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1 μεθίστημι
+ V 2-14-4-5-9=34 Dt 17,17; 30,17; Jos 14,8; JgsA 7,5; 9,29A: to change, to turn away [τι] Jos 14,8; to remove [τι] 2 Kgs 3,2; to turn away from [τί τινος] Is 59,15; id. [τι ἀπό τινος] Am 5,23; to remove, to take apart [τινα] Jgs 9,29; to remove, to banish [τινα] JgsA 10,16; to set free from, to remove from [τινά τινος] 1 Kgs 15,13; to deprive sb of sth [τινά τινος] 3 Mc 6,24M: to stand by, to stand aside 1 Kgs 18,29; to change, to turn away Dt 17,17; to turn aside 1 Sm 6,12; to depart Is 54,10; to pass over to [εἴς τινα] 2 Mc 11,23ἕως οὗ μετέστησεν κύριος τὸν Ισραηλ ἀπὸ προσώπου αὐτοῦ until the Lord removed Israel from his presence or out of his sight 2 Kgs 17,23; τοὺς δὲ ἀντιλέγοντας βίᾳ φερομένους τοῦ ζῆν μεταστῆσαι in order to put to death those who resisted once they had been ap-prehended by force 3 Mc 2,28; ἐλέησον ἡμᾶς τοὺς ἐκ τοῦ ζῆν μεθισταμένους have mercy upon us who are being withdrawn from life, have mercy upon us who are about to be killedor to die 3 Mc 6,12; μεταστῆσαι αὐτὸν τῆς χρείας to deprive him of his office, to dismiss him 1 Mc 11,63*2 Kgs 23,33 μετέστησεν he removed (him)-הסיר for MT יאסר he bound, he confined (him)Cf. DOGNIEZ 1992 226(Dt 17,17); HELBING 1928, 165 -
2 λοξός
A slanting, crosswise, Hp.Off.11; λοξή (sc. γραμμή), ἡ, a cross-line, E.Fr.382.9; λοξὰ βαίνειν, of a crab, Babr.109.1;λ. ὄφις Call.Epigr.26
; ὁ λ. κύκλος the ecliptic, Arist.Metaph. 1071a16, Cleanth.Stoic.1.112, Arat.527, Gem.5.51, Cleom.1.4, Ptol.Alm.1.8 (withoutκύκλος Plot.5.8.7
); of the milky way, Gem.5.68;τῶν ἀστέρων λ. γίνεται φορά Arist.Mete. 342a27
;λ. δρόμος Diog.Oen.8
;λ. πορείας σχῆμα Plu.Phoc.2
; λ. φάλαγξ, a phalanx of which one wing is in advance of the other, Ascl.Tact.10.1, Onos.21.8, Ael.Tact.30.3; λ. ζῴδια, i.e. λοξῶς ἀνατέλλοντα, Heph.Astr.3.1; οἱ λ. μύες the oblique abdominal muscles, Gal.2.518, al.; λ. τῇ θέσει πρός τι at an acute angle to it, Thphr.Sens.73, cf. Arist.Mu. 393b15. Adv. -ξῶς, τὰ λοξὰ [ἐπιδεῖν] Hp.l.c.2 of suspicious looks, λοξὸν ὄμμασιν βλέπειν τινά look askance at one, Anacr.75.1;λοξὸν ὀφθαλμοῖς ὁρᾶν Sol.34
;ὄμμασι λοξὰ βλέποισα Theoc.20.13
;λοξῷ ὄμματι ἰδεῖν A.R.4.475
; οὔπω Ζεὺς αὐχένα λοξὸν ἔχει Zeus has not yet turned his neck aside, i.e. withdrawn his favour, Tyrt.11.2; but αὐχένα λοξὸν ἔχει, of a slave, as type of dishonesty, Thgn.536: hence metaph., mistrustful, suspicious, in Adv. [comp] Comp. - ότερον, ἔχειν πρός τινα Plb.4.86.8
.3 of language, indirect, ambiguous, esp. of oracles, Lyc.14, 1467, Luc. Alex.10; λοξὰ ἀποκρίνασθαι Id.D Deor.16.1; ἐν τοῖς χρησμοῖς λ., of Apollo, Id.JTr.28. (Cf. λέχριος.) -
3 προανταναιρέομαι
A to be removed, withdrawn previously, PTeb.61 (b).219,72.147(ii B.C.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > προανταναιρέομαι
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4 ἀλλοτριόω
A estrange from: c. gen., deprive, ; τοὺς ἠλλοτριωκότας ἑαυτοὺς ἀπὸ τῆς λῃτουργίας those who have withdrawn themselves from.., D.51.17.2 c. dat. pers., make hostile to another,τὴν χώραν τοῖς πολεμίοις X.Cyr.6.1.16
:—[voice] Pass., become estranged, be made enemy,τινί Th.8.73
;πρὸς τὴν αἴρεσιν Vit.Philonid.p.12C.
