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1 λεῖος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `level', of bottom a. o., `smooth', of urfaces etc. (Il.), also `rubbed, well-ground' (Delos, pap., Dsc.; cf. λε(ι)αίνω, - όω below); adv. λείως, also λέως (after τελέως, ἡδέως a. o., cf. also λε(ι)αίνω below), also metaph. `completely, quite ' (IA.; cf. Lat. plānē, NHG glatt).Compounds: Often as 1. member, e. g. λειό-φλοιος `with smooth bark' (Thphr.), also with adverbial value (with - ω- after λε(ί)-ως), e. g. λειώλης = πανώλης (Rhodos VIa), λεω-κόνιτος, - κόρητος `changed in fine dust' resp. `swept smooth', i. e. `completely destroyed' (Theognost., H., Phot.), λεω-πάτητος `completely trodden (down)' (S. Ant. 1275 with v. l. λακ-πάτητος, s. λάξ); cf. further λεωργός = πανοῦργος, κακοῦργος (Archil. 88, 3, A. Pr. 5, X.), s. Chantraine Glotta 33, 25 ff. w. extensive treatment and many details; on λεῖος etc. also Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 89 n. 1.Derivatives: λειότης f. `smoothness' (Att.), λείαξ `beardless boy' (EM, H.); two denomin.: λε(ι)αίνω (on the phonetics Schwyzer 236, Lejeune Traité de phon. 216), also with ἐκ-, συν-, ἀπο-etc., `(make) smooth, ground' (Il.) with λε(ί)αν-σις, - τήρ, - τικός, ἐκλεα-σμός a.o. (Arist.); λειόω, also συν-, ἀπο- a. o., `id.' (Arist.) with λείω-μα `powder' (Thphr.); - σις `grinding' (Gal.).Etymology: Beside the o-stem in *λεῖϜος Latin has in lēvis `smooth' an i-stem, which may have replaced as lĕvis, brevis a. o. an older u-stem; *λεῖϜος too therefore first for *lei-u̯-os? The stemvowel is uncertain; beside lei- also lēi- has been supposed, cf. πλε(ί)ων \< *πληΐων and Schulze KZ 28, 266 n. 1 = Kl. Schr. 434 n 1; cf. W. -Hofmann s. 2. lēvis. Connection with the root of λείμαξ seems probable; s. also 2. λίς and λιτός.Page in Frisk: 2,99Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λεῖος
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2 λοίτη
Grammatical information: f.Etymology: Persson Beitr. 1, 222 assumes (WP. 2, 402) a verb for `go, go away, pass away' in Germ., e.g. Goth. ( af)- leiÞan, OWNo. līđa, OHG līdan (\> NHG leiden) with the causative OWNo. leiđa `carry, conduct, bury', OHG leiten ' leiten, carry etc.'; further the nouns OWNo. leiđi n. `burial place', OHG leitī f. `conduct, exequiae'. Also in Iranian the verb has remained as euphemistic expression for `pass away, die' (Av. raēθ-, pres. iriθ yeiti).Page in Frisk: 2,136Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λοίτη
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3 λίς 2
λίς 2Grammatical information: adj.Derivatives: Beside it 1. acc. sg. (also taken as pl.) λῖτ--α, dat. λιτ-ί `smooth (simple(?) linen' (Hom.). 2. λῑτός `simple' (IVa), λίτως (Alc. F 7, 2; connection unknown) with λιτότης f. `simpleness' (Democr. 274, Thphr.). - 3. λισσός (Crete IIIa, also GN), f. λισσή (Od.), λισσάς, Boeot. λιττάς (Corinn., A., E., Theoc., A. R.) `smooth, callow', also metaph. `naked, insolvent' (Crete); from here λισσόομαι in [λισ]σωθέντων ptc. `becoming insolvent' (Crete IIIa) and in λίσσωμα `bald spot on the skull', λίσσωσις `becoming bald, baldheadedness' (Arist.); cf. λισσούς δεομένους. καὶ τοὺς ἡσυχῆ φαλακρούς H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: On λισσάνιος s. v. These words must be explained as follows acc. to Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 88ff.. The basis was the τ-stem λι-τ- in λί-ς and in the substantives λῖτ-α, λιτ-ί. Thematic enlargement gave