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1 ἐπισπάω
A draw or drag after one, Hdt.2.121.δ; ἦγ' ἐπισπάσας κόμης by the hair, E.Hel. 116, cf. Tr. 882, Andr. 710:— [voice] Med., X.An.4.7.14:—[voice] Pass., ἐπισπασθῆναι τῇ χειρί with the hand, Th.4.130.2. metaph., bring on, cause,τοσόνδε πλῆθος πημάτων A.Pers. 477
.3. pull to,τὴν θύραν X.HG6.4.36
; cf. ἐπισπαστήρ: ἐπισπασθέντος τοῦ βρόχου being drawn tight, D.24.139.4. attract, gain, win, :—freq. in [voice] Med.,ἐπισπᾶσθαι κέρδος Hdt.3.72
;εὔνοιαν Plb.3.98.9
; (Magn. Mae., ii B.C.);ἔχθραν AP11.340
(Pall.); welcome, Ph.1.384; ἐπισπᾶσθαι πώγωνα get one a beard, Luc.JTr.16; induce,ὕπνον ἐκπώμασιν Lib.Or.56.26
; attract,σίδηρον Phld.Sign.1
.5. draw on, allure, persuade, :—[voice] Med.,ὁ λόγος.. ἂν ἐπισπάσαιτο Th.3.44
, cf. 5.111; ἐ. ἡ πέρδιξ [τὸν θηρεύοντα] Arist.HA 613b19; θάτερον παρεμπῖπτον ἐπεσπάσατο.. τὸ ἕτερον ἐπινόημα induced, provoked, Epicur.Nat. 137 G.: c.inf., induce to do, ἐπισπάσασθαι [ἂν] αὐτοὺς ἡγεῖτο προθυμήσεσθαι he thought it would induce, invite them to make the venture, dub. l. in Th.4.9; ἐπισπᾶσθαί τινα ἐμπλησθῆναιδακρύων τὰ ὄμματα X.Cyr.5.5.10
;ἐ. τοὺσπολεμίους ἐφ' ἑαυτόν Plu.Phil. 18
, cf. Mar.11, 21, 26; but τοὺς πολεμίους εἰς τόπους allure, entice, Plb. 3.110.2, etc.:—[voice] Pass., ἐπισπώμενον εἰς τἀναντία πολλάκις ἅμα though often he is being drawn in opposite directionsatonce, Pl.Lg. 863e; φοβοῦμαι μὴ πάντες.. ἐπισπασθῶσιν πέρα τοῦ συμφέροντος [πολεμῆσαι] D. 5.19; (iii B.C.); ἐπεσπάσθηνφιλονεικεῖν Demetr.Lac.Herc.1055.23F.
6. [voice] Med., absorb, τὰ σιτία- σπᾶται τὴν ὑγρότητα Arist.Pr. 868b30
;τὰ ἐριναστὰ [σῦκα] ἐ. τὸν ὀπόν Thphr.CP2.9.12
; quaff, of a drinker, ἀπνευστὶ ἐ. Gal.15.500, cf. Luc. DDeor.5.4; of infants, suck,γάλα Sor.1.88
; of cupping instruments, Hp.VM22; draw in,πνεῦμα Phld.D.3.13
:—[voice] Pass., of air, to be sucked in, Arist.Pr. 931b22.7. [voice] Med., draw in, call in,Πύρρον Plb.1.6.5
; φυλακὴν καὶ βοήθειαν παρά τινος ib.7.6;μάρτυρας -ᾶται τοὺς μουσικούς Phld.Po.5.1425.8
:—[voice] Pass., to be called in, forced to work,εἴς τι PTeb. 27.4
(ii B.C.).8. in [voice] Pass., of the sea, ἐπισπωμένη βιαιότερον returning with a rush after having retired, Th.3.89.II. overturn: hence proverb., ὅλην τὴν ἅμαξαν ἐπεσπάσω you have `upset the apple-cart', Luc.Pseudol.32.III. [voice] Med., draw the prepuce forward, become as if uncircumcised,μὴ ἐπισπάσθω 1 Ep.Cor.7.18
; of the nurse, ἐπισπάσθωτὴν ἀκροποσθίαν Sor.1.113
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐπισπάω
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2 ὄχλος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: 1. `(orderless, moved) crowd, (common) multitude, great mass, throng', pl. `crowd, people'; 2. `disturbance, perturbation, annoyance' (Pi., IA.).Compounds: Compp., e.g. ὀχλο-κρατία f. `mob-rule' (Plb., Plu., s. lit. on δημοκρατία), ἄ-οχλος `without disturbances, not disturbing' (Hp.).Derivatives: Adj. 1. ὀχλ-ηρός `bothersome, annoying' (IA.) with - ηρία f. (LXX); 2. - ικός `belonging to a great multitude, mobbish' (hell.); 3. - ώδης `annoying' (IA.), `popular, common' (Plu.). Subst. 4. ὀχλεύς μοχλός, στρόφιγξ, δεσμός... H.; ἐποχλεύς m. `sprag on a cart' (Ath.), prob. for *ἐποχεύς; ἐποχλίζομαι `to be bolted' (Apollon. Lex.). -- Denominative verbs 5. ὀχλέω `to put in (rolling) motion, to roll away' (Φ 261; ἀν-οχλέω = ἀν-οχλίζω S. E.), `to disturb, to perturb, to bother' (Ion., hell.; w. prefix, esp. ἐν-, also Att.); from it ὄχλ-ησις ( ἐν- ὄχλος) f. `bothering, interference, perturbation' (Democr., hell.), ( ἐν-)ὄχλ-ημα `id.' (Epicur., medic.), ὀχλητι-κός = ὀχλικός (Procl.); 6. ὀχλεύονται = ὀχλεῦνται κυλινδοῦνται H.; 7. ὀχλ-ίζω, also w. μετ-, ἀν- a.o., `to pull up, out of place' (Il.); 8. ὀχλ-άζω `to be disturbed, confused' (LXX).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1118] *u̯eǵh- `move, drive, ride'Etymology: The orig. meaning of the verbal nouns ὄχλος, which was concretized as `heap, crowd', cannot be established with more certainty; in the sense of `perturbation etc.' it may have been influenced by ὀχλέω (cf. Bosshardt 78). If one starts from *Ϝόχ-(σ)λο-ς (on the possible loss of a Ϝ- in Hom. s. Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 125), ὄχλος agrees well with the well-known verb for `drive, carry, bring, move' in Ϝέχω (s. 2. ἔχω), ὀχέομαι, Lat. vehō etc., IE *u̯oǵh-(s)lo-; cf. the interpretations of Sealey Glotta 37, 281 ff. The broad sphere of meaning gives several possibiliies: *'driving, carrying, moving', resp. as nom. agentis or instr. *'driver, carryer, mover'. -- Formally identical is OWNo. vagl m. `tiebeam, roost' (prop. *'bearing-bar, carrier'). To the denominative ὀχλ-ίζω `raise', ὀχλ-έω `roll away' and to ὀχλ-εύς `lever etc.' agree semantically the primary nouns Lat. vec-tis and OWNo. vǫg (IE *u̯oǵhā) `lever'. From *`move, movement' one gets both to `moved mass, mob' and to `spiritual movement, unrest'; the same holds for the denominative ὀχλέω (cf. turba, - āre). -- Uncertain supposition on cross with μοχλός, - έω in Güntert Reimwortbildungen 161 f. Older hypothesis in Bq (rejected). Wrong Belardi Doxa 3, 217. -- Further lit. s. ὄχος.Page in Frisk: 2,456-457Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄχλος
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