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1 ἦκα
ἦκα, Adv.:I of Place or Motion, slightly, a little, ἦκ' ἐπ' ἀριστερά a little to the left, Il.23.336;ἦ. παρακλίνας κεφαλήν Od.20.301
: hence, generally, softly, gently,ἦ. ἐλάσαι 18.94
, cf. 92;ἀπώσατο ἦ. γέροντα Il.24.508
;ἦ. μάλα ψύξασα 20.440
;ἦ. κιόντας Od.17.254
;ἦ. βιησάμενος Nic.Al. 226
.II of Sound, softly, low,ἦ. πρὸς ἀλλήλους ἀγόρευον Il.3.155
; ἦ. μύρεσθαι, μάλ' ὁμαδῆσαι, A.R.3.463, 565. -
2 ἀμείβω
ἀμείβω, - ομαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `change, exchange', mid. also `answer, repay, requite.' (Il.).Other forms: ἀμεὶβοντες `rafters that meet and cross each other' (Il. Ψ 712).Derivatives: ἀμοιβή `change, exchange, requital, recompense, answer'. - Adj. ἀμοιβός `one who exchanges, in requital' (Il.)Origin: IE [Indo-European] [713] * h₂meigʷ- `change'Etymology: No exact correspondence. One compares Lat. migrare `wander' as from * migros `changing (place)'. The - β- will go back to *gʷ as *b is rare in PIE, which gives * h₂meigʷ- The root * h₂mei - `change' is well known, Skt. máyate, Lat. (com)mū- nis, but the enlargement -gʷ- is rare.Page in Frisk: 1,90Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀμείβω
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3 ἄνυμι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `effect, accomplish' (Il).Other forms: themat. ἀνύω, ἁνύω; *ἄνϜω \> ἄ̄νω; with dental ἀνύτω, Att. ἁνύτω (Schwyzer 704: 1), aor. ἤνυσα (sec., s. below), ἤνεσα (Strunk below). Glosses κασάνεις· ἀνύεις, Λάκωνες H. (= καθανεις); ἀανές· οὐ τελεσθησόμενον H.Compounds: ἀν-ήνυ(σ)τος `unrealisable, endless' (Od.);Etymology: ἄνυμι is identical with Skt. sanóti `win' (*sn̥-n-eu-). The aorist ἤνεσα is old and corresponds to Skt. asāniṣam (* senh₁-s-); Schwyzer 696 n. 10, 752; Strunk Nasalpr. 116. Hitt. šanḫ-zi `seek, strive' cannot represent * senh₁- - Cf. αὑθέντης, ἐντεσίεργος.Page in Frisk: 1,115Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄνυμι
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4 ἔαρ 2
ἔαρ 2., ἔαροςGrammatical information: n.Meaning: `spring' (Il.; cf Schwyzer 251).Derivatives: ἐαρινός (also εἰ-, ἠ- like εἴαρος through metrical lengthening), poet. also ἠρινός `belonging to the spring' (Il.); idem ἐάρτερος (Nic. Th. 380, with contrasting - τερος, Schwyzer-Debrunner 183); ἐαρίδας τὰς κανθαρίδας H.; on the semantics Strömberg Wortstudien 13. - Denomin. verb ἐαρίζω `bloom as in spring etc.' (Pl.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1174] *u̯es-r̥ `spring'Etymology: From γέαρ ἔαρ H. and Hom. prosody (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 128) one concludes to Ϝέαρ, from *Ϝέσαρ, an old r-n-stem: Av. loc. vaŋri \< * vasr-i `in spring', Arm. gar-un `spring', Lith. vasar-à `summer'; OCS etc. vesn-a `spring', Skt. vasan-tá- `id.' (cf. heman-tá- `winter', s. χειμών). On the Celtic forms s. Pok 1174. - Beside IE *u̯es-r-, *u̯es-n- Lat. vēr, ONord. vār n. (o-stem). Porzig Gliederung 110f. suggests, that Lat.-Germ. *u̯ēr- was changed after the wordt for `year', IE *i̯ēr- (s. ὥρα). - With ἐαρινός cf. Lith. vasarìnis `of the summer' and Lat. vernus (like hibernus, hornus).Page in Frisk: 1,432-433Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἔαρ 2
