, i : a. » <=) SO en es sant Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2006 with funding from Microsoft Corporation htto://www.archive.org/details/greekenglishlexOOliddrich —— “A om a 7 a _— : oS * a x . an oo —— . ae oe + : tae _ or a = = “ ae a : — e ; os a -_ a as = ee * - <, = ie ae i. } 7 ie ro eae an nA = - yan ee ae A a ad a a a — a = rao a2 9 e COMPILED BY HENRY GEORGE LIDDELL, DD. a ‘ eae OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD, AND ee eG atee ROBERT SCOTT, 'D,D. > eam DEAN\OF ROCHESTER, LATE MASTER OF BALLIOL COLLEGE, OXFORD. a. ” i re ae Ls Sebeith Coition, Bebised and Augmented throughout ‘ é | es WITHTHE COOPERATION OF PROFESSOR DRISLER, — _ amo: - BE. ‘S. OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE, NEW YORK, : be ay } af ” ; ‘ aes i mt i ’ ol NEW “YORK: | a ei BRORHERS, FRANKLIN- SQUARE. : 1883. i nh = 3 Pek. Rie vist Sao » ay aS oa ae os t. . oe Ated ito. be be based/on the ne nfBdition (1855) it was © : be—-assuted| not from a our obligations to that Scholar, pee would aver have been compiled, “any wish to. disown or conc base to work upon, our o in some cases especially to this work, and have to thang him for the great assistance we ha “ constantly derived from his Jabours. st SE In this, the Seventh Edition, the last that we can bps to seé published, the whole wi dd been thoroughly revised, and large additions made. But by compresdi ion, and a slight enlargemer of the page, the bulk of th¢ volume has been reduced by ninety fages, The additions co mainly of fuller references |to the classical authiors/and a free use of the Judices to the Ber ng % Aristotle and to the Co: Luscriptionum Grage anum. ; - eis \/ We have gratefully to acknowledge the assistance vendleig us by many schalane Mota ‘ee particularly must we me tion the names ‘ Professors Driges, of New York; Goodwin, : Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Gildersleeve) of Baltimore, Professors Goodwin and Gilde sleeve have rewritten sevéral important Afti¢les, which their well-known Grammatical lears makes peculiarly valuabl¢; we may specify the Articles on ay, el, énel, Zore, ta, nus, & ov, #4, and aply: the fotmer has also supplied some excellent additions to Attic law-term such aS ypappare’s, napaypady}, cbvdixos, IBgis, drwporta Professor Drisler has gone carefull ; over the whole Book, and there is hatdly a~page which do eect bear some trace of ak accurate observation. f tit en 2 Dee yh E 7 Scher Hie of the ‘veork, it will be found that im Verba, the In the Arrang ‘come first; then Etymologi~ sody, inclosed in square by, In Nouns, the Etymol¢: eal . then the Interpretation of the word, Marks have been generally left at the end of the w , fatbs will be pe under the Simple forms, € Compound Verb itself | 18 anything peculiar. Adverbs must be|sougi e end of their Adjectives. ; . The sciengas of Gompakative Philology , s made such fapid progress since the : we had adopted for our textbook the fa Luymologische Foagey 0 A. F. Pott,—that if was necessary entirely to, af : so we availed ourselves of the Grundziigh * Pace Px om: © “a: Ghee tnitted the name of SCHNEIDER from 4i2¢ Title-pace. xeorg Curtius, an excellent summary of the most approved results 4 the relations of the Greek language to Sanskrit *, Latin, Gothic, Old ithuanian, the Ecclesiastical Slavonic, and other cognate languages. We results in a compendious form, and have now, to save space, omitted special untius’ hook : this work has copious een and be English translation by . Many Proper Names, however, appear in their places. Under some et ‘ete. a short account of their mythological bearings has been retained, eny ung Student in reading Homer. Others are given which have in themselves me | ignificance, or present something remarkable in their grammatical forms, e. g. Ayané ‘Np Aijs, Ponds: It may be observed ihe the proper) names of the mytholog' traced elsewhet In all these ult to draw a line between what is essential to general Lexicography ané ! e have done this to the best of our judgment; and if the line waves more or ‘must shelter ourselves under the plea that it could hardly be otherwise. 7 We subjoin an _ when the reference is, nargin; and, by compe rit ture prefixed to the Cy t uc and of its subsequent chap of a word does not wholly been lost; secondly, a word peter of Attic Greek, may'D ' atglogue of Authors quoted, with a note of the Edition used, Pagts. The date of each authdr’s ‘floruit’ is added in the ith the short summary of the chief Epochs of Greek Litera- ; t will be easy to determine the time of a word’s first use, ) signification. It will be understood, however, that the age that of its Author. For, first, many Greek books have et first occurring in Lucian, Alciphron, or later imi- red as virtually older than those found in the vernacular r, the Language changed differently in different places Demosthenes and Aristotle, whom we have been compelled even at the same place, as at Athens, there were naturally sng , the other fond of what was new. The Greek of Thucy- des and Cys may be compared bir i illustration of this remark. “We may add that, though the . term ‘flourished * is vague, it is yet the Y only one available, if we wish to observe the influence of eny ‘particular Writer on Language and Litctaiure., The dates have generally been assigned with reference to some notable event ia ce dife of the Writer: and this is specified in the case of the most eminent persons. In many, however, no specific note of time can be found; and here a date has been taken, as neatly as ie a be fixed, so as to give the age of 30 or 35. We Zz} “have. in these matters been chiefly gue by Mr, \Fynes Clintcn’s Fasti Hellenici, and r. Smith’s Biographical Distionesy, aye réhe same times as in the. bata in different pots. | 7, ¥ & = £ y | 4 * Sanskrit words have ben written in English chee atic té ch and 7; the ae being to isa to the acters according toy the ¥stém adopted in Professor of the -reader the real affinity which exists between Williams’ Sanskrit Grammar;—except that # and ge ¢ in Airk ad. chiiy ch), 1 and A (as in get and have been a as the i ae of @ and ¥, in pre- rans listandgng a to the ear. The Early Epic Period, olesaatng the Ifiad and Odyssey, the Homeric Fibre and ‘the Poems of Hesiod. L fea ; IL From about 800 to 530 A.C., in which iterature flourished chiefly in Asia Minor and the Islands : the Pe: of the early "Lyric, Elegiac, and Iambic Poets, we Ill. From 530 to 510 A.C., the Age of Pei cate, etc. ; the beginning of Tragedy at Athens: early Histori IV. From 510 to 470 A. C., the Age of ra Mepoixd, in which the Greek Tiagic Poets began to exhibit, and Si brought Lyric Poetry to perfectien. V. From 470 to 431 A.C., the Age of A for Supremacy : perfection of Tragedy; regular Eis, Toaky of Peas and Hippocrates, Attic ‘(probably) of Antip! VIL.. From 431 to 403 A.C., the Age of the Peloponnesian War: perfection of the Old Comedy: er ‘ Speeches, Thucydides, etc, VII. From 403 to about 336 A. C., the Age of Spartan and Theban Supremacy, and of Philip: Middle Lysias, Plato, and Xenophon : fection of Oratory, Demosthenes, etc. VII. From about 336 A.C. to the Roman Times: (1) Macedonian Age: Prose of Aristotle and Théoph s: New Comedy, (2) Alexandrian Age: later 1. and Elegiac writers, Callimachus, Theocritus, me ik. Rhodius, ete, sate 3 Poets, Critics, etc. TX. Roman Age: Epigrammatic Poets, the revived Atticism of Lucian,’ pe Sophists, ete. / / Pi y mie } h Il. LIST OF Ps Rea WITH THE EDITIONS REFERRED TO. i Floruit circa : sit Ae Puen Achaeus Eretrieus, Tragicus ...,....2..... mice ge hig vecsres(Aged 40) | "444 Lesa Achilles Tatius, Scriptor Eroticus (an imitator of Heliodoms) .. Ne = 500? . , gona Oneirooritica.) Ed, "Rignlts* sks csincseces des cosh, Sate in af o eek etuarius, Joannes, Medicus. In Tdelers Physici Gr. Minores re te e, Sf Ego 6 Acusilaiis, Aoyoypapos. In Miiller’s Fragm. Historicorum .......... Be ee $752? |} = Adamantius, ere Lota tobe apRaVeRe Nas [iaaveswe peaiies sus sgubdsuh tue styedeay tows Qabtule ners ssc consanttates paamnuad _ 415 ist. Naturalis . 9 3 Aclianus, Rhetor, NEA TEN: ETiichcipaetid Seubbe beceths », In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4, p. 554 cos treses resetennees apo? Bs SF Alexander Tyaliamuis, Medicus} \..,.52.ccecvnsseevesecetereeusgeons sted boeepteatenne Vakabes ae hs _ 57° Alexis, Comicus (Med.), In Meineke’s Com, Fragm., 3: p. 382...0lcssscsscneesenvenssernsenanse tenets 356 = Amipsias, Comicus (Vet.), In Meineke's Com. Fragm, 2. p. jor. sieves (The Kaxpacrat gains the 423 or Atmnmonius/ Grammaticus .02.5..f.biccsadacpsesseeeastderapesechenserensene Lib nedaw guava pReeaueons (At Staasashe _— 390 Ammionius, Hermene fill, Philosophts ...55..-.seessereseesceressecnsenseersesen Sak 47° Ammonius Saccas, Philosophus ave oat veebeg ae vipa pepedsibhenatk “. 220 Amphilochius, Ecclesiasticus. Hod," COMERS sac sneg eons suetanes see =" 375 Amphis, Comicus ( Med.) Be pase Com, Fragm. ay bass Sis 359 = is ¢rve Fragments collected by Berg! ye Anacreon of Teos, Lyricus. Sporious Paes, Anacreontich } ; : 549 Ananius, Iambographus. In Bergk’s LyrichGr, ee ss Lows Pagawehuyeca ve cdacbnpecsncumestubarctl aires belani ie t= aaeraet 549 os Anaxagoras, Philosophus. Ed, Schaubati\y ©. ype eereseeesceresseereeees ... (Leaves Bact aged 50) 45° aye Anaxandrides, Comicus (Med.).. In Meine) Cam. ¢ oe $- P; DOR: as s,s yorwceap is oe (Begins to exhibit) 376 — Anaxilas, Comicus o- In Meineke s tana. Pree 3 o atte Wiietics cackaly cikakgpe Teese aiberper ee 340 _ Anaximander, Philosophus ,....... hevsroadl % cesssseee (30 years old) 580 eas Anaximenes, Philosophu PET as Si, cn Vuled tape eactncc sORUdeaeeOeLanars dani at >a the teRtaETS 544 — xippus, Comicus (Nov). “Nin Meincke’s Cera, tiga ABO. es Pes See ST Ee, 303 — ‘aitoies Orator. Ine Attic’ £4 + ener Feesincs chu acos .....(Iinprisoned, at the age of 52) 45 os Andromachus, Meédicts .....).,..... FRET soci Ses 2 sia ol nad Vopacynyop opsta stoop Apoa tas 2ta daaneSenngs — 68 Andronicus 58 5 Rhos; Philosophus. .... ey ESEEEY, cosh iigetv cue nsare') (Chief of the Peripatetics at Rome) es and Pindar elleni¢ Prose of Polybius, etc.: Alexandrian Prose of Philo, ates: amubeagk ‘Then Pane, 5” * ff Ea ‘ef a } ...(Begins to exhibit) (Aged 39) Aphthonius, Rhetor ....... ; &M “ee PRD IOM, CTAMINBEICUS (05s icc igh sentadd+eaossaansicenvanshe Seed Vege eds Fe cede porotkachoo desea (Embassy to Caligula) Apollodorus (tres, Comici Nov.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 4. pp. 438, 440, 450 PERIL OCOTRES DEV EMOLOPIS. coc cerovacusschalcesacaNy ens sash cate aahcees Ganesan ina d«tUeces cyaccovereceeee gus Apollonius, Archebuli fil., Grammaticus. Lexicon Homericum Apollonius Dyscolus, Grammaticus. (De Constructione, by Sylburg’s pages. De Conjunct. et Adverd., in “eee ee vol. 2. De Pronom., in Wolf's Museum Antiquitatis. Historiae Commentitiae, Ed. UTSIUS) vievasorcceedyeardaccecsncnesescscesenveiess Gnbavetersenncnscesreseescsseensecuteseceevguasesestesnbenucsneerssseunsseasses Apollonius Pergaeus, Mathematicus Apollonius Rhodivs,"Hpicns: ...........5>.-darpoabestersvegevasectesdaylsvenavecceons Apollophanes, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 879.... Appianus, Historicus "(At the court of Egypt) Peer Ce Ret eeerrirerrerrerirrriti titi eter Ape eeeteewaenence Prrreerererirrrrr eter rere rier eet eee eee Aguila, Judaens iss cub. Secasvopaatacccayeesbetiehant Sone ea ea ...(Translator of O. T. into Greek) Araros, Comicus (Med.), In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 273 .ccsscceesceceeeessnccersrsescennceers (First exhibits) Aratus, Poéta Physicus. Ed. Bekker (in which the Avoonyea and bawdpyeva form one continuous poem)...... Arcadius, Grammaticus. Ed. Barker ..,.....c.ssscssseesnssessenstceceterveceonens Archedicus, Comicus (Noy.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm, 4. p. 435.. Archilochus Parius, Iambographus. In Bergk’s Lyrici Gr. ............. _ Archimedes, Mathematicus. From the Bale ed. ..........cecececeeceneeee ...(About 37 years of age) Archippus, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 715 ..... Be dines) ve xvtaaheney as (First prize) Archytas Tarentinus, Philosophus Aretaeus, Medicus... :.......--..ececvesseees Arethas, Ecclesiasticus ...........css00 Afristaenetus, Scriptor Eroticus © 1)y. 1. ..eessceecsecaseccareecesoeetveseceresseveven Aristagoras, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 761 c.cccscccsesssceeesseesesctsvesessnseasesseeesetees Mediotad Caitis, WCITAMIMDA IOUS) ass coseb aes cxaks dnaaeVeat«nacaatvas ie theqe babes invvene (At the court of Ptolemy Philopator) Aristarchus Samius, Astronomus _ ,,.,..........s0.005 Aristeas, de LXX (in Gallandii Patrum Bibl. tom. ii. WATIstIASS AWAQICDS 56.6 cc raat «isos scvensapidacapiseastspedseys Aristides, Rhetor, Ed. Jebb Aristides Quintilianus, Musicus. In the Antiguae Musicae Auctt. of Meibomius Aristomenes, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 730 ..s.csseeseseenee Aristonymus, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 698 .... Aristophanes, Comicus (Vet.). Ed. Dindorf. Phe eee seat eeretewnnetene reeset aet ses enneeneerees reeeeT Tete ere eet ete eee rece rerry pirastophanes,. Grammayeinns sss, ssisscainsrinsdbes «kegestiseesressccvasdesoavenes Aristopho, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm, 3. p. 356 .....:sssscseseesesereetectacsseeeeeseneensenestene ces Aristoteles, Philosophus. Ed. Bekker, Oxon, ...........:.cceeeeeeeseees (Departs from Athens, at the age of 37) .++++e-.(Introduced to Hadrian in Greece) Arrianus, Historicus (his Periplus cited by pape) Artemidorus (Oneirocritica), Edd. Rigalt. and Reiff. ... Asius, Elegiacus, In Bergk’s Lyrici Gr. ....0......c0seeeeeeeseees Astrampsychus (Oneirocritica). In Rigalt.’s Artemidorus ..... DRI VanEn ee. distaos« sie dune obragaxeiones; 6 RSUVCAMNaS, nO IOM erst lon cncsUaedeynaclaeedsee 350° rae! ane <= 260 _ 730? = 35° — rs ae 160? —_ 270 — 420 —~ — 100? 399 = 402 — 320 _ 380 — ee 500? xt _ — rE: 504 —< Choerilus Samius, Epicus, Ea. Nike... Choeroboscus, Grammaticus. Ed. Gaisford. Christodorus, Poéta. In the mgs yi eat at vr cacasoegitadoetees ppus Tyaneus ienaeum Cleanthe: ha Bl eee a) See Reo Clearchus, Comicus (Incert,). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 562 .. Clemens Alexandrinus, Ecclesiasticus, Ed. Potter o...0.......-....ceseecee ~_ Clemens us, Ecclesiasticus o2o.c.c.ceeesceeseee oie mh: Cleo! , Mathemati¢us. Ed. Bike .... Clitodemus (or Clidemus), Historicus pic eaee. CESSES Go - Siler Ae etn sae Tn Bergk’s Lyr., Gran. seesamen retnadede aa enar ee via erate te Ce sancbanise Gomes Natura Deorum, publ. by, Aldus under the name of Phurnutus) .. Cosmas bropicaues In Nova Collectio Patrum (Paris 1706) Crates, Comicus (Vet.), In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 2. p, 233 Crates, Grammatcus (0 oii0g .......d.csoss-sesveeedvos baa REE RBETES 3700 0s 200 av iass Cratinus Major, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 15 .. Cratinus Minor, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 3. P. 314 Critias, Elegiacus et Tragicus. Ed. Bach. ........cccsetssecseee- Crito, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4, p. 537 Crobylus, Comicus (Incert.).. In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 565..... CRSA Ss ERBCOTICUS 10005 53s ciht =< -cadn cscs canscosedanten eaMBRe eI) pi Fiver sovoted tinge Cyrillus, Ecclesiasticus ..0.0.0..........eeccseeene , Damascenus, v. Joannes, and Nicolaiis Damascius, Philosophus.. Ed. Kopp. Pai ail chases (Vet.). Tn Meineke’s + Com, Prag, cu Be Choerilus Atticus, co Be aie of * B s sate 7] RS icont py i Fes cS 2 to ahead: see heweeeeeen ree teaetasenenemanns Re RES (Physician to is ...(Archbishop of Al Sree rerer rer eeer ee rrer rier teeter ee Damocrates, Medicus ©..5526) ....cis;dscccececoudetgesse % Betas < SE Fy aa fd cae axe. cbGhb odes tas dh testaceaea ae eeees Damioxenus, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 529. scsiseccescsssseeerenseaseoscrnenscocnsvnsaveae Demades, Orator. In Oratt. Attici; quoted like Aeschines .....,........ 3 ...(Leads opposition to Demosthenes) VEE!) BPO ZG: cess Lean kea decease sabhconey epeeppainem sbeby Demetrius (duo Comici). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. { Demetrius Phalereus, Rhetor. In Walz’s Rhetores Graeci ......... Democrates, Pythagoreus. Sententiae.gnomicae in Gale ...... A Democritus, Philosophus ..)..........0..cccceeseeeseeeses Demon, Historicus, Ed. Siebelis .........0.c..0.....00 Demonicusy Comicus (Incert.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 570 Demosthenes, Orator. In QOratt. Attici; by Reiske’s pages ...........++.- Dexicrates, Comicus (Incert.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm, 4. Pp. 571 s.....-.-escscisvensecesonereenesenpettavenevens ee: Dicaearchus, Geographus. In Hudson's Geographi Graeci Minores A nie Didymus, Grammaticus 1.0... ..cec..ccsseccnaeenespentes Dinarchus, Orator. In Oratt. Attici: quoted like Aeschines Dinolochus, Comicus Doricus...,.. : Dio Cassius, Historicus 2.20, ........ccceceseneees Dio Chrysostomus, Rhetor: quoted by Morell Diocles, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Diodorus Siculus, Historicus.. Ed. Wesseling PID P Enos RELUUS. 8. os .ccac8 -eacsnovacvncesssensbeesecnes Diogenianus. In the Paroemiographi Dionysins Areopagita Sah... aoe io Dionysius, Comicus (Med.), In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 547 Dionysius Halicarnassensis, Historicus, et Criticus. sometimes by Upton’s pages in the margin of Schiifer's Ed.) sent enennne tte tpae ns ener tet: ei 4).« fa 2. p. 838. ........ Diodorus, Comicus (Med.)._ In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 543 Ed, Reisk. ki Stee PORROS RUE, oe: 5. s.sacbagaersvbovcesss vas Sr konsatbaacdecdensssenaat phantus, Comicus (Vet.), In Meineke’s Com, Frag Dioscorie, Physicus.. Edi Sprengel) -..0..3....:..covicvacsterras sso staras pus, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 4. p. 541 ..... Dipl Comicus (Noy.). In Meineke’s Com, Frege 40 B2375! Gsees Dositheus, Grammaticus ...0........c1.ssecesecsneeseeeeees Doxopater or Doxipater, Rhetor. In Walz’s Rhetores Graeci ., Draco Stratonicensis, Grammaticus. Ed, Hermann Dromo, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 3. Pp. 549 --..,++ Ecphantides, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p, 12..... Empedocles, Poéta philosophicus. Ed. Sturz. ..... Ephippus, Comiéus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 3. p. 322 ...-- Ephorus, Historicus. In Miiller’s F: ragm. Historicoram ....-..02..++-++ Epicharmus, Comicus Syracusanus. In Ahrens de Dialecto aes Epicrates, Comicus (Med.). . In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 365 .. (Noy.) 4. p- 539- ete eee ren eebenensereeteneengetseesbep ee eeuceraeny Prererrettet treet wean eeeeneee vee eenanewetweee weet naenrreeees Epictetus, Philosophus, ~ Schweighiiuser 2....5..2..c.cseesserneeennuraeens cea Philosophus -7ovaes. «..sasasuenbs}iedtenss ety ooneas Pigenis. Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s: Goin, ag 3- Pp. 537 Eni lycus, Comicus (Vet.), In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 2, p. wil Epinicus, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. nee benentesererenrbeseseetereens SPT ererrerrrerri teeter rir) Epiphanius, Ecclesiasticus, 5s Be the pages of Petavai iy ee &, Dindorf’s ed. ...... Soo. of Constantia Erasistratus, Medicus ......0)i...Jisatcscddecs-entaeeeeseeee Eratosthenes, Mathematicus. Ed, Besihardy 1 “4 tee ae state eenaes yprus (At the cout of Seleucus Nicator) (Librarian at Alexandria about) LPR Bar S BeBe 1a. I ~ » : on uP eReisca TULL — ss S111 SBI ~ or t U g S1llisr1i ibd Lit Peer itt > Cr) 3° 9S Ri Se need LIST OF AUTHORS, Floruit circa my, \Y A.C. 5 EAL OR wae y no ns ete. wi Sonus sted gaa aa a ae ets ews: ~ 5 doxns, Comicus .). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 508.... frie wae is _ ~ Eamathius, or sacar Macrembolita, Scriptor tiene E rig te oe — I ord WP svicAakh sk phEAME Vb soci va ecb bonnet dee a 300 Eiuicus, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Frag: 394 = Poéta et Grammaticus.. Ed. Meineke i)..,.....c.csceeeceeees (Librarian at Antioch, at the age of 55) 221 = u omicns (Nov.),: Th Meineke’s Com, Frag 280 = Eupolis, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm. 2. p. 4 429 a Uda ths pgs Aenean oonah> : Genesius, Byzant. By the pages of the Venice Ed., in the margin of the Bonn Ed. . — 950° SEONG. PHA cLINICHIEN Wands chy cxdsetn ds vevha hotenenananyedalpsecegerivenseccasesdsveosnvadgegnetdeseneemaveseevirs _ 920? Georgius Acropolita, Byzant, ............ —_ 1250 Georgius Cedrenus, Byzant. ............ — 1100? Georgius Pachymeres, Byzant. = 1270 Georgius Pisida, Byzant. .......... ad 620 Georgius Syncellus, Byzant. on 43 b= 800 EGP ras PRI DHISta sy ed) semstd caunin aeeaamedie cde cesemeivs ete cence ..(Embassy to Athens, at the age of 60) 427 == Gregorius Corinthius, Grammaticus, Ed. Koen. et Schiifer ............:.cccsecceseeecnseesneeeeneeeenatsareseeueessas eens — 1150 Gregorius Nazianzenus (6 @¢oAdyos)........ Rpee carats ..(Ordained Presbyter, at the age of 32) _ 361 _ Gregorius Nyssenus, Ecclesiasticus Had (Brother of St. Basil; bishop of Nyssa) oo 372 Mum ytearpocratio, Lexicogra phys ii: sc. supvsledeseaseccecsUearesiecoesseeetecppedaceccuyaccetapneesstsccesessesacsvarnosberssereres = 350? | Hecataeus Abderita. Ed. Zorn, Altonae 1730 .0........2.sccceecenceesecteesnseneees 332 ae . Hecataeus Milesius, Historicus. In Miiller’s Fragm. Historicorum §20 = 1 Hegemon, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 743. .....e::e06 413 Hegesippus, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 469 ; 300 Pe Heliodorus, Scriptor Eroticus a 390 1 Flelladis,. Grammatons sis... Wavyevcodssacdabiscdenssovidsonseesses DF 43° Hellanicus, Historicus. In Miiller’s Fragm. Historicorum ............ 466 ra Heniochus, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 560... 3507 = Hephaestio, Grammaticus, Ed. Gaisford .o..c..cceeeeeeeeeeeeee aT 150 Heraclides, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. p. 565.. 348 Sw t Se lente ne een eae lanes o8o rat ed sicns (Noy.). In Meineke’s Com, rere 4 p. 433 seb ti daldscovasadenter <4 aeeoge 7 in Es SEMICL: ssn oa tenclncas tedaubs/atinese® (Returns from Thurii to Athens, Tagm. 2. ann 149. Man Bien Sra SeMtaay ZAM sy. 55 00 cna davnnds lg Cimaver {eis sloccsca ex caanh ash ea} 4 is Marcellus Sidetes, Poéta Maticus, Tn Fabtic. Bibl. Gr.vol. 1. p. 14, ed. 3. 1... whe vate creeps DRORIOMIPASEIELID © 5. daa dany> ves vcdvjasdesacdsuso CCRRSA Dy cxespib css sok gaa SeaTAL A Seelet son ndsascabhehos ¥e2eM es ESe Md ae W Marcus Asceta or Eremita ...,........ ...(A disciple of St. ‘Chirysos 5 1 Marinus, Rhetor. Ed. Boissonade ., ; DARUNIEIUE EPUAUL, 120s epg - rect eouvasyedesdadecatagtstileenoues ss ecrdqakemedai¥psess ss Maximus “jy (rept ‘parapyav) dave ne obyeet yoxge i ie ata We Mc $a Maximus udes, Byzant. (Compiler of the latest ein: Maximus Tyrius, Philosophus ere eee eee eee ere ee rece reer er eer es Melampus, Physiognomicus ....0.....0..sceccecceceeeeeees Melanippides, Dithyrambicus. In Bergk’s Lyrici Gr, Meleager, Elegiacus. In the Anthologia...., Melinno, Gacaeen tbe .% io, Comians e's ragmn. 3. p. Bae Reels 2a SE RUT AN SRR SS FREI nf faces So: (Ak eae are {ep potere’s Margin). ..(Accompanies Julian to Gaul) Slt iii is . (Ordained iain at about 44 years of age) ~ ~ ° ae ~ LIST OF AUTHORS, Orion Thebanus, Grammaticus thancvane Bd Reap Beate RRA PE A BAe eb eae 2th -ossqsoutuswethisuatedstyebrar¢sotrocese sh receyee sonaesere Phalaris (Spurious Epistles).......... at << eetsaares cece -oabeen ks Phanias, Piilecophad SHES, AL. Phanocles, Elegiacus. ae Bach BhanodemuscArchaeologus 2505-0) «.-vsnessnneahdeaninanske scdndddanendeakvssesers Pherecrates, Comicus ( at). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 252 .. Phereeydes, Historicus. In Miiller’s F: ragm. Historicorum Pherecydes (of Syros), Philosophus — .....:......ceeccseeeeceeeteeeceeaes Philemon, Comicus (Noy.). In Meineke’ 's Com, Fragm. 4. p. 3 *, ...++-+-(Begins to exhibit) Philemon Minor, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. Ae ie aene tS ane o> aa Philemon, Grammaticus. Lexicon Ed.-Osann. .......c.ccscccceeeseeeceneeeeeeeneeeeees SN ae. © eee Philes (Manuel), Moeta Byzant 3st 2, at scemtar ter baaeecasahoonns acaba eaeneastecgasase a AS PER Philetaerus, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com. BSROM. Fi PrAOd ns veargaasccsucssassacess Lop Seas Philetas, sleriacus, '2 Rds Paes news. - a2. vienes qedemsnacvonrsss Varese sey sem oS ee Philippides, Comicus (Nov.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 4. p. 467 .. : Philiscus, Comicus (Med.). In Meineke’s Com, Fragm, 3. p.579 ...... Philistus, Historicus. In Miiller’s Fragm. Historicorum ................ Philo, Academicus .0.........eecsensnenee eR Re ae ree i Philo pears By, Manoey S/ PB RORe, luc Bat esaspsrrsssapiersassesarobedeesdi Philo Byzantinus, Mechanicus. (BeAomoixa, De vii Mirabilibus)... Philochorus, Archaeologus, In Miiller’s Fragm. Historicorum ...... Philodemus, Epicureus. In Gomperz Herkul. Studien ................6 Philonides, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 421 ... MRTRCCIOS. Mi TOAMNCS COA 55575) \tlawapas.phateephedeovecseestruesndhans>iasrdsspetnrnhiernrg Philostephanus, Comicus (Incert.). In Meineke’s moe: us 4+ P. 589 . Philostorgius, Historicus Eccles. ............secaseee Philostratus, Sophista. By the pages of Olearius .. .. (Lives of Sophists written about) eM RRR oa EMINIOT Ce rene’ foc enrs ee eab Mee ee tang RNCER GAP aa IEss5 vem Passes tensrab bre teneceatasssbece¥oessego3épereueapes Philoxenus, Dithyrambicus, v. Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 3. pp. 635 sqq., and Bergk’s Lyr. Gr. ...... Philyllius Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 857 ASP OUH GE MUTACOE) 520.55 si ontedeeshcsteeenascie-enée our tas eashvarsereds teen Phocylides, Elegiacus. In Gaisford’s Poétae Minores Gr, ‘s Phoebammon, Rhetor. In Walz’s Rhetores Graeci Photius, Ecclesiasticus, Lexicographus, etc. i RTM RL SEND ov, ee cuereo deh Caen NaC UISN cs uMRERN MN Ses SP CUUSSS Ae Acid om ALE GOTase> {svppeet ccna <> 660 TF an eeesssccecens ces Phrynichus, Comicus (Vet.). In Meineke’s Com. Fragm. 2. p. 580...........5.45 Miedyatiian lsc (Exhibits) aap NEEM OUCUR EEA, oul (OU NeeTaesE cas ACA TSMA LEELA AT TO-Viesesbeyrehn iiss ssh strsebenerbasndasoseorenvedecesvereccces Coe Pe PILAR ar eTOD aes ce AO DECM ODES ety (Us a da toia uitasco qa dasiancccopanisieiciesetnsisonsvosepedsdecdoreseeooenen er Nee ONS VAs ETC Me as Poe aa He GWU ONT: AI avid Pipe he's Paap envelchUd Tivhensevinans Cobacrtcancavheobsadensescovecsensseseceses Phylarchus, Historicus. In Miiller’s Fragm. PM TD, PR QOS eg One RI Sr re Pindarus, Lyricus. Quoted by Heyne’s lines, in the right margin of Béckh, Dissen, etc.; the Fragments by PRA Ciety sy RAL Nach ods Seana puny adi venused canals wicchtgis cenbbavvecsapareeseretsvcpanseoss (At the age of 32) Pisander Larandius, Poéta . awe te Pisander Rhodius, Poéta .... Bist tvenestaxte Pisida, v. Georgius ........ a Paseateny Oe sser7 5 eter ROG Sr MAERUA cas spy ak ina cu oservnebcevsteers uarados tes vscnae rh cies rt _ Plato, Comicus (Vet.). In Morais’ SCOP MEM IDE Dei OLS bonne turcetrekhacverspaesehe> she oes (Begins to exhibit) Plato, Philosophus: quoted by the pages of H. tephens ieatententterksie (At the age of 30; death of Socrates) Rena eet GIT LE) AS MRIMS ore canon te decal udedoyadeseye ss echtsctprvsnodnvsuvanserryh evesassieorsdsspees sore ssvens _ Plotinus, Philosophus ........00.-.00s-eeuereeseeess ..(Accompanies Gordian to the East, at the age of 38) - Plutarchus, Philosophus. The Lives by Cha: apiersj the Moralia e pees S pages Poéta de Viribus Herbarum, in Fabricius’ Bibl. Graeca, 2, p. 692 ed Polemo, Physiognomicus. In Franz’s Scriptt. Phamealonies Vetere PCM DAIALE 1, 2 yi av easton bieads ct apinw ined kin Gew~__ Arcad.=Arcadius Dep. = Deponent Verb oe “Archil.=Archilochus | | deriv. = derived, derivation, de- Aretae. = Aretaeus ‘3 Arist. = Aristoteles Aristaen. = Aristaenetus Aristid. = Aristides hae “Epee Epicteti Di pind. = Di dork (W. and = cteti. Dissertae ind. = Din of Astyd. i apie re ae Dink ‘Diodors Sie Ath.= Ath Diog. Att,= Attice, in Attic Greek Att. AS ae ae ieee er Process, hiss eas ooms: rae selee Bast. a Cr. Basts Eplstola i ivi Lyv. =Lycophron Lys.=Lysias, (But Ar. Lys.= Avistophanis Lysistrata) masc. = masculine Math. Vett.=Mathematici Ve- teres (ed. Paris. 1693) Med. = medium, middle Medic. =in medical writers Mel.=Mbeleager. (But Schif. Mel, =Schafer’s Meletemata Critica) Menand. = Menander metaph. = m»taphorice metaplast. =metaplastice metath. = mettthesis. metri grat. =metri gratia Moer. = Moeris bh Mosch. = Moschus Miill. Archiol, @ Kunst.= Miil- ler’s (K. O.) Archiologie der Kunst Mill. Proleg. z. Myth. =Miil- ler’s Prolegomenen zu einer wissenschaftlichen Mytholo- gie Mus. Crit. = Museum Criticum Mus. Vett.= Musici Veteres (ed. Meibomius) n. pr.=nomen proprium N. T.