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1 ἅλς
ἅλς, ἁλόςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `salt' (very often pl.) (Il.)Other forms: f. (only sg.) poetical word for the sea (after θάλασσα or as collective?); since Arist. ἅλας, - ατος n. from the acc. pl., Leumann Hom. Wörter 160f.Dialectal forms: Myc. opia₂ra \/ opihala\/ `coastal regions' cf. ἔφαλος. apia₂ro \/ Amphihalos\/, a₂rie perhaps \/haliēn\/ Perpillou Subst. en -eus, 1973, 61 n. 2, 161.Compounds: ἁλί-πλοος, - πόρφυρος (for ἁλ- after the i-stems, not locatival with Schwyzer 476: 5, 1. On ἁλι-μυρήεις s. μύρομαι. ἁλουργός `who exploits a salt-mine' CEG6,Derivatives: ἅλ-μη `sea-water, brine' ( Od.) with ἁλμυρός `salt, briny' (Od.); from *ἁλυρός (cf. ἁλυ-κός), Schwyzer 482: 6; cf. πλημυρίς. - ἅλιος, (-α), - ον `of the sea' (Hom.) - ἁλιεύς `fisher' (Od.) - ἁλυ-κός `salt' (Hp.).Etymology: Old word found in most IE languages: Lat. sāl (secondary lengthening), OIr. salann, Arm. aɫ (i-stem), Latv. sāls, OCS solь (i-stem, secondary beside the consonant-stem in slanъ `salted' \< * solnъ), Toch. B sālyiye, A sāle. A d-enlargement in Goth. salt etc., Arm. aɫt, and in Balt.-Slav., e.g. Lith. sald-ùs `süß', OCS. sladъ-kъ id. Lith. sólymas points to * seh₂l-, other languages require * sh₂-el. This gives an original paradigm nom. *seh₂-(ōl?), acc. sh₂-el-m, gen. * sh₂-l-os. On possible Sanskrit cognates Thieme ZDMG 111 (1961) 94ff.See also: ΆλοσυδνηPage in Frisk: 1,78-79Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἅλς
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2 ἁλός
ἅλς, ἁλόςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `salt' (very often pl.) (Il.)Other forms: f. (only sg.) poetical word for the sea (after θάλασσα or as collective?); since Arist. ἅλας, - ατος n. from the acc. pl., Leumann Hom. Wörter 160f.Dialectal forms: Myc. opia₂ra \/ opihala\/ `coastal regions' cf. ἔφαλος. apia₂ro \/ Amphihalos\/, a₂rie perhaps \/haliēn\/ Perpillou Subst. en -eus, 1973, 61 n. 2, 161.Compounds: ἁλί-πλοος, - πόρφυρος (for ἁλ- after the i-stems, not locatival with Schwyzer 476: 5, 1. On ἁλι-μυρήεις s. μύρομαι. ἁλουργός `who exploits a salt-mine' CEG6,Derivatives: ἅλ-μη `sea-water, brine' ( Od.) with ἁλμυρός `salt, briny' (Od.); from *ἁλυρός (cf. ἁλυ-κός), Schwyzer 482: 6; cf. πλημυρίς. - ἅλιος, (-α), - ον `of the sea' (Hom.) - ἁλιεύς `fisher' (Od.) - ἁλυ-κός `salt' (Hp.).Etymology: Old word found in most IE languages: Lat. sāl (secondary lengthening), OIr. salann, Arm. aɫ (i-stem), Latv. sāls, OCS solь (i-stem, secondary beside the consonant-stem in slanъ `salted' \< * solnъ), Toch. B sālyiye, A sāle. A d-enlargement in Goth. salt etc., Arm. aɫt, and in Balt.-Slav., e.g. Lith. sald-ùs `süß', OCS. sladъ-kъ id. Lith. sólymas points to * seh₂l-, other languages require * sh₂-el. This gives an original paradigm nom. *seh₂-(ōl?), acc. sh₂-el-m, gen. * sh₂-l-os. On possible Sanskrit cognates Thieme ZDMG 111 (1961) 94ff.See also: ΆλοσυδνηPage in Frisk: 1,78-79Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἁλός
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3 κωλύμη
A = κώλυμα, ἐπὶ κωλύμῃ for the purpose of hindering, Th.1.92; ταῖς κ. ταύταις ἱκανῶς.. εἰρχθῆναι by these impediments, Id.4.63; a poetical word in Th., cf. D.H.Amm. 2.3. -
4 ζάλη
