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1 unsatiable
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2 unsatiable
◙ adj. שאינו יודע שובע* * *◙ עבוש עדוי וניאש◄ -
3 unsatiable
adj. \/ˌʌnˈseɪʃjəbl\/umettelig -
4 unsatiable
un.sa.ti.a.ble[∧ns'eiʃəbəl] adj insaciável. -
5 unsatiable
adj. onverzadigd -
6 unsatiable
adj. omättlig -
7 ненаситен
1. unsatiable(алчен) greedy, grasping, ravenous, voracious, covetous (на of)2. хим. unsaturated, non-saturated* * *ненасѝтен,прил., -на, -но, -ни 1. unsatiable; ( алчен) greedy, grasping, ravenous, rapacious, voracious, gluttonous; covetous (на of); esurient; шег. edacious; той е \ненаситенен he is greedy, etc.; he never thinks he’s had enough;2. хим. unsaturated, nonsaturated.* * *avid; covetous; grasping{`gra;spiN}; greedy: I've never seen such a ненаситен man. - Никога не съм виждала толкова ненаситен човек.; insatiable; rapacious{rx`peiSxs}; ravenous; voracious* * *1. (алчен) greedy, grasping, ravenous, voracious, covetous (на of) 2. unsatiable 3. той е НЕНАСИТЕН he is greedy, etc.;he never thinks he's had enough 4. хим. unsaturated, non-saturated -
8 неутолимый
unquenchable, unappeasable; insatiable перен.* * ** * *unquenchable, unappeasable; insatiable перен.* * *unassuageableunquenchable -
9 inappagabile
inappagabile agg. insatiable, unsatisfiable, unappeasable: un desiderio inappagabile, an unsatiable desire. -
10 κορέννυμι
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `satiate, fill, be satiated' (ep. Ion.).Other forms: - μαι (Them., Orph.), κορέω, κορέσκω (Nic.), κορίσκομαι (Hp.), aor. κορέσ(σ)αι, - ασθαι (Il.), pass. κορεσθῆναι (Od.), perf. ptc. Act. (intr.) κεκορηώς (Od.), ind. midd. κεκόρημαι (Il.), κεκόρεσμαι (X.), fut. κορέω (Il.), κορέσω (Hdt.),Compounds: Rarely with ὑπερ- (Thgn., Poll.), ἀπο- (Gloss.). As 2. member in ἄ-κορος `unsatiable, untiring' (Pi.) with ἀκορία `unsatiated condition, moderation' (Hp.), `unsatiability' (Aret.). διά-, κατά-, πρόσ-, ὑπέρ-κορος `satiated etc.' (IA.); also as σ-stam and with verbal redefinition (Schwyzer 513) ἀ-, δια-, προσ- κορής with προσ-κορίζομαι `vex, annoy' (sch.). As privative also ἀ-κόρη-τος (Il.), ἀ-κόρε(σ)-τος (trag.). - Quite uncertain Αἰγι-κορεῖς pl. m. with Αἰγικορίς f. name of one of the old Ionic phylai (E., inscr.; cf. Hdt. 5, 66), s. Nilsson Cults 147 and Frisk ibd.Derivatives: Wiht lengthened grade κώρα ὕβρις H. (v. Blumenthal Hesychst. with Lobeck). To κόρος ( κοῦρος, κῶρος) `youth' and κόρη `young girl' s. esp. κόρος m. `satiaty, be satiated, surfeit, insolence' (Il.);Origin: IE [Indo-European] [577] *ḱerh₁- `fodder, (let) grow'Etymology: The starting point of the whole paradigm is clearly the aorist κορέσαι, - ασθαι, to which the other forms were successively added: pass. κορε-σ-θῆναι (Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 406), perf. κεκόρημαι, - εσμαι (Schwyzer 773), fut. κορέω, - έσω, lastly also the different, sparsely attested presents κορίσκομαι, κορέω, - έσκω, - έννυμι. The verb was prob. orig. because of the perfective aspect limited to the aorist; for an old present *κόρνυμι (Schwyzer 697; as στόρνυμι) there is no support. - The ο-vowel, which is found also in στορέσαι, with the same building, and in θορεῖν, μολεῖν, πορεῖν, is not convincingly explained (attempts in Schwyzer 360f. and Sánchez Ruipérez Emerita 18, 386ff.); with the disyllabic κορέ-σαι agrees elsewhere acute Lith. šér-ti `fodder' (from *ḱerh₁-), with which one connected the old s-stem in Lat. Cerēs `goddess of the growth of plants', and also Arm. ser `origin, gender, offspring' (IE. *ḱéros n. transformed to an o-stem). - The other forms, e. g. Lat. creō `create', crēscō `grow', Arm. sermn `seed', Alb. thjer `acorn', prop. "fodder" (Pok. 577, W.