=New Testament negat.=negativum neut. =neuter Nic. = Nicander Nicoch. = Nicochares Ticoph. = Nicopho 1. =nominative > Odyssey ap. Eus, =Oenomaiis “usebium O. H. Germ, =Old n LIST OF, ABBREVIATIONS. Orph. = Orphica Sabir oxytone ee aroem.=Paroemiographi (ed. Gaisford) a" parox. = paroxytone part. = participle pass. = passive Paus, = Pausanias pecul. = peculiar perf. ov pf. = perfect perh. = perhaps perispom. = perispomenon Philo Bel. = Philo BeAorouina Phryn. = Phrynichus Piers. Moer, = Pierson on Moeris pl. ov plur. = plural Plat. = Plato (Philosophus) Plat. Com. =Plato (Comicus) plqpf. = ee empetiecuss plur. = plura Plut, = Plutarchus poét. = poétice Poét. de Herb. =Poéta de Viri- bus Herbarum. (In Fabricius’ Bibliotheca Graeca, ii. p. 630, ed, pr.) Poll. = Pollux Polyb. = Polybius Pors. = Porson post-Hom. = post-Homeric Pott. Et. Forsch, = Pott’s Etymo- logische Forschungen pr. n.= proper name Prep. = Preposition pres. = present prob, = probably proparox. = proparoxytone properisp, = properispomenon Q. Sm, = Quintus Smyrnaeus q. v-=quod vide radic. =radical tegul. = regular, ie Sea ‘ Rhet. = Rhetorical; Khett. = Rhetores Rubnk. Ep. Cr. = Ruhnkenii Epistola Critica, appended to his Ed. of the Homeric hymn to Ceres Ruhnk, Tim.=Ruhnkenius ad Timaei Lexicon Platoni- cum ; Salmas. in Solin. =Salmasius in Solinum, (Ed, 1689) Skt. =Sanskrit sc, =scilicet Schaf. Dion. Comp. =Schiifer on Dionysius de Compositione Schaf. Greg., v. Greg. Cor. Schaf. Mel.=Schiafer’s Melete- mata Critica, appended to the former work Schneid. = Schneider Schol. =Scholium, Scholiastes Schweigh. or Schw. =Schweig- hauser Scol. Gr.=Scolia Graeca (by Iigen) shortd.=shortened signf, =signification Simon, =Simonides (of Ceos) Simon. lamb. =Simonides (Iam- bographus) sing. = singular Slav. =Slavonic Sopat. =Sopater ’ Soph. = Sophocles sq. or sqq.=sequens, sequen- tia Stallb. Plat. = Stalibaum on Plato Steph. Byz.=Stephanus Byzan- tinus Steph, Thes.=Stephani Thesau- tus (edited by Hase and Din- dorf) Stesich. =Stesichorus Stob. =Stobaei Florilegium Stob. Ecl. =Stobaei Eclogae strengthd. =strengthened sub, =subaudi ‘ subj. =subjanctive Subst, =Substantive Suid. = Suidas Sup. = Superlative susp., susp. 1,= suspected, sus- pecta lectio Ss. v.=sub voce syll. = syllable synon,. =synonymous Telecl. = Teleclides Th. M.=Thomas Magister Theol, Arithm, = Theologumena IV. SIGNS, Etc. omitted, to save space. Arithmetica, Ed. Ast. Lips. 1817 Theoph. Cont. = Theophanes Continuatus (in Byz. Histo- rians) Theopomp. Com, or Hist. = Theopompus (Comicus) or (Historicus) Thirlw. Hist. Gr.=Bp. Thirl- wall’s History of Greece Thue. = Thucydides Tim. =Timaeus Trag. = Tragic trans. = transitive Tryph. = Tryphiodorus trisyll. =trisyllable Tyrt.=Tyrtaeus v.=vide: also voce or vocem vy. l.=varia lectio Valck. Adon. = Valcknaer on Theocritus’ Adoniazusae Valck. Diatr.= Valcknaer’s Dia- tribé, appended to his Hip- polytus Valck. Hipp. = Valcknaer on Eu- ripidis Hippolytus Valck. Phoen.=Valcknaer on Enuripidis Phoenissae verb. adj. =verbal adjective voc, = voce, vocem vocat. = vocative Vol, Herc. Ox. = Volumina Her- culanensia, Oxoniae usu, = usually Welcker Syll. Ep.=Welcker’s Sylloge Epigrammatum Wess. or Wessel. = Wesseling Wolf Anal.= Wolf's Analekten (Berlin 1816—1820) Wolf Mus. = Wolfs Museum Wytt. (or Wyttenb.) Ep. Cr.= Wyttenbach’s Epistola Cri- tica, appended to his Notes on Juliani Laus Constantini (ed. Schafer) Wytt. (or Wyttenb.) Plut.= Wyttenbach on Plutarch Xen. = Xenophon Xen, Eph. = Xenophon Ephesius Za. =Zend Zonar. = Zonaras Acgnate signification with the Verb, as tGpw bApicey, teva ddr, etc. )-Bios) we have written them so. And in Compounds so common This applies to words regularly compounded with srefositions, ‘“po-, uuto-, movo-, veo-, oivo-, dAvyo-, duo-, Tapz-, Tay-, mavTo-, K0-, Xpud—, xpvao-, Wevd-, Wevdo-. A, ‘fe a, GAga, 74, indecl., first letter of the Gr. alphabet: hence as Nu- meral, a’ =efs and mp@ros, but a = 1000. Changes of a: 1. Aeol., & for €, in some Adyvs, of time and place, dAAora for -re, évep@a for -Ge, Ahrens D. Aeol. p. 74. b. for 0, tma-dedpdpakev, Sapph. 2. 10, cf. Alcae, 7 Ahrens:—but 0 more fre- quently represents d, v. sub o. 2. Dor., & for ¢, as in Aeol., Gddoxa for -re, dvwOa for -e or -Bev, ya for ye. b, so in the body of words, “Aprayus for “Aprepus, Grepos for érepos, tapds for iepés, Tpdpa, orpapa, rpaxa, for tpépa, orpépa, Tpéxw, ppaat for ppest, etc., Ahrens D. Dor. p. 113 sq. ¢. for o, elxare (Felxart) for elxoor; but more often o for a, v. sub 0, Ahr. p. 11g. 3. Ion., & for e, as pé-yados for wéyeOos :—reversely e for a, v. sub e. b. & some- times becomes 7, in the num. forms, dirAjoros, ToAAaAHotos for Sumdd- a.0s, ToAAaTAdatos, etc. ¢. in some words, @ represents 7, as AéAappat for AAT pat, Adgopar for Afouar, pecaBpln for peonuBpla, dpupio-Baréw, -Basin for auduo-Byréw, -Bhrnots, Dind. de dial, Hdt. p. Xxxiv. d, a for 0, as dppw5éw for dppwdéw, Hat. II. changes of a: 1. & appears constantly in Aeol. and Dor. (as also in Lat.) for Ion. 7, whereas Att. agrees sometimes with Ion., sometimes with the older diale¢ts ; for there is little doubt that the forms in a are the most ancient. It may be laid down as a gen. rule that 7 Ion. becomes @ Aeol. and Dor. in the term. of the 1st decl., as mUAa, *Arpel- das, etc., for mvAn, “Arpetdns, etc.; and wherever 7 represents a in the Root or primary form, as @vdoxw for OvnoKw (4/ Bay), pvaua (4/ pva), «v-dvwp (avnp), dAxdus (GAnd), etc.; but when 7 represents € or et, then it is retained in Aeol, and Dor., as qpxdépay (Epxopa), but dpxdpar (Gpxopar), parnp (A parep), etc.: many exceptions however occur; see on the whole question, Ahrens D. Aeol. pp. 84-88, D. Dor. pp. 127-153. b. reversely, in Dor., ae and ae in the inflexions of Verbs in dw are contr. not into @ but into 7, as évixn for -d, dpfis for -gs, Ahr. D. Dor. p. 195; so ay, as xx’ dph for Stay dpdp, Epich. 10 Ahr. :—also in crasis, as Ta for 7d éua, Kiyyéy for Kal éywr, etc., Ahr. p. 221. ¢c. in Dor., ao and aw are contracted not into w, but into a, v. sub w. d. in Aeol., ae sometimes stands for Dor. @, as @vai- oxw for OvacKe (Ovnoxw), Ahr. D. Acol. p. 96 :—also in certain termina- tions, v. sub N v 11:—v. also del, derés, OnBayerhs. 2. in Ion., n for @ is as characteristic as @ for 7 in Aeol. and Dor.: so in Ist decl., gopin, -ns, -n, -nv, Apisrarydpns, (-ew), -p, -nv; but when the nom. ends in a, the change only takes place in gen. and dat., dAj@eta, -ns, -7, -ay: also in many inflexions and terminations, as @upng, -nKos, Xmaptey- Ts, dvinpds, AdOpn, Any, etc.; and in many words, of which a list (as used by Hdt.) is given by Dind. de dial, Hdt. p. vii sq. a-, as insep. Prefix in compos, : I. a orepnrinéy, alpha priva- tivum, expressing want or absence, like Lat. in-, Engl. -un, as copes wise, daopos unwise: (for the Root, v. sub dv—, dva—.) Sometimes it implies blame, as GBouAta, = 5vcBovaia, ill-counsel, ampdawmos ill-faced, ugly,—this being strictly a hyperbole, counsel that is no counsel, i.e. bad, a face no better than none, i.e. ugly, cf. diwpos. This a rarcly precedes a vowel, as in d-daros, d-aros, dn@ns, doxvos, dofos, domros ; more often before the spir. asper, as Garros, djaanros, domAos, déparos, ddpioros, di5pos, dwpos; other cases are not in point as a F has been lost, as deldeAos, derdns, aldndos, didpis, dioros, déxav, deATTOS, depyos, doticos : sometimes a coalesces with the foll. vowel, as deav, dpyds (depyds): but before a vowel dy— is more common. It answers to the Ady. dvev, so that Adjs. formed with it often take a gen., as GAaumes #A/ou, dvaros xakay, =dvev Adppews Hrlov, dvev drns Kaxdv, esp. in Trag., Schiif. Mel. p. 137- Only found in compos. with nouns; for verbs into which it enters are always derivatives, Scaliger ap, Lob. Phryn. 266; cf. GBovrdw, eyvoéw, avndopat, arita. Il. a d@pootindy, alpha copulativum, d- or d-, expressing union, participation, likeness, properly with spir. asper, as in G@poos, Gras, but commonly with spir. lenis, doris, GAoxos, ddedpbs, arddavros, axbAovbos, cf. Plat. Crat. 405 C. It answers to the Skt. sa—, sam— (cum), being prob. akin to the Ady. aya (q. v.), and sometimes appears in the form 6-, as in marpos, dydorpios, d¢vé ; Curt. no. 598. Til. a émerariKoy, alpha in- tensivum, strengthening the force of compds., and said to answer to the Adv, dyay, very. The use of this a has been most unduly extended by the old Gramm. : many words cited as examples seem to be inventions of. their own, as dyovos, dytpvacros for moAvyovos, moAvyUpYaTOS, Valck. Adon, p, 214; some words have been referred to this a eos oF adm. belong to a privative, as addxpuros, abéoparos, agvdos (vy. sub voce ) ” and in haus ehh remain, a doles paar ‘scat doxedés, =| it may be asked whether the a be any more than a modification ¢: @ copulat. IV. a euphonicum, in a few words, esp. lon. an” Att., is used merely for phonetic purposes, mostly before two nt. as GBAnxpés, donaipw, adorapis, dereporh for BAnxpés, amaipor, oragis, oreponn, but also before one, as duelpopat for peipopat, and dxovw ci xoéw; in some cases also before vowels, v. deldw, delpw, dégw. all these cases, except by position. Yet Adjs. which begin with short syllables have @ in dactylic metres, as, dddpuaros, a0éuuros, a Haros, dmdAapos, drapdpvOos (v. sub vocc.). One Adj., d0avaros, its derivs., has @ in all metres, so that to make it short would be fa Pors. Med. 139, Elmsl. Ar. Ach. 47.] § &, exclamation used to express various emotions, like Lat. and Eng}. ah! in Hom. always @ SeA€, d& 5ecdw, G@ Seidoi, Il. 11, ar 4525 If 443, Od. 20. 355, al.; also in Trag., Aesch, Ag. 1087, etc.; 4, wpdauds .- Soph. Ph. 1300, cf. O. T.1147; a paxap C.1. 401; sometimes doubled, — & & Aesch. Pr. 114, 566, etc.; rare in Prose, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 295 A. & or & &, to express laughter, like our ha ha, Eur. Cycl. 157, Ar., etc.; & & dacuvOév yéAwra Sydot Hesych. and Phot.; cf. Meineke Plat. Com. I'gur. 2. 4, Dor. for Artic. 7. III. Dor. for 7, dat. of és. ddatos, ov, (daw) in Il. with penult. long, not to be injured or violated, II. &, Dor. for relat. Pron. 7. inviolable, viv por Gpoocoy daarov Srv-yos tiwp, because the gods sw: their most binding oaths thereby, 14. 271. II. in Od. wig * penult. short, pynornpecow deOAov da&rov 21. 91; deBAos ddiiros & 7édeorat 22.5, where it is commonly rendered by hurtful, dangerous; vat here also Buttm., Lexil., attempts to retain a kindred sense, not to be aurt, not to be treated lightly ox slighted. III. in Ap. Rh. 2. 77, xdpros dda&rov invincible strength. (Originally 4éfaros, which is implied in the Lacon. form ddBaxros cited by Hesych.; cf. ddw, arn.) z Gayns, és, unbroken, nui to be broken, hard, strong, Od. 11. 575, Theocr. 24. 121, etc. (Originally 4fayns; cf. dyvuys.) [The first @ short in Od. and Theocr., but long in Ap. Rh. 3. 1251, Q. Sm. 6, 596.) dala, f. cw, to breathe through the mouth, breathe ort, Arist. Prob 34 7. (For the Root, v. sub dpe.) x dav0a, 4, a kind of earring, Aleman 113, Ar. Fr 567, Hesych. &dmeros, ov, lengthd. Ep. for dmAeros, Q. Sm. 1.675. “| d-amros, ov, (Gmropat) not to be hed, resistless, invincible, xetpes darro: Hom. (mostly in IL, as 1. 567), Hes. Op. 1473; «ros damroy Opp. H. 5, 629. dis, tomorrow or the day after tomorrow, genit. of da,=1}ws, as Zenod, read for jods in Il, 8. 470 (v. Schol. Ven.) : be in Boeot. as Adv., Hesych, Gacrppootvy, dacidpey, in Gramm. for deoupp-. ~ Berube 6, (daw) a breathing ou:, Arist. Probl. 34. 7. 4 adormeros, ado eros, v. sub doweros, doxeros. “A darar, Ep. for derat, from dw, satio, Hes. Sc. Il. ; d-tiros, contr. Gros, ov, (do, doar) insatiate, c. a daros moXépoww Hes. Th. 714; “Apys Gros woAguowo Il. 5. 388; waxns drév wep evra + 22. 218: cf, Buttm. Lexil. s. v::—absol., daros #Bpis Ap. Rh, 1. 459. [The first syll. in davos is short in Hes., but long in Ap. Rh.] ; daros, ov, in Q. Sm. I. 217,=dnros, q. v. ; &éw, old Ep. Verb, used by Hom. in aor. act. ddica contr. doa, med, daigdpny contr. dodpny, and pass, dda@nv: the pres. occurs only in 3 ine of Med. dara: Il. Properly to hurt, damage, but always used in reference to the mind, to-mislead, infatuate, of the effects of wine, sleep, divine: judgments, etc., daody yp’ Erapol te kaxot mpds Total Te imvos Od. 10. 68; doé pe Saiyoves alca kaxi Kal..olvos 11. 61; ppévas dace olvw 21. 296; inf. doa Aesch. Fr. 428; part. doas Soph. Fr, 554:—so in Med.,”Arn 7) mavras d@ra: Il, 19. 91, 129 :—Pass., daoOny Hes. Op, 281. II, the aor. med. has an intr. sense, fo act reckiessly or foolishly, dacdunv I was infatuated, ll. 9. 116, 119, etc.; ddcaro 5& péya Oup@ Ib. 537., 11. 340; Kal yap bh vU more Zeds daaro (as Aris tarch., whereas others read Ziv’ doaro sc.”ArTn), 19. 95, V. Schol, Ven.} el ri mep dacdpny Ap. Rh. 1. 1333; dacduny..drqv 2. 6235 so also aor. pass., #éy’ ddo6n Il. 16. 685.—Cf. Buttm. Lexil. s.v.ddeat. (Hence d-daros, dn, dvaros. Originally it had the digamma, é Fae, v. sub ary and ddaros. Hesych, also cites dyardo@a (i.e. d aracbat) = Brdrre- , aba, and cryarnuar (i, e. aFarnuat) = BEBAG HAL.) CRE usual quantity 4 es ~~ y \ EN ~_— dacOny Il. ll, c.; but dacaro 11, 340, dan h. Hom. Cer. 247.] &Ba, 7, Dor. for #87. 3 és, (BdOos) not deep, Arr. Tact. 5.6; émpdvera GB, without ti ae Emp. p. 475. 5 Bekk. vig ov, without foundation, Georg. Pisid. @, (dBaxns) to be speechless, Ep. Verb. only used in aor., of & aBarnoay navres said nothing, took no heed, Od. 4. 249. GBarys, és, (Baw) speechless, Lat. infans: hence childlike, innocent, pny Sappho 77 (where E. M. has acc. dBdenv). Adv. —Kéws E. M.— Hesych, has also pov; and GBat is cited by Eust. 1494. 64. ‘opat, Dep., =dBaxéw, Anacr. 74. , Td, v. sub Bag. oKos, 6, Dim. of dBag, a small stone for inlaying, in mosaic work, Lat. ¢essera, tessella, Moschio ap. Ath. 207 D. GBaxo-adis, és, like an dBag, Schol. Theocr. 4. 61. G-Béxxevtos, ov, uninitiated in the Bacchic orgies, Eur. Bacch. 472: generally, joyless, Id. Or. 319; v. Luc. Lap. 3. GBiXe [48], properly d Bade, expressing a wish, O that. .! Lat, utinam, ¢, indic., Callim. Fr. 455 ; ¢. inf., Anth. P. 7. 699. Cf. Bdde. vauoros, ov, liberal : in Ady, -ws, Clem. Rom. 1. 44. [&], dos, 6, Lat. abacus :—a slab or board: 1. a reckoning- board or board for geometrical figures, Jambi. V. Pyth. 5, Sext. Emp. 447, 4 Bekk.; and in dim. form aBdxvoy, Lys. ap. Poll. 10, 105, Alex. “Ameya. I. 3. 2. a draught-board, Caryst. ap. Ath. 435 D; Dim. GBaxiov Poll. 10. 150. 38. a sideboard, Ammon. 4. a trencher, plate, Cratin. AeoB, 2. II. a place on the stage, in Dim, aBdsevoy, Suid. III. cf. dBaxionos. ‘os, ov, (Barrifw) not to be dipped, that will not sink, Lat. immersabilis, dB. dAwas of a net, Pind. P. 2.146; 48. rpdavoy a trepan with a guard, to stop it from going too deep, Galen, II. not drenched with liquor, Plut. 2. 686 B. III. not baptized, Eccl. GBamros, ov, (Barrw) of iron, not tempered by dipping in cold water, Suid., Hesych.; v. sub Bapy I. GBapBapteras, without barbarisms, E.M.: -vort, Boiss, An. 3. 160. ‘GBapBapos, ov, not barbarous: but in Soph. Fr. 336, Blomf. 48dpBopov. GBipns, és, (Bdpos) without weight, Arist. Cael. 1. 8, 16, Plut., etc. ; aBa — aBonros. is dicey Gtictipny, part. dicas; but Sdcay Od. 10. 68; adacaro and GBeArepia, 3), silliness, stupidity, fatuity, Plat. Theaet. 174 C, Symp. 198 D, etc. (The false form aBeArnpia, common in late Mss., is left uncorrected by Bekk. in Arist. Pol. 5.11, 26.) GBedrepo-KdKkvé, vyos, 6, a silly fellow, Plat. Com, Adi. 1. GBéeArepos, a, ov (Plat. Phil. 48 C), good for nothing, silly, stupid, Jatuous, Ar. Nub, 1201, Antiph., etc. ; mpds Tt Anaxandr. Kavnp. 1; a8. mt mabeiv Dem. 449. 26;—Sup. -wraros, Ar. Ran. 989; of Margites, Hyperid. Lyc. 6. Adv. —pws, Plut. 2. 531 C. Bydav, i.e, dfniwy, for dniwy, prob. Lacon., Hesych. Bap, i.e. dfnp, Lacon, word for olknpa arods éxov, Hesych.; cf. adjp. Biacros, ov, (Budopar) unforced, without force or violence, Plat. Tim. 61 A: unstrained, unaffected, Dion. H. de Demosth. 28. Ady. —rws Arist. Mot. An. 10. 4. &-BiBAns, ov, 6, a man without books, Tzetz. Hist. 6. 407, 475. G-Bios, ov,=dBiwros, (wis dBiov Emped. 38; dB. Bios Anth. P. 7. 715. 2. not to be survived, aicxuvn Plat. Legg. 873 C. re without a living, starving, Luc. D. Mort. 15. 3; drexvos Kat GB. kat mpowAns, an imprecatory form in C. I. 3915. 46. III, dBror in Il. 13. 6, as epith. of the “Immnpodryol, simple in life and manners, ‘Inmn- pHodyar yAakropayay aBioy Te: but prob, ’ABiwv,as a pr. n., is the true reading ; it certainly was so used in the time of Alexander, vy. Schol. Ven. G-Biotos, ov,=sq., xaTaxovad GBioros Biov, a&Bioros Biov téxa Eur. Hipp. 821, 867, ubi olim aBiwros. &Brwrorovds, ov, making life insupportable, Schol. Eur. Hipp. 823. GBiwros, ov, (Aida) not to be lived, insupportable, 48. wenoinxe Tov Biov Ar. Pl. 969 ; GB. (@pev Biov Philem, Incert. 8. 7, cf. 5.7; dBiwrov xpévor Broredoa Eur. Alc, 241; GBlwrov ger’ éceoba: Tov Biov aiT® Dem. 557. fin.:—dBiwrdy [éorc] life is intolerable, Plat. Rep. 407 A; also, dBiwroy (jv Id. Legg. 926 B; dBiwroy jyiv Eur, Ion 670. Adyv., aBiaras éxev Plut. Dio 6; alcypas nal 4B. dareO7va Id, Sol.'7. Cf. GBios, GBioros, Biwrds. GBAGBea, 4, freedom from harm, Lat. incolumitas, Plut. 2, 1090 B; for Aesch. Ag. 1024, v. sub evAdBea. II. act. harmlessness, Lat. innocentia, Cic. Tusc. 3. 8. &-BAGBHs, és, without harm, i.e., I. pass. unharmed, unhurt, Pind. O. 13, 37, P. 8. 77, Aesch. Th. 68, etc.; (Goav dBrAafei Bin Soph. El. 650, cf. 649. II, act. not harming, harmless, i t, fvvovoia Aesch. Eum, 285; idovai Plat. Rep. 357 B, etc.; Ry By Bu opuypos 4B. a light pulse, Galen. II. not burd , of per- sons, GBap éavrdv rypeitv 2 Ep. Cor. 11. 9; af. éavrdv mapéxew C. I. 5361. 15 :—Adv. —pds, lightly, without offence, Simplic. uodvurros, ov, not examined by torture or question, untortured, un- questioned, Antipho 112. 46; dB, @vnoxew Joseph. B. J. I. 32, 3; a8. BaAérew (sc. Tov fAwov), without pain, of hawks, Ael. N. A. Io. 14. 2. of things, untested, unexamined, GB, wapadelmeav te Plut. 2. 59 B. 4 idevros, ov, without a king, not ruled by a king, Thuc. 2. 80, en. Hell. 5. 2, 17. tivos, ov, (Backaivw) free from envy, Teles ap. Stob. 575, fin. Adv. -vaws, M. Anton, 1. 16. GBaoKavros, ov, not subject to enchantment, C. I. 5053, 5119: Subst., aBactavtov, 7d, a charm, amulet, cited*from Diosc. Adv.—raws, Anth, P. 11. 267, aBaoraxros, ov, (Bacrdtw) not to be borne or carried, Plut. Anton. 16, Adv. -rws, Hesych. « \\B. Adv. -rws, without question or search, Thuc. 1. 20, Plut. 2. 28 B. 1 @ s, 6, Dor. for Bnr7js, Call. L. P. 10g. roopat, Pass. to be made desert, LXx (Jerem. 29. 20). &-Biros, ov, also 7, ov, Pind. N. 3. 36 :—untrodden, impassable, inacces- sible, of mountains, Hat. 4. 25., 7.176, Soph. O. T. 779, etc.; of a river, not fordable, Xen. An. 5. 6, 9: metaph. in Com., ol#ia: a8. Tois €xover pnde & inaccessible to the poor, Aristopho 'Iarp. 2; 48. woiy rds tparé(as Anaxipp. Kepaur. 5. 2. of holy places, not to be trodden, like G@:eros, Soph. O. C. 167, 675; Epme mAodros. . és TaBara Kal mpos BéBnda Id Fr. 109; GBarwraros 5 rémos [sc. of raqor] Arist. Probl. 20.12: metaph. pure, chaste, yvx7 Plat. Phaedr. 245 A. b. as Subst., aBarov, 74, adytum, Theopomp. Hist. 272. 8. of a horse, not ridden, Luc. Zeux. 6; of female animals, Id. Philops. 7, cf. Lexiph. 19. II. act., dB. révos, a plague that hinders walking, i.e. gout, Luc. Ocyp. 36. K Ns, és, = aBamros, v. sub cvapys. “*ABBa, Hebr. word, father, Ev. Marc. 14. 36. : , &, 6, an abbot, Justinian. } uKros, ov, (BdeAvoow) not to be abominated, Aesch, Fr. 130. * pits [i], ov, 6, a man of Abdera in Thrace, the Gothamite of antiquity, proverb. of simpletons, Dem. 218, 10:—Adj. ee ahr ty év, like an Abderite, i.e. stupid, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 2: “ABSnpo-Aéyos, ov, Tatian, Cic, Att. 7. 7, 4. 6, said by Hesych. to mean a scourge in Hippon. 88. ov, uncertain, of remedies, Hipp. Aph. 1245 Dice mi ay Kexth sc. mAodros) Alex. Incert. 27, cf. Menand. Avox. 2. 1; Seach on, asm Arist. H. A. 1. 10, 33 metaph., dB. puAfa Id. Eth. E. 7. 2, 15; 70 4B¢Bavov =4BeBardrns, Luc. Char. 18; & dBeBaiov from an insecure position, Arr. An. 1.15, 2. 2. of persons, unstable, uncertain, fickle, Dem. 1341, fin., Arist. Eth. N. 9. 12, 3. Adv. —as, Menand. Tewpy. I. nros, }, unsteadiness, instability, Polyb. Fr. Gram. 6. - , ov, like @Baros, sacred, inyiolable, Plut. Brut. 20. Los, i.e. dféAuos, Cretan for 7éAsos, fAtos, Hesych. GBeAréperos, a, ov, lengthd. for dBéArepos, as Hyperépesos for Auérepos, Eust. 1930. 32, E. M. 429; restored by Dind. in Anaxandr. ‘EAev. 1, for aBerTepiov, GB, onacpoi doing no serious injury, Hipp. Epid. 1.944. 2. avert- ing or preventing harm, tdwp Theocr. 24. 96:—in Plat. Legg. 953 A, we have the act. and pass. senses conjoined, dBA. rod Spacai Te Kat madeiv :—Adv. dBAaBas, Ep. -éws, h. Hom. Merc. 83. 3. in Att, formularies, d8AaB@s omovdais éupévew, coupled with d:ealws and a5d- Aws, seems to exclude open violence as well as fraud, Thuc. 5. 18 and 47; so the grovdai themselves are entitled 5o0A0: eal dBA. Id. 4. 118., 5.18; and we have fvpupaxor morot ., at dBr. in C. I. 74. 14. G&BAGBia, %, post. for dBAdBera, 4BAaBinot vdowo h, Hom. Merc. 393- BAamros, ov,=dBAaBys, Nic. Th. 488. Adv. -rws, Orph, H. 63. 10, GBhacréw, not to bud, to bud imperfectly, Theophr. C. P. 1. 20, 5. &-Bhacros, ov, (BAacravw) not budding, budding imperfectly, barren, Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 5 :—also, 4-BAaorns, és, Id. H. P. 2, 2, 8; and &-BAdornros, ov, v. 1. C. P. 1. 3, 2. Bracdypytos, ov, not blasphemed, Socr. H. E, 8. 19. BAavros, ov, (BAavrn) unslippered, Opp. C. 4. 369. Bruns, és, (BAcueaivw) feeble, Lat. impotens, Nic. Al. 82 :—Adv., Aevwews mivav drinking intemperately, Panyas. 6. 8. Br . és, (BA€évva) without mucus (pituita), Ath. 355 F. Brerréw, (4Brerrns Hesych.) not to see, to overlook, disregard, 73 mov Polyb, 30. 6, 4, often in Euseb. GPAerrmpa, 76, a mistake, oversight, == mapépapa, Polyb. Fr, 1. &-BrEhiipos, ov, without eyelids, Anth. P. 11.66. 4-Brepia, 4, blindness, Eccl. mpa, i.e. dFAnpa, for atAnpa, etAnpa (q. v.), Hesych. :—"ABAnpos as prop. name, Il. 6, 32. GBAqs, Fros, 5, , (BaAAw) not thrown or shot, iy GBARTa an arrow not yet used, Il, 4. 117, cf. Ap. Rh. 3. 279. &-Bhyros, ov, not hit (by darts), opp. to dvatzaros, Il. 4. 540. d Anxis, és, (BAnx7) without bleatings, ératAcoy Antip. Sid. 95- MXPIS, és, gen. éos, rare form of 4B8Anxpds, Nic. Th. 885. &BAnxpés, 4, dv, (a euphon., BAnxpds, v. sub padaxds) :—weak, Seeble, of a woman's hand, Il. 5. 337; of defenceless walls, Il. 8. 178; dBa. Gavaros, an easy death in ripe old age, opp.jto a violent one, Od, rr. 135. 23. 282; x@pa BX. Lat. languidus sopor, Ap. Rh. 2. 205. &PAnxpadbys, es, = dBAnxpds, of sheep, Babr, 93- 5 (Suid. BAnxwons). &Boari, -aros, Dor. for dBonri, —nTos. &-BonOycia, %, helplessness, LXx (Sir. 51. 10). 4-BonPyros, ov, admitting of no help, without remedy, incurable, of wounds, Ephor. 58, Polyb. 1. 81, 5, etc.; 48, €xew ry émxouplay, un- serviceable, useless, Diod, 20. 42; vd¢ dB, Galen. :—Adv. -Tws, Diose, Ther. 12. IL. of persons, helpless, Plut. Arat. 2, etc. i jonrt, Dor. -Gri, Adv. (Bodw) without summons, Pind. N. 8. 1 5. anros, Dor. —aros, ov, (Bodw) not loudly lamented, Anth, P. append, 200. 2. noised abroad, kdéos obx GB. Epigr. Gr. 40. II. voice- less, Nonn. Jo. 12. v. 42. &Bohéa, f. how, late Ep. for dvr:Bodgw, aor. &Bdrnoay Id, a. 770, Call. Fr. 455. Bodnris, vos, , a meeting, Ion. word in A. B. 322, E. M. 3. Bodnrwp, opos, 5, one who meets, Antim. ap. E. M. 4. 8. BodAa, 7, the Lat. abolla, a thick woollen cloak, Arr.Perip|. M. Rubri,p.t ae Bohos, ov, (BoA%}) that has not shed his foal-teeth, of a young horse, R- Pe Dy. Re ae) 4 EE to meet, Ap. Rh. 3.1145; Ep: Ps 2+ By & 486 pBopos — ayadis. Soph. Fr. 363, Plat. Legg. 834 C, Strattis Xpvc. 2: also of an old horse, that no longer sheds them, A. B. 322. 2. dBoda an unlucky throw of the dice, Poll. 7. 204. IL. as Subst., dBodAos, 7), a horseman’s cloak, Lat. abolla, Arr. Peripl. M. Rubri, p. 4: (in this sense, Curt. re- gards the d— as a relic of du- or dut-, thrown around; cf. arpaxros.) &-BépBopos, ov, without mire, v. sub dBdpBapos. 6s, Dor. for #Bds. GBoorys, és, (Bdcxw) unfed, fasting, Nic. Th. 124. &-Bécxntos, ov, pastureless, épn Babr. 44. 10, cf. Eust. 307. 27. Oriivos, ov, without plants or vegetation, Jo, Chrys. joros, ov, (Bdaxw) without pasture, Hesych. GBouxddnros, ov, (Bovwodéw) untended : metaph. unheeded, &B. Todr’ €u@ ppovnpare Aesch. Supp. 929. ’ aBovAet, Adv., inconsiderately, Suid., etc. &BovAeutos, ov, ill-advised, i iderate, Hippol. c. Noét. 10. Ady. —Tws, LXXx (1 Mace. 5. 67). GPovhéw, to be unwilling, Plat. Rep. 437 C; c. inf., Ep. Plat. 347 A: —also c. ace. to dislike, object to, Dio C. 55.9. (dBovdéw seems to be an exception to the rule that a privat. cannot be comp. directly with Verbs: but Plat., in a manner not unusual with him, may have taken GBovdos in the sense of unwilling for the purpose of forming this Verb ; cf. the curious analogy of im-probus, improbare.) GBothnros, ov, (BovAouat) unwilling, involuntary, Plat, Legg. 733 D. II. not according to one’s wish of will, disagreeable, Dion. H. 5. 74. Adv. -rws, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 19, M. 8. 316. &Bovdia, %, ill-advisedness, want of advice, thoughtl , Hadt. 7. 210, Antipho 126. 30, etc.; émapOévres dBovdAln Hat. 7. 9, 3; && dBovdlas megely, GBovdia mecciv Soph. El. 398, 429: also in pl, Hdt. 8. 57, Pind., etc. EBovdos, ov, (Bovdn) inconsiderate, ill-advised, Soph. Ant. 1026, etc. ; téxvowot Ziv’ 4Bovdov taking no thought for them, Id. Tr. 140: Comp. ~érepor Thuc. 1, 120, 7. 2. = xaxdBovdos, Soph, El. 546.— Ady. —ws, Hdt. 3. 71; ot dB. Pherecr. Tup. 1.6; Sup. GBovAdrara, Hdt. 7. 9, 2. GBovrys, ov, 5, (Bods) without oxen, i.e. poor, Hes. Op. 449. &Bpa, %, a favourite slave, Lat. delicata, Menand. “Amor. 1, Sue. 35 Wevd. 3, Lxx (Gen. 24. 61, Ex. 2. 5, al.). (Commonly referred to aBpés: but some old Gramm, call the word foreign, and write it @Bpa, ef, A. B. 322.) Bpapidrov, 76, Dim. of sq., Xenocr. 36. Bpiijls, iSos; 7, a fish found in the sea and the Nile, Opp. H. 1. 244. Bpextos, ov, =dpoxos, Plut. 2, 381 C, Mosch. ap. Nike Opusc. 179. Bptfopar, Med. or Pass. =dBpivopat, Hesych. &-BptOns, és, of no weight, Bapos piv odx 4Bpibés Eur. Supp. 1125. pikros, ov, (Bpi{w) wakeful, Hesych., Suid.: &Bptt, Ady., Hesych, &Bpo-Barns, ov, 6, softly or delicately stepping, Aesch. Pers. 1072. &Bpé-Bros, ov, living delicately, effeminate, Plut. Demetr. 2, etc. Boorpuxos, ov,=dBpoxdpns, Tzetz. &Bp6-yoos, ov, wailing womanishly, Aesch. Pers. 541. &Bpé-Bars, 5, 4), luxurious, dBpdSarrt rpaméty Archestr. ap, Ath. 4 E. GBpo-Biarra, %, luxurious living, a faulty compd. (v. Lob. Phryn. 603) in A. B, 322, Suid., Ael. V. H. 12. 24 in lemmate. GBpo-Blarros, ov, living delicately, dBpotiatrav Avdav bydos Aesch. Pers. 41, cf. Anth. P. append. 59: 7d dBp. effeminacy, Thuc. 1. 6, Ath, 513 C. Adv. -rws, Philo 1. 324. GBpo-elpov, ov, (efua) softly clad, Com. Anon. in Mein. 4. p. 621. &Bp6-Kapmos, ov, bearing delicate fruits, ap. Hesych. GBpo-Képns, ov, 6, with delicate or luxuriant leaves, potvg Eur. Ion 920, I. T. 1099, cf. Anth. P. 12. 256 :—aBpoxdpos, ov, Or. Sib. 14. 67. fin ab ov, without Bacchus, Anth. P. 6. 291. fr Bt B- Be optrpns, ov, 6, with bright girdle, Hesych. a-Bpopos, ov, either, 1. (acopul.) noisy, boisterous, or, 2. (a priv.) noiseless; of the Trojans, v. sub avéaxos: Ap. Rh, uses it in the latter sense, Bp. KOpa 4. 153. Bpo-meSthos, ov, soft-sandalled, *Epws Mel. in Anth. P. 12. 158. BporrevO qs, és, v. sub dxporevOns. 3 Bpémyvos, ov, (rin) of delicate texture, Lyc. 863; whence it was introduced by Salmas. into Aesch. Ag. 690, for the vulg. é8poripar. &Bps6-rAouros, ov, richly luxuriant, x54} Eur. I. T. 1148. be &Bpés, a, dv, poet. also ds, dv :—graceful, beauteous, pretty, mats, “Epws Anacr. 16. 64; @Bpat Xdpures (with Aeol. acc.) Sapph. 65; esp. of the body, c@pa, mods, etc., Pind. O. 6. 90, Eur., etc.: of things, splendid, arépayos, Ki50s, wAovTos etc, Pind. I. 8. 144, etc.—Very early, however, the word took the notion of soft, delicate, dainty, luxurious, like tpv- pepds; hence, 48pa madeiv to live delicately, Solon 15. 4, Theogn. 474 and, from Hdt. downwards (1, 71, and in Sup. -draros, 4. 104) it became a common epithet of Asiatics; "Idvwv dBpds..dxAos Antiph. Aw. 1; cf. gadAos.—Still the Poets continued to use it in good sense, esp. of women, delicate, gentle, e.g. Aesch, Fr. 322, Soph. Tr. 523; and of anything delicate or pretty, Valck. Call. p. 233; aBpov abuppa, of a pet dog, Epigr. Gr. 626; neut. pl. 48pd rapntios= Spay mapniéa (cf. donpos 11. 1), Eur. Phoen. 1486. Adv. dBpas, Anacr. 16; apis and aBpdy Baivew to step delicately, Eur. Med. 830, 1164; so neut. pl., appa yedav Anacreont. 44. 3.. 45.53 GBporépws éxew Heliod. 1. 17,—The word is chiefly poét., though never found in old Ep.; and is rare in Att. Prose, Xen. Symp. 4, 44. Cf. GBpa. (Perh. from same Root as Bn: Curt. regards the root as unknown, p. 490). [@ by nature, v. Eur. Med. £0 2 8 1164, Tro. ee &Bpooriyis, és, (ord) dropping rich unguents, péromov Anon. ap. Suid, 's, v. @Bpds. SBpootvn, 7, dBpérns, Sappho 43, Eur. Or. 349, Xenophan. 