-
1 οἶδμα
A swelling, swell, in Hom. only of water, ὁ δ' ἐπέσσυτο οἴδματι θύων, of a river, with swollen waves, Il.21.234 ; of the sea,ὁ δ' ἔστενεν οἴδματι θύων 23.230
, cf. Hes. Th. 109 ;ἐπ' οἴδματι μάργῳ Emp. 100.7
, cf. 24 ; (lyr.) ;οἶ. θαλάσσης h.Cer.14
;οἶδμ' ἅλιον h.Ap. 417
, Pi.Fr. 221 (codd. S.E.) ;γλαυκᾶς ἐπ' οἶδμα λίμνας S.Fr. 476
(lyr.) ;ἐς οἶ. πόντου E.Or. 991
(lyr.);οἶ. πόντιον Id.IA 704
: hence, generally, the sea, S.Ant. 588 (lyr.) ; Τύριον, Φρύγιον οἶδμα, E.Ph. 202, Hel. 369 (both lyr.), etc. ;ἐς οἶδμ' ἁλός Id.Hec.26
; τῶν κατ' οἶδμα παρθένων the Nereids, Id.Hel.6 ;Αἴγαιον οἶ. Id.IA 1601
, cf. IT 1412, al. ; διὰ πόντιον οἶδμα (mock heroic) Antiph. 196.3.II οἶ. νότων the swelling of the south-west wind, AP9.36 (Secund.). -
2 τρικυμία
-ας ἡ N 1 0-0-0-0-1=1 4 Mc 7,2the third of three waves, sea storm; ταῖς τῶν βασάνων τρικυμίαις by the swelling waves of tortures -
3 κολόκυμα
A large heavy wave before it breaks, swell that is the forerunner of a storm: metaph., of the swelling threats of Cleon, Ar.Eq. 692 (expld. as κόλον κῦμα, Sch.ad loc.; τυφλὸν κῦμα, Hsch.; κωφὸν κῦμα, Suid.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > κολόκυμα
-
4 ῥοιβδέω
A move with a whistling or rustling sound, ῥοιβδοῦσα κόλπον αἰγίδος letting the swelling aegis rustle (as she flies), A.Eu. 404: intr., of wind, whistle,ῥοιβδήσας Εὖρος AP7.636
(Crin.).II suck down, of Charybdis, Od.12.106;κῦμα δ' ἐρροίβδει μέγα σύνεγγυς ἡμῶν Ezek.Exag. 237
, cf. Aristid.Or.46(3).38.2 cause to gush forth,ὅταν.. κρηναῖον ἐξ ἄμμοιο-ήση γάνος Lyc.247
. (In signf. 11 ῥυβδέω shd. perh. be written, cf. ἀναρροιβδέω; signf. 1 is found also in ἀπορροιβδέω, ἐπιρροιβδέω.)Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ῥοιβδέω
-
5 μώλωψ
μώλωψ, ωπος ὁ (Hyperid., Fgm. 200; Plut., Mor. 565b; Herodian Gr. I 247, 20; LXX) welt, wale, bruise, wound caused by blows (Machon vs. 285; Dionys. Hal. 16, 5, 2; Pausanias Attic. ζ, 5 μώλωψ, τὸ ἐκ πληγῆς οἴδημα ‘the swelling from a blow’; Artem. 2, 48 p. 150, 4; Lucian, Philops. 20 of welts from whipping; Sir 28:17) οὗ τῷ μώλωπι ἰάθητε by his welt(s)/wound(s) you have been healed 1 Pt 2:24; cp. 1 Cl 16:5; 5:2 (all Is 53:5; this passage revised Just., D. 17, 1 δἰ οὗ τῶν μωλώπων ἴασις γίνεται; 137, 1 μηδὲ χλευάσητε αὐτοῦ τοὺς μώλωπας).—DELG. M-M. TW. -
6 κυλοιδιάν
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc voc sg (doric aeolic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc sg (doric aeolic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc nom sg (doric aeolic)κυλοιδιᾶ̱ν, κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres inf act (epic doric)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres inf act (attic doric)——————κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres inf act -
7 κυλοιδιόων
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc voc sg (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc sg (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc nom sg (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: imperf ind act 3rd pl (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: imperf ind act 1st sg (epic) -
8 κυλοιδιά
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj mp 2nd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind mp 2nd sg (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj act 3rd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind act 3rd sg (epic) -
9 κυλοιδιᾷ