λιτ-ό-ς; beside it a ια-deriv. in fem. *λῖσσα (from *λῖτ-ι̯α), with (through the orig. ablauting gen. λισσῆς) a new nom. λισσή with masc. λισσός. With λίς: λῖσσα cf. e.g. θής: θῆσσα, Κρής: Κρῆσσα. - From λίς the form λεῖος can hardly be separated; so λῑ-τ- zero grade to a lengthened grade lēi- (Fraenkel l.c.) or because of its monosyllabicity from *λῐ-τ- lengthned to lei- (cf. Schwyzer 350)? - There is no reason to postulate a separate word λῖτ-α, λιτ-ί `linnen' (s. Bq s. λίνον); s. also Bechtel Lex. s. λίς, λισσός. Uncertain suppositions.Page in Frisk: 2,128-129Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λίς 2
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4 λῶ
λῶGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `want, wish' (Epich., Ar., Theoc., Dor, El. inscr.)Other forms: λῃ̃ς, λῃ̃, λῶμες etc., El. opt. λΕοιταν, Cret. opt. λΕ(ι)οι, λΕιοιεν, subj. λΕιωντι, ptc. λΕιοντος, -α etc., inf. (coni. Ahrens Th. 5, 77) λῆν; the gloss λεῳμι seems Ion.Derivatives: 1. λῆμα n. `will, spirit, courage, insolence' (Hdt.; Aly Glotta 15, 116) with λημάτια φρονήματα, βουλεύματα H., ληματίας m. `high-spirited, dare-devil' (Ar. Ra. 494; Chantraine Form. 93; v. l. ληματιᾳ̃ς as from *ληματιάω), ληματόομαι in λελημάτωμαι λῆμα ἔχω εἰς τὸ ἔργον H.; 2. λῆσις (also λῆϊς Dor.) βούλησις, αἵρεσις H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Because of forms like λΕιοι, λΕιωντι etc. an orig. long diphthong lēi- was supposed, to which also λαιδρός, λιλαίομαι (WP. 2, 393 with Solmsen KZ 44, 171); this however, is impossible. Diff. s. vv.; also λίαν was wrongly adduced. Against an orig. Ϝλη- (from *u̯lēi-?) to Lat. vel-le, wollen etc. s. WP. l.c., where also other, decidedly wrong interpretations are rejected (also in Bq). Further lit. in Schwyzer 676 w. n. 2. One might start from *lē-i̯ō, Bechtel, Gr. Dial. 2, 192. - Cf. λωΐων.Page in Frisk: 2,150Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λῶ
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5 λίβος
2 = ἐπίσταγμά τι τῶν ὀμμάτων, Gal.19.118. -
6 ἀλείφω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `anoint with oil' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. enaripoto \/ enaliptos\/; arepate \/ aleiphatei\/; arepazoo \/ aleiphzoos\/ `boiler (ζέω) of unguent'.Derivatives: ἄλειφαρ, - ατος `unguent, anoiting-oil' (Il.) and ἄλειφα n. (\> Lat. adeps). ἀλοιφή `anointing, grease' (-α from *-n̥t?, Szemerényi Studi Mic. 2, 1967, 23 n. 64).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [00] * h₂leibʰ-Etymology: Generally connected with λίπος (q. v.), but this is impossible since the α- can no longer be a prothesis, and because of the -p- and because its meaning, `fat', is quite different. Connection with ἀλίνω is formally ( h₂lei(bʰ)-) and semantically easy. S. s.v. (improbable suggestions Szemerényi Gnomon 42 (1971) 653.) Semantically comparable with Skt. limpáti `smear, stick, adhere', but Gr. - φ- makes this impossible (s. λίπος); Goth. bileiban etc.? Cf. Pok. 670 leip-.Page in Frisk: 1,67-68Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλείφω
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7 ἀλίνειν
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: (cod. - νεῖν) ἀλείφειν H. ἀλῖναι ἐπαλεῖψαι H. ἰν-αλαλισμένα `engraved' (Cyprus). καταλῖναι. καταλεῖψαι H. is now confirmed by an inscr. from Selinous, RPh 69, 1995, 128, l. 16.Derivatives: Verbal noun ἄλινσις τοῠ ἐργαστηρίου (Epid.).Etymology: ἀλίνω prob. \< *ἀλιν-ι̯ω will be cognate with Lat. lĭno `besmear, rub', orig. an n-present (perf. lēvi)?; root ἀλι- \< * h₂li-. One would like to reconstruct * h₂li-n-H-, but Lat. litus has short i (after linō? LIV 247f.). The same root as in ἀλείφω.Page in Frisk: 1,73Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀλίνειν
