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1 κομψός
A nice, refined, gentlemanly, ἐσμὲν ἅπαντα κομψοὶ ἄνδρες we are perfect gentlemen, Eup.159, cf. Ar.V. 1317;κ. ἐν συνουσίᾳ Id.Nu. 649
; τὸ θῆλυ τοὺς πόδας ἔχει κομψοτέρους more delicate, finer, Arist.Phgn. 809b9.2 smart, clever, ingenious, of persons or their words and acts,ὁ πρῶτος εὑρὼν κ. ἦν τραγήματα Alex.185
;κ. θεαταί Cratin.169
, cf. 307;Θηραμένης ὁ κ. Ar.Ra. 967
;Σικελὸς κ. ἀνήρ Timocr.6
, cf. Pl.Grg. 493a; κ. περί τι clever about.., Id.R. 495d ([comp] Sup.), Cra. 405d; of a dog's instinct,κ. τὸ πάθος αὐτοῦ τῆς φύσεως Id.R. 376a
; μὰ γῆν.., μὴ 'γὼ νόημα κομψότερον ἤκουσά πω a more ingenious device.., Ar.Av. 195; τὸ πρᾶγμα κ. [ἐστι] Id.Th.93, cf. 460 (lyr., [comp] Comp.), Dionys.Com.3.1; esp. in a sneering sense, over-ingenious, ; τρίβων γὰρ εἶ τὰ κομψά versed in subtleties, Id.Rh. 625;μή μοι τὰ κομψὰ ποικίλοι γενοίατο, ἀλλ' ὧν πόλει δεῖ Id.Fr.16
; τὸ κ. refinement, subtlety, Arist.Pol. 1265a12;τῶν ἰατρῶν ὅσοι κ. ἢ περίεργοι Id.Resp. 480b27
;κ. σοφίσματα E.Fr. 188.5
; τοῦτ' ἔχει -ότατον this is the subtlest part of it, Pl.Tht. 171a; κομψότερος.. ὁ λόγος ἢ κατ' ἐμέ too subtle for me, Id.Cra. 429d:—but in Pl. and Arist., usu. clever, esp. skilful in technique, with at most a slight irony (κομψοὺς Πλάτων οὐ τοὺς πανούργους, ἀλλὰ τοὺς βελτίστους Moer.p.206 P.).3 more generally, nice, good, pleasant,πάντων δὲ κομψότατον τὸ τῆς πόας Pl.Phdr. 230c
; τὰ κ. ταῦτα χλανίσκια that nice suit of yours, Aeschin.1.131.II Adv. - ψῶς cleverly, Ar.Ach. 1016 (lyr.), Pl.Cra. 399a, etc.: [comp] Comp. - οτέρως Isoc. 15.195; κ. ἔχειν to be well, 'nicely' in health, PPar.18.3 (ii B.C.), cf. PLond. ined. 2126 (ii/iii A.D.), etc.; κομψότερον σχεῖν to get better in health, Ev.Jo.4.52, cf. Arr.Epict.3.10.13, POxy.935.5 (iii A.D.): [comp] Sup. - ότατα nicely, Ar.Lys.89; λέγεσθαι κομψότατα most cleverly, Pl.Tht. 202d.— Chiefly found in [dialect] Att. Com. and Prose; Trag. only in E. (Orig. sense uncertain; = στρεβλός, Erot. (citing Euripides); = στρογγύλος, Hsch.) -
2 στόμα
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `mouth, muzzle, front, peak, edge' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. Tomako, Tumako \/ στόμαργος\/ (Mühlestein Studi Micenei 2 (1967), 43ff. w. lit.; Killen, Minos 27-8, 1992-1993 [95],101-7Compounds: Many compp., almost all from the shorter stem (cf. below), e.g. στόμ-αργος `chattering, high-sounding' (trag.), to ἀργός (Willis AmJPh 63, 87 ff.: `shining' \> `bright' \> `loud'?), if not after γλώσσ-αργος, which could stand for γλώσσ-αλγος (s. on γλῶσσα w. lit.); Blanc RPh. 65, 1991, 59-66 analyses the word as στόμα + μάργος `furious', also BAGB 1996\/1, 8-9; cf. also Πόδ-αργος (s. πούς); on στομα-κάκη s. κακός; εὔ-στομος `with a beautiful mouth, speaking nicely', also = `silent' (Hdt., X. etc.); beside it, quite rarely, στοματ-ουργός `working with one's mouth, grandiloquent' (Ar.). κακο-στόματος (AP) for κακό-στομος (E. a.o.).Derivatives: 1. στόμ-ιον n. `mouth, opening, denture, bit, bridle' (IA.), rarely `mouth' (Nic.), with - ίς f. `halter' (Poll.); ἐπι-στομ-ίζω `to put in a bit' (Att.), also `to shut up one's mouth' (late). 