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj mp 2nd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind mp 2nd sg (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj act 3rd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind act 3rd sg (epic) -
10 κυλοιδιώ
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres imperat mp 2nd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj act 1st sg (attic epic ionic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind act 1st sg (attic epic ionic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: imperf ind mp 2nd sg (homeric ionic) -
11 κυλοιδιῶ
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres imperat mp 2nd sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres subj act 1st sg (attic epic ionic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres ind act 1st sg (attic epic ionic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: imperf ind mp 2nd sg (homeric ionic) -
12 κυλοιδιών
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc voc sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc nom sg (attic epic ionic) -
13 κυλοιδιῶν
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc voc sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc sgκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc nom sg (attic epic ionic) -
14 οἰδέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to swell' (ε 455).Other forms: Also οἰδάω (Plu., Luc.), οἰδαίνω (hell. poet.); οἰδάνομαι, -ω (Ι 646 a. 554, Ar., A. R.), οἰδίσκομαι, -ω (medic.) `swell' resp. `make swell', aor. οἰδῆσαι (IA.), rare οἰδῆναι (Q. S.: οἰδαίνω), perf. ὤδηκα (Hp., Theoc.);Derivatives: 1. οἶδμα n. `torrent of water' (Il.), after κῦμα (Porzig Satzinhalte 242); cf. κυέω: κῦμα, δοκέω: δόγμα (if not from a lost primary verb; cf. below); οἰδματ-όεις `flowing' (A. Fr. 69 = 103 Mette, Opp.). 2. οἶδος n. `swelling' (Hp., Nic., Aret.); cf. κρατέω: κράτος. 3. οἴδ-ημα n. `swelling' (Hp., D.) with - ημάτιον (Hp., Aët.), - ηματώδης (medic.); ( ἀν-, δι-, ἐξ- etc.) οίδησις f. `bulge' (Pl., medic., Thphr.). 4. ( ἐπ-, ὑπ-)οιδαλέος `swollen' (Archil., Hp.: οἰδαίνω like κερδαλέος: κερδαίνω). 5. οἴδᾱξ m. `unripe fig' (Poll., Choerob.; from οἶδος or οἰδέω). 6. Backformations: ὕποιδος `somewhat swollen' (Gal.: ὑπ-οιδέω), ἐνοιδής `swollen' (Nic.: ἐν-οιδέω). -- On Οἰδίπους s. v.Etymology: Of the presentforms only οἰδέω will be old. Through enlargement arose the causat. οἰδάνω with intr. οἰδάνομαι (cf. on Οἰδίπους), in the same way οἰδίσκομαι, -ω (Schwyzer 700 a. 709 f.); οἰδαίνω will be analog. after κυμαίνω, ὀργαίνω u.a., perh. also to οἰδῆσαι after κερδῆσαι: κερδαίνω a. o.; to οἰδῆσαι the late and rare οἰδάω. In οἰδέω some see an iterativ-intensive formation; but an agreeing primary verb is not attested. -- A certain cognate is Arm. ayt-nu-m `swell' with the primaryn aor. ayte-ay and the noun ayt (i-stem) `cheek', IE * oidi- (poss. * aidi-; cf. below); the nu-present is an Arm. innovation. Germ. presents some isolated nouns, a.o. OHG eiz, NHG dial. Eis `abscess, ulcer', PGm. * aita-z, IE * oido-s (* aido-s?; cf. formally close οἶδος n.); with r-suffix e.g. OHG eittar n. ' Eitar', PGm. * aitra- n. (cf. on Οἰδίπους), also in waternames, e.g. Eiter-bach (Krahe Beitr. z. Namenforsch. 