-
61 atormentar
v.1 to torture.2 to torment, to torture, to beset, to gnaw.3 to terrorize.* * *1 (torturar) to torture2 figurado (causar disgusto) to torment, harass1 (sufrir) to torment oneself* * *verb1) to torture2) torment•* * *1. VT1) (Mil etc) to torture2) (=causar aflicción) to torment; (=acosar) to plague, harass; (=tentar) to tantalize2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) persona ( físicamente) to torture; ( mentalmente) to tormentb) dolor/celos2.atormentado por los celos/el remordimiento — tormented by jealousy/guilt
atormentarse v pron (refl) to torment oneself* * *= put + Nombre + on the rack, torment, gnaw (at), tantalise [tantalize, -USA], torture, bedevil.Ex. The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.Ex. Modern scholars are tormented by the abundance of electronically transmittable information available.Ex. The rugby league is increasingly beset by a financial reward system that gnaws at its prime resource -- the players.Ex. He may have wished to tease and tantalize his readers by insoluble problems.Ex. They tortured her into revealing her Pin number and safe code before cutting her up and disposing of her in bin liners.Ex. The article has the title 'Piracy, crooked printers, inflation bedevil Russian publishing'.----* conciencia + atormentar = conscience + smite, conscience + trouble.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) persona ( físicamente) to torture; ( mentalmente) to tormentb) dolor/celos2.atormentado por los celos/el remordimiento — tormented by jealousy/guilt
atormentarse v pron (refl) to torment oneself* * *= put + Nombre + on the rack, torment, gnaw (at), tantalise [tantalize, -USA], torture, bedevil.Ex: The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.
Ex: Modern scholars are tormented by the abundance of electronically transmittable information available.Ex: The rugby league is increasingly beset by a financial reward system that gnaws at its prime resource -- the players.Ex: He may have wished to tease and tantalize his readers by insoluble problems.Ex: They tortured her into revealing her Pin number and safe code before cutting her up and disposing of her in bin liners.Ex: The article has the title 'Piracy, crooked printers, inflation bedevil Russian publishing'.* conciencia + atormentar = conscience + smite, conscience + trouble.* * *atormentar [A1 ]vt1 «persona» (físicamente) to torture; (mentalmente) to torment2«dolor/celos»: este dolor de muelas me está atormentando this toothache is driving me crazyatormentado por los celos tormented by jealousyme atormentaba el remordimiento I was racked with o tormented by guilt( refl) to torment oneself* * *
atormentar ( conjugate atormentar) verbo transitivo [ persona] ( físicamente) to torture;
( mentalmente) to torment
atormentarse verbo pronominal ( refl) to torment oneself
atormentar verbo transitivo to torment
' atormentar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
martillear
- martirizar
- mortificar
English:
haunt
- rack
- tantalize
- torment
- torture
* * *♦ vt1. [torturar] to torture2. [sujeto: sentimiento, dolor] to torment;ese dolor de cabeza la está atormentando she's in agony with that headache;la atormenta la culpa she is plagued o tormented by guilt* * *v/t torment* * *atormentar vt: to torment, to torture* * *atormentar vb to torment -
62 terrible
adj.1 terrible (tremendo).2 terrifying.* * *► adjetivo1 terrible, awful* * *adj.terrible, horrible* * *ADJ terrible, awful* * *a) <tortura/experiencia> terrible, horrificb) ( uso hiperbólico) terrible* * *= formidable, harrowing, dreadful, horrendous, redoubtable, terrible, ghastly, excruciating, appalling, god-awful, shattering.Ex. 'It's up to you to see that things are done,' she defended herself, somewhat nervous and abashed by his formidable stare.Ex. See Michael R. Booth, 'English Melodrama', for further details of this harrowing tale.Ex. The same author also wrote the book 'Serials deselection: a dreadful dilemma'.Ex. If we were confronted with the alternatives that Mr. Gorman described this morning, it would have been a horrendous undertaking.Ex. The city has returned a majority for every Democratic presidential candidate since 1916, when Woodrow Wilson took 65% of the city's vote against the redoubtable Charles Evans Hughes.Ex. She had a distant fleeting vision of a workplace in which people acted like free and sensible human beings, instead of like the martyrized and victimized puppets of a terrible system called 'one-upmanship'.Ex. True, ghastly additions were made to XML.Ex. Loneliness can involve excruciating physical pain as well as harrowing mental suffering.Ex. His article, 'The skeleton in the our closet: public libraries art collections suffer appalling losses,' examines the problem of theft and mutilation of art materials in public libraries.Ex. The director and deputies deserve the most recognition because they actually had to give up time with their families for the god-awful places we sent them.Ex. The death of Scindia was shattering to all of us who knew him.----* Atila el Terrible = Tilly the Hun.* jaqueca terrible = splitting headache.* Terrible, el = Hun, the.* terrible experiencia = ordeal.* * *a) <tortura/experiencia> terrible, horrificb) ( uso hiperbólico) terrible* * *el Terrible= Hun, theEx: Mathilda Panopoulos, known as 'Tilly' to her friends and colleagues but usually styled 'Tilly the Hun' or just 'the Hun' by her detractors, is a native of Pritchard.