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8 κλειτορίς
κλειτορίς, - ίδοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `clitoris' (Ruf., H., Suid.).Derivatives: κλειτοριάζω `touch the clitoris' (iid.)Origin: IE [Indo-European] [600] *ḱlei- `lean'Etymology: medic. term, formed like ἀλεκτορίς (: ἀλέκτωρ), ἀκεστορίς (: ἀκέστωρ) etc., so prop. "small hill", from *κλείτωρ `hill', which is known as name of an Arcadian town; verbal noun of κλίνω (s. v.); on the meaning cf. e. g. κλειτύς `slope, hill', Lat. clīvus `hill'. Grošelj Živa Ant. 3, 201; cf. also Schwyzer 531 n. 2, Benveniste Noms d'agent 34. - Not a foreign word with Cohen Mél. Boisacq 1, 178ff.Page in Frisk: 1,868-869Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλειτορίς
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9 κλῐ1νω
κλῐ1νωGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `incline (oneself), lean (on), sink, bend'.Other forms: - ομαι, aor. κλῖναι, κλίνασθαι (Il.), pass. κλιθῆναι (Od.), κλινθῆναι (Il.;; Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 404 w. n. 2, Schwyzer 761), also κλινῆναι (Att.; prob. for *κλι-ῆναι; Schwyzer 760), fut. κλῐνῶ (Att.), perf. midd. κέκλῐμαι (Il.), with κέκλῐκα (Plb.),Derivatives: 1. from the root with δ-suffix: δι-κλί-δ-ες f. `double leaning, two-winged' (s. v.), ἐγκλίς ἡ καγκελλωτη θύρα (EM); παρα-, ἐγ-κλιδόν `turning aside, inclining' (Od.). 2. From a prefixed present with ending after the s-stems (Schwyzer 513): κατα-, ἐπι-, ἀπο-, ἐκ-, συγ-κλινής etc. `inclined away, slant etc.' (Hp., A.) with ἐπικλίν-εια (Heliol. Med.), συγκλιν-ίαι pl. (Plu.). 3. compounds with τη-suffix: παρα-, συγ-κλί-της `who lies beside or together at the table' (X.. Plu.), ἐπι-κλίν-της `who inclines to the side' (Arist.). - 4. κλειτύ̄ς (also κλῑτύς after κλί̄νω), ύος f. `slope, hill' (Il.; on the notation Schwyzer 506 w. n. 7). 5. κλεῖτος n. (A. R. 1, 599), κλῐ́τος n. (Lyc., LXX, AP) `slope, side'. - 6. κλίσις, most. in prefixcompp., e. g. ἀνά-, κατά-, ἀπό-κλισις `leaning back etc.' (IA.). - 7. κλίμα n. (with hell. ῐ for ει; Schwyzer 523) `inclination, slope, quarter, land', also ἔγκλι-μα etc. (Arist.), with κλιματίας `inclining' (Herakleit., Amm. Marc.), κλιματικός `belonging to the sone' (Vett. Val.). 8. κλῖμαξ, - ακος f. `trep, ladder, climax etc.' (Od.) with κλιμάκιον (IA.), - ίς (Att. inscr., hell.), κλιμακίσκοι πάλαισμα ποιόν H.; κλιμακίζω `use a grip called κλῖμαξ in the fighting', metaph. `bring down' (Att.); κλιμακωτός (Plb.), - ώδης (Str.) `like a trep'; also κλιμακ-τήρ `rug of a ladder' (IA.), `critical point of a mans life' (Varro) with κλιμακτηρικός, - τηρίζω (Gell., Vett. Val.); on the formation of κλῖμαξ (ῑ analog. for ει [*κλεῖ-μα] from κλί̄νω) Rodriguez Adrados Emerita 16, 133ff.; on κλιμακτήρ Chantraine Formation 327f. - 9. κλισμός `arm-chair' (Ion.Il.) with κλισμίον, - άκιον (inscr., Call.), `inclination, slope' (Arist.). - 10. ἀνά-κλιθρον `back of a chair' (Ptol.). - 11. κλίτα στοαί, κλίταν ( καὶ τάν cod.) στοάν H., prop. `leaning'; from there κλισία, Ion. - ίη `pile-dwelling, shed, chapel; arm-chair, resting-bed, tomb' ( Il.), κλίσιον nearly `annex, stoa' (ω 208, Delos IIIa), also `annex, shed, chapel' (Lys., Paus.); often written κλεισίον (inscr.), also