3. GBpordle, to miss, c. gen., Ep. Verb only wat in aS subj. 4Bpordtouev (Ep. for —wpev) ddAHAotiv Il. 10.65. A Subst., app €ws, , error, is cited in Hesych,, Eust. 789. 52; and an Adj., GBpo r pov, ov, erring, in Hesych., A, B. 322. (From the same Root ¥ apBpor-civ, duapr-civ, » being rejected as in duBporos dBporos, 4, xetv drdaxeiv, cf, Buttm, Lexil. s. v. duBpéotos 7.) ; GBporys, 770s, 1), splendour, luxury, dbnous éBpéraros houses of i i.e. luxurious, Pind. P. 11.51; TH Mjdwv orodp kat dBpdrnre Xen. 8. 8, 15, cf. Plat. Alc. 1. 122 C, Eur. Bacch. 968; ode & 48 xetoat thou art not in a position to be fastidious, Id. I. T. 1343; @Bpdéraros &m in tender youth, Pind. P. 8, 127. Bpé-tipos, ov, delicate and costly, v. sub dBpémnvos. Bporivn, ,=dvaprwdh, Hesych. ; cf. dBpordca, Bporévivos, 7, ov, made of 4Bpdsrovor, Diosc. 1. 60. Bporovirys, olvos, 6, wine prepared with éBpérovor, Diosc, 5. 6 Bpérovov, 74, an aromatic plant, prob, south d, Artemisi: tonum, Theophr. H. P. 6. 7, 3, etc.; v. Schneider in Indice. . &-Bporos, ov, also 7, ov,=dpBporos, immortal, divine, sent fro sacred to the gods, holy, in Hom. only once, vd¢ 4Bpérn Il. 14. 78, holy Night, as a divinity, (like vd¢ @uBporos, auBpoaty, Sacpovin, avepas, iepdv juap), or never failing (like dpOcros ius); xn a holy hymns, Soph. Ant. 1134, ubi v. Musgr,—Cf. duBporos, duBpe and Buttm. Lexil. s. v. II. without men, deserted of men, Tov eis épnuiay Aesch. Pr. 2, where the MS. reading dBarov has been corrected from Schol. Ven, Il. 14. 78. wie GBpo-puijs, és, tender of nature, prob. 1. Anth. P. 9. 412; v. dppopufs. &Bpo-xairns, ov, 6,=aBpoxduns, Anacreont. 44. & GBpoxta, 1}, (4Bpoxos) want of rain, drought, Menand. ap. Joseph. A. J. 8. 13, 2, Or. Sib. 3. 540; cf. Lob. Phryn. 2gl. &Bpo-xtraw [1], wvos, 6, %, in soft tunic, softly clad, Anth, P. 9. 538; —«ivds dBpoxlravas beds with soft coverings, Aesch. Pers. 543, GBpoxos, ov, (Bpéxw) like GBpexros, unwetted, unmoistened, Aeschin. : 31. §, Nic. Th. 339; ward wévrov &Bpoxos dicoeas Mosch. 2. 139: . wanting rain, waterless, média Eur. Hel. 1484; ’Aptadin Call. Jov. 19. ; &Bpuva, rd, mulberries, =ovxdyuwa, Parthen, ap. Ath. 51 F, cf. A. B. ‘ 224 ;—Hesych. writes @Bpuva. GBpuvrijs, ov, 6, a coxcomb, fop, Adam. Physiogn. 2. 20. 3 &Bptvw, (éBpés) to make delicate, treat delicately, ur) -yuvakds tv rpb- tos GBpuvé pe Aesch. Ag. 919: to deck or trick out, els -yapov &Bpoval twa Anth, P. 6, 281 :—Med. or Pass. to live delicately, and so, much like @p¥rropat, to wax wanton, give oneself airs, dBpivera: yap mas Tis «0 mpacoow dynp Aesch. Ag. 1205, ef. Soph, O. C. 1339; éeadAuvéunv te kat jBpuvdpny dv Plat. Apol. 20 C; c. dat. rei, to pride or plume oneself on a thing, odx dBpivonat TOS’ Eur. I. A. 858; ABpivero ro Bpadews Siamparrev Xen. Ages. 9. 2: cf. Aaumptva, cepvive, Pte 76, a woman's garment, Hesych. a “AB Be By Be Du Oa pwpos, ov, free from smell, Diph. Siphn. ap. Ath. 355 B. pwv, wyos, 6, Abron, an Argive, proverbial for luxurious living, “ABpowos Bios Suid. 4-Bpas, Gros, 6, },=vijorss, Paul, Sil. 66; restored by Cobet for d8pa- Tos in Soph. Fr. 796. 4-Bpwota, 4, want of food, fasting, Poll. 6. 39. pwros, ov, (BiBpworw) not fit to be eaten, not good for food, Ctes. in Phot. Bibl. 49. 7, Arist. H. A. 9. 28, 1, al.; d07@ Menand. Avox. 3 :— of wood, not eaten by worms, Theophr. H. P. 5. 1, 2. II. of persons, without eating, dBp., dmoros Charito 6. 3 fin.; cf. dBpas. “ABi8os, %, Abydos, the town on the Asiatic side of the Hellespont :— *ABU560ev, Adv. from Abydos, Il. 4. 500; “ABv560, at Abydos, 17. 584:—Adj. “ABubdnvés, 7, dv, of or from Abydos, Ath. 572 E, etc.: proverb., "AB. émpdpnpa a dessert of Abydos, i.e. something unpleasant, variously expl. in Paroemiogr.:—hence “ABuSnvoképys, or “ABuBo- Kops, ov, 6,=6 én 7@ oveoparreiy Kopay, Ar. Fr. 568, ubi v. Dind. 1. c. d-Bu8os, ov, =aBvacos, eis Twa GBvOov pAvapiar Plat. Parm. 130 D; but prob, the true reading is e/s ra Buddy pdvaplas, &BUpoevros, ov, (Buptevw) untanned, Schol. Il. 2. 527. &Buprékny [ix], %, a sour sauce of leeks, cresses, Pherecr. Incert. 89, Theopomp. Com, @na. 1. Alex. Mavip. I. 13, ete,. aBupriiko-rovds, dv, making 4Bupraxn, Demetr. “Apeom. 1. urcos, ov, bottomless, unfathomed, Hdt. 2. 28; drys aBvocov méXaryos Aesch, Supp. 470: generally, unfathomable, boundless, enormous, like BaOds, dB. tAodros Aesch, Th. 950; dpytpiov Ar. Lys. 174; ppéva Alay radopay, dyxv dBuvacov Aesch, Suppl. 1059. II. 4 dBuaoos, the great deep, the sea, LXX (Isai. 44.27): the abyss, bottomless pit, Ev. Luc. 8. 31, Apoc. 9. 1, etc. (For the Root, v. Baus.) &BwdsKorros, ov, not hoed, Poll. 1. 246. GBadp, i.e. dFup, Lacon. for 7jWs, and 4B =mpwi, Hesych. ay, apoc. form of ava before x, y, x, ¥. dvd init. aya, Dor. for &y7. dydac0a, dyaacQe, Ep. forms from dyapa, Od. ‘ Gydfopat, poét. collat. form of dyapat, from which we have part. honouring, adoring, Ko.Batow dyaCépevor mpwrav Bedy Pind. N. 11. 7; impf. #ya¢ero Orph. Arg. 63:—for the Homeric fut. dydocopat, etc., y. sub d-yapat. II. the Act. is used in same sense by Aesch, Supp. 1062, 7a Oedv pndiy aydCev; but dyafes is cited from Soph, in A. B. (Fr. 797) as =Oapotves. d&yd0eos, Dor. for 7jy-, Pind. < dya0{Stov, 7é, Dim. of dyabis, Hesych. s. v. roAvmn. 5 &yk0is, fSos [1 Draco 23], 4, a ball of thread, Pherecyd. 106; dyabav d dyabides, proverb., quantities of goods, Com. ap. A. ES Poll. 7. 31. > 2 eb if ' 1 ice eee, | 4 Gya%o-Bpucia, %, good produce, C. I. 9262. : ; : ay Bevel or Somat of, guests who drink to the aya0ds Baipow (cf. sq.): hence, guests who drink but little, Arist. Eth, E. 3. 6, 3:—GyaPoSatpoviacrai, name of a sort of club, Ross Inserr. ined. 282. Gya0o-Saipwv, ovos, 6, the good Genius, to whom a cup of pure wine was drunk fe the end of pes the toast being given in the words 9 G00 Saipovos: and in good Greek it was always written divisim, a an Egyptian serpent, Wessel. Diod. 3. 50. "Zyaboboota, %, (8601s) the giving of good, Schol. Arist. Gyalo-Sérqs, ov, 5, the Giver of good, Diotog. ap. Stob. 332. 19: fem. —Boris, i5os, 3}, Dionys. Ar. 440. 34. a As, és, like good, seeming good, opp. to dya0ds, Plat. Rep. 509 A, Iambl., etc. Ady. -8as. GyaSoepyéw, to do good or well, 1 Ep. Tim. 6, 18: contr. —ovpyéw, Act. Ap. 14. 17 (vulg. dya0orody). maaacesyis. Ton. of , contr. -oupyta, 7, a good deed, service rendered, Lat. beneficium, Hdt. 3. 154, 160. II. well-doing, Eccl. GyaQo-epyds, contr. —oupyés, dv, (*épyw) doing good, Damascius ap. Suid. s. v. dya0oepyia:—oi ’AyaOoepyoi, at Sparta, the five oldest and most approved knights, who went on foreign missions for the state, Hdt. I. 67; v. Bihr ad 1., Ruhnk. Tim. s. v., Grote Hist. Gr. 2. 478, 602. dyaGo0édeva, 7, desire of good, Anon. ap. Suid. -GyaPorovéw, to do good, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 70, Ev. Mare. 3. 4. 2. ay. Twa to do good to, Ey. Luc. 6. 33; c. dupl. acc., Lxx (Num. Io. 32). II. to do well, act rightly, 1 Ep. Petr. 2. 15. Gya8orotnots, 7, well-doing, Hermas :—also —rrouia, 4, I Pet. 4. 19. &ya0o-mrovds, dv, doing good, beneficent, Plut. 2. 368 B, Lxx,etc. IT. as astrolog. term, giving a good sign, Artem. 4. 59, Eus. P.E. 275 D. &ya0o-npemis, és, becoming the good, Eccl. Adv. —1as. -dya0Spputos, ov, (few) streaming with good, Synes, H. 1. 128. ayades [a7], h, 6v, Lacon. eaiets Ar. Lys. 1301: (v, sub fin.) :—good, Lat. bonus : I. of persons, 1. in early times, , gentle, noble, in reference to birth and rank, the Nobles and well-born being termed good men, prud’hommes, as opp. to kakol, deAoi (lewd people, churls, etc.), ofa re Trois dyaOota mapadpmmor xépynes Od, 15. 324, cf. Il, 1. 275; dpveds 7° dyadds re Il. 13. 664, cf. Od. 18. 276; marpds 5 cip’ dyaBoio, Ged 5é pe yeivaro pyrnp Il. 21. 109, cf. Od. 4. 611; so in later writers, xaxds é¢ dya0od Theogn. 190, cf. 57 sq.; mpavs darois, _ 0b PBovewy ayaGois Pind, P. 3. 125, cf. 2.175. 4.506; tis dv evrarpis Ge Brdoror; ovdels rev dyab@v KTA. Soph. El. 1080; of 7° dyabot mpos Tav dyevav naraviKnavra Id. Fr. 105; Tovs edyeveis yap Karya- Bods .. pide “Apns évaipew Ib. 649; and so 7d edyevés is made the attribute of of dya@oi, Eur. Alc. 600 sq., cf. I. A. 625, Andr. 767, Tro. 1254; Gyaol Kal e¢ dyabGv Lat. boni bonis prognati, Plat. Phaedr. 274 A:—with this early sense was often associated that of wealth and political power, just as in the phrases boni and mali cives, optimus quts- que in Sallust and Cicero; esp. in the phrase xadol xdryaoi (v. sub xadoKaya0ds):—on this sense y. Kortum Hellen. Staatsverf. p. 14, Welcker praef. Theogn. § 10-15, 22 sq., and cf. é00Ads, xpyaords, dpet- vo, dporos, Bertiov, BéArioros, kaxds, xelpav, xepelov, ebyevtjs. 2. ‘ood, brave, since these qualities were attributes of the Chiefs and Robles, so that this sense runs into the former, Il. 1, 131., 10. 5593; T@ Ke ayadds piv exepy’, dyabdv 5é Kev efevdp£ey 21. 280; cf. Hdt. 5. 109, etc. 38. good, in reference to ability or office, ay. Bagthevs Il. 3. 179; inrfp .2. 732; Ocpdmay 16, 165., 17. 388; often with qualifying words, dya00s év iopivy 13. 314; Boy dyabds 2. 408, 563, etc.; UE 3. 237, Od. 11. 300; Ainy Il. 6. 478; so in Att., youn dy. Soph. O. T. 687; macay dperny Plat. Legg. 899 B, cf. Alc. 1. 124 E; réxvnv Id. Prot. 323 B; 7d woAdua, Ta wodrTind Hat. 9. 122, Plat. Gorg. 516 B, etc.;—more rarely c. dat. dy. woAéup Xen. Occ. 4. 15 ;—also with a Prep., dy. wept 70 wAHO0s Lys, 130, 2; €ts Tt Plat. Alc. 1. 125A; mpés 7 Id. Rep. 407 E:—alsoc. inf., dy. paxeoba: Hdt. 1.135; immedecat 1. 79 ; dy. iordvat good at weighing, Plat. Prot.356B. 4. good, in moral sense, first perhaps in Theogn. 438, but not freq. till the philos. writers, as Plat.; often joined with other Adjs., 6 mards «dry. Soph. Tr, 451; sopds ay. Id. Ph, 119; Siealwy Kay, Ib. 1050, cf. Ant. 671, etc, 5. & yabé, my good friend, as a term of gentle remonstrance, Plat. Prot. 311 A, 314 D, etc. 6. lod Salpovos, as a toast, ‘to the good Genius,’ Beers .. moe an, ght Ar, Vesp. 525; cf. dyaOodaiywy, rixn Il. 3: title of ike a Eom as of Nero, C. I. 4609: cf. 3886 sag tH * eds , the Rom. bona dea, Plut. Caes. 9, Cic. 19. . oO ~ doll 1. good, serviceable, IddKn . . dyab? xovporpdpos Od. g. , etc,; ay. roils Toxedot, TH whAe Xen. Cyn. 13,17; ¢. gen. ef 7 muperou dy. for it, Id. Mem. 3. 8, 3. 2. of outward cir- cumstances, — ob ayadhv one éppevat wr ra ot é 35: 4 : imeiv eis daddy to purpose, Il. 9. 102; 7 3 jor any eek end, nrhr 5 puderr’ eis Sa8t 23. 305 :—d-yabdv [éor], c. inf., it is good to do so and so, Il, 7. 282., 24. 130, Od. 3 196, Att. 3. bv, 75, a good, a blessing, t, of persons, @ peya dy. od Tois s Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 20; pidov, 6 péyoroy ay. evai pact Id. Mem. 2. 4, 2, cf. Hier. 7, 9, Ar. Ran. 73, etc. 3 ea drya0G Tivos for one’s good, Thue. 5.27, Xen.; én” dya0@ rois wodlrais Ar, Ran. 1487 :—70 dyabov or rayabér, the good, Cicero's summum bonum, Plat. Rep. 506 B, 508 E, 34 C, al. :—also in pl., dya04, 74, the goods of fortune, goods, wealth, Hat. 2. 172, Lys. 138. 32, Xew., etc.; dyabd yey, etc.; but also, things, dainties, Theogn. To00, Ar. Ach. 873, 982, etc.: also good falities, Tots @y., ols éxopev ev 7H Yux7 Isocr.165D; €l raAAa wavra . Exot, Kaxdmovs 5° ein, of a horse, Xen, Eq. 1, 2, ete, dyaboBpuoia — ayadro. rir. | o the word has no regular degrees of Comparison; but many forms are used instead; viz. Comp. dyeivay, dpeiwy, BeATiov, xpeloowy (Kappwr), Awlwv (Adwv), Ep. BéArepos, Awtrepos, péprepos :—Sup. dprotos, Bér- TigT0s, KpariaTos, AwiaTos (A@aros), Ep. BéATaros, KaptiaTos, pép- Taros, pepiaros. The reg. Comp. dya@wrepos occurs in Lxx (Jud. 11. 9. 2, p. 193, Dion. Areop. Div. Nom. 21. E Gya0dw, a verb first found in Lxx, to do good to one, twa or Twi LXX Qa Regg. 25. 31, Sir. 49. 10). Gyaluve, like dya0dw, first and chiefly in Lxx: I. trans, to honour, magnify, exalt (3 Regg. 1. 47, Ps. 50. 18): to adorn, riv Kepadny (4 Regg. 9. 30) :—Pass, to be of good cheer, to rejoice greatly, 2 Regg. 13. 28, Dan. 6. 23, al. II. intr. to do good, do well, Ps. 35: 33 Tivi to one, (but with v.‘I. rw), Ib. 124. 4. lwoivn, %, goodness, kindness, Ep. Rom. 15. 14, Eph. 5. 9. Gyatopat, Ep. and Ion. for éyayar, but only used in pres., and always in bad sense (cf. dyn 11), 1. c. ace, rei, to be indignant at, ayat- opévov Kaxd épya Od. 20. 16: to look on with jealousy or envy, ov8 dyalopat Bev epya Archil. 21, cf. Opp. H. 4. 138. 2. c. dat. pers. to be wroth or indignant with, rO.. Zeds ards dyaierat Hes. Op. 331 ; dryaibpevoi Te Kai pOovéovres aii Hat. 8. 69, 1. 3. absol., Ap. Rh. 1, 899. Gyaios, a, ov, enviable, admirable, Hesych., A. B. 334, E. M. Suid. dya-kAens, és, voc. -xAeés Hom.: Ep. gen. dyaxAjos Il. 16. 738, nom. pl. dyaxAneis Manetho 3. 324, (and in very late writers, as Apollinar., a sing. nom, d-yaxA7eis) :—shortened acc. sing. dyaxAéa Pind. P. g. 187., I. . 49; dat. dyaxAéi Anth. Plan. 377: pl. dyaxAéds Antim. Fr. 36 ; cf. evens : very glorious, famous, Lat. inclytus, in Il, always of men, as 16. 738., 23. 529; in Pind., dy. ala, etc.—Ep. and Lyr. word (not in Od.), except in Adv. dyaxAeas, Hipp. 28. 13. Gya-Khettés, 7, dv, =foreg., Hom., and Hes., mostly of men. things, dyaxAccr? ExarduBy Od. 3. 59 ; cf. dyakAutés. éyakAupévy, a poet. fem.=sq., Antim. Fr. 25 : cf, ayaxripévn. Gya-KAurés, dv, =dyaKxdens, -Krerds, Lat. inclytus, Hom. (chiefly in Od.), and Hes., mostly of men. 2. of things, dy. Spare Od. 3. 388., 7. 3, 46. ay €v, poct. fem.=edxripévy, well-built or placed, wéAts Pind. P. 5. 108; cf. dyaxAupévn. ayiAaxria, 7%, want of milk, Autocrit. Incert. 1, Poll, 3. 50. ayahaxros [yi], ov, (a privat., yéda) without milk, giving none, Hipp. 247. 9, cf. Call, Apoll. 52. 2. getting no milk, i.e. taken from the mother’s breast, Horace’s jam lacte depulsus, Aesch. Ag. 718. 3. never having sucked, Nonn. Jo. 9. v. 20, 4. vopai dydadaxror pastures bad for milch cattle, Galen. II. (a copul.) =duoydAaxros, ap. Hesych., who also quotes dyahaxroowvy = avyyéveia. GydaF, axros, 6, %,=foreg. (signf. 1), found only in pl. dydAaxres, Call. Apoll. 52. II.=foreg. 11, Hesych., Suid. GyahMGpa, 76, a transport of joy, LXx. GyadAlaois, ews, 4, great joy, exultation, Ev. Luc. 1. 4, 44, etc. GyaAvdw, late form of dydAAopat, to rejoice exceedingly, Apocal. 19. 7 (v. 1. dyarAépeBa) ; yadAlaoa Ey, Luc. 1. 47:—more common as Dep. @yadArdouar or —dCopuat, LXx : fut. —doopat Ib. : aor, #yaAdaodpny Psalm. 15. 9, Ev. Jo. 8. 56; also, HyaAAdoOny Ev. Jo. 5. 35.—But this family of words seems also to haye been used in malam partem, dyah- feu, te GyaApds * AovSopia, ayadAvos * AoiSopos, Hesych.,’ cf. E. M. 7. 8. GyaAXs, i50s, 7, a bulbous plant of the genus bdxwos, the iri h. Hom. Cer. 7, 426; cf. Alb. Hesych. - Pp. 30. noe ee ay4\Xoxov, 74, Lat. agallochum, the bitter aloe, Diosc. I, 21, ubi v. Sprengel; from Aétius’ time called fvAaddn. aya [a], Pind., Att.: fut. éyad@ Ar, Pax 399, Theopomp. Com. TinveA. 1; aor. #ynda Dio C.,, etc., subj. d@y#Aw Hermipp. Apr. 1, inf. dyfra Eur. Med. 1026 :—Pass., only used in pres. and impf. by correct writers: aor. I inf. dyaA@jvar Dio C. 51. 20: cf. é—-dyaAdAw. To make glorious, glorify, exalt, Pind. O. 1, 1 39, N. 5. 79: esp. to pa honour to a god, & a Sce6 Plat, Leo. 2 wonour to a god, ayadre oiBoy Ar. Thesm, 128, cf. Plat, Legg. 931 A; dy. TVA Bvoiaict Ar. Pax |. c.; pépe viv, dynrdw rods Beors Hermipp. 1, c.:—to adorn, deck, -yapundtous ebvds Eur, |. c.:—Pass, to glory, take delight, rgoice or exult in a thing, be proud of it, c. part., Ted xea Oy Exrop . . €xav Gpotow dydddrerat Il, 17. 473, cf. 18. 1323 iv €xacros marpida éxov.. dy. Thuc. 4. 95; but mostly c. dat., immoow nad Exeopu dryahrdpevos Il, 12. 1143 OpviBes dyaAdovrar mreptyecot 2. 402; vijes.. dy, Aws otpw Od. 5. 176; Modoa.. dy. émi nary Hes. Th. 68; domt& Archil, 5 ; éoprais Eur. Tro, 4523; so in Prose, 7@ obvd- part try@dovro Hat. I. 143, cf. Thuc, 2. 44, Plat, Theaet. 176 B; ddAorpiows mTEpals ay. to strut in borrowed plumes, Luc. Apol. 4; also, ayarAcoOat emi ri Thuc. 3-82, 15, Xen. Cyr, 8, 4, 11; later pis Bid 2. of dy. 1400s Soph. Tr, 854 (in lyr.): ayadpa — ayaraQo, tat 7 Dio C. 66, 23; and even c, ace., Anth, P. 7. 378: absol., Hdt. 4. 64., 9. 109, Hipp. Art. 802, Eur, Bacch. 1197.—Cf, ayaApa throughout. ay » aos, 74, acc. to Hesych, wav ép' @ ris dydAAera, a glory, delight, honour, ll. 4. 144, etc.; so Alcae. Fr. 15, speaks of Addox as kepahaiow dvipay ayddpara ; and Pind. calls his ode ydupas dyaApa, N. 3. 21, cf. 8. 27; often of children, réxvov déuov dyadya, Aesch. Ag. 207; edkdelas réxvos dy. a crown of glory to them (cf. et«Aera), Soph. Ant. 704; Kadpeias ay. Ndppas, addressed to Bacchus, Ib. 1116; Harépos dy. péviov, said of slain sons, Eur. Supp. 369, ubi v. Markl. ; dyddpar’ dyopas mere ornaments of the agora (cf. d-yopaios 11. 3), Eur. El. 385, cf. Metagen. “Oy. 1. 2. a pleasing gift, esp. for the gods, dy. Oedv Od. 8. 509, cf. 3. 438, where a bull adorned for sacrifice is called an dyaAya; of a tripod, Hdt. 5. 60, 61, 158, and generally, = dvd@nya, Inscrr. Vet. in C. 1. 3 (v. Béckh), 24, 150, al.; dvOnwev dy. Simon, 158; Xdpys cipl.., dy. 7@ AwéAAwM Inscr. at Branchidae, Newton P- 779 3 80, ‘Exarys dyaApa .. cdwy, because sacred to her, Eur. Fr. 959, cf, Ar. Fr. 635. 3. a statue in honour of a god, Hat. 1. 131., 2. 42, 46, Lys. 104. 35; as an object of worship, Aesch. Th. 258, Eum. 55, Soph. O. T. 1379, Plat. Phaedr. 251 A: sculpture, phe dy. wre ypaph Arist. Pol. 7.17, 10 ;—but dy. ’AiSa, in Pind, N. 10. 125, is the head- Stone of a grave, called or#An in the parallel passage of Theocr., 22. 207. 4. then generally, =dvdpids, any statue, Plato Meno 97 D: or @ portrait, picture, ¢Eardepbeio’ ds dyadkua Eur. Hel, 262; cf. A. B. 82, 324, 334. 5. lastly any image, expressed by painting or words, Plat. Tim. 529 C, Symp. 216 E.—On the word v. Ruhnk. Tim. s. v. dyahparias, ov, 6, like a statue, beautiful as one, Philostr. 612. dyahpariov, 74, Dim. of dyadpa, Theopomp. Com. Inve. 1, etc. dyahpartirys, 6,=AdoxdAda, Hesych. dyahpato-yAvdos, 6, a carver of statues, Theodoret. dyahparo-rovds, 6, a maker of statues, a sculptor, statuary, Hat. 2. 46. Plat. Prot. 311 C, etc.; ypapeis i) dy. Arist. Pol. 8. 5, 21:— yaApatoroéw, to make statues, Poll. 7. 108 :—éyahparorounticés, %, Ov, of or for a statuary: %, —Kh (sc. réxvn), ap. Poll. 1. 13 :—éyaA- parorrotia, 4, the statuary’s art, Porph. Abst. 2. 49, A. B. 335, Poll. dyoApatoupyia, ,=dyaAparoroiia, Max. Tyr. 1. p. 438: and dyaA- paroupyikds, 7, dv, =dyadparoronrinds, Id. 2. p. 139, Clem, Al. 41. dyaAparoupyss, dv, (*épyw) =dyadparorords, Poll. 1. 12. dyaAparodpopéw, to carry an image in one’s mind, bear impressed upon one's mind, Philo 1. 16, 412., 2. 403, etc.; and Pass., 2. 136. dyahparo-pépos, ov, carrying an image in one's heart, Hesych. Gyahparéa, f. wow, to make into an image, Lyc. 845. dyahpo-eys, és, beautiful as a statue, “Epws Poéta ap. Jo. Lyd. p. 117. 18, Bekk. Gyahpo-rimos [%], ov, forming a statue, maddpnow dyadpotimos Manetho 4. 569. dyipa [a], 2 pl. dyacbe (vulg. dyaoGe, from dydouat) Od. 5. 129, Ep. aydao@e Ib. 119; Ep. inf. aydacOa 16. 203: impf. #yduny Plat. Rep. 367 E, Xen., Ep. 2 pl. #ydacde Od. 5. 122 :—fut. Ep. dyaooopat Od, 4. 181, (v. 1. 1. 389), later, dyac@jcopuar Themist. :—aor. #ryacdpny Hom., Dem. 296. 4, Plut., etc.; Ep. #ydo0arTo or dydooaro ll. 3. 181, 224; but after Hom, the pass. #ydo@ny prevails, Hes. Fr. 206, Solon 32, Pind., Att. (From same Root as dyn wonder, dyd{opat, dryatopat: ef. Buttm. Lexil. s.v. dyros 4.) — [éyauar, but qyaao0 by the re- quirement of Ep. metre, Od. 1. c.] I. absol. to wonder, be astonished, pynorihpes 8 . . dweppiddws aydoavro Od. 18. 71, etc.; c, part., @yapar ido Il. 3.224; cf. dydopar. 2. more often c. acc., to admire a person or thing, tov 3 6 -yépwr jydooaro Il. 3. 181; ds oe, yovat, dyapa Od. 6.168; pdOor dy. Il. 8.29; 7d mpoopay dy. oev Hdt. 9. 79, cf. 8. 144; so in Att., radra dyacbets Xen, Cyr. 213, 19, cf. 7. I, 41, etc.; ¢. acc. pers. et gen. rei, to admire one for a thing, Plat. Rep. 426 D, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 21. 3. c. gen. rei only, often in Com., to wonder at, dyapat 5& Adywy Ar. Av. 1744, cf. Plat. Euthyd. 276 D, Xen., etc,; dyapyar xepapéws Eupol. Incert. 90; dy. od ordpa- Tos, ws. .Phryn. Com. Kpév. 5. 4. c. acc. rei et gen. pers., ob dyapat Tabr dvdpos apirréws Eur. Or. 28. 5. c. gen. pers., foll. by a part., to wonder at one’s doing, éy.’Epacivov ov mpodiddvros Hat. 6. 76, 2; ay. avrov eimdyros Plat, Rep. 329 D, etc.; so, dy. Twos Ort.,, or Sidr .., Id. Hipp. Ma. 291 E, Xen. Mem. 4. 2,°9, etc. 6. also like xaip, jdopat, c. dat. to be delighted with a person or thing, Hdt. 4. 75, Eur. H. F, 845, Plat. Symp. 179 D, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 9; and later éni mun, Ath. 594 C, cf. Ruhnk. Tim. II. in bad sense, to feel envy, bear a grudge, c. dat. pers., el wh of dyaccaro PoiBos ’AméAdwy Il. 17. 713 dyaooapevor [por] wept vixens 23. 639; with an inf, added, to be jealous of one that... , oxérdt0i éore, Deol, . . oiTe Oeats dyaacbe wap dvipdow eivacecOa Od. 5. 119, cf. 122, 129., 23. 211; foll. by a relat., épacke Moceddew’ aydcacbat hyiv, otivera.. 8. 565. 2. c. acc. to be jealous of, angry at a thing, dyacodpevor wand épya 2. 67; Ta pév mou pédreyv ayaccecbar Oeds 4.181; UBpw dyacodpevor 23. 64. Cf. d-yaiopar, "Ayapépvev, ovos, 6, (yar, péuvey (from pevw), the very resolute or steadfast, cf. Mépyvav) :—Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, leader of the Greeks against Troy, Hom.: Adj. Ayuipepvéveos, éa, cov, Hom., also —6vevos, efa, evo, and —évi0s, fa, cov, Pind., Aesch.: Patron. —ovléys, ov, 6, Agamemnon’s son, Orestes, Od. 1. 30, Soph. El. 182. dyipévws, Ady. part. pres. of dyapat, with admiration or applause, ay. A€yewv Arist. Rhet. 3. 7,3; dy. Tov Adyov dmedéfaro with respect or de- Serence, Heind. Plat. Phaedo 89 A. dydpunros, ov, rarer form for @yipos, Comici ap. Poll. 3. 47: a form Gydyeros is cited from Soph. (Fr. 798) in A. B.: v. Lob, Phryn. 514. ayapla, %, single estate, celibacy, Plut. 2.(491 E:—ayaptou dixn, H, an $ 5 against a bachelor for not marrying, Plut. Lys. 30, v. Poll. 48. ; d-yiipos, ov, unmarried, single, properly applied to the man, wheth bachelor or widower, dvavdpos being used of the woman, ll. 3. 49, in Prose ; so, (@ 5¢ Tivmvos Biov, d-yapov, dSovAov Phryn. Com. Mov 1 :—however dyapos is used of the woman in Aesch, Supp. 143, So O. T. 1502, Ant. 867, and Eur. IL. ydpos dyapos, a marri that is no marriage, a fatal marriage, Soph. O. T. 1214, Eur. Hel. 6 like Bios @Bios, etc. dyav, Adv. very, much, very much, Theogn., Pind. and Att., the wo Ainv being the usual equiv, in Ep. and Ion. (but see Hat. 2. 173), strong’ affirmat. like Lat. prorsus, too surely, Aesch. Th. 811; and so in compos. it always strengthens or enforces. The bad sense too, too much, like Lat nimis, occurs only in peculiar phrases, as in the famous pydty aya quid nimis, not too muck of any thing, first in heogn. 335, Pind. 235; attributed to Chilo by Arist, Rhet. 2. 12, 14; so, dyav Te Tou Plat. Rep. 563 E, etc. It may stand alone with the Verb, @yav & Oepooropeis Aesch. Pr. 180, etc.; but it is not seldom joined with Adj., which may either go before or follow, dyav Bapus Id. Pers. mBavos dyay Ag. 485; even with Sup., dyay dypiwrdrous far the me savage, Ael. H. A, 1.38, cf. 8.13; also with an Adv., drepOdpms dyav Eun 824; dyay ofrw Soph. Ph. 598; das dyay Xen. Vect. 5.6; w Subst., #) dyav oiyn Soph. Ant. 1251; % dyav AevOepia Plat. Rep. A; without the Article, eis dyav SovAciay Ib. (The 4/AT' appe dy-jvwp: Curt. refers it to dyw: in sense it seems rather to belo dyapat, dyn.) [ya properly, Orac. ap. Hdt. 4. 157, etc.; but & in Anth, P. 5. 216., Io. 51.] j dytivaxréw, f. ow, properly in physical sense, to feel a violent ir tion (cf. sq.), of the effects of cold on the body, Hipp. 426. 6; kal dyavaxrei, of the soul, Plat. Phaedr. 251 C; of wine, to ferment, Plut. 2. 734 E. II. metaph. to be grieved, displeased, vexed, annoyed, angry, or discontented, nd dryavdnre Ar. Vesp. 287; esp. to shew outward signs of grief, xAdwv Kat dy, Plat. Phaedo 117 D, etc. :— foll. by a relat., dy. drt. . , Antipho 126. 5, Lys. 96. 30; dy. et.., or édy .., Andoc. 18. 16, Plat. Lach. 194 A. 2. c. dat. rei, to be vexed ata thing, e.g. @avarw Plat, Phaedo 63 B; also c. acc. rei, Heind. Phaede 64 A; ay. rabra, drt .., Plat. Euthyphro 4 D; also, dy. éni ru Lys. 91. 5, Isocr, 357 A, etc.; bép twos Plat. Euthyd, 283 D, etc.; mept twos Id. Ep. 349 D; da 71 Id. Phaedo 63 C; mpds tt Epict. Enchir. 4; and sometimes c. gen. rei, A. B. 334. 3. to be vexed at or witha | person, tvi Xen. Hell. 5. 3, 11; mpés twa Plut. Cam. 28; «ard twos Luc, Tim. 18 :—also c. part. to be angry at, ay. dro8vncKoytas Plat. Phaedo 62 E, cf. 67 D; dy. évOvuotpevos .. Andoc, 31. 24. Iii. in Luc. Somn. 4 and Aristid., dyavaxreioOar as a Dep.—Cf. &-, ovv-, trep-ayavaxréw. (The signf. shows that dyay forms the first part of the Verb. The latter part is referred by Schneid. to @yw, as —exréw in TAEOVERTEW, TEpInLEKTEW to Ex.) dyavaxryots, ews, 7), properly physical pain and irritation, dy. epi ra ovAa, of the irritation caused by teething, Plat. Phaedr. 251 C. II, vexation, annoyance, dyavaxrnow éxee the thing gives just grounds for displeasure, Thuc. 2. 41, cf. 2 Cor. 7. 11, Hesych. dyavaxryTiKds, 7, dv, apt to be vexed, easily vexed, irritable, peevish, Plat. Rep. 604 E, 605 A (Bekk.); vulg. dyavaxrixds. dyavaxryrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. vexatious, Plat. Gorg. 511 B. dyavaxricés, 7, dv,=dyavanrntinés (q. v.), Luc. Pisc, 14. Adv. —xas, M. Anton, IT. 13. } dydv-vidos, ov, much snowed on, snow-capt, “Odvpros Il, 1. 420. ayivo-Brépapos, ov, mild-eyed, Ibyc. 4, Anth, P. 9. 604. ayavépeos, dyavopia, Dor. for dyny-. : ayuvés, 7, 6v, pott. Adj. mild, gentle, kindly, of persons or their words and acts, dy. cal #muos éorw oxnmrodxos BactAeds Od. 2. 230., 5. 8; dy. éméecow Il, 2. 164, 180, etc.; pdOos dy. Od. 15. 53; evxwAgs Il. 9. 499, Od. 13. 357; Sépoor Il. 9.11433; so in Pind., dy. Adyos P. 4.179; dy. éppix Ib. 9. 65; Trag. only in Aesch. Ag. 101; avardy dyaval avai Mnesim. ‘Inn, 1. 56. 2. in Hom. also of the shafts of Apollo and Artemis, as bringing an easy death, GAN Gre -ynptokwor .., “AmddAdAav *Aprémde fdv ols dyavois Bed€ecow érot~ xopevos katérepvey Od, 15. 411, cf. 3. 280, Il. 24. 759, etc. Sup. dyavwraros, Hes. Th. 408. Adv. -v@s, Anacr. 49.1, Eur. I. A. 602; Comp., dyavwrepov BAémew Ar. Lys. 886. (The Root is perh, the same as that of yévuzar, with a euphon.) dyavos, ov, (dyvupt) broken, fvAov ay. sticks broken for firewood, A. B. 335, Eust. 200. 3. dyavoppootwvn, 4, gentleness of mood, kindliness, Il.24.772, Od. 11.202. ayavé-ppav, ov, gen. ovos, (pphv) poét. Adj. gentle of mood, Il. 20. 467, Cratin. Xeip. 1; “Hovyia Ar. Ay. 1321. ; &yav-Gms, Sos, 7, (ay) mild-looking, mild-eyed, Marcell. Sid. 80; dy. mapea ap. Hesych. aydavep, Dor. for dynvwp, Pind. dydavwros, ov, (yivéw) not glazed over, Posidon. ap. Paul. /Bg. j Gydopar, Ep. collat. form of dyapa:, only found in part. dyapevos, admiring, Hes. Th. 619; for in Od. 5. 129, dyaade is restored for ayaob6c; aydacbe, iyaac0¢e, dydac@a also belong to dyapat. * Gyardto, Ep. and Lyr. form of dyamdéw Hom.; Dor. 3 pl. —ovre Pind. I. 5. 69; Ep. impf. éydéra{ov Ap, Rh.:—also in Med., Hom. ; Dor. impf. ’@yamd¢ovro Pind. P. 4. 428 :—only used in pres. and impf., except aor. act. dyamdgac in Callicrat. ap. Stob. 487. 16. ‘ To treat with affection, receive with outward signs of love, to love, dis BE maTh)p dv maida .. dyand(e, édOdvr’ &f dmins yains Sexar@ éauT@ Od. 16. 17; venegonrov 5é Kev ein GOavarov Gedy de Bporods cyanalénev ; ae eeea rene} 6 : ; ’ , AYLTATOS — dyrny ll. 24. 464 :—Med. in absol. sense, to show signs of love, caress, | xiveoy dyaraCbyevo: wepadny te wal dpovs Od. 21. 224; 08 dya- maCdpevot pid Ig 2. timat KadAlvixov xdpy’ dyand{ovre welcome, receive Fully, Pind, 1.1, ¢.; cf. duparyard(w.—Used once in Trag,, v. dyamaw I, 1. a » Ov, Dor. for dyamnrés, Pind. : dyimaw, f. now: pf. iydrnea Isocr. Antid. § 158: Ep. aor. dydanoa Od. 23. 214:—cf. imep-ayandw. (The Root is uncertain.) I. of tsons, fo treat with affection, receive with outward signs of love, to » be fond of, like the Ep. dyara{w, used by Hom. once in this sense, Od. 1.c.; rare also in Trag., and only in the sense of skewing affection to the dead, 67’ Hydra vexpods Eur. Supp. 764 (so véxuy dya- md{av éuop Id. Phoen, 1327); but freq. in Plat., etc., both of persons and things, domep .. of mownral Ta aitav ronpata Kal of marépes Tods maidas dyaraot Plat, Rep. 330 C, cf. Legg. g28 A; ds Avion pv’ dyando’ Poéta ap. Phaedr. 241 D; dy. rods énawéras Ib, 257 E; émornuny, 7d dicaov, ra xphuara, etc., Id. Phileb. 62 D, Rep. 359 A, al.; rovrous dyamG kal rept abroy éxet Dem. 23. 23:—Pass., Gy. kat oixeiy evdarpdves Plat. Polit. 30D; id rev Gedy Hyanho8ae Dem. 1404. 4; and of things, Ac@iiia radra 7a iyarnpéva Plat. Phaedo 110 D. 2. to desire, Plat. Lys. 215 A, B. 38. in N. T, and Christian writers, to regard with brotherly love, v. d-yamh :—the word comes near sense in two passages of Menand., 6 péyoror dyamay ot or opyitera: Incert. 113, cf. 215. 4. dyandw differs from , as implying regard or affection rather than passion, cf, Lat. diligo, amo, but sometimes can hardly be distinguished, v. Xen, Mem. 2. 