= formidable, harrowing, dreadful, horrendous, redoubtable, terrible, ghastly, excruciating, appalling, god-awful, shattering.Ex: 'It's up to you to see that things are done,' she defended herself, somewhat nervous and abashed by his formidable stare.
Ex: See Michael R. Booth, 'English Melodrama', for further details of this harrowing tale.Ex: The same author also wrote the book 'Serials deselection: a dreadful dilemma'.Ex: If we were confronted with the alternatives that Mr. Gorman described this morning, it would have been a horrendous undertaking.Ex: The city has returned a majority for every Democratic presidential candidate since 1916, when Woodrow Wilson took 65% of the city's vote against the redoubtable Charles Evans Hughes.Ex: She had a distant fleeting vision of a workplace in which people acted like free and sensible human beings, instead of like the martyrized and victimized puppets of a terrible system called 'one-upmanship'.Ex: True, ghastly additions were made to XML.Ex: Loneliness can involve excruciating physical pain as well as harrowing mental suffering.Ex: His article, 'The skeleton in the our closet: public libraries art collections suffer appalling losses,' examines the problem of theft and mutilation of art materials in public libraries.Ex: The director and deputies deserve the most recognition because they actually had to give up time with their families for the god-awful places we sent them.Ex: The death of Scindia was shattering to all of us who knew him.* Atila el Terrible = Tilly the Hun.* jaqueca terrible = splitting headache.* Terrible, el = Hun, the.* terrible experiencia = ordeal.* * *1 ‹tortura/experiencia› terrible, horrific2 (uso hiperbólico) terribletengo un sueño terrible I'm terribly tiredtenía un terrible dolor de muelas she had terrible toothachela máquina hace un ruido terrible the machine makes a terrible o dreadful noiseeste niño es terrible, no para quieto this child is terrible, he won't sit still* * *
Multiple Entries:
algo terrible
terrible
terrible adjetivo
terrible adjetivo
1 (desagradable) terrible, awful
2 (intensificador) terrible
3 (travieso) naughty
' terrible' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abominable
- amanecer
- campeonato
- canutas
- condición
- demonio
- diabólica
- diabólico
- disgusto
- espanto
- estado
- follón
- hambruna
- impresionante
- infumable
- lamentable
- lástima
- maltrecha
- maltrecho
- miedosa
- miedoso
- pecho
- pena
- penosa
- penoso
- pésima
- pésimo
- rabiosa
- rabioso
- secuela
- susto
- tener
- traer
- tremebunda
- tremebundo
- tremenda
- tremendo
- triunfo
- agobiante
- antología
- barbaridad
- bueno
- cabreo
- calamidad
- cochino
- endiablado
- enredo
- espantoso
- fatal
- funesto
English:
abominable
- appalling
- bad
- blow
- carry-on
- damage
- dispose
- doom
- flap
- lousy
- ordeal
- oversight
- rotten
- shocking
- terrible
- think back
- dreadful
- flirt
- harrowing
- horrendous
- job
* * *terrible adj1. [malo] terrible;la guerra es siempre terrible war is always a terrible thing;un año terrible para la economía del país a terrible year for the country's economy;este niño es terrible this boy is a terror;es terrible no poder hacer nada por ellos it's terrible not to be able to do anything for them2. [mucho] terrible;tengo un hambre/frío terrible I'm terribly hungry/cold* * *adj terrible, awful* * *terrible adj: terrible, horrible♦ terriblemente adv* * *terrible adj terrible / awful -
63 déguster
déguster [degyste]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb2. intransitive verb• j'ai mal aux dents, je déguste ! I've got toothache and it's agony! (inf)* * *degysteverbe transitif ( savourer) to savour [BrE] [boisson, aliment, victoire]; to enjoy [spectacle]* * *deɡyste1. vt1) (= goûter) [vins] to taste, [fromages] to taste2) (= savourer) [boisson, plat] to enjoy, [plaisirs, spectacle] to enjoy, to savour Grande-Bretagne to savor USA2. vi(= être malmené) to be in for it *On va déguster. — We're in for it now.
