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1 γεμάτος, πλήρης
ple -
2 πίμπλημι
πίμπλημι, - αμαιGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `to fill, to make full', intr. `to fill oneself, to become or be full' (Il.).Other forms: - άνεται 3. sg. (I 679), rare - άω, - έω (Hp.), also πλήθω (intr., late also tr.; ep. poet. Il.). Aor. πλῆ-σαι, - σασθαι, - σθῆναι, (Il.), intr. πλῆ-το, - ντο (ep.), ἐν-έπλητο etc. (Att.), fut. πλή-σω, - σομαι (Od.), - σθήσομαι (Att.), perf. midd. πέπλησμαι (IA.), act. πέπληκα (Att.), intr. πέπληθα (poet.).Compounds: Very often w. prefix, e.g. ἀνα-(συν-ανα-, προσ-ανα- a.o.), ἐν- ( ἀντ-εν-, παρ-εν- a.o.). As 1. member in some governing compp., e.g. πλησίστιος `filling the sail' (Od., E.), `with full sails' (Ph., Plu.).Derivatives: 1. πλέως (also w. ἐν-, ἀνα-, ἐκ- a.o. to ἐμ-πίμπλημι etc.), Ion. πλέος, ep. πλεῖος = *πλῆος, ntr. πλέον `full' (Il.). On the comp. πλείων with sup. πλεῖστος s. esp. -- 2. πλή-μη f. `high tide, flood' (Plb., Str. a.o.), - σμη f. `id.' (Hes. Fr. 217), - μα πλήρωμα H., - σμα n. `fertilisation' (Arist.); - σμιος `saturating, causing tedium' (Epicur., medic.); - σμονή f. `fullness, congestion, (over)saturation' (IA.; Schwyzer 524, Chantraine Form. 207) with - σμονώδης (Hp., Gal.), - σμονικός (Pythag. Ep.) `(over)saturating'. On πλήμνη s. v. -- 3. πλή-ρης `full' (IA.); as 1. member e.g. πληρο-φορέω ` fulfill' (Ctes., LXX, NT, pap.); πληρό-της f. `fullness' (Plu.), πληρ-όω, very often w. prefix, e.g. ἀνα-, ἐκ-, ἀπο-, συν-, `to make full, to (ful)fill, to finish, to pay fully' (IA.) with - ωμα ( ἀνα-, συν- a.o.) n. `filling, filling piece, full number, full payment, (full) crew' (IA.), - ωσις ( ἀνα-, ἐκ- u.a.) f. `accomplishment, complement, satisfaction' (IA.; Holt Les noms d'action en - σις 128), - ωτής ( ἐκ-, ἀπο-) m. `finisher, executor, collector' (Att.), - ωτικός ( ἀνα-, συν- a.o.) `fulfilling, completing' (Epicur., medic. a. o.). -- 4. πλῆ-θος n. `fulness, mass (of people), herd' (Il., Dor., Arc.); often as 2. member, e.g. παμ-πληθής `consisting of a whole mass, very numerous' (Att.); -θᾱ f. `id.' (Locr., Boeot.); -θύ̄ς, - θύος f. `id.' (Ion. Cret. Locr. hell.; Bechtel Dial. 2, 791f., also Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 110 against Leumann Hom. Wörter 294 f.) with - θύω `to be full, to become full, increase', - θύνομαι, - θύνω `to belong to the mass, to agree with it, to augment oneself; to make full, to augment' (A., Arist., LXX, NT); from it - θυσμός m. `increase' (Procl., Simp.), - θυντικός `plural' (Gramm. a.o.); 5. πληθ-ώρα, Ion. -η f. `fulness', rnedic. `plethora, full-blooded' (Ion. hell.; on the secondary barytonesis Wackernagel-Debrunner Phil. 95, 181 f.) with - ωριάω `suffer from p.'