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101 πτύσαι
πτύωspit out: aor imperat mid 2nd sgπτύωspit out: aor inf actπτύσαῑ, πτύωspit out: aor opt act 3rd sg -
102 πτύσει
πτύσιςspitting: fem nom /voc /acc dual (attic epic)πτύσεϊ, πτύσιςspitting: fem dat sg (epic)πτύσιςspitting: fem dat sg (attic ionic)πτύωspit out: aor subj act 3rd sg (epic)πτύωspit out: fut ind mid 2nd sgπτύωspit out: fut ind act 3rd sg -
103 πτύση
πτύσηι, πτύσιςspitting: fem dat sg (epic)πτύωspit out: aor subj mid 2nd sgπτύωspit out: aor subj act 3rd sgπτύωspit out: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
104 πτύσῃ
πτύσηι, πτύσιςspitting: fem dat sg (epic)πτύωspit out: aor subj mid 2nd sgπτύωspit out: aor subj act 3rd sgπτύωspit out: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
105 πτύσον
πτύωspit out: aor imperat act 2nd sgπτύωspit out: fut part act masc voc sgπτύωspit out: fut part act neut nom /voc /acc sg -
106 πτύσω
πτύωspit out: aor subj act 1st sgπτύωspit out: fut ind act 1st sgπτύωspit out: aor ind mid 2nd sg (homeric ionic) -
107 πυτίση
πυτίζωspit frequently: aor subj mid 2nd sgπυτίζωspit frequently: aor subj act 3rd sgπυτίζωspit frequently: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
108 πυτίσῃ
πυτίζωspit frequently: aor subj mid 2nd sgπυτίζωspit frequently: aor subj act 3rd sgπυτίζωspit frequently: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
109 πτύω
Aπτύσομαι Id.Morb.1.28
: [tense] aor. ἔπτῠσα ib.22, S.Ant. 653, etc.: [tense] pf.ἔπτῠκα S.E. M.8.252
, Gal.10.374, 11.281:—[voice] Pass., [tense] fut. πτυσθήσομαι ([etym.] ἀνα-) Id.9.686, 15.700, ([etym.] ἐμ-) Ev.Luc.18.32: [tense] aor.ἐπτύσθην Hp.Morb.1.28
: [tense] aor.2 part.πτυέντα Id.Epid.2.3.4
. [[pron. full] ῡ in [tense] pres. and [tense] impf.; later [dialect] Ep. have [pron. full] ῠ in [tense] impf. before a short syll., Nonn.D.10.171, but mostly in compds., ([etym.] ἀνα-) A.R.2.570, ([etym.] ἀπο-) 4.925, ([etym.] ἐξ-) Theoc.24.19; [pron. full] ῠ always in [tense] aor.): — spit out or up, αἷμα Il.l.c., Hp.Art.49: abs., spit, Hdt.1.99, X.Cyr. 8.1.42: c. dat., πτύσας προσώπῳ spat in his face, S.Ant. 1232.2 of the sea, disgorge, cast out,με.. τηλόσ' ἀπὸ.. ἠϊόνος AP7.283
(Leon.), cf. Opp.H.5.596: metaph.,στοργὰν ἔπτυσας εἰς ἀνέμους AP7.468
(Mel.): abs., ἐπ' ἀϊόνι πτύοντα, of waves, Theoc.15.133; with a splash,AP
9.290 (Phil.).b of fish, spawn, Babr.6.8.c prov., πρὶν πτύσαι 'before you can say Jack Robinson', Men.Pk. 202.3 metaph., πτύσας with loathing, S. Ant. 653;ἰδεῖν ῥᾷόν ἐστι καὶ πτύσαι Epicr.3.20
.4 εἰς κόλπον π., to avert a bad omen, disarm magic, etc., which was done three times, , cf. 20.11;φρίξας εἰς κόλπον πτύσαι Thphr.Char.16.15
, cf. Luc.Nav.15, etc.; ὑπὸ κόλπον π. AP12.229 (Strat.).II promote the flow of spittle, of certain wines, in [voice] Pass., Hp.Vict.2.52. (Cf. Goth. speiwan 'spit', Lat. spuo, etc.) -
110 πτύ̄ω
πτύ̄ωGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `to spew, to spit' (Hom.).Other forms: Aor. πτύ-σαι (Hom.), pass. πτυ-σθῆναι, - ῆναι (Hp.), fut. πτύσ-ω, - ομαι (IA.), perf. ἔπτυκα (late).Derivatives: 1. ἀπό-, κατά-πτυστος `worth to be spat upon, abominable' (Anacr., trag., also Att. prose); 2. πτύσις ( ἔκ-, ἔμ-, ἀνά-) f. `the spewing' (Hp., Arist.); 3. πτυσμός m. `id.' (Hp.); 4. πτύσμα ( ἔμ-, ἀπό-, κατά-) n. `spittle' (Hp., Plb., LXX); 5. ἀπο-πτυστήρ m. "the spitter" (Opp.); 6. πτυάς, - άδος f. des. of a venomous snake (Gal. a. o.); 7. πτύ-αλον, - ελον n. (- ος m.) `spittle' (Hp., Arist.), from which - αλώδης `spittle-like', - αλίζω, - ελίζω `to secrete spittle' with - αλισμός (- ελ-) m. (Hp.