Grammatical information: f.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Poetical word without etymology. Hypothesis in Bq (to δίνη etc.); cf. also Schwyzer 331. In NGr. mixed with σάλος; cf. Hatzidakis IF 36, 301 and Άρχ. 28, 3ff.; diff. Kretschmer Glotta 11, 236 (with Hatzidakis): NGr. ζάλος from ζᾶλος (= ζῆλος), after σάλος?Page in Frisk: 1,608Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ζάλη
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5 λέξις
A speech, opp. ᾠδή, Pl.Lg. 816d; λ. ἢ πρᾶξις speech or action, Id.R. 396c; ὁ τρόπος τῆς λ. ib. 400d; τὰ λέξει δηλούμενα orders given by word of mouth, Arr.Tact.27.2.2 diction, style, ἡ ἐνθάδε λ. the style used here (in courts of justice), Pl.Ap. 17d; Μούσης λ. poetical diction, Id.Lg. 795e, cf. Arist.Rh. 1410b28, Po. 1450b13, etc.; περὶ Λέξεως, title of work by Ephorus, Theon Prog. 2.II a single word or phrase, Arist.Rh. 1406b1, Epicur.Nat.28p.4V., al. (pl.), D.T. 633.31, Plb.2.22.1, etc.; even a meaningless word, such as βλίτυρι, Diog.Stoic.3.213;ταῖς λ. κέχρηται ταῖς αὐταῖς Plb.6.46.10
; αὐταῖς λέξεσι or κατὰ λέξιν word for word, D.H.Pomp.2, Plu.2.869d, Ath.11.493d, D.L.2.113; laterἐπὶ λέξεως PLond.5.1713.14
(vi A.D.), Vit.Arist.p.438 Rose, etc.; collectively, κρατῶ καὶ τῆς λ. the very words, Ath.7.275b, cf. Epicur.Nat.28p.15V., Gal.12.403.3 Gramm., a word peculiar in form or signification: hence λέξεις is the older term for a glossary, Ῥοδιακαὶ λέξεις a glossary of Rhodian phrases, Ath.11.485e; cf.γλῶσσα 11.2
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6 λᾶας
Grammatical information: m. (late also f.),Meaning: `stone'; as GN (Laconia) Λᾱ̃ς and Λᾶ (Th., Paus., St.Byz. a.o.; acc. Λᾰ́ᾱν Β 585).Other forms: gen. etc. λᾱ̃-ος, -ι, - αν (-α Call.), pl. λᾶ-ες etc. (Il.); also as ο-stem λᾶος, - ου etc. (Hes.Fr. 115[?], S., Cyrene, Gortyn; details in Schwyzer 578),Compounds: Compp., e. g. λᾱ-τόμος (beside uncontracted or restored λαο-) `stone-cutter' with λᾱτομ-ίαι `quarry' (= Lat. lātomiae beside lautumiae \< *λαο-; s.W.-Hofmann s. v.), Arg., Syracus., hell. (Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 125f.); λα(ο)-ξό(ο)ς with λαξεύω etc. (Georgacas Glotta 36, 165 f.), λατύπος; as 2. member in κραταί-λεως (\< -*ληϜος or -*λᾱϜος; cf. below) `with hard rock' (A., E.), prob. also in ὑπο-λαΐς, - ίδος (H. also - ληΐς) f. name of an unknown bird (Arist.); cf. Thompson Birds s.v.; s. also 2. λαιός.Derivatives: λάϊγγες f. pl. `small stones' (Od., A. R.; on the formation Chantraine Formation 399; wrong Specht Ursprung 127; s. also below); λάϊνος, - ΐνεος `(of) stone' (Il.); uncertain λαιαί f. pl. (Arist.), λεῖαι (Gal.), sg. λεία (Hero) `the stones used as weights hanging from the upright loom'; unclear λαίεται καταλεύεται H. and λαυστήρ μοχθηρός... η οἴκου λαύρα, λαύστρανον τινες λύκον, τινες φρέατος ἅρπαγα H.; hypotheses by Jokl Rev. int. ét. balk. 1,46ff.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: On λαύρα and λεύω s. vv. The unique stemformation of λᾶας is unexplained. One supposes an old neuter with sec. transition to the masc. (fem.) after λίθος, πέτρος (Brugmann IF 11, 100 ff.). The further evaluation is quite uncertain. After Brugmann orig. nom.