. - ωρικός `plethoric' (Gal.), - ωρέω `to be full' (Suid.).Etymology: The sigmatic aorist 3. sg. ἔ-πλησ-ε is (except for the -ε) identical with Skt. á-prās: IE *é-pleh₁s-t; with 1. pl. pres. πίμ-πλα-μεν agrees also, setting aside the secondary nasalisation of the present, Skt. pi-pr̥-más: IE *pi-pl̥-mé(s). Also 3. sg. πίμ-πλη-σι has a non-Gr. agreement, in Av. ham-pā-frāi-ti `fills up' over against Skt. pí-par-ti from IE * pi-pel-ti. Both in Greek and in Iran. came in sing. the langvocalic full grade plē- after other forms (e.g. the aor. *é-plēs-) for the prob. older Skt. pí-par-ti. After the pattern of τίθημι: τίθεμεν one made sometimes forms like ptc. pl. f. πιμπλεῖσαι (Hes.: τιθεῖσαι). With πέ-πλη-θ-α cf. still Skt. pa-prā́[u] (on θ below). -- The r-suffix in πλή-ρης (for older *πλη-ρο-ς? Schwyzer 513) is both in Arm. li-r `fullness' (from * plē-r-i-) and in Lat. plē-rus `for the greater part', plērī-que `most' (s. W.-Hofmann s. v.) attested. Also πλέως from *πλῆος (= Hom. πλεῖος), *πλη-(ι)ος can be equated with Arm. li `full' (better then li from * plē-tos = Lat. - plētus a.o.). The m-suffix in πλή-μη, - μα seems also in Lat. plēminābantur replēbantur (Gloss.; from * plēmen = πλῆμα) to be represented. -- Like πλῆ-θος: πλή-θω, πέ-πλη-θα also βρῖ-θος: βρί-θω: βέ-βρι-θα (s. v. and Schwyzer 511 a. 703); with πλῆθος, -θύ̄ς (on which Schwyzer 463f. and Frisk Eranos 43, 221) one compares Lat. plēbēs from IE *plēdhu̯ēs (cf. W.-Hofmann s. v.); well-argued doubts in Ernout-Meillet s. v. -- Further details w. rich lit. in WP. 2, 63f., Pok. 799f., W.-Hofmann s. pleō, Mayrhofer s. píparti1; older lit. also in Bq. On the Greek form still Schwyzer 689. -- Cf. πολύς, πλείων, πλήμνη.Page in Frisk: 2,537-538Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πίμπλημι
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3 ἐπίπλοον
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `fold of the peritoneum, omentum' (Ion. hell.).Other forms: (also - οος m.)Etymology: Compared with Lith. plėvė̃ `fine, thin skin (on the milk, below the egg-shell etc.), Russ. plevá `id.', Sloven. plė́va `eye-brow' (Curtius, Fick; Specht Ursprung 182); but then the prefix remains unexplained. So prob. a pure Greek verbal noun from ἐπι-πλεῖν as `swim upon'; s. Strömberg Wortstudien 65f.; ἐπίπλοον then `the organ, that swims upon'. - The form ἐπιπόλαιον (Eub. 95, 3) from connection with ἐπιπόλαιος, s. ἐπιπολή.Page in Frisk: 1,540Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἐπίπλοον
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4 πέλμα
Grammatical information: n.Meaning: `sole of the foot or shoe' (Hippon., Hp., LXX, hell.).Derivatives: From it κατα-πελματόομαι `to be soled' (LXX), πελματίζω `to sole' (pap. VIp), `to sleek the soles' (Anon. on EM 659, 43).Etymology: Formation like δέρμα and other full-grade verbal nouns with μα-suffix, with a westgerm. word for `skin, pellicle' mainly formally identical: OS filmen, OFris. filmene, OS. æger-felma `pellicle of an egg'. Beside it, in suffix quite deviating, other words for `skin etc' like Lat. pellis (s. πελλο-φόρος `pellarius' Gloss.), Germ., e.g. OHG fel, - lles, all prob. with n-suffix as several ablauting Slav. and Balt. words, e.g. Russ. plená, Lith. plėnė̃. Different again e.g. Lith. plėvė̃ `fine thin skin'. From Greek one might also consider ἐρυσί-πελας n. `name of a skin-disease' (s. v.); so πέλμα: πέλας like δέρμα: δέρας? A corresponding primary verb is however inknown. -- Further, partly unselected and uncertain material w. lit. in WP. 2, 58f., Pok. 803f., W.-Hofmann s. pellis; morpholog. speculations in Specht Ursprung 141 a. 182. Cf. πέλτη, also ἐπίπλοον and σπολάς.Page in Frisk: 2,499-500Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέλμα
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5 ολομέλεια
el ple -
6 πλατύς 1
πλατύς 1.Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `wide, broad, flat, level' (Il.).Compounds: Often as 1. member, e.g. πλατύ-φυλλος `broad-leaved' (Arist., Thphr.).Derivatives: πλατύτης f. `width, breadth' (Hp., X.); πλατύνω, also w. δια-, ἐν- a.o., `to widen, to make broad' (X., Arist.) with πλάτ-υσμα (- υμμα) n. `dish, brick etc.' (Herod., Hero, pap.), - υσμός m. `broadening' (Arist., LXX). Also πλατεῖον n. `board, table' (Plb.), after the instrument names in - εῖον; from πλατεῖα ( χείρ, φωνή e. o.) πλατειάζω `to blow with the flat of the hand' (Pherecr.), `pronounce broadly' (Theoc.). -- Besides several formations: πλάτος n. `width, breadth, size' (Simon., Emp., Hdt., Ar.) with ἀ-πλατής `without breadth' (Arist.); πλατ-ικός (v.l. - υκός) `concerning the width, breadth, exhaustive, extensive' (Vett. Val., Arist.-comm.); cf. γεν-ικός to γένος. -- πλαταμών, - ῶνος m. `flat stone, ledge of rock, flat beach etc.' (h. Merc. 128, hell.) with - αμώδης `flat' (Arist.). -- πλάτη f. `blade of an oar, oar', meton. `ship', also `shoulder blade' (usu. ὠμο-πλάτη Hp.) (trag., Arist.); πλάτης, Dor. -ᾱς m. `pedestal of a gravestone' (inscr. Asia Minor, cf. γύης, πόρκης); πλάτιγξ τῆς κώπης τὸ ἄκρον H. -- PN Πλάταια (Β 504 a.o.), usu. pl. - αί f. (IA.) town in Boeotia with - αιίς, - αιεῖς etc.; accent-change as in ἄγυια: - αί (s. v.).Etymology: With πλατύς are deiretcly dientical Skt. pr̥thú-, Av. pǝrǝʮu- `wide, broad' (on the dental bel.). To this πλάτος like e.g. βάρος to βαρύς (s. v.) with zero grade instead of the older full grade in Skt. práthas- = Av. fraʮah- n. `breadth', Celt., e.g. Welsh. lled `id.' Also πλαταμών has -- the secondary zero grade excepted -- an exact Skt. agreement, i.e. prathi-mán- m. `extension, breadth'; cf. bel. With the reserve necessary with PN Πλάταια can be identified with Skt. pr̥thivī́ f. `earth', prop. "the broad (stretches of earth); here also a Celtic agreement e.g. in Welsh.-Lat. Letavia, Welsh Llydau `Brittany'. The identification, which is in itself possible, of πλάτανος with Celt., e.g. OIr. lethan, Welsh llydan `broad' is however rather improbable; cf. s. v. The same suffix also in Hitt. paltana-'arm, shoulder', which resembles semantically πλάτη (Laroche Rev. de phil. 75, 38, Benveniste BSL 50, 42). On πλάτη beside πλάτος cf. βλάβη: βλάβος, πάθη: πάθος a.o.; after κώπη? -- A corresponding primary verb is only in Skt. práthati, -te `extend' retained, to which as verbal noun prathi-mán-: πλατα-μών prop. "which extends" (cf. τελα-μών prop. "who bears"). The from this and from pr̥thi-vī : Πλάτα-ια resulting disyll. root * pleth₂-: *pl̥th₂ gave the Skt. aspirate (in prevocalic position): pr̥thú- from *pl̥th₂-ú-, práthas- from *pléth₂os-. -- Far remains Arm. layn `broad' (to Lat. lātus `broad'), s. W.-Hofmann s. v. w. lit. Further details with rich lit. in Mayrhofer s. pr̥thúḥ, pr̥thvī́, práthati, práthaḫ, prathimā́, W.-Hofmann s. 1. planta, Fraenkel s. platùs; older lit. in WP. 2, 99f. (Pok. 833f.).Page in Frisk: 2,553-554Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πλατύς 1