κλεισία f. `tavern' (ep.), perh. through adaptation to κλείω `lock' (diff. Schulze Q. 295 A. 3 and Fraenkel KZ 45, 168); from there κλεισιάδες ( θύραι) `doors of the κλ(ε)ισία, of the κλ(ε)ισίον' (Hdt., Ph., D. H., Plu.); details on κλισίη in Frisk Eranos 41, 59ff., Scheller Oxytonierung 61. - 12. ( ἐγ-, ἐκ-)κλιτικός `inflecting etc.' (gramm.); to ( ἔγ-, ἔκ-)κλισις. - From the present: 13. κλίνη `layer, bed, litter' (IA.; cf. Chantraine Formation 192) with κλινίς, - ίδιον, - ίον, - άριον (Com.), κλίνειος `belonging to a κλίνη' (D.), - ήρης `censorius' (Ph., J.); as 2. member in σύγ-κλινος `bedfellow' (Men.). - 14. κλιντήρ, - ῆρος m. `id.' (Od.) with κλιντήριον, - ίδιον, - ίσκος (Ar.), ἀνακλιν-τήρ `neighbour at table' (Ps.-Callisth.); παρακλίν-τωρ `id.' (AP); ἀνά-, ἐπί-κλιν-τρον `back (leaning) etc.' (Erot. in Poll., Ar., inschr. etc.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [600] *ḱlei- `lean'Etymology: The yot-presens κλί̄νω \< *κλῐ́ν-ι̯ω, which is a Greek innovation, goes back on an older nasal-presens, seen in several languages but in diff. forms: Lat. clīnāre, Germ., e. g. OS hlinōn, OHG hlinēn \> lehnen, Balt., e. g. Latv. slìe-n-u, slìet, EastLith. šli-n-ù, šliñti `lean', Av. sri-nu-, ptc. sri-ta- `lean', prob. also Arm. li-ni-m, aor. ipv. le-r, `become, be'; the basis was athem. *ḱli-n-ā-mi. Beside this there was in Indo-Iranian and Baltic a thematic root-present, e. g. Skt. śrayati = Lith. (old a. dial.) šlejù `lean'. The originally only presentic nasal has in Latin and Germanic conquered the whole inflexion, but in Greek did not reach the perfect ( κέ-κλι-ται: Skt. śi-śri-y-é), partly also the passive aorist. - The Greek nominal derivations are mostly innovations; note, except ( ἄ)-κλιτος = Skt. śri-tá-, Av. sri-ta- `leaning', κλίσις, formally = Lith. šli-tì-s `shove-shed'; κλίτον = Germ. e. g. OHG lit `cover', NHG Augen- lid; beside it with full grade (as in κλει-τύς) e. g. OWNo. hlīð f. `slope'. As in κλίνη the nasal came in OHG hlina `reclinatorium'. - Several nominal formations in Bq s. v., Pok. 600ff., W.-Hofmann s. clīnō.Page in Frisk: 1,874-875Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλῐ1νω
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10 λαιός 1
λαιός 1.Grammatical information: adj.Derivatives: Diminut. (context unknown) λαίδιον ἀριστερόν, εὑώνυμον H.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [652] *leh₂iu̯o- `left'Etymology: Old word for `left', identical with Lat. laevus, Slav., e. g. OCS lěvъ, Russ. lévyj ; IE. *lai̯u̯os = *leh₂i-uo-?; on the phonetics Schwyzer 266 a. 314, on the u̯o-suffix ibd. 472 and Chantraine Form. 122f. Substantivized is λαίβα (= λαίϜα) ἀσπίς, πέλτη H.; prop. "what is worn in the left"(?). Here also Illyr. PN Laevicus, Levo (Krahe Spr. d. Illyr. 1, 55). - Hypothesis on a basic meaning `crooked' and further suggestions for connections, all quite hypothetic or arbitrary, in WP. 2, 378 f., W.-Hofmann s. laevus; also Huisman KZ 71, 104 (to λαιμός, λαῖτμα; IE. * lei- `towards below, askew', but this is phonetically impossible). On spread and use of λαιός, σκαιός, ἀριστερός Chantraine Μνήμης χάριν 1, 61 ff. - Fur. 339 compares λαφός ὁ ἀριστερᾳ̃ χειρὶ χρώμενος Η.; but Lat. laevus can hardly be separated from the word.Page in Frisk: 2,73Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λαιός 1