; πρός τι to be prejudiced against thing, D.H.Th.27; disguise oneself from, Ge. 42.7; πρὸς τὰ καίοντα to be inaccessible to cautery, Antyll. ap. Orib.10.22.4.4 [voice] Pass., to be alienated from one's natural condition, Pl.Ti. 64e.5 [voice] Pass., also of things, to be alienated, fall into other hands,ἀλλοτριοῦται ἡ ἀρχή Hdt.1.120
, cf. D.18.88.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀλλοτριόω
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5 ἀπολίτευτος
II not fitted for public affairs, unstatesmanlike, Plu.Mar.31; ὑπατεία, λόγοι, Id.Crass. 12, 2.1034b.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀπολίτευτος
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6 ὑποσπάω
A draw away from under,στρώματα D.24.197
;τὰ σκολύθριά τινων ὑ. Pl.Euthd. 278b
; ; ὑ. τινὰ ἐκ τῶν ποδῶν, i. e. trip him up, Luc.Asin.44, cf. Plu.2.535f.2 draw off,τὴν ὑποστάθμην Protagorid.4
;τὸ πῦρ Dsc.1.30
; ὑ. τῆς ποσότητος τοῦ γάλακτος reduce the baby's ration of milk, Sor.1.116.II metaph., withdraw secretly. filch away, ; ὑπέσπασεν φυγῇ πόδα withdrew his foot secretly, stole away, Id.Ba. 436:—[voice] Med. ὑποσπάσασθαι in X.Eq.7.8 is (prob.) to draw one's skirts from under one, of a horseman after mounting:—[voice] Pass., to be withdrawn, Arist.Somn.Vig. 457b24.2 εἰπεῖν ὑ. refuse to say, Phld.Lib.p.23 O.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὑποσπάω
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7 ἄλοξ
ἄλοξ, - κοςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `furrow' (Trag., Com.).Other forms: Also αὖλαξ (Hes.), ὦλκα, - ας acc. sg., pl. (Hom.), Dor. ὦλαξ EM 625, 37and in ὁμ-ώλακες (A. R. 2, 396). Further εὑλάκᾱ `plough' with the Lacon. fut. inf. εὑλαξεῖν (Orac. ap. Th. 5, 16); and αὑλάχα ἡ ὕννις H. and *ὄλοκες (cod. ὀλοκεύς) αὔλακες H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The relation between these forms was unclear. Solmsen Unt. 258ff. explained ὦλκα from *ἄϜολκα ( κατὰ ὦλκα Ν 707 for original *κατ' ἄϜολκα); it is strange that this form did not live on. Beside *ἀ-Ϝολκ- the zero grade would give *ἀ-Ϝλακ- in αὖλαξ. The root was supposed in Lith. velkù, OCS vlěkǫ, Av. varǝk- `draw'; one could assume * h₂uelk-. This is tempting, but must not be correct. If the Balto-Slavic words are isolated (there is further only Av. vǝrǝc-), the verb may be non-IE; also it is rather * uelkʷ-, which makes the connection with Greek impossible; further there is no trace of the verb in Greek, which has ἔλκω \< *selk-. εὑλάκα can no longer be explained from different prothesis, *ἐ-Ϝλακ-. But ἄλοξ cannot be explained in this way: metathesis of *αϜολκ- would give *αυλοκ-; an after the F had disappeared, metathesis was no longer possible (only contraction to *ωλκ-). - I see no reason to reject ὀλοκ-. ὦλαξ was perhaps taken from a compound, like ὁμώλακ-, which would give *ολακ-. - Pisani JF 53, 29 derived αὖλαξ from αὑλός and separated it from ἄλοξ etc., which is improbable. - The variants are strongly reminiscent of substr. words, as Beekes Dev. 40 held (withdrawn ib. 275-7). Variation of prothetic ε\/α\/ο\/αυ\/ευ is typical of substr. words, as is κ\/χ ( αὐλάχα). So more probably we have to assume a substr. word. The start with the Homeric form was wrong: it is the only form that has no vowel between λ and κ, and is therefore suspect. If we assume labialised phonemes, like lʷ, a reconstruction * alʷak- gives all forms: αὖλαξ (by anticipation of the labial feature; which gives ὦλαξ by contraction), ἄλοξ (influence on the second vowel ; ὀλοκ- on both vowels), interchange α\/ε gave εὐλακ-; see Beekes Pre-Gr., and cf. ἀρασχάδες etc. Homer might have had *κατ' ὠλακ(α), which became unclear during the tradition.Page in Frisk: 1,77Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἄλοξ
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8 βλένᾰ
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `mucous discharge, μύξα' (Hp.).Other forms: βλέννος n. (Arist.). πλένναι μύξαι H.; βλένα μύξα. οἱ δε δία τοῦ π πλένα καὶ πλέννα τὰ ἀσθενῆ καὶ δυσκίνητα H.; πλεννεραί = μυξώδεις (Hp. ap. Gal. 19, 131). ( πληνώδης ἁσθενης H. perh. to be read πλεν(ν)-, Fur. 144).Derivatives: βλεννώδης `slimy, mucous' (Hp.). Also βλεν(ν)ός `id., idiot' (Epich.); with regularly withdrawn accent βλέννος m. a fish (Sophr., H. as explanation of σιαλίς), s. Strömberg 29, Grilli Studi itfilcla. 33 (1961)201f.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The gemination can be expressive (Meillet BSL 26, 15f.). βλέννος can go back on *μλεδ-σ-νος (Schwyzer 322, Lejeune Traité de phon. 105; diff. Specht KZ 62, 213f.) connecting Skt. ū́rṇa-mradas- `soft as wool' (= Gr. *-βλεδής), pres. mr̥dnāti, mardati, also ( vi)- mradati (\< *- mled-eti) `soften' (to mr̥dú- `soft'). Cf. further MIr. blind `slime from the mouth of a dead man', Pok. 718. DELG: "pour le sens ces rapprochements ne s'imosent pas". Frisk: "Der sehr beschränkte Wert dieser Kombinationen liegt indessen auf der Hand." - As Fur. 144 points out, the variations π\/β, νν\/ν prove a Pre-Gr. word. If the -α is short, π\/ βλενα cannot be IE\/Gr, whereas this ending is frequent in Pre-Greek. - The words still exists in Mod. Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,242-243Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βλένᾰ
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9 βλέννᾰ
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `mucous discharge, μύξα' (Hp.).Other forms: βλέννος n. (Arist.). πλένναι μύξαι H.; βλένα μύξα. οἱ δε δία τοῦ π πλένα καὶ πλέννα τὰ ἀσθενῆ καὶ δυσκίνητα H.; πλεννεραί = μυξώδεις (Hp. ap. Gal. 19, 131). ( πληνώδης ἁσθενης H. perh. to be read πλεν(ν)-, Fur. 144).Derivatives: βλεννώδης `slimy, mucous' (Hp.). Also βλεν(ν)ός `id., idiot' (Epich.); with regularly withdrawn accent βλέννος m. a fish (Sophr., H. as explanation of σιαλίς), s. Strömberg 29, Grilli Studi itfilcla. 33 (1961)201f.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: The gemination can be expressive (Meillet BSL 26, 15f.). βλέννος can go back on *μλεδ-σ-νος (Schwyzer 322, Lejeune Traité de phon. 105; diff. Specht KZ 62, 213f.) connecting Skt. ū́rṇa-mradas- `soft as wool' (= Gr. *-βλεδής), pres. mr̥dnāti, mardati, also ( vi)- mradati (\< *- mled-eti) `soften' (to mr̥dú- `soft'). Cf. further MIr. blind `slime from the mouth of a dead man', Pok. 718. DELG: "pour le sens ces rapprochements ne s'imosent pas". Frisk: "Der sehr beschränkte Wert dieser Kombinationen liegt indessen auf der Hand." - As Fur. 144 points out, the variations π\/β, νν\/ν prove a Pre-Gr. word. If the -α is short, π\/ βλενα cannot be IE\/Gr, whereas this ending is frequent in Pre-Greek. - The words still exists in Mod. Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,242-243Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βλέννᾰ
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10 γλυκύς