* * *déguster verb table: aimerA vtr2 [dégustateur] to taste [vins, liqueurs].B ◑vi ( endurer) to suffer, to go through hell○; qu'est-ce que j'ai dégusté! I really went through hell![degyste] verbe transitif1. [manger, boire - suj: convive] to taste ; [ - suj: dégustateur professionnel] to taste, to sample2. [écouter, lire, regarder] to savour————————[degyste] verbe intransitif(familier) [recevoir des coups] to get a bashing[être mal traité] to have a rough timeattends qu'il rentre, tu vas déguster! just wait till he gets home, you'll really catch it! -
64 fichu
• fichu téléphone ! that damn phone! (inf)c. ( = habillé) regarde comme il est fichu ! look at the way he's dressed!d. ( = bâti) elle est bien fichue she's got a nice body• c'est bien fichu, cette table pliante that folding table is well designede. être mal fichu or pas bien fichu [malade] to feel rotten (inf)f. ( = capable) il est fichu d'y aller, tel que je le connais knowing him he's quite capable of going* * *fiʃy
1.
(colloq) participe passé ficher 1. 3, 4, 5, 2. 2, 3, 4
2.
(colloq) adjectif1) ( détestable) (before n) [temps] rotten (colloq); [pluie] dreadful; [voiture, télévision] damned (colloq), blasted (colloq); [caractère] nasty; [métier] rotten (colloq)2) ( condamné) [personne] done for (colloq); (usé, cassé) [vêtements, véhicule, machine] done for (colloq)3) ( fait)être bien fichu — [femme] to be shapely; [homme] to be well built
être bien/mal fichu — ( conçu) [dispositif] to be well/badly designed; [appartement] to be well/badly laid out; [vêtement] to be well made/badly cut
être mal fichu — ( malade) to feel lousy (colloq)
4) ( considérable)une fichue différence — a heck (colloq) of a difference
5) ( capable)
3.
* * *fiʃy fichu, -e1. pp*See:2. adj *1) (= fini, inutilisable)Son stylo a fui dans sa poche et son veston est fichu. — His pen leaked in his pocket and his jacket has had it.
2) (intensif: avant le nom) wretched * darned *Avec cette fichue neige toute les routes sont bloquées. — All the roads are blocked with this wretched snow., All the roads are blocked with this darned snow.
