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1 σατράπης
-ου ὁ N 1 0-23-0-15-6=44 Jgs 5,3; JgsA 16,5.8.18governor (one of the five lords of the Philistines, originally a governor over the satrapy in the Pers. empire) Jgs 5,3; id. (in opp. to βασιλεῖς) 1 Kgs 21(20),24*Est 1,3 οἱ ἄρχοντες τῶν σατραπῶν the governors of the satraps corr.? οἱ ἄρχοντες τῶν σατραπειῶν for MT המדינות רישׂ the governors of the satrapies, see also Est 9,3Cf. PETIT, T. 1988, 59-65 -
2 στρατηγός
-οῦ + ὁ N 2 0-5-7-15-32=59 1 Sm 29,3.4; 1 Chr 11,6; 12,20; 2 Chr 32,21captain, commander, general 1 Sm 29,3; governor 2 Mc 12,2*Ez 32,30 στρατηγοὶ Ασσουρ the commanders of Assur-ורשׁא סרני? for MT רשׁא צדני the Sidonians, whoCf. DELCOR 1967a, 155-156; PETIT, T. 1988, 59-65; →NIDNTT; TWNT -
3 τοπάρχης
-ου ὁ N 1 1-1-1-7-5=15 Gn 41,34; 2 Kgs 18,24; Is 36,9; Est 3,13a; DnLXX 3,2regional commander, governor, officer in charge of a τόπος or τοπαρχίαCf. CONYBEARE 1905=1988 124; HARL 1986a, 274; LEE, J. 1983 98.145.147; PETIT, T. 1988, 59-65 -
4 ἕ
ἕ, ἑGrammatical information: refl. pron.Meaning: `se', ep. also `eum, eam, id', 3. pers. sing. acc. of the reflexive and (enclitic) anaphoric pronoun; (pl. see σφε)Other forms: Lesb. Ϝε, Pamph. Ϝhε, ep. auch ἑέ; gen. οὗ (οὑ), ep. ἕο ( εἷο), εὗ (ἑο, εὑ), ἕθεν, Lesb. Ϝέθεν, Locr. Ϝέος; dat. (and gen.; Schwyzer-Debrunner 189 m. Lit.; cf. Latte Glotta 35, 296) οἷ (οἱ), ep. also ἑοῖ, Lesb. etc. Ϝοῖ, Cret. (Gortyn) etc. Ϝιν, Boeot. (Korinna) ἑίν.Derivatives: From it the possessive ὅς, ep. also ἑός, Dor. etc. Ϝός `suus, own' (also referring to 1. and 2. pers.), `eius'.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [282] *se, su̯e `himself'Etymology: The ep. forms ἑ, εὑ, ἕθεν, οἱ can, if there is no trace of digamma (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 146ff.), go back to an IE reflexive stem * se-, seen in Lat. sē, OCS sę `sē', Germ., e. g. Goth. si-k; with οἱ \< * soi = OP šay, Av. hē, Prakr. se; ἑο aus * se-so, cf. τέο from τίς (s. v.). It is now maintained that IE only had *su̯e, Petit * Swe en grec ancien 1999, 126-8. Beside it we find Ϝhε, Ϝοῖ \< *su̯e, *su̯oi = Skt. sva- `himself', only in derivations and in compounds, e. g. sva-taḥ `from himself, of his own' (cf. ἐτός), sva-já- `born from himself'; a disyllabic (full grade) variant seems found in ἑέ \< *seu̯e. - Adjectivized *su̯e, *seu̯e gave the possessive *su̯o-s, *seu̯o-s, which gave Ϝός, ἑός = Skt. svá- `suus', OLat. sovos \> Lat. suus. - Further see Schwyzer 600ff. (Strange idea in Szemerényi, Gnomon 43(1971) 665f. that *su̯e indicated the extended family.) Cf. ἑαυτοῦ, ἑκάς, ἕκαστος, σφε und σύ.Page in Frisk: 1,431-432Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἕ
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5 ἑ
ἕ, ἑGrammatical information: refl. pron.Meaning: `se', ep. also `eum, eam, id', 3. pers. sing. acc. of the reflexive and (enclitic) anaphoric pronoun; (pl. see σφε)Other forms: Lesb. Ϝε, Pamph. Ϝhε, ep. auch ἑέ; gen. οὗ (οὑ), ep. ἕο ( εἷο), εὗ (ἑο, εὑ), ἕθεν, Lesb. Ϝέθεν, Locr. Ϝέος; dat. (and gen.; Schwyzer-Debrunner 189 m. Lit.; cf. Latte Glotta 35, 296) οἷ (οἱ), ep. also ἑοῖ, Lesb. etc. Ϝοῖ, Cret. (Gortyn) etc. Ϝιν, Boeot. (Korinna) ἑίν.Derivatives: From it the possessive ὅς, ep. also ἑός, Dor. etc. Ϝός `suus, own' (also referring to 1. and 2. pers.), `eius'.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [282] *se, su̯e `himself'Etymology: The ep. forms ἑ, εὑ, ἕθεν, οἱ can, if there is no trace of digamma (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 146ff.), go back to an IE reflexive stem * se-, seen in Lat. sē, OCS sę `sē', Germ., e. g. Goth. si-k; with οἱ \< * soi = OP šay, Av. hē, Prakr. se; ἑο aus * se-so, cf. τέο from τίς (s. v.). It is now maintained that IE only had *su̯e, Petit * Swe en grec ancien 1999, 126-8. Beside it we find Ϝhε, Ϝοῖ \< *su̯e, *su̯oi = Skt. sva- `himself', only in derivations and in compounds, e. g. sva-taḥ `from himself, of his own' (cf. ἐτός), sva-já- `born from himself'; a disyllabic (full grade) variant seems found in ἑέ \< *seu̯e. - Adjectivized *su̯e, *seu̯e gave the possessive *su̯o-s, *seu̯o-s, which gave Ϝός, ἑός = Skt. svá- `suus', OLat. sovos \> Lat. suus. - Further see Schwyzer 600ff. (Strange idea in Szemerényi, Gnomon 43(1971) 665f. that *su̯e indicated the extended family.) Cf. ἑαυτοῦ, ἑκάς, ἕκαστος, σφε und σύ.Page in Frisk: 1,431-432Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἑ
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6 ἦθος
Grammatical information: n.Compounds: As 1. member with analog. comp.-vowel e. g. in ἠθο-ποιός `forming customs' (Arist.), as 2. member e. g. in κακο-ήθης `with bad customs' (IA).Derivatives: ἠθεῖος `reliable, beloved' (Hom., Hes.), also ἠθαῖος (Pi., Antim.), after γενναῖος a. o. (wrong J. Schmidt Pluralbild. 387, Sandsjoe - αῖος 102f.); ἠθάς, - άδος m. f. `usual, reliable' (Hp., S.) with ἠθάδιος `id.' (Opp.); ἠθικός `concerning the character' (Arist.; s. Verdenius Mnemos. 3: 12, 241ff.); ἠθαλέος `usual' (Opp., Epigr.; Debrunner IF 23, 26).Etymology: Cf. Johanna Schmidt, Ethos. Beitr. zum antiken Wertempfinden (Borna 1941); and Verdenius l. c. Differs from ἔθος only in lengthened grade, ō-grade in εἴωθα (s. v.). D.Petit, RPh. 73 (1999)87, who refers to Schindler, Flexion u. Wortbildung 259-267. - On traces of the digamma Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 150.Page in Frisk: 1,625Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἦθος
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7 λίγο
1) petit2) peu -
8 μικρός
1) jeune2) petit3) peu
См. также в других словарях:
petit — petit, ite [ p(ə)ti, it ] adj., n. et adv. • 980 « jeune »; lat. pop. °pittittus, d un rad. expressif °pitt ;cf. bas lat. pitinnus « petit garçon » I ♦ Dans l ordre physique (quantité mesurable) A ♦ Adj. 1 ♦ (Êtres vivants) Dont la hauteur, la… … Encyclopédie Universelle
petit — petit, ite (pe ti, ti t ; le t se lie : mon pe ti t ami) adj. 1° Qui a peu d étendue, peu de volume, par opposition à grand, gros, étendu, volumineux. • Comme c est dans les plus petits vases que l on enferme les essences les plus exquises,… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
Petit — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Adrien Petit (* 1990), französischer Radrennfahrer Alexis Thérèse Petit (1791–1820), französischer Physiker Alfredo Petit Vergel (* 1936), Weihbischof in San Cristobal de la Habana Antoni Martí Petit (*… … Deutsch Wikipedia
petit — Petit, Paruus, Paruulus, Modicus, Exiguus, Minutus, Curtus, Pusillus. PETHI apud Hebraeos id valet quod Paruulus apud Latinos. Petit nombre, Paucitas. Fort petit, Tantillus, Perexiguus, Paruulus. Oiseau un peu plus petit que les colombes, Auis… … Thresor de la langue françoyse
Petit — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Wikcionario Wikcionario tiene definiciones para petit. Petit puede significar: La palabra en francés para pequeño Triangulo de Petit (triangulo lumbar inferior). Véase Hernia de Petit Petit Jean State Park … Wikipedia Español
petit — PETÍT subst. Corp de literă cu mărimea de opt puncte tipografice. – Din fr. petit, germ. Petit. Trimis de oprocopiuc, 15.03.2004. Sursa: DEX 98 petít s. n. Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa: Dicţionar ortografic PETÍT petituri n. 1)… … Dicționar Român
Petit — may be any of the following: *The French word for small *Petit s triangle (inferior lumbar triangle) . See Petit s hernia *Petit Jean State Park *Petit jurorPeople/Surname*A French surname **Pierre Petit, a French photographer **Jean Pierre Petit … Wikipedia
Petit — Pet it, a. [F. See {Petty}.] Small; little; insignificant; mean; Same as {Petty}. [Obs., except in legal language.] [1913 Webster] By what small, petit hints does the mind catch hold of and recover a vanishing notion. South. [1913 Webster] {Petit … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Petit Be — Petit Bé Le Petit Bé vu des remparts de Saint Malo par gros temps … Wikipédia en Français
Petit bé — Le Petit Bé vu des remparts de Saint Malo par gros temps … Wikipédia en Français
PETIT (R.) — PETIT ROLAND (1924 ) Chorégraphe et danseur français né à Villemomble. C’est en 1934 que Roland Petit entre à l’Opéra de Paris, où il reçoit l’enseignement de Gustave Ricaux et de Serge Lifar. Promu grand sujet, il danse pour la première et… … Encyclopédie Universelle