2. στόμ-ις m. `hard-mouthed horse' (A. Fr. 442 = 649 M.; cf. Schwyzer 462 n. 3), also - ίας `id.' (Afric., Suid.). 3. - ώδης `speaking nicely' (S.), `savoury' (Sor.). 4. - ίζομαι `to take in the mouth' (Aq.), w. prefix, e.g. ἀπο-στομίζω `to remove the edge' (Philostr.). 5. - όω ( ἀνα- στόμα a.o.) `to stop the mouth, to provide with an opening, edge, to harden' (IA.) with - ωμα n. `mouth' (A.), `hardening, which is hardened, steel' (Cratin., Arist., hell. a. late), - ωμάτιον (Gloss.), - ωσις f. `hardening' (S., hell a. late), - ωτής = indurator (gloss.). -- Besides στομάτ-ιον n. dimin. (Sor.), - ικός `belonging to the mouth' (medic. a.o.), ἀπο-στοματ-ίζω `to repeat, to interrogate etc.' (Pl., Arist. etc.). -- On στόμαχος, στωμύλος s. vv.Etymology: The etymol. unclear στόμα has secondarily joined the verbal nouns in - μα (Schwyzer 524 w. n. 5), with which the strong predilection for the short form στομ- in compp. and derivv. may be connected (cf. Georgacas Glotta 36, 163). But the n-stem is old and is found not only in Av. staman- m. `mouth (of a dog)' but also in Celtic, e.g. Welsh safn `jaw-bone'. So we must reconstruct * steh₃m-, which was in Greek replaced by the zero grade (* sth₃m-); on the short a of Avestan see Lubotsky Kratylos 42(1997) 56f. -- Far remain however the Germ. words for `voice', Goth. stibna, OHG stimna, stimma etc. and the Hitt. word for `ear', ištam-ana-, - ina-, prob. denominativ from ištamašzi `hear' (Frisk GHÅ 57, 19ff. = Kl. Schr. 79ff. w. lit.; diff. Kronasser Etymologie II 399).Page in Frisk: 2,800-801Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στόμα
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3 χαρίεις
Aχαρίϝεττα Mon.Piot2.138
(statuette from Thebes, vii/vi B. C.), χαρίεν (for χάριεν, v. infr. iv): gen. χαρίεντος, dat. - εντι: voc. χαρίει, χαρίεν, acc. to Theodos. Can.1.11, 209 H.: ([etym.] χάρις):—graceful, beautiful:I in Hom. freq. of the works of men, [πέπλος] χαριέστατος Il.6.90
, 271;εἵματα 5.905
;ἔργα Od. 10.223
;φᾶρος 5.231
; also, gracious,ἀμοιβή 3.58
;ἀοιδή 24.197
; ; δῶρα χ. acceptable gifts, Il.8.204, Ar.Pl. 849;οὐ πάντεσσι θεοὶ χαρίεντα διδοῦσιν Od.8.167
; ; of the parts of a person, χ. μέτωπον, πρόσωπον, κάρη, 16.798, 18.24, 22.403;μέλεα Archil.12
; of a youth,πρῶτον ὑπηνήτῃ, τοῦπερ χαριεστάτη ἥβη Il.24.348
(also- έστατος ἥβη Od.10.279
); of persons first in Hes.Th. 247; χαρίεσσα δέμας ib. 260;ὦ κάλα, ὦ χαρίεσσα Sapph.