3) (= capable)4) (locutions)Il était trop mal fichu pour venir à l'entraînement ce soir. — He was feeling too lousy to come to training tonight., (chose) useless
3. nm(= foulard) scarf, headscarf* * *A ○pp ⇒ ficher A 3, 4, 5, B 2, 3, 4.B ○pp adj1 ( détestable) (before n) [temps] rotten○; [pluie] dreadful; [voiture, télévision] flaming GB, damned○, blasted○ ( épith); [caractère] nasty; [métier] rotten○; ce fichu gamin ne veut rien apprendre this damn○ kid just doesn't want to learn; c'est à cause de ma fichue maladresse! it's because I'm so damned○ clumsy!;2 ( condamné) [personne, chaussures, vêtements, véhicule, machine] done for; s'il m'interroge je suis fichue if he asks me any questions, I'm done for ou sunk○; c'est fichu maintenant, c'est trop tard! it's no good now, it's too late!; s'il pleut c'est fichu if it rains that's the end of that; c'est la troisième ampoule de fichue that's the third bulb that's gone ou blown out US;3 ( fait) comment c'est fichu ce truc? how's this thing put together ou made?; être bien fichu [femme] to be shapely; [homme] to be well built; [mécanisme, dispositif] to be well designed; [appartement] to be well laid out; [vêtement] to be well made; [atlas, dictionnaire] to be well laid out; être mal fichu ( malade) [personne] to feel lousy○; ( mal conçu) [mécanisme, dispositif] to be badly designed; [appartement] to be badly laid out; [vêtement] to be badly cut; [atlas, dictionnaire] to be badly laid out; ce logiciel est très mal fichu this software is really badly designed;4 ( considérable) une fichue différence a heck○ of a difference;5 ( capable) être fichu de faire to be quite capable of doing; elle est fichue de réussir ses examens she's quite capable of passing her exams; il n'est pas fichu d'écrire une lettre he can't even write a letter.C nm shawl; avoir un fichu sur les épaules to have a shawl around one's shoulders.I1. [perdu]3. (avant le nom) [important]4. [capable]fichu de: il n'est même pas fichu de prendre un message correctement he can't even take a message properly5. (locution)II[fiʃy] nom masculin -
65 болеть
несов1) (чем-л.) to be sick, to be down withя боле́ю гри́ппом — I have the flu
2) (о теле, части тела и т.п.) ache [eik], hurtу меня́ боли́т голова́ (зуб) — I have a headache (toothache)
у меня́ боли́т рука́ — my hand hurts
• -
66 infernal
adj.infernal (also figurative).* * *► adjetivo1 (del infierno) infernal* * *ADJ infernal, hellish* * ** * *= hellish, scorching.Ex. The movie novel is about a trio of small-town guys who come across a wrecked plane containing a bag full of what they presume to be 'dirty money' and decide to hold onto it, with predictably hellish consequences.Ex. It is widely known that black robes help the Bedouins to keep cool in the scorching heat of the desert.----* calor infernal = blistering heat.* * ** * *= hellish, scorching.Ex: The movie novel is about a trio of small-town guys who come across a wrecked plane containing a bag full of what they presume to be 'dirty money' and decide to hold onto it, with predictably hellish consequences.
Ex: It is widely known that black robes help the Bedouins to keep cool in the scorching heat of the desert.* calor infernal = blistering heat.* * *‹ruido› infernal, hideous; ‹música› diabolicalhacía un calor infernal it was baking o unbearably o hellishly hot ( colloq)tengo un dolor de muelas infernal I have terrible o unbearable toothache* * *
infernal adjetivo ‹ ruido› infernal, hideous;
‹ música› diabolical;◊ hacía un calor infernal it was baking hot (colloq)
infernal adjetivo infernal, hideous: tengo un dolor de cabeza infernal, I've got a dreadful headache
' infernal' also found in these entries:
English:
hellish
* * *infernal adj1. [del infierno] infernal2. [ruido, tiempo] abominable;hizo un calor infernal it was infernally hot* * *adj* * *infernal adj: infernal, hellish -
67 боль
ж.pain, ( внезапная резкая) pang, ( колотьё) stabиспытывать боль — feel* / have a pain
причинять боль (дт.) — hurt* (d.)
♢
душевная боль — mental anguish -
68 біль
-
69 douiller
douiller (inf!) [duje]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb• ça douille it's damn expensive or pricey (inf!)b. ( = avoir mal) to have a hard time of it• j'ai une rage de dents, qu'est-ce que je douille ! I've got a toothache, it's agony! (inf) or it's killing me! (inf)• quand je me suis cassé le pied, qu'est-ce que j'ai douillé ! when I broke my foot, it hurt like hell (inf)* * *(très familier) [duje] verbe intransitifla nourriture est super, mais ça douille the food is great but it costs a packet ou an arm and a leg! -
70 dérouiller
dérouiller [deʀuje]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb2. intransitive verb( = souffrir) (inf!) to have a hard time of it• j'ai mal aux dents, qu'est-ce que je dérouille ! I've got toothache, it's agony! (inf)* * *
1.