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11 λείβω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `pour (forth), make a libation' (Il.).Other forms: aor. λεῖψαι,Derivatives: A. λειβῆνος ὁ Διόνυσος H., λείβηθρον ( λίβ-) n. `dripping place' (Eup. 428), λείβδην `by drops' (EM). - B. With ablaut: λοιβή f. `sacrifice of drinks, gift' (Il.) with λοιβ-εῖον (Plu.), - ίς (Antim., inscr.), - άσιον (Epich.) `vase for spilling', - αῖος `belonging to spilling' (Ath.); λοιβᾶται σπένδει, θύει H. (cf. below). - C. With zero-grade: 1. *λιψ f., only gen. λιβός, acc. λίβα `drink-offering, drip' (A., A. R.) with λιβηρός `wet' (Hp. ap. Gal.); 2. λίψ, λιβός m. "the dripper", name of the rainbringing Southwest-, (West)wind, also as name of the heavenly region `Southwest, West' (Hdt., Arist.) with λιβικός `(south)western' (pap.). For λίψ... πέτρα, ἀφ' ἧς ὕδωρ στάζει H. cf. αἰγίλιψ. 3. From λίψ: λιβάς, - άδος f. `spring, fount etc.' (trag. etc.) with the dimin. λιβάδιον (Str., Plu.), also ' χωρίον βοτανῶδες', i. e. `wet meadow' (H., EM), λιβάζω, - άζομαι `drip' (AP, Poll.), ἀπο- λείβω metaph. `throw away, remove oneself' (com.). 4. λίβος n. = λιβάς (A. Ch. 448 [lyr.], Gal.). - On λιβρός s. v.Etymology: The regelar fullgrade thematic λείβω (with λεῖψαι) and the zero grade primary noun λίψ stand side by side in Greek (cf. νείφει: νίφ-α; quite uncertain λίβει σπένδει, ἐκχύνει H.). - To λοιβᾶται (from λοιβή, s. above) Lat. lībāre `pour out, spill' can be a direct counterpart (cf. Porzig Satzinhalte 254, 322), but it can also be a an independent iterative deverbative (so certainly dēlĭbūtus, if with ū after imbūtus); quite doubtful is λαβά σταγών H., after v. Blumenthal Hesychst. 18 f. Maced. or Messap. for λοιβά. If we remove the -b-, we can adduse other words for `pour (out)', e. g. OCS lьjǫ, lějǫ, liti, Lith. líeju, líeti, s. Bq, WP. 2, 392f., W.-Hofmann s. lībō, Vasmer Wb. s. litь, Fraenkel Wb. s. líeti; always with further connections. - The length in ὄφρᾱ λείψαντε (Ω 285 = ο 149) must not prove λλ- \< IE sl-; cf. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 176. A riming form is εἴβω, s. v.Page in Frisk: 2,96-97Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λείβω
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12 λειμών
λειμών, - ῶνοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `moist, grassy place, humid meadow' (Il.), metaph. of flowered surfaces and objects (Ach. Tat., Philostr.);Compounds: Compp., e.g. βαθυλείμων (Pi.), - λειμος (Il., with transition in the ο-stems) `with grassy meadows'; ἀ-λίμενος `without harbour, refuge' (Att.; Sommer Nominalkomp. 77 f.).Derivatives: λειμώνιος `belonging to the meadow' (A., Arist.), f. - ιάς (S., A. R.), - ίς (D. P.), - ιον n. plantname, `Statice limonium' (Dsc., Plin.); λειμων-ιάτης λίθος name of a grass-green stone (Plin.). With suffix-change (after πῖδαξ, βῶλαξ etc.) λεῖμαξ, - ακος f. `meadow' (E. in lyr.), `garden' (Pherecr.) with - ακώδης `meadowlike, grassy' (Hp.), - ακίδες νύμφαι (Orph. A. 646; uncertain; codd. λιμνακίδων). - With diff. ablaut: λιμήν, - ένος m. `harbour, protected creek', also metaph. `refuge' (Il.), `assembly-, marketplace' (Thess.; after H. also Cypr.; cf. Bechtel Dial. 1,450f.). Dimin. λιμένιον (Str.; NGr. λιμάνι from Osm. liman; Maidhof Glotta 10, 14); λιμένιος `belonging to the harbour' (Paus.), λιμενίτης, f. - ῖτις `inhabitant of a harbour' (Corycos), of Priapos resp. Artemis as harbourgod(dess) (AP; Redard 23), λιμεν-ητικὰ χρήματα `harbour-taxes' (Cod. Just., with analog. - ητικά, if not itacistic fr - ιτικά), λιμεν-ίζω `build a harbour' (Polyaen.). - With enlargement after the ᾱ-stems and zero grade suffix (Schwyzer 524, Chantraine Form. 2 15): λί-μν-η f. `standing water, pond, sea, marsh' (Il.), Λίμναι pl. place in Athens, in Sparta etc. (Att.); compp., e. g. εὔ-λιμνος `with many seas' (Arist.). Many derivv.: 1. diminut. λιμνίον n. (Arist.). 