-
1 snaim
1. nm. gen.+e; pl.+eannan, a tie, knot, stitch2. va. tie, knot, stitch -
2 snaim
-
3 nasg
a band, tieband, collar, Irish, Early Irish nasc: *nasko-; Old High German nusca, fibula, Norse nist, brooch: *n$$.dh-sko-, root n$$.dh (Brug.). The verg nasg, Old Irish - nascim, appears in Breton as naska. The root nedh is in Sanskrit nahyati. Others make the root negh of Latin nexus, etc., and the root snet of snàth, q.v., has been suggested. See snaim further. -
4 snaomanach
a strong, robust fellow, Irish snaománach, stout, jolly fellow, hearty: "knotty", from *snadm- of snaim? -
5 νέω 1
νέω 1Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `swim' (Il.), ipf. ἔ-ννεον (Φ 11), aor. νεῦσαι, perf. νένευκα (Att.), fut. νεύσομαι (H.), - σοῦμαι (v. l. X. An. 4, 3, 12).Derivatives: νεῦσις f. `schwimming' (Arist.), ἀνάνευ-σις prop. "swimming up(ward)", `coming up, the living up' (LXX). -- Besides νήχω, usu. - ομαι (on the variation of diathesis Schwyzer-Debrunner 232), Dor. (Ps.-Theoc.) νά̄χω, - ομαι, fut. νήξομαι (ep. poet. Od.), aor. νήξασθαι (Plb., Lyc., AP), perf. midd. νενῆχθαι (Ath.), very often w. prefix (mostly midd.), e.g. παρα-, δια-, ἐκ-, ἐπι-, `swim'. From this νῆξις f. ` swimming' (Batr., Plu., medic.), διάνηξ-ις `swimming through' (Herm. ap. Stob.), νηχαλέος `swimming' (Xenocr.), after μυδαλέος a.o.Etymology: The present νή-χ-ω, νά-χ-ω, from which νήξομαι etc., has a velar enlargement of IE snā- in Skt. snā́-ti `bathes', Lat. nā-re `swim', OIr. snāim `swim, creep'; cf. σμῆ-ν: σμή-χ-ω etc. (Schwyzer 702; hypotheses on the aspect by Chantraine BSL 33, 81 ff., Gramm. hom. 1, 331.). The in vocalism deviating νέω, νεῦσαι agrees with πλέω: πλεῦσαι and can be a rhime-formation; verbal nouns with o-ablaut are supposed in νόα (rather with Bechtel Dial. 2, 378, Wackernagel Phil. 95, 178 = Kl. Schr. 2, 877 νοά) πηγή. Λάκωνες H. and in Νοῦς ποταμός (Arcadia, Asia Minor; cf. Schwyzer 310), a zero grade aorist in ἔννυθεν ἐκέχυντο H. (tradition correct?). Beside νήχω, νέω there is νάω `bubble up, stream' (s.v.). -- More hypotheses on IE snā-, snāu-, sneu- etc. (after Brugmann IF 20, 221 ff.) in WP. 2, 692ff., Pok. 971 ff., W.-Hofmann s. nō; also w. rich lit. Cf. νῆσος and νότος.Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νέω 1
См. также в других словарях:
John Hunyadi — one of the most renowned kings of the country.Names in other languages*Albanian: Janosh Hunjadi *Bulgarian: Ян (Янош) Хуниади ( Yan Huniadi or Yanosh Huniadi ); in Bulgarian epic songs: Янкул(а) войвода ( Yankul(a) Voyvoda ) *Spanish: Juan… … Wikipedia
Long campaign — The long campaign was a military campaign led by John Hunyadi and Ulaszlo I of Hungary across the Balkans against the Ottomans from July 22, 1443 to January 25, 1444.The christian army started at Buda including Hungarian, Polish, Czech, German… … Wikipedia
Janos Hunyadi — Johann Hunyadi Wappen des Iancu de Hunedoara (Helmkleinod): Ein halber Flug nach rechts gewendet Johann Hunyadi ( … Deutsch Wikipedia
Johann Hunyadi — Wappen des Iancu de Hunedoara (Helmk … Deutsch Wikipedia
János Hunyadi — Johann Hunyadi Wappen des Iancu de Hunedoara (Helmkleinod): Ein halber Flug nach rechts gewendet Johann Hunyadi ( … Deutsch Wikipedia
Guerras Otomano-Húngaras — El texto que sigue es una traducción defectuosa o incompleta. Si quieres colaborar con Wikipedia, busca el artículo original y mejora o finaliza esta traducción. Puedes dar aviso al autor principal del artículo pegando el siguiente código en su… … Wikipedia Español
natatorium — (n.) 1890, New Englandish word for swimming pool, from L. natator swimmer (from nare to swim ) + ium, neuter suffix. Latin nare is from PIE root *sna to swim (Cf. Skt. snati bathes; Avestan snayeite washes, cleans; Armenian nay wet … Etymology dictionary