσις ( ἐκ-, δια- a.o.) f., - ωμα, - ωτής, - ωτικός; 2. πυρ-εύω `to make fire, to kindle' (Pl.; ἐμπυρ-εύω, - ίζω from ἔμ-πυρος) with - εύς, - ευτής, - ευτικός (more in Bosshardt 83); 3. πυρ-άζω EM as explanation of 4. πυρακτέω; s.v.Etymology: With πῦρ, πῠρ-ός agrees exactly Umbr. pir nom. acc. (from * pūr), abl. pur-e (from *pŭr-), thus, with secondary vowelenlargement, Arm. hur, gen. hr-oy (\< *pū̆r-o-) and OWNo. fūrr, fȳrr (\< PGm. * fūr-i-). The word was originally an heteroclitic r \/ n- stem and is still so inflected in Hitt. paḫḫu(u̯a)r, gen. paḫḫu̯enaš. Traces of this formation can still be seen in Germ.: Goth. fōn, gen. fun-ins as opposed to OHG fuir, fiur, Feuer; also in Arm.: hn-oç `fireplace, furnace' a opposed to hur (s. above); note also Toch. A pl. por-äṃ (= -n; combination of r and n?, v. Windekens IF 65, 249 ff.). The ablaut, which appears already from the above cited forms, is now reconstructed as a proterodynamic r\/n-neuter: IE *peh₂-ur: ph₂-u̯en-s; cf. Specht KZ 59, 283ff.), was simplified in Greek (the change in quantity is not old). -- Beside this neutral matter-indicating word for `fire' Indo-European had an as old word indicating fire as active entity in Lat. ignis, Skt. agní-, Lith. ugnìs, OCS ognь; a parallel double designation, which represents two different interpretations of nature, is found with the words for `water' (s. ὕδωρ). On this Schulze Kl. Schr. 194f., Meillet MSL 21, 249ff., Bonfante Sprachgesch. u. Wortbed. 33ff., Mastrelli Arch. glottol. it. 43, 1 ff. On tabuistic replacing words for `fire' Havers Sprachtabu 64ff. Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 14f., Pok. 828, W.-Hofmann s. pūrus (relation quite hypothetic and quite doubtful; s. on this with further discussion Mayrhofer s. punā́ti; also Blesse KZ 75, 195).Page in Frisk: 2,627-629Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πῦρ
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99 πῠρός
πῦρ, πῠρόςGrammatical information: n.Meaning: `fire' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. pukawo = *πυρ-καϜοι?Compounds: Many compp., e.g. πυρ-καϊά, Ion. -ϊή f. `fireplace, pyre' (Il.), from *πυρ-καϜ-ιά̄, compound of πῦρ and καίω ( καῦ-σαι) with ι̯ᾱ-suffix, acc. as in σποδιά, ἀνθρακιά a. o.; cf. Scheller Oxytonierung 93 w. diff. interpretation; cf. Myc. pukawo; πυρ-φόρος `fire- or torch-bearing, -bearer' (Pi.), later also πυρο-φόρος; cf. Schwyzer 440; πυρι-γενής `born, worked in fire' (E. a.o.); ἄ-πυρ-ος `untouched by fire, without fire' (Il.); on πυρ-πολέω s. πέλομαι; on πυρ-αύστης etc. s. 2. αὔω; on πυρι-ήκης s. v.Derivatives: Many derivv. A. Subst.: 1. πῠρά n. pl. `watch-fires' (Il.), dat. πυροῖς (X.), prop. plur. of πῦρ with transition in the ο-stems and accentshift (Egli Heteroklisie 18 a. 22 f.). 2. πυρ-ά̄, Ion. -ή f. `fireplace, pyre' (IL). 