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [999] *spi̯(e)uH- `spew, spit'Etymology: Beside the present πτύ̄-ω with long vowel (Schwyzer 686, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 373) there is the aorist πτῠ́-σαι with short vowel as in ἐρῠ́-σαι, ἀρῠ́-σαι a.o.; after this πτῠ́-σις and with anorganic σ πτύσ-μα, - μός a.o. -- Onomatop. expression, found in several languages in somewhat varying form: Lat. spuō, Germ., e.g. Goth. speiwan, Lith. spiáu-ju, -ti (from * spieuH-?), and in Skt. (niḥ-)ṣṭhī́vati (spiHu̯-? with t-v dissimilated from p-v); without s- as πτύω: CS pljujǫ, plǰьvati (from *pi̯u-\/pi̯uu̯-?), Arm. t`uk` `spittle' with t`k`-anem `spew, spit'; with diff. sequence of sounds Alb. pshtyj (Mann Lang. 26, 387). Greek πτ- can, if old, agree with Arm. t` ; if for older πι̯- OCS plǰujǫ and Lith. spiáuju can be compared. On the attempts to reduce the deviating forms to one preform, cf. Schwyzer 325 Zus. 3, WP. 2, 683 (Pok. 999f.), W.-Hofmann s. spuō (all w. lit.); further Collinder Ein indoeuropäisches Wohllautgesetz (Uppsala 1943) 9 f., 14. Well-founded objections against assuming a strict base-form for this popular-expressive expression in Persson Beitr. 1, 270 and Ernout-Meillet s. spuō. -- Greek too presents several variants: ἀπο-, ἐκ-πῡ-τίζω (Hp., com., Arist.; simplex πυτιζω only EM), prob. expressively enlarged with dissimilation (Lat. LW [loanword] pytissāre, cf. Leumann Kl. Schr. 159 w. n.1); Dor. ἐπι-φθύσδω = ἐπιπτύω (Theoc.); ψύττει πτύει and σίαι πτύσαι. Πάφιοι H. with σίαλον (s.d.).Page in Frisk: 2,617-618Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πτύ̄ω
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111 σπίδιος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `extensive, wide' ( σπίδιον μῆκος ὁδοῦ A. Fr. 378 = 733 M.), σπιδόθεν = μακρόθεν (Antim. 77); σπιδνόν πυκνόν, συνεχές, πεπηγός; σπιδόεν μέλαν, πλατύ, σκοτεινόν, πυκνόν, μέγα H.Derivatives: Cf. further σπιδέος gen. sg. (Λ 753) beside v. l. ἀσπιδέος; if correct, prob. from *σπιδύς (s. ἀσπιδής); s. also ἑλεσπίδας and 1. ἀσπίς. Verb σπίζω = ἐκτείνω (Sch. Ar. V. 18, Eust.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Obsolete wortgroup, which seems only to have lived on in the learned and higher poetic language and about the meaning of which one was no longer certain (cf. the explanation of σπιδόεν). -- As basis functions partly a noun *σπίδος ( σπιδό-θεν, - εν), partly a primary σπιδ- ( σπίζω, σπιδνόν); for σπίδ-ιος, *-ύς both are possible. One may compare first Lat. spissus (\< * spid-tos or * spit-tos) `extended, esp. in time, slow, prolonged', also `close, dense, thick' (= σπιδνόν); on the development of the meaning Persson Beitr. 1, 386ff. with extensive treatment. Here also a richly developed Baltic family, e.g. Lith. spintù, spìsti (\< * spit-ti) `begin to swarm (of bees), gather' (ptc. spìstas = Lat. spissus?), s. Fraenkel s. spiẽsti w. further forms a. lit. -- If one adduces also σπιθαμη [for which I see no ground], we get a threefold variation σπιδ-: σπιθ-: Lith. (Lat.?) spit-. (Some have also connected σπάω etc; s. v. w. lit.Page in Frisk: 2,766Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σπίδιος
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112 πτύω
πτύω 1 aor. ἔπτυσα (Hom. et al.; Num 12:14; Sir 28:12; TestSol; JosAs 29:1) spit, spit out χαμαί on the ground J 9:6 (also TestSol 7:3). πτύσας εἰς τὰ ὄμματα αὐτοῦ when he had spit on his eyes Mk 8:23 (Jos., Ant. 5, 335 πτ. εἰς τὸ πρόσωπον. On association with magical procedures s. L-S-J-M s.v. 4. Cp. Persius 2, 31–34.). Abs. 7:33.—Lit. s.v. πτύσμα.—B. 264. -
113 έμπτυε
ἐμπτύωspit into: pres imperat act 2nd sgἐμπτύωspit into: imperf ind act 3rd sg (homeric ionic) -
114 ἔμπτυε
ἐμπτύωspit into: pres imperat act 2nd sgἐμπτύωspit into: imperf ind act 3rd sg (homeric ionic) -
115 έπτυκεν
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116 ἔπτυκεν
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117 έπτυον
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118 ἔπτυον
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119 έπτυσ'
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120 ἔπτυσ'
См. также в других словарях:
Spit — may refer to: *Spitting, the act of forcibly expelling from the mouth ** Spit, another word for saliva *Spit (archaeology) an archaeological term for a unit of archaeological excavation *Spit (landform), a section of land that extends into a body … Wikipedia
spit — Ⅰ. spit [1] ► VERB (spitting; past and past part. spat or spit) 1) eject saliva forcibly from one s mouth. 2) forcibly eject (food or liquid) from one s mouth. 3) say in a hostile way. 4) (o … English terms dictionary
spit — spit1 [spit] n. [ME spite < OE spitu, akin to OHG spizzi, sharp: for IE base see SPIKE1] 1. a thin, pointed rod or bar on which meat is impaled for broiling or roasting over a fire or before other direct heat 2. a narrow point of land, or a… … English World dictionary
Spit — Spit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Spitting}.] [From {Spit}, n.; cf. {Speet}.] 1. To thrust a spit through; to fix upon a spit; hence, to thrust through or impale; as, to spit a loin of veal. Infants spitted upon pikes. Shak.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Spit — Spit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spit} ({Spat}, archaic); p. pr. & vb. n. {Spitting}.] [AS. spittan; akin to G. sp[ u]tzen, Dan. spytte, Sw. spotta,Icel. sp?ta, and prob. E. spew. The past tense spat is due to AS. sp?tte, from sp?tan to spit. Cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Spit — Spit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spit} ({Spat}, archaic); p. pr. & vb. n. {Spitting}.] [AS. spittan; akin to G. sp[ u]tzen, Dan. spytte, Sw. spotta,Icel. sp?ta, and prob. E. spew. The past tense spat is due to AS. sp?tte, from sp?tan to spit. Cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Spit — Студийный альбом Kittie … Википедия
spit — vb, spit or spat spat; spit·ting vt to eject (as saliva) from the mouth vi to eject saliva from the mouth spit n SALIVA … Medical dictionary
spit up — {v.} To vomit a little. * /The baby always spits up when he is burped./ * /Put a bib on the baby. I don t want him to spit up on his clean clothes./ … Dictionary of American idioms
spit up — {v.} To vomit a little. * /The baby always spits up when he is burped./ * /Put a bib on the baby. I don t want him to spit up on his clean clothes./ … Dictionary of American idioms
Spit — Spit, v. i. To attend to a spit; to use a spit. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] She s spitting in the kitchen. Old Play. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English