[pron. full] η ¯ 5 App.p.48 Lobel, cf. Alc.46;φυὴν χαριέστερος Tyrt.12.5
;σοὶ χάριεν μὲν εἶδος Sapph.
[pron. full] η ¯ 9 App.p.49 Lobel; once in Trag.,σὰν χαρίεσσαν ὥραν E.Fr.453.6
(lyr.); alsoχαρίεσσα χελιδοῖ Anacr.67
: laterζῷα ὀφθῆναι χαρίεντα Luc.Prom.Es3
.II in [dialect] Att., freq. of persons, in relation to qualities of mind, elegant, accomplished,χ. ἦσαν οἱ Λακωνικοί Ar.Lys. 1226
; men of taste,Isoc.
12.8, Arist.Metaph. 1060a25, cf. Pl.R. 605b ([comp] Comp.);οἱ χ. Arist.Pol. 1297b9
, Phld.Mort.31; opp. οἱ πολλοὶ καὶ φορτικώτατοι, Arist.EN 1095b22, cf. Pol. 1267a1; τὰ τῶν χ. σκώμματα the wits, Pl.R. 452b;χ. καὶ νοῦν ἔχοντες Arist.Pol. 1320b7
; χαριέστατος τὴν μουσικήν accomplished in.., Pl.La. 180d;περὶ φιλοσοφίαν Id.Ep. 363c
;χ. ποιητής Id.Lg. 680c
;τῶν ἰατρῶν οἱ χ. Arist.EN 1102a21
;στρατηγοί D.S.12.33
([comp] Sup.); γεωργός, παιδαγωγός, etc., Plu.2.92b, Cat.Mi.1, etc.2 of things, graceful, elegant, μέλος, πόνος, Pi.P.5.107, N.3.12, cf. Ar.Pl. 145;φιλοσοφία ἐστὶν χαρίεν Pl.Grg. 484c
, cf. Sph. 234b ([comp] Comp.);χαρίεντα μὲν γὰρ ᾄδω, χ. δ' οἶδα λέξαι Anacr.45
;λόγον λέξαι χαρίεντα Ar.V. 1400
; ;ἐνθύμημα χ.
clever, smart,X.
An.3.5.12;τὸ ἀστεῖον καὶ χ. Luc.VH1.2
;χαρίεντα.. ἐσοφίσω καὶ σοφά Ar.Av. 1401
; ironical, χαρίεντα πάθοιμ' ἄν I should be nicely off, Id.Ec. 794; χαρίεν [ἐστὶ] εἰδέναι it is well to know, Hp.Art.34;χ. οὖν.. λαλεῖν Ar. Ra. 1491
(lyr.);δοκεῖ χαριέστερον εἶναι.. λέγειν Pl.Prt. 320c
; also χαρίεν γάρ, εἰ .. it would be a pretty thing, if.. ! X.Cyr.1.4.13, Luc. JTr.26.3 rarely of natural objects,θεῶν χ. ἐναύλους Hes. Th. 129
;χαρίεντα τὰ ὑδάτια φαίνεται Pl.Phdr. 229b
; πηγὴ χαριεστάτη ib. 230b;τὴν Ἰνδῶν λίθον χ. Jul.Or.2.51a
.4 name of a plant,χαρίεν τὸ ἐπονομαζόμενον, τούτου ῥίζαν πρόσθες Hp.Mul.1.78
.III Adv. χαριέντως gracefully, elegantly, cleverly;πάνυ χ. ἀποδεδεῖχθαι Pl.Phd. 87a
, cf. Plt. 300b;χ. ἔχων τὸ σῶμα
in fine condition,Id.
