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1 ἐπινεύω
A- νεύσω Luc.Sat.4
,- νεύσομαι Aristaenet.2.1
:—nod to, in token of command or approval, nod assent, opp.ἀνανεύω, ἐμῷ δ' ἐπένευσα κάρητι Il.15.75
; ἐπ' ὀφρύσι νεῦσεΚρονίων 1.528
, etc.;ἐπὶ γλεφάροις νεῦσαν Pi.I.8(7).49
; σὺ.. ἐπένευσας τάδε did'st approve, sanction these acts, E.Or. 284, cf. D.18.324; ἐπένευσεν ἀληθὲς εἶναι he nodded in sign that it was true,Aeschin.3.59; σιγῇ δὲ τὰ ψευδῆ.. ἐπινεύουσι they indicate falsehoods without speaking, D.21.139: abs., Antipho 2.2.7; Ἑλληνικὸν ἐ. give a Greek nod, Ar.Ach. 115: c. acc., grant or promise, (lyr.); τι Id.Ba. 1349;ὑπέρ τινος Plb.21.5.3
: c. dat.,ἐ. τῇ δεήσει τινός PGiss. 1.41
ii 9 (ii A.D.): c. dat. pers.,ἐ. τισὶ δεομένοις SIG888.13
(Macedonia, iii A.D.): c. dat. pers. et inf., permit,κῴδια ἐ. ἡμῖν ἐργάζεσθαι PPetr.2p.108
(iii B.C.).2. make a sign to another to do a thing, order him to do, c. inf.,ἐπ' ὀφρύσι νεῦσε σιωπῇ.. στορέσαι λέχος Il.9.620
:abs., Od.16.164(tm.), h.Cer. 169, 466, X.Cyr.5.5.37.3. nod forwards, κόρυθι ἐπένευε φαεινῇ he nodded with his helmet, i.e.it nodded, Il.22.314;λόφων ἐπένευον ἔθειραι Theoc.22.186
;ἐ. ἐς τὸ κάταντες Luc.DDeor.25.2
; πέτραι ἐπινενευκυῖαι overhanging, Id.Prom.1.4. incline towards, .6. trans., elevate, point upwards, Id.Bel.78.8, 89.14:—[voice] Pass., to be inclined downwards, opp. ἐξυπτιάζεσθαι, S.E. P.1.120.7. ἐπινενευκὼς σφυγμός, name coined by Archigenes, Gal.8.479.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐπινεύω
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2 κατανεύω
κατα-νεύω, part. κατα-νεύων (Od. 9.490), fut. - νεύσομαι, aor. κατένευσα, part. sync. καννεύσᾶς: nod down (forward), nod to, to give a sign, regularly of assent (opp. ἀνανεύω); κεφαλῇ or κρᾶτί, Il. 1.527; joined with ὑπέσχετο, ὑπέστην, Il. 2.112, ν 133, Il. 4.267; grant ( τινί τι), νῖκήν, κῦδος, also w. inf., Il. 10.393, Od. 4.6.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > κατανεύω
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3 ἐπινεύω
ἐπινεύω 1 aor. ἐπένευσα (s. νεύω; Hom. et al.; ins, pap, LXX; Ath. 37, 1) give consent (by a nod) οὐκ ἐπένευσεν he did not give his consent (PRyl 119, 21 [I A.D.]; cp. Philo, Migr. Abr. 111; Jos., Vi. 124) Ac 18:20.—M-M. -
4 τέκμαρ
A fixed mark or boundary, goal, end (= πέρας, κατὰ τὴν ἀρχαίαν γλῶσσαν, Arist.Rh. 1357b9), ἵκετο τέκμωρ he reached the goal, Il.13.20; τοῖο μὲν.. εὕρετο τέκμωρ for this he found an end, i.e. devised a remedy, 16.472;εἰς ὅ κε τ. Ἰλίου εὕρωσιν 7.30
;οὐδέ τι τέκμωρ εὑρέμεναι δύνασαι Od.4.373
, cf. 466: in Pi., either end, termination,τέκμαρ αἰῶνος Fr. 165
; or end, object, purpose, P.2.49.II sure sign or token of some high and solemn kind, as Zeus says that his nod is ἐξ ἐμέθεν μέγιστον τέκμωρ, the highest, surest pledge I can give, Il.1.526; σαφὲς τ. Pi.N.11.44; of the moon, as a sign in the heavens,τ. δὲ βροτοῖς.. τέτυκται h.Hom.32.13
, cf. A.R.1.499, 3.1002, etc.;ἦν δ' οὐδὲν αὐτοῖς οὔτε χείματος τ. οὔτ'.. ἦρος A.Pr. 454
; ἔστι τῶνδέ σοι τ.; Id.Ag. 272, cf. 315; τἀνδρὸς ἐκφανὲς τ. Id.Eu. 244; τῆσδ' ἀφίξεως τ. Id.Supp. 483; κυνὸς.. σῆμα, ναυτίλοις τ. E.Hec. 1273.--Poet. word, used also in the [dialect] Ion. Prose of Hp. and Aret. for symptom, esp. pathognomic symptom, Hp.Mul.2.123, Aret.SA2.2, al. -
5 νύσσω