7, 9, and 12; prcio0a =dyarao0a abroy 8 aivréy Arist. Rhet. 1. 11, 17. 5. cme dled sexual love, like épaw, Arist. Fr. 66, Luc. Jup. Trag. 2; in Plat. Symp. 180 B, Phaedr. 253 A, this sense is not necessary ; and in Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 4, tépvas dyanay is not =épay, but simply to be fond of, devoted to them; so, dy. éraipay Anaxil. Neott. I. Ii. in relation to things, to be well pleased, contented, used once by Hom. also in this sense, ob« d-yamgs 8 éxndos .. weO’ Huiv dalvucat Od. 21. 289; but this sense is freq. in Att., dyandy or: .., Thuc. 6. 36, 4; more commonly dy. ei ..to be well content if .., Plat. Rep. 450 A, al.; édv.. Ib. 330 B, al.; qv ..,ayv.., Ar. Vesp. 684, Plat. Gorg. 483 C, al. 2. c. part., dy. Tiud@pevos Plat, Rep. 475 B, ef. Isocr. 234 C, Antiph. Neott. 2; c. inf., Hdn. 2. 15, Alciphro 3. 61, Luc., etc. 3. c. dat. rei, to be contented or pleased at or witha thing, like orépyo, dowd Copat, dy. rois imapxovaw dyabois Lys. 192. 26; Tois mempaypévors Dem. 13. 11. 4. like orépyw, c. acc. rei, pnére Thy edevdepiay dy. Isocr. 69 D; 7a wapévra Dem. 7o. 20; cf, Arist. Rhet. 1. 2,23. 5. rarely c. gen., iva... ris dias dyan@ow may be content with the proper price, Alex. AéB. 3. 7. 6. absol. to be content, dyamhaavres Lycurg. 157. 5, cf. Luc, Nec. 17. 7.c. inf. to be fond of doing, wont to do, like piAéw, rods Avgiovs d&yan@vras Tpixwpa pepe Arist. Oec. 2. 14; and so in Lxx, ; ayaa, %, love, dy. nat picos LXx (Eccl. 9. 1, al.): esp. brotherly love, charity, 1 Ep. Cor. 13. 1 sq., al.: the love of God for man and of man for God, Philo x. 283, Rom, 5. 8, 2 Cor. 5. 14, Ev. Luc. 11. 42, al. II. a beloved object, one’s love, LXx (Cant. 2. 7). Tit. in pl. a love-feast, 2 Ep. Petr. 2. 13, Ep. Jud.12. The Noun first occurs in Lxx, and Biblical writers, though dyamd{w, dyamam, and derivs, are freq. in Classical authors. aydaamnpa, 76, Lat. deliciae, a delight, of a 1, Anth. P. To. 104, C. I. 5039; of a dainty dish, Aryvay dvdpav dy. Axionic, BA. 1. 6. dyat-nvwp, opos, 6, = ivopénv dyarar, lovin, manliness, manly, epith. of heroes, Il, 8.114, etc.: also as a prop. n., Il. « aydarnjots, ews, $ affection, choice, Arist. Metaph. 1.1, 1, Def, Plat. 413 B, Plut. Pericl. 24; cf. Lob. Phryn. 352. . dyarrn , 6, rarer form for foreg., Menand. Suvap. 3. , @, ov, verb. Adj. to be loved, desired, Plat. Rep. 358 A. dyarnrixés, 4, dv, affectionate, Plut. Sol. 7, Clem. Al, 123, etc, Adv, kos, Id, 102, etc. 2 wee : ayimnnrés, 7, dv, Dor. -arés, a, dv, verb. Adj. beloved, potvos édv dyarnrés the only dearly beloved son, Od, 2. 365; more commonly without podvos, of an only son, ‘Exropiiny dyamnréy Il. 6. 401, cf. Od. 4. 817; so in Att., Ar. Thesm. 761; Nuehparos ..5 Tod Nuxiov dy. wats Dem. 567. 24, cf. Arist. Rhet. 1. 7, 41, al.; Comically, Samidioy ey dy. Hipparch. ’Avac. 1. II. of things, worthy of love, loveable, desirable, a Plat. Alc. 1. 131 E, pies erat Id. “4 os 3 7d dyannrév an object of desire, Arist. Rhet. 1.7, 41, . to be iesced in (as ae in a choice of evils), Andoc. 26. 15 :—hence, (or) one must be content, el.., tdv.., Plat. Prot. 328 A, Xen. Oec. 8. 16, Dem. 302. 1, Arist., etc.; ¢. inf, Eth. N. g. 10, 6. III. Adv. -7@s, readily, gladly, contentedly, Plat. Legg. 735 D, Dem. 409. 7, etc. 2. to one’s heart's content, Diphil. Incert. a5 3. just ei h to content one, only just, barely, scarcely, = pdd«s, Plat. Lys. ee Cs dpaageot ao0ivat Lys, 107.16; so also, dyarnrév Menand. Me6n 1. é ie form for dyannréis, Eus. P. E. 14. 5, 4, Stob. 297. 41. Gyupixéy, 7d, Lat. agaricum, a sort of tree-fungus, boletus igniarius, used for tinder, Diosc. 3.1. [a@y-; but @y metri grat. in the hexam. of Androm. in Gal. Antid. 894 B, 895 D.] ‘ &yappis, %, (dyelpw) a meeting, Inscr. Neap. in C. I. 5785. 12, Hesych. & , ov, contr. —ppous, ovr, (dyav, péw) strong-flowing, Homeric epithet of the Hellespont, Il. 2. 845., 12. 30. ee , és, (a0évos) very strong, Opp. C. 2. 3; Epigr. Gr. 1052 ;— ” (cf. piAéw I. 2) 7. 33; but c.acc., like Act., Pind, P. | 3 L-orixus, v, very rich in corn, yi Greg. Naz. 2. 112 B. 0s, ov, much groaning, howling, of the hollow roaring of the Od. 12. 97, h. Ap. 94: loud-wailing, Aesch. Th. 97. “Gyaords, 4, dv, (d-yapar) deserving admiration, later form of the Hom, dyyrés, admirable, Aesch, Fr. 265 ; obwére pot Blos dy. Eur. Hec. 169 ; éxeivo 82 kpivw Tou dvdpos dy. Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 56, cf. An. 1.9, 24, Occ. 11, 19, Bq. 11, 9; often in Piut.:—Adv. -ra@s, Xen, Ages. 1, 24.—In other Att. writers, @avyacrds is the word preferred. Gydorap, opos, (a copul., yaornp, cf. dbeApds) from the same womb: pl. twins, Hesych.: generally, a near kinsman, Lyc. 264. s, (60s, %, a plant, heracleum gummiferum, Diosc. 3. 98. Gydovptos, 6, an obscure epith. given to Pittacus by Alcae. (38), which Diog. L. 1. 81 explains by émoeouppévos Kal putapds. ; » Lacon. ace. pl. of dyads, Ar. Lys, 1301. Gyarés, 7, dv, post. for d-yaords (cf. Oavpards, didparos, etc.), h. Hom. Ap. 55 vy. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. p. 26. yyavos, 7), dv, in Hom. almost always of kings or heroes, illustrious, noble, high-born, dy. whpuxes ll. 3. 268; pvnothpes, Painxes Od.; dyavi) Tlepoepivera Od, 11. 213; mopnijes dyavoi noble guides, Od. 13. 71: also in Pind. P. 4. 127, and once in Trag., Mépoais ayavois Aesch, Pers. 986 (lyr.) :—Sup. -déraros Od, 15. 229. 2. as prop. names, ’Ayavds, ‘Ayavn, Il., Hes. ; not “Ayavos, “Ayaun, v. Arcad. 45 and 103, Lehrs de Stud. Aristarch. p. 293. (For the Root, v. yaiw.) Gyauptapa, 7d, insolence, Lxx (Bar. 4. 34), Hesych., A. B. 325. Gyaupés, 4, d6v,=-yaipos with a euphon., stately, proud, tatpos Hes. Th. 832, cf. Wess. Hdt. 7. 57, 2, where the superl. Adv. dyaupdrara is used. of Xerxes. dyddOeyKros, ov, (pOéyyouat) loud-sounding, dorbai Pind. O. 6, 155. aya, =dyd(opat, Aleman 119. dyyipa, 7a, the daily stages of the dyyapo, E. M. Gyyipeta, %, a despatching, despatch, C.1. 4956 A. 21, Arr. Epict. . 1, 79. Siigiearrts, od, 6, one who employs an ayyapos, Hesych. dyyipevo, to press one to serye as an dyyapos, or generally, to press into service, late Lat. angariare, Ev. Matth. 5. 41., 27. 32, C. I. 4956 A. 24:—Pass. to be pressed into service, Menand. Stkvwy. 4. Gyyaprtos, 6, lon. form of dyyapos, Hat. 3. 126. II. as Subst., ayyapiov, 76, post-riding, the Persian system of mounted couriers, 1d.8.98. Gyyipos, 6, Persian word, a mounted courier, such as were kept ready at regular stages throughout Persia (with power of impressment) for car- tying the royal despatches, Auct. ap. Suid. s. v., cf. dyyapnios U1, and v. Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, 17. II. as Adj., Aesch, Ag. 282 dyyapov mip the courier flame, said of beacon fires used for telegraphing ; cf. wopmés fin. ayyapodopée, to bear as an dyyapos, Procop. 3. 122, 1, al. Gyyetbtov, 7d, Dim. of dyyetov, Damocr. in Galen, Antid. 894 F, Poll. TO. 30. Gyyeto-hoyéw, to take up a vein and operate upon it, Paul. Aeg. 6. 5, p- 177 :—hence Subst. -Aoyia, 7, Id. Gyyetoy, Ion, —tov, 76, (dyyos) a vessel of any kind for holding liquid or dry substances (roto... fnpots nal irypots . . épyaabév, dyyeiov 5 5) HG KAGE TpoopPeyyspea Plat. Polit. 237 E); of metal, dpy’pea ayy. silver jars or vases for water, Hdt. 1.188; dpyupd nal yada ayy. Plut. 2. 695; & ayy. xadkK@ a mortar, Theophr. Lap. 60 ;—f{vAwa ayy. large tubs or vats of wood, Hat. 4. 2 ;—vessels for holding money, in a treasury, Id. 2.121, 2; for masons’ use, Thuc. 4. 4;—déoTpdmwa dy. of earthenware, Hipp. 668, 21, Lxx (Lament. 4. 2) ;—pails or buckets used by firemen, Plut, Rom. 20;—also, buckets or sacks of leather, GUAaKor Kat GdhdAa ayy. Xen. An. 6. 4, 23; Tas papas ray dry. Plut. Lys. 16; for corn, Lxx (Gen. 42. 25); for wine, Lxx (1 Regg. 25. 18). 2. generally, a receptacle, reservoir, Xen. Occ. g, 2, Plat. Criti. 111 A, Legg. 845 E. 3. a coffin or urn for the dead, C. I. 4300, al. II. of the human body, a vessel, cell, Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 13 of the veins, Ib, 2, al.; of the stomach, Id. P. A. 4. 5, 393 the lungs, Id. G. A. 5. 7, 14; the female breast, Id. P. A. 4. 11, 1g; of plants, a capsule, Theophr. H. P. 1. 11, 1:—in Eccl. the body itself, like axedos. Gyyeo-cehivov, 74, pot-parsley, Anacr. 37 Bgk. Gyyeid-omreppos, ov, v. s, évaryyecoorépparos. &yyeddqs, es, (eld0s) like a vessel, hollow, Arist. P. A. 3. 8, 5. ayyehia, Ion. and Ep. -(m, #4, (dyyedos) a message, tidings, news, as well the substance, as the conveyance thereof, Il, 18, 17, Od. 2, 30, Att.; ayyeAln A€youca rade Hat. 2,114; dyyedlny pdvar, dropdavat, dmeumreiy Il, 18. 17, ete. ; pepe, dmopépew Hom., Hat., etc. ; mwéumew Hdt.; Tas dyyeXias éopépew (cf. dyyedrapdpos) Hdt. 1. 1 14, 3. 77 i—ayyeAin éun a report of me, concerning me, Il. 19. 336; ayy. Twos a message about a person or thing, d-yyeAiny marpds pépe épxopeévoro news of thy father’s coming, Od. 1. 408; so, dvdpds ai@ovos dyy. Soph. Aj. 221; ayy. Ths Kiov dquxveirae Thuc, 8.15; ayy. HArOov éx Trav Todeulov Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 7: with Verbs of motion, dyyeAiny érGeiv, like Lat. legationem obire, Il, 11. 140, cf, Od. 21. 20, and v. sub éfecia ;—so also Ep. in gen., rev dyyeAlns . . fAvOes Il. 13. 252; dyyedins olxveoke 15. 640; HAvde aed even’ dyyeXins (i. e. deyyedins ood évera) 3. 206; dyyeAins mwdcira: Hes. Th. 781 ;—in all which places it is gen. causae, and may be rendered on account of a message; for the old Interpp. (Schol. Il. ll, c., Apoll. Lex.) are wrong in assuming a masc. Subst, dy- yerins. 2. an t, proclamation, Pind. P. 2. 44: @ command, order, h. Hom. Cer, 448, Pind. O. 3. 50, cf. Od. 5. 150., 7. 263. II. a messenger, v.1. Hes. Th, 781, : ayyeAl-apyos, 6,=dpydyyedos, Anth, P. 1. 34. dyyeAtahopéw, f. 40, to bear messages, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 966. in Il. only as prop. n. "Ayaodévns (paroxyt.) sr err 7 toyajis} an object of adoration, Soph. Fr. 799. BE dyyehG-hopos, Ion. &yyeAinh-, ov, bearing a message, a messenger, ayyeriea Hdt. 1. 120, Arist. Mund. 6, 11, Luc., etc.: esp. the Persian minister who introduced people to an audience with the king, Hdt. 3. 118. dyyeAlea, %, a female messenger, Orph. H. 78. 3; but v. dyyeAThp. dyyeAlns, 6, v. sub dyyedia. dyyeAin-hépos, ov, Ion. for dyyeArapdpos. dyyeAucds, 7, dv, of or for a messenger, phos A. B. 26. 2. an- gelic, orparia Just. M. Apol. 1. 52; pux7 C. I. 8654. II. dy- “yeAce?, Opxnots a Sicilian kind of pantomimic dance at a banquet, Ath, 629 E, cf. Anth. Plan. 289 :—Adv. -x@s, Procl. Plat. Tim. 298; perh. from “AyyeAos a name of Hecat®, cf. Ath. |. c., Poll. 4. 103, Hesych. dyyehiorys, ov, 6, a messenger, h. Hom. Merc. 296: fem. dyyeAvaris, «Sos, Call. Del. 216. dyyédAw, (dyyedos): Ep, and Ion. fut. dyyeAéw Il. 9. 617, Hdt., Att. dyyeX@, Dor. -1@ Tab, Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 70: aor. 1 #yyetAa Hom., Att.: pf. #yyeAua Polyb. 35. 4, 2, (kar-) Lys. 174. 28, (eio—) Lycurg. 147. 43, (wept-) Dem. 515. 19 :—Med. (v. infra) : aor. jyyyetAapny (ér-) dt. 6. 35, Plat.:—Pass,, fut. dyyeA@joopa (dr) Dem. 445. 10, later dy-dyyeAjoopa: Lxx: aor. HyyéAOnv Hdt., Att.: pf. #yyeApac Aesch. Cho. 774, Thuc. 8. 97, etc.—An aor. 2 pass. qyyéAnv is freq. in later Greek, as Dion. H. 10. 20, Plut. Anton. 68, Galb. 25, etc., and was introduced by the copyists into correct writers, as Eur. I. T. 932 (where now 777yéA9n is restored): the aor. 2 act. #yyeAov seldom occurs even in late writers (as Dion. H. 1. c, App. Civ. 1. 121) without the impf. as a v.L, though in Anth. P. 7. 614, dyyeAérny is required by the metre; and the aor. 2 med. #yyeAdpny is equally dub.: v. Veitch Gr. Verbs Ss. Vv. To bear a message, @pro 5é “Ips . . dyyedcovea Il. 8. 409, ef. 9.617, al.; revi to a person, Od. 4. 24., 15.458; with an inf. added, ot Ke... Kelvors ayyetdwar..olkdvie véecOa may bring them word to return home, 16. 350, cf. E. M. s. v. dyyetAar; also c. acc. et inf., enpues 3. . ayyedAbvtwv ..yépovras Adfacbat make proclamation that they should lie down, Il. 8. 517. 2. acc. rei, to announce, report, éo0Ad Il. to. 448; pdos jods Od. 13.94; with dat. added, “AxiAje xaxdv eros Il. 17. 7Ol; Moceddon rade mavra 15.159 ;—so in Prose, wn Tt vewrepov dyyeAAes Plat, Prot. 310 B; ravra per jpiv fyyedé Tis Id. Phaedo 58 A, cf. 57 B; dyy. méAepyor to proclaim war, Id. Phaedr. 242 B;— with a Prep. added, dyyéAAmpey és rédw rade Eur. Or. 15393; pods tiv’ ayyethal we xp} Adyous Id. Supp. 399. 3. c. acc. pers. to bring news of.., el Ké puv GyyeiAauyu Od. 14.120, cf. 122; later, dyy. wepi twos Soph. El, 1111 :—dependent clauses are added with a Conj., ayyethev brre pa of méars xo pipver Il. 22. 439, cf. Simon. 95; dry. as... Eur. I. T. 704; 6@odvexa.. Soph. El. 47 ;—also in the part., «al @avévra fyyethav; did they bring word that he was dead? Ib. 1442, 1443; Kopov émorparedovra.. Hyyetkevy Xen. An. 2. 3, 19, cf. Cyr. 6. 2,15; with ws inserted, warépa rov odv ayyeA@v ws obKér’ ‘Gvra Soph. O. T. 9553 ByyetAas ds reOvnedra Id, El. 1341. II. Med., perh. only in pres., Tedapw dyyéAAopar civae pidos I an- nounce myself to him as a friend, Id. Aj. 1376. III. Pass. to be reported of, ént 7d mAciov Thuc. 6. 34; also c. part., (av 7) Saver dyyéANerat Soph. Tr. 73, cf. Eur. Hec. 591, Thuc. 3. 16, Xen. Hell. 4. 3,13; ¢. inf, fyyeATar waxy loxupa yeyovéva: Plat. Charm. 153 B, cf, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 303; also, HyyeAOn.., dre Pev-youev news was brought. that.., Id. Hell. 1.1, 27:—7d wyyyeApéva the reports, ém rois 77, Thue, 8, 97. dyyeApa, 76, a message, tidings, news, Eur. Or. 876, Thuc. 7. 74, etc. dyyeAoeins, es, like an angel, Jo. Chrys. dyyeos, 6, 7, a messenger, envoy, Hom., Hdt.; 5¢ dyyéAov dpidéev tit Hdt. 5. 92, 6, cf. 1. 99. 2. generally, one that announces or tells, e. g. of birds of augury, Il. 24. 292, 296; Movadiv dyyedos, of a poet, Theogn. 769; dpuis.. Ards ayy., of the nightingale, Soph. El. 149: c. gen. rei, ayy. Kana@v épay Id. Ant. 277; ayyeAov yAwooav Aoyov Eur. Supp. 203. 3. an angel, Lxx, N.T. II. like Lat. nuntius, the message, or tidings brought, Polyb. 1.72, 4. (Perh. akin to dyyapos and Skt. angiras, as modus to Skt. purus.) ayyeATHp, 7jpos, 6,=foreg., Or. Sib. 2. 214, 243: fem. dyyéArpua, Ib. 8.117; also, dyyéAretpa as restored by Dind. in Orph. H. 78. 3. dyyeAriKés, 7, dv, of or for a messenger, Justin. M. Apol. 1. 22. ayynvov, 76, Ion. for dyyetov, Hdt. ayyo-OiKen, 4, a receptacle for vessels, Ath. 210 C. dyyos, eos, 76, a vessel of various kinds, a jar to hold wine, Od. 16. 13, cf. 2. 289; milk, Il. 16. 643: a vat for the vintage, Hes. Op. 611; a water-pot, urn, pitcher, such as women carried on the head, Hdt. 5. 12, cf, Ael. V. H. 7.12, Eur, El. 55: a@ bucket, pail, Hdt. 4.62; a bowl or cup for wine, Eur. I. T. 953, 960. II. also for dry substances, a coffer or ark, in which children were laid, Hdt. 1, 113, Eur. lon 32, 1337: @ chest for clothes, Soph. Tr. 622: a cinerary urn, Ib. 1118, 1205; a@ coffin, C. I. 3573. III. the womb, Hipp. Epid. 5. p. 1185, v. Galen. ad 1. IV. the shell of the xapaBos, Opp. H. 2. 406. V. the cell of a honey-comb, Anth. P. 9, 226.—CE. ayyetov. dyyoupiov, 74, a water-melon, Byz.; v. Ducang. ayypadw, shortd. for dvaypapw. dyyov, wros, 6, a Frankish javelin, Agath. 2. 5, p. 40 D. aySnv, Adv. (@yw) by carrying, &y5nv otpey Luc. Lexiph. to. ye, dyere, properly imperat. of dyw, but used as Ady. like pépe, come ! come on! well! Lat. age! Hom., who mostly strengthens it, ei 5 dye, viv 8 aye, dye 54, GAN aye, immo age! in Att. also dye viv Ar. Eq. 1011: also like pépe before x and 2 pers. pl., dye di rpaneiopey Il. 3. 4415 Gye 5) oréwpey 11. 348; aye Tdyvere Od. 3. 332; an’ aye, Tlépoa, Oudpea Aesch. Pers, 140; aye 57, Kat xdpov aywpev Id. Eum. 307, cf. Supp. 625; rarely before Ist sing., aye ay. . dpOpnow Od, 13. 215, aye, Eur. Cycl. 590; even before 3 pl., GAA 3. » Aesch. Cho. 638. anpukes .. adv , . dyerpov- ‘- — ayerAn. Taw ll. 2. 437; in Prose, dye di). . oxommpey Xen. Cyr. 5. 5,.15 + dyere,.. AVgacGe Aesch. Cho. 803 ; dyere is also used with 1 ph, 2.139, Od. 1. 76, Ar. Lys, 665 ; with 1 sing., Od. 22. 139. dyeos, ov, (yf) landless, a corrupt word in Aesch. Supp. 858. cringe ov, Pp for dyépagros, E. M. ; dyeipw: impf. #yepoy Hdt. 1. 61, 6: aor. 1 Hyepa Ep. dyepa O 14. 285: pf. dyiyepea (avv—) Theod, Prodr. ab 44 fut. a podpac (in pass. sense) Or, Sib. 1. 346: aor. 1 yyyeipdyny (trans.) Ap Rh. 4.1335, (ovv-) Hom.:—Pass., aor. 1 7yép6qv Hom. : pf. dyfyepuan App. Civ. 2. 134: plqpf. dytyyepro Id. Mithr. 108, Ep. 3 pl. dynyépare Il. 4. 211, App.—We also find in Hom. a shortd. aor. 2 of med, form, — but pass. sense, dyépovro Il. 18. 245, inf. dyepécOar Od, 2. 385 (not wyepeo@at, v. Pors. ad 1.), part. dypdpevos Il. 2. 481, etc. (whence later Poets formed a pres. dyépopar, e. g. C. I. 6280. 35). To bring jogos a Sather together, adv ayelpwy Il. 4. 377, etc.; Aady dyepivrav Kard vijas let them gather ..2. 438; év0ad’ dwd.. toAlev iyepa txacroy 17. 222; so in Att., ov és OnBny orédov Soph, O. C. 1306, Thue. 1.9; To “EAAddos arpdérevpa Soph. El. 695; orparidy Xen. An. 3. 2, 13; cis play otxnow dy. kowwvods Plat. Rep. 369 C, cf. App. Mithr. 84 (naxnv iyetpas Il. 13. 778 rather belongs to éyeipw, as also 7éA€ iyepay Plat. Legg. 685 C, v. Spitzn. Il. 5. 510) :—Pass. to come togeth gather, assemble, ll. 2. 52, Od. 2. 8, etc.; aypduevoe aves herded swine, — Od. 16. 3; Ouyds evi orhPecaw dyépOn, és ppéva Ovpds dyépOn Il. 4. 152, etc. (v. sub éyeipw.) II. of things, to get together, collect, gather, Snuddev GAgura .. kai aidora oivoy dyeipas Od. 19. 197; woAdy Biorov kat xpuadv dyeipwy 3. 301 ; ToAAA 8 dyetpa xphuara 14. 285: —so in Med., dyeipduevar kara Shpov 13. 14. 2. to collect by begging, stipem colligere, ws dv mipva Kara pynorijpas dyelpor 17, 362, cf, Hdt. 1. 61; dg’ dv dyeipe nal mpooarred Dem, 96. 17 :—absol. to collect money for the gods and their temples, NUppais dy. Aesch, Fr. 170, cf. Hdt. 4. 35, Plat. Rep. 381 D; esp. for Cybelé, Luc. Pseudom. 13, cf. Hytparyiprys :—absol. to go about begging, Philostr. 225, Max. Tyr. 19. 3. to put things together, accumulate arguments, as in a speech, 4. ogpuas els tv dy. to frown, Anth. P. 7. 300. ; Rare in good Prose. d-yeltwv, ov, gen. ovos, without a neighbour, neighbourless, mé-yos Aesch. Pr. 270; olxos pidwv dy, Eur. El. 1130; ddudAos eal ay. Plut. 2. 423 D. dyehGS6v, Dor. for d-yeAnidv, Theocr. 16. 92. dyeAdfopat, Pass. to go in flocks, be gregarious, Arist. H. A. 8.12, 9.5 g. 2, I :—Hesych. cites the Act., dyeAaoa’ Kxoploat. GyeAato-KopiKds, 7, dv, (opéw) = dyeAarorpodirds ; ) aryeAatoxouKh (sc. réxvn) the art of breeding and keeping cattle, Plat, Polit. 275 E, sq., 299 D:—dyedoxopexn in Clem. Al. 338. Gyehaios, a, ov, (ayéAn) belonging to a herd, feeding at large, because the herds stayed out at grass all the summer, in Hom. always with Bods, Il. 11. 729, Od. 10, 410, al.; so, Bods dy. Soph. Aj. 175; Booxnyatra Eur. Bacch, 677; ai dy. rv ima, i.e. brood-mares, Xen. Eq. 5,8. IT. in herds or shoals, gregarious, ixOves Hdt. 2. 93; dyeAaia, ra, gre- garious animals, Plat. Polit. 264 D; opp. to povadid, Arist. H. A. 1. I, 23, 8q.; to omopadixa, Id. Pol. 1.8, 5; modirindy 5 dvO, (@ov maons peXitrns Kat mavTos GyeAalou (gov waGAdor Ib. I. 2, 10. 2. of the herd or multitude, i.e. common, dy. dvOpwmot, opp. to dpxovres, Plat. Polit. 268 A; dy. icxddes Eupol. Incert. 74; dproe Plat. Com. Mev. 3; aopiorai Isocr, 236 D: (in this sense the Gramm. make it proparox, dyéAaos, Hemst. Thom, M. p. 7.) - dyeharotpodia, 7, the keeping of herds, Plat. Polit. 261 E. dyeAarorpoduirds, 7, dv, of or fit for dyeAatorpopia: 7 —Kn, =foreg., Plat. Polit. 267 B, etc,; cf. dyeAaroxopexds. dyearo-rpdpos, ov, keeping herds, Max. Tyr. 25.6; in Poll. dyeAotp-. dyehauov, @vos, 6, a place for herds (ra dyedaia), pasture, Suid. dyeAapxéw, to lead a herd or company, c. gen., Plut. Galb, 17. dyeA-apyxns, ov, 6, (dpxw) the leader of a company, a captain, Plut. Rom. 6; dy. radpos Luc. Amor. 22: -apxos, 6, Philo 2. 144. dyéAacpa, aros, 76, a gathering, crowd, vodgaw Procl. h, Minery. 44. dychacréw, to be ayéAaoros, cited from Heracl. Epist. ayehaori, Adv. without laughter, Plat. Euthyd, 278 E, Plut. 2. 727 A. aycAacorixés, 7, dv, disposed to herd together, social, Philo 2. 202, ete. a-yéAacros, ov, (yeAdw) not laughing, grave, gloomy, h. Hom. Cer, 200; dy. mpdcwma BiaCdpevor Aesch. Ag. 794; epith. of Crassus, Lucil, ap. Cic. Fin. 5, 30:—metaph. dyéAaora pOéyyeo@ac Heracl. ap. Plut. 2. 397 A; dy. ppyy Aesch. Fr. 418; Bios Phryn. Com. Movérp. I II. pass. not to be laughed at, not light or trifling, Evppopat Aesch, Cho, 30; also as v. 1. Od. 8. 307. ayeAarys, ov, 6, v. sub dyéAn 1, [a] dyeAetn, 1), Ep. epith. of Athena, =Arniris, @yovoa Alay, the driver of spoil, the forager, ll. 6. 269, etc., and Hes. dye, %, (dyw) a herd, of horses, Il. 19. 281; elsewhere in Hom. always of oxen and kine, Il. 11. 678, etc., cf. Bovvopos :—also, any herd or company, Lat. grex, cvdv dy. Hes. Sc. 168, dy. wapbévay Pind. Fr. 78 ; wrnvay dyédat Soph. Aj. 168, Eur. Ion 106; metaph., révaw dyédat Eur. H. F. 1276; a shoal of fish, Opp. H. 3. 639 ;—also in Plat. Rep. 451 C, Arist. H. A. 9. 2, 2, etc., but not freq. in good Prose. II. at Crete dyéAac were the bands or classes in which the youth were trained from the age of seventeen until marriage; while at Sparta the boys were removed from their parents’ home and put into the dyéAa (there called Bodax) at the age of seven; Ephor. ap. Strabo 480, Plut. Lyc. 16, Heraclid. Polit. 3; the chief of an dyéAn was dyeAdrns, Heraclid. |. c.; and the youths were dyéAaorot, Hesych.; cf. Miiller Dor. 4. §, I, sq. and v. Bova; also, véow dy. at Miletus, C. I. 2892; di®éwv at Smyrna, 3326. =e , 4 ekemee a0 BBE Ot ee err ne ll ae mans nile i é 3 py Ep. dyepdvevpa . dyeppootvn, %,=dyepats, Opp. C. 4. 2 ie oe al ayeAndév, Adv. (dycAn) in herds or companies, Il. 16. 160, Hdt. 2. 93, 2, etc.; also dyeAnda, Arat. 965, 1079. dyAndev, Adv. (ayédy) from a herd, Ap. Rh. 1. 356, 406. dyeAnis, iSos, 7, pecul. fem. of dyeAaios, Numen, ap. Ath. 320 Dew II. =dyercin, Cornut. N. D. 20. dyeAn-Kopos, ov, keeping herds, Nonn. D. 47. 218. . dyed , ov, 6, belonging to a herd, Bods ap. Suid. cf. dyeAarys. . dyno, Ep. dat. of dyéAn, Il. 2. 480. . d-yéhowos, ov, not matter of laughter, ox dyédo.ov no bad joke, Henioch. Tpox. 6. ; , —Tpodos, v. sub dyeAaio-. inf. of dyw. f , Gyepovetw, &yepav, Dor. for fryeH-. . dyev, Ep. for éaynaay, v. sub dyvupu, Il. 4. 214. 4 SyyTOs, ov, of unrecorded descent, Ep. Hebr. 7. 3- \ dyéveia, %, (dyevs) low birth, Arist. Pol. 6. 2, 7; cf. ayevvera. _ Gyévetos, ov, (yéveiov) beardless, Pind., etc. (v. infra); dyéverdv Te elpnévar to speak like a boy, Luc. Jup. Trag. 29; 7d dyéveov, absence or want of beard, Id. Eun. 9 :—Ady., dyevelws éxew Philostr. 489. IL. the dyévecor were boys within the age to enter the lists for certain prizes at the ee Pind, O. 8. 71., 9. 135, cf. Ar, Eq. 1373, Lys. 162. 4, Plat. . 833 C, C. I. 236, al., Paus. 6. 6, 3. _ayevns, és, (yevéoOax) unborn, uncreated, Plat. Tim. 27 C. II. of no family, ignoble,mean, cowardly, vile, opp. to dya8ds, Soph. Fr. 105 (the ‘metre warrants the form in this sense, though the correct word was dyevyhs, Stallb. Plat. Prot. 319 D); of things, ob dyeveis orixor Schol. Od. 11. 568; cf. A. B. 336, Steph. Byz. s. v. "Avaxropeia, III. with no family, i.e. childless, Isae, ap. Harpocr. dyévntos, ov, (yevécOax) unborn, uncreated, unoriginated, dpxn Plat. Phaedr. 245 D, cf. Arist. Cael. 1, 11, I., 12, II. II. of things, not done, not having happened, 70 yap pavOev ris dv Bivaur’ dv dyévnrov moteiy ; infectum reddere, Soph. Tr. 7433; dyévnra toeiv, doo’ av memparypeva Agatho ap. Arist. Eth. N. 6, 2, 6; alria dy. groundless charges, Aeschin. 86.1; d:aBodat Alciphro 3. 58; dv oddér,. dy. can’ be undone, Isocr. 397 A. Cf. dyévynros. -Gyéwea (in Mss. often dyévera or dyevvia), 4, meanness, baseness, Arist. de Virt. et Vit. 7. 4, Polyb., etc. dyewss, és, (yévva) =dyerys ut (q. v.), of low family, Hat. 1.134 (in Comp.), Plat. Prot. 319 D, etc. II. low-minded, base, Hdt. 5. 6, Ar. Pax 748, Plat. Prot. 319 D, al.; of dyevveis, opp. to of yevvasdrepor, of yevvaiot, Arist. Pol. 3. 13, 2., 4. 12, 2; of a cock, Plat. Theaet. 164 C, Menand. @cog. 2. 13. 2. of things, much like Bdvavaos, illiberal, sordid, Plat. Gorg. 465 B, 513 D, al.; od5év dyevvés Dem. 563, fin. Adv, -v@s, Eur. I. A. 1458, Plat. Com. Zevs 1. 6,—In Plat. mostly with a negat. ob« dyevyas, Charm, 158 C, etc. In Mss. sometimes confused with drev}s, Ruhnk. Tim. 46. : . Gyewncta, %, the state of cne not begotten, Greg. Naz. Or. 25. 16, al. - dyevvqroyevs, és, born from the unbegotten, Arius ap. Epiphan., Theodoret. H. E. 1. 5. , - dyéwnros, ov, (yevvda) like dyévyros, unbegotten, unborn, dy. thr i ‘Soph. O. C. 973: unoriginated, Id. Fr. 739, Plat. Tim. 52 A; of the elements, Emped. ap. Hesych.:—Adv., dvartiws wat dy. Plut. 2. 1015 A. II. like dyevvjs, low-born, mean, Soph. Tr. 61. Tit. act. not productive, Theophr. C. P. 6. 10, I. dyevvia, v. sub dyévvea, ayewile, to act like an dyevvijs, Teles. ap. Stob. 68. 6. . &yéopat, Dor. for #yéopat, Pind: 7a dynpéva, customs, prescription, Orac. ap. Dem. 1072. 27. This form also occurs in Mss. of Hdt., as 2. 69, 72, 115, etc., but is corrected by Edd. ay , ov, (yépas) without a gift of h , unt ip unre- warded, Il. 1. 119, Hes. Th. 3953 @y. TUHBos, dvopa Eur. Hec. 117, Bacch. 1378; dmeAdeiv dy. Luc. Tyrannic. 3; c. gen., @véwv dy. Ap. Rh. 3. 65 :—a post. form dyeipiiros is cited in E. M. ~teyepéOw, v. sub ryyepéBopar. dyepOev, Dor. and Ep. 3 pl. aor. 1 pass of d-yeipw. J 6, a collecting of money for the service of the gods (cf. dyeipw 2), C. I. 2656. 28, Dion, H. 2. 19, Ath, 360 D, Poll. 3. 111. II. in Arist. Poét. 8, 3, prob. (like dyepats) the gathering’ of the Greeks against ‘Troy. I1I. generally a collection, as of wisdom and experience, Ael. V. H. 4. 20.—The form d-yuppés is condemned in E. M. 51. aye , late poet. form of dyeipopat (q. v.), Ap. Rh. 3. 895. . dyéppw, Acol. for dyeipw. ry ‘dyepot-cvpydis [ii], 6, a begging sacrificer or priest, Cratin. Apam. 11, ubi v. Meineke. (From «vByAcs II, not KuBéA7.) * dyepots, ews, }, a gathering, mustering, orparins Hat. 7. 5, 48. ayéptys, Dor., —Tas, 6, a collection of dues, C. 1. 5640. I. 35. Gyepwxia, 9, arrogance, Lxx (Sap. 2. 9), Polyb. 10. 35, 8, etc. ayépwxos [4], ov, poét. Adj. (used also in late Prose), in Hom. always ‘in good sense, high-minded, lordly, honoured, epith. of warlike tribes, ‘mostly of the Trojans, Il. 3. 36, etc. ; the Rhodians, 2. 654; the Mysians, 10. 430, cf. Batr. 145; once of a single man, viz. Periclymenus, Od. 11. 286, and so Hes. Fr. 22 Gaisf.; in Pind. of noble actions, dy. épypara N. 6. 56; viren O. 10 (11). 95; TAovToU orepdvaxy’ dy. lordly crown of wealth, P. 1. 96. II. later in bad sense, haughty, arrogant, insolent, Archil. 154, Alcae. 119; so also 3 Macc. I. 25; dy. dvos Luc. Asin, 40:— so Adv. —xws, Anth. P. 9. 745, Polyb. 2.8, 7; Comp. -drepov Id. 18.17, 3. *Ayeoihaos, “AyeotAas, v. sub ‘Aynotdaos, . ayé-orparos, 4, %), host-leading, 'AGjvn Hes, Th, 925 ; oddmvyt, ai”dds Nonn, D. 26. 15., 28. 28, mx Jd ayerndov — ayneidaos. ayérys, ayéts, Dor. for jy-- ia fasting, Schol, Ar. Nub. 621. : Gyevorros, ov, (yevopar) act. not tasting, without taste of, fasting from, mAakodyros Plat. Com, Hot. 1; lyovev Luc, Saturn. 28: metaph., ofor kakay dyevoros aidv Soph. Ant. 583 ; éAevbepias dy. Plat. Rep. 576 A; Tav reprvav Xen, Mem. 2. 1, 23; Tod KaAov Arist. Eth. N. ro. 10 (9), 4:—absol., without eating, droro kat dy. Luc, Tim. 18. TI. pass. without taste, Arist. de An, 2. 10, 3. 2. untasted, Plut, 2. 731 D, etc. G-yewpéerpyros, ov, of persons, ignorant of geometry, Arist. An. Post. I, 12, 3; pydels dy. eiairw, Inscr. on Plato's door, Tzetz. Chil. 8. 972. 2. of problems, not geometrical, Arist. ut supr. 4. ayewpynota, 7, bad husbandry, Theophr. C. P. 2. 20, 1. YynTOS, ov, uncultivated, C. I. (add.) 2561 6. 77, Theophr. C. P. 1. 16, 2. &-yewpytou dixn, %, an action for neglect of agriculture, prob. against careless tenants, A. B. 20 and 336. dyn, Dor. aya [ay], %, (v. sub dyapat) wonder, awe, horror, amaze- ment, Hom. only in phrase dyn p éxec Il. 21. 221, Od. 3. 227., 16. 243 :—Hesych. interprets it by 7:4, ceBacpds, citing also pl. dryats (= (prddioeow) from Aesch. Fr. 81; in Soph. Ant. 4, Coraés reads ovder .. dyns dep pro vulg. drys, II. envy, malice, pOdvm kat dyn xpewpevos Hat. 6. 61: and of the gods, jealousy, ph tis aya Ocdbev xvepdan Aesch. Ag. 131.—The two senses are also found in the Verb &yapat, while the latter alone belongs to d-yatopat. ayn, Dor. aya [ay], 7, (v. sub dyvupe) breakage : 1, a fragment, piece, splinter, dyaior kamav Aesch. Pers. 425; pos 4pparay 7° ayatoe Eur. Supp. 693. 2. kiparos ayn the place where the wave breaks, the beach, Ap. Rh. 1. 554., 4. 941- 3. a curve, bending, ddtos ayn Arat, 688 :—hence Bickh reads éydv (for dyav) in Pind, P. 2. 151 (82), in the sense of crooked arts, deceit. 4. a wound, Hesych. ayn, Ep. for éaryn, v. sub dyvups. d&ynyéparo, v. sub dyelpw. GynAiréw, to drive out one accursed or polluted (éyos), Lat. piaculum exigere, esp. one guilty of sacrilege and murder, Hat. 5. 