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1 κρίνος
lis -
2 θύλακος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `sack, bag, mostly of leather' (IA);Other forms: θυλλίς θύλακος H, θυλίδες οἱ θύλακοι H.; also θῦλαξ (Com.; backformation from θυλάκιον?, Kalén Quaest. gramm. graecae 106)Compounds: As 2. member in παρσουλακίρ (= παραθυλακίς) τὸν τρίβωνα, ὅταν γένηται ὡς θύλακος H. (Lac.).Derivatives: Diminut.: θυλάκιον (IA), θυλακίς f. (Ael.), θυλακίσκος m. (Com., Dsc.). Other: θυλακή `scrotum' ( Hippiatr.), θυλακώδης (Thphr.), θυλακόεις (Nic.) `sack-like'; θυλακῖτις in plant names (Dsc.): θ. μήκων (after the capsules of the seeds), θ. νάρδος (after the acorn-like root-stock; Strömberg Pflanzennamen 36); θυλακίζειν τὸ ἀπαιτεῖν τι ἑπόμενον μετὰ θυλάκου. Ταραντῖνοι H. - Short form, poss. with hypocoristic gemination: θυλ(λ)ίς H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Unexplained; prob. foreign, like σάκκος. - Removing a κ-suffix gives *θῡλ(ο)- which has been compared with Lith. dundùlis `puffed, big-bellied', if from *dul-dùlis (Persson Beitr. 2, 798 n. 1; other suggestion by Fraenkel Lit. et Wb. s. demblỹs), in the end connected with 1. θύω; cf. Slav., e. g. Russ. dutь `blow' with dúlo `mouth (of a gun, a canon)', Ukr. dúɫo `bellows'. - The forms θαλλίς μάρσιππος μακρός, θάλλικα σάκκου εἶδος H.. with different vowel, are unexplained. - The suffix - ακ- shows Pre-Greek origin (Beekes, Pre-Greek, Suffixes).Page in Frisk: 1,691Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θύλακος
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3 γωλεός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `hole' (Arist.), γωλ\<ε\> ιοί σπήλαια. καὶ αἱ πρὸς θάλασσαν καταδύσεις H.; plur. γωλε(ι)ά (Nic.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: One compared Lith. guõlis, Latv. guol'a `lair, nest' (Lith. guliù `lie (down)') and Arm. kaɫaɫ `hole, hiding-place'. Quite uncertain. IE origin is not very probable. May have been influenced by φωλεός. See Fraenkel KZ 71, 40.Page in Frisk: 1,336Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γωλεός
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4 ἐρείκω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `breach, bruise, pound' (Il.).Other forms: ( ἐρεικόμενος intr. Ν 441), aor. ἤρῐκε (Ρ 595, intr.), ἐρεῖξαι (Ion.-Att.), perf. pass. ἐρήριγμαι, - μένος (Hp., Arist.),Derivatives: ἐρεικίδες pl. (Gal.), ἐρεικάς (H.) `pounded barley, groats', ἐρείκιον `crumbly pastry' (Gal.; formation like ἐρείπια), ἐρεικίτας ( ἄρτος, Ath.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 89), all often itacistic. written ἐρικ-; thus ἐρίγματα pl. (Hp.), ἐρίγμη (Sch.) `bruised beans' for ἐρειγ-; in the same meaning with unexplained ε: ἐρέγματα (Thphr., Erot.), ἐρεγμός (pap., Gal., Erot.) with ἐρέγμινος (Dsc., Orib.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]; cf. [858]Etymology: To the full grade root present ἐρείκω and the clearly old weak grade aorist ἤρικε there are no formal and semantic agreements. Close comes Skt. rikháti, likháti `scratch' (with aspirated velar), Lith. riekiù, riẽkti `cut loaf, plough for the first time', Skt. riśáti, liśáti `pluck, tear away'; the different forms can be in relation with the expressive meaning. As related nominal formations one might consider OHG rīga, MHG rīha `row, line', Lat. rixa `hatred, conflict', prob. also rīma `scratch, split'. - Further W.-Hofmann s. rīma, rixa, ricinus. Cf. ἐρείπω.Page in Frisk: 1,551-552Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐρείκω
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5 κώδεια