(colloq) deʀuje verbe transitif ( dégourdir) [sport] to loosen up [jambes]; to limber [somebody] up [personne]
2.
3.
se dérouiller verbe pronominal* * *deʀuje vi ** * *dérouiller○ verb table: aimerA vtr ( dégourdir) [sport] to loosen up [jambes]; to limber [sb] up [personne]; [lecture] to stimulate [esprit].B vi ( recevoir des coups) to get a hiding○, to get a beating; ( souffrir) to go through hell○, to suffer.[deruje] verbe transitif1. [enlever la rouille sur] to remove the rust from————————[deruje] verbe intransitif1. [être battu] to get ittu vas dérouiller! you're for it ou going to get it!2. [souffrir] to be in agony————————se dérouiller verbe pronominal transitif -
71 morfler
morfler (inf!) [mɔʀfle]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb( = souffrir) to have a hard time of it• j'ai une rage de dents, qu'est-ce que je morfle ! I've got toothache, it's agony! (inf)• ça va morfler ! there's going to be trouble!* * *mɔʀfle vi *to get it * to catch it ** * *(très familier) [mɔrfle] verbe intransitif -
72 боль
ж.pain; ache [eɪk]; ( внезапная резкая) pang; ( колотьё) stabболь в боку́ — stitch
головна́я боль — headache
зубна́я боль — toothache
испы́тывать боль — feel / have a pain
причиня́ть боль (дт.) — hurt (d)
••душе́вная боль — mental anguish
с болью в се́рдце — with a heavy heart
до боли знако́мый — painfully familiar
-
73 боль
жен.pain, ache; pang (внезапная, резкая); stab (колотье)причинять боль (кому-л.) — to hurt
боль в животе — разг. belly-ache
испытывать боль — to feel/have a pain
-
74 боль
Существительному боль соответствуют английские pain и ache. Pain может обозначать продолжительную или мгновенную, тупую или резкую боль: боль в груди – pain in the chest, боль в колене – pain in the knee. Ache в современном употреблении встречается в составе существительных headache, toothache, stomachache, earache, backache и обычно имеет в виду продолжительную боль. Русские сочетания у меня болит глаз (горло, палец, нога) передаются английскими I have a sore eye (throat, finger, foot).Трудности английского языка (лексический справочник). Русско-английский словарь > боль
-
75 зуб
м1) tooth pl teethкоренно́й зуб — molar
у меня́ боли́т зуб — I have a bad tooth (a toothache)
2) ( клык у животного) fangсоба́ка оска́лила зубы — the dog bared its fangs
•- держать язык за зубами
- иметь зуб против кого-л.
- зуб на зуб не попадает у кого-л.
