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1 minon
(colloq) minɔ̃ nom masculin Helvétisme ( poussière) fluff [U]* * * -
2 miñón
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3 sycaminon
sycămīnus or - os, i, f., = sukaminos, a mulberry-tree, Cels. 3, 18 med.; 5, 18, 7; cf. Plin. 6, 29, 35, § 184.—Called sycă-mīnon, ōnis, Dig. 47, 11, 10; and sycŏ-mŏrus, Cels. 5, 18, 7; Isid. 17, 7, 20. -
4 sycaminos
sycămīnus or - os, i, f., = sukaminos, a mulberry-tree, Cels. 3, 18 med.; 5, 18, 7; cf. Plin. 6, 29, 35, § 184.—Called sycă-mīnon, ōnis, Dig. 47, 11, 10; and sycŏ-mŏrus, Cels. 5, 18, 7; Isid. 17, 7, 20. -
5 sycaminus
sycămīnus or - os, i, f., = sukaminos, a mulberry-tree, Cels. 3, 18 med.; 5, 18, 7; cf. Plin. 6, 29, 35, § 184.—Called sycă-mīnon, ōnis, Dig. 47, 11, 10; and sycŏ-mŏrus, Cels. 5, 18, 7; Isid. 17, 7, 20. -
6 βλιχώδης
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `clammy'. Cf. LSJSupp.Other forms: βλιχώδης (Hp), βλιχανώδης (Diph.). βλίκανος (which must not be changed to *βλίχανον) βάτραχον καὶ βλίχαν H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Sophie Minon, CEG 5, 263f, compares βλαχάν βάτραχον and Artemis' epithet βλαγανῖτις. Grošelj, Živa Antika 7 (1957) 42 adduces βεβλιχασμένον (ms. βεβλυχ-) μεμολυσμένον H.Page in Frisk: 1,245Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βλιχώδης
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7 βλιχανώδης
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `clammy'. Cf. LSJSupp.Other forms: βλιχώδης (Hp), βλιχανώδης (Diph.). βλίκανος (which must not be changed to *βλίχανον) βάτραχον καὶ βλίχαν H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Sophie Minon, CEG 5, 263f, compares βλαχάν βάτραχον and Artemis' epithet βλαγανῖτις. Grošelj, Živa Antika 7 (1957) 42 adduces βεβλιχασμένον (ms. βεβλυχ-) μεμολυσμένον H.Page in Frisk: 1,245Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βλιχανώδης
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8 κέρδος
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `gain, profit, desire to gain, cunning, wiles' (Il.); in plur. also `good advice' (Hom.).Compounds: rarely as 1, member, e. g. κερδο-φόρος `bringing gain' (Artem.), as 2. member in αἰσχρο-κερδής `full lowly desire to gain, greedy' (IA).Derivatives: Diminutives κερδάριον, κερδύφιον (gloss.); κερδοσύνη `ruse' (Hom., Cleanth. Hymn. 1, 28; Porzig Satzinhalte 226, Wyss - συνη 27), κερδώ f. "the cunning", i. e. `the fox' (Ar., Babr.); Κέρδων, - ωνος PN (D., Argolis; from here Lat. cerdō `ordinary artisan'), also Κερδέων surn. of Hermes and Κερδείη Πειθώ (Herod. 7, 74); Κερδῳ̃ος `bringing gain' surn. of Apollon (Thessal., Lyc.; after Λητῳ̃ος), also of Hermes (Plu., Luc.), also from the fox (Babr.); κερδητικός `greedy' (gloss.). - Further κερδαλέος `greedy' (Il.) and κερδαίνω, aor. κερδῆναι, - δᾶναι, - δῆσαι `gain, have profit' (Pi., IA); hardly from an old \/ n-l\/-stem (Schwyzer 484). - Compar. forms κερδίων `more profitable' (Il.), κέρδιστος `the most cunnting' (Hom.), cf. Seiler Steigerungsformen 84.Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [579], PGX [probably a word of Pre-Greek origin] * kerd- `gain, clever, cunning'Etymology: The only connections outside Greek are a few Celtic words: OIr. cerd (IE. * kerdā) `art, handwork', also `aerarius, figulus, poeta', Welsh cerdd `song'. - The doubtful H.-glosse κήρτεα τὰ κέρδη does hardly allow conclusions for the morphology (cf. Schwyzer 512 n. 3). See Bq, and W.-Hofmann s. cerdō; also E. Lewy FS Dornseiff 226f. Sophie Minon conects (RPh. LXXIV (2000) 271 κορδύς πανοῦργος H., which is of course not certain (s.v.). Or do κερδύφιον, κερδώ point to a Pre-Greek word?Page in Frisk: 1,829Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κέρδος