Phd. 80c;δείπνου χ. πεπρυτανευμένου Alex.110.4
;χ. εἰπεῖν Pl.R. 331a
: [comp] Comp.,ἀνθηρότερον καὶ -έστερον τῶν ἄλλων λέγειν Isoc. 13.18
;οἱ -εστέρως λέγοντες Arist.Metaph. 1075a26
.2 kindly, courteously, Isoc.5.22.3 with good intention,χ. μέν, ἀπειροτέρως δὲ ἐπαινεῖν Id.12.37
.IV the neut., as Adv., was written proparox. χάριεν in [dialect] Att., acc. to Hdn.Gr.1.350, A.D.Adv.160.22, etc., but no example is quoted; neut. as Adj. is proparox. acc. to Suid.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > χαρίεις
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4 ὀψοποιέω
A dress food (esp. fish) nicely, Alex.24.1, Plu.2.663c, etc.: metaph., ὀ. λόγον make a dainty speech, ib.55a:—[voice] Med., c. acc. cogn., X.Mem.3.14.5: abs., Id.HG7.2.22, D.54.4.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὀψοποιέω
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5 δίκτυον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `net, strick' (Od.).Dialectal forms: Myc. dekutuwoko \/ dektuworgos\/Compounds: δικτυ-βόλος (AP, Opp.) beside δικτυο-βόλος (Poll.) after δικτυ-αρχέω (inscr.) with elided -o-?Derivatives: Dimin. δικτύδιον (Poll.); δικτυεύς `fisher (with a net)' (Str.) with δικτυεία `fishing' (Ael.); also δικτυΐα, s. Scheller Oxytonierung 41. - δικτυώδης `netlike' (Hp. Ep.), δικτυωτός `forming a net' (LXX); from δικτυόομαι? (LXX). PN Δίκτυς.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: From an u-stem ( δίκτυ only EM 275, 27; from the plural δίκτυα, Schwyzer 460f.) of δικεῖν `throw' (s. v.). The Myc. form has -e- as variant of -i-, which points to a Pre-Greek word (see Bader, Type Demiourgos $ 23; Chadwick, Myc. Studies Wingspread, 19-21; cf. on δίσκος); on Pre-Greek u-stems Heubeck, Praegraeca 36; to avoid this conclusion Chantraine, REG 80 (1967)1-5 assumes deiktu- for Mycenaean. So the Myc. form nicely confirms Furnée's conclusion that δικ- is Pre-Greek (s. δίσκος).Page in Frisk: 1,394-395Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δίκτυον
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6 λᾶας
Grammatical information: m. (late also f.),Meaning: `stone'; as GN (Laconia) Λᾱ̃ς and Λᾶ (Th., Paus., St.Byz. a.o.; acc. Λᾰ́ᾱν Β 585).Other forms: gen. etc. λᾱ̃-ος, -ι, - αν (-α Call.), pl. λᾶ-ες etc. (Il.); also as ο-stem λᾶος, - ου etc. (Hes.Fr. 115[?], S., Cyrene, Gortyn; details in Schwyzer 578),Compounds: Compp., e. g. λᾱ-τόμος (beside uncontracted or restored λαο-) `stone-cutter' with λᾱτομ-ίαι `quarry' (= Lat. lātomiae beside lautumiae \< *λαο-; s.W.-Hofmann s. v.), Arg., Syracus., hell. (Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 125f.); λα(ο)-ξό(ο)ς with λαξεύω etc. (Georgacas Glotta 36, 165 f.), λατύπος; as 2. member in κραταί-λεως (\< -*ληϜος or -*λᾱϜος; cf. below) `with hard rock' (A., E.), prob. also in ὑπο-λαΐς, - ίδος (H. also - ληΐς) f. name of an unknown bird (Arist.); cf. Thompson Birds s.v.; s. also 2. λαιός.Derivatives: λάϊγγες f. pl. `small stones' (Od., A. R.; on the formation Chantraine Formation 399; wrong Specht Ursprung 127; s. also below); λάϊνος, - ΐνεος `(of) stone' (Il.); uncertain λαιαί f. pl. (Arist.), λεῖαι (Gal.), sg. λεία (Hero) `the stones used as weights hanging from the upright loom'; unclear λαίεται καταλεύεται H. and λαυστήρ μοχθηρός... η οἴκου λαύρα, λαύστρανον τινες λύκον, τινες φρέατος ἅρπαγα H.; hypotheses by Jokl Rev. int. ét. balk. 1,46ff.