-
1 τρομέω
A like τρέμω, tremble, quake, quiver, esp. from fear,οἱ δὲ μάλ' ἐτρόμεον καὶ ἐδείδισαν Il.7.151
;τρομέουσι δέ τε φρένα ναῦται 15.627
; : c. inf., fear to do, Theoc.27.29, 31;τρομεῦσιν μὴ κακῶς ἀκούσωσι Call.Iamb.1.328
: simply, quiver, τρόμεσκε δὲ πάντ' ἀπὸ τοῖο (sc. Βορέαο) Hes.Fr.96.89, cf. Q.S.12.506, Orph.L. 560.II c. acc., tremble before or at a person, stand in awe of,τόν τε τρομέουσι καὶ ἄλλοι Il.17.203
;τοῦτόν γε τρομέεις καὶ δείδιας Od. 18.80
;θάνατον τρομέεσθαι 16.446
, etc.—With and without acc. Hom. uses both [voice] Act. and [voice] Med., but only in [tense] pres. and [tense] impf.; [dialect] Ep. and [dialect] Ion. τρομεοίατο for τρομέοιντο, Il.10.492; [dialect] Ion. part.,ἤθη δεσποτῶν τρομευμένους Sol.36.12
.—Poet. word, used in trans. sense by A.Pr. 542 (lyr., [voice] Act.), Pers.64 (anap., [voice] Med.); but never by S. or E.: [tense] aor. ἐτρόμησα only late, LXX 1 Ma.2.24 (v.l. ἐτρόμασαν), POxy.416.10 (iii A. D.). -
2 σαλεύω
+ V0-7-12-41-19=79 Jgs 5,5; 2 Sm 22,37; 2 Kgs 17,20; 21,8A: to cause to rock [τινα] Sir 29,17; to shake (the head) [τι] Ps 108(109),25; to shake, to afflict [τινα] 2 Kgs 17,20; to stir up [τινα] Sir 28,14P: to be driven to and fro (by the wind) Wis 4,4; to be shaken, to be moved (of the sea) Ps 97(98),7; to be shaken (of mountains) Jgs 5,5; to be shaken, to tremble Zech 12,2; to slip (of steps) Ps 16(17),5; to totter 2 Sm 22,37; to stagger Ps 106 (107),27; to tremble, to shudder (from fear) Eccl 12,3; to be moved, to waver, to change one’s mind Jb 41,15; to be shaken, to be in sore distress Sir 13,21; to wander Ps 108(109),10; to be (re)moved DnTh 4,14τοῦ σαλεῦσαι τὸν πόδα Ισραηλ ἀπὸ τῆς γῆς to remove Israel’s foot from the land 2 Kgs 21,8 et al.; βοοζύγιον σαλευόμενον an ox yoke rubbing and chafing the neck, a hard yoke Sir 26,7; σαλεύσει αὐτοὺς ἐκ θεμελίων he shall shake them to their foundations, he shall eradicate them from their foundations Wis 4,19*Hab 2,16 σαλεύθητι καὶ σείσθητι shake and quake-והרעל (cpr. 1QpHab 11,9, see σείω) for MT והערל be uncircumcisedCf. HELBING 1928, 320; TALMON 1964, 131; →NIDNTT; TWNT(→διασαλεύω,,)
См. также в других словарях:
from — [frum] prep. [ME < OE from, fram, akin to Goth fram, forward, away, ON frā < IE base * pro , var. of * per , beyond, ahead > FOR1, FORE, FIRST] a particle used with verbs or other words to indicate 1. a) beginning at (a point of… … English World dictionary
tremble — (v.) c.1300, shake from fear, cold, etc., from O.Fr. trembler tremble, fear (11c.), from V.L. *tremulare (Cf. It. tremolare, Sp. temblar), from L. tremulus trembling, tremulous, from tremere to tremble, shiver, quake, from PIE *trem to tremble… … Etymology dictionary
tremble — v. 1) (d; intr.) to tremble at (to tremble at the thought of going back to work) 2) (D; intr.) to tremble from, with (to tremble from the cold; to tremble with fear) * * * [ tremb(ə)l] with (to tremble from the cold; to tremble with fear) (D;… … Combinatory dictionary
tremble — verb ADVERB ▪ badly, violently ▪ uncontrollably ▪ a little, slightly ▪ inside ▪ still … Collocations dictionary
tremble — v. & n. v.intr. 1 shake involuntarily from fear, excitement, weakness, etc. 2 be in a state of extreme apprehension (trembled at the very thought of it). 3 move in a quivering manner (leaves trembled in the breeze). n. 1 a trembling state or… … Useful english dictionary
tremble — /ˈtrɛmbəl / (say trembuhl) verb (i) (trembled, trembling) 1. (of persons, the body, etc.) to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, weakness, cold, etc.; quake; quiver; shiver. 2. to be agitated with fear,… …
tremble — tremblingly, adv. /trem beuhl/, v., trembled, trembling, n. v.i. 1. to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, weakness, or cold; quake; quiver. 2. to be troubled with fear or apprehension. 3. (of things) to be… … Universalium
tremble — trem•ble [[t]ˈtrɛm bəl[/t]] v. bled, bling, n. 1) to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, or cold; quake; quiver 2) to be troubled with fear or apprehension 3) to be tremulous 4) the act of trembling 5) vet… … From formal English to slang
tremble — [trem′bəl] vi. trembled, trembling [ME tremblen < OFr trembler < VL * tremulare < L tremulus, trembling < tremere, to tremble < IE * trem (< base * ter ) > Gr tremein, to tremble] 1. to shake involuntarily from cold, fear,… … English World dictionary
Fear — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Fear >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 fear fear timidity diffidence want of confidence Sgm: N 1 apprehensiveness apprehensiveness fearfulness &c. >Adj. Sgm: N 1 solicitude solicitude anxiety care … English dictionary for students
tremble — I. intransitive verb (trembled; trembling) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French trembler, from Medieval Latin tremulare, from Latin tremulus tremulous, from tremere to tremble; akin to Greek tremein to tremble Date: 14th century 1. to… … New Collegiate Dictionary