7, 105 ff.). Isolated also Lat. aemidus (prob. after the synon. tumi-dus), in the vowel deviating from οἰδέω (ablaut oi: ai?, which could be * h₂ei-\/ h₂oi-); the non-Greek. forms can further continue both IE oi and ai. -- The Slav. forms adduced are polyinterpretable: OCS jadъ `poison'; even more doubtful Russ. etc. jadró, PSl. *jędro `kernel, testicle etc.' (with nasal infix?). Also other nasalised forms wit zero grade have been connected, e.g. Skt. índu- m. `drop', Balt. rivernames like Indus, Indura; all of it rather doubtful and for Greek unimportant. Further details w. rich lit. in WP. 1, 166f., Pok. 774, W.-Hofmann s. aemidus, Vasmer s. jád and jadró, also Mayrhofer s. índuḥ and Indraḥ.Page in Frisk: 2,357-358Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > οἰδέω
-
15 κόνδῠλος
κόνδῠλοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `knuckle, bony knob, clenched fist, swelling of the gum etc.' (IA.).Compounds: As 2. member e. g. in μονο-, δι-κόνδυλος (Arist.)Derivatives: κονδυλώδης `κ.-like, knuckly', κονδύλωμα, - σις `hard swelling, tumour' (Hp.), κονδυλωτός `with κ. ' (Att. inscr. IVa), hardly through κονδυλόομαι `get κ., swell' (Aspasia ap. Aët., H.). - κονδυλίζω `hit the face with the fist, muffet, maltreat' (Hyp., LXX) with κονδυλισμός (LXX).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Other body-parts in - υλος are δάκτυλος, σφόνδυλος (cf. Güntert Reimwortbildungen 116ff.); the stem is seen in κόνδοι ἀστράγαλοι H. Connections outside Greek are quite uncertain or to be rejected: Skt. kanda- m. `root of a knol', kandúka- m. `playball', kanduka- n. `cushion' (cf. Mayrhofer s. vv., who considers Dravidian origin); Lith. kánduolas `kernel' (to kándu, ką́sti `bite'; s. Fraenkel Lit. et. Wb. s. v.). Older lit. in Bq. - The word will be Pre-Greek because of its structure, κονδ-υλ-. It may continue *κανδυλος with ο \< α before υ.Page in Frisk: 1,911Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κόνδῠλος
-
16 ὄγκος 2
ὄγκος 2.Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `mass, burden, weight; distinction, pride, pomposity', also as notion of style (IA.); but see at the end.Compounds: Often as 2. member, e.g. ὑπέρ-ογκος `excessively large, exaggerated, haughty' (Pl., X.), rarely as 1. member, e.g. ὀγκό-φωνος `with a hollow and pompous tone' (of a trumpet; sch.).Derivatives: 1. Adj. ὀγκ-ηρός `bulky, extensive', mostly metaph. `pompous' (Hp., X., Arist.); - ώδης `bulky, bombastic' (Pl., X., Arist.); ὀγκύλον σεμνόν, γαῦρον H. with ( δι-)ὀγκύλλομαι, - υλόομαι `to be swollen, to be puffed up' (Hp., Ar.); comp. ὀγκότερος `bulky' (Arist.), sup. - τατος (AP); on the formation Schwyzer 536. 2. Verb ὀγκόο-μαι, - όω, also w. prefix, e.g. δια-, ἐξ- `to become a mass, resp. to bring something off, to tower (above), to puff oneself up' (ion. att.) with ( δι-, ἐξ-)ὄγκωσις `bulge, swelling' (Arist., medic.), ( ἐξ-)ὄγκωμα `bulge, swelling, towering (above), heap' (Hp., E.). -- From H.: ὀγκίαι θημῶνες, χώματα; ὄγκη μέγεθος (cf. to 1. ὄγκος).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Prop. "what is carried, load, burden" as verbal noun with ο-ablaut of the root seen in the reduplicated aorist ἐνεγκεῖν; s. v. (supposed to be * h₁enk-). - Jouanna ( CRAI 1985, 31-60) holds that the meaning `burden' is not attested and that there is only one word `gonflement' from `curvature' (* h₂onk-).Page in Frisk: 2,347Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄγκος 2
-
17 κυλοιδιώντα
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc plκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc acc sg -
18 κυλοιδιῶντα
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc plκυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc acc sg -
19 κυλοιδιόωντα
κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act neut nom /voc /acc pl (epic)κυλοιδιάωhave a swelling below the eye: pres part act masc acc sg (epic) -
20 παχυβλεφαρία
παχυβλεφαρίᾱ, παχυβλεφαρίαswelling of the eyelids: fem nom /voc /acc dualπαχυβλεφαρίᾱ, παχυβλεφαρίαswelling of the eyelids: fem nom /voc sg (attic doric aeolic)
См. также в других словарях:
Swelling of the knee — (colloquially known as water on the knee) occurs when excess fluid accumulates in or around the knee joint. There are many common causes for the swelling, including arthritis, injury to the ligaments or meniscus, or when fluid collects in the… … Wikipedia
Swelling — Swell ing, n. 1. The act of that which swells; as, the swelling of rivers in spring; the swelling of the breast with pride. [1913 Webster] Rise to the swelling of the voiceless sea. Coleridge. [1913 Webster] 2. A protuberance; a prominence;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The Bonny Bunch of Roses — (Roud 664) is an English (or Irish) folk song.The earliest known version of the tune is in William Christie s Tradition Ballad Airs (1881), but there is another tune, of Irish origin. There is an obvious difficulty in identifying the narrators… … Wikipedia
The Story of the Gadsbys — is a short collection of short stories by Rudyard Kipling. It was originally published as no. 2 of the Indian Railway Library in 1888. The Story of the Gadsbys is written in dramatic form: it has eight stories presented as short scenes. They are… … Wikipedia
Swelling — Swell Swell, v. i. [imp. {Swelled}; p. p. {Swelled} or {Swollen}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Swelling}.] [AS. swellan; akin to D. zwellen, OS. & OHG. swellan, G. schwellen, Icel. svella, Sw. sv[ a]lla.] 1. To grow larger; to dilate or extend the exterior… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
swelling — n. (the) swelling goes down, subsides (the swelling went down) * * * [ swelɪŋ] subsides (the swelling went down) (the) swelling goes down … Combinatory dictionary
swelling — swell|ing [ˈswelıŋ] n 1.) an area of your body that has become larger than normal, because of illness or injury swelling in/on ▪ a painless swelling in his neck 2.) [U] the condition of having swelled ▪ The spider s bite can cause pain and… … Dictionary of contemporary English
swelling — swell|ing [ swelıŋ ] noun count an area of your body that has increased in size as a result of an injury or illness: A large swelling had come up on my ankle. a. uncount the increase in size of an area of your body caused by an injury or illness … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
swelling — noun use ice to reduce the swelling Syn: bump, lump, bulge, protuberance, enlargement, distension, prominence, protrusion, node, nodule, tumescence; boil, blister, bunion, carbuncle … Thesaurus of popular words
The Best Damn Sports Show Period — Infobox Television | show name=Best Damn Sports Show Period format = Sports talk runtime = 60 minutes starring = Chris Rose John Salley country = USA network = Fox Sports Net (2001 ) first aired = July 23, 2001 last aired = Present num episodes … Wikipedia
The Anniversary (Fawlty Towers) — Infobox Television episode Title = The Anniversary Series = Fawlty Towers Caption = Season = 2 Episode = 5 Airdate = 19 March 1979 Production = 11 Writer = John Cleese Connie Booth Director = Bob Spiers Guests = Episode list = List of Fawlty… … Wikipedia