3. πυρ-σός m., pl. alo - σά n. `firebrand, fire-signal' (with remarkable oxytonesis) with - σώδης `firebrand-like' (E. in lyr.), - σεύω `to ignite, to give a fire-signal' (E.; X.), - σεία, - σευτήρ, σευτής (hell.), - σίτης `fire-colour' (Philostr.). 4. πυρ-ετός m. `burning heat, fever' (Χ 31; after νιφετός? Porzig Satzinhalte 245) with πυρ-έσσω, Att. - έττω, aor. - έξαι, adj. - εκτικός; - ετιάω, - εταίνω, - ετώδης, - έτιον, - ετικός. 5. πυρ-εῖα, Ion. -ήϊα n. pl. `lighter, firesticks' (h. Merc.; not with Zumbach Neuerungen 14 from πυρή `pyre'). 6. πυρ-ία, Ion. - ίη f. `vapour-, sweating-bath etc.' (Ion., Arist.), `fishing by torchlight' (Arist.), with - ιάω `to prepare a vapour-bath, to foment, to warm' (Hp.), from which - ίαμα, - ίασις, - ιατήρ, - ιατήριον (Scheller Oxyton. 55); also - ιάτη f. `warmed animal-milk' (com.). 7. πυρ-ίδιον n. `spark' (Thphr.). 8. πυρ-ίτης m. `copper ore, ore' (Dsc., pap.), "fireman", surn. of Hephaistos (Luc.); Redard 36, 60, 245. 9. πύρ-εθρον, - ος, - ωθρον `pellitory, Anthemis pyrethrum' (because of the warming effect; Strömberg Pfl.namen 82 a. 146f.). 10. πυρ-αλ(λ)ίς s. v. 11. Πυρ-ωνία surn. of Artemis (Paus.). -- B. Adj.: 1. πυρ-ώδης `fire-like, fiery' (IA.); 2. - ινος `fiery' (Arist., Plb.); 3. - όεις `id.' (hell.), also as n. of the planet Mars (Arist., hell.); 4. on πυρρός s. v. C. Verbs: 1. πυρ-όομαι, - όω, also w. ἐκ- a.o., `to catch fire, to set on fire' (Pi., Ion. Att.; Wackernagel Unt. 124) with πύρ-ωσις ( ἐκ-, δια- a.o.) f., - ωμα, - ωτής, - ωτικός; 2. πυρ-εύω `to make fire, to kindle' (Pl.; ἐμπυρ-εύω, - ίζω from ἔμ-πυρος) with - εύς, - ευτής, - ευτικός (more in Bosshardt 83); 3. πυρ-άζω EM as explanation of 4. πυρακτέω; s.v.Etymology: With πῦρ, πῠρ-ός agrees exactly Umbr. pir nom. acc. (from * pūr), abl. pur-e (from *pŭr-), thus, with secondary vowelenlargement, Arm. hur, gen. hr-oy (\< *pū̆r-o-) and OWNo. fūrr, fȳrr (\< PGm. * fūr-i-). The word was originally an heteroclitic r \/ n- stem and is still so inflected in Hitt. paḫḫu(u̯a)r, gen. paḫḫu̯enaš. Traces of this formation can still be seen in Germ.: Goth. fōn, gen. fun-ins as opposed to OHG fuir, fiur, Feuer; also in Arm.: hn-oç `fireplace, furnace' a opposed to hur (s. above); note also Toch. A pl. por-äṃ (= -n; combination of r and n?, v. Windekens IF 65, 249 ff.). The ablaut, which appears already from the above cited forms, is now reconstructed as a proterodynamic r\/n-neuter: IE *peh₂-ur: ph₂-u̯en-s; cf. Specht KZ 59, 283ff.), was simplified in Greek (the change in quantity is not old). -- Beside this neutral matter-indicating word for `fire' Indo-European had an as old word indicating fire as active entity in Lat. ignis, Skt. agní-, Lith. ugnìs, OCS ognь; a parallel double designation, which represents two different interpretations of nature, is found with the words for `water' (s. ὕδωρ). On this Schulze Kl. Schr. 194f., Meillet MSL 21, 249ff., Bonfante Sprachgesch. u. Wortbed. 33ff., Mastrelli Arch. glottol. it. 43, 1 ff. On tabuistic replacing words for `fire' Havers Sprachtabu 64ff. Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 14f., Pok. 828, W.-Hofmann s. pūrus (relation quite hypothetic and quite doubtful; s. on this with further discussion Mayrhofer s. punā́ti; also Blesse KZ 75, 195).Page in Frisk: 2,627-629Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πῠρός
