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1 ἀναχάζω
A make to recoil, force back, found only in poet. [tense] aor. 1, οὐδ' ἀνέχασσαν prob. in Pi.N.10.69.II mostly as [voice] Pass., [full] ἀναχάζομαι, [dialect] Ep. [tense] aor. ἀνεχασσάμην:—draw back, freq. in Il. of warriors, , cf. 15.728, 16.819, 17.47, etc.; ἀναχασσάμενος νῆχον πάλιν giving way to the wave, Od.7.280: c. gen.,ἀ. ἠπείροιο
draw back from..,A.R.
4.1241; ἐπὶ πόδα ἀναχάζεσθαι retire slowly, of soldiers, X.Cyr.7.1.34:—[voice] Act. in sense of [voice] Pass., Id.An.4.1.16.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀναχάζω
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2 ἀναδύομαι
ἀνα - δύομαι, ἀνδύομαι ( δύω), aor. 2 ἀνέδῦν, opt. ἀναδύη (vulg., - δύῃ), inf. ἀναδῦναι, mid. aor. ἀνεδύσετο: (1) emerge; ἁλός, ‘from the sea,’ Il. 1.359, λίμνης, Od. 5.337; with acc., κῦμα θαλάσσης, ‘arose to the wave,’ surface, Il. 1.496.— (2) draw back; abs., Od. 9.377, ἐς ὅμῖλον, Il. 7.217; trans., πόλεμον, ‘back out of,’ Il. 13.225.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > ἀναδύομαι
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3 ἀνδύομαι
ἀνα - δύομαι, ἀνδύομαι ( δύω), aor. 2 ἀνέδῦν, opt. ἀναδύη (vulg., - δύῃ), inf. ἀναδῦναι, mid. aor. ἀνεδύσετο: (1) emerge; ἁλός, ‘from the sea,’ Il. 1.359, λίμνης, Od. 5.337; with acc., κῦμα θαλάσσης, ‘arose to the wave,’ surface, Il. 1.496.— (2) draw back; abs., Od. 9.377, ἐς ὅμῖλον, Il. 7.217; trans., πόλεμον, ‘back out of,’ Il. 13.225.A Homeric dictionary (Greek-English) (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ομηρικό λεξικό) > ἀνδύομαι
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4 παλιρρόθιος
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > παλιρρόθιος
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5 ἀνασείω
Aἀνασσείασκε h.Ap. 403
:— shake back,ἀνασείοντά τε κόμας E.Ba. 240
; swing to and fro, brandish, ; ἀ. τὰς χεῖρας wave the hands, Th.4.38;ἀ. φοινικίδας Lys.6.51
.3 shake out,ὑδρίαν IG2.104a36
(iv B. C.); πάντα κάλων shake out every reef, Ph. 1.327, al.;ἀ. τὰ ἱστία Philostr.VA6.12
, cf. VS2.32;πάσας τὰς ἡνίας Poll.1.214
;τὴν χλαμύδα Philostr.Im.1.6
.II stir up,τὰ πλήθη Phld.Rh.2.290
S., cf. D.H.8.81, D.S.13.91, Ev.Marc.15.11, Ev.Luc. 23.5:—[voice] Pass., to be incited, encouraged, c. inf., PTeb.28.20 (ii B. C.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀνασείω
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6 ἔγκλισις
A inclination, ἔ. λαβεῖν, of the earth, D.L.2.9, cf. Pl.Amat. 132b; of the ecliptic ([etym.] ὁ λοξὸς κύκλος), Arist.GC 336b4; of ground,ἔ. ἔχειν πρὸς ἕω Id.Pol. 1330a39
;εἰς νότον Porph.Antr. 26
;ἐγκλίσεις τῆς κεφαλῆς εἰς τὰ δεξιά Arist.Phgn. 808a13
;ἐ. σχημάτων τριγώνων Onos.10.28
(pl.); ἐ. δορατίου, in signalling, Id.26.1.3 Medic., displacement, Hp.Fract.39 (pl.): generally, ὄγκων cj. in Epicur.Ep.1p.14U.5 failure, defeat, PMag.Par.1.2445.II in Gramm.,3 inflexion, Simp.in Cat.65.8, Dexipp.in Cat.33.8: generally, of derivative forms, Simp.in Cat.37.11.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἔγκλισις
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7 ῥόθος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `the roar of the waves, of the oars', metaph. `noise' in gen. (Hes., A. Opp.); `path, trail' (Nic., after Plu. in Hes. 13 Boeot.).Other forms: S. below.Compounds: Often as 2. member, e.g. ἁλί-ρροθος `roared around by the sea' (trag., Mosch.), ταχύ-ρροθοι λόγοι `quickly rushing words' (A.); παλι-ρρόθιος `rushing back' (Od., hell. epic). On ἐπίρροθος s. v.Derivatives: ῥόθιος, f. - ιάς `roaring, clamorous' (ep. ε 412, also late prose), mostly - ιον, - ια n. sg. a. pl. `roaring wave(s), breaking(s), high-tide, loud stroke of the oar', metaph. `noise, bluster, rush' (poet. Pi., trag. [mostly in lyr.], also late prose). -- To ῥόθος, prob. as denom. (cf. Schwyzer 726), ῥοθέω, also w. ἐπι-, δια-, `to roar, to clamour' (A., S.); ὁμο-, κακο-ρροθέω = ὁμο-, κακο-λογέω (Hp., S., E., Ar.); from ῥόθιον: ῥοθι-άζω `to make a rushing sound (with the oar)' (com.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Expressive word without agreement outside Greek. The comparison (Fick 2, 318) with Celt. words for `liquidity, stream', OCorn. stret gl. `latex', MCorn. streyth `stream' is semant. noncommittal and also phonetically not quite comvincing because of the final dentals (Celt. t = IE t, Gr. θ = IE dh). The connection of Germ. OHG stredan `seethe, whirl, boil' (J. Schmidt Voc. 2, 282 f.) has the same phonetical weaknesses. Further forms (also from Slav.) in Bq and WP. 2, 704f., Pok. 1001 f., where also on the analysis (Persson Stud. 46, 165) in sr-edh- (to ser- `stream'; s. ὁρμή). Cf. also W.-Hofmann s. fretum and verū. -- On ῥάθαγος s. ῥαθαπυγίζω. -- Cf. the gloss ῥάθαγος = ῥόθος sch. Nic. Th. 194, H. and ῥαθα- = ῥοθο-πυγίζω suggests that it is a Pre-Greek word (with variation).Page in Frisk: 2,661Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ῥόθος
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