-
1 τέρπω
Aτέρπῃσι 17.385
: [dialect] Ion. [tense] impf.τέρπεσκον Q.S.7.378
, AP9.136 ([place name] Cyrus): [tense] fut. , etc.: [tense] aor.ἔτερψα h.Pan.47
, E.Heracl. 433, Pl.Lg. 658b:—the [voice] Pass. and [voice] Med. have a fivefold [tense] aor.,2 [dialect] Ep. ἐτάρφθην, τάρφθην, Od.6.99, 19.213, 251, 21.57.3 [dialect] Ep. ἐτάρπην, τάρπην, 23.300, Il.11.780, al.; inf.ταρπῆναι Od.23.212
, and ταρπήμεναι ib. 346, Il.24.3; subj. τρᾰπείω, [dialect] Ep. [ per.] 1pl. τρᾰπείομεν (v. infr. 11.2).4 [dialect] Ep. also ἐταρπόμην, only in [ per.] 1pl. subj.ταρπώμεθα Od.4.295
, al.; also redupl. through all moods,τετάρπετο Il.19.19
, 24.513;τεταρπώμεσθα Od.11.212
, Il.23.10,98;τεταρπόμενος Od. 1.310
, al.5 [tense] aor. 1 ἐτερψάμην, in [dialect] Ep. subj.τέρψομαι 16.26
(but τέρψομαι is [tense] fut. [voice] Med. in Il.20.23, S.Fr. 677); opt. ; part.τερψάμενος Od.12.188
:—delight, gladden, cheer,ὅ κεν τέρπῃσιν ἀείδων 17.385
;τῇ [φόρμιγγι] ὅ γε θυμὸν ἔτερπεν Il.9.189
, al.;πεσσοῖσι.. θυμὸν ἔτερπον Od.1.107
;καὶ τὸν ἔτερπε λόγοις Il. 15.393
;τοὐμὸν.. τ. κέαρ S.Tr. 1246
; θοίνῃ σε τ. Achae.17; ἡ ἀγγελίη.. ἔτερψε [ αὐτούς] Hdt.8.99; sts. in [dialect] Att. Prose, ἔπεσι.. τὸ αὐτίκα τέρψει will give momentary pleasure, Th.2.41, cf. Pl.Lg. 658b, 658e, etc.; τ. τὴν ἀκοήν, τὰς ἀκοάς, Phld.Po.5.26,28; ἧλιξ τέρπει τὸν ἥλικα, prov. in Pl.Phdr. 240c, etc.: abs., give delight, Od.1.347, 8.45, S.Aj. 475; τὰ τέρποντα delights, Id.OC 1217 (lyr.); ῥήματα τέρψαντά τι ib. 1281;οἱ τέρποντες λόγῳ ῥήτορες Th.3.40
;τὰ τέρψοντα X.Ages.9.4
.II more freq. in [voice] Pass. and [voice] Med.,1 in [dialect] Ep. the [tense] aor. [voice] Pass. is used, c. gen. rei, have full enjoyment of, enjoy to one's heart's content,ἐπεὶ τάρπημεν ἐδητύος ἠδὲ ποτῆτος Il.11.780
;ἐπεὶ τάρπησαν ἐδωδῆς Od.3.70
;σίτου τάρφθεν 6.99
; ; ὕπνου, εὐνῆς ταρπήμεναι, 24.3, Od.23.346; φιλότητος ἐταρπήτην ib. 300; ἥβης ταρπῆναι ib. 212: metaph., take one's fill of lamentation,τεταρπώμεσθα γόοιο Il.23.10
,98, Od. 11.212, cf. 19.213, 21.57.2 enjoy or delight oneself, c. dat. instr.,φρένα τ. φόρμιγγι Il.9.186
;μύθοισι Od.23.301
;δαιτί 1.26
;γόῳ φρένα 4.102
;δίσκοισιν Il.2.774
;ἐν θαλίῃς Od.11.603
, Hes.Op. 115; φιλότητι (or ἐν φ.)τραπείομεν εὐνηθέντε Il.3.441
, 14.314 (whereas in the phrase λέκτρονδε τραπείομεν εὐνηθέντες (v.l. -θέντε), Od.8.292, the form τραπείομεν seems to be taken by the poet as belonging to τρέπω, though others retain the usu. sense by connecting λέκτρονδε with εὐνηθέντες or by punctuating after λέκτρονδε); so in Trag.,λαμπάδι τερπόμεναι A.Eu. 1042
(lyr.), cf. S.OC 1140, etc.; delight in, (Egypt, i A.D.);τοῖς εὐώδεσι Sor. 2.29
; : c. part.,λόγοις.. οἷς σὺ μὴ τέρψῃ κλύων S.Ant. 691
;τέρπεται τιμώμενος E.Ba. 321
; τί ἂν.. ἀκούσας τερφθείης; X.Mem.2.1.24: abs., πῖνε καὶ τέρπευ drink and be merry, Hdt.2.78.3 with internal acc., οἴην μοῖραν δέκα μοιρέων τέρπεται ἀνήρ has only one tenth part of the enjoyment, Hes.Fr. 162;κενὴν ἐτερπόμην.. τέρψιν S.Fr. 577
;τέρπου κενὴν ὄνησιν E.Or. 1043
.4 freq. with words which limit its sense,θυμῷ Il.19.313
, Od.16.26;θυμόν Il.21.45
;κατὰ θυμόν Hes.Op.58
, 358;φρένα Il.1.474
, Od.4.102, etc.;φρεσὶν ᾗσι τετάρπετο Il.19.19
, cf. Od.5.74;ἐνὶ φρεσίν 8.368