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9 κορδύς
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: πανοῦργος H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Sophie Minon, RPh. LXXIV (2000) 271 connects the word with κέρδος (s.v.). Fur. 362 proposes connection with κο-κρύδ-ων λῃστῶν, κλεπτῶν, which seems possible. From * ka-krud- with a \> o before u?Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κορδύς
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10 σκάλλω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to hack, to scrape' (Hdt., Arist., Thphr., LXX).Other forms: only pres. a. ipf. (aor. ipv. περίσκαλον Gp.; correct?)Compounds: Rarely w. δια- a. o. (partly controversial).Derivatives: 1. σκαλ-ίς, - ίδος f. `hack' (Att. onscr. IVa, Str., J.) with - ιδεύω `to hack' (gloss.); 2. - σις f. `the hacking' (Thphr.); 3. - μός m. `id.' (pap. IIIp; on σκαλμός `thole' s. v.); 4. - ηνός (- ηνής) `craggy, rough, uneven'; of numbers `odd', of triangles `scalene', of cones `slant' (s. Mugler Dict. géom. 377; Democr. ap. Thphr., Hp., Pl., Arist. etc.; on the formation cf. γαληνός; s. also σκολιός) with - ηνία, - ηνόομαι (Plu.); 5. ἄ-σκαλος `unhacked' (Theoc.; prob. metri c. for ἀσκάλευτος). Secondary verbs: 1. σκαλ-εύω, aor. σκαλεῦσαι, also w. ἀνα-, ἐκ-, ὑπο- a. o. `to hack, to scrape, to stir up' (Hp., Ar., Arist. etc.) with several derivv.: σκαλ-εύς m. `hack' (X., Poll.; not with Bosshardt 54 from *σκαλή), - ευσις f. `the scraping' (Aq.), - ευμα n. `scrapings' (sch., H.), - ευθρον n. `poker' (Poll.; cf. Bechtel Dial. 1, 210), - εία f. `the hacking' (Gp. tit.). 2. σκαλ-ίζω (ἀ- σκάλλω) `id.' (Phryn.) with - ισμός m. `the hacking' (pap., Eun.), - ιστή-ριον n. `hack' (sch.). - On σκαλίας s.v.Etymology: As zero grade yot-present σκάλλω can be formally identified with Lith. skiliù, inf. skìlti `strike fire': IE *skl̥-i̯ō [but the accent shows that the root is disyllabic; s. bel.]. Semantically closer are the innovated nasalpresents skįlù (skylù) `split off, get a tear' and the full grade skeliù, skélti `split', also `strike fire (ùgnį) (from a stone)', the last of which is also found in Germ., e.g. ONord. skilja `separate, distinguish'. Diff. again MLG schelen `id.' (PGm. * skelōn; type Lat. secāre), Arm. c'elum `split' (u-pesent; anlaut unclear), Hitt. iškallāi- `split, tear apart' (formation uncertain; s. Kronasser Etymologie $ 200 f., 214). -- The Greek derivv. go all back on ungeminated σκαλ-, which must not be old, but may have originated after σφαλ- (: σφάλλω), θαλ- (: θ άλλω) etc. Sophie Minon ( RPh. LXXIV 282) reconstructs *skl̥h₁-ye\/o-, assuming that the laryngeal disappeared in this position, after Pinault 1982, 265-272; cf. LIV 500. On σκαλαθύρω s.v. -- To the same formal system, but independent of σκάλλω, belong also σκαλμός `thole', σκῶλος, σκόλοψ etc.; s. vv. A clear separation from the semant. cognate κολάπτω, κόλος, κλάω, κελεός etc. cannot be achieved; [not here σκύλλω]. -- The non-Greek formations are innumerable; on this WP. 2, 590ff., Pok. 923ff. w. rich lit.Page in Frisk: 2,715-716Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σκάλλω
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