Grammatical information: v.Derivatives: 1. νύξις f. `push, sting' (Dsc., Plu.), κατάνυξ-ις `stupefaction, bewilderment' (: κατα-νύσσομαι `get a push in the heart, be stunned'; LXX, NT); 2. νύγμα (also - χμα) n. `push, prick' (Nic., Epicur., Gal.) with νυγμα-τικός `fit for pricking' (medic.), - τώδης `punctuated' (Arist., medic.); 3. νυγ-μός m. (D. S., Plu.), - μή f. (Plu.) `id.'; 4. νύγ-δην `by pricking' (A.D.). -- Further νυκχάσας = νύξας H. (expressive enlargement with geminate and aspiration; cf. Schwyzer 717 n. 4).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Without exact agreement outside Greek. Formal similarity show some westgerm. and Slav. expressions for `nod etc.', e.g. MLDu. nucken `move the head menacingly', nuck(e) `sudden for- and upward pushing of the head when frightened etc', OCS nukati, njukati `brighten', which are, assuming a velar enlargement, usually conneted with νεύω, Lat. nuō. Also νύσσω is since Brugmann IF 13, 153 ff. seen in this way, which means for νεύω, nuō the assumption of a basic meaning `make a pull, give a thrust'. -- WP. 2, 323f., Pok. 767, W.-Hofmann s. nuō.Page in Frisk: 2,Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > νύσσω
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6 διανεύω
διανεύω to express an idea through motion of a part of the body, such as head (‘nod’), eye, or hand (‘gesture’), give a sign (s. νεύω, ἐννεύω, κατανεύω; Diod S 3, 18, 6 ‘with head’; 17, 37, 5; Lucian, Icar. 15, Ver. Hist. 2, 25 both of flirtatious manner, implying use of eye; Ps 34:19 and Sir 27:22 with eyes) τινὶ to someone (Alexis Com. [IV B.C.] Fgm. 261, 12 [II 392 Kock]; Lucian, Ver. Hist. 2, 25) ἦν διανεύων αὐτοῖς he kept making signs to them the manner not specified, but prob. hand gestures Lk 1:22.—DELG s.v. νεύω.
См. также в других словарях:
give someone the nod — give (someone) the nod British & Australian, informal to give someone permission to do something. We re just waiting for the council to give us the nod then we ll start building … New idioms dictionary
give someone the nod — 1. tv. to signal someone by nodding. (Not slang.) □ I gave Pete the nod, and he started the procedure. □ Just give me the nod when you are ready. 2. tv. to choose someone. (See lso get the nod.) □ The committee gave Frank the nod for the job … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
give someone the nod — ► give someone/thing the nod 1) select or approve someone or something. 2) give someone a signal. Main Entry: ↑nod … English terms dictionary
give thing the nod — ► give someone/thing the nod 1) select or approve someone or something. 2) give someone a signal. Main Entry: ↑nod … English terms dictionary
give someone the nod — 1 the winger was given the nod: SELECT, choose, pick, go for; Brit. cap. 2 the Lords will give the treaty the nod: APPROVE, agree to, sanction, ratify, endorse, rubber stamp; … Useful english dictionary
give somebody the nod — … Useful english dictionary
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nod — ► VERB (nodded, nodding) 1) lower and raise one s head slightly and briefly in greeting, assent, or understanding, or as a signal. 2) let one s head fall forward when drowsy or asleep. 3) (nod off) informal fall asleep. 4) make a mistake due to a … English terms dictionary
give the nod — give (someone) the nod British & Australian, informal to give someone permission to do something. We re just waiting for the council to give us the nod then we ll start building … New idioms dictionary
nod — 1 verb nodded, nodding (I, T) 1 to move your head up and down, especially in order to show agreement or understanding: I asked her if she was ready to go, and she nodded. | nod your head: Jane nodded her head sympathetically. | nod your… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
nod — nod1 W2 [nɔd US na:d] v past tense and past participle nodded present participle nodding [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Perhaps from Low German] 1.) to move your head up and down, especially in order to show agreement or understanding… … Dictionary of contemporary English