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `head, bulb of garlic' (Ξ 499, Nic.), κώδεα, - υια, -ύᾱ, - ία (Delos, Att. inscr., Arist., Thphr.); also other plants and comparable objects.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Unexplained. After Scheftelowitz BB 28, 148 to κῶος `hollow, prison'; against Kalén Quaest. gramm. graecae 24, where also extensively on the diff. forms ( κώδυια oldest form). To Lith. kuõdas `crown of the head, bush of feathers' (by Prellwitz wrongly compared with κώδεια) s. Fraenkel Wb. s. kuodẽlis. - Fur. 195, 198 Pre-Greek because of the variants; he compares words for `cup', e.g. κώδων `closk' (s. v.), Etr. qutum. Cf. Beekes, FS Watkins (1998) 25f., Beekes, Pre-Greek, Suffixes sub - αι-\/- ε(ι)-.See also: Vgl. κώδων.Page in Frisk: 2,59Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κώδεια
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6 μαῦλις 1
μαῦλις 1Grammatical information: ?Derivatives: μαυλίζω = μαστροπεύω (H., sch.) with μαυλιστής m. ( Cat. Cod. Astr., Phot., Suid.), f. μαυλίστρια (Suid., sch., EM); μαυλιστήριον παρ᾽ Ίππώνακτι, λύδιον νόμισμα ( λέμισμα cod.) λεπτόν τι H.Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably] Lyd.Etymology: Chain of hypotheses by Jongkees Acta Or. 16, 146ff.: from Lyd. * mav-lis, adj. of *Mavś, Lydian name of the mother goddess Magna mater (in Asia Minor PN as Μαυα, Μαυ-εννα, Μαυ-σσ-ωλλος a. o.), also prop. `belonging to Mavs', where 1. = μάχαιρα, as the Magna mater was considered as protecting goddess of metal weapons; 2. `woman decoted to M.', who acts as prostitute for money; 3. `coin of M.' (with added - τήριον). Criticism by Masson, Hipponax 178f.Page in Frisk: 2,186Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μαῦλις 1
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7 μώλωψ
μώλωψ, - ωποςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `stripe, wale, weal, bruise' (Hyp., Arist., LXX, medic.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Formation like 1. μύ-ωψ, ὕδρ-ωψ a.o. (Schwyzer 426 n. 4), so prob. with as first member a noun, which however has no certain connection. Semantically, and also formally close is Lith. mėl-ymė, -ynė `blue spot, blue stain, stripe', form mėlas `blue', wiht ablaut ē: ō (cf. Lith. mólis `loam'); here further μέλας, μολύνω (s. vv.) a.o. (Bq, Persson Beitr. 2, 674, WP. 2, 293, Pok. 720f., Fraenkel Wb. s. mėlas). -- Diff, certainly not better, Zupitza KZ 37, 398 and Solmsen IF 13, 137: from *μώσλωψ to Germ., e.g. OHG māsa `stain in the skin, scar, wound' (WP. 2, 300, Vasmer Wb. s. mozólь). Words like κώνωψ rather point to a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μώλωψ
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8 ὁμαλός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `equal, level, smooth' (ι 327).Other forms: ὁμαλής `id.' (Pl., X., Arist.; innovation, Schwyzer 513).Compounds: As 2. member e.g. in ἀν-ώμαλος `unequal' (IA.; comp. length.).Derivatives: ὁμαλ-ότης, - ητος f. `equality, even surface' (Pl., Arist.), - εύς m. `leveller' (who levels the bottom of the acker, pap. IIIa; Mayser I: 3, 15). Denominative Verbs: 1. ὁμαλ-ίζω, also w. δι-, ἐξ- a.o., `to level, to balance' (X., Arist.) with ὁμαλ-ισμός m. `levelling' (LXX, S.E.), - ιξις f. `levelling' (Delph., Didyma, - ιστῆρες m. pl. `instruments for levelling' ( Gloss.), - ιστρον H.; hardky to λίστρον. 2. ὁμαλ-ύνω, also w. δι-, προ-, συν-, `to make equal, to make level' (Hp., Pl., Arist.; Fraenkel Denom. 36f.) with - υντικός `equational' (Gal.). 3. *ἀν-ομαλ-όω in ἀνομάλω-σις f. `equalisation' (Arist.).Etymology: Identical with Lat. similis `similar' (if - lis \< - los) in formation; in any case with o -ablaut from the l-stem in Lat. semel `once', Goth. simle `one time' = `once' etc.; beside it an n-stem in Germ., e.g. OWNo. saman `together etc.' (Benveniste Origines 43). Arm. amol `harnessed pair of cows' (Adontz Mél. Boisacq 1, 10) must remain far for its meaning, cf. Dumézil BSL 39, 241 f.Page in Frisk: 2,384Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὁμαλός
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9 ὄρνεον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `bird' (Ν 64).Compounds: A few late compp., e.g. ὀρνεο-θηρευτική f. `the art of bird-catching' (Ath.). -- Often as 1. member, e.g. ὀρνιθο-θήρας m. `bird-catcher' (Ar., Arist.; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 93 a. 99), ὀρνιχο-λόχος m. `id.' (Pi.). Also as 2. member, e.g. δύσ-ορνις `with bad auspices' (A., E., Plu.), πολυ-όρνιθος `rich of birds' (E.).Derivatives: Besides ο῎ρνῑ̆ς, -ῑθος etc. (Il.), acc. sg. also - ιν, pl. also - εις, -ῑς (trag., D.), Dor. -ῑχος etc. (Pi., Alcm., B., Theoc., Cyrene), dat. pl. - ίχεσσι and - ιξι, to which nom. sg. - ιξ, gen. pl. - ίκων (hell. pap.) m. f. `(augural) bird', young-Att. esp. `hen, cock' (Wackernagel Unt. 165 w. n.1). - From it ὀρνε-ώδης `bird-like' (Plu.), - ώτης m. `bird-catcher' (Poll.), - ακός `avian' (Tz.), - άζομαι `to twitter' (Aq.), `to hold one's head up high' ("watching the birds", Com. Adesp.). Several derivv.: 1. Dimin. ὀρνίθ-ιον (IA.), - άριον (com., Arist.), also ὀρν-ύφιον (from ὄρνεον?; Thphr., Dsc.). Further subst. 2. - ᾶς, -ᾶ m. `poulterer' (pap. II--VIp; Schwyzer 461 w. lit.); 3. - ίαι m. pl. "bird-winds", which bring migratory birds (Ion., Arist.), χειμὼν -ίας (Ar.); cf. ἐτησίαι a.o. (Chantraine Form. 95); - ίας m. `bird-fancier' (Lib.); - ίων m. PN (Att.); 4. - ών, - ῶνος m. `henhouse' (inscr., pap.); 5. - ία f. `poisoning by bird dung' ( Hippiatr.; Scheller Oxytonierung 44). Adj. 6. - ειος `of a bird, of a chicken' (Att.); 7. - ικός `belonging to birds, hens' (Luc.); 8. τὰ -ιακά name of a work on birds by D. P. (on the formation Schwyzer 497 w. lit.); 9. - ώδης `bird-like' (Arist.). Verbs 10. - εύω `to catch birds' (X.), - εύομαι `to watch the birds, auspicari' (D.H.) with - εία f. `auspicium' (Plb.), - ευτής m. `bird-catcher' (Att.; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 62), - ευτική f. `the art of bird-catching' (Pl.); 11. - όομαι `to be changed into a bird' (Philoch.); 12. - ιάζω `to speak the language of birds' (sch. Ar. Av.). -- Further ὄρν-ιος = ὀρνίθ-ειος (AP), ὀρν-ίζω `to twitter' (Aq., uncertain; cf. ὀρνεάζομαι ab.). -- On itself stands ὀρναπέτιον n. (Boeot., Ar. Ach. 913; hypocor.-contempting) with unclear α; cf. further κινώπετον, ἑρπετόν a.o., also Bechtel Dial. 1, 308. -- On the diff. formations s. Robert Mél. Niedermann (Neuchâtel 1944) 67ff.Etymology: Both ὄρν-εον and ὄρν-ῑ-ς go back on a ν-stem (in ὄρν-εον enlarged with a prob. genderindicating ε(ι)ο-suffix ( τὰ ὄρνεα older than τὸ ὄρνεον? Chantraine Form. 62; cf. Risch $ 49 a); diff. Wackernagel Unt. 165 n. 1 (stem -neu̯o-). The more usual ὄρν-ῑ-ς is an orig. feminine ῑ-deriv. (cf. Schwyzer 465 a. 573), to which analogic. or popular θ- resp. χ-suffixes were added (Schw. 510 u. 496, Chantraine Form. 366 a. 377; but s. below). The for Greek to be assumed n-stem is found back in Germ. and Hitt. word for `eagle', e.g. Goth. ara (gen. * arin-s), OWNo. are and ǫrn (\< * arn-u- with u-flexion), OE earn etc., Hitt. ḫara-š, gen. ḫaran-aš, IE * or-(e\/ o-)n-. With this interchanges an l-stem in Balto-Slavic, z.B. Lith. erẽl-is, arẽl-is, OCS orьl-ъ, Russ. orël `eagle'. Further forms, also from Armen. and Celt., in WP. 1, 135, Pok. 325f., Fraenkels. erẽlis, Vasmer s. orël; w. rich lit.; older lit. also in Bq. - The suffixes -ῑθ-, -ῑχ- may be Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 2,421-422Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄρνεον
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10 *πέμφιξ