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100 Ζεύς
Grammatical information: m.Other forms: Boeot. Lac. etc. Δεύς, voc. Ζεῦ, gen. Δι(Ϝ)ός, dat. (loc.) Δι(Ϝ)ί, dat. also ΔιϜεί (e. g. ΔιϜεί-φιλος;), acc. Ζῆν, since Hom. also Δί-α, Ζῆν-α with Ζην-ός, -ί; nom. Ζήν (A. Supp. 162 [lyr.]; or voc.?), Ζάν (Pythag., Ar.), Ζάς (Pherec. Syr.), gen. Ζανός (inscr. Chios IVa [? ] a. o.); note Δᾶν (Theocr. 4, 17); more forms in Schwyzer 576f., Leumann Hom. Wörter 288ff. and the dict.Dialectal forms: Myc. dat. diwe \/diwei\/Compounds: As 1. member in univerbations like Διόσ-κουροι (gen.; also Διεσ-κουρίδου [Priene a. o.]), ΔιϜεί-φιλος (dat.), stemform e. g. in διο-γενής; also Ζηνό-δοτος (for Διόσ-δοτος) a. o.; as 2. member in ἔνδιος, εὑδία, s. vv.; cf. also αὑτόδιον.Derivatives: δῖος, s. v.Etymology: Ols name of heaven, of the god of heaven, of the day, preserved esp. in Sanskrit, Greek and Italic, and prob. in Hittite, with several related forms: Ζεύς = Skt. dyáuḥ `(god of) heaven, day', Lat. Iovis and pob. in nu-diūs tertius `(it is) now the third day', i. e. `the day before yesterday', IE *d(i)i̯ēus; also Hitt. * šiuš, šiun(i)- `god'; Ζεῦ πάτερ = Lat. Iūpiter, Ζῆν = Skt. dyā́m, Lat. diem (with new nom. diēs, Diēspiter; cf. also Illyr. Δειπάτυρος); the other oblique cases, ΔιϜ-ός, - εί, -ί, Δία agree with Skt. diváḥ, divé, diví, dívam (partly parallell innovations). New in Greek are Ζῆν-α (after Δί-α) with Ζηνός, -ί, which contains the old acc. *Di̯ē(u)m with early loss of the u̯ seen also in Skt. Dyām; not to IE * din- `day' in Lat. nun-dinae `market-day', Skt. madhyán-dinam `midday' a. o. (after Kretschmer Glotta 14, 303f. also Τιν-δαρίδαι and 30, 93ff). - The α in Ζάς, Ζάν, Ζανός was spread from Elean Olympia, where η became ᾱ, s. Leumann Hom. Wörter 288ff. (after Kretschmer Glotta 17, 197) and Fraenkel Gnomon 23, 373. - It is generally assumed that IE *d(i)i̯ēus is an agent noon of the verb seen in Skt. dī́-de-ti `shine', gr. δέατο (s. v.) meaning `shine, glow, light'; *d(i)i̯ēus prop. "the shining, gleaming". Objections in Wackernagel BerlAkSb. 1918, 396ff. (= Kl. Schr. 1, 315ff.), Nilsson Gr. Rel. 1, 391. Beside Ζεύς etc. there is an old appellative for `god' in Skt. deváḥ = Lat. deus = Lith. diẽvas a. o., IE *deiu̯os; prop. "the heavenly, caelestis" as deriv. from the noun for `heaven'. - Except Bq see W.-Hofmann s. diēs, Fraenkel Lit. et. Wb. s. diẽvas, Wackernagel-Debrunner Aind. Gramm. 3, 219ff., Mayrhofer EWAia. s. dyáuh, Benveniste Origines 59f, 166. (Cf. also Τινδαρίδαι).Page in Frisk: 1,610-611Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Ζεύς
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