-Hofmann and Ernout-Meillet s. Cerēs, creō), are unimportant for Greek. - With the meanings `satiate, fodder, let grow', cf. the similar meanings of Lat. alō.Page in Frisk: 1,918-919Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κορέννυμι
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11 Έρυσίχθων
Έρυσίχθων, -ονοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: 1. Thessalian, son of Myrmidon or Triopas, because of his destruction of a wood sacred to Demeter punished by the goddess with an unsatiable hunger (Hellanik. ap. Ath. 416b, Call. Cer. 33ff.); by Strat. Com. 1, 19 (Ath. 382d) used as a travesty as name of an animal, prob. a swine (an ox?), because of his voracity or his destructive disposition. 2. Athenian, son of Kekrops and Agraulos (Pl. Kriti. 111a).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: For the formation cf. ἐρυσί-πτολις `town protecting' (Ζ 305 a. e.). A later time, that wanted to connect the name better with the deeds of its owner, changed it to, connecting ἐρύω `draw, pull', "earth-puller", a name, that does not fit well with the destruction of the wood; Έρυσίχθων is then described by Lykophr. 1396 as γατομῶν. - Schulze Q. 318 (s. also KZ 55, 112 n. 2) took ἐρυσίχθων as "grub the earth" and connected Lat. ruō `grub', OCS rъvǫ `pull out' etc. (Pok. 868); cf also ῥυτοῖσι λάεσσι [Od.], which belongs rather to ἐρύω `draw'; s. v.); this would not fit the place in Straton. - Cf. v. Wilamowitz Hellen. Dichtung 2, 40f. No doubt a Pre-Greek name that has nothing to do with χθών.Page in Frisk: 1,570-571Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Έρυσίχθων
См. также в других словарях:
Unsatiable — Un*sa ti*a*ble, a. Insatiable. [Obs.] Hooker. {Un*sa ti*a*ble*ness}, n. [Obs.] {Un*sa ti*a*bly}, adv. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
unsatiable — (adj.) late 14c., from UN (Cf. un ) (1) not + SATIABLE (Cf. satiable). Since 17c. the usual form is INSATIABLE (Cf. insatiable) … Etymology dictionary
unsatiable — [spelling only] … English World dictionary
unsatiable — adjective impossible to satisfy an insatiate appetite an insatiable demand for old buildings to restore his passion for work was unsatiable • Syn: ↑insatiate, ↑insatiable • Ant: ↑satiate ( … Useful english dictionary
unsatiable — adj.; unsatiableness, n.; unsatiably, adv. * * * … Universalium
unsatiable — adj. not able to be satiated, unsatisfiable … English contemporary dictionary
unsatiable — un·satiable … English syllables
Unsatiableness — Unsatiable Un*sa ti*a*ble, a. Insatiable. [Obs.] Hooker. {Un*sa ti*a*ble*ness}, n. [Obs.] {Un*sa ti*a*bly}, adv. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Unsatiably — Unsatiable Un*sa ti*a*ble, a. Insatiable. [Obs.] Hooker. {Un*sa ti*a*ble*ness}, n. [Obs.] {Un*sa ti*a*bly}, adv. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Unsatiability — Un*sa ti*a*bil i*ty, n. Quality of being unsatiable; insatiability. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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