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1 shaft
جِذْع (العَمُود) \ shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ عَرِيش \ shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also سَهْم العَرَبة -
2 shaft
قَصَبَة \ cane: the stem of certain plants (such as bamboo or sugarcane). capital: a town which is the centre of government: Paris is the capital of France. London and Paris are capital cities. reed: a tall stiff grass that grows in wet places. shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also عاصمة (عاصِمَة) -
3 spydstage
shaft of a spear;[ retten sidder i spydstagen] might is right. -
4 δόρυ
Aδοράτεσσι Q.S.6.363
: [dialect] Ep. and [dialect] Ion. decl., gen. δούρατος (also in Pi.P.4.38); dat. δούρατι (also in S.Ph. 721 (lyr.)); pl. δούρατα, δούρασι (but codd. of Hdt. usu. have δόρατα, δόρασι): more commonly δουρός, δουρί (butδορί Archil.2.1
); dual δοῦρε; pl. δοῦρα, δούρων, δούρεσσι; dat. pl.δούροις Opp.H.3.573
: Trag., gen. δορός; dat. δορί or δόρει, the former required by metre in A.Th. 347, 456, 958, Ag. 111, E.Hec. 909, Ph. 186, etc. (all lyr.), also in Id.Hec.5; δόρει is required in S.OC 620, 1314, 1386;ξὺν δορὶ ξὺν ἀσπίδι Ar.V. 1081
, butσὺν δόρει σὺν ἀσπίδι Achae.29
, cf. Choerob. in Theod.1.346; δορί occurs in Prose in the phrases δορὶ ἑλεῖν, λαβεῖν (v. infr. 11.2): nom. pl. , Theopomp.Com.25; gen.δορῶν Hsch.
: nom.δοῦρας AP6.97
(Antiphil.). Exc. sg. δόρυ, Hom. uses only the [dialect] Ion. forms:I stem, tree,οὔπω τοῖον ἀνήλυθεν ἐκ δόρυ γαίης Od.6.167
; but commonly, plank or beam,δοῦρ' ἐλάτης κέρσαντες Il.24.450
;δούρατα μακρὰ ταμών Od.5.162
, cf. Il.3.61;δούρατα πύργων 12.36
;δούρατ' ἀμάξης Hes.Op. 456
; mostly of ships, δόρυ νήϊον ship's plank, Il.15.410, etc.;νήϊα δοῦρα Od.9.498
; also, mast, E.Tr. 1148: hence,2 δ. εἰνάλιον, ἀμφῆρες, of a ship, Pi.P.4.27, E.Cyc.15;δ. ποντοπόρον S.Ph. 721
(lyr.); also δόρυ alone, A.Pers. 411, Ag. 1618, E.Hel. 1611;ἐπ' Ἀργῴου δορός Id.Andr. 793
; also δούρων, of oars, Hymn.Is.152.II shaft of a spear, δόρυ μείλινον the ashen shaft, Il.5.666, al.: hence, generally, spear itself,δ. χάλκεον 13.247
;ἀσπίδα καὶ δύο δοῦρε Od.1.256
, etc.; hunting-spear, Il.12.303; δόρατα ναύμαχα boarding-pikes, Hdt.7.89: freq. in military phrases, v. πέλεκυς 1; εἰς δόρατος πληγήν within spear's throw, X.Eq.8.10;εἰς δόρυ ἀφικόμενοι Id.HG4.3.17
; ἐπὶ δόρυ to the right hand, in which the spear was held, opp. ἐπ' ἀσπίδα, Id.An.4.3.29 (cf. κλίνω IV. 3, );παρὰ δόρυ Id.Lac.11.10
;εἰς δόρυ Id.HG6.5.18
;τὴν ἐμβολὴν ἐκ δόρατος ποιεῖσθαι Plb.3.115.9
:— ὑπὸ δόρυ πωλεῖσθαι, = Lat. sub hasta venire, D.H.4.24, cf. Str.4.6.7.c sceptre, E.Hec. 9.2 metaph., δουρὶ κτεατίζειν win wealth by the spear, i.e. in war, Il.16.57; ὑπὸ δουρὶ πόλιν πέρθαι ib. 708; in Prose, δορὶ ἑλεῖν, λαβεῖν, Th.1.128, App. BC4.8; an armed force,συμμάχῳ δ. A.Eu. 773
;δ. ἐπακτοῦ S.OC 1525
; καὶ τὸ δ. καὶ τὸ κηρύκειον πέμπειν to offer war or peace, Plb. 4.52.4. (Cf. Skt. dā´ru 'piece of wood', δορά (B), δρῦς.) -