72, Soph. O. T, 402, v. Schiif. Greg. p. 546; cf. dvdpnAaréw. GyiAtiros, ov, (@yos, éAatyw) driving out a curse, ay. poor, i.e. lightning which consumes and so purifies, Lyc. 436. Gynpa, 7, (from dyw, or perh. Dor. for #rynua) anything led, a division of an army, of the Lacedaemonians, Xen. Lac. 11. 9., 13. 6: but, in the Macedonian army, the Guard, Polyb. 5. 65, 2, Arr. An. I. 15 Tov inméwv 70 dy. Id. 4.24, 1; rev mela 7d ay. 2.8, 3; TY EAepayTaw Ath, 539 E. &ynvopevos, Dor. dyavép-, a, ov,=dynvwp, Aesch. Pers. 1026. Gyqvopéwv, a participial form =dyfvwp, Nonn. D. 12. 206. dynvopia [%], %, manliness, manhood, courage, of men, Il. 22. 457: haughtiness, in pl.,.9. 700; of a lion, 12. 46. Gyhvep [4], Dor. dydvep, opos, 6, : (dyav, avnp): poet. Adj., manly, heroic, Ovpds Il. 16. 801 ; Kpadin Kat Ovpds ay. 9. 635, al. ; Bin nat dyhvopt Ovp@ elgas, of a lion, 24, 42: often with collat. notion of headstrong, arrogant, of Achilles, 9. 699; of Thersites, 2. 276; of the suitors, Od. 1. 106, 144, al.; of the Titans, Hes. Th. 641, cf. Op. 73; of commanders of an army, Aesch. Th, 124 (lyr.). 2. in Pind. of animals and things, stately, splendid, magnificent, trmos O. 9. 353 mAodros P. to. 27; Képmos I. 1. 60. aynoxa, pf. of dyw; also dyfyoxa, v. sub dyw. G-ynpavros, ov,=sq., Simon. 95, Eur. ap. Ath. 61 B. -yijpaos, ov, Att. contr. dyqpws, wy (of which Hom. uses nom, dual d-yjpo (v. infr.), nom, sing. and acc. pl. dyfpws Od. 5. 218, etc.) ; acc. sing. dynpov h. Hom.+Cer. 242, for which Hes. Th. 949 has dyhow; nom. pl. dyjpw Hes. Th. 277, dat. dyhpws Ar. Av. 689- Not waxing old, undecaying, Hom., and Hes., who. use it of persons in conjunction with d0@dvaros; d@avaros nal dyhpaos jpara mavra Il. 8. 539, cf. Od. 5. 136, etce.; ob 8 GO. Kal dynpws Od. 5. 218; dynpw 7 aOavarw Te Il. 12. 323., 17. 4443; so Hes. Th. 949; also, drhwavros Kat dy. Ib. 9553 so, dynpws xpévw dvvdoras Soph. Ant. 608 (lyr.). 2. of things, once in Hom., of the Aegis, Il. 2. 447; then, dy. «050s Pind. P. 2. 96; xdpw 7 dynpwv eopev Eur. Supp. 1178; and in Prose, rov dyhpav érawov Thue, 2. 43; ay. kal dBdvaroy maGos Plat. Phil. 15 D, etc. a&ynpacia, 7, eternal youth, Schol. Il. 11. 1. aynparov, 76, an aromatic plant, perhaps yarrow or milfoil, Achillea ageratum, Diosc. 4. 59. G-ynpiiros, ov,=d-ynpaos, wéos Eur. I. A. 567 (lyr.), C. I. 6269 ;— also in Prose, Lys. 198. 8, Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 13, Plat. Ax. 370 D, Arist. de Cael. 1. 3, 9. dyhparos, 6, a stone used by shoemakers to polish women’s shoes, Galen. dyjpos, wy, v. sub dyhpaos. dyhs [a], és, (&yos) guilty, accursed, Hippon. 11. II. also in good sense, = evans C, bright, pure, deyéa xvxdov Emped. ap. A. B. 337; cf, Nike Choer, 179, sq.; or perh, it is=epinyns, round. *Ayijc-avBpos, 6, epith. of Pluto, ="AynaiAaos, Hesych. aynot-hdos [@y], ov, 6, leader of the people, conductor of mankind, epith. of Hades (Pluto), Aesch. Fr. 319; aynoiAews Anth. P. 7. 5453 Ep. wyyeoiAaos, Nic. ap. Ath. 684 D; poét. also dyeciAas, a, Call. Lav. Pall. 130, Anth. P. append. 235 ;—the form d-yeciAaos, cited in E. M,, Zonar., etc., is doubtful. II. as pr. n., esp, of the well-known Spartan king, “AyyaiAaos Xen. Hell. 3. 3, 4, etc.; but “HynoiAews Id. Vect. 3, 7, Dem. 434. 14, as in Hdt. 7. 204., 8. 131, 2; “Aynataas, a, Paus. 8. 18,8; poét. “AyeoiAas Critias ap. Plut. Cim. 10, C. I. 2599; *AyeiotAas, Inscr, Boeot. in Leake's Northern Gr., no, 37; ef. Ahr. D. Aeol, p. 182, sq. " i « aynoixopos — ayxvdddous. dynot-xopos, ov, (d-yéopat, Dor. for iy-) leading the chorus or dance, mpooipua, Pind. P, 1. 6. GynrHp, jpos, 6, Dor. for Fynrnp. dynrés, 7, dv, (dyapar) Ep, form of the later dyaords, admirable, wonderful, puiv Kai eidos aynrov “Exropos Il. 22.370; elsewh. in Hom. of persons, ¢. acc, rei, 5éuas al eldos dynrds admirable in .., 24. 376, ef, Od. 14. 177; €ld0s dynrot wonderful in form only, as a reproach, Il, 5. 787., 8. 228; eldos dynrh h. Hom. Ap. 198; later c. dat. rei, dy. Xpnyaat Solon 5. 3. ayhrwp, opos, 6, Dor. for 7yATwp. Gyiafw, later form for a@yi{w, Anth. P. append. 339, Lxx, N. T., Eccl. ;—in Dion. H. 7. 72, prob. @yvi{ouévav should be restored, cf. Fepiayvicayres just above. iacpa, aros, 74,=dayaorhpiov, LXx (Amos 7. 15, al.). holiness, Ib. (Ps..92. 5). III. the consecrated host, Eccl. dyvacpds, 00, 6, consecration, sanctification, Lxx, N.T., Eccl. & Hprov, 76, a holy place, sanctuary, LXXx (Lev. 12. 4, al.). dyiaoricés, 7, dv, of or for consecration, €datov, etc., Eccl. dy.a-épos, ov, =iepapdpos, C. I. 481. a-ylyapros, ov, of grapes, etc., without seed or stone, Theophr.C.P. 5.5, 1. Gyile, f. Att. 1@, (aos) to hallow, make sacred, Lat. dedicare, esp. by burning a sacrifice, @e@ BovOurov éoriay dyi{wv Soph. O. C. 1495 (lyr.); témava iytev és gaxrav, a joke tap’ imévoray for és Bwpdy, Ar. Pl, 681 :—Pass., Bapol warp aycOévres Pind. O. 3. 34; dyoGels C.I. 353. 18. Cf. év-, xad-ayitw. ayivéw, lengthd. Ep. and Ion. form of dyw, used by Hom. and Hat. only in pres. and impf. (impf. with or without augm. in Hom., but with- out always in Hdt.); inf. pres. dywéwevar Od. 20. 213, Ion, impf. dyi- veokov Od. 17. 294 (in Arat. 111, 7yiveokor), cf. kadéoxero, mwAécKeTo: f, dywwjow h. Hom. Ap. 57, 249, etc. To lead, bring, carry, vippas ..iyiveov Kara aorv Il, 18. 493; pRAov dywel Od. 14. 105 ; dyweis alyas pynornpecat 22. 198; ayiveov domeroy vAny Il. 24. 7843 bapa dyiveoy Hat. 3. 89, cf. 93, 97, etc., cf. dmayiwéw; so, tAOdTOY ay. eis dperqv Anth, P. append. 47; Aniddas ay. lead captive, Ap. Rh. 1. 613 :—Med. to cause to be brought, -yuvatkas és 7d ipdy dywedpevos 7- 33- . [yylveor Il. 18. 493, is a trisyll.] dydypada (sc. BiBAia), 7a, the Sacred Books, i.e. the Poetic Books, Which, with the Law and the Prophets, made up the Old Testament, Eccl. ; so, dy. 5€Arot Dion. Areop.: v. Suicer. Gyorrovéw, fo sanctify, Phot.; from Gyto-rrowés, ov, sanctifying, Eccl. Gyto-mpemns, és, befitting the holy, Adv. -3as, Subst. —mpémeva, Eccl. Gytos [], a, ov, (@yos or d-yos) devoted to the gods, Lat. sacer, and $0, I. in good sense, sacred, holy: 1. of things, esp. temples, “Agpodirns ipdy dyov Hdt. 2. 41; ipdy “Hpaxdéos ayov Ib. 44, cf. Plat. Criti. 116 C, Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 19 ;—in these places the gen. is sometimes taken as dependent on a@yov, sacred to Aphrodité, etc., but prob. wrongly ; it must be so, however, in Luc. Syr. D. 13 (vndv émt 7d xdopar. “Hpns ayov 2ornearo):—generally, @vota, gvyuBdAaca Isocr. 218 D, Plat.; pyrpdés..éore marpis dywrepov Id. Crito 51 A; Spxos dy. Arist. Mir. 57. 1: 7d Gyov, the Temple, Lxx, etc.; Ta &ya Trav dyiwv the Holy of Holies, Ib., cf. Ep. Hebr. 9. 3. 2. of persons, holy, pious, pure, Ar. Av. 522 (anap.) :—Adv., dyiws nal cepvads éxew Isocr. 226 C: freq. in Lxx, N. T., etc. II. in bad sense, ac- cursed, execrable, as Lat. sacer, Cratin. Incert. 35, Antiph. Av«, 7, Eust. 1356. 59.—The word never occurs in Hom. or Hes., and is rare in Att. (v. supr.); nor is it ever found in Trag., who use dvds instead, Pors. Med. 752. ayvorys, 770s, 7),=dywwotvn, 2 Macc. 15. 2, Ep. Hebr. 12. 10, dy.o-pépos, ov, abounding in holiness, Ignat. Eph. 9, Smyrn, in tit. dyvopds, od, 6, =évayiopds, an offering to the dead, Diod. 4. 39. dyoreia, 4, mostly in pl. holy rites, temple-worship or service, Isocr. 227 A, Plat. Ax. 371 D, Arist. de Caelo 1. I, 3. II. holiness, Strabo 417. dyvoretw, to perform sacred rites, Plat. Legg. 759 D:—Pass., doa ddd. dyoreverat all other sacred rites, Philo 2. 231. 2. to be holy, live piously or chastely, do7ts .. Biordy ay, Kal Oacelera yuxdy whoever is pure in life and religious in soul, Eur. Bacch. 74: to be sacred, Paus. 6. 20, 2, cf. 8. 13,-I. II. act. to purify, pévov xeipas from blood, Orac. ap. Paus. to. 6, 7. 2. to deem holy: Pass., of places, Strabo 417, Dion. H. 1. 40. GyiaSws, Adv. in sacred manner, Sup. —éorara Philo 1. 675. d&ywwowvn, %, holiness, sanctity, LXx (2 Macc. 3. 12), Ep. Rom, 1. 4, etc. ayk-, poet. (esp. Ep.) abbrev. for dvax— in compds. of dvd with words beginning with x, as dyxeio@at for dvaxeioOa: cf. dyxaer II. GyKalopat, (dyxds) Epic Dep. to lift up in the arms, vexpdv amd xPovds dyxaCovro Il. 17.722; aor. Hyykaccaro Nonn. D. 7. 318. GynaBev, Adv. like dyxds, in the arms, ayx. AaBelv te Aesch. Eum. 80. II. contr. for dvéxaber, =ava0er, on the top, Aesch. Ag. 3 (v. Schol. ad 1. c., Hesych., A. B. 337. 25); in this place Herm. inter- prets it cubito presso, with bent arm, resting on the arm, since in all other cases dyx- stands for dvax-, never for dvex—; but v. Schneidew. Philol. 3. p. 117 sq.:—in Eum, 369, dvéxader is required by the metre. &yKddn [a], %, the bent arm, Hdt., etc. ; év dyxddas Aesch. Ag. 723, Supp. 481, Eur-; proverb., év rais dyn. wepipépev ruvd Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 50; also without év, dyxaAas exe, mepupéepew Eur. I. T. 289, Or. 464; also, én’ dyrddas Aafeiy Id. Ion 7615; és ayn. Ib. 1598; mpos dynddras teceiv Ib. 962; bm dyxddats oradels Id. Andr. 747 ;—rarely in sing., pépew ev ry ayeddy Hat. 6. 61, cf. Timocl. in Com, Fr. 3. p. 96. II. metaph. anything closely enfolding, werpaia dyxddn Aesch, Pr. 1019; mévriae dyedAae corners, arms of the sea, Id. Cho. 587, Ei cf, Eur, Or. 1378; meAaryios év. dyxddas, Nausicr, Nave, 1; sempre | . ae 9 S év dynddaus Ar. Ran. 7043 even of the air, yy ..€xov6’ iryputs ey dye. Eur. Fr. 935; cf. dyxoivn. (For the Root, v. dykos.) perce GyKGA-aywyéo, to carry a bundle, Paus. ap. Eust, 1283. 42. dyKihB-aywyés, dv, carrying an armful or bundle: of beasts of burden, dyKarsdnpdpos, —popéw being used of men, Poll. 7. 109, Eust. 1283. 43. yeidtfopar, Dep.,=dyxaCopa, Saris Kandy rovodrov dyKadlCerat Simon, Iamb. 7.77; aor. med., els rpupepds yxadioacbe xépas Mel. in Anth, P. 12. 122, cf. Manetho 1. 45; pf. xepoiv elSwAov tyyeadiapevos Lyc. 142, cf. dmaryeaditw:—but dykadsfouevos in pass, sense, Aesop. 306 (Halm.) - GykéAls, 7}, in pl.=dyxddat, arms, Ep. dat. pl. dyxadldecow Il. 18. 555+ 22.503; i dyxadlow C. I. (add.) 1907 bb. 2. an armful, Ni- costr. Sup. 3, Plut. Rom. 8. II.=6péravov, Macedon. word, Hesych., Joseph. A. J. 5. I, 2. : dyxdhiopa, aos, 76, that which is embraced or carried in the arms, Luc. Amor, 14; cf. dmayxdAucya. II. an embrace, Lyc. 308. dykahos, 6, an armful, bundle, h. Hom. Merc. 82. dykds [ds], Adv. into or in the arms, éxe 8 dyxds dxourw Il. 14. 353, cf, Theocr. 8. 55, Ap. Rh. 1. 276; yds éuapmre Ib. 346; dyxas erdfero Ovyarépa Fy Il. 5. 371; Tpémw dynds Eddy veds Od. 7. 252; dykds 8 ddAfAov AaBérny (of wrestlers) Il. 23. 711: cf. dyxaber. (Prob. for dyxa¢e, from dyn = ayxdan.) ayKh, %,=ayeddrn (cf. xéyxn=KoyxvAn), Coraés Heliod. 2. 113, 372 :—a metapl. dat. pl. dyxdorv occurs in Opp. H. 2. 315. dyxtov, 76, Dim, of dyxos, prob. |. for dyyetous Arist. H. A. 8. 16, 2. dyxvorpela, 7), angling, Plat. Legg. 823 D, aykurrpeutixés, 7, dv, of or for angling: 1d -Kév, angling, like d-yxi- orpela, Plat. Soph. 220 D. dyKuotpeva, f. evow, (dyxiarpov) to angle for, entice, Aristaen. I, 5 :— so also Med., Philo 2. 265, 316, etc. dyxtotpuov, 74, Dim. of ayxtorpov, Theocr. 21. 57. dyxiotpé-Beros, ov, bound with a hook, dévat Anth. P. 6. 27. dyKvorpo-edys, és, or -GBys, €s, hook-shaped, barbed, Polyb. 34. 35 5, Diod. 5. 34, Strabo 24, al.; dd rav dyn. dorpoy (drépav Heeren) Stob. Ecl. Phys. I. 22. : dyKurtpov, 75, (dykos) a fish-hook, Od. 4. 369, Hat. 2. 70, etc.: the hook of a spindle, Plat. Rep. 616 C. dyxtorpéopat, Pass., to be furnished with barbs, Plut. Crass. 25, to be caught by a hook, Synes. Ep. 4; tyyxtarpwpévos 1é0y Lyc. 67. dykuorrpo-rr@dys, ov, 6, a seller of fish-hooks, Poll. 7. 198. ayxiorpo-payos, oy, (piiyeiv) biting the hook, Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 13. dykurtpadns, es, v. sub dyxcaTpoedijs. dyxuotpwrds, 7, dv, verb. Adj. barbed, Polyb. 6. 23, To. dykAdptov, 74, seems to be Dor. for dvaxAnpiov, an apportionment (?), C. I. 2562. 13. dykAive, and dyxAipa, 76, post. for dvaxk—. . dyKotvn, %, (dyxos) poét. for dyxdAn, dyxwv, the bent arm, used only in pl, Zqgvos..év dyxotvnow iaves Il. 14. 213, Od. 11. 261, etc. II. metaph. anything closely enfolding, év US se pytpidow Anth. P. 9. 398, Opp. H. 3. 34. dyKoviw, v. 1. for éyx-, Ar. Lys. 1311, as if from dvaxoviw =éyxovéw, Gy«os, eos, 76, properly a bend or hollow: hence a mountain glen, dell, valley, I. 20. 490, Od. 4. 337, Hes. Op. 387. Hat. 6. 74, etc.; in Trag. only in Eur. Bacch. 1051. (From 4/. come also ayn, dyndan, aykdy, aynoivn, ayKtdn, dynvdos, dyKarpov, ayxupa, dyKos ; cf. Skt. ak, aitkami (curvo), akas (sinus); Lat. ancus, uncus, angulus, ungulus ; Goth. hals-agga (neck); O. H. G. angul, etc.) dykpepawupt, dykpiois, dykpotéw, dykpovopat, poet. for dvaxp-. dykrap, Fpos, 6, (dyxw) an instrument for ee wounds, Lat. fibula, Plut. 2. 468 C, Galen—Hence dykrypidtw or -(fw, to bind with an dyxrnp, and &yxTnpiacpés, 6, Galen. dykvAgopar, Dep. to hurl like a javelin, Lat. torquere jaculum, "Epms Kepauvoy ayyxvAnpevos ap. Ath. 534 E;—in Poll., &y«vAtfopar. dykvAn [v], 9, (dyeos) properly, like dyxdAn, the bend of the arm or wrist, dm d-ytAns tévat, a phrase descriptive of the way in which the cottabus was thrown, Bacchyl. Fr. 24; dm’ dyxvAns (not Adrayas Cratin, Incert. 16, ubi v. Meineke (hence came the sense of a cup, given by Ath. 667 C and Eust.). 2. a joint bent and stiffened by disease, Paul. Aeg., etc., v. Poll. 4. 196 :—also dyxvAn, dyevAat, or &yKuA6yAwooov 7a80s, a similar disease of the tongue, Aét. 6. 29. II. a loop or noose in a cord, mAexras ayxvAas Eur. I. T. 1408 ; in the leash of a hound, Xen,Cyn. 6, 1, cf. Poll. 5. 54, 56. 2. the thong of a javelin, by which it was hurled, Lat. amentum, Strabo 196: hence the javelin itself, Eur. Or. 1476, cf. C. I. 2099 4, Plut. Philop. 6, and v. dyxvAdopat, dyxvAnrés. 3. a bow-string, dyx. xpuadatpopor Soph. O, T. 203. 4. dyxdrdn Ths éuBdados, a sandal-thong, Alex. “Ax. 2. 5. the looped handle of a vase, cited from Hipp. ayktAntos, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of dyxvdéopat, thrown from the bent arm, Il. “i II. as Subst., dyavAnrév, 76, a javelin, Id. Fr. 14. dykiAswrds, dv, having a loop for a handle (dyxtdn 111), Galen, aykvAvov, 75, Dim. of dyxvAn, a ring of archain, A. B. 329, Suid. IT. 7a dykvAua, the Roman ancilia, Plut. Num. 13. dys, (50s, 4, a hook, barb, Opp. C, 1. 155. : &yKvAo-Bréhapos, 6, also -ov, 74, a cohesion of the eyelids, Paul. Aeg. 6. 15:—as Adj. in Cels. 7. 7. dyKvA6-Bovdos, ov, crafty, Tzetz. Hom. 144, Posth. 84, 630. dykvAo-yAaxwy, Tvos, of a cock, with hooked spurs, Babr. 17. 3. dyxtA6-Serpos, ov, crook-necked, Opp. H. 4. 630. ; , GyKvA-d5ous, ovros, 6, %, crook-toothed, of a scimitar, Q. Sm. 6. 218; I ' a ¢- 5 of the cottabus, Aesch, Fr. 178 (as emended by Dobree); cf. dyxvAy I. en aelle “10 . Epich, ap. Hesych. dy, xadwoi, of anchors, Nonn. D. 3. 50. 6. 176. GyKvAoes, ecoa, ev, post. for dyxvAos, Nonn. D. 6. 21. i GykuoKotéw, to hamstring, Jo. Aegaeates in Rev. Archéol, 3). 26. 403; v. Casaub. ad Ar, Eq. 262. 5 GYKUAS-KUKAOs, ov, curved in spires, of a dragon’s tail, Nonn, D, GyKUAS-Kwdos, ov, crook-limbed, Archestr. ap. Ath, 320 A. secre, 3}, @ curved probe, Erot., Galen. : 7, of O-LATHS, ov, 6, 7), (iris) crooked of counsel, regular epith. Kpovos, Il. 2, 205, Od. 21. 415, al., Hes. Th. 19; of Prometheus, Ib. na Hee Tis, cos, 6, %,=foreg., Nonn., v. 1. in Hom, and Hes. — eas xcvs, 6, 4, wovv, 76, ake modos, with bent legs, dyke. Blpos, the Rom, sella curulis, Plut. Mar. 5. GyKUAS-pivos, ov, hook-nosed, Malal. 106. 7. aykvAos [0], 7, ov, (dykos) crooked, curved, rounded, réga Il. 5. 209, Od. 21. 264, etc.; dpya Il. 6.39; of the eagle, d-yxtAov xapa his beaked head, Pind. P. 1.15; of greedy fingers, hooked, Ar. Eq. 205 ; of the move- ment of a snake, d. éptwy Dion. P. 123. II. i. ¥, of style, crooked, intricate, Luc. Bis Acc. 21; épuorieds kal dye. THY yA@ocav catchy, Alciphro 3. 64: but in good sense, terse, periodic, like orpoyyvdos, Dion, H. de Thuc. 25 ;—so Adv. —Aws, Ib, 31. 2, of character, wily, crafty, Lyc. 344. - &yKUA6-roEOs, ov, with crooked bow, Il. 2. 848., Io. 428, Pind, P, 1. 151. GyKiAS-hpav, 6, 7}, =dyxvdopHrns, Nicet. Eug. 8. 194. ' dykvdo-xetAns, ov, 5, (xeiAos) with hooked beak, alerds Od. 19. 538; aiyumol Il, 16, 428, Hes, Sc. 405, v. sq. dyKivAo-x Ams, ov, 6, (xnAH) with crooked claws, Batr. 295; in Ar. Eq. 197 Cleon is called Bupoaieros dyxvAoxetAns; but the interpr. of the Schol., 6 ém«apmeis rds xeipas Eywy, shews that he read —xrns. dykihow, f. wrw, to crook, hook, bend, riv xXéipa, as in throwing the cottabus, Plat. Com. Zevs 1, cf. Meineke 5. p. 44:—Pass., dvuxas Wyyxvhopeévos with crooked claws, Ar, Ay. 1180. ayKvrAGvut, uxos, 5, 4, with crooked claws, Nic. Eug. 5. 214. aykvAwors, 7), as medic. term, anchylosis, a stiffening of the joints, Paul. Aeg.; or, of the eyelids, Galen. ‘ : dyktdwrés, 4, dv, verb. Adj., of javelins, furnished with an dyxiAn (signf. 11. 2), ready for throwing, oroxaopara Eur. Bacch, 1205. GyKipa, 7, Lat. ancéra, an anchor, first in Aleae. 18. 9, Theogn. 459, for in Hom. we hear only of edvat; Bdddcobat, vat, pebrévan, ddrévat to cast anchor, Pind, I. 5. 18, Hdt. 7: 36, Aesch. Cho. 662, Xen. An. 3. 5, 10; dyx. aipew, aipesBar to weigh anchor, Plut. Pomp. 50, 80; dvapefo@a: Anth. P. 10. 1; ém dyeuptow éxew tas véeas Hdt. 6.12; dputcew Thuc. 7. 59; em dyxdpas dppeto@at, aro- oadevew to ride at anchor, Hdt. 7. Ba Dem. re» ta oa 1071 ;—proverb., dya@ai méAovT’ .. 5’ ayxupac ‘tis we strings Ri your rat Pind. O. 6. 173; so, emt dvoiv dyedpaw dpyeiv avrovs édre Dem. 1295, fin.; dyxupa d Ff pov ras TIxas dxet povy Eur. Hel. 277, cf. dxéw 1. 1; ént rips aris (sc. dyedpas) dppety Tots ToAAoIs, i.e, ‘to be in the same boat’ with the many, Dem, 319. 8; «lod pyrpi maides dyxvpar Biov Soph. Fr. 612; olxev a@yxupa, of a son, Eur. Hec. 80; for iepd dyx., of one’s last hope, v. éepds TI. I. II. gener- ally, any hook, for pruning, Theophr. C. P. 3. 2, 2- III. =aidoioy, (For the oe v. ayos.) ayKipnBorrov, 7d, v. s. dryey; - ‘ ayKopl @, f. Att. 1, (dyeupa) in Ar. Eq, 262, dadaBaw aaesnoes having taken him by the waist you threw him by the nary a e. by hooking your leg behind his knee; so, dyxuploas Eppngev Eupo ° ag. something like it is described in e cae Il. 23. 731:—hene ayn 76, Schol. Ar. 1, c., Hesyc! ; yreipiov, 74, Dim. of dripa, Lee. ene 1. TL. dyxipia (sc. meigpara), Ta, anchor-cables, Diod. 14. aes Aéw, to secure ty eee an eh se generally, to hook fast in, fasten securely, iyyxupoB ‘at Hipp. gon o-Béhvov, sy pases Strabo 159, Democr. ap. Plut. 2. 17 A, with v. 1. dyxupyB-. oil nS, 45 chor ohana a 3 Ze & , , a hind of probe, Hipp. ap. . raat (x) a pie by the anchor, ¢v dyxupouxias when ‘at anchor, Aesch. Suppl. 766. , Seetipectin, 9, ov, TewAdi as if from dynupbe, bent like s cael Philo in Math. Vett. 85 D. II. secured as by an anchor, > jp" dyyecov, Gvos, 6, the bend of the arm, and so, like Att. dAévy, the elbow, 5 pepey 8 én dyxdvos Il. 10. 80; H, Kad ex’ dykdvos Kepadiyy oxéOev I ; dyxava tvxdv péoor (the man had turned his back before he was it, ny 582, cf. 20. 479; dyedve virrew to nudge, Pe 14. 485, cf, Plat. Amat. 132 B; xporeiy rois dyn@ow Tas meupas _ 1259. 22: proverb., dyx@v dropirrecdar Bion. ap. Diog. L. 4. 46; én’ Geyneavos bemveiv cubito nixus, of the attitude at meals, Luc. arias " 6. 2. generally the arm, like d-yeadn, dyxolvn, vinas éy dyKaveoot airvey Pind. N. 5.76; és 8 bypov dyndva . .poorriacerat Soph. ae. 1237, etc. 3. the bend’ in animals’ legs, Xen. Cyn. + I. aes any nook ot bend, as the jutting angle of a wall, dyed 7 ixeos Il. 16. 702, cf. Hdt. 1. 180; _ bend or So pega - in Soph. Aj. 805, seem to stern I pee ronan near ihe wath of the Simois; also ¢he jutting land which a bay, Strab, 580; dyxdves miOdpas the ribs which support the ‘horns of the cithara, Ath. 637 C, Hesych. IIT. the proverb yAvxis a is used Kar’ dvrlppacty of a difficulty, Plat. Phaedr. 257 D, Ath. are said to be derived from a long bend or reach in the mile, | Aadpopros. Paroemiogr., Interpp. ad ll. c.; in Plat. Com. #4. 4, however yAveis | dyedy seems to be=mapayxddicya, a thing to be embraced, treasure. (For the Root, v. dykos.) Gykwviokos, 6, Dim. of dyxwy, Hero Spir. 228, Lxx; -foxvov, 7d, Hero Spir. 229. aykwvicpds, of, 6, a bending, reach, of an estuary, Eust. 1712. 29. GyKkovo-cdys, és, curve-shaped, curved, Bito Mech. 110. ayAa-epos, ov, bright-haired, h. Hom. 18. 5. éyAata, Ion. ty, %, (dyAads) splendour, beauty, adornment, of any- thing splendid or showy, as opp. to what is useful, «05ds re wal dyA. kat dvecap Od. 15. 78; dyAainge wero0as (Ep. dat.) Il. 6. 510; of Penelope's personal appearance, Od. 18. 180: in bad sense, pomp, show, vanity, dyAains évexev xopéew xvas 17. 310; and in pl. vanities, 17. 44, Eur. El. 175. 2, festive joy, triumph, glory, Pind. O. 13. 18, ete.; pydé mor dyAaias drovaiaro Soph. El. 211: in pl, festivities, merriment, Hes. Sc. 272, 285.—The word is poét., and in Trag. only found in lyr. passages, but occurs in Xen. Eq. 5, 8, Ael. N. A. 10. 13, etc. dyhaito, Hipp. 666. 45, Aecl.: f. Att. dyAai® (é7-) Ar. Eccl. 575: aor. #7yAdioa Theocr. Ep. 1. 4, Anth., etc., (@7-) Ar. Fr. 548:—Pass., y. infr, (dyAads). To make bright or splendid, glorify, honour, Gavaras jyAdioey xapiow Epitaph. in C. I. 2439, cf. Plut. 2. 965 C, Ael. N. A. 8. 28. 2. to give as an ornament or honour, aol, Baxxe, qavbe povoay dydaifopey Carm. Pop. 8 (in Bgk. Lyr. Gr.), cf. Theocr. 1, c—But II. earlier only in Med. and Pass. to adorn oneself or be adorned with a thing, take delight in, o€ gnu divapmepes dyAai- ea8at (sc. iors) Il. 10. 331 (this fut. is the only form in Hom., even of compds.); dams roovros Ovpdy dydat{erar Simon, Iamb. 7. 70; dyAaifer@ar povorxds év dur Pind. O. 1. 22; comically, €Aaiw pd- avos iyyAaiopévn Ephipp. np. 2. IIT. in Antiph. Incert. 37, Pors. restored émnyAaiter’ for #yAdifey (intr.); but Hesych. cites dyAat(er* OdAAe.—Never used in Trag. or good Att. Prose. GyAdiopa, 75, an ornament, honour, Aesch. Ag. 1312; 7d untpds aya. Eur. Hel. 11, cf. 282; of the hair of Orestes placed as an offering on his father's tomb, Aesch. Cho. 193, Soph. El. go8, cf. Eur. El. 325; of a sarcophagus, Epigr. Gr. 325.—Poét. word, used in late Prose, as dyA. uray, of the rose, Ach. Tat. 2.1. dyAaiopés, 6, an adorning, an ornament, pnuarov Plat. Ax, 369 D. ayhaiorés, 7, dv, also ds, dv, verb, Adj. of d-yAat(w, adorned, Hesych.; ayhaiaros xupa Jo. Chr. 7. 313. dyhaé-Borpus, v, gen. vos, with splendid bunches, Nonn. D. 18. 4 &yha6é-yuros, ov, beautiful-limbed, “HBa Pind. N. 7. 6. Gyha6-SevBpos, ov, with beautiful trees, Pind. O. 9. 32. GyAa6-Swpos, ov, with or bestowing splendid gifts, Anufrnp h. Hom. Cer. 54, 192, 492. dyAao-epyés, dv, (Epyov) ennobled by works, Maxim. 7. xar. 68. Gya6-Opovos, ov, with splendid throne, bright-throned, Motoa Pind. O. 13. 136; also in N. to. 1, with v. 1. dyAaé-QaKos. GyAad0ip0s, ov, noble-hearted, Anth. P. 15. 40, 25. GyAa6-Kapmos, ov, bearing beautiful or goodly fruit, of fruit-trees, pyréat aya. Od. 7. 115., 11. 589; dyA. SueAla Pind. Fr. 83.—And so in h. Hom. Cer. 4, 23, where it is an epith. of Demeter and the Nymphs, as givers of the fruits of the earth; and in Pind, N. 3. 97, of Thetis, as blessing the fruit of woman’s womb, vy. Bockh ad 1. (56). GyAad-Koupos, ov, rich in fair youths, Képwos Pind. O. 13. 5. GyAaé-Kwpos, ov, giving splendour to the feast, pavh Pind, O. 3. 10. dyhao-pedns, és, brightly smiling, “Epws Poéta Lyr. ap. Jo. Lyd. de Ostent. p. 282 ;—restored by Meineke for the vulg. d-yaApoedns. Gyha6-pnris, os, 6, %, of rare wisdom, Tryph, 183. ae st pepdos, ov, of beauteous form, Inscr. Vet. in C. I. 38, cf. Anth, - 9. 524, al. dyha6-trats, 5, 1}, rich in fair children, Opp. H. 2. 41, Epigr. Gr. 896. dyha6-memos, ov, beautifully veiled, Q. Sm. 11. 240. dya6-mnxus, ¥, gen. €0s, with beautiful arms, Nonn. D. 32. 80. dyAa6-moros, ov, splendidly faithful, Hesych. &yAa0-roéw, to make famous, Hermap. ap. Ammian. dyhab-rupyos, ov, with stately towers, Tzetz. Hom. 417. dyhads, 7, dv, also ds, dy Theogn. 985, Eur. Andr. 135 :—splendid, shining, bright, often as epith. of beautiful objects, dyA. t5wp Il. 2. 307, etc.; yuia 19. 385 ; pnpia Hes, Op. 3353 9Bns dyAadv dvOos Tyrt. 10, 28, cf. Theogn. lc.; of the sun, Emped. 172: then generally, splendid, beautiful, dmowa Ul. 1. 23; dpa Ib. 213, etc. ; épya Od. 10. 223; adoos Il. 2. 506; so also in Pind., ete. IL. of men, either beau- tiful or famous, noble, Il. 2, 736, 826, etc.; c. dat, rei, famous for a thing, xépa dyAads sarcastically, Il. x1. 385.—It is an old Ep. and Lyr. word, being only found twice in Trag., in lyr. passages, dyAads @7Bas Soph. O, T, 152 ; Nypidos dyAadv é5pay Eur. |. c.; but it occurs in late poetry, ¢. g. Theocr, 28, 3, and the Adv, dyAads in Ar, Lys. 640: cf. the derivs. dyAaitw, dyAdioua, dyAawy, (Akin perhaps to dyaAAw.) [ayAtios, and so in compds, ] Gyhas-reueros, ov, splendidly built, Or. Sib. 14. 125. dyas-ripos, ov, splendidly honoured, often in Orph. pAvrao-rplatvys, ov, 4, he of the bright trident, a name of Poseidon, mu 0.1, 64, in ace, "AyAaorplawiy, cf. Béckh. praef. p. 39. at ao-havijs, és, of bright appearance, Eccl. iVAao-baphs, és, in splendid robe, Or. Sib. 3. 454. inseee €s, splendidly shining, Maxim. 7. «at. 189, Or. Sib. Per si ov, of splendid fame, Orph. H. 30. 4. a FOS, ov, one who ‘ walks in beauty,’ Maxim. 7. Kar. 402. re AO-hopros, ov, proud of one’s burden, Nonn. D, 7. 253. , , mM” ayaopurevtos — ayvupt. Aao-ptrevtos, ov, beautifully planted, ddoos Manass. Chron,-4260. “Gyha6é-devos, ov, with a splendid voice, Procl. h, Mus, 2. dyAao-pars, .50s, %, the peony, =yAveuoldy, Acl. N. A. 14. 24. dyhavpos, ov, =dyAads, Nic. Th. 62, 441. II. “AyAaupos, 4, a daughter of Cecrops, worshipped on the Acropolis at Athens, Hat. 8. 53, 2. é-yAapipws, Adv. without polish, inelegantly, Ath. 431 D. a Wp, Bros, 6, }, bright-eyed, beaming, reden Soph. O. T. 214 (lyr.). dyheunis, és, (yAedos) not sweet, sour, harsh, Xen. ap. Suid., whence Zeune has received it (in comp.) for d-yAv«ts in Hier, 1, 21, and restored it for drepés and dxAeéorarov in Occ. 8, 3 and 4; opp. to yAvxds Arist. Probl. 4.12, 1; olvos Luc. Lexiph. 6; cf. Lob. Phryn. 536 :— metaph. of the style of Thucyd. harsh, crabbed, Hermog.—In Nic. Al, 171, dyAevk} @4Aacoay should prob. be read for d-yAedunv. d-y\nvos, ov, without yin, i.e. blind, Nonn. Jo. 9. v. 6. ate gen. dyAi#os, not so well dyAiMos (Dind. Ar. Ach. 763), 4 :— only used in pl.,a@ head of garlic, which is made up of several cloves, Ar. I. c., Vesp. 680: cf. yéAyis. d-yuoxpos, ov, not sticky, Hipp. 77 D, Theophr. C. P. 6. 11, 16. a-yAvins, és, = dyAevens, q. v., Theophr. C. P. 6. 16, 2. ios, ov, unhewn, Schol. Soph. O. C. 101. dyhoooia, Att. -rria, 4, want of eloquence, Eur. Fr. 57. a-yAwoos, Att. —rros, ov, without tongue, of the crocodile, Arist. Part. An. 4. 11, 2; ofa flute (cf. yA@ooa m1. 1), Poll. 2. 108 :—Adv. —rws Id. 6. 145. II. tongueless, ineloquent, Lat. elinguis, Pind. N. 8. 4I, Ar. Fr. 570, Anth., etc. 2.=BapBapos ; 006 “EAAds (="EAAnv) ovr’ dyAwooos Soph. Tr. 1060. Gypa, 76, (dyvups, aya) a fragment, Plut. Philop. 6. dypés, 5, (Gyvum) a breakage, fracture of a bone, wept dypar title of a treatise by Hipp. II. a broken cliff, crag, Eur. 1. T. 263 ; in pl., Id. Bacch. 1094, Nic. Al. 391. d-yvapmros, ov, unbending, inflexible, Orph. Lith. 27 ; 7d mpds Adovds ..@yvapnroy Plut. Cato Mi. r1, cf. Anth. Plan. 4. 278 :—in Aesch. Pr, 163, the metre requires a short penult.; Dind. suggests dyvapor, citing Hesych. dkavOov (|. dyvagov)* ayvaprrov. . d-yvamros, ov, of cloth, not fulled or carded, and so, new, Plut. 2. 691 D. II. not cleansed, unwashen, Ib. 169 C. dyvi.dos, ov, (yvdnrw) =foreg., Ev. Matth. 9. 16, Marc. 2. 21. Gyveta, 7, (dyvevw) purity, chastity, Soph. O. T. 864 (lyr.), Anth. P. append. 99, N. T.; r&v Oe@v Antipho 116. 11. II. strict ob- servance of religious duties, Plat. Legg. gog E, etc. :—in pl. purifications, Isocr, 225 D, Pseudo-Phoc. 215, Joseph. B. J. prooem. ro. ayveupa, 76, (dyvetw) chaste conduct, chastity, Eur. Tro. 501. Gyveuriptov, 74, a place of purification, A. B. 267. 9, Eccl. Gyveutixés, 4, dv, preserving chastity, opp. to dppodiotacrinés Arist. HAL Y..20402 II. act. purificatory, 7d ayy. a sin-offering, Philo 2. 206, Gyvettpia, %, a female purifier, Gloss. Gyvevw, f. evow: pf. #yvevea Dem. |. citand. To consider as part of purity, make it a point of religion, c. inf., dyvetovar Eupuxov pndev reiveww Hdt. 1.140: absol. to be pure, SpviBos bpus mas dy dyveton paywy; Aesch. Supp. 226, cf. Plat. Legg. 837 C; c. acc. rei, xetpas ayveve Eur, 1. T. 1227; dyvedoy Ovew Lys, 107. 39; dyvevers er Alex. "Ameya. 1. 6: to keep oneself pure from, twés Dem. 618. Io. II. act.=dyviw, to purify, Lat. lustrare, Antipho 119. 11. Gyvedyv, Ovos, 6, a place of purity, per antiphr. for a brothel, Clearch, ap. Ath. 515 F. Gyvifw: f. Att. 1@: (dyvés). To make pure, to purify, cleanse away, esp. by water (7d mip KaOaipea.., rd Hdwp dyvicer Plut. 2. 263 E), Avjas) dyvioas éua Soph. Aj. 655; ri Twos, xépas ods dyvioas pudo- varos Eur. H.F. 1324; freq. in Lxx, N, T. :—late also in Med., but cf. dparyvicu, II. dyv. tov Oavdvra to hallow the dead by fire, so that he may be received with favour by the gods below, Soph. Ant. 545, cf. Diphil. Incert. 3. 1 :—Pass., owpad’ HyvicGy mupi Eur, Supp. 1211: hence 2. to burn up, destroy, Soph. Fr. rig. dyvos, a, ov, made of d-yvos or withy, Plut. 2. 