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1 parentalia
părentālĭa, ĭum, v parentalis, II. B. -
2 parentalis
părentālis, e, adj. [2. parens], of or belonging to parents, parental:II.umbrae,
of my parents, Ov. Tr. 4, 10, 87.—In partic., of or belonging to the festival in honor of dead parents or relatives:B.dies,
the day of the festival in honor of the dead, Ov. F. 2, 548:mos,
i. e. the annually repeated combat of the birds which rose from Memnon's funeral pile, and which were therefore regarded as his children, id. M. 13, 619 (cf. id. Am. 1, 13, 4).—Subst.: părentālĭa, ĭum, n.1.A festival in honor of dead relations:2.ut parentalia cum supplicationibus miscerentur,
Cic. Phil. 1, 6, 13; Inscr. Orell. 3927; 4084.— Gen.:PARENTALIORVM,
Inscr. Orell. 3999.—The title of a work by Ausonius. -
3 Паренталии
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4 caristium
annual family banquet 3 days after Parentalia (20 Feb.) where feuds settled -
5 charistium
annual family banquet 3 days after Parentalia (20 Feb.) where feuds settled -
6 parentali
1 memorial celebrations, commemoration2 (st. romana) parentalia. -
7 Agonalia
Ăgōnālĭa, ĭum or ōrum (like Saturnalia, Parentalia, etc.), n., a festival in honor of Janus, celebrated in Rome on the 9 th of Jan. (V. Id. Jan.) and 21 st of May (XII. Kal. Jun.).—Different derivations of the word were given by the ancients, concerning which see Ov. F. 1, 319-332. Ovid, in l. c., derives it from agonia, q. v. For other etym., v. the foll. art., and under agonium. -
8 charistia
chăristĭa ( car-), ōrum, n., = charisteia or charistêria, an annual family repast made three days after the Parentalia, on the 20th of February; a family banquet, at which existing family feuds were settled, Ov. F. 2, 617 sq.; Val. Max. 2, 1, 8; cf. Mart. 9, 56, 1. -
9 γίγνομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `be born, become, arise' (Il.).Other forms: Ion. etc. γί̄νομαι (with assimilation and lengthening, Schwyzer 215), Thess. Boeot. γίνυμαι (innovation, Schwyzer 698), Cret. γίννομαι, aor. γενέσθαι, perf. γέγονα, γέγαμεν, γεγαώς, Med. (new) γεγένημαι, fut. γενήσομαι; recent Att. etc. γενηθῆναι and γενηθήσομαι; transitive s-aorist γείνασθαι (ep. etc., \< *γεν-σ-; s. Schwyzer 756 and Wackernagel Unt. 175), alo γεινόμεθα, - μενος (either for γί(γ)νομαι, Schwyzer 715, or for γεν- with metrical lengthening); athemat. root aorist ἔγεντο (Hes.; analog. innovation, s. Schwyzer 678f. m. Lit.)Compounds: - γνη-τος, e.g. κασί-γνη-τος `brother' (q.v.) and - γν-ος in νεο-γν-ός `newborn' (h. Hom.), with ιο- in ὁμό-γν-ιος `of the same origin'Derivatives: γένος ( γενικός, - γενής) and γόνος, γονή ( γονεύς `parent'). γενεά, Ion. -ή `lineage' (Il.; s. Chantr. Form. 91). γενέ-θλη (Il.) and γένε-θλον (A.) `id.' with γενέθλιος and γενεθλιακός, γενεθλίδιος, γενεθλίωμα, γενεθλιάζω. γενε-τή `birth' (Hom.); hypocor. Γενετυλλίς name of Aphrodite as protectress of birth (Ar.;). γένε-σις `birth, origin' (Il.). γέν-να(s. v.). - γενέ-τωρ (Ion. Dor.) and γενε-τήρ (Arist.) `begetter'; on the diff. s. Benveniste Noms d'agent 46; fem. γενέτειρα (Pi.) ; γενέ-της (Ion.); with γενέσια n. pl. `Parentalia' (Hdt.). - γνήσιος `of real birth' (Il.) from γνητός. ἴγνητες s.vv. ( γνωτός, - τή to γιγνώσκω).