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1 ξάρτια
riggingΕλληνικά-Αγγλικά νέο λεξικό (Greek-English new dictionary) > ξάρτια
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2 κρεμαστός
A hung, suspended, ; κ. αὐχένος hung by the neck, Id.Ant. 1221: c. gen., hung from or on a thing,παραστάδος κρεμαστὰ τεύχη E.Andr. 1122
; κ. ἀρτάνη, i.e. a halter, S.OT 1266;βρόχοι κ. E.Hipp. 779
; σκεύη κ. the rigging of ships, opp. ξύλινα σκ., X.Oec.8.12;τὰκ. ἱστία Hermipp.63.12
; κλινίδιον κ. hammock, Plu.Per.27;κ. ποτιστρέα PTeb. 527
(ii A. D.); κ. σταφυλή, i. e. dried grapes, Alex.Trall.8.1; οἱ κ. κῆποι hanging gardens, Plu.2.342b;κ. παράδεισος Beros.
ap. J.AJ10.11.1; κρεμαστά, τά, fortresses, LXX Jd.6.2.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > κρεμαστός
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3 λευκόλινον
λευκό-λῐνον, τό,Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > λευκόλινον
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4 συριγμός
συριγ-μός, ὁ,A shrill piping sound, hissing, as of serpents, Arist.HA 536a6, Str.9.3.10 (pl.); in sign of derision, X.Smp.6.5; as a military signal, Aen. Tact.24.17;σ. καὶ χλευασμοί Plb.30.29.6
; σ. κάλων the whistling of rigging, D.H.Comp.16; of the sound of sibilants, ib.14; hissing in the theatre, Plu.Cic.13; of the cry of elephants, Arr.An.5.17.7; singing in the ears, Dsc.2.78.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > συριγμός
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5 ἔντεα
ἔντεα, τά,A fighting gear, arms, armour,ἔ. ἀρήϊα Il.10.407
, Od. 23.368;ἔ. πατρός 19.17
; esp. coat of mail, corslet, Il.10.34;ἔντε' ἔδυνεν 3.339
, etc.II furniture, appliances, tackle,ἔ. δαιτός Od. 7.232
;ἔ. νηός
rigging,h.Ap.
489, Pi.N.4.70; ἔ. ἵππεια trappings, harness, ib.9.22, cf. P.4.235; harness,A.
Pers. 194 (but ἔντεα alone for chariots, Pi.O.4.24); ἔντεα αὐλῶν periphr. for αὐλοί, ib.7.12; also ἔντεα alone, musical instruments, Id.P.12.21; of the instruments of the Γάλλαι, Lyr.Adesp.121;ἔντεα Φοίβου Call.Ap. 19
.—[dialect] Ep. and Lyr. word, once in Trag. (v. supr.):—sg. ἔντος only in Archil.6. -
6 νηῦς
νηῦς (νέ Od. 24.1), gen. νηός and νεός, dat. νηί, acc. νῆα and νέα, pl. νῆες, νέες, gen. νηῶν, νεῶν, ναῦφιν, dat. νηυσί, νήεσσι, νέεσσιν, ναῦφιν, acc. νῆας, νέας: ship, vessel. The parts of a ship, as named in Homer (see cut under ἔδαφος), are as follows: of the hull, τρόπις, πρῴρη, πρύμνη, ἐπηγκενίδες, πηδάλιον, οἰήια, ἱστός, ἱστοπέδη, ἱστοδόκη, ζυγά, κληῖδες, τροπός. Of the rigging, ἱστία, πείσματα, πόδες, ἐπίτονος, πρότονος. Oar, ἐρετμός, κώπη. Homer mentions ships of burden, φορτίδες, Od. 9.323; otherwise ships of war are meant. Pl., νῆες, the ships, often in the Iliad of the camp of the Greeks, which included νῆες and κλισίαι, Il. 2.688. (See plate IV., at end of volume.)— νῆάδε, to the ship, Od. 13.19.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > νηῦς
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7 ὅπλον
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > ὅπλον
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8 οἴαξ-
οἴαξ-, - ακοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `handle (bar) of the rudder, rudder' (trag., Pl.), οἴηκες pl. name of a apparatus on the yoke ('handle'?, `eyes'?; Ω 269).Compounds: As 1. member e.g. in οἰακο-νόμος m. `steersman' (A. in lyr.; cf. Sommer Nominalkomp. 166), as 2. member in κερ-οίακες (from κερα(ι)-οίακες) pl. `rigging of the yardarm'? (Luc. Nav. 4).Derivatives: Dimin. οἰάκιον (Eust.); adv. οἰακ-ηδόν `after the mannar of an οἴαξ' (A.D.); denom. οἰακ-ίζω (- η-) `to pilot, to steer' (ion. att.) with - ισμα `steering' ( Trag. Adesp.), - ιστής (Suid.); οἰάκ-ωσις `steering' (Aq.), from *οἰακ-όω or directly from noun (cf. Chantraine Form. 279). -- Besides οἰήϊον n. `rudder' (Hom.).Etymology: Instrument-name formed like πόρπᾶξ, τρόπηξ, resp. λαισήϊον, ἐργαλήϊον a.o. (Chantraine 381 a. 60 f.). The basis of the Greek words was an old noun with unknown stem; an ā-stem * oisā- is possible, nut not necessary. The noun seems preserved as Balt. LW [loanword] in Finnougr., e.g. Finn. aisa `bar of the forked pole (thill)' from Balt. * aisō or * aisa- (IE * oisā-, * oiso-). The Balt. word is again based on a Slav. s-stem, e.g. Sloven. ojê, ojês-a `(carriage) pole' (further Slav. forms in Vasmer s.vojé), IE. * oio \/ es- n. Besides with zero grade, also lengthened, Skt. īṣ-ā́ f. `pole', from which as LW [loanword] Hitt. hišša-'pole' (s. Kronasser Etymologie 144 against Kammenhuber; borrowing is also denied by Benveniste Hitt. et i.-eur. 13f.). Further combinations, for Greek unimportant, in WP. 1, 167 and Pok. 298 (after Lidén Stud. 60ff., Specht Ursprung 101). -- To be rejected Dumézil BSL 39, 192f. On the meaning of οἴαξ Meringer WuS 5, 89 ff, Hermann Gött. Nachr. 1943, 7 f.; the connection with a ship is a Greek innovation, cf. on ἱστός. -- Ngr. δοιάκι (Schwyzer KZ 63, 62). - The suffix -ᾱκ- rather suggests a Pre-Greek word (which the language may have adapted to nautical use).Page in Frisk: 2,356Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οἴαξ-
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9 σκευή
σκευή, ῆς, ἡ (Pind., Hdt. et al.; TestSol 5:12; Philo; Jos., Bell. 3, 117, Ant. 4, 301; BGU 775, 6; 11; POslo 187, 6; PWarr 18, 25) a collective for a variety of items that fall in the category of σκεῦος, equipment (used elsewhere of attire, military gear, chorus props, etc.) in our lit. of a ship’s gear or equipment (Diod S 14, 79, 4; Appian, Bell. Civ. 5, 88 §367 [= τὰ σκεύη τὰ ἐν τῷ πλοίῳ Jon 1:5]) ἡ σκευὴ τοῦ πλοίου of the equipment of a ship that can be dispensed w. Ac 27:19 (acc. to CVoigt, Die Romfahrt des Ap. Pls: Hansa 53, 1916, 725–32 the tackle or rigging of a ship; so NRSV et al.; s. comm.).—DELG s.v. σκεῦος. M-M.
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