- ни в зуб ногой -
76 страдать
нсв vi1) испытывать страдания to suffer (from); to be in torment (with)страда́ть от бо́ли — to suffer from pain, to be in pain
страда́ть от головно́й/зубно́й бо́ли — to have a headache/a toothache
страда́ть головны́ми бо́лями — to suffer from headaches
2) (св пострада́ть) to suffer for sthстрада́ть за свои́ убежде́ния — to suffer for one's beliefs/convictions
-
77 у
предл с Р1) около at, byу окна́ — at/by the window
у воро́т мн — at the gate sg
у вла́сти — in power/office
останови́ться у ро́дственников — to stay with one's relatives
у меня́ есть — I have
у него́ си́льный го́лос — he has a strong voice
у неё боли́т зуб — she has a toothache, her tooth aches
4) указывает на источник fromузна́ть у кого-л — to know/to learn from sb
-
78 γόμφος
Grammatical information: m.Derivatives: γομφίος ( ὀδών) `grinder-tooth' (Ion.-Att.), γομφίτης `kind of styrax' (Aët.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 70), γομφάριον fish name (Sch.). - Denom. γομφόομαι, - όω `fasten with bolt or nails' (A.) with γόμφωσις (Gal.), γόμφωμα `frame-work, peg' (Plu.); γομφωτήρ `shipbuilder' (AP), γομφωτήριον `tenon' (Delos IIIa); γομφωτικη τέχνη `shipbuilding' (Pl.). - γομφιάζω `have toothache, gnash the teeth' (LXX) with γομφιασμός (LXX) and γομφίασις (Dsc.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [369] *ǵembh-, ǵombhos `bite; cutting tooth'Etymology: Old word for `tooth', prob. `cutting tooth': Skt. jámbha-, Alb. dhëmb, OCS zǫbъ, Latv. zùobs, Toch. A kam, B keme; cf. κόμβους ὀδόντας γομφίους H. (Illyrian? Krahe IF 60, 297). With metaph. meaning, e. g. OHG kamb `comb', and Lith. žam̃bas `sharp side'. - On the deviant meaning in Greek (from the use of the cutting teeth as pegs) s. Porzig Gliederung 184f. - Verbs in Skt. iterative jambháyati `grind'; and Lith. žembiù, žem̃bti `cut', OCS zębǫ `tear up'; on the meanings see Narten KZ 79 (1965) 255ff..Page in Frisk: 1,319-320Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γόμφος
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79 μύλη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `handmill, mill, (Od.), (the nether) millstone', metaph. `molar' (LXX), `knee-cap, hard formation in a woman's womb' (Hp., Arist.).Other forms: hell. a. late also μύλος m. (LXX, NT, Str.; cf. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2,58)Compounds: Compp., e.g. μυλο-ειδής `as a millstone' (H 270), μυλή-φατος `ground by a mill' (β 355, A. R., Lyc.; after ἀρηΐ-φατος a.o.; diff. Chantraine Sprache 1, 145); χειρο-μύλη `handmill' (X.), also - μυλος ( Edict. Diocl.), - μυλον (Cass. Fel.; cf. on βούτυρον); dimin. - μύλιον (Dsc., pap.).Derivatives: A. Subst. 1. μύλαξ, - ακος m. `millstone, big rounded stone' (M161, AP, Opp.), cf. λίθαξ a.o. (Chantraine Form. 379). 2. From this with ρ-suffix μύλακρος m. `millstone' (Alcm.), pl. = γομφίοι ὀδόντες (H.); f. - ακρίς, - ίδος as attr. of λᾶας `millstone' (Alex. Aet.), as subst. `cockroach', also (influenced by ἀκρίς) `locust' (Ar. Fr. 583, Poll.); also - αβρίς `id.' (Pl. Com., Poll.; prob. after ἁβρός, ἅβρα), - ηθρίς `id.' (Poll.). 3. μυλών, - ῶνος m. `millhouse, mill' (Att.) with - ωνικός `miller' (pap.), - ώνιον dimin. (gloss.). 4. μυλωθρός m. `miller' (Att., Arist.); on the formation which is not quite clear cf. Chantraine Form. 373; from this - ωθρίς f. `milleress' name of a comedy of Eubulos; - ωθρικός `belonging to a miller' (Plu.), - ωθρέω `grind' (Men.); backformation - ωθρον = μυλών (Phot.)?; also - ωθριαῖοι adjunct of καλυπ-τῆρες (= `roof-tiles'?; Delos IIa, reading uncertain); beside it μυλωρός `miller' (Aesop., Poll.), after πυλωρός a.o. 5. μυλάριον dimin. `small handmill' (pap.). 