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5 ἔαρος
ἔαρ 2., ἔαροςGrammatical information: n.Meaning: `spring' (Il.; cf Schwyzer 251).Derivatives: ἐαρινός (also εἰ-, ἠ- like εἴαρος through metrical lengthening), poet. also ἠρινός `belonging to the spring' (Il.); idem ἐάρτερος (Nic. Th. 380, with contrasting - τερος, Schwyzer-Debrunner 183); ἐαρίδας τὰς κανθαρίδας H.; on the semantics Strömberg Wortstudien 13. - Denomin. verb ἐαρίζω `bloom as in spring etc.' (Pl.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1174] *u̯es-r̥ `spring'Etymology: From γέαρ ἔαρ H. and Hom. prosody (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 128) one concludes to Ϝέαρ, from *Ϝέσαρ, an old r-n-stem: Av. loc. vaŋri \< * vasr-i `in spring', Arm. gar-un `spring', Lith. vasar-à `summer'; OCS etc. vesn-a `spring', Skt. vasan-tá- `id.' (cf. heman-tá- `winter', s. χειμών). On the Celtic forms s. Pok 1174. - Beside IE *u̯es-r-, *u̯es-n- Lat. vēr, ONord. vār n. (o-stem). Porzig Gliederung 110f. suggests, that Lat.-Germ. *u̯ēr- was changed after the wordt for `year', IE *i̯ēr- (s. ὥρα). - With ἐαρινός cf. Lith. vasarìnis `of the summer' and Lat. vernus (like hibernus, hornus).Page in Frisk: 1,432-433Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἔαρος
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6 καινός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `new, newly found, unexpected' (IA.).Compounds: Often as 1st member, e. g. in καινο-τομέω (: καινὰ τέμνειν), prop. expression of mining `cut out a new (type of) stone'', metaphor. `introduce innovations (in the state)' with - τομία, - τόμος (Att.), καινο-ποιέω `introduce innovations, renovate' (S., Plb.) with - ποιΐα, - ποιητής, s. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 90f.Derivatives: Ab (NT) with ( ἀνα-)καίνωσις (J., NT). - EN Καινίας, Καίνιος a. o. (Bechtel Hist. Personennamen 229), Καινεύς with Καινεΐδης (Boßhardt Die Nom. astracts καινότης `innovation' (Att.). - Denomin. verbs: 1. καινίζω `innovate' (Trag.), also with prefix, esp. ἀνα- (Isoc., Str., Plu.), ἐγ- (LXX, NT); from there ( ἐγ-)καίνισις, - ισμός (LXX); postverbal ἐγκαίνια pl. `consecration of a temple' (LXX, NT). - 2. καινόω `innovate' (Hdt., Th.), ἀνα-καινόςuf - ευς 128, Debrunner Άντίδωρον 32).Etymology: One compares Av. kainī̆(n)-, Skt. gen. pl. kanī́nām `girls', with the full grade nom. ag. kanyā̀ `girl' (reinterpreted as ā-stem) and the adj. kanī́na- `young' (Wackernagel-Debrunner Ai. Gramm. 3, 112f.; also K. Hoffmann Münch. Stud. 6, 38); primary comp. kánīyas-, kániṣṭha-. Doubtful is however OWelsh cein `beautiful' (Pedersen Vergl. Gramm. 1, 23). - A remote cognate further Lat. recēns `fresh, new, young'; if from re-cen-t-, it belongs as primary t-derivation to a verb `rise freshly, come up, begin' in OIr. cinim `rise', OCS. vъ-, na-čьnǫ, -čęti `begin' (IE. * ken-). More forms in Bq s. v., W.-Hofmann s. recēns, Pok. 563f. - Not with Wackernagel Verm. Beiträge 38f. (= Kl. Schr. 1, 799f.) to καίνυμαι, κέκασμαι from *καιδνός.Page in Frisk: 1,754Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > καινός