*πέμφιξ, -ῑγοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: poet. word of unstable meaning, which is based partly on the artificialities of hell. poets (s. Wenkebach Phil. 86, 300ff.): `bubble of air or water' (secondarily of the soul, s. Nehring IF 40, 100ff.), `blister on the skin, drop (of water or blood), drizzle, spraying spark, also said of the sunlight' (Ibyc., trag., hell. poetry).Derivatives: πεμφιγώδης `full of vesications' (Hp.). Besides πεμφίς, only gen. pl. - ίδων (Lyc. 686; v. 1. - ίγων). -- With ο-vowel: πομφός m. `blister on the skin' (Hp.); more often with λ-suffix in πομφρολύζω (- ύσσω?), only aor. 3. pl. πομφόλυξαν `sprang up' ( δάκρυα; Pi.), and πομφόλυξ, -ῠγος f. (also m.) `bubble' (Hp., Pl., Arist., Thphr.), metaph. of a female hair-ornament (Ar., att. inscr.), of an architecton. ornament (Att. inscr.), of shieldknobs (H.), of a zincoxyde (medic.); as 1. member in πομφολυγο-παφλάσματα pl. joking formation (Ar. Ra. 249). From it πομφολυγ-ωτός `provided with bosses' (Ph. Bel.), - ώδης `like bubbles', - ηρόν n. `plaster with zinc oxyde' (medic.), - όω `to make bubbles' (Arist.), - όομοι, - ίζω `to bubble' (medic.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Expressive words, which may be old as regards the kernel but in Greek preserved their special morphological character. The nearest example of πέμφιξ is not recognisable ( μάστιξ and τέττιξ are too far off; Chantraine Form. 397); the hapax πεμφίς after the many words in -ῑ̆δ- (cf. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 201 n. 2; to far-going Specht Ursprung 212 a. 228). The ablauting πομφός was adapted to the o-stems; here with λ-suffix πομφο-λύξαι, - υξ (s. on μορμώ); cf. also φλύζω, οἰνό-φλυξ, φλύκταινα and Persson Beitr. 1, 58 a. 2, 879; similar βομβυλίδας πομφόλυγας H. -- To a group popular and onomatop. expressions for `blow up etc.', which are found esp. in Baltic, e.g. Lith. pam̃p-ti `swell, aufdinsen', pempùs `fatt-bodied', pumpùlis `roundish, thick-bellied thing', with voiced cons., e.g. bum̃balas `knob, bladder', with aspirate Arm. p'amp'ušt `urine-bladder'. -- Cf. βέμβιξ and βόμβος w. lit., also W.-Hofmann s. pampinus. - The words may well be Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 2,503Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > *πέμφιξ
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11 σπολάς
σπολάς, - άδοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `leather harness, jerkin' (S. Fr. 11, Ar., X.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin] (V)Etymology: Formation in - άς from a verbal noun *σπόλος, *σπολή. If prop. `(torn off) skin', with ( ἀ)σπάλαξ (s. v.; ?) from a verb for `split, tear off' (IE * sp(h)el-), to which belong also σπόλια τὰ παρατιλλόμενα ἐρίδια ἀπὸ τῶν σκελῶν τῶν προβάτων (formally = Lat. spolia), ἄσπαλον σκῦτος H., prob. also Thess. (IG 9: 2 p. XI [IIa]) σπόλος `pole' (= `split wood') [this seems quite doubtful to me]. However σπολεύς `kind of bread' (Philet. ap. Ath. 3, 114e) may be wrong for σποδεύς (s. on σποδός). -- From other languages: Lat. spolium `torn off animal skin, equipment taken from the enemy, taken off equipment', Lith. spãlis `beard, einzelne (Flachs)schäbe (= parts of the stalk of flax)', pl. spãliai `parts of the stalk (Schäben)', Germ., e.g. NHG spalten etc.; s. WP. 2, 677ff., Pok. 985ff., W.-Hofmann s. spolium, Hiersche Ten. aspiratae 193 f.; everwhere w. lit.; on the adduced Indian words also Mayrhofer s. phálati. Cf. on στέλλω; also ψαλίς. - Clearly the same word as ἄσπαλον, so a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 2,771Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σπολάς
См. также в других словарях:
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