6. μυλεύς m. surn. of Zeus as keeper of mills (Lyc.; Bosshardt 67). 7. μυλίας m. ( λίθος) `millstone, stone, from which millstones were made' (Pl., Arist., Str.; Chantraine Form. 96). 8. μυλίτης m. ( λίθος, ὀδούς) `millstone, molar' (Gal.). 9. Μυλόεις ποταμὸς Άρκαδίας H.; s. Krahe Beitr. z. Namenforsch. 2. 233. -- B. Adj., all rare and late: 1. μύλ-ιος `belonging to a mill' (Procop.); 2. μυλ-ικός `id.' (Ev. Luk., Gal.); 3. - ινος `consisting of millstones' (Smyrna); 4. - αῖος `working in a mill' (AP), - αῖον n. `handmill' (pap.); 5. - ιαῖοι ὀδόντες `molars' (medic.); 6. - όεις `consisting of a millstone, belonging to a mill' (Nic., Nonn.); 7. - ητικη ἔμπλαστρος `remedy for toothache' (Gal.). -- C. Verbs, all rare. 1. μυλιάω only in ptc. μῡλιόωντες `gnashing with the teeth' (Hes. Op. 530; on - ιάω Schwyzer 732); 2. μυλόομαι `be hardened, cicatrized' (Hp.). -- On itself stands μύλλω = βινέω (Theoc. 4,58) with μυλ(λ)άς f. `whore' (Phot., Suid.), μυλλός m. `cake in the form of the pudenda muliebria' (Ath. 14, 647 a; Sicilian).Etymology: The primary verbal noun μύλη (accent as e.g. μάχη) with the secondarily arising μύλος (after λίθος or ὄνος ἀλέτης?) like the primary yot-present μύλλω deviate through the υ-vowel from the other cognate words for `grind', which show an e: o-vocalism: Celt., OIr. melim, Slav., e.g. OCS meljǫ (IE * mel-); Germ., e.g. Goth. malan, Lith. malù, Hitt. 3. sg. mallai (IE * mol-); Lat. molō, on itself ambiguous, prob. from * melō like OIr. melim. In μυλ- we must assume a zero- [or reduced] grade variant (ml̥-; mel-?) (Schwyzer 351). With μύλλω from *ml̥-i̯ō agree in Germ. OHG muljan, OWNo. mylia `crush'; on the meaning s. below, on the υ -vowel cf. φύλλον against Lat. folium. A weak grade appears also in Welsh malu `grind', as well as in Arm. malem `crush'. An u-vowel could also be found in the reduplicated Arm. ml-ml-em `rub'; (it could however also be drived from lengthened grade mēl- or mōl). The technical meaning `grind' might have been specialized from the general `rub'. As verbal noun μύλη has in Greek the character of an archaism, while μύλλω, which was degraded to an obscene meaning, was further replaced by the also old ἀλέω (s.v. and Porzig Gliederung 156), which was limited to the eastern languages. -- On itself stands μάλευρον (s.v.); remarkable and\/but suspect is the e-vowel of Myc. mereuro `meal' and meretirija `milleresses'. -- More forms in WP. 2, 284ff., Pok. 716f., W.-Hofmann and Ernout-Meillet s. molō, Fraenkel Wb. s. málti.Page in Frisk: 2,268-270Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μύλη
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80 ألم
أَلَم \ ache: a continuous pain: a headache; a stomach ache; backache. pain: suffering in mind or (usu.) in body: He was in great pain after falling down the cliff, a particular suffering in a certain part of the body: I have a pain in my stomach. suffering: pain; a discomfort; an unhappiness. \ أَلَمُ الأَسْنَان \ toothache: a pain in a tooth. \ أَلَمُ عِرْق النَّسا \ sciatica: a severe pain in the upper part of the leg. sciatica: a severe pain in the upper part of the leg. \ See Also أَلَمُ العَصَب الوَرِكيّ \ أَلَمٌ حادّ في الخاصِرة (بِسَبب الجَرْي) \ stitch: a pain in the side, caused by running: She got a stitch, and had to stop for a moment. \ أَلَمٌ حادّ مفاجئ \ pang: a sudden sharp pain: pangs of hunger; a pang of guilt. \ أَلَمٌ لاذِع \ sting: a stinging pain; a mark on the skin where one was stung: I felt a sharp sting. My arm was covered in ant stings. \ أَلَمٌ مُبَرِّح \ agony: great or sharp pain (of mind or body).
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