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121 ἡδυσμός
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἡδυσμός
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122 ὄζω
Aὦζε Crates Com.2
(cj. Pors. for ὦ Ζεῦ): [tense] fut. ; [dialect] Ion.ὀζέσω Hp. Superf.25
, Gp.12.29.5, Eust.1523.39, An.Ox.2.396: [tense] aor. ; [dialect] Ion.ὤζεσα Hp.Superf.25
, LXX Ex.8.14(10): [tense] pf.ὤζηκα Phot.
; but [tense] pf. with [tense] pres. senseὄδωδα Phylarch.10
J., AP7.30 (Antip. Sid.), Plu.2.916d, Aret.SA1.9 : [tense] plpf. as [tense] impf.ὠδώδειν Plu.Alex.20
; [dialect] Ep. ὀδώδειν (v. infr.):—smell, whether smell sweet or stink, Hom. only in [ per.] 3sg. [tense] plpf. with sense of [tense] impf.,ὀδμὴ κέδρου.. ἀνὰ νῆσον ὀδώδει Od.5.60
; ὀδμὴ δ' ἡδεῖα ἀπὸ κρητῆρος ὀδώδει, of wine, 9.210 : later c. gen.rei, freq. with neut. Adj. or Adv. added, smell of a thing,τόδ' ὄζει θυμάτων A.Ag. 1310
;ὄζων τρυγός Ar.Nu.50
;βύρσης κάκιστον ὄζων Id.Eq. 892
, cf. V. 38 ; alsoὠδώδει ὑπὸ μύρων ὁ οἶκος Plu.Alex.20
: metaph., smell or savour of a thing, Κρονίων ὄζων smelling of musty antiquity, Ar.Nu. 398, cf. 1007, Ach. 192, Lys. 616 ;καλοκἀγαθίας X.Smp.2.4
; that from which the smell comes is also in gen.,ὄζων κακὸν τῶν μασχαλῶν Ar. Ach. 852
;τοῦ στόματος Pherecr.67
: so c. dupl. gen.,τῆς κεφαλῆς ὄζω μύρου Ar.Ec. 524
; v. infr. 11.II freq. impers., ὄζει ἀπ' αὐτῆς ὡσεὶ ἴων there is a smell from it as of violets, Hdt.3.23 ; ὄζει ἡδὺ τῆς χρόας there is a sweet smell from the skin, Ar.Pl. 1020 ;τῆς γῆς ὡς γλυκὺ ὄζει Cratin.Jun.1
; ὄζειν ἐδόκει τοῦ ἄρτου καὶ τῆς μάζης κάκιστον there seemed to be a most foul smell from.., Lys.6.1 ; οὐκ ὄζει αὐτῶν (sc. τῶν λαγῶν) no scent of the hares remains, X.Cyn.5.1, cf.7 : c. dupl. gen., ἱματίων ὀζήσει δεξιότητος there will be an odour of cleverness from your clothes, Ar.V. 1059, cf. Pax 529 ;ἀπὸ στόματος.. ὄζει ἴων, ὄζει δὲ ῥόδων, ὄζει δ' ὑακίνθου Hermipp.82.8
;ὄζει ἐκ τοῦ στόματος μελικήρας Pherecr.25
.III [voice] Med., κακὸν ὀζόμενος, for ὄζων, Hp.Loc.Hom. 12 ;οἶνος.. ἄνθεος ὀσδόμενος Xenoph.1.6
;δριμὺ ὀσδομένου τοῦ σώματος PSI4.297.3
(ca. v A. D.). (Cf. Lat. odor, Lith. uodžiu 'I smell'.) -
123 κνῖσα
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `steam and odour of fat, smell and savour of burnt sacrifice, fat caul' (Il., Arist., hell.).Compounds: Compp., e. g. πολύ-κνισος `with rich smell of the sacrifice' (A. R.).Derivatives: κνισήεις (κ 10, Pi.), κνισωτός (A. Ch. 485), κνισηρός (Achae. 7) `smelling of fat', κνισώδης `id, fett' (Arist., Gal.), κνισαλέος (H.), κνισός (Ath. 3, 115e; = κνισήεις. Denomin. verbs: κνισάω `fill with the smell...' (E., Ar.), κνισόομαι, - όω `be changed into the smell..., give the smell...' (Arist., Ph.).Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably], PGX [probably a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Lat. nīdor m. `smell of roasted meat, vapour, smoke', which can come from * cnīdōs, makes for κνίση, from where secondarily κνῖσα (Solmsen Wortforschung 238), an s-stem based *κνῑδσ-ᾱ possible, from IE. * knīdos- n.; cf. on ἕρση. Close is OWNo. hniss n. `strong smell, bad taste in eating', IE. *knĭd-to-. As this without doubt belongs to hnītan `push against' (cf. Goth. stigqan `push' = OHG stincan `stink'), one assumes also for nīdor and κνῖσα a comparable origin, i.e. connection with κνίζω. As for κνί̄δη we have however for κνῖσα and nīdor to start from a longvovalic form. - From Celtic perh. here Ir. a. Welsh cnes `skin' (IE. *knĭd-tā; cf. OWNo. hniss; on the meaning Vendryes WuS 12, 243). - See Bq, Bechtel Lex. s. κνίση, W.-Hofmann s. nidor; s. also on - κναίω. - The long vowel is quite problematic for IE; is the word rather Pre-Greek?Page in Frisk: 1,885Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κνῖσα
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124 γεύομαι
1) sample2) savour3) tasteΕλληνικά-Αγγλικά νέο λεξικό (Greek-English new dictionary) > γεύομαι
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125 γεύση
1) flavour2) savour3) tasteΕλληνικά-Αγγλικά νέο λεξικό (Greek-English new dictionary) > γεύση
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