2. λιμναῖος `living in seas etc., belonging to the sea' (IA.); 3. λιμνάς f. `id.' (Theoc., Paus.). 4. λιμνήτης, - τις (- ῖτις) `id.' (Theoc., Paus., inscr.), λιμνιτικά n. pl. name of a tax (pap.). 5. λιμνώδης `sea-, marsh-like' (IA.). 6. plantname: λιμν-ήσιον, - ησία, - ηστις, - ηστρον, - ηστρίς (Dsc., Gal.). 7. Denomin. verbs: λιμνάζω `build a λ., stagnate, put under water' (Arist.) with λιμνασμός `flood, inundation', - αστής `inund. surveyor', - αστεία `inund. work' (pap.), - ασία `marshy bottom' (Arist.); λιμνόομαι `build a λ.' (Thphr., Str.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [662?] * lei- [not well mentioned in Pok.]Etymology: The primary formations λει-μών and λι-μήν (with λί-μν-η), which show both in stem as in suffix old ablaut (Schwyzer 521 f., Chantraine Form. 170), are isolated in Greek and have outside Greek no counterpart; for the etymology we have only suppositions. Starting from the idea `moistness, standing water etc.' (thus Benveniste Origines 123) Bq with J. Schmidt Zur Gesch. d. idg. Vocalismus 2, 259 f. wants to connect Lat. līmus `mud', to which may belong, with anlaut. sl-, the words mentioned under λείμαξ; also those unser λείβω, e. g. OCS lьjǫ (with perhaps Lat. lītus "floodarea") might be considered. - Quite diff. WP. 1, 158 and Pok. 309: prop. *'low-lying, Einbuchtung' (cf. e. g. NHG Anger to ἀγκ- in ἀγκ-ύλος etc.) to Lat. līmus `oblique', līmen `threshold', withou m-suffix e. g. Latv. leja `dale, valley'.Page in Frisk: 2,97-99Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λειμών
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13 λείπω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `let, leave, leave behind', intr. `to be wanting, disappear', midd. `depart'.(Il.)Other forms: λιμπάνω (Sapph., Hp., Th., v. l. Λ 604), fut. λείψω, aor. 2 λιπεῖν, perf. λέλοιπα (alle Il.), midd. λέλειμμαι (Il.), aor. pass. λειφθῆναι (h. Merc., Pi.), aor. 1 λεῖψαι (Ar.),Compounds: often with prefix, e. g. ἀπο-, ἐκ-, ἐν-, κατα-, ὑπο-, As 1. member in mehreren governing compp., partly with privative meaning, e. g. λιπό-τεκνος `childless' (Pi.), s. Schwyzer 442; on the stemformation see Sommer Nominalkomp. 124 f.; also with inversion of the members as σαρκο-λιπής (AP) for λιπό-σαρκος (Hp.). Besides note λειψ(ι)- in λειψ-υδρ-ία `dirt of water' (Thphr.) etc.Derivatives: Subst.: 1. λεῖμμα ( ὑπό-, κατά-, ἔλ- λείπω etc.) `rest' (IA., Arist.). 2. λεῖψις ( ἔκ-, ἀπό- λείπω etc.) `leaving, be absent' (IA.). 3. λείψανον, most pl. -α `remainder' (E., Ar., Pl. 4. ἐκλειπ-ία `lack' (J.; cf. ἐκλιπ-ής below). - Adj.: 5. λοιπός (also ὑπό-, κατά- λείπω a. o. from ὑπο-λείπω etc.) `remaining' (posthom.) with ( ὑπο)λοιπ-άς f. `rest' (pap.), ἀπολοιπ-ασία `id.' (Hero, pap.; *ἀπολοιπ-άζω: ἀπόλοιπ-ος; Chantraine Form. 85, Schwyzer 469). 6. ἐκ-, ἐν-, ὑπο-λιπ-ής etc. (v. l. - λειπής) `lacking, remaining etc.' (Att.). 7. ἐκ-, ἐν-, παρα-, ὑπο-λειπτικός `regarding the ἔκλειψις' (hell.). - On its own is λίσσωμεν ἐάσωμεν H.; the explanation is dubious, cf. Schwyzer 692.