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7 πλίσσομαι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to strike out, to sprawl one's legs' (ζ 318).Other forms: Aor. ἀπεπλίξατο `removed (himself) in great jumps' (Ar.), πλίξαντα διαναβάντα H., perf. δια-πεπλιγμένος `with legs spread out' (Archil.), περι πλίσσομαι `with legs laid around' (Stratt.), περιπεπλίχθαι διηλλαχέναι τὰ σκέλη ἀσχημόνως H., act. δια-πεπλιχός ( στόμα) `standing open' (Hp.), fut. pass. καταπλιγήσει (Ar. Fr. 198, 3), after H. = κατακρατηθήσῃ.Compounds: ἐκ- πλίσσομαι `gaping, of a wound etc.' (Hp.), ἀμφι-πλίσσω (Poll.), διαπλίσσοντες (v. l. Ψ 120).Derivatives: πλίξ = βῆμα (sch.; Dor.), πλιχ-άς, - άδος f. `perineum, inside of the thighs' (medic.), πλίγμα n. `sprawling, perineum' (Hp., H., EM); ἀμφι-πλίξ adv. `with sprawled legs' (S. Fr. 596), περι- πλίσσομαι περιειληφώς H., περιπλίγδην περιβάδην H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Unconvincing hypothesis by Prellwitz KZ 47, 188 (s. WP. 2, 91 and W.-Hofmann s. placeō); by Pedersen Vergl. Gramm. 1, 84: to OIr. sliassait f. `shank' and Skt. (Dhātup.) plehate `go'; on this (also WP. 2, 684 and Pok. 1000) also Mayrhofer s. v. (rejecting); by Pisani Mél. Boisacq 2, 181 ff. (w. extensive treatment): to OCS plęsati, Russ. pljasátь etc. `dance'. Older lit. in Bq and Schwyzer 692.Page in Frisk: 2,563Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πλίσσομαι
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8 πωλέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to offer for sale, to sell' (IA.).Derivatives: 1. Nom. actionis: πώλ-ησις f. `sale (X. a.o.),- ημα n. `sale, sold merchandise' (inscr. Tauro- menion a.o.); backformation -ή, Dor. -ά f. `sale' (Sophr., Hyp. fr.). 2. Nom. agentis: πωλ-ητής m. `seller', des. of a financial official (Att. etc.), also - ητήρ m. `id.' (Delph. IVa a.o.), f. - ήτρια `seller' (Poll.), λαχανο- πωλέω (Ar.) a.o.; - πώλης m., - πωλις f. unlimited productive in compounds, e.g. ἀλλαντο-πώλης `sausage-seller' with ἀλλαντο-πωλ-έω etc., ἀρτό-πωλις `bread-seller, baker' (Ar. a.o.), cf. Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 26 a. 109 w. n. 3, Schwyzer 451; from this as momentary formation the simplex πώλης (Ar.). 3. Nom. loci - ητήριον `selling-booth' (X. a.o.). 