693 F. dyvopa, 74, a purification, expiation, parpGov ayv. pévou, of Orestes, Aesch. Eum, 325 (lyr.); also in Lxx. Gyviopds, }, purification, expiation, dy. moeic@a Dion. H. 3. 22; Tois ayv. Tois mpd* T&v Oecpopopiav C. 1. 3562; ayy. 7@ vdare LXx (Num. 6. 3). dyvuoréos, a, ov, verb, Adj. to be purified, Eur. I. T. 1199. & yptov, 76, a means of purifying (cf. weptppayvtjpiov), Hero 219. dyworns, ov, 6, a purifier, like dyvirns, Gloss. dynorikés, 7, dv, (dyvi(w) =dyveurixds 11, Bust. 43. 6. dyvirgs [7], ov, 6, (dyvitw) a purifier, Oeot dyvirar Poll. 1. 24. II. one who requires purification, like ixérns, Hesych., A. B. 338 (ubi ayirns). dyvoéw, Ep. dyvoréw, 3 sing. subj. dyvoujor Od. 24. 218: impf. jyyvoour Isocr., etc.: fut. dyvonow Bacchyl. 31, Isocr. 285 C, Dem. 885. 2., 1266. 19: aor. #yyvénoa Aesch, Eum. 134, Thuc., ete., Ep. jyvoinea Il. 2. 807, Hes. Th., also Ep. contr, 3 sing. dyvwaaoxe Od. 23. 95: pf. ayvonka Plat. Soph, 221 D, Alex. Amoxomr. i :—Pass., fut. (of med. form) dyvoncopat, v. infr.; dyvonOpaopat v.1. Luc. J. Trag. 5: aor. Wyvonony, v. infr.: pf. yyvdnpuar Isocr. Antid. § 182, Plat. (This Verb implies a form d~yvoos =ayvws 11; for it cannot be compd. of a— priv., voéw, cf, a—I, fin. For the Root, y. sub yeyvwonw.) Not to perceive or know, Lat. ignorare; Hom., almost always in Ep. aor., dvip’ d-yvoinaao™ badd from not recognising him, Od. 20. 15, cf. Thuc. 2. 49, Plat. Phaedr. 228 A; but mostly with negat., od jyvoincey he perceived or knew well (vy, supr.); pydiv dyvde learn all, Eur. Andr, Soc Coren J Le Sz mostly c, acc. to be ignorant of, Hat. 4. 156, Soph. Tr. 78, Plat.; éavrods ayy. to forget their former selves, Dem. 151.7; Thy wéAus ay. not to discern public opinion, Id. 413. 11, etc.; also mept tivos Plat, Phaedr, 277 D3; also c. gen. pers. added, dyvooiyres dAAHAY 8 Te A€-yomer Plat. Gorg. 517 C :—dependent clauses are added in part., ris. , d-yvoet Tov éxeibev médenov dedpo Hfovra ; Dem. I 3.173 or with a Conjunct., ovdels d-yvoet br... , Id. 565. 8, etc.; dyvodv ei... Xen. An. 6. 5, 12— Pass. not to be known, Plat. Euthyphro 4 A, Hipp. Ma. 294 D, ete. ; dyvoodpeva bry ..dyabd éore Id. Rep. 506 A; tyyvohabae fdpracw bre. . Id. Legg. 797 A; imedduBavoy dyvohcecbat they expected shat they should escape notice, Dem. 310. 7; kaipdv ob mapebévra ovd" dy- vonbévra Id. 326, 25, ef. Isocr. Antid. l.c.; 7d jyvonuéva unknown parts, Arr. An. 7.1, 4. II. absol. to go wrong, make a false step, first in Antipho 134. 30, Isocr. 167 C; part. dyvody ignorantly, by mistake, Andoc. 29. 28, Xen. An, 7. 3, 38, Arist.: in moral sense, fo be ignorant of what is right, to act amiss, Polyb. 5. 11, 5, cf. Ep. Hebr. 5. 2. dyvénpa, 7d, a fault of ignorance, oversight, ayy. érepov mpocayvoeiv Theophr. H. P. 9. 4, 8, cf. Lxx, N.T. dyvonréov, verb. Adj., with negat., ob« dyv. one must not fail to remark, Diosc. prooem. 1, Philo. dyvontixés, 7, dv, mistaken, ra d. mparrew Arist, Eth. E. 7. 13, 3- dyvoul, 7%, (v. sub yeyvconw) want of perception, ignorance, ayvoia Aesch. Ag. 1596 ; dyvoias tro Supp. 499; fv im’ dyvolas dpas whom seeing you pretend not to know, Soph. Tr. 419; dyvolg é¢apaprévew Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 38, cf. Thuc. 8. 92, 11, Ar. Ay. 577, Dem. :—in logic, % Tod EXéyxou dyv., ignoratio elenchi, ignorance of the conditions of a valid proof, Arist. Soph. Elench. 4, 10, cf. 5, 5-6. II. =dyvénua, a mistake, Dem. 271. 15., 1472.5. [In Poets sometimes dyvoid, Soph. Tr. 350, Ph. 129; and this is old Att., acc. to Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 1579. 29, cf. Moer. 191, Lob, Phryn. 494. Cf. dvora.] ayvoréw, Ep. for dyvoéw. dyvoowrws, Adv. of dyvoéw, ignorantly, Arist. Top. 2. 9, 4. Gyvo-rovds, dv, making pure, Eccl. Gyvo-médos, ov, (roAgw) pure, Anuhrnp Orph. H. 18, 12. act. making pure, Id. Arg. 38. Gyvi-pirros, ov, pure-flowing, morapds Aesch. Pr. 435 (lyr.): post. form. ayvés, 9, dv, (ayos) full of ayos or religious awe, Hom, (only in Od.), etc. : I. of places and things dedicated to gods, hallowed, holy, sacred, éoprh Od. 21. 259; of frankincense, dyv?) 6544 Kenophan. 1. 7 Bgk.; dAgos h. Hom. Merc. 187, Pind. ; répevos Id. P. 4. 363; #dwp Id. I. 6. 109 ; mupds dyvdrarar waryai Id. P. 1. 41; aiOnp Aesch, Pr. 281; dos, Aourpév Soph. El. 86, Ant. 1201; @dpara Id. Tr. 287; xpyorH- pia Eur. Ion 243, etc.; x@pov ob dyvoy mareiy a spot not holy to tread on, Soph. O. C. 37. 2. of divine persons, chaste, pure, Hom., mostly of Artemis, xpuad@povos “A. dyvh Od. 5.123, cf. 18. 202, al. ; also, d. Mepcepdvera 18. 202, cf. h. Cer. 337, 439; of Demeter, h. Cer. 203; dyval Gea, of Demeter and Persephoné, C. I. 5431, 56433; of other gods, as Apollo, Pind. P. 9.112; Zeus, Aesch, Supp. 652 ;—also of the attributes of gods, @e@v oéBas Soph. O. T. 830, cf. Ph. 1289. II. after Hom., of persons, wndefiled, chaste, pure, of maidens, Pind. P. 4.183, Aesch. Ag. 244, Fr. 238; so of Hippolytus, Eur. Hipp. 102; and c. gen., Aéxous dyvov déuas Tbh. 1003; yaar ayvol Plat. Legg. 840 D; dyv?) dw dvdpds avvovotas Jus}. ap. Dem, 1371. 23. 2. pure from blood, guiltless, innocent, dyvol robm rhvb_ rhv xopnv Soph. Ant. 889; dayvds xeipas Eur. Or. 1604; pnrporrdvos.., 760° dyvds dv Id. El, 1607, cf. 1. A. 940; 66° ayvds Hv, says Her- cules, when I had been purified from blood, Soph. Tr. 258: c. gen., dyvos atparos Eur. Hipp. 316; dvov Plat. Legg. 759 C. 3. generally, in moral sense, @. xplots pure, upright, Pind. O. 3. 373 yuxiis quaAia a, Xen, Symp. 8, 15, etc. 4. Aaparpos derds déuas dyvov ioxew to keep the body pure from food, abstain from .., Eur. Hipp. 138. 5. év dyv@ iCeo@ar on pure, holy ground, Aesch. Supp. 223. III, Adv., dyv@s nat rabapa&s h. Hom. Ap, 121, Hes. Op. 339; 4. Exe Xen. Mem. 3. 8, 1o.—Cf. drytos fin. : ; dyvos*%, Att. 6 (Heind. Plat. Phaedr. 230 B),=Avyos, a willow-like tree, the branches of which were strewed by matrons on their beds at the Thesmophoria, vitex agnus castus (still called dyveia), h. Hom. Mere. 410, Chionid. “Hp. 2, ubi v. Meineke, cf. Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 49. (It was associated with the notion of chastity from the likeness of its name to ayvés, 7, ov.) II. dyvos, 6, name of a fish, Ath. 356 A. iil. a kind of bird, Suid. dyvé-oropos, ov, with pure mouth, Tzetz. Chil. 6. 36. dyvo-raAns, és, worshipped in holy rites, @éyus Orph. Arg. 551. d&yvorns, 770s, 4, (ayvds) purity, chastity, C. 1. 1133, 2 Ep. Cor. 2. 2. dyvuGes, wy, ai, stones hung to the threads of the warp to keep them straight, Plut. 2. 156 B; cf. Poll. 7. 36, and v. sub Aata, kavdv. ; dyvipe, 3 dual dyvirov Hom. (v. infr.): fut. dgw (war—) IL 8. 403: aor. 1 éaga Hom. («ar— Plat.), #éa Il. 23. 392; imper. afov 6. 300; part. dfas 16, 371, Eur. Hel. 1598 (but in Lys. 100. 5 (xaT-)edfavres, perth, to distinguish it from the 1 aor, of d@yw); inf. dgac Ap. Rh.:— II. “Pass., pres. (v. infr.): aor. 2 éaynv Hom. and Att. (v. infr.): pf act. (in pass. sense) gaya, Ion. érya (but only in comp, xar-) Hes., Hdt., Att. : a pf. pass. xat-€aypac Luc. Tim. 10. — (@yvupu orig. had the digamma, which remained in the form savdgas (v. earayvuju), and in the Aeol. Féaye, Ahrens D. Acol. 32; so that the Root was Fay, whence dy7 [a], _d-ayhs, vav-dryds, dypés, peth. derh; cf. Skt. bhai, bhanagmi (frango), bhaigas (fractura).) [@ by nature, as appears from the pf. aya, Ion, nya; in aor. pass. édynv Hom. and later Ep. commonly shorten the penult., (whereas in Att. sa7-e@ynv is always found); so in the un- augm. form a is short, v. supr.; even Hom, however has é@yny, Il. 11- e. : wr. tois éy TH vnt Thuc. 1. 137, cf. Plat. Rep. 375 E, al. r 12 ayveodys p59 To break, shiver, etow 8 domid’ eage Il. 7. 270; vydv 23. 392; appara ..dtav7’ (i.e, dgavre, agreeing with tmmot) év mpary puz@ Il. 16. 371; vnds..éagay xdpara Od. 3. 298; but, mpd re xdbpar’ éagey broke the waves, Od. 5. 385 ; dyvuroy tAny crashed through it, of wild boars, Il. 12. 148; dyvvor xepavvdy Anth. Plan. 250,—Pass., with pf. €@ya, to be broken or shivered, &v xelpecow ayn figos Il. 3. 367, cf. 16. 801; év Kavdd éd-yn SoArxov Sépu 13. 162; marayos .. dyvu- Hevday (sc. of the trees), 16. 769 ; vnav e dpa dyvupevdor (cf. vavd~ yor) Od. 10. 123; Tov 8 eedxopévoro madi ayer dfées bywor as the arrow was drawn back out of the*wound the barbs broke (where others join madw dyer, were bent back and broken), Il. 4. 214; in Hdt. 1. 185, 7, Torapos mep) Kapmds Todds dyvipevos is merely a river with a broken, i.e. winding, course :—metaph., dyvvro xm the sound spread around, Hes. Se. 279, 348; so, xéAabdos dyvipevos 5d ordyaros, of the notes of song, Pind. (?) Fr. 238. The Act. never appears in Prose, and the Pass. once, in Hdt.; the compd. xardyvupz being in far more general use, v. sub voc. Later forms are (car)doow, (kar)ayvi. dyvains, es, (ef50s) like a willow, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 4. Gyvapovew, to be dyvipov, to act without right feeling, act unfairly, Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 33; dyv. eis or mpds twa to act unfeelingly or unfairly towards one, Dem. 257. 14 (in pf.), 309. 25, Apollod. Ad«. 1; with a neut. Adj., uh vey Ta Ovnrd Ovnrds dv dyvoudver Trag. ap. Clem. Al. 521; dy. wept twa, wepi Tt Plut. Cam, 28, Alcib. 19:—Pass. to be irly treated, Id. 2. 484 A; dyvnyovnbeis Id. Cam. 18, etc. dyvopootvn, %, want of acquaintance with a thing, want of knowledge, Plat. Theaet. 199 D. 2. want of sense, folly, Theogn. 3 sense- less pride, arrogance, obstinacy, Hdt. 2. 172, Eur. Bacch. 885 (lyr.) ; pos ayy. tpdmecbar Hat. 4. 93; ayvapootvn xpacbat Id, 5. 83; im dyvapootvns 9. 3. 3. want of feeling, unkindness, unfairness, Soph. Tr, 1266 (1. susp.), Dem. 311. 7; d@yv. TUxns, Lat. iniquitas for- tunae, Id, 297. 7. 4. in pl. misunderstandings, Xen. An. 2. 5, 6. Gyvapwv, ov, gen. ovos, (yun) ill-judging, senseless, Theogn. 1260 (si vera 1.), Pind. O. 8. 79, Plat. Phaedr. 275 B; opp. to perd Aopopod mparrew Menand. Incert. 267; inconsiderate, Hipp. Aér. 290:—Adv. —éves, senselessly, Xen. Hell. 6. 3, 11, etc.; dyv. €xew Dem. 25.18. 2. headstrong, reckless, arrogant, (in Comp. —ovégrepos) Hdt. 9. 41; in Sup., Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 26. _ 3. unfeeling, unkind, hard-hearted, PoiBw Te Kapol pi) yévncO’ dyvdpoves Soph. O. C. 86; of judges, Xen. Mem. 2. 8, 5; joined with dydptoros, Id. Cyr. 8. 3, 49, cf. Mem. 2. 10, 3; of Midias, Dem. 546. 3; 2 dyvdpoy, i.e. fortune, Isocr. Epist. 10, 3: —esp. ignoring one's debts, Ulp. ad Dem. 25. 19; dyv. mept Tas dmobd- ces Luc, Hermot. Io. 4. unknowing, in ignorance, ayy. mavacbat Hipp. 343. 20. II. of things, senseless, brute, Aeschin. 88. 37; also, ppovovcay Ovnra Kove ayvdpova (neut, pl.) Soph. Tr. 473. 2. pass. ill-judged of, unforeseen, Parthen. —__ IIT. of horses, without the teeth that tell the age (-yvdpoves) Poll. 1. 182; cf. dmoyvapav. [ayv-, only in Manetho 5. 338.] G-yvapirros, ov, unascertained, Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 3. : Gyvas, Gros, 6, }, (yeyvwona, yavat, cf. Lob. de Adject. Immobil. 4,9): I. pass. unknown, mostly of persons, dyv@res GAAHAois Od. 5.79; Gyvas pds dyer’ elwe Aesch. Cho. 677, cf. Supp. 993, Soph. Ph. 1008; dyvads marpt clam patre, Eur. Ion 14; so iw Prose, b. of things, k, obscure, unintelligible, puvh, pOdyyos Aesch. Ag. 1051, Soph. Ant. Tool ; dyv. déxnots, a dark, vague suspicion, Id. O. T. 681. ir 2. not known, obscure, ignoble, dyv., axdens Eur. I. A. 19; od« dyvdra viray a victory not unknown to fame, Pind, I. 2. 19. TI. act. not knowing, ignorant, Soph. O. T. 1133; cod pay Tuxdv dyvGros unable to appreciate me, Ib. 677; dyvas, Tt divara . . Xen. Occ. 20,13. IIT. c. gen., where the sense fluctuates between pass. and act., xOav obt ayy. Onpa&v Pind. P. 9. 103, cf. I. 2. 443 dyvG@res GAAHAw Thuc. 3. 533 6 ayy. Tay dé-yow Arist. Soph. Elench. 22, 4. s ayvoota, 4, a not knowing, ignorance, Hipp. Vet. Med. 11; ovppopas dyv. Eur. Med. 1204; 8:0 riv GAApAwY ayy. from not knowing one another, Thuc. 8. 66: absol., opp. to -yv@ats, Plat. Soph. 267 B. = IT. a being unknown, obscurity, Plat. Menex. 238 D. dyvaoow, =dyvotw, a pres. only used in late Poets, as Musae. 249, Dion. P. 173, Coluth, 8, Nonn., etc., as also in Luc. Ep, Sat. 25 (with v. 1. dyvoeis), prob. formed backward from the Hom. form dyvdoacxe (v. sub dyvoéw) on the analogy of Atpd&aow, etc., cf. Lob, Phryn. 607 sq. G-yvworos, ov, unknown, rwi Od. 2. 175 (or, peth., unexpected) : unheard of, forgotten, like dt5ndos, Mimnerm. 5. 7; y- sub ova, I. 1; dy. és viv Eur. I. T. 94:—so also in the form dyvatos, ywrd KovK peta M4 pot Soph. O. T. 58; ayvwra rois Oeopévors Ar, Ran. 926. 2. not to be known, dyvwarov twa Tebxew Od. 13. 191 ; navrecot Ib. 397; dyvwordraro yh@aooav most unintelligible in tongue, Thuc. 3. 94- 8. in Plat. and Arist. not a subject of knowledge, unknowable, dkoya kal ayy. Plat. Theaet. 202 B, cf. Arist. Metaph. 6. 10, 18; in Comp. harder to know, Ib. 1 (min.). 3, I. 4, as the name of a divinity at Athens, v7) rov” Ayvworov Luc. Philop. 9, cf. Act. Ap. 17. 23; in pl. Oe@v .. dvopa{opéva dyvdoraw Paus. 1. 1, 4. II. act. not knowing, ignorant of, yevdéwv Pind, O, 6, 113, ef. Luc. Hale. 3.— Ady. —rws, Clem. Al. en poate & vo, poet. for dvagnpaiva, Il. 21. 347. Gyéts, 9, (dyxw) a throttling, like dyxévn, E.M. 194,50. %, (yoyyt¢w) abstinence from murmuring, patience, Eccl, 4 ay ov, not murmuring, Eccl. 4-yo . ov, not to be bewitched or beguiled, Synes. 135 B. a1. Act. without guile; Adv. —rTws, Cic. Att. 12. 3, I. d-yopdtos, ov, without grinders, dy. ald toothless age, Diocles Incert. ah § Soe . ' dyopaCw. G-yoppwros, ov, not nailed, unfastened, Jo. Chtys. Giyéviiros, ov, (yévu) without a knee, Arist. Incess. An. 9, 4. metaph., not bending the knee, inflexible, Soct. H. E. 6. 15. plants, without knots or joints, Theophr. H. P. 4. 8, 7- dyovéw, to be dyovos or unfruitful, Theophr. H. P. 9, 18. 3, al. Gyovia, 7, unfruitfulness, Plut. Rom. 24. ; Gyovos, ov, (-yovn): I. pass. unborn, Il. 3. 40 (which Augustus translated childless, Suet. Oct. 65). 2. unborn, not yet born, Eur. Phoen. 1597. II. act. not producing, unfruitful, impotent, barren, of animals both male and female, Hipp. Aph. 1255, Art. 807, Arist. G. A. 1.7, 2 (in Comp.), etc.; rémorcw dydvors, travail without issue, bringing no children to the birth, Soph. O. T. 27, cf. Hes. Op. 242, Hdt. 6. 139. b. of plants, Theophr. H. P. 1. 13, 4, al.; of sandy soil, Justin. M. 348 B. ce. metaph., dy. juépa a day unlucky for begetting children, Hipp. 1053 D; dy. mouris, opp. to “yévipos, Plat. 2. 348 B:—in the Pythag. language 7 was an dyovos apiOpos, not being divisible by any number, nor a factor of any number under 12 (cf. det- mapBevos), Clem. Al. 811. 2. c. gen. not productive of, barren of or in, gopias Plat. Theaet. 150C, cf.157 C; Onpiov Menex. 237D; xaxdv ay. Bios Id. Ax. 370 D. III. childless, -yévos Eur. H. F. 887, v. supr. Byccs, ov, unmourned, Aesch. Th. 1063 (lyr.). Gyopé [ty], as, Ion. dyoph, fs, h: (dyelpw). Any assembly, esp. an Assembly of the People, opp. to the Council of Chiefs (BovAn, @@xos) Il. 2. 51, 93, sq-, Od. 2. 26, etc.; the absence of dyopal BovAnpédpot among the Cyclopes (Od. 9. 112) is a mark of barbarism. In the dyopd, sitting was the proper posture, Il. 2. 96, cf. 99 ; standing denoted tumult or terror, 18. 246; dyopal TlvAdribes, of the Amphictyonic Council at Pylae, Soph. Tr. 638, cf. Ion 1, 3; in Pind., even of the gods, paxdpwy dy. 1. 8. 59, cf. A. B. 210.—Phrases, some of which may belong to signf. 11. I, xa@i¢ew d-yopny to hold an assembly, opp. to Avew dy. to dissolve it, Od. 2. 69, cf. Il. 1. 305; ayopnvie kadéav, xnptooer Il. 1, 54., 2. 51; ayopiy moreta0ar or ridecOar, els tiv ay. elovévar, dyetpecOar, ayopnvbe KabéCecOar Hom., etc.—This sense is more freq. in Ep. than Att., but we have dyopdy ovvayew and ovAAéyew Xen. An. 5. 7, 33 moteiv Aeschin. 57. 37:—in late Prose, dy. diaav mpodeivar, katacTH- gag@at, to express the Rom. conventus agere, Luc. Bis Acc. 4 and 12. 2. generally, a tribe, people, Pind. N. 3. 32. II. the place of Assembly, Rom. forum, rods & ebp’ civ dyop7 Il. 7. 382; va op ay. TE Oémis Te 11. 807, cf. 2. 788., 7. 345, Od. 6. 266., 8. 5, sq.; also in pl., Od. 8, 16. 2. as in Hom, the dyopd was used not only for meet- ings, trials at law and other public purposes, it is likely that it was also used as a market-place, like the Roman Forum, but the first passage in which this distinctly appears seems to be in Epigr. Hom. 14. 5, moAAa pev civ dyoph mwdetpeva, TOAAA 8 dryuais; but it is freq. in all later authors (though signfs. 11. 1 and 11. 2 are often blended), mpupvors deyopas ém Pind. P. 5. 125 ; Geol... dyopas énioxowor Aesch. Th. 272; péon Tpaxwlov dy. Soph. Tr. 424; ote dyopa obre dora SéxeaOat Thue. 6. 44; in Theogn. 268 ods .. eis dy. épyerat is a sign of poverty; but ¢o frequent or lounge in the market was held to be disreputable, éAvyass ..dyopas xpalvaw kixhov Eur. Or. 91g; é& dyopas ef Ar. Eq. 181, etc.; cf, dyopatos 11; els dy. éuBddAew to go into the forum, i.e. be a citizen, Lycurg. 148. 23; év TH dy. épyd{eca: to trade in the market, Dem. 1308. 9; «is THv dy. wAdrrew 71 to make it for the market, Id. 47+ 14. III. the business of the dryopa: 1. public speaking, gift of speak- ing, jets in pl., éox’ dyopdew withheld him from speaking, I. 2. 2753 of & dyopas dydpevov Ib. 788, cf. Od. 4.818; gdiy dvt’ dyopas Béuevos Solont. 2. things sold in the d-yopa, the market, provisions, Lat. annona; d-yopay mapackevacey, Lat. commeatum offerre, to hold a market for any one, Thue. 7. 40, Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 11 ; dy. mapéxew Thuc. 6. 50, Xen., etc. ; dyew Xen. An. 5. 7, 33; etc.; opp. to dyopa xpijc@a, to have supplies, Xen. An. 7. 6, 245 ris dy. eipyecBar to be barred from it, Thuc. 1. 67, Plut. Pericl. 293 dyopas mepinérrew to stop the market Dion, H. 10. 43; dy. EdevOEpa, i.e. abapd tav dviwv ndvTwy, Arist. Pol. Vedas 3, ef, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 35 opp. to dy. dvarynata Arist. Pol. 7. 12,73 of ék THs ary. market people, Xen. An. 1. 2, 18, cf. Ar. Eq. 181. _b. market, sale, dry. Tav BiBXiwy, Tov mwapPévev Luc. Indoct, 19, Ael. V. H. 4. 1; cf. Nicoch. Kévr. 2, et ibi Meineke. IV. as a mark of time d-yopa mH Bovea the forenoon, when the market-place was full, and the ordinary business was going on, dyopis mAnOvotons Hat. 4. 181 ; d-yopas mAy= Ootons Xen. Mem, I. I, 10; trept or dup dyopdy mAAPovcay Id. An. 2.1, 7., I. 8, Tj ev ayopa mAnbovon Plat. Gorg. 469 D; also called dyophs mAnOuipn, Hat. 2. 173+ 7- 223; poét., év dyopG mAHGovTos SxAou Pind. P. 4. 151; mply d-yopdy mendndévar Pherecr, Ai’rép. 9 ;—opp. to dryopijs SidAvors the time just after mid-day, when they went home from market, Hdt. 3. 104, cf. Xen. Oec, 12, 1. dyopdteo [ay], fut. dow Ar. Lys. 633, ayop Lxx (Neh, to. 31): aor, iyyopaca Xen, Hell. 7. 2, 18, Dem., etc. ; Pf. ayépaka Arist. Oec. 2 34 5, Polyb.:—Med., aor. tyopacduny Dem. 1223. 20: pf. tryépagyae (v. infr.) :—Pass., aor. 7yopdc0ny Id. 1360. 19: pf. tyyopacpau Isae, 71 22, Menand. Incert. 214. To be in the d-yopd, frequent it: ar ‘yovaties dry. kat karndevovar, in Egypt, Hat. 2. 35. 4. bps | OP Ate Phys. 2. 4, 2: to occupy the market-place, of troops. Thue 6 3 ; 2. to buy in the market, buy, purchase, Tweiv, dyopétew am” ‘Ach 62 : i J . 625, cf. Pl. 984; émrfdera dy. Xen. An. 1. 5, 10; and this became the com. mon sense:—Med. to buy for oneself, Xen, An, 1. 3,14, Dem, 1215. 2; pf. pass. in med. sense, dvr? rod iyopdoOat abrots roy olvoy Dem. 129. i 3. as a mark of idle fellows, to haunt the d-yopa, loun ree Corinna and Pind. ap. Schol. Ar, Ach. 720; dyophadryeveros (a othe oe ayopages dyévetos) obdeis nor shall any one lounge in the é-yopa. till he has 2. II. of ayopaios — aypavaos. gota beard, Dind. Ar. Eq. 1373; d-yopa(e els modu, stroll in, Thuc. 6. 51; Ch. 8q. 15, 2. [4y- properly ; but @y- in Com. Anon. 4. p. 620.] dyopaios [ay} ov, fem. also d-yopaia (as epith. of Artemis and Athena, Paus. 5. 15, 4., 3. 11, 9, etc.). In, of, or belonging to the d-yopa, Zebs "Ay. as guardian of popular assemblies, Hdt. 5. 46, Aesch. Eum. 973 (lyr.), Eur. Heracl. 70; “Eppijs “Ay. as patron of traffick, Ar. Eq. 297, cf. C. I. 2078, 2156, Paus. 1, 15, ©; and generally, @eot dy. Aesch. Ag. 90; cf. Th. 272. 2. of things, ra dy. details of market- business, Plat. Rep. 425 C: dpros dy., a particular kind of good bread, Ath. 109 D. Il. frequenting the market, 5 dy. dxXos, dijpos Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 23, Arist. Pol. 4. 3, 2., 6. 4, 14, etc.; 70 dy. TAROos . . 70 mept rds Tpdces Kal tds dvds Kal ras éumoplas Kat Tas KamnAcias StarpiBor Ib, 4. 4, 10 :—dyopaio (with or without dv@paor), of, those who frequented the dyopd, loungers in the market, Lat. circumforanei, subrostrani, Hdt. 1. 93., 2.41; opp. to €umopo, Xen. Vect. 3, 13 :— hence generally, the common sort, low fellows (cf. d-yopd 11. 2, d-yopd¢w 3), Ar. Ran. 1015, Plat. Prot. 347 C, Theophr. Char. 6, Act. Ap. 17. 5; and, in Comp., the baser sort, Ptolem. ap. Ath. 438 F:—hence Ady., Gyopaiws Aéyeww Dion, H. de Rhet. to. 11. 2. of things, low, mean, vulgar, common, okwppata Ar. Pax 750; Tovs vods dyopaious rrov .. 70d Id. Fr. 397; dy. gudta Arist. Eth. N. 8. 13, 6, cf. Ib. 6, 4. III. generally, proper to the dyopa, skilled in, suited to forensic speaking, Plut. Pericl. 11 :—d-yopaios (sc. #pépa), a court-day, Tas ay. moreia@at Strabo 629: also, dyeuv Tov d-yopaiov Joseph. A. J. 14. 10, 21, cf. dyopd 11. 1, fin., Act. Ap. 19. 38; (in this sense some Gramm. write proparox. dydpatos, as in most Edd. of N. T.) :—Adyv. -ws, in forensic style, Plut. C. Gracch. 4, Anton. 24. GyopGvopéw, to be dyopavdpos, Alex. Paid. 1, Dion. H. 10. 48, C. I. 2483. 20; pf. -nxa Dio C. 52. 32. Gyopavopia, 7, the office of dyopayépos, Arist. Pol. 7. 12, 7, C. 1. 1104, al. Gyopavopicés, 7, dv, of or for the dyopavdpos or his office, dy. Grra Plat. Rep. 425 D; vépipa Arist. Pol. 2. 5, 21; tTemal C. I. 1716. II. for Lat. aedilicius, Dion. H. 6.95, Plut. Pomp. 53. GyopGvéptov, 74, the court of the dyopavéuos, Plat, Legg. 917 E, C. I. 2374 e. 44 (add.), 2483. 25. dyopavopios, ov, of or in the forum, mepimaros C. I. 3545. bpoptintaot, 6, aclerk of the market, who regulated buying and selling there, Ar. Ach. 723, al., Lys. 165. 34, freq. in C.1., v. Ind. iv; ef. Bockh P. E. 1. 67, Dict. of Antiqq. II. to translate the Lat. Aedilis, an officer who had similar duties, Dion, H. 6. go, Plut. 2. 658 D. dyopdopar, almost wholly used in the Ep. forms, pres. dyopdac0e, impf. #yopaacbe, fryopdwyro, aor. I only in 3 sing. dyophaaro (v. infr.) : but 2 sing. impf. 7yop® occurs in Soph.; inf. d-yopac@a: in Theogn. 159: aor. I edayopnOets (v. ednyopéw) Pind. I. 1. 73: in Hdt. 6. 11 the Mss. give the Ep. form #yopdwvro: Dep. To meet in assembly, sit in debate, of 5& Oeot map Znvt KaOqpevar Fyopéwyro Il. 4. 1: also, like dyopedw, to speak in the assembly, harangue, 6 opw éidppovéar dyopnaaro Il. 1. 73., 9. 95, cf. Od. 7.185; masoly éouxdres dyopdacbe, Il. 2. 337:—to speak, utter, evxwdal.., as .. xeveavyxées Hyopdacbe 8. 230:—to speak or talk with, éws od... iyyop® fevais Soph. Tr. 6or. [@y- Il. 2. 337, metri grat.; otherwise ay-.] dyopacSw, Dor. for d-yopa{w, Theocr. 15. 16.: dyopicetw, Desid. of d-yopatw, to wish to buy, Lat. empturio, Schol. Ar. Ran. 1100. dyopicia, %, a buying, purchase, Teleclid, Incert. 27, Diog. L., etc. GySpiors, ews, 7), =foreg., Plat. Soph. 219 D, in pl. a&ybpacpa, 76, that which is bought or sold: mostly in pl. goods, wares, merchandise, Aeschin, 85. 37, Dem. gog. 27, etc., cf. Alex. Mayxp. I. dyopacpés, 6, a purchasing, Phintys ap. Stob. 445. 19, Or. Sib. 2. 329. II. purchase, Lxx (Gen. 42. 19, al.), C. I. 4957. 20; in pl., Epigr. Gr. 714. dyopaorys, 00, 6, the slave who had to buy provisions for the house, the purveyor, Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 2: in later authors éyavarwp, Lat. obsonator, Ath. 171 A:—generally, a buyer, uérpios dy. Menand. bay. 2. dyopactikés, 4, dv, of or for traffick or trade, commercial, Plat. Crat. 408 A: % -Knh (sc. réxvn) traffick, trade, commerce, Id. Soph. 223 C. dyopacrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. to be bought or sold, Gloss. Gyoparpés, 6, =mvAaydpas, Delph. Inscr. in C. I. 1689 b. &yépaxos, 7), some kind of female official in Pelop. cities, C.I. 1446, 1451. ayopeurnptov, 74, a place for speaking, C. 1. 5789. Gyopeurés, 7, dv, utterable, to be spoken of, Just. M. 221 D. Gyopetw (d-yopd), with impf. ydpevoy Ep. dydpevoy Il. 1. 385 :— fut. -evow often in Hom., (mpoo—) Plat. Theaet. 147 E:—aor. myy0- pevoa, Ep, éy-, Hom., (4m—) Plat. Theaet. 200 D, Dem. 1021. 18., 1273. 2; (#ar-) Ar. Pax 107, (mpoo—) Xen. Mem. 3. 2, 1, Dem. 1006. 7; (ovv-) Id. 397. 7: pf. ayépevea (mpo-) Id. 157. 20:—Med., aor. 7y0- pevoayny (v. infr.):—Pass., fut. (of med. form) d-yopevoouat (mpo-) Xen. Hipparch. 2. 7 {where however the sense requires mpoaryopeverat) _ aor. HyopevOny (mpoo—) Aesch. Pr. 834, Anaxil. Neorr. 2, Philem. Incert, 16 :—pf. Hien (wap-) Hat. 7. 13, (mpo-) Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 35.— But in correct Att. writers, this Verb (and still more its compds.) is for the most part confined to the pres. and impf.; the fut., pf. and aor. being borrowed (sc. ép@, eipnxa, efmov, and their compds.), v. sub elroy ; and recent Editors have endeavoured to alter the passages which contravene this rule, cf. Cobet V. LL. p. 36; but see Veitch Gr. Verbs s.V.—Cf, dv-, dvr-, dm-, éf-, nar-, mpo-, mpoo-, ovv—ayopetu. To speak in the assembly, harangue, to speak, trea wrepbevra, dyopds ty. Hom., who constantly uses the word, as do Hes, and Hdt,; ds “Exrwp dydpeve Il. 8. 5423 ay. Twi Il. 1. 571, al.; twit Te Hat, 6. 97; ® 13 te mpbs ria Il. 24. 142; dvedifwv dy. Od. 18. 380; Kxandv 7 dy, rWd to speak ill of one, Ib. 15 ; also, xaxws dy. twa. Arist. Fr. 378: in Att., of the crier’s proclamation in the Ecclesia, ris dyopevey BovAerac; who wishes to address the house? Ar. Ach. 45, Dem, 285. 6, etc. :—also, dy. ds... Il. 1. 109, Hdt. 3. 156; 6 7.. Ar, Pl. 102:—c. inf., pr re d- Bovd? dryépeve counsel me not to flight, Il. 5. 252; dy. ua) otparetecbar Hdt. 7. 10. 2. to tell of, mention, rt Od, 2. 318., 16. 263, al.; also, iép twos dy. of .., Plat. Legg. 776 E. 3. to proclaim, declare, Il. I. 385, Plat. Legg. 917 D; and so in aor, med. d-yopevcacbat ds .. to have it proclaimed that.., Hdt. 9. 26:—so in Att. phrase, d véuos dyopever the law declares, says, Antipho 123. 16, Lys. 115. 6, Arist. Rhet. 1. I, 53 dy. pi) moety Ar, Ran. 628; ovtvoya..48 dy. orhan C. I. 1412 :—simply to say, speak, Soph. O. C. 838, Eur.; metaph., 5épya Onpds dry. xeipav Epyov tells a tale of .. , Theocr. 25. 175. 4. Pass., of a speech, to be spoken, ént rois .. Oawropévors Thuc. 2. 35. &yopn, Ep. and Ion, for d-yopd. dyop ev, Adv. from the assembly or market, Il. 2. 264, al. dyophv5e, Adv. to the assembly or market, Il. 1. 54. dyopnrhs, 0, 6, (d-yopdopat) a speaker, Ep. word, chiefly used of Nes- tor, Avybs TvAlew ayopyras Il, 1. 248, al., cf. Ar. Nub. 1057. II. in C. I. 4474, dyopyras seems to be=dyopavépos. dyopnrus, vos, %, the gift of speaking, eloquence, Od. 8. 168: Ep. word. dyopit, Adv. in the assembly, Hes. Th. 89. dyopos, 5,=dyopd, only found in lyrical passages of Eur., and always in pl. (I. T. 1096, El. 723, Andr. 1037), except in H. F. 412, dyopov dXricas pirwr. dyés [a], 00, 5, (@yw) a leader, chief, often in Il, c. gen., e.g. 4. 265 ; also in Pind, N. 1.77, Aesch. Supp. 248, 904, Eur. Rhes. 29 (lyr.), Anth. P. 9. 219. dyos (ie [&], eos, 74, any matter of religious awe: hence, like Lat. piaculum, 1. that which requires expiation, a curse, pollution, guilt, tv TO dyet véxecOar Hat. 6. 56,1; dyos exOvoacbat 6. 91; dyos.. xexThoerat OeGv Aesch, Th. 1017; dyos aiuaroy Id. Eum, 168; dyos guddocecOa Id. Supp. 375; pevyew Soph. Ant, 256; bev 1d dyos ovvéBn trois SvBapiras Arist. Pol. 5. 3, 11; @yos dpoowwoacba Plut. Cam. 18, cf. Anth. P. 7. 268 :—also in concrete sense, the person or thing accursed, an abomination, Soph. O. T. 1426; d&yos éAavvew = dyndareiv, Thue. 1. 126. 2. an expiation, Soph. Ant. 775, Fr. 613; cf. Herm, Aesch, Cho. 149. II. in good sense,=aéBas, awe, péya yap Tt Oedv dyos icxavee abdnv h. Hom. Cer. 479; in Hesych. also we find @yea" repévea, and dyéecot' Teéveot; and in A, B. 212. 33, dyn" Ta pvorhpia.—Cf, Ruhnk. Tim. s. v. (Curt. seeks to distinguish the two senses as belonging to diff. Roots: (1) 4/‘AI’, dyos, expiation, sacrifice, whence Gytos, dyvds, GCouat, cf. Skt. yag, yagami (sacrifico, colo), yagus, yagnam (sacrificium) ; and (2) 4/AT’, dyos in bad sense, curse, pollution, whence dyns or ayns, év-aryns, cf. Skt. dgas (offensa).) dyoorés, 6, the flat of the hand, in Hom. only in Il, in the phrase 6 3° év Kovinot mecdy de yalav dyooT®@ I. 425, etc.; dy. xetpds Ap. Rh. 3. 120. II. the arm, =dyxddAn, Theocr. 17. 129, Anth, P. 7. 464: metaph., “Axadnyelas ..év d-yoor@ Simon, (?) ib. 6.144. (Akin to dykos, dyKdAn, etc.) Gyoupos, 6, a youth, Byz. aypa, Ion. dypy, %, (yw) a catching, hunting, the chase, (never in Il), dypav épérey to follow the chase, Od. 12. 330; Xalpovor 5é 7’ dvépes dypn 22. 306; dypais mpookeicbar Soph. Aj. 4073 é dypas iévac Eur. Supp. 885, cf. Plat. Legg. 823 E; €xwv dimvous dypas, of fishermen, Soph. Aj. 880, 2. a way of catching, Hes. Th, 442, Pind. N. 3. 