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [669] `let, leave behind'Etymology: The thematic root aorist ἔ-λιπ-ε has exact parallels in Arm. e-lik', Skt. á-ric-a-t, IE *é-likʷ-e-t `he left'. With λέ-λοιπ-α agrees except the accent and the reduplication vowel Skt. ri-réc-a; without reduplication Germ., e.g. Goth. laiƕ, Lat. līqu-ī, IE *- loikʷ-. The nasalpresent λι-μ-π-άν-ω resembles best Arm. lk`-an-em (IE * likʷ-); nasalpresents of diff. formation are found also elsewhere, e. g. Skt. (3. sg.) ri-ṇá-k-ti, Lat. li-n-qu-ó. With the thematic root present λείπω agree Germ., e. g. Goth. leiƕan, OHG līhan `loan' (PGm. *līhu̯-) and Lith. liekù `let'; the last stands for older athemat. liek-mì. The Germ. present may go back on a nasalized *liŋhu̯-, which would agree with Lat. linquō. Note λοιπός beside the subst. Skt. ati-reka- m., Lith. ãt-laikas, OCS otъ-lěkъ `remainder' (IE *- loikʷ-o-); cf. Porzig Satzinhalte 304, Gliederung 167. - Further details WP. 2, 396f., Pok. 669f., W.-Hofmann s. linquō, Fraenkel s. lìkti.Page in Frisk: 2,99-100Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λείπω
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14 λείριον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `lily, Lilium candidum' (h. Cer. 427, Hp., A. R., Thphr., Dsc.; λείριον ἄνθεμον Pi.), also `narciss' (Thphr., Dsc.).Compounds: As 2. member im PN Ποδα-λείριος (Il.).Derivatives: λείρινος `made of lilies' (Dsc., Gal.), also `lily-like' ( ἄνθος, Thphr. HP 3, 18, 11; not quite certain), λειρι-ώδης `lily-like' (Thphr.), - όεις `belonging to the lily' (Nic. Al. 406). - Also λειριόεις of the skin (N 830), of the voice or the song of the cicadas (Γ 152), of the song of the Muses (Hes. Th. 41, Q. S. 2, 418); λείριος of the voice (A. R., Orph.), also of the eyes (B. 17, 95), λειρός, n. pl. λειρά of the song of the cicadas (IG 14, 1934 f6, verse-inscr.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Like Lat. līlium the word comes from an eastern Mediterraneam language; a comparable deignation of the lily is found in Coptic, hrêri, hlêli (Egypt. ḥrr-t). Further several words for `flower', Hamit. ilili, alili, Alb. lule, Hitt. alil, alēl; s. W.-Hofmann s. līlium, Benveniste BSL 50, 43. - Also the poetic λειριόεις and the later attested, prob. backformations λείριος and λειρός as adjuncts of the skin and the voice can be understood as derivv. of λείριον ('lily-white, -soft'), s. Wærn Eranos 50, 19 f. Leumann Hom. Wörter 27 f. (who for Ποδα-λείριος reminds of the opposite Μελάμ-πους) calls the problem unsolvable as intermediate phases cannot be reconstructed. - Quite diff. Bechtel (s. Lex. s. λειριόεις), Fick 1, 538, Fraenkel Wb. 330: to λειρός (cod.- ώς) ὁ ἰσχνὸς καὶ ὠχρός H.; through dissimilation from *λειλός to Lith. leĩlas `thin, slender'.Page in Frisk: 2,100-101Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λείριον
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15 λῑμός
λῑμόςGrammatical information: m., also f. (Schwyzer-Debrunner 37 w. n. 3, Solmsen Wortforsch. 109)Meaning: `hunger, famine' (Il.).Compounds: Compp., e.g. λιμ-αγχ-έομαι `be weakened by hunger' (Hp.) from *λίμ-αγχ-ος (: ἄγχω; cf. Schwyzer 726); on βού-λιμος s. on βουλιμία; on πούλιμος `strong hunger' (Boeot.) Schulze K.Z. 33, 243 f. = Kl. Schr. 399 f. -Derivatives: λιμ-ώδης `hungry' (Hp.), - ηρός `hungry, connected with hunger' (Theoc., AP), - αλέος = ' ῥυσός, λεπτός' (H.; after αὑαλέος a. o.). Verbs: λιμαίνω, λιμῆναι `be hungry' (Hdt.), λιμώττω, - ώσσω `id.' (Str., J.) with λίμωξις (late); on NGr. λιμάζω, - άσσω cf. Georgacas Glotta 36, 168; on the group id. Άφιέρωμα Τριανταφυλλίδη 513ff.