5 Lanzenschaft
m lance shaft; einer Wurflanze: spear shaft* * * -
6 LEGGR
(-jar, -ir), m.1) hollow bone (of arms and legs);2) leg; komast á legg, to grow up (þá vóru synir hans vel á legg komnir);3) stem of a plant;5) shaft of a spear.* * *m. [Engl. leg], gen. leggjar, pl. leggir, gen. leggja:—a leg, hollow-bone, of arms and feet, Edda 110, Magn. 532, Stj. 458, Fms. iv. 110, vii. 102; lær-leggr, fót-leggr, of the legs; hand-leggr, arm-leggr (q. v.), of the arms; hann tekr svá við knútunni, þar fylgdi leggrinn með, Fas. i. 67: allit., leggr ok liðr, leg and joint; lið kalla menn þat er leggir mætask, Edda 110: phrases, komask á legg, or rísa á legg, to get on one’s legs, grow up from infancy, grow strong, Eg. 171, Fms. xi. 186, Glúm. 344, Bjarn. 4, Grett. 22 new Ed., Hkr. i. 106.II. metaph. the stem, trunk of a tree, Fas. i. 119, Hkr. i. 71: the stock of an anchor, Orkn. 362: the shaft of a spear, Slurl. i. 63; of a column, Al. 116: of lineage, ætt-leggr, frænd-leggr, lineage.III. a pr. name, Sturl.COMPDS: leggjaband, leggjabrot, leggjaknúta. -
7 astile
I.Lit.:II.ferrum, quod ex hastili in corpore remanserat,
Nep. Epam. 9:hastili nixus,
Cic. Rab. Perd. 7, 21:missile telum hastili abiegno,
Liv. 21, 8, 10.—Transf.A.(Pars pro toto.) A spear, javelin, in gen. ( poet.):B.torquere hastilia lenta,
Ov. M. 8, 28; Verg. A. 1, 313; 5, 557; 12, 489; Sen. Hippol. 397:curvatum,
Juv. 7, 127.—In gen., a piece of wood in the form of a shaft ( poet. and in post-Aug. prose). So of branches, Verg. A. 3, 23; of poles, props, id. G. 2, 358; Col. 4, 12, 1; Plin. 17, 23, 35, § 212; the standard:candelabri,
Vulg. Exod. 25, 31:arcus,
Amm. 22, 8, 37. -
8 hastile
I.Lit.:II.ferrum, quod ex hastili in corpore remanserat,
Nep. Epam. 9:hastili nixus,
Cic. Rab. Perd. 7, 21:missile telum hastili abiegno,
Liv. 21, 8, 10.—Transf.A.(Pars pro toto.) A spear, javelin, in gen. ( poet.):B.torquere hastilia lenta,
Ov. M. 8, 28; Verg. A. 1, 313; 5, 557; 12, 489; Sen. Hippol. 397:curvatum,
Juv. 7, 127.—In gen., a piece of wood in the form of a shaft ( poet. and in post-Aug. prose). So of branches, Verg. A. 3, 23; of poles, props, id. G. 2, 358; Col. 4, 12, 1; Plin. 17, 23, 35, § 212; the standard:candelabri,
Vulg. Exod. 25, 31:arcus,
Amm. 22, 8, 37. -
9 spjóts-hali
a, m. the ‘spear-tail,’ the end of the wooden shaft of a spear, Ld. 132, Eg. 289, Fms. vi. 413. -
10 رمح
1́ n. spear, javelin, lance, pike, shaft2́ v. spear -
11 δόρυ
δόρυ, gen. δούρατος and δουρός, dat. δούρατι and δουρί, du. δοῦρε, pl. δούρατα and δοῦρα, dat. δούρασι and δούρεσσι: (1) wood, beam, and of a living tree, Od. 6.167; of timber, esp. for ships, δοῦρα τέμνειν, τάμνεσθαι, Od. 5.162, 2, Il. 3.61; ἐλάτης, Il. 24.450; δόρυ νήιον, νήια δοῦρα, δοῦρα νηῶν, Il. 17.744, Od. 9.498, Β 13, Od. 5.370.— (2) shaft of a spear, spear; of ash, μείλινον, Il. 5.666.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > δόρυ
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12 ξυστόν