Grammatical information: adj.Derivatives: γλύκων individualising (Ar. Ek. 985), also PN, with Γλυκώνειος (Heph.); γλυκόεις (Nic.); diminutives: γλυκάδιον `sweetmeat, vinegar' (Choerob.; for the meaning cf. ἦδος = ὄξος), γλυκίδιον (pap.). - γλυκίν(ν)ᾱς m. `cake made with sweet wine' (Seleuk. ap. Ath., Cretan H.). - γλυκύτης (Hdt.). - Denom. γλυκαίνω (Hp.), γλύκυσμα (Lib., Sch.), mit γλύκανσις (Thphr.), γλυκαντικός (S.); γλυκάζω (LXX) etc.; γλυκασία `family-love' ( Sammelb.); γλυκίζω (Pagae, Gp.), γλυκισμός (Callix.); ἐγ-γλύσσω `be sweet' (Hdt. ἔγγλυκυς Dsc.; γλύξις `sweet wine' (Phryn. Com.); γλεῦξις οἶνος ἕψημα \< ἔχων\> H., cf. γλεῦκος. - Also γλυκερός (Od.), f. (with withdrawn accent) Γλυκέρα as PN, with Γλυκέριον. - With geminate: γλυκκόν γλυκύ and γλύκκα ἡ γλυκύτης H. - Plant name γλύκη βοτάνη τις ἐδώδιμος H. and (strange) γλυκυμή = γλυκύρριζα (Hp. ap. Gal.), cf. Strömberg Pflanzennamen 63. - γλεῦκος n. `sweet wine' (Arist.), γλεύκινος (Dsc.), γλευκίτης ( οἶνος) = γλεῦκος (Arist.-Komm.); γλευκήσας `stunned by γ.' (H.); also γλεύκη = γλυκύτης (Sch.) and γλεῦξις, s. γλύξις above.Etymology: If to Lat. dulcis, with γλ- \< δλ-. But the υ is also unexpected. The Mycenaean form seems to confirm the idea.- On arm. k` aɫcr `sweet' s. on ἡδύς. - Full grade γλεῦκος seems a late innovation (after the many neutral σ-stems) but ἀγλευκής (Epich.) seems old.Page in Frisk: 1,314-315Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γλυκύς
См. также в других словарях:
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withdrawn — index inarticulate, null (invalid), null and void, taciturn, unapproachable Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
withdrawn — (withdraw) with drawn || wɪð drÉ”Ën ,wɪθ v. pull back; remove from; take money from the bank; take back; retire; depart; remove; take out with drawn || wɪð drÉ”Ën ,wɪθ adj. reserved, introverted; aloof, recluse; taken back, recalled… … English contemporary dictionary
withdrawn — past participle of WITHDRAW(Cf. ↑withdraw). ► ADJECTIVE ▪ unusually shy or reserved … English terms dictionary
withdrawn — [withdrôn′, withdrôn′] vt., vi. pp. of WITHDRAW adj. withdrawing within oneself; shy, reserved, introverted, etc … English World dictionary
withdrawn — withdrawn1 [ wıð drɔn ] adjective very quiet and preferring not talk to other people: After his mother s death he became shy and withdrawn. withdrawn withdrawn 2 the past participle of withdraw … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
withdrawn — [[t]wɪðdrɔ͟ːn[/t]] 1) Withdrawn is the past participle of withdraw. 2) ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ Someone who is withdrawn is very quiet, and does not want to talk to other people. Her husband had become withdrawn and moody. Syn: introverted … English dictionary
withdrawn — (Scratched) A horse that is withdrawn (or scratched) from a race before the start. Horses can be withdrawn due to adverse track conditions or because of illness or injury … Equestrian sports dictionary
Withdrawn — Withdraw With*draw (w[i^][th]*dr[add] ), v. t. [imp. {Withdrew} ( dr[udd] ); p. p. {Withdrawn} ( dr[add]n ); p. pr. & vb. n. {Withdrawing}.] [With against + draw.] 1. To take back or away, as what has been bestowed or enjoyed; to draw back; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
withdrawn — adjective Date: 1615 1. removed from immediate contact or easy approach ; isolated 2. socially detached and unresponsive ; exhibiting withdrawal ; introverted < a shy and withdrawn child > • withdrawnness noun … New Collegiate Dictionary
withdrawn — with|drawn [wıðˈdro:n, wıθ US ˈdro:n] adj very shy and quiet, and concerned only about your own thoughts ▪ After his wife s death he became more and more withdrawn … Dictionary of contemporary English