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: No agreement outside Greek (Osc. limu `famem' is a loan.) A primary formation compared with λῑ-μός is suspected in λοι-μός `pest' (s.v.) in spite of the long ι; on further hypothetical connections, e.g. with Lith. líesas `meagre', leĩnas `thin, weak, pliant', Goth. af-linnan ' ἀποχωρεῖν', OHG bi-linnan `give way, stop, leave off' s. WP. 2, 387f., Pok. 661 f., Fraenkel Wb. s. láibas, also W.-Hofmann s. lētum. Diff. Wackernagel KZ 30, 295 ( = Kl. Schr. 1, 658): from *λῑπ-μός to λίψ ἐπιθυμία, λίπτω (s. v.); s. also λιρός..Page in Frisk: 2,124-125Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λῑμός
См. также в других словарях:
lei — lèi pron.pers. di terza pers.f.sing., s.m.inv., s.f.inv. FO I. pron.pers. di terza pers.f.sing. I 1. riferito a persona e, in usi fam., anche ad animale o a cosa, si usa in funzione di complemento oggetto o di complemento di termine quando si… … Dizionario italiano
lei — Lei (for various kinds, see Haw. Eng. entry and entries that follow it). See saying, pu upu u1. ♦ Feather lei, lei hulu. ♦ Any lei for the neck, lei, lei ā ī. ♦ Head lei, lei po o. ♦ Hat lei, lei pāpale. ♦ Flat lei, as for a hat … English-Hawaiian dictionary
LEI — steht für: Litauisches Energieinstitut, Lietuvos energetikos institutas Lessico Etimologico Italiano, das Grundlagenwörterbuch Lokale Erasmus Initiative, eine Gruppe an einer Hochschule, die Austauschstudenten des Erasmus Programms betreut… … Deutsch Wikipedia
lei — s. f. 1. Preceito ou regra estabelecida por direito. 2. Norma, obrigação. 3. Religião. 4. Relação constante entre fenômenos da Natureza, ou entre as fases de um mesmo fenômeno. 5. Quantidade de metal precioso que deve entrar em cada quilograma de … Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa
Lei — steht für: Litauisches Energieinstitut, Lietuvos energetikos institutas Lessico Etimologico Italiano, das Grundlagenwörterbuch Lokale Erasmus Initiative, eine Gruppe an einer Hochschule, die Austauschstudenten des Erasmus Programms betreut… … Deutsch Wikipedia
lei — → 2. leu ● lei nom masculin pluriel Pluriel de leu. ● lei (homonymes) nom masculin pluriel le article défini le pronom personnel leu nom masculin invariable le … Encyclopédie Universelle
lei-2 — lei 2 English meaning: to eliminate, dissipate, disappear; weak, thin Deutsche Übersetzung: “eingehen, abnehmen, schwinden; mager, schlank” Note: (from *el ei ) Material: a. Gk. λίναμαι τρέπομαι Hes., λιάζομαι “weiche from,… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
LEI — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. {{{image}}} Sigles d une seule lettre Sigles de deux lettres > Sigles de trois lettres … Wikipédia en Français
-lei — [mhd. lei[e] = Art u. Weise < afrz. ley = Art < lat. legem, Akk. von: lex = Gesetz]: wird zur Bildung [un]bestimmter Gattungszahlwörter verwendet, z. B. achterlei, keinerlei, mancherlei. * * * lei <Suffix> [mhd. lei[e] = Art u. Weise… … Universal-Lexikon
Lei — Smf Stein, Schiefer (auch in Ortsnamen) per. Wortschatz reg. (14. Jh.), spmhd. lei(e) f., as. lēia f. Entlehnung Regionale (rheinische) Entlehnung aus gall. * lēi, vgl. air. lía, lie m./(f.) (aus kelt. * līwank ), gr. lãas m./(f.) Stein .… … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
lei-3 — lei 3 English meaning: slimy; to glide Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘schleimig, durch Nässe glitschiger Boden, ausgleiten, worũber hinschleifen or streichen, also glättend worũber fahren; andrerseits schleimig = klebrig” Note: various… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary