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1 βδέω
Aβδέσα AP11.242
(Nicarch.); laterἔβδευσα Hierocl. Facet.233
, al.:— break wind, Ar.Pl. 693, Pax 151, etc.: c. acc. cogn.,οὐ λιβανωτὸν βδέω Id.Pl. 703
:—[voice] Med. or [voice] Pass., Id.Eq. 900. -
2 δάπεδον
A level surface,ἐν τυκτῷ δαπέδῳ Od.4.627
; floor of a chamber, 10.227, al., X.Cyr.8.8.16, IG4.952.44 (Epid.); ground, soil,γῆς ἀρότροις ῥήξας δ. Ar.Pl. 515
;πόλιος δ. Hdt.4.200
;Συρίης δ. AP12.131
(Posidipp.): abs., ground,κείμενον ἐν δαπέδῳ Od.11.577
: in pl., a ship's decks (fore and aft), h.Ap. 416; but, plain, Pi.N.7.34, E.Hipp. 230 (anap.);Βοιωτῶν δ. AP7.245
(Gaet.).—Mostly poet.; in later Prose, Luc.Sacr.8 alludes to Il.4.2. (From *dṃ-pedo- [dem-, dom-, dṃ-, = house; expld. by οἶκος, ἐρείπιον, Hsch.]; cf. ζάπεδον.)Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > δάπεδον
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3 πορδῶ
A pedo, Gloss. -
4 βδέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `break wind' (Com.)Derivatives: βδ-ύλλω `break wind (for fear)' (Ar.) and βδέννυμαι ἐκκενοῦμαι την κοιλίαν Suid. ( βδένεσθαι H., correct?; Schwyzer 685, 697 and 736, Debrunner IF 21, 97f.) - βδόλος, βδελυρός and βδελύσσομαι (s. vv.).Etymology: Old verb Russ. bzdetь, Lith. bezdù, bezdė́ti, Lat. pēdō \< * pezdō. Thus βδέω from *βzδέω; s. Schwyzer 326 Zus. 5. - Different from πέρδομαι.Page in Frisk: 1,230Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βδέω
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5 πέδον
Grammatical information: n.Compounds: As 2. member in δά-πεδον, κράσ-πεδον a.o.; s. vv. and Risch IF 59, 14 f. Adject. hypostasis ἔμ-πεδος `standing on the ground, firm' (ep. poet., late prose) with ἐμπεδ-όω `to confirm, to consider inviolable' (Att. etc.); bahuvrihi w. α copul. ἄ-πεδος `flat' (Hdt., Th., X.); as 1. member a.o. in πεδο-βάμων `walking the earth' (A.). Adverbs πεδ-όσε, - όθεν, - οι (ep. poet.).Derivatives: Besides with ιο-suffix πεδίον n. `plain, plane, field' (Il.) with many derivv.: 1. πεδι-άς, - άδος f. `flat, level, on the plain' (Pi., IA.); 2. πεδι-εινός, also πεδ-εινός, -ϊνός, `flat, level' (IA.; after αἰπεινός, resp. πυκινός a.o.); 3. πεδι-ακός `belonging to the plain', pl. `inhabitant of the plain country of Attica' (Lys. Fr. 238 S., Arist., pap.); 4. πεδι-εῖς m. pl. `id.' (Plu., D. L., Bosshardt 74); 5. πεδι-άσιος `on the plain' (Str., Dsc.; prob. after Φλειάσιος a.o.); 6. πεδι-ασι-μαῖος = campester (gloss.); 7. πεδι-ώδης `flat' (sch.); 8. Πεδι-ώ f. `goddess of the plain' (Hera; Sicily. -- Cypr. πεδίϳα f. `plain' (cf. Bechtel Dial. 1, 423); after χώρα, γῆ?Etymology: Old inherited word, identical with Hitt. pedan `place, position', Umbr. peřum `bottom', as well as with Arm. het, -oy `track', OWNo. fet n. `pace', Skt. padá- n. `pace, step, footstep', Av. pađa- n. `trace': IE * pedo-m n. Orig. meaning `trace, bottom', from the word for `foot', s. πούς w. lit.Page in Frisk: 2,485-486Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέδον
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6 πέρδομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to fart' (Ar.).Other forms: Perf. πέπορδα (with result. meaning.), aor. (only w. preflx) - παρδεῖν, fut. - παρδήσομαι.Derivatives: 1. πορδή f. `fart' (Ar.) with πόρδων, - ωνος m. nickname of the cynics (Arr.); 2. πράδησις f. `farting' (Hp.); 3. πραδίλη f. `id.' (Theognost.; σπατ-ίλη, κον-ίλη a.o.); reduplicated πεπραδῖλαι pl. `id.', also name of a fish (H., Phot.) as πεπρίλος ἰχθῦς ποιός H. (after the sound he produces; Strömberg Fischn. 76). 4. Enlargment πήραξον ἀφόδευσον H.; Cret. for *πέρδαξον as from *περδ-άζομαι; besides ἀποπαρδακᾳ̃ (- κα?) τοῦτο εἴρηται παρὰ τὸ ἀποπαρδεῖν H.; cf. Specht KZ 66, 201. -- Here also σιληπορδέω and πέρδιξ, s. v.Etymology: With themat. root-present πέρδομαι agrees the also middle Skt. párdate; with the act. root-aor. ἀπ-έ-παρδον agrees the also act. aor. Av. pǝrǝdǝn; act. πέπορδα like δέδορκα (Wackernagel Unt. 224 w. n. 2). Also elsewhere is this old verb of the popular language retained: Germ., e.g. OHG ferzan, Slav., e.g. Russ. perdětь, Lith. pérdšu, pérsti etc.; s. WP. 2, 49, Pok. 819. A phonetic variant (IE * pesd- beside * perd-) is found a.o. in Lat. pēdō, s. W.-Hofmann w. rich lit.; cf. also βδέω. -- With Basque eperdi, ipurdi `hind, after' πέρδομαι has nothing to do; cf. Lafon BSL 54 c. r. 52 f. (against Elderkin A comp. study of Basque and Greek vocabularies [Princeton 1958]).Page in Frisk: 2,511-512Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέρδομαι
См. также в других словарях:
pedo — sustantivo masculino 1. Pragmática: eufemismo. Expulsión por el ano de gases acumulados en el intestino: tirarse un pedo. Sinónimo: ventosidad 2. Uso/registro: coloquial. Resultado de emborracharse o de estar bajo los efectos de alguna droga … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
pedo — (Del lat. pedĭtum). 1. m. Ventosidad que se expele del vientre por el ano. 2. vulg. borrachera (ǁ efecto de emborracharse). Agarrarse un buen pedo. 3. El Salv. y Méx. fiesta (ǁ reunión para divertirse). 4. adj. vulg. Ebrio, bajo los efectos del… … Diccionario de la lengua española
Pedo — is a prefix meaning relating to children or soil, see e.g.: *Pedology (children study) *Pedology (soil study) *As an abbreviation, pedo, sometimes used to refer to pedophiles.Persons: *Pedo (governor of Roman Egypt), a governor of Roman Egypt in… … Wikipedia
pedo — pedo·log·i·cal; pedo·met·ric; pedo·met·ri·cal·ly; … English syllables
pedo- — 1 [pē′dō, pē′də] [< Gr pais (gen. paidos), a child < IE base * pou , small, small animal, child > FEW, FOAL] combining form child, children, offspring [pedophilia, pedobaptism] pedo 2 [ped′ō, ped′ə] [< Gr pedon, the ground < IE… … English World dictionary
pedo- — 1 a combining form meaning child, used in the formation of compound words: pedophilia. Also, paedo ; esp. before a vowel, ped . [var. sp. of paedo < Gk paido , comb. form of paid (s. of paîs) child] pedo 2 a combinin … Universalium
pedo — m. fisiol. Expulsión ruidosa de gas por el ano. Medical Dictionary. 2011 … Diccionario médico
pedo- — Prefijo que significa niño. Medical Dictionary. 2011 … Diccionario médico
pedo- — from Gk. pedo , comb. form of pais boy, child, from PIE root *peu small, little, few, young (see FEW (Cf. few) (adj.)). The British form paed is better because it avoids confusion with ped … Etymology dictionary
pedo- — 1 combining form US spelling of paedo . pedo 2 [ pɛdəʊ] combining form relating to soil or soil types: pedogenic. Origin from Gk pedon ground … English new terms dictionary
PEDO — vide Albinovanus. It. Quintus … Hofmann J. Lexicon universale