A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > ξυστόν
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13 κάμαξ
2 any pole or shaft,κ. πεύκης A.Fr. 171
; θύρσου Χλοερὸν κ. APl.c. (Phal.); in an engine of war, Apollod.Poliorc.171.8, al.3 shaft of a spear, A.Ag.66 (anap.), E. Hec. 1155, El. 852, Ar.Fr. 404; Χαλκέαι κάμακες, with rings at the top, J.AJ3.6.2 (masc. in this sense, acc. to EM487.38).5 = κερκίς1, AP6.247 (Phil.).6 in pl., steering-paddles, Alc.Supp.4.16.7 tent-pole, Gal.2.218. -
14 Lanzenschaft
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15 جذع
جِذْع \ body: the main part of a man or animal, without head, arms or legs,. \ جِذْع (العَمُود) \ shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ جِذْع الشجرة \ trunk: the main stem of a tree. \ جِذْع الشجرة المقطوع \ log: a tree that has been cut in lengths so that it is ready for use: They rolled the logs down to the river. -
16 عريش
عَرِيش \ shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also سَهْم العَرَبة -
17 قصبة
قَصَبَة \ cane: the stem of certain plants (such as bamboo or sugarcane). capital: a town which is the centre of government: Paris is the capital of France. London and Paris are capital cities. reed: a tall stiff grass that grows in wet places. shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also عاصمة (عاصِمَة) \ قَصَبَة السّاق من الأَمام \ shin: the front of the leg, below the knee. -
18 cane
قَصَبَة \ cane: the stem of certain plants (such as bamboo or sugarcane). capital: a town which is the centre of government: Paris is the capital of France. London and Paris are capital cities. reed: a tall stiff grass that grows in wet places. shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also عاصمة (عاصِمَة) -
19 capital
قَصَبَة \ cane: the stem of certain plants (such as bamboo or sugarcane). capital: a town which is the centre of government: Paris is the capital of France. London and Paris are capital cities. reed: a tall stiff grass that grows in wet places. shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also عاصمة (عاصِمَة) -
20 reed
قَصَبَة \ cane: the stem of certain plants (such as bamboo or sugarcane). capital: a town which is the centre of government: Paris is the capital of France. London and Paris are capital cities. reed: a tall stiff grass that grows in wet places. shaft: a bar or pole (of wood or metal) that forms part of a machine or vehicle or weapon: the shafts of a cart (by which it is drawn); the shaft of a spear (to which the point is fixed). \ See Also عاصمة (عاصِمَة)
См. также в других словарях:
shaft — I. noun (plural shafts) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English sceaft; akin to Old High German scaft shaft, Latin scapus shaft, stalk, Greek skēptesthai to prop oneself, lean Date: before 12th century 1. a. (1) the long handle of a spear or… … New Collegiate Dictionary
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