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [373] *ǵenh₁-, ǵonh₁-, ǵnh₁- `beget'Etymology: Old verb: redupl. pres. γίγνομαι = Lat. act. gignō `beget'; thematic aorist ἐγένετο = Skt. them. impf. ájanata (pres. jánate, -ti = lat. genit); perf. γέγονα = Skt. jajā́na. Nouns γένος (Skt. jánas-, Lat. genus) and γόνος (Skt. jána-); γενέτωρ, γενετήρ (IE *ǵenh₁-) = Lat. genitor, Skt. jánitar- and janitár-, γενέτειρα = Skt. jánitrī, Lat. genitrī-x; γένεσις but with zero grade Skt. jātí- `birth, family', Lat. nāti-ō, OE ( ge)cynd ; - γνητος (*ǵnh₁-tos); - γν-ος in compounds (with loss of the laryngeal) = e. g. Lat. prīvi-gn-us `born separately' = `stepchild', νεο-γν-ός: Goth. niu-kla-hs `as a child' (\< *- kna- \< IE. *-ǵnh₁-o- dissimilated), also in NPhr. ουεγνω (*sue-ǵnh₁-o-); - γν-ιος in ὁμόγν-ιος = Gaul. Abe-gnia. - Many forms from different languages, s. Pok. 373ff.Page in Frisk: 1,307-308Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γίγνομαι
См. также в других словарях:
Parentalia — was a Roman festival for honoring one s dead parents. Families gathered among the tombs of loved ones and made offerings or sacrifices of grain and wine to their souls (February was considered an ill omened month and a good time to make sure the… … Wikipedia
PARENTALIA — erant sacra funesta; quae fiebant ab antiquis in honorem mortuorum, a parentando, quod parentibus iusta celebare significat, licet etiam transferatur ad alios. In his fieri solebant προσκλησεις τῆς νεκρων, evocationes mortuorum. Aderant propinqui … Hofmann J. Lexicon universale
Parentalĭa — (lat.), 1) was Eltern, auch Anverwandten, nach ihrem Tode zu Ehren od. zum Andenken geschieht, z.B. Todtenopfer, Leichenbegängniß, Todtenfest; 2) so v.w. Feralia, s.u. Februus. Daher Parentation, Rede am Grabe od. im Hause des Verstorbenen … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Parentalia — Parentalia, lat., Begräbnißfeierlichkeiten bei den Römern; Parentation, Leichenrede, Lobrede … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
Parentalia — Die Parentalia (auch dies parentales) waren im römischen Kalender als Nundinum Priode die „Tage des Totenkultes“, die den verstorbenen Eltern (parentes) und anderen Familienvorfahren gewidmet waren. Der Gedenkcharakter des Seelenfests wird… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Parentalia — римский праздник в память умерших, приходившийся на февраль месяц, от 13 до 21 числа; последний день праздника был известен под названием feralia. Во время П. приносились на могилы усопших вино, молоко, мед, масло, кровь жертвенных животных,… … Энциклопедический словарь Ф.А. Брокгауза и И.А. Ефрона
Parentalia — ▪ Roman religious festival Roman religious festival held in honour of the dead. The festival, which began at noon on February 13 and culminated on February 21, was essentially a private celebration of the rites of deceased family members.… … Universalium
parentalia — par·en·ta·lia … English syllables
parentalia — ˌpa(a)rən.ˈtālēə, ˌper noun plural Usage: usually capitalized Etymology: Latin, from neuter plural of parentalis parental more at parental : the chief annual festival of the dead in ancient Rome from midday February 13 to February 21 … Useful english dictionary
LEMURIA ET PARENTALIA — LEMURIA & PARENTALIA À Rome, les 9, 11 et 13 mai, un père de famille soucieux de ses devoirs devait se lever sur le coup de minuit. Pieds nus, il écartait de son chemin les ombres des morts en joignant le pouce aux autres doigts; il se lavait les … Encyclopédie Universelle
ПАРЕНТАЛИИ — • Parentalĭa, см. Feralia, Фералии … Реальный словарь классических древностей