143, Hdt. 2. 70, I. II. that which is taken in hunting, the booty, prey, Hes. Th. 442; @ypay ddeoa Aesch. Eum, 148 (lyr.) ; evepws a, Soph. Aj. 64, cf. 297; MeAéaype, wedéay yap mor’ dypedets dypav Eur. Fr. 521: game, Hdt. 1. 73, 5, etc.; of fish, a draught, take, Ev. Luc. 5. 9:—metaph., Sopds dypa Aesch. Th. 322 (lyr.). III. “Aypa, %, a name of Artemis, like “Ayporépa, ’Aypaia, Plat. Phaedr. 229 C, cf. Ruhnk. Tim. 186. aypaSe, Adv., poét. form of dypév6e, Call. Fr. 26. dypatos, a, ov, (dypa) of the chase, as epith. of Apollo, Paus. 1. 41, 6; and of Artemis, Eust. 361. 36; Saipoves Opp. H. 3. 27: cf. Ayporépa, crap periee }, want of learning, Ael. V. H. 8. 6. d-ypappiiros, ov, without learning (ypappara), unlettered, Lat. illite- ratus, Damox, Svvtp. 12, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 20, Anth. P. 11. 154, cf. Sext. Emp. M. 1. 99: unable to read or write, Plat. Tim. 23 A:—Ady. -rws, Arr. Epict. 2. 9, Io. II.=dyparros, dyp. €6n Plat. Polit. 295 A. ‘ IIT. of animals, unable to utter articulate sounds, Arist. H. A. 1. I, 29: of sounds, inarticulate, Id. Interpr. 2, 2, Diog. L. 3. 107. G-ypappos, ov, not on the line, dypappa apetra, of a throw of the dice, counting nothing, Hesych. dypavits, = d-ypdvde, Dor. Adv. in Theognost. Can. 163. 33. 3 d-ypatros, ov, unwritten, dyp. Oe@v vdurpa Soph. Ant. 454: cf. dypa- pos. II. ayp. dixy an action cancelled in consequence of a demurrer, Poll, 8. 57. E Frege te, to be an Gypavaos, and so: to live in the open fields, live out of doors, Arist. Mirab. 11, Plut. Num. 4, Strabo 197; of shep- herds, Ev. Luc. 2. 8. dypavais, és, in the fields, out of doors, koirn Nic. Th. 78. dypavXla, %, the state of an &ypavdos :—in Dion. H, 6. 44, Diod., etc., military service in the field. dypavAlfopat, Dep. =dypavdéw, Theoph. Sim. 179. 4. dypavdos, ov, (dypés, avAH) dwelling in the field, living out of doors, of shepherds, Il. 18. 162, Hes. Th. 26, Ap. Rh. 4. 317; so epith. of Pan, Anth. P. 6. 179; but, &yp. dp a boor, Ib. 11. 60, 2.a ’ 14 regular epith. of oxen, Bods dypavAovo Il. 10. 155., 17. 251, Od. 12. 253; Op Soph. Ant. 349 (lyr.), Eur. Bacch. 1187, ete. 8. of things, rural, rustic, mida Id. El. 342. dypidiou ypap7, 7, an action against state-debtors, who had got their debts cancelled without paying, Dem. 1338. 19, Poll. 8. 54. d-ypiios, ov, unwritten, uvqun Thuc. 2. 43; ayp. diaOqxae verbal wills, Plut. Cor. 9, cf. @yp. «Anpovdpos Luc, Tox. 23; dypaha Aéyew to speak without book, Id. Demosth. 8 :—Adv. —pos, Clem. Al. 771. II. Gypapor vopor, unwritten laws, which are 1. the laws of nature, moral law (cf. dypamros), Tots dyp. véyo.s Kal Tots dvOpamivos eo Dem. 317. 23; 70 dixacdv éore Surrdv, 7d pev dyp., 7d Be ward vopov Arist. Eth. N. 8. 13, 5. 2. laws of custom, common law, Thuc. 2. 37; dyp. vopipa Plat. Lege. 793 A, cf. omnino Arist. Rhet. 1. to, 3 and 13, 2; dyp. ddienua a crime not recognised by law as such, Hesych. 3. religious traditions, as of the Eumolpidae, Lys. 104. 8. Iii. not registered or recorded, ayp. TAs cities whose names do not stand in a treaty, Thuc. 1. 40. 2. dyp. uéradAa mines which had not been registered, but were wrought clandestinely, to evade the tax of 4, Suid. s. v.; cf. droypapw 111, dvamdypados. IV. without in- scription, C. I. 155. 41.—Prose word, dypet, v. sub dypéw 11, ; Gypetos, a, ov, (dypés) of the field or country, mAdravos Anth. P. 6. 35. 2. clownish, boorish, like dypoucos, Ar. Nub. 655, Thesm. 160. dypevootvy, 4, clownishness: or a rude, vagrant life, Anth. P. 6, 51; cf, Jacobs Del. Epigr. 1. 6. dypeidvay, v. sub dypidn. Gypépios, ov, taken in hunting: 7d dyp.=dypa tm, Anth. P. 6. 224. Gypepdv, dvos, 6, a catcher, hunter, Artem. 2. 17, E. M, 13:—for Aesch, Fr. 138, v. Dind. Lex. Aesch. dypecia, Ion. —ty, },=dypa 1, Anth. P. 6. 13, Call. Fr. 22. 2. dyp , ov, 6, (dryeipw) a Lacedaemonian magistrate, acc. to Hesych. =yenav, whence it is restored by Toup for aypérac in Aesch. Pers. 1002 (lyr.), and by Bergk in Alcm. 16. 1, 8: a Verb dyperet, to be an dypéras, occurs in a Pelop. Inscr. in C. I. 1395; ef. also inm-ayperys. dypevpa, 76, (dypetw) that which is taken in hunting, booty, prey, Eur. Bacch, 1241 :—metaph., Xen. Mem. 3. 11, 7; @yp. dv0ewv Eur. Fr. 754; cf. dypa 0. II. a means of catching, dyp. Onpds Aesch. Cho. 998; évras.. popoipwv dyp., of the net thrown over Agamemnon, Id. Ag. 1048, cf. Eum. 460. dypevs, éws, 5, (d-ypeva) a hunter, as epith. of Aristaeus, Pind. P. 9. 115; of Apollo, Aesch. Fr. 205 (cf. dypeuris); of Bacchus, Eur. Bacch. 1192 (lyr.); of Pan, Poseidon, etc., Dorvill. Charit. 77. II. of an arrow, Anth. P. 6. 75. III. a kind of fish, Ael. N. A. 8. 24. dypevouros, 7, ov, easy to catch, Schol. Soph. Ph. 863. dypevors, ews, 1, a catching, Hesych., Achm, Onir. 178. dypeurip, jpos, 5,=sq., Theocr. 21. 6, Call. Dian. 218, Anth. P. 7-578. II. as Adj., dyp. xdves Opp. C. 3. 4565 dypevrijpt Airy, i.e. with fishing net, Manetho 5. 279. dypeurns, od, 5, a hunter, like dypeds, epith. of Apollo as slayer of Python, Soph, O.C. 1091 (lyr.). IL. as Adj., yp. «dves, hounds, ongng 23.25 dyp. wédhapor a hunter's trap of reeds, Anth. P. 7. 171, cf. 6. I Bepliints. h, bv, of or skilled in hunting, d-ypevrucdy (¢ort) useful for ensnaring an enemy, Xen. Hipparch. 4.12. Adv. —Kas, Poll. 5. 9. dypeutis, iSos, %, fem. of ay; s, prob. 1. in Schol, Ar. Vesp. 367- aypeuros, dv, caught, Opp. H. 3. 541- arpa, f, edow Call Dian, 84: aor. #ypevoa Eur. Bacch. 1204 :— Med., v. infr.:—Pass., aor. 7/7 Anth.: (@ypa). To take by hunting or fishing, catch, take, ix00s Hat. 2. 95, cf. Xen. Cyn. 12, 6; pay wypevedres Eur. Bacch. 434; of war, gure. oe, . . dypevery véous Soph. Fr. 498:—also in Med., 6vpar’ ye caught or chose your victim, Eur. I. T. 1163 ; also, 7é pot £ios ex xepds irypetow; why didst thou snatch .. i. ac 8 hon ad . a * ae in on chase, Xen. An. 5. 3, 8; dypevdeis we iypevoe .P.9.94- 2. metaph. to hunt after, tires for, alpa Eur. Bacch. 138; dperas dvvapiy Arist. in Bgk. Lyr. p. 664; dmvov Anth, P. 7.196, cf. 12. 1255 but, Pi lec 7d. A6yw to catch by his words, Ev. Marc.12.13, ypéw, post. form of foreg., used only in pres., but seldom in lit. sense, dype 3 oivov Epvdpdv search for, Archil. 5. 3: tpipos macav dypei seizes, Sapph. 2.14, cf. Theogn, 294; dypet captures, Aesch. Ag. 126 (lyr.); of fishing, dypets Anth. P. 6. 304- , iL. in Hom. only in imperat. be, come! come on! dype pay of éropcoy *AOnvainv tL 5. 765; so, dypetre Od. 20.149. Cf. Buttm, Lexil. s. v. ~ &ypn, 7, lon. for dypa. dypnbev, Adv. from the chase, Ap. Rh. 2. 938. dypyvév, 76, a net, Hesych.:—also a net-like woollen robe worn by Bacchanals and soothsayers, Id., Poll. 4. 116. ‘ ‘ Gyptaive, fut. av@ Plat. Rep. 501 E: aor. jyypiava Dio C. 44. 47, Ael. :—Pass., Dion. H. 12. 3, Plut.: fut. dypavOjcovar Lxx (Dan. 11. 11): aor. 777 Diod. 24. 1.—In Att. the Pass. was supplied by (cf. Lob. Phryn. p. 757), which was rare in Act. ; but the compd. Pass. éfarypralvopa: occurs in Plat., and the Act. éfaypidw in Hdt., Eur., Plat. 1, intr, to be or become dyptos, to be angered, provoked, angry, Plat. Rep. 493 B, etc.; vii with one, Id. Symp, 173 D; of animals, to be wild, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 11; of rivers and the like, to chafe, mpos Thy TAnupipay .. dypratvav 6 morapds Plut. Caes. 38 :-—of sores, to be angry or inflamed, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 11, etc. lak Causal, to make angry, provoke, anger, Dio C. 44. 473; of love, to drypapiov — ayprotparis. Gyptds, ddos, },=d-ypia, pecul. fem. of dypios, wild, rough, Ap. Rh, I, 28, Arat., etc.; dumeAov dypidda Anth, P. 9. 561. dypide, to be savage, Opp. C. 2. 49, in Ep. form dypidavra, GypiStov, 76, Dim. of dypds, Lat. agellus, Arr. Epict. 1.1, 10., 2.2, 17. dypt-eAata, 7, a wild olive, olive-wilding, Lat. oleaster, Diosc. 1, 125. Gypt-eAatos, ov, of a wild olive, Anth. P. 9. 237- II. as Subst., =dypieAata, Theocr. 7.18, Theophr. H. P. 2. 3, 5, Ep. Rom. 11. 17. —On late forms like this, dypro-BaAavos, etc., v. Lob. Phryn. 382. dypinvés, 7, dv, =dypios, wild, Or. Sib. 7. 79. rn Gypuyzatos, a, ov, wild, opp. to juepos: Td dypipata the flesh of wild animals, game, Ptolem. ap. Ath. 549 F. Gypt-pediooa, 4), a wild bee, metaph. of Hegesias, Hesych. Gypvo-amibiov, 76, wild pear, Geop. 8. 37. aypvo-Badavos, 7), wild Badavos, cited from Lxx. Gypto-BapBapos, ov, savagely barbarous, Manass. Chron. 4350. ayp6-Bovdos, ov, wild of purpose, Polem. Physiogn. dypto-Sairys, ov,.6, eating wild fruits, Orac, ap. Paus. 8. 42, 6. Gypioes, eooa, ev, =aypios, Nic. Al. 30. 617. Gypi6-Odpos, ov, wild of temper, Orph. H. 11. 4. Gypio-KavvGBis, 7), wild hemp, Diosc. Gypio-Kapdapov, 74, wild xap5apoy, Galen. Gypto-Kapdios, ov, of savage heart, Manass. Chron. 3763. Gypt6-Kevtpos, ov, with cruel thorn, Manass. Chron, 4634. Gypto-koKkkipnAa, wy, wild koxkdpnra, Diosc. 1. 174. Gypvo-Kpoppvov, 7d, wild onion, Schol. Ar. Pl. 283. Gypto-Kuptvov, 76, wild cummin, Schol. Nic. Th. 709. Gypro-haxiiva, wy, ra, wild Aaxava, Schol. Theocr. 4. 52, Eccl. dypio-heixty, 6, =dypros Ae jv (3), Hesych. Gypio-pirayn, %, wild mallow, Schol. Nic. Th. 89. dypi6-pnha, wy, 74, wild apples, Diosc. 1. 164. dyp.6-popdos, ov, wild, savage of form, Orph. Arg. 977. dypto-piptrny [7], %, wild pupixn, Lxx (Jer. 17. 6). Gypis-pwpos, ov, desperately foolish, Eccl. dypvo-merewdAtov, and —mérewov, 74, the hoopoe, Ducang. Gl. dypio-miyavov, 74, wild rue, Hesych. Gypro-mnyés, 6, (m7 yvup) = dpatoupyis, dypiwy EvAwv Epyarns, Schol. Ar. Eq. 462. dypto-mvoos, ov, contr. —mvous, ovr, fiercely blowing, Manass. Chron. 4183, 3776. Gypio-trovéw, to make wild, Scho). Aesch. Pers. 613. dypvo-mrovds, dv, drawing wild characters, writing wild poetry, as epith.. of Aeschylus in Ar. Ran, 837. dypv-oplyiivos, 6, wild dpiyavos, Diosc. 3. 34. dypt-dpwides, wy, al, wild fowl, Byz. dypvos, a, ov, Od. 9. 119; also os, oy, Il. 19. 88, Plat. Lege. 824 A: Comp. —wrepos Thuc. 6, 60; Sup. -d7raros Plat. Rep. 564 A: (dypds): living in the fields, wild, savage, Lat. agrestis: hence I. of animals, opp. to T:@agds or fjpepos, wild, savage, BédAcy &ypia TavTa wild animals of all kinds, Il. 5. 52; aig, cds 3. 24., 9. 539; immot, Svat, etc., Hdt, 7. 86, etc.; of men, living in a wild state, Id. 4.191; of a countryman, as opp. to a citizen, Mosch. 5. 15. 2. of trees, opp. to Hiuepos, wild, Pind. Fr. 21, Hat, 4. 21, etc.; nrpos dypias aro morév made from the wild vine, Aesch. Pers. 614, cf. Arist. Probl. 20. 12, 4; dyp. Ehavov Soph. Tr. 1197; vay Id, O. T. 476, etc. 3. of coun- tries, wild, uncultivated, Lat. horridus, Plat, Phaedo 11 3 B, Legg. 905 B :—but, II. mostly of men, beasts, etc., as having qualities incident to a wild state: 1. in moral sense, savage, fierce, Lat. Jerus, ferox, Il. 8. 96, Od. 1. 199, etc., cf. Ar. Nub. 349, 507, Aeschin, 8. 10; Tvpavvos, deordrys Plat. Gorg. 510 B, Rep. 329 C; a@ypte wat kal arvyvé Theoctr. 23. 19, cf. 2.54; ayp. kvBeurhs a passionate gambler, Menand, Incert. 335. 2. of passion, temper, disposition, wild, savage, Jierce, coarse, boorish, Gupds, xdros, Il. 9. 629., 4.23 ; Aéwy F ws, dypra older 24.41; dyp. mrddepos, u@Aos 17. 737, 398; dypios dry 19. 88; dyp. 680i savage ways or counsels, Soph, Ant. 1274; dpyq O. T. 344; dypi@rara iea Hdt. 4.106; épwres Plat. Phaedo 81 A; pirta Id. Legg. 837 B, cf. Rep. 572 B, etc.:—7d déypiov. savageness, Id. Crat. 394 E; és 7d dypubrepoy to harsher measures, Thuc. 6. 60. 3. of things, circumstances, etc., cruel, harsh, Seopa Aesch. Pr. 176; répas Eur. Hipp. 1214; vd¢ dypwrépy wild, stormy, Hdt. 8. 13; dovAela, 5ovAwars Plat. Rep. 564 A, al; gdoraos dyp. a violent strain, Id. Phil. 46D; dyp. Bapos, of strong, hot wine, Ar. Fr. 130. b. yp, vécos, prob., like re@npiwpévos, in the Medic. sense, malignant, cancerous, Soph. Ph. 173, 265; dyp. ZAxos Bion 1. 16; v. dypiaiver, dypido, and cf. Cels. 5. 28, 16. ITI. Ady. —tws, savagely, Aesch. Eum: 972, Ar. Vesp. 705: also dypa as neut. pl., Hes. Sc. 236, Mosch. I.11. [The first syll. is always used long by Hom.; Aesch, and Soph. have it long in iambics, but short in lyr.; Eur. long or short indif; ferently:—Hom. has T, when the ult. is long, Il. 22. 313.] dypwo-céAivov, 74, wild parsley, Diosc, 3. 78. $ dypto-oriibis, lSos, 4, wild grapes, Orneosoph., etc.; so in Gramm. dypio-orapvAn, -orapiAtvoy, -orapuXls. : Gypio-ovne§, 1), the wild fig, Horapoll. ; -evmtov, 74, the fruit, A.B, 1097. dypiérns, 77s, %, savageness, wildness, of animals, opp. to queporns, Xen, Mem. 2. 2, 7, Isocr. 267 B; and plants, Theophr. H. P. 3. 2 43 of untilled ground, dyp. ys Geop. 7- 1:—of diet, Hipp. Vet. Med. 13, Aér, 294. II. of men, in moral sense, savageness, Jierceness, cruelty, Plat. Symp. 197 D, al., Arist. H. A. 8. I, 2; in pl., Dem. 808. 15 : Gypro-bdyor, of, men who eat raw Sood, Salmas, Solin, 214 F. ; &yptb-daypos, 5, the wild paypos, Opp. H. 1. 140. irritate, Ach, Tat. 2. 7 :—Pass. to be angered, Plut. Anton. 58. , &ypro-~pay » és, appearing wild, Cormut. 27. aypiopOad nos — aynarns. dypt-dp0adpos, ov, with wild eyes, Vit. Nili Jun, Gyprddpav, ovos, 5, %, (phy) savage of mind, Eccl. buAXov, 7d, a name for the tevxéSavos, Diosc. 3. 92. AY sores, ov, with wild rough voice or tongue, like BapBapdpavos, - 294. dypio-xnvaptov, 76, the wild goose, Byz. dyptd-xoupos, 6, a wild swine, Ar. Pl. 304. dyprowpia, 7, (papa) inveterate itch, Hesych. Gypidw, aor. Hypiwoa Eur. Or. 616, the act. tenses being mostly sup- plied by deypraivas : (aypios). To make wild or savage, provoke, }) Ti Texovon @ iyypiwce against thy mother, Eur. l. c. II. mostly in Pass. (cf. dypiaivw), dypiodpar Hipp. Aér. 282: impf. qyyprovpny Enr. El. 1031: aor, iypivOnv Plut., (dr-) Plat. Polit. 274 B: pf. #yplo~ vat Soph., Eur., Xen. :—to grow wild, and in pf. to be wild, properly of plants, countries, etc., vyfaos UAy iyypiwrar Theophr. C. P. 5. 3, 6; of men, fo be wild or savage in appearance, ds iyypiwoar did paxpas Gdovgias Eur. Or. 226, cf. 387. 2. in moral sense, of men, to be savage, fierce, cruel, yypiwoa Soph. Ph. 1321, cf. Eur. El. 1. c., etc.:— yAdooa .. iyypiara, of Aeschylus, Ar. Ran. 898; metaph., ?yprwpevov méhayos an angry sea, Plut. Pyrth. 15. 3. &Akea dyprodra: (cf. dypios 11. 4) Hipp. 1. c. Gypummos, 6, Lacon. name for the wild olive, Suid., etc.; proverb., dxaprérepos dypinmov Zenob, Cent. 1. 60:—in Hesych. dyptdos. dypitys, ov, 6, a countryman, Steph. Byz. s. v. dypés. dyplpy [7], 9, a harrow, rake, Arcad. 115, E. M. 15. 44, Hesych. The Doric dypipay is restored by Dind. for dypetpvay in Anth. P. 6. 297. dypiadys, es, (cfd0s) of wild nature, Strabo 155. *Ayptdvios, 6, epith, of Bacchus, Plut. Anton, 24 :— Aypiona, Td, a festival in his honour, Id. 2. 291 A, 299 F, etc. dypt-wnés, dv, wild-looking, dupa Eur. H. F. go, cf. Bacch. 541; 70 dypiwrdy rod. mpoodmov Plut. Mar. 14. aypo-Barys, ov, 5, haunting the country, v.1. in Eur. for dypoBérns. dypo-Béas, 6, rudely shouting, Cratin. Incert. 36. &ypo-Bérms, ov, Dor. -as, a, 5, feeding in the field, dwelling in the country, like dypévopos, Soph. Ph. 214 (lyr.), Eur. Cycl. 54 (lyr.). Gypo-yelrwv, ovos, 5, a country neighbour, Plut. Cato Ma. 25; dyp. Tiés having a field adjoining his, Joseph. A. J. 8. 3, 8. aypo-yevys, és, country-born, Gloss. dypo-Slattos, ov, living in the country, Synes. 27 B. aypodérys, ov, 6, (dypa) a giver of booty, game, etc., Anth, P. 6. 27. Gypd0ev, Adv. from the country, Od. 13. 268., 15. 428, Eur., etc. Gypd0t, Adv. in the country, Call. Cer. 136, Poll. 9. 12. Gypoikevopat, Dep. to be dypoixos, E. M. dypournpés, a, dv, boorish, dyp. puots ap. Steph. Byz. s. v. dypés. dyporkia, %, rusticity, boorishness, coarseness, Plat. Gorg. 461 C, Rep. 560 D, al.; cf. Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 13. II. the country, Lat. rus, Plut. 2. 519 A; pl. Ib, 311 B:—in pl. country-houses, Diod. 20. 8. dypoxifopar, Dep. fo be rude and boorish, Plat. Theaet. 146 A, Plut. Sull. 6: aor. jypoutodpny Aristid. 1. 491: pf., Fypouopévos Synes. dypoutkés, 7, dv, boorish, Ath. 477 A. Adv. -«@s, Philostr. 198, etc. dypoixo-rruppavetos, 5, a rude, coarse Pyrrhonist, Galen. dyp-o1ros, ov, of or in the country, dyp. Bios Ar. Nub. 43, etc. 2. esp. of men, dwelling in the country, a countryman, rustic, Ib. 47 :— mostly with the collat, sense of clownish, boorish, rude, rough, coarse, Tb. 628, 646, etc. ; méAos dypoixdrepoy Id. Ach. 674; ayp. copia, Lat. erassa Minerva, Plat. Phaedr. 229 E, cf. Isocr. 98 D, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 9, 3; of fortune, Apollod. Car. Tpayp. 5, 14 :—the character of the d-ypot- os is described by Theophr. Char. 4; Dinarchus is called 6 @yp. Anpo- a0évns by Dion. H, de Din. 8. II. Adv. —«ws, Ar. Vesp. 1320; Comp. -orépws, Plat. Rep. 361 E, Xen. Mem, 3. 13, 1; but -drepoy, Plat. Phaedr. 260 D. 2. of fruits, grown in the country, common, opp. to yevvaios, Plat. Legg. 844 D, 845 B. 3. of land, rough, uncul- tivated, like dyptos épos dyp. Thuc. 3. 106.—(Not found in good Ep. or in Trag.) GypoiKkd-codos, ov, coarsely wise, with rude mother-wit, Lat. abnormis sapiens, Philo 1. 448. aypoucodns, es, of clownish kind, rude, Schol. Il, 23. 474, Mus. Vett. p. 67. Gypomtys, ov, 6, =d-ypérns 1, Hom., who always uses nom. pl., dvépes dypodra: Il. 11.549; Bovxddro dyp. Od. 11. 293 ; Aaol dyp. Il. 11.676; without a Subst., = whe dyp. Od, 21. 85; so, mocpévas dypowwras Hes, Sc, 39; sing. in Ar, Thesm. 58: fem. dypovanis, 7, Sapph. 70. II. as Adj. rustic, Anth. P. 6, 22., 7.411: wild, Numen, ap. Ath. 371 C. &ypo-Kymov, 74, a field kept like a garden, Strabo 545. dypo-Kopos, 6, a land-steward, Joseph. A. J. 5. 9, 2- . Gyp-ohéreipa, 7), a waster of land, Hesych. ; "Aprepus yp. ap. Suid. Gypo-pevijs, és, dwelling in the country, Hesych. Gypépevos, syncop. part. aor. pass. of d-yefpw. 2 Gypévie, Adv. (d-ypds) to the country, Od. 15. 370+ cf. dypade. : &ypévopos or —vdpos, ov, (véuopat) haunting the country, rural, wild, Nuppar Od. 6. 106; Ofjpes Aesch, Ag. 142 (lyr.); of a song, dyp. podea, Virgil’s agrestis musa, Anth. P. 7. 196 (Cod. Pal. d-ypovdpyar). 2. of places, mAdes aiAai Soph, O.T. 1103, Ant. 785 (both lyr.); tAy Opp. H. 1. 27. II. as Subst., dypovopos, 6, (véuw) a magistrate at Athens, overseer of the public lands, freq. in Plat. Legg., e. g. 760 B ; ef, Arist, Pol. 6. 8, 6; v. sub bAwpds. Gypés, od, 5, a field, mostly in pl. fields, lands, Il. 23. 832, Od. 4. 757, Pind. P. 4. 265, Plat., etc.: in sing. a farm, an estate, Od, 24. 205. 2. the country, opp. to the town, Od. 17. 182, al.; dypov tay médw moreis Epich. 162, cf. Eur. Supp. 884; dyp@ in the country, Od, 11, 188 ; én’ dypod in the country, 1. 190., 22. 47; a 15 dypod vdaqu médnos 1.185; in pl, xara wrddw 72 Kar’ dypots 17. 18; éy olxows } ’y deypots Soph. O. T. 112; én’ dypav Ib. 1049; dypotar Id. El. 313; rov & dypv Ib. 1051; so, ra ef dypav Thuc. 2. 13, cf. 14; “ar dypovs Cratin. Incert. 178, Plat. Legg. 881 C; olxeiv év dyp® Ar. Fr. 344. 2; 7a év dyp@ ywyvdpeva, fruits, Xen. Mem. 2. 9, 4, cf. An. 5. 3, 9 :—proverb., obdey &f dypod Aéyes, aypod mAégws, i. e. boorish (cf. dyporcos), Suid., Hesych. (With 4/AI'P, whence also dypios, etc., cf. Skt. agras (aequor), Lat. ager, Goth. akrs, O. Norse akr, A. S. @cer, Engl. acre.) [& by nature, but often used long, except in Com., who always have it short, except Ar. Av. 579, Philem. Incert, 21; Gypdev in Alcae. Kwymd, 1 is a parody on Eur.] dypérepos, a, ov, poet. for dypios, in Hom. always of wild animals, Hulovor, aves, EXaot, alyes ; so Hes. and Pind.; also, d-ypérepor or ~pa, alone, Theocr. 8. 58. 2. of countrymen, Anth. P. 9, 244, Plan. 235. 3. of plants, wild, Anth. P. 9, 384, cf. Coluth. 108. II. (aypa) fond of the chase, huntress, of the nymph Cyrené (cf. d-ypérns), Pind. P. 9. 10; metaph., wépimva dyp. Id. O. 2. 100. 2. as prop. n. *Ayporépa, Artemis the huntress, like “Aypaia (cf. dypeds, dypeurhs), Il. 21. 471 (vers. dub.), Xen. Cyn. 6, 13; worshipped at Sparta, Id. Hell, 4.2, 20; in other places, C. I. 2117, 5173, Paus. 1. 19, 6, al.; cf. Interpp. ad Ar. Eq. 660, and y. sub xipaipa. dyporip [4], jpos, 6, =dypérys, Eur. El. 463 (lyr.) :—fem. dypérepa, as Adj., rustic, Ib. 168 (lyr.). dyporns, ov, 6, (dypés) poét. word, a country-man, rustic, dyp. évip Eur. Or. 1270; mdpowos dyp., of something out of place, Anth. P. append. 311. II. (dypa) =dypeurhs, a hunter, olwvot.., olai Te Téxva dypérat eeidovro Od. 16. 218 ; dypéra Mav, to whom dierva dn’ dypeoins are offered, Anth. P. 6, 13 :—in fem. form, véupn d&ypétis, the same as d-ypopéva in Pind., Ap. Rh. 2. 509; dyp. kovpa, i.e. Artemis, Anth, P. 6. 111; dyp. aiyavén Ib. 57 :—in Od. 1. c., etc., some retain the sense of countryman; but Apollon, Lex. and Hesych. interpret it by Onpevral ; and this usage in the later Poets cited seems unquestion- able. III. for Aesch, Pers. 1002, v. dypérys. Gyportués, 7, dv, rustic, Eust. Opusc. 261. 24, etc. II. fond of the chase, Tzetz. ad Lyc. 400, ubi Mss. dypevrat. dypo-pvidag [iv], 6, a watcher of the country, Anth, Plan. 243. dypurros, ov, (a privat., ypd) not to be spoken of, dypuxta mabeiv Pherecr. Incert. 20 :—hence dypvtta, 1, dead silence, Pind. Fr. 253. dyputrvéw, to be dypumvos, lie awake, be wakeful, Theogn. 471, Hipp. Progn. 37, Plat., al.; opp. to eadevSw, Xen, Cyr. 8. 3, 423 Gypunveiy tiv vixra to pass a sleepless night, Id, Hell. 7, 2, 19, Menand. Anu. 1, cf, Incert. 40 :—to suffer from sleeplessness, Diosc. 4. 65. 2. metaph. to be watchful, Lxx (Sap. 6. 15), Ev. Marc. 13. 33, Ep. Eph. 6. 18. ayp ov, verb. Adj. one must watch, Eust. 168. 16. dypurvatnp, pos, 6, a watcher, Manetho 1. 81; in Gl., dypumvnrhs. dypumvytucds, 7, dv, wakeful, Diod. Excerpt. 32, Plut, Cam. 27. aypurvia, Ion. -{y, 7, sleeplessness, waking, watching, Hipp. Aph. 1244, al., Plat. Crito 43 B; also in pl., dypumvinow elxero Hat. 3. 129, Ar. Lys. 27. II. a time of watching, Pseudo-Plat. Ax. 368 B. {Z in Opp. Cyn, 3. 511.) dyp-utvos, ov, (dypéw) seeking after sleep, sleepless, wakeful, watchful, Hipp. Epid. 1. 954, Plat. Rep. 404 A, Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 24: metaph., Znvos ayp. Béxos Aesch. Pr. 358; aioves Anth. P. 7. 278 :—rd dypumvoy =dypurvia, Plat. Rep. 460 D :—Ady, -vws, C. I. 4717. 23. 18 oe act. banishing sleep, keeping awake, vonoes Arist. Probl. 18. 7, 4; wéptyuvac Anth. Plan, 211. [é&yptmvos Eur. Rhes. 2 (lyr.),@ypimvos Theocr. 24. 104.] dyputvains, es, (el50s) making sleepless, Hipp. 68 A. ? dypaocw, Ep. for dypeva, only used in pres., to catch, dypwacav ix6ds Od. 5. 533 often in Opp., H. 3. 339, 543, etc. ; so Call. Ap. 60, Lyc., etc. :—absol. to go hunting, Opp. C. 1. 129 :—Pass. to be caught, Opp. H. 3. 415., 4. 565. . : dypaorns, ov, 6,=dypérns, subst. and adj., Lat. agrestis, Soph. Fr, 83, Eur. H. F. 377, Rhes. 266; whence Meineke reads Gypworay -yepa- pwraros in Theocr. 25. 48. II. a hunter, (dypéw) Ap. Rh. 4, 175: fem. dypGortts, dos, }, as epith. of a hound, Simon. 130 (c. conj. Schneid. for dypwoca, cf. A. B. 213, 332, where dyp@orac are expl. by Kuviyyerat). 2. a kind of spider, Nic. Th. 734. dypworivos, Syracus. for aypouos, name of a play by Epich.; dypa- orivar vipat dpevot, Hesych, dypwortts, Sos Theophr. H. P. t. 6, 10, and ews, %, a grass that mules fed on, dyp. wedcndns, Od. 6. go; eiAcrerijs dyp. Theocr. 13. 42 :—it is triticum repens, acc. to Interpp. ad Theophr. H. P. 1. 6, 7, etc. II. for dyp@orts, v. sub dypworns II. dypaotwp, opos, 6,=dypwarns, Nic. Al. 473. px dypwrnp, 6, fem. dype@repa, =dypérns, Steph. Byz. s. v. dypés. a&ypadrys, ov, 6,=dypdrns, v. 1. for dporpevs in Theocr. 25. 51. : 2. as Adj. of thayfield, wild, Ojpes Eur. Bacch. 562 (lyr.) : rustic, BouvxddAot, Anth. P. 6. 37. y dyud, %, a street, highway, Il. 5. 642, Od. 2. 388, ete.; dy. orev} Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 3:—mostly in pl., oxidevro 5¢ raoa d-yuai, in describing the passage of Telemachus from city to city, Od. 3. 487, cf. 15. 1853 and even of a passage over sea, 11.12; dyuaiot in the streets, Epigr. Hom. 15.53 so in Pind, P. 2. 107, Soph, O.C. 715, Ant. 1136, Eur. Bacch. 87 (all lyr.), Ar.; rare in Prose, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 3- 2. a collection of streets, a city, Pind. O. 9. 52, N. 7.136; moAvmupos dy. Epigr. Gr, 1028. 2,v. sub edpvxopos, kvicdw, (A quasi~participial form from ayo, cf, dprua, opyua.) [a&yuad, except in Il. 20. 254, where it is written proparox. ryudi: on this, v. Roche Hom, Text-kritik, p. 177 sq-] ayuiatos, a, ov, of streets or highways, yi) Soph. Fr. 211. d&yudrys, ov, 6,=’Ayuieds, Aesch. Ag. 1081, in voc. "Ayuara, , ‘ Sa wa Gyuiatis, 150s, 4, fem. from foreg., like Kopnris, a neighbour, II. 2, II. as Adj., dyuarides Oeparetac the worship of j ; yuiels, éws, 6, a name of Apollo, as guardian of the straits. highways, Eur. Phoen. 631, ap. Dem. 531. 9, Inscrr, Att, in C. 4 oe Ra a pointed pillar, set up as his statue or altar at street door, Ar. Vesp. 875, v. Miiller Dor. 2.6, 5; similarly, "Ayueds Boyds in Soph. Fr. 340:—cf. nnodw. 4 ‘: RAY, Gyuomlacréw, (rAdoow) to build in streets or rows, Lyc. 6or. d-yuos, ov, without limbs, weak in limb, Hipp. 600. 49. ov aha erect, %, want of exercise or training, Ar. Ran. 1088, Arist. Eth. omen; 15: i Gytpvacros, oy, (-yuuvdw) unexercised, untrained, trot Xen. Cyr. 8, 1, 38, cf. Arist. Probl. 8. 10; dy. 7G odpars Plut. Arat, 47. 2 unpractised, rds in a thing, Eur. Bacch. 491, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 29, Plat., etc.; also es or mpés 7 Plat. Legg. 731 A, 816 A; mept 7 Plut. 2. 802 D. 3. unharassed, Soph. Tr. 1083 ; 083° éydpvacrov mAdvors Eur. Hel. 533 ; ob dytuvaoros mévas ppévas Id. Fr. 335ce" II. Ady., dyupvaorws éxew mpés 7 Xen. Mem, 2. 1, 6. Gytvak, 5, (yuh) wifeless, Soph, Fr. 5: another nom. dybvatKos oc- _ curs in Phryn. Com. Mov. 13 ; &ybvatos in Dio C., Porphyr. Abst. 4. 17,’ Manetho 1.173; dydvys in Poll. 3. 48; dyvvos in Ar. Fr, 571. dyipis [a], cos, , Aeol. form of pa? a gathering, ei, dvbpav dyupy Od. 3. 31; év vertow dybpe Il. 16. 661 ; ev vay dy. 24. 141; also in Eur. I. A. 753 (lyr.). (Hence dytyyupis, mavfyyupis; cf. dydprys, etc.) dyvppa, aros, 70, anything collected, A. B. 327. : Gyuppoés, 6,=dyvpis, Babr. 102. 5, A. B. 331: cf. ouvaryuppds, and v. sub dyeppds, ; Gyuptatw, (dyuprns) to collect by begging, xphpara Od. 19. 284. dyupreta, , begging ; and ieyipiostien ao ae Suid. ayupreutns, ov, 6, =dayvprns, Tzetz. ayuprip, 7ipos, ’ Rape 4. 218, i f ayuUprys, ov, 6, (dyeipw) properly a collector, esp. a begging priest o' Cybelé, Myrpds dy. (cf. praia. fe Anth, Ps. 218; TdAdos dy. Babr. 2 :—then, 2. as the character of these persons was bad, a beggar, vagabond, impostor, juggler, Eur. Rhes. 503, 715, cf. Lysipp. Baxx. 6; applied to Teiresias in Soph. O. T. 388; associated with pay- Tes generally, Plat. Rep. 364 B. IT. a throw of the dice, Eubul, Kv. 2.—On the accent, v, E. M. 436. 3. Gyuptixés, 4, dv, fit for an dyiprys, vagabond, ay. pavris Plut. Lyc. 93 juggling, wivaxes, Id. Comp. Aristid. c, Cat. 3; 70 dy. yévos Id. 2. 407 C: 70 dy. as Subst. jugglery, Strabo 474. Adv. -K@s, Hierocl. dyupris, (dos, fem. of dyvprns, Tzetz. ayuprés, 4, dv, verb. Adj. of d-yelpw, got by begging, Hesych. dyvprpta, %, fem. of dyuprhp, Aesch, Ag. 1273; cf. dyipras. dyuprabns, es, ( yya-ridaoros, bie 3 Adv. pws, Longin. 22. I. * & gop nding, xpovos Nonn. Jo. 16. 25. SYK rehhis, €s, near an end, cednvn Nonn. D 40. 314 S A . D. 40. 314: YAUTEPHOV, Ov, gen. ovos, (répua) near the borders, neighbouring’, ayxitoKos — aye. Soph. Fr. 349; twit Eur. Rhes. 426; ruvds Lyc, 1130:—Mostly: pott. (and acc, to Poll. 6, 113 dithyrambic), but also in Xen, Hier. 10, 7. dyxt-roKos, ov, near the birth, dyx. wdives the pangs of child-birth, Pind. Fr. 58. 5; of a woman, in the pangs of child-birth, Auth, P. 7. 462. dyxi-pavis, és, appearing near, Nonn. D, 29. 29. ayxi-puros, ov, planted near, Nonn. D, 3. 152., 12. 279. dyxlwv, cov, gen. ovos, nearer, Comp. of dyx, E. M. 14. 47. ayxodSnv, Adv. post. form of dvax— (xéopar) gushing up, Hesych. dyx dev, Adv. (dyxo0) from nigh at hand, Hat. 4. 31, Luc. Syr. D. 28: opp. to méppwOer. f GyxX6O, Adv.=dyxod, dyxt, near, c. gen., Il. 14. 412, Od. 13. 103; absol., Theocr. 22. 40, Anth. ayxovdw, (dyxév7) to strangle, Manetho 1. 317, Suid. dyxévn, 9, (@yxw) @ throttling, strangling, hanging, Trag., etc. ; ayxévns..téppara Aesch, Eum. 746; épya xpetocov’ dyxdévns deeds beyond (i.e. too bad for) hanging, Soph. O. T. 1374; 748° dyxdvns médas ’tis nigh as bad as hanging, Eur. Heracl. 246; tadr’ ody). . dyxévns érdgia ; Id. Bacch. 246 ; tabra .. ob dyydvn; Ar. Ach. 125 ; rare in Prose, dyxévn kat Adm Aeschin. 33. 18 :—in pl., év dyydvais @dvarov AaBeiy Eur. Hel. 200, cf. Ib. 299, H. F. 154; af dyy. paduora ois véois Arist. Probl. 30. 1, 26. II. acord for hanging, halter, Simon. Iamb. 1. 18; Spdxos dyxévns in Eur. Hipp. 802. dyxovife, to strangle, Schol. Eur. Hipp. 780. dyxovipatos, a, ov, wdpos, death by strangling, ap. Eus. P. E. 277 D. dyxévios, a, ov, (dyxm) fit for strangling, Bpdxos Eur. Hel. 686 (re- stored by Elmsl. for @yxéveos) ; Secuds Nonn. D. 21. 31., 34. 229. GyxXopeva, poét. for dvaxopetw, Anacreont. 14. 30, acc. to Coraés. Gyxéce, Ady. coming near, Apoll. de Adv. 607. 23. ayxorarw, Adv., Sup. of dyxoi, like dyxiora, nearest, next, c. gen., h. Hom. Ap, 18, Hdt. 2. 169, Eur. Fr. 623; dyx. twds very near, i.e. very like some one, Hdt. 7. 