-acc. *λῆϜας (\< IE. *lēu̯ǝs-; on the full grade cf. λεύω and λεῖαι), gen., dat. etc. *λᾰ́Ϝᾰσ-ος, -ι (IE. *lǝu̯ǝs-os, -i) \> λᾶ-ος, -ι, to which analogically the nom. λᾶ-ας was formed. The simpler assumption, that only the vowellength in λᾶας (for older *λᾰ́Ϝας) was taken from (gen.) λᾶ-ος etc., is rejected by B. Metrical objections against a contraction of *λᾰ́Ϝᾰσ-ος, -ι to λᾶ-ος, -ι by Ruijgh l.c.; he prefers, with Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 211 to see in λᾶ-ος, -ι etc. an (unenlarged) consonant-stem λᾱϜ-. Who accepts these, not decisive, objections but also does not want to assume heteroclis, might assume a full grade monosyllabic oblique stem *λᾱϜσ- (beside *λᾰϜᾰσ-). The abandoning of the old σ-flection was anyhow connected with the gender-change. - Quite diff. Pedersen Cinq. decl. lat. 44ff. (with de Saussure Rec. 587 f.): λᾶας old masc. ablauting ā-stem: *λᾱϜᾱ-: λᾱϜ(ᾰ)- \< IE. * leh₂ueh₂-: *leh₂u̯(h₂)-; the supposed full grade -ā- (*- eh₂-) is however quite hypothetical, but it would nicely explain the absence of the root-vowel in the inflection; followed by Beekes, Origins (1985)15-17. - The word λᾶας was apparently unknown to Ion.-Attic (Wackernagel Hell. 9 f., Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1,22; doubts in Björck Alpha impurum 69 and 76 n. 1); Ion.-Att. form shows κραταί-λεως (or only poetical analogy after λαός: Μενέ-λεως a.o.?); thus the free-standing λεύω (s. v.). Connections to λᾶας outside Greek are rare and not without doubt. First Alb. lerë, -a `stone, heap of stones, stony plain, rockslope' from IE. *lā̆uerā (Jokl Rev. int. et. balk. 1, 46ff.; to λαύρα?, s.v.); Illyr. PN Lavo f. prop. "which belongs to the rock (stone)" (from * lava `stone'; Krahe ZNF 19, 72; Spr. d. Illyr. 1,69 f.). One considers further the orig. Celtic Lat. lausiae f. `small stones from stone-cuttings', s. W.-Hofmann s. v. The suffixal agreement between λάϊγγες and OIr. līe, gen. līac (\< Celt. *līu̯ank-; cf. Pok. 683 against Loth Rev. celt. 44, 293; also Lewy Festschr. Dornseiff 226 f.) is no doubt accidental. Further uncertain combinations in Bq, WP. 2, 405 ff., W.-Hofmann s. lausiae. - For Aegaean origin also Chantraine Formation 421, Güntert Labyrinth 5,9. - Since the Myc. form shows that there was no -w- in the form, we must assume *lāh- (but not from *lās-, as the -s- would have been retained. Hence the relation to λεύω, λαύρα has become quite unclear. See Heubeck, IF 66 (1961) 29-34. Fur. 329 compares λέπας; he considers (n. 53) λαίνθη λάρναξ λιθίνη Cyr. as proof of Pre-Greek origin.Page in Frisk: 2,64-66Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > λᾶας
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7 δέπας
δέπας, - αοςGrammatical information: n.Dialectal forms: Myc.di-pa \/dipas\/, du. di-pa-e \/dipa(h)e\/.Derivatives: Poetical lengthening δέπαστρον `id.' (Antim.) with δεπαστραῖος (Lyc.), s. Chantr. Form. 333f., Schwyzer 532.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Like many other words for cups etc. Pre-Greek. ε\/ι is frequent, Fur. 353ff; Hester, Minos 6 (1958) 24-36. On - θρον\/- στρον see Fur. 302 n. 37 and 303 n. 39. - Perhaps the same word as Luwian tepas.Page in Frisk: 1,367Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > δέπας
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8 διάλεκτος
διάλεκτ-ος, ἡ,A discourse, conversation, Hp.Art.30;θεοῖς πρὸς ἀνθρώπους Pl.Smp. 203a
; discussion, debate, argument, Id.Tht. 146b; opp. ἔρις, Id.R. 454a.II speech, language, Ar.Fr. 685;καινὴν δ. λαλῶν Antiph. 171
; δ. ἀμνίου, opp. τὰ ἔνδον δράκοντος, Hermipp.3; articulate speech, language, opp. φωνή, Arist.HA 535a28;τοῦ ἀνθρώπου μία φωνή, ἀλλὰ διάλεκτοι πολλαί Id.Pr. 895a6