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7 ὄνειδος
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `reproach, rebuke, abuse, disgrace' (Il.).Derivatives: ὀνειδείη f. `id.' (Nic.; cf. on ἐλεγχείη s. ἐλέγχω), ὀνείδειος `baling, scolding' (Hom., AP), ὀνειδείω `to blame' (Thebaïs Fr. 3; \< -εσ-ι̯ω); mostly ὀνειδίζω, also with prefix as ἐξ-, προσ-, `to make reproaches, to abuse, to scold' with several derivv.: ὀνείδ-ισμα n. `reproach, abuse' (Hdt.), - ισμός ( ἐξ-) m. `id.' (D.H., J.), - ιστήρ (E., κατ- ὄνειδος Man.), - ιστής (Arist.) `railer' (Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 14 a. 18), ( ἐξ-)ονειδιστικός `abusive' (hell.); on itself ἐπ-ονείδ-ιστος `deserving a reproach, blameworthy' (Att.), prob. for *ἐπ-ονειδής after the many verbal adj. in - ιστος.Etymology: Old, in Grek isolated verbal noun without exact non-Greek agreement. The basic primary verb, which in Greek was replaced by the denomin. ὀνειδίζω, is in other languages often retained: Skt. nid-āná- `reproached', athem. aor. ptc., beside which the passive formation nid-yá-māna- `id.' and the nasal present ní-n-d-ati (cf. on ὄνομαι); Av. nāis-mī \< * nāid-s-mi `I reproach', lengthened grade athem. pres. with s-enlargement (if not analogical after forms like ipf. nāis-t \< * nāid-t, 2. pl. nis-ta \< * nid-ta); Balt. e.g. Latv. nîdu, inf. nîdêt, nîst `squint at, not tolerate, hate'. Further fom German. the deverbal or denominative secondary formation in Goth. ga-naitjan `revile'. Especially interesting for Greek is because of the vowelprothesis Arm. anicanem, aor. anici \< * o-neid-s- (on Arm. a- \< o- cf. on ὄναρ, on -s- Meillet MSL 20, 211). -- Further forms with lit. and uncontrollable root analysis in WP. 2, 322f., Pok. 760, Feist Vgl. Wb. d. got. Spr. s. v., Kuiper Nasalpräs. 130, Specht Ursprung 126, 167; see also Mayrhofer s. níndati and Fraenkel s. níedėti.Page in Frisk: 2,394Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄνειδος
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8 πηγη
Grammatical information: f.Other forms: Dor. παγά.Derivatives: Dimin. πηγ-ίον (pap. IIa), - ίδιον (Suid.); the adj. - αῖος `belonging to the w.' (IA.), - ιμαῖος `id.' (Hdn. Epim.); the verb - άζω, also w. ἀνα-, κατα-, `to spring up' (Ph., AP), παγάσασθαι aor. inf. `to bathe in a w.' (Dodona; late.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin](X)Etymology: Formation like πληγ-ή, λήθ-η, ζω-ή a.o.; without explanation. -- Referring to the many designations for `well' from `cold' (e.g. OCS studenьcь: studenъ, Lith. šaltìnis: šáltas, νίβα [= νίφα] χιόνα, καλεῖται δε οὕτως καὶ κρήνη ἐν Θρᾳκῃ Phot.) by Grošelj Živa Ant. 4, 173 f. connected with πήγνυμαι in the meaning `stiffened, freeze', πηγυλίς `ice-cold' (cf. also παγετώδης `ice-cold', of water: παγετός `ice'); to be considered. Cf. also Στύξ. Older lit. w. explanations which are to be rejected in Bq. - A Pre-Greek word seems quite probable.Page in Frisk: 2,525Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πηγη
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