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: On λαύρα and λεύω s. vv. The unique stemformation of λᾶας is unexplained. One supposes an old neuter with sec. transition to the masc. (fem.) after λίθος, πέτρος (Brugmann IF 11, 100 ff.). The further evaluation is quite uncertain. After Brugmann orig. nom.-acc. *λῆϜας (\< IE. *lēu̯ǝs-; on the full grade cf. λεύω and λεῖαι), gen., dat. etc. *λᾰ́Ϝᾰσ-ος, -ι (IE. *lǝu̯ǝs-os, -i) \> λᾶ-ος, -ι, to which analogically the nom. λᾶ-ας was formed. The simpler assumption, that only the vowellength in λᾶας (for older *λᾰ́Ϝας) was taken from (gen.) λᾶ-ος etc., is rejected by B. Metrical objections against a contraction of *λᾰ́Ϝᾰσ-ος, -ι to λᾶ-ος, -ι by Ruijgh l.c.; he prefers, with Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 211 to see in λᾶ-ος, -ι etc. an (unenlarged) consonant-stem λᾱϜ-. Who accepts these, not decisive, objections but also does not want to assume heteroclis, might assume a full grade monosyllabic oblique stem *λᾱϜσ- (beside *λᾰϜᾰσ-). The abandoning of the old σ-flection was anyhow connected with the gender-change. - Quite diff. Pedersen Cinq. decl. lat. 44ff. (with de Saussure Rec. 587 f.): λᾶας old masc. ablauting ā-stem: *λᾱϜᾱ-: λᾱϜ(ᾰ)- \< IE. * leh₂ueh₂-: *leh₂u̯(h₂)-; the supposed full grade -ā- (*- eh₂-) is however quite hypothetical, but it would nicely explain the absence of the root-vowel in the inflection; followed by Beekes, Origins (1985)15-17. - The word λᾶας was apparently unknown to Ion.-Attic (Wackernagel Hell. 9 f., Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1,22; doubts in Björck Alpha impurum 69 and 76 n. 1); Ion.-Att. form shows κραταί-λεως (or only poetical analogy after λαός: Μενέ-λεως a.o.?); thus the free-standing λεύω (s. v.). Connections to λᾶας outside Greek are rare and not without doubt. First Alb. lerë, -a `stone, heap of stones, stony plain, rockslope' from IE. *lā̆uerā (Jokl Rev. int. et. balk. 1, 46ff.; to λαύρα?, s.v.); Illyr. PN Lavo f. prop. "which belongs to the rock (stone)" (from * lava `stone'; Krahe ZNF 19, 72; Spr. d. Illyr. 1,69 f.). One considers further the orig. Celtic Lat. lausiae f. `small stones from stone-cuttings', s. W.-Hofmann s. v. The suffixal agreement between λάϊγγες and OIr. līe, gen. līac (\< Celt. *līu̯ank-; cf. Pok. 683 against Loth Rev. celt. 44, 293; also Lewy Festschr. Dornseiff 226 f.) is no doubt accidental. Further uncertain combinations in Bq, WP. 2, 405 ff., W.-Hofmann s. lausiae. - For Aegaean origin also Chantraine Formation 421, Güntert Labyrinth 5,9. - Since the Myc. form shows that there was no -w- in the form, we must assume *lāh- (but not from *lās-, as the -s- would have been retained. Hence the relation to λεύω, λαύρα has become quite unclear. See Heubeck, IF 66 (1961) 29-34. Fur. 329 compares λέπας; he considers (n. 53) λαίνθη λάρναξ λιθίνη Cyr. as proof of Pre-Greek origin.Page in Frisk: 2,64-66Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λᾶας
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7 κομψότερον