; but also, spoken, opp. written language, D.H.Comp.11.2 the language of a country, Plb.1.80.6, D.S.5.6, etc.: esp. dialect, as Ionic, Attic, etc., Diog.Bab.Stoic.3.213, D.H.Comp.3, S.E.M.1.59, Hdn.Gr.2.932; also, local word or expression, Plu.Alex.31.2 pl., modes of expression, Epicur.Ep.1p.24U.IV style, πανηγυρική, ποιητικὴ δ., D.H.Comp.23,21: esp. poetical diction, Phld.Po. 2 Fr.33, al.V of musical instruments, quality, 'idiom', Arist. de An. 420b8.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > διάλεκτος
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9 ποίημα
A anything made or done: hence,I work, π. χρύσεα, χάλκεα καὶ σιδήρεα, Hdt.4.5, 7.84, cf. 2.135;Γλαύκου τοῦ Χίου π. Id.1.25
; of the works of Daedalus, Pl.Men. 97e; π. ἐραστοῦ a lover's invention, Id.R. 474e; product, of land formed by silting-up of rivers, Arr.An.5.6.4(pl.).2 poem, Cratin.186, Pl.Phd. 60d, Ly. 221d;τὰ μετὰ μέτρου π. Isoc.2.7
, 15.45;π. εἰς τὰς Μούσας IG7.1773.17
(Thespiae, ii A. D.): pl., of single verses, = ἔπη, D.H.1.41, Comp.3.b poetical, esp. metrical, form, περὶ ποιήματος, title of work by Hephaestio.3 fiction, Arr.An.5.6.5(pl.). -
10 κλαίω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `lament, bewail, weep over'.Other forms: Att. also κλά̄ω (Schwyzer 266), aor. κλαῦσαι (Il.), pass. κλαυ(σ)θῆναι (Lyc., J.), fut. κλαύσομαι (Il.), κλαύσω (Theoc.), κλα(ι)ήσω (Att.; vgl. Chantraine BSL 28, 15), also κλαυσούμεθα? (Ar. Pax 1081; cf. Schwyzer 786), perf. κέκλαυμαι (A., S.), - σμαι (Lyl., Plu.), fut. κεκλαύσομαι (Ar.),Derivatives: 1. κλαυθμός `weeping' (Il.) with several derivv.: κλαυθμώδης `suffocated from weeping' (Hp.), κλαυθμηρός `weeping' (sch.), κλαυθμών `place for weeping' (LXX); κλαυθμυρίζομαι, - ίζω `moan' (Hp., [Pl.] Ax.), expressive cross of κλαυθμός and μύρομαι with ending after the verbs in - ίζομαι (cf. Schwyzer 644), with κλαυθμυρισμός (Is., Plu.). - 2. κλαύματα pl. `moaning, lamenting' (Att.), κλαύσματα (Porph.). - 3. κλαυμοναί pl. `id.' (Pl. Lg. 792a; after Stob. κλαυθμοναί [s. on 1.]; cf. πημοναί). - 4. κλαῦσις `weeping' (hell.) with κλαυσιάω `long to weep' (Ar. Pl. 1099), κλαυσί-γελως m. `with weeping combined laughing' (X.) - 5. κλαυστήρ `cryer' (Man.) and κλαυστικός (Apoll. Lex.); κλαυ(σ)τός (A., S.). - Quite uncertain is the present κλαύθονται ( PTeb. 3, 7; Epigramm; poetical momentary formation?, cf. Schwyzer 703).Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [599]. PGX [probably a word of Pre-Greek origin] * klau- `weep'Etymology: From κλαύ-σομαι, κλαυ-θμός a. o. we see a present *κλάϜ-ι̯ω. - A connection gives only Alb. klanj, kanj `weep' from *klau-n-i̯ō with combination of nasal- and yot-suffix (Brugmann Grundr.2 2: 3, 382); cf. Mann Lang. 26, 381. If IE from *kleh2u-? But there is no further connection with any IRE language, so Pre-Greek?Page in Frisk: 1,865Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλαίω
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11 Ἄγλαυρος
Grammatical information: PNMeaning: daughter of Kekrops, one who fostered Erichthonios.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Explained as `die klares Wasser hat', from ἀγλαός and a word for `water', supposed in ἄναυρος `waterless'; but the latter interpretation is completely in the air. Maaß Ath. Mitt. 35, 337ff., Kretschmer Glotta 4, 346; Nilsson Gr. Rel. 1, 294; 414. - The adj. ἄγλαυρος = ἀγλαός, Nic. Th. 62, 441, seems an arbitrary poetical association.. Prob. Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,12Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Ἄγλαυρος
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