;τεταρπόμενος φίλον κῆρ 1.310
;ἀπάταισι θυμὸν τέρπεται Pi.P.2.74
. (Cf. Skt. trpnoti 'take one's fill', Causative tarpáyati 'delight (trans.)', Opruss. ka enterpo.. ? 'what is the use of..?', Goth. paurfts, OE. pearf 'benefit', Goth. parf 'I need'.) -
2 πυγμή
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `fist, fist-fight' (Il.); as measure of length = `the distance from the elbow to the knuckles', 18 δάκτυλοι (Thphr., Poll.).Derivatives: πυγμαῖος `as large as a π., dwarf-like' (Hdt., Arist.), nom. pl. "the fistlings", n. of a fable-tale people of dwarves, which was diff. localised (Γ 6, Hecat. etc.); πυγμ-ικός `belonging to fist-fight' (An. Ox.). Shortname Πυγμᾶς m. (Chantraine Études 18). -- On Πυγμαλίων, prob. popular correction of a foreign word, s. Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 136. -- πυγών, όνος m. measure of length = `the distance from the elbow to the first finger-joint', 20 δάκτυλοι (Hdt., X.); from this πυγούσιος `one π. long' (κ 517 = λ 25, Arat.), prob. analog. (Risch 115); a *πυγοντ- (cf. Schwyzer 526) is not credible; regular πυγον-ιαῖος `id.' (Hp., Thphr. a.o.). -- πύκτης m. `fist-fighter' (Xenoph., Pi., Att.) with πυκτ-ικός `belonging to fist-fight(ers), brave in fist-fight' (Att.), - οσύνη f. `skilfulness in fist-fight' (Xenoph.; Wyss - σύνη 31), - εύω `to be a fist-fighter, to have a fist-fight' (Att., Boeot.) with - ευσις, - ευτής (Gloss.), - εῖον (Suid.); also with analog. λ-enlargement - αλεύω (Sophr.), - αλίζω (Anacr.) `id.'. -- πύξ adv. `with the fist, in a fist-fight' (esp. ep. poet. Il.); from it πυγ-μάχος m. `fist-fighter', - μαχέω, - μαχία, - ίη (ep. poet. Hom.), univerbation from πὺξ μάχεσθαι; cf. Georgacas Glotta 36, 180.Origin: IE [Indo-European](X) [828] *puḱ-, puǵ- `sting'Etymology: The above words are all built on an element πυγ-, which function may have been both verbal or nominal. To πυγ-μή cf. in the first instance primary formations like παλάμη (s.v.), στιγ-μή, δραχ-μή, but also the ambivalente ἀκ-μή and he purely nominal ἅλ-μη. Of πυγ-ών remind ἀγκ-ών, λαγ-ών, the first perh. verbal, the last prob. nominal (s. on λαγαίω). Also πύκ-της can be taken both primary and secondarily; for πύξ nominal origin seems most probable (s. Schwyzer 620); cf. still πύξ πυγμή H. -- A corresponding l-deriv. is seen in Lat. pug-il m. `fistfighter', an n-formation in pug-nus m. `fist' (to which pugnāre, pugna; to be connected formally with πυγ-ών?). So we arrive at a Lat.-Gr. pug- `fist'. By Fick, Walde a.o. (s. Bq, WP. 2, 15 and W.-Hofmann s. pugil) this group is further connected with pu-n-g-ō, pu-pug-ī `sting', for which we would have to assume a specialisation of `sting' to `sting with clenched fist and knuckles stretched out forward' = 'box'; so pug- `fist' as suffixless nom. ag. prop. * "the stinger, the boxer"? The (orig.) meaning `sting' can still be seen in Lat. pūgiō `dagger', thus, with final tenuis, in πεύκη a. cogn. (s.v.). -- An original meaning `sting' is rather surprising but Lat. pugio seems a good argument; πεύκη may be unrelated.Page in Frisk: 2,619-620Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πυγμή
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