κομψότερον adv. of the comp. of κομψός (the word Eur. et al.; the comp. in Pla., Crat. 429d; POxy 935, 5 [III A.D.]) better of sick persons: κ. ἔχειν begin to improve J 4:52 (κομψῶς ἔχειν in this sense in Epict. 3, 10, 13; PParis 18, 3; PTebt 414, 10. This use develops as a transferred sense of κομψός ‘nice’ [cp. our ‘N.N. is doing nicely’]. On the comp. cp. POxy 935, 5 θεῶν συνλαμβανόντων ἡ ἀδελφὴ ἐπὶ τὸ κομψότερον ἐτράπη; FBilabel, Badische Papyri 1923 no. 34, 4 [I A.D.] κομψότερον ἔσχεν).—DELG s.v. κομψός. M-M. s.v. κομψῶς. -
8 ωραία
1) handsomely2) nicelyΕλληνικά-Αγγλικά νέο λεξικό (Greek-English new dictionary) > ωραία
См. также в других словарях:
Nicely — Nice ly adv. In a nice manner. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nicely — (adv.) early 14c., foolishly, from NICE (Cf. nice) + LY (Cf. ly) (2). From c.1600 as scrupulously; 1714 as in an agreeable fashion … Etymology dictionary
nicely — nice|ly S3 [ˈnaısli] adv ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(well)¦ 2¦(in a friendly/pleasant way)¦ 3 be doing nicely 4 that will do nicely 5¦(exactly)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1.) ¦(WELL)¦ in a satisfactory, pleasant, or attractive way ▪ He was handsome and nicely dressed. ▪ … Dictionary of contemporary English
nicely — [[t]na͟ɪsli[/t]] 1) ADV GRADED: ADV with v If something is happening or working nicely, it is happening or working in a satisfactory way or in the way that you want it to. → See also nice She has a bit of private money, so they manage quite… … English dictionary
nicely */ — UK [ˈnaɪslɪ] / US adverb 1) in a satisfactory way The children are settling in nicely at school. 2) in an attractive way a nicely furnished flat 3) in a polite or friendly way If you ask Bob nicely, I m sure he ll help. 4) in a suitable or… … English dictionary
nicely — nice|ly [ naısli ] adverb * 1. ) in a satisfactory way: The children are settling in nicely at school. 2. ) in an attractive way: a nicely furnished apartment 3. ) in a polite or friendly way: If you ask Bob nicely, I m sure he ll help. 4. ) in… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Nicely — People commonly known solely by their family name Nicely include: Nick Nicely musician Jonnie Nicely Playboy model Tony Nicely CEO This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an … Wikipedia
nicely — [ˈnaɪsli] adv 1) in a satisfactory or suitable way That illustrates the point nicely.[/ex] 2) in an attractive way a nicely furnished flat[/ex] 3) in a polite or friendly way If you ask Bob nicely, I m sure he ll help.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
nicely — adv. Nicely is used with these adjectives: ↑balanced, ↑furnished, ↑polished, ↑rounded, ↑tanned Nicely is used with these verbs: ↑ask, ↑balance, ↑capture, ↑complement, ↑contrast, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
nicely — adverb Pleasantly; satisfactorily. He lookt askew with his mistrustfull eyes, / And nicely trode, as thornes lay in his way, / Or that the flore to shrinke he did auyse [...] … Wiktionary
Nicely — This is an interesting American variant form of the medieval Germanic surnames Nies, Nieser, and Niesller. However spelt all derive from the Ancient Greek personal name Dionysus meaning Keeper of wine . The American versions include Nicely,… … Surnames reference