4. Adj. - ητικός `belonging to sale' (Pl.; Chantraine Études 134), - ιμος `for sale' (hell. pap.).Etymology: Acc. to its formation πωλέω must be an iterative-intensive deverbative, though neither in Greek nor in the related languages a corresponding primary verb can be shown with certainty. However Skt. páṇate `purchase, buy' can represent an old nasalpresent in MInd. form IE *pl̥-nā-ti). With this n-present is clearly related (except Skt. paṇa- n. `bet, stake, wages') a Balto-Slav. noun: Lith. pel̃nas `gain, profit, merit', Slav., e.g. OCS plěnъ ' λάφυρον', Russ. polón `captivity, booty'; IE * pel-no-s. From Germ. come two isolated adj.: OWNo. falr `vendible' (IE * polo-s), OHG fāli `id.' (IE *pēli̯o-s; formation like OWNo. ǣtr = Skt. ādyàs `eatable' \< IE *ēdi̯o-s); besides OHG feili, NHG feil with unexplained vocalism. Further details w. lit. in Mayrhofer s. páṇate, Fraenkel s. pel̃nas, Vasmer s. polón; older lit. in Bq and WP. 2, 51 (Pok. 804). -- Semant. πωλέω is close to ἐμπολή `trade(ware), purchase, gain' (s.v.), which is usu. connected with πέλομαι prop. *'turn (oneself)'; for πωλέω to πέλομαι Schwyzer 720. With this combination one should abandon the words mentioned above from IE * pel-. -- Cf. the lit. on πέρνημι.Page in Frisk: 2,633Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πωλέω
См. также в других словарях:
-ple — ple·gy; … English syllables
ple — ple·iad; ple·i·dae; ple·na·ri·ly; ple·nar·ty; ple·na·ry; ple·ne; ple·ni·lune; ple·nip·o·tence; ple·nip·o·tent; ple·nist; ple·o·chro·ic; ple·och·ro·ism; ple·och·ro·ous; ple·o·cy·to·sis; ple·o·dont; ple·o·mas·tia; ple·o·ma·zia; ple·o·me·tro·sis;… … English syllables
ple — plè interj. Čk kartojant tuščiam kalbėjimui, plepėjimui reikšti: Plè plè plè par kiauras dienas – kaip liežuvis neįsmilksta! Krš. Plè plè i plepa su bobums Krš. Ji tokia kalbi, kaip ir aš: plè plè, plè plè Šmk. Plè plè kaip beprotė ir … Dictionary of the Lithuanian Language
Ple — [ple:] Beschreibung deutsche Computerspielezeitschrift Verlag [ple:] Medien (Gaca, Metzger + Meyer GbR) Erstausgabe 10. November 2004 … Deutsch Wikipedia
Ple: — [ple:] Beschreibung deutsche Computerspielezeitschrift Verlag [ple:] Medien (Gaca, Metzger + Meyer GbR) Erstausgabe 10. November 2004 E … Deutsch Wikipedia
ple — plè išt. Dárbo nedi̇̀rba, tik plè plè plè per diẽną plẽpa … Bendrinės lietuvių kalbos žodyno antraštynas
Plé — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Christophe Plé (* 1966), französischer Skirennläufer Simone Plé Caussade (1897–1986), französische Komponistin, Pianistin und Musikpädagogin Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung zur Unte … Deutsch Wikipedia
ple... — ple..., Ple... vgl. ↑pleo..., Pleo … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
ple´na|ri|ly — ple|na|ry «PLEHN uhr ee, PLEE nuhr », adjective, noun, plural ries. –adj. 1. not lacking in any way; full; complete; absolute: »an ambassador with plenary power. SYNONYM(S): entire. 2. attended by all of its qualified members; fully constituted:… … Useful english dictionary
ple|na|ry — «PLEHN uhr ee, PLEE nuhr », adjective, noun, plural ries. –adj. 1. not lacking in any way; full; complete; absolute: »an ambassador with plenary power. SYNONYM(S): entire. 2. attended by all of its qualified members; fully constituted: »a plenary … Useful english dictionary
PLE — Abreviatura de preparación de lupus eritematoso. Diccionario Mosby Medicina, Enfermería y Ciencias de la Salud, Ediciones Hancourt, S.A. 1999 … Diccionario médico