73, 80, al.; also tut 7. g1, 1:—ol dyxo- Taro mpoonkovres the nearest of kin, 4. 73:—so too dyxérara; ayx. exev twvds to be most like. ., 7. 64. &yXérepos, a, ov, Comp. of ayxod, nearer, c. gen., Hdt. 7. 175. ayXot,=dyxu, near, Lat. prope, freq. in Hom., mostly absol., and at the beginning of a line, dyyod & israpévy Il. 2. 172, cf. 4. 92, 303, al. ; absol. also in Soph. Tr. 962, Fr. 69 ; twice c. gen., Il. 24. 709, Od. 6.5; elsewh. in Hom. always dyxod iordyevos or —pévn, except in Od. 17. 526., 19. 271; also c. dat., Pind. N. 9. 95, Hdt. 3. 85 ; but cf. @yxe ;— never in Att. Prose, v. Luc. Ner. 9. Later forms are dyxérepos, dyxo- Tare, qg.v. (V. sub dyxw.) dyxoupos, ov, Ion. for dyxopos, neighbouring (Hesych.), Anth, P. 9.235: bordering on, rivi Orph. Arg. 122; Twds Lyc. 418, dyxouca, v. sub éyxovea. Gyxovotfopar, Med. to use rouge, Hesych. dyxo, f. dyéw, Ar. Eccl. 638, Luc.: aor, #yfa C. I. 3588, Joseph., (am-) Ar. Pax 796 :—Med. and Pass. (v. infr.) only in pres.: cf. dmdy- xe. (From 4/AX, 4/AD'X come dxéw, dxevw, dxvupar; ayxdvn, as also dyxz (q. v.), dyxod, évayxos, éyyts ; dos, dxGouat, &xOos, and peth. dynv, dxnvia (Lat. egeo); cf. Skt. anhus, anhas (Lat. angustus, angor), agham (evil) ; Lat. ango, angina, anxius ; Goth. aggvya, (ango), aggvus (angustus); O. H.G. angust (angst, anguish) ;—the common notion being of close pressure or constriction.) To press tight, esp. the throat, d@yxe puv tvds ind dephy Il. 3. 371: to strangle, throttle, rovs marépas Hyxov vixtrwp Ar. Vesp. 1039, cf. Eccl, 638, 640; Tdv KépBe- pov arntas ayxov Id. Ran. 468, cf. Av. 1575; Kav ravpoy dyxos Id. Lys. 81, cf. Dem. 1157. 6., 1263.7, Theocr. 5. 106, Anth. Plan. go; é& xadw@ rads ovaydvas Gd. LXx (Psalm. 31.9): metaph., of pressing creditors, Ar. Eq. 775, Luc. Conv. 32, cf. Ev. Matt. 18, 28; v. ad Thom. M. p. 8; of a guilty conscience, rovro .. dyxet, o1wmay Tove? Dem, 406. 5 :—Med. to strangle oneself, Hipp. 563. 7 :—Pass., Pind. N. 1. 69, Dem, 1157. 6. Not found in Trag. dyxXapidos, ov, (duadds) nearly equal, dyxepadror éy xetporovia Thuc. 3. 49, cf. Dion. H. 5. 14; dyx. udxn a doubtful battle, Thuc. 4. 1343 vinn Plut. Otho 13; ob« dyx. 7d wAHOos Id. Caes. 42 :—neut. pl. as Adv., dyx@padra vavpaxeiv, Lat. aequo Marte pugnare, Thuc. 7. 713 dyxupard oguot éyévero Luc. Herm. 12. Adv.-dAws Luc, Ver. Hist. 37. Gy [a], Dor. 3 pl. dyovre Pind. P. 7. 13: impf. fyov, Ep. dyov Il. 7. 312, 3 dual dyérny Od. 3. 439, Dor. dyav Pind. P. 9. 217, Ion. dyeoxov Hat. 1. 148, Ap. Rh.:—fut. dgéw Il. 1. 139, Soph., Plat.; but dere is used as aor. imperat. by Hom., Il. 3. 105., 24. 778, Od. 14. 414; so inf. dgéuevar, —Euev Il, 23. 50, 111; and med. dgeoe 8, 505 :—aor. 2 ayyayov Hom. and Att.:—also aor. 1 #fa Hes. Op. 432, 438, Batr. 115, 11g; but aor. 1 is very rare in Att., dgac Antipho 134. 42, mpoo-htay Thuc. 2.97; (in other places it has been corrected, partly from Mss., partly from the context, v. sub dmatcow, mpoctatcow, ovvvacow, cf. L. Dind. Xen, Hell. 2. 2, 20, Veitch Gk. Verbs s. v.):—pf. #xa Polyb. 3. III, 3, (mpo-) Dem. 346. 24., 772. 5, (ovv—) Xen. Mem. 4, 2, 8; later dynoxa, Joseph., etc., which is allowed by the Atticists only in compds., eicaynoxéras Philipp. ap. Dem. 238. 28; xarayhoxer (vy. sub kardya); ovvaynoxa Arist. Oec. 2. 1, 10; a form dyfyryoxa twice in Inscr. Aeg. in C. I. 2. p. 1013, ovv-ayd-yoxa Inscr. Ther. in C. 1 2448. 111. 12, di-aryehsyea Ib. (add,) 4897 d: plapf. dynéxet Polyb. 30. 4, 17, cf. C. I, (add,) 4897 d :—Med., fut. dgoxa: Hom., Hdt., Trag.: aor. 2 iyaryd- pv Hom., etc.: also aor. 1 unaugm. dgdyny (éo—) Hat. 5. 34, cf. 1. 190. 8. 20, I, never in Att.:—Pass., fut. dy@jcopar Plat. Hipp. Ma. 292 A, (apoc-) Thuc. 4. 87, etc., but also dfopar in pass. sense, Aesch, Ag. ney , Plat. Rep. 458 D, (apoo—) Thuc. 4. 115, etc.: aor. 1 HxOnv Xen. An, 6. 3, 10, Ion. dxOnv Hat. 6. 30, 1: pf. Hvac Id. 2,158, 2, Dem. 170. 17 —Verb. Adj. dréoy, q. v. (From 4/AD come also dyiwéw, ayds, dxrap, tyyéopat, Hyena, etc. ; also dypa, dypetar, etc. ; dyay (v. signf. Iv. 2); Oypos, and-perh, the Adv. dyay: cf. Skt. ag, agdmi (ago), agas (derwp) ; agmas (bypos), agis (dyav) ; Zd. az (ago), azra (dypa).) I. to lead, carry, convey, bring, mostly with living creatures as the object, pépa being used of things, dane F dyew érdpoice . . yuvaika, at tpinoda : . pépey Il. 23. 512; Body 8 dyérny xepdow by the horns, Od. 3- 4395 Gy: els or mpds Témov, but poet. also c, acc. loci, vécro 8 &« ToAé pow dndvous (sc. dvipas) . . Fyov otkous Aesch. Pers. 862 ; “Aidas..” dye "Axépovros dxrdv Soph, Ant. 811; dy. rwd Tu to lead one to another, Od. 14. 386; immous if’ pyar’ dy. 3. 476, Aesch. P. V. 465: from the common phrases @yew orparevpa, oTparév, etc., comes the use of yew intr. of the soldiers themselves, radrp .. dges 6 Adxos Xen. An. 4. 8, 12, cf, Hell. 4. 2,19, and perh. Thue. 5. 54: more generally, én? Td dxpoy dyaydvrav éxarépaw tending to the extreme, Plat. Legg. 701 E: dywper let us go, often in N.T.; cf. deréov, b. part. @ywy is used in gen, sense, taking, orhoe 8 dyov Il, 2. 558, cf. Od. 1. 130; where we should use two Verbs, took and placed; and v. éxw A. 1. 6, pépw A. X. 2. 2. to take with one, éraipovs Od. 10. 405; Te Il. 15. 531. 3. to carry of, as captives or booty, II. 1. oF 25 9. 594, Aesch, Th, 340, etc. ; 409 dyépevos mapa Baotdéa had been seized and taken to.., Hdt, 6. 30; dydpevos, i.e. SodAos, Archil. 155, cf. Eur. Tro. 140, Plat. Legg. 914 E; so, Atxny dyew to lead Justice forcibly away, Hes. Op. 218 :—of a fowler, PdAov dpvidav dupiBaddy dye Soph, Ant. 343 :—mostly in phrase dyew xal pépew to sweep a country of all its plunder (where strictly pépecy refers to things, dye to men and cattle), first in Il. 5. 484 ofov x’ 7% péporey “Axarol 7H Kev dryo.ev, cf. 23. 512 sq.; then often in Hdt. and Att. Prose ; more rarely reversed, pépovot Te wat dyovor Hdt. 1. 88,15; epepe nal Frye mavras Id. 3. 39, 4; also c. acc. loci, pépwv Kal dywv tiv Bibvvida Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 2; just like’ Lat. agere et ferre, Liv. 22. 3, etc.:—but pépew xal dye sometimes means simply to bear and carry, bring together, Heind. Plat. Phaedr, 279 C; thy molnow pépew re wat dye i.e, bring it into the state, . Id. Legg. 817 A, cf. Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 2; ‘like portari atque agi in Caes. B. C. 2. 25: in Pass., dydpeOa, pepdueba Eur. Tro, 1310, cf. Ar. Nub. 241 :—Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 5, has also dyer wat wale; cf. pépw A. VI. 2. 4. dyey els Sixny or dieacrhpioy, ay. em rods dieactds to carry one before a court of justice, Lat. rapere in jus, often in Att. Prose; so, mpds Tiv dixny ay. Eur. Fr. 1036; also simply dyewv, Plat. Legg. 914 E, Gorg. 527 A, etc. : esp. in the phrase émt Oavarw dy. Xen. An. 1, 6, Io, etc.: so, pévov dyec@at to be accused of murder, Plut. 2. 309 E. 5. to fetch, dge0’ tay rdv dporov Od. 14. 414: hence also of things, to bring to, or in, import, oivov vijes dyovot Il. 9. 72, etc.; cf. Hdt.1. 70; iva of adv pdprov dyouu (i.e. atv of) Od. 14. 296. 6. to draw on, bring on, mhpa 768 Hryaryov Odpaviwyes Il. 24. 5473 “IAiw pOopdy Aesch, Ag. 406; Teppiay dpuépay Soph. Ant. 1330; wtmvov Id. Ph. 638; xapdy Eur. Fr. 174; Saxpv Id. Alc. 1081. 7. to bear up, pedrdot 8 ds, a&yovor Sixrvoy Aesch, Cho. 506. II. to lead towards a point, lead on, Tov & dye poipa Kak?) Oavdroo rédoade Il. 13. 602, and absol., 2.834; of pw éripias dyes Soph. El. 1035; also, c. inf, dye Oaveiv leads to death, Eur. Hec. 43 :—c. acc, cogn., @yopat Tay mupdray 66dév (but the metre re- quires épyopac) Soph. Ant. 877 ; 7d orpdrevpa Hye Thy emt Meéyapa (sc. 656) Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 13 ; also, 650s dyet the road leads, ets or émt rémov, Soph. O. T. 734, Plat. and Xen. 2. metaph. ¢o lead, as a general, Il. 10. 79; ds dye veikos "AOHvy II. 721; ay. orparidy, vais, etc., Thuc.° 7. 12., 8. 59, etc.: to guide, as the gods, étc., Pind., Hdt., etc.; dad névey dyev twa Eur. I.T. 988; ay. tiv wodrretay to conduct the government, Thuc. 1.127; 5 rv coplay dyovor thus they treat philosophy, Plat. Theaet. 172 B; tiv abr aipeow ay. Twi to hold the same views as.., Polyb. 27. 13, 14 :—Pass. to be led, guided, Koyop@ Plat. Rep. 431 C. 3. to bring up, train, educate, bp0Gs, kad@s or Kans GxO7jvat Plat. Legg. 782 D, etc. III. to draw out in length, re@xos dyerv to draw a line of wall, Thuc. 6. 99; so, HéAaOpov | els épdgous dy. Anth. P. 9.649; &ypov dyev Theocr. 10. 2, cf. Thuc. 6. 100 :—tly. ypappds to draw lines, Arist. Top. 1. 1, 6, cf. An. Pr. 1. 24, 2, etc.:—Pass., 7erat % Sidpug Hdt. 2. 158; xéAmov dyopuévou- Ths ys i.e. the land running round into a bay, 4. 99; cf. éAatvw mI. 2. IV. to keep in memory, kai ev Kd€os Fyov ’Axatol Od. 5. 31r. 2. like agere, to hold, celebrate, éoprhy, rA’OAdpma, etc., Hdt.” 1.147,183; though this is more freq. in Att. (for Hdt. mostly uses dvayev), ay. Ovotay Isocr. 386 C, etc.; xpeovpydy juap evOvpas dyeav Aesch, Ag. 1592; but in Il. 1. 99, Hes. Sc. 480, dy. ExaréuBny is literal, to convey the hecatomb., 8. also to hold, keep, observe, dpOav dyes épnpootvay © Pind. P. 6. 20; omovdds dy. mpds twas Thuc. 6.7; elphyny Plat. Rep. 465 B, etc.: often c. acc., as a periphrasis for a neut. Verb (cf. éxa A. 1. 8), veixos dyew =veeiv, Pind. P. 9. 54, cf. dperiy dy. Id. I. 7. 31; oXoARY dyew =axoddlay, Eur. Med. 1238, Plat. Rep. 376 D; jovxiay dy. = jov- xa¢ew Xen. An. 3. 1,14; @y. dwacriay Ar. Nub. 621; so, yéAwr’ dyew to keep laughing, Soph. Aj. 382; dy. erdwoy Eur. Or. 182. 4. to keep, maintain, €hevO€épav tye Tiyv “EAAGSa Dem, 120. 17. 5. of Time, to pass, Grhpavrov dyov Blorov Pind, O. 8.115; wolas Hpépas Sonets py’ dyew ; Soph, El. 266; 6 Bios obpos éorépar dryer Alexis Ti78. 3; déxaTor éros ay., etc,, decimum annum agere, Galen, V. like #yéopat. Lat. ducere, to hold, account, reckon, év Tipp dye or dyecOa, év ov- SepuH polpy dy., wept mAciorou dyew Hat, 1. 134., 2. 172+, 9. 7 1, ete. 5 Gcovs dye to believe in, Aesch. Supp. 924; &° aidovs, bid Tuphs ay. wd, etc., Eus. H.E. 7. 24, 4, Luc. Prom. 4, etc.; Tap’ dAwAd6" edpickar dya Aesch. Supp. 918 ; 73 mpayp’ dyew .. ds map’ ob5év Soph. Ant. 34; 1g: plapf. qyyuévor Hoav.Thuc. 6. 100.; also, in med, sense, v. infr. B, 2 2 ae *Agpodirny mpood’ &yew Tod Baxxlov-Eur. Bacch, 235 3 Tyumrepor™ t 18 ins dy. twa Thuc. 8. 18:—also with Adverbs, 5vopdpws ay. to think in- | sufferable, Soph. O. T. 784; so, évrips dyew Plat. Rep. 528 C, ete,:— Pass., youqv 8 dvijp dorayv wéyoros Soph, O.T. 775, cf, Lob. 418, VI. to weigh so much, dyew pray, rpraxoatous ovs, etc., to weigh a mina, 300 darics, etc., Dem. 617. 21., 741. 7, ch Philippid. “Apy. "Ap. 7, etc. ; @yew mdéoy Arist, Probl. 23. 3, 2: where the ace. is the weight which the thing weighs or draws down: also, dy. orabpdy Plut. 2. 96 C; cf. Ako A. IL. 9, and y. sub dvrippomos. VII. on aye, ayere, v. s. vocc. 4 B. Med. @yopat, to carry away for oneself, take to oneself, xpuady Te Kat dpyupov oixad deca Od. 10. 35: to take with one, 6. 58; often in Att. 2. dyecOar yuvaira, Lat, uxorem ducere, to take to oneself a wife, Od, 14. 211, Hes. ; in full, dy. yuvaika és rd oleia Hat. I. 59, etc.; and simply dyeo@az, to marry, Il. 2. 659, Hdt. 2. 47, 1, etc., and in Att., cf. Elmsl. Heracl. 808 ; pf. pass. #ypat is used in this med. sense, Joseph. A. J. 14.12, 1, cf. mpodyw 1.6; (Aesch, Pr. 560 has the Act. dyew in same sense) : also of the father, o bring home a wife for his son, Od, 4. 10, Valck, Hdt. 1. 34; of the brother who brings a wife to his brother, Od. 15. 238; and of the friends of the bridegroom and bride, Od. 6, 28, Hes. Sc. 274. 3. 5@pov dyecOat to take to oneself a gift, Valck. Theocr, 1.11 ; did ordpa dyecOat pd0ov to let pass through the mouth, i.e, to utter, Il. 14. 91; dyecOal 71 és xeipas to take a thing into one’s hands, and so to take upon oneself, undertake, Hat. 1. 126., 4. 79. Gy [a], crasis for & éy&, Soph. El. 259. Gywyatos, ov, (dyayh) fit for leading by, of a dog’s collar or Jeash, Anth. P. 6. 35. Gywyeiov, 7d, a pander’s house, Poll. 9. 48. Gywyets, éws, 6, one that draws or drags, Hat. 2. 175, 3- ; 2. an accuser (v. dyw I. 4), Suid. II. =urnp, a leading-rein, leash, Soph. Fr. 801, Strattis Xpuo. 2, Xen. Eq. 6, 5. ? dywyh, 7, (dw) a carrying away, Hat. 6. 85, etc.; freight, carriage, mpos Tas dyaryds.. xphoOa iofuylos Plat. Rep, 370 E, cf. C. I. 1838. I. b. intr., viv Gy. dd TaXous érore?ro pursued his voyage, Thuc. 4. 29: movement, Tod wodds Plat. Rep. 400 C, cf. 604 B; ay. ént 71 ten- dency towards.., Hipp. Epid. 1. 938. 2. a bringing to or in, byuady 7 és rods Atyous ay. your bringing us before the council, Thuc. 5. 85. 3. a carrying off, abduction, Aesch. Ag. 1263, Soph, O. C. 662. 4. tSaros dyaryat aqueducts, C. I. 233 }. 52. II. a leading towards a point, conducting, guiding, irmov Xen. 6,43 4 Tov vouov, TOD Aoyopod dy, guidance by.., Plat. Legg. 45 A, cf. Polit. 274 A:—intr. the course, tenour, tendency of a thing. 2. the leading of an army, Plat. Legg. 746 D ; év rais dy. on marches, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 25: the guiding of a state or public business, Polyb. 3. 8 5. 3. a leading, conducting, directing, training, naidela pév éo8' } matdav OAKh te xal dy. mpos Tov md TOD vopov op0dv elpnuévoy Plat. Legg. 659 D, cf. 819 A; dy. dpOfs ruxeiv mpds dperqy Arist. Eth. N. Io. 9, 8; 51d 70 700s kat Thy dy, Id, Pol. 4. 5, 35 esp. of the public education of the Spartan youth, Aaxavud) dry. Polyb. 1. 32,1; “AynotAaos 4x90 Ty Acyouevny dywyhy év Aaxedalyove Plut. Ages. 1; cf. Miiller Dor. 4. 5, 1 :—also of plants, culture, Theophr. H. P. 1, 3, 2; of diseases, treatment, Galen, 4. generally, a method, way, treatment of a subject, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 10: style, Dion, H. de Isocr. 20, al.; ) dy. 7” duadéerov Strabo 648. 5. a school or sect of philosophers, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 145. III. a mode or aide ee Plut. 2. an ae anise y4L0s, ov, easy to be led, capable of being carried, 7, -. dy. Bapos pena to load three wains, Eur. Cycl. 385 ; 74 meee things portable, wares, Plat. Prot. 313 C, Xen. An. 5.1, 16, etc. ; s 4 8 pndev dydrytpor dyecOar év TE TAOlw Dem. 929. 17. >. TL. o persons, to be outlawed, Schneid. Xen. Hell. 7. 3, 11: to be delivered into bondage, Dem, 624. 12, Plut. Sol. 13 :—so of things, liable to seizure, Dion. H. 5. 69. 2. easily led, complaisant, Plut. Alc. 6. . Gyayvov, 74, in Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 54, the load of a wagon or hacer y dywyés, dv, (&yw) leading, guiding, and as Subst. a guide, Hat. 3. 4 5 dyaryol an escort, Thuc, 2,12; dy. ddaTos an aqueduct, Hdn, 7. 12, neg 1040, 1. 17: c. gen., dévapus dvOpdmav dyaryds power of ne sg Lyc. 5. II. leading towards a point, mpds or éné rt Plat. a: 525 A; els.. Plut. Pericl. 1. IIL. drawing, attracting, Tw . -of the magnet, Diosc. 5. 148. 2. iiaaias forth, eliciting, xoa vexpav Eur. Hec. 536; Saxpiow dy. Id. Tro. 1131. "hd absol. attractive; Plut. Crass. 7; 7) d-yarydv attractiveness, 1d. 2. 25 B. A & @], crasis for 6 dy. iri ea vos, 6, Acol, also dywvos, ov, 6, Alcae. 120: (dy). E- athering’, assembly, like dyopd; iCavev edpdv dyava Il. 23. 258; AvTo S dydv 24.1, cf. Od. 8, 200; év aya vewy Il. 16. 239, cf, Bust. 1335. 7: esp. an assembly met to see games, often in Il. 23; Tre ay Pind, P. 10. 47; mowods dyavas Oévres Aesch. Ag. 845, cf. Ar. _Fr. 572. 2. a place of contest, the arena, Biyrny és péocov ayava. Il, 23. 685, cf. 531, Od. 8. 260, Hes. Sc. 312, Pind. P, 9. 202, cf. Be Thuc. 5. 50: proverb., é&a dy@vos out of the lists or course, i.e, beside the mark, Pind. P. 1. 84, Luc. Gymn. 21; cf. éaydvcos, Spépos 11. 2. IL. an assembly of the Greeks at their great national ames, 5 & Odvpaip dydv Hat. 6.127; ’OAvpmias a, Pind, O. 1.11; 6 Odvp- mos @yav Ar. Pl. 583; “EAAdbos.. dyavos Soph. El, 682, cf. 699: —hence the contest for a prize at the games, dydv tamucds, -yupyucds Hat. 2. 91, Plat. Legg. 658 A, al.; povords Ar. Pl, 1163, Thuc. 3. 104; of dy. of émt Aapmade Arist. Fr. 385; dydv trav dydpay a contest in which the chorus was composed of men, opp. to 7av matiay, Dem, §20. 27 :-—dry. orepaynpdpos or orepavirns a contest where the prize is a crown, Hdt. 5. 102, Arist. Rhet. 1. 2,13; dy. xdAKeos, where it is a ~ ip Phryn, | shield of brass, Pind, N, 10. 41, ubi v. Dissen:—hence many phrases, |, “dyaiva dyew, kaiordvar, rWévai, mporiBévat, mo.ely, etc., to hold or propose @ contest ; dyava mpoayopevey rit, els dyava mpokareiabat Twa, etc.; dyava or ev aya. vixdy, to win one or at one, etc.; dyay | mpés twa Dem. 247. 10; els dy. Adyar dpucécOar Twi Plat. Prot. 335 A. '—V. Interprr, ad Ar, Pl. 1163. III. generally, any struggle, trial or danger, moddovds deyavas eid, of Hercules, Soph. Tr. 1595 ay. tupnpépos Aesch. Cho. 584; els dyava Tbe cupmeady waxns Soph. Tr, 20, etc. ; dydy mpoxéerar, c. inf., it is hard or dangerous to.., Hdt. ?: IT; dye dmopos Lys. 108. 25; péyoros Eur. Med. 235 ; OwAaw eneer Gyav mépi Soph. Aj. 936; and without epi, dyev Tay AxiAdAciay GrAwy Ib. 1240 :—so also, dydv wept Tis Yuxis, Tept HeyLaTay, etc., a struggle for life and death, for one’s highest interests, Eur. Or. 847, Phoen. 1330; moAAods dyvas Spapeovra meph opéwy abrav Hdt.8.102; = ob... dyav, GAAA ofs Yuyijs wépe Soph. El. 1492; v. sub HOS. 2. a battle, action, Thuc. 2. 89, etc. 3. an action at law, trial, Antipho 143. 44, etc., cf. Aesch. Eum. 677, 744 3 els dyavas kabtordvat dvOpémevs Plat. Apol. 24 C, Rep. 494 E; mept yuxts els dyava karacrnoai twa Xen. Lac. 8, 4. 4, metaph., ob Adyar 2° dyav, now is not the time for speaking, etc., Eur. Phoen. 588; obx eépas dy. "tis no time for sitting still, Id. Or. 1291, cf. Thuc. 3. 443 ayov mpdpacw od déxerar the crisis admits no dallying, Ar. Fr. 318, cf. Plat. Crat. 421 D, Legg. 751 D; wordew 7) madéev mporerrar dydy the issue proposed is to do or die, Hat. 7. 11, cf. 2093 péyas 6 dyad . . 7d XpIr ordy % waxdv yevéoOax the issue is great ,. , Plat. Rep. 608 B; cf. dun. Gywvaheis, of, the Lat. Agonales, Dion. H. 2. 70. : t Gyav-dpxys, ov, 6, judge of a contest, Soph. Aj. 5725 cf, dyavoberns. : dyovia, 7, a contest, struggle for victory, dye bid dons ayuvins exov Hat. 2. 91; moAeploy dy. Eur. Hec. 314, cf. Tro. 1003; v. sub aydpoxpuns ; esp. in the games, Pind. O. 2. 94, P. 5. 1503 also in Prose, ev Snporuch dy. Xen. Cyr. 2. 3,15; dmacay ay. évreivar Dem. 1398. 20, etc. 2. gymnastic exercise, wrestling, and the like, Hipp. Art. 787, Plat. Meno 94 B, Legg. 765 C, etc.: generally, exercise, Id. Gorg. 450D sq., Rep. 618 B. 8. of the mind, agony, anguish, ev poBy kat TOAAW dyovig Dem. 236.19, cf. Menand. Incert. 5, Arist. Probl, 2. 26, 23 & Tols THs YuxFs poBass, éAmiorv, dyovias Id. de Spir. 4,6. Gyoudrns [ar], ov, 6, a nervous person, Diog. L. 2. 131, Suid, Gyovide, inf. -.dy Plat. Prot. 333 E, part. -a@yv Id. Charm. 162 C, Isocr., (indic. first in Luc.): impf. jywviov Polyb., etc.: fut. dow [a] Porph. Abst. I. 54: aor. qyywvidca Timocl, Mapad. 1, Diod.: pf. ayywviana (imep—) Dem. 1410. 5. Like dywvi(ouat, to contend eagerly, struggle, Dem. 534. 11; mpds GAAHAous Isocr. 59 B. II. to be distressed or anxious, be in an agony, TetpaxtvOa Te Kai dy. Plat. Prot. 333 E; dyaviavra Kat rePopuBnyévoy Id, Lysis 210 E, cf. Arist. Probl. 2. 26, 2; mepi tuvos Id, Rhet. 1. 9, 21; c. acc., Polyb. 1. 20, 6, al; éni rit Plut. Caes. 46; dy. wh .., Polyb. 3. 9, 2, etc. Gyovifopat, fut. Yodya Eur. Heracl. 992, Thuc., etc., (in pass. sense, v. infr. B) ; —fcopar only in late writers, as Joseph, ; -tc@joopac Aristid. , I, §04: aor. Hywvicduny Eur., etc.: pf. Pydviopac (in act. sense) Eur. Ton 939, Ar. Vesp. 993, Isocr., (in pass., v. infr. B): aor. jrywvicOny in pass. sense, infr. B: an act, form dywvicas in C. I. 1108 (bis) —(dyor). A. as Dep., fo contend for a prize, esp. in the public games, Hadt. 2. 160, al.; mpés twa Plat. Rep. 579 C, al.; rwi Id. Ion 530 A; mept Twos about a thing, Hdt. 8. 26, Thuc. 6.16; ‘OAvymiaow Plat. Hipp. Mi. 364 A; wept mpwreiwv Dem. 247. 5; wept THs édevOeplas Id. 287.17: often c. acc. cogn., dy. orddiov Hat. 5.223 Tov dywver, obs mept THs Yuxijs tyywviecde Dem, 314.15; dyava.. TOvd Fyrywvicos thou didst provoke this contest, Eur. Supp. 427, cf. Ion 939, Heracl. 795. 2. to fight, Hat. 1. 76, 82, al, Thuc. 8. 27, al.; mept Tov amayrow dy. Id. 6. 16; mpés twa Id. 1. 36; ©. acc. cogn., av [uaxnv]).. dyaviferbe Eur. Supp. 636. 8. to contend for the prize on the stage, both of the poet, Hdt. 5. 67, Ar. Ach. 140, 419, Arist. Poét, 7, 11; and of the actor, Dem. 418, 5: generally to contend for victory, Kad@s .. Hyuvicat Plat. Symp, 194 A, cf. Menex. 235 D. 4. to argue sophistically, like épi¢w, opp. to diadéyoum, Plat. Theaet. 167 E, cf. Rep. 454 A, Phileb. 17 A: but, 5. generally of public speaking, Xen. Mem, 3. 7, 45 dy. mpds dmédeagw Arist, Fr. 1. 23. II. to contend or struggle against, as law-term, Antipho 130. 73 ¢. acc. cogn., dy. Sixny, ypapny to fight a cause to the last, Lys. 98. 14, Dem. 653, 26: hence also, dy. Yevdouaprupiay (sc. ypapjv) Dem. 741. 20; dy. ayava Andoc, 4. 1, Lys, 111, 36: also, dy. pévov to Sight against a charge of murder, Eur. Andr. 336; dy. TE mpaypart to grapple with the matter, Plat, Hipp. Mi. 369 C, cf. Arist. Rhet. 3. I, 5; TIT. generally, to struggle, to exert oneself, c. inf,, Thuc. 4. 87; 3+ not bathed in sweat, oOévos Pind. N. 7. 107 ; cf. dviSpwri, dxoviti. II. as Subst. ddtavros, a plant, maiden-hair, Orph. Arg. 918: also dStavrov, 7d, Theocr. 13. 41, Theophr. H. P. 7. Io, 5. G-8idvirros, ov, not to be accomplished, Gloss. G-8idteoros, ov, unpolished, Galen. 4.p.574. * &-Sidamavoros, ov, not to be stilled, incessant, violent, Polyb. 4. 39, 10. Ady. —rws, Id. 1. 57, 1. a-Statdacros, ov, as yet unformed, Plat. Tim. 91 D, cf. Suid. v. Spivos. adtatrvevoréw, not to perspire, Galen. 10. p. 528. aS.vamvevorla, , want of perspiration, Galen. 10. p. 257. G8tatrvevoros, ov, (Siamvéw) not blown through, Galen. 10, p. 251; not evaporated or volatilized, Theophr. Odor. 39. II. act. without drawing breath, uninterrupted, lambl. v. Pyth. 188. G-Siatrévytos, ov, not worked out, undigested, Ath. 402 D, é-Sidrraveros, ov, not stumbling, Iambl, Protrept. 360. adiarrwola, 4}, infallibility, Hipp. 1282. 56. ; 4-S:drrwros, ov, not liable to error, infallible, Hipp. 1283. 21, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 110:—Ady. -rws, Polyb. 6. 26, 4: unerringly, of archers, Heliod, 9. 18. 2. faultless, of writers, Longin. 33. 5: 70 ddiamrw- tov perfection of style, Id. 36. 4. ‘ &-StapQpos, ov, a faulty form for sq., Theophr. H. P. 3. 10, 5; Lob. Paral. p. 39. , G-SidpOpwros, ov, not jointed or articulated, Arist. H, A. 2. 1, 5, al. II. of the voice, inarticulate, Plut. 2. 378 C, Ady. -rTws,- without distinction, Galen, 16. p. 240. } ; &-Sidppyros, ov, not torn in pieces, Jo. Chrys. d-Sidppowa, 7, constipation, Hipp. ap. Erotian. G-Sidcevoros, ov, not shaken about, Galen, é-Stackértws, Adv. inconsiderately, Eccl. G-BidcKevos, ov, unequipt, trmos Anon. ap, Suid. &-SidoKotos, ov, not perspicuous, Schol. Aesch. Cho. 815. , G-8td4eracros, ov, not torn asunder, uninterrupted, unbroken, Xen. Ages. 1. 4, Polyb. 1. 34, 5, Greg. Nyss. Adv. -rws, Hesych., Eccl. -Sidcradtos, ov, not clearly unfolded, v. 1. Schol. Od. 19. 560. GSiactacla, 4, continvousness, lambl, in Nicom, Arithm, 81. é-Sidertiiros, ov, t intervals, i , Antipho ap. Suid., Cy- rill. :—Adv. —rws, without intermission, Philo I. 342, 501, etc. 2. without difference :—Adv. -Tws, without dispute, Eust. Opusc. 228. 50, etc. II, (S:lornpt) without dimensions, Plut. 2. 601 C, 926 B. &-Sidortucros, ov, undistinguished, unvarying, Philo 2. 297. II. =dzap- d-Biderodos, oy, not separated, confused, A. B. 809. éuparos, Gramm, Adv. -Aws. é-Suacrpéntas, Ady. without turning, continuously, Hipp, Fract. 765. &-Staatpodos, ov, incapable of turning, of the eyes of certain animals, Arist. Probl. 31. 7; 43. @ mpocwmm meiv Clem, Al. 185: metaph. un- perverted, xpiots Dion. H. de Thuc, 2:—Adyv. -gas, Sext. Emp. M, 2. 77. a-Sidcyioros, ov, not cloven, Arist. H. A. 7. 4, 12. G-Biatakros, ov, unarranged, Dion. H. 3. 10. G-Siatpytos, ov, not cut in pieces, indivisible, Eccl. aStatpdvwros, ov, not made clear, unintelligible, Athan. &-BSidtperros, ov, immoveable, headstrong, LXX, etc. Ady. -Tws, Lxx. é-Starpela, %, obstinacy, Caligula ap. Suet. Calig. 29. G-Svarimwros, ov, unshapen, Diod. 1. 10. &-Stavdos, ov, with no way back, without return, of the nether world, Eur. Fr. 860; epoepivas ddiavaov ind . . Sépor Epigr. Gr. 244. 9. &-SrdpOapros, ov, = ddudpOopos 1, Plat. Apol. 34 B, Legg.g51C. ‘II. = ddidpOopos 11, Galen. 2. p. 27. . &-BradGopia, 7%, incorruption: uprightness, Ep. Tit. 2. 7 (but Lachm. b and Tisch, dp@optay). i - > 22 6-5 , OV, uncorrupted, pure, chaste, Plat. Phaedr. 252.D; dm’ 357, Diod. 1. 59, Plut.:—Adv. —pws épda@a Aeschin, 19. 20. 2. of judges, incorruptible, Plat. Legg. 768 B; of witnesses, Arist. Rhet. I. 15, 17; of magistrates, Id. Pol. ke II. imperishable, Plat. Phaedo 106 D, E. GBradhopéw, to be ddvdpopos or indifferent, ard rt Sext. Emp. P. 1. ‘Ig; mpds 7 M. Anton. 11. 16: ddsagope? c. inf., Lat. nihil refert, Apoll. de Pron, 57. IL. d5. rivds not to differ from, Philo 1. 414. adiadspyors, ews, %,=ddiapopia, Eccl. aBiahopyrixés, 7), dv, like indifference : 7d 45.=dd.apopta, Arr, Epict. ‘2. I, T4. ‘0s, ov, not evaporating or perspiring, Medic. - Brahopia, %, indifference, Cic. Acad, Pr. 2. 42, Sext. Emp. P. x. 152; cf. sq. II. equivalence of signification, Gramm. - d-Biddopos, ov, not different, Arist. Rhet. 1. 12, 35; Tots Spolos Kat G5, Id. Cael. 4. 3, 4. 2. in his Logic, déidpopa are individual objects, as having no logical differentia, adiapopa by Gdialperov 7d eidos Metaph. 4. 6, 15; 45. 7@ et5e Ib. 14; ward 7d Sos Id. Top. 1. 7, 1, cf, An. Post. 2. 13, 7, etc. II. indifferent; in Stoic philosophy, 7a GBiapopa, res mediae or indifferentes, are things neither good nor bad, Cic, de Fin. 3. 16, Epict. Enchir. 32; cf. Sext. Emp. P. 3.177,sq. I1I. in metre, common, Lat, anceps, Gramm. ‘IV. Ady. —pws, without distinction, promi ly, Dion. H, de Demosth, 56. i G-Sidhpaxros, ov, with no divisions or joints, opp. to yovarwons, Theophr, H. P. 1. 5, 3., 8. 5, 2. Adv. -rws, Ib. 6. 5, 3. XUTos, ov, (duaxéw) not softened by cooking, opp. to evdidx., ‘Theophr. C. P, 4. 12, 2. IL. not diffuse or extravagant, of per- sons, Hipp, 22. 45; of style, Longin. 34. 3. 4-Biaxapioros, ov, unespariied, Nie 6. 46, Suid. ipevorros, ov, not deceitful, Diod. 5. 37, Ath, Adv, -rws, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 191. G-5iSaxros, ov, untaught, ignorant, Pseudo-Phocyl. 83; c. gen., a5. épwray Anth. P, 5, 122, cf. Hipp. 382. 34. 2. unpractised, un- trained, of a chorus, Dem. 520. 13. II. of things, untaught, like abrobdibaxros, dp’ éavrod Kal dd. Plut, 2, 968 C, cf. Luc, de Hist. Conscr. 34. 2. dd. Sp&pa not yet acted (v. ibdocKw Tt) Ath, 270 A. IIT. Adv. -rws, without teaching, Plut. 2. 673 F, al. G-BréxStiros, ov, not to be escaped, Apoll. Lex. s. v. vySupos. Ady. ~Tws, Ulp, in Pand, ¥ d-Bieképyacros, ov, not wrought out, Isocr. 104 C; v. 1, dduépyaoros. a 0s, ov, that will not stand inquiry, LXX. GBvetityTOs, ov, (5éf erp) that cannot be gone through, Arist. Phys.3.7,5- G-5reES5evros, ov, having no outlet, AaBipivbos Eust. 1688. 37. G-BréEoS0s, ov, that cannot be gone through, 7d dmeipov Arist. Phys. 3. 5, 2. 2. having no outlet, of places, App. Mithr. 100. aL. act. unable to get out, Anth, P. 11. 395, cf. Plut. 2. 679 B. a-8u 0S, ov, not wrought out, unfinished, \socr, 289 B (cf. ddietépyaoros), Poll. 6. 144, who also cites the Adv.—rws, G-Bepetvyros, ov, inscrutable, Plat. Tim. 25D. 2. uninvestigated, Philo 1. 470, etc, II. of persons, unquestioned, Plut. Dio 19. G-5.euxpivyros, ov, indistinct, Eust. 213. 23. &-5ihynros, ov, indescribable, Xen. Cyr. 8.7, 22,Dem, 219, fin, ‘IT. not related, Heliod. : - HOnrT0s, ov, not filtered or strained, mrisdvn ad. gruel with the meal in it, Hipp. Acut. 384. . &-Bikalapxos, ov,—d5inos pxov, in Cic. Att. 2. 12, a pun on the name of the historian Dicaearchus, as dipos on “Ipos, etc. , &-BixaoSéryTos, ov, where no justice can be got, SuceXia, Diod. Excerpt. 616. 65. ; i a-Sikacros, ov, without judgment given, Plat. Tim. 51 C: undecided, Lue. Bis Acc. 23. Adv. —Tws, Aesop. 2 F 3 GBSixeupr, Boeot. for dducéw: part. pass. Aurelvevos for —ovpevos (in pf. sense) Ar. Ach. 914; cf. d5séw sub fin., and v, Ahrens D. Aeol. p. 210. GBlxevors, ews, 4, a doing wrong, Stoic word, Stob. Ecl. 2. Loo. GBixéw, Solon 4. 22, Att.: Ion. impf. 75ikeov or -edv Hdt. 1. 121: —Pass., fut., in med, form dduefoopar Eur. I. A. 1437, Thuc. 5. 56, Plat., etc.; pass. dduenjcopzat Apollod. 1. 9, 23, v. 1. Dem. 507. 16, etc. To be ddixos, do wrong (defined by Arist., Rhet. 1. 10, 3, 70 Brdnreav éxdvra rapa rov vbpov, cf. adixnpa), first in h. Hom. Cer. 368, where it means to do wrong before the gods, to sin; then in Hat. and Att. ; rddicelv wrong-doing, Soph. Ant. 1059; 70 pabinciv righteous dealing, Aesch, Eum. 85.749; but, oxqoe 70 pabsxetv will restrain wrong-doing, Ib. 694 :—in legal phrase, to do wrong in the eye of the law, the particular case of wrong being added in participle, as wxparns duce .. motéiv .. kad di5donwv Plat. Apol. 19 B, cf, Xen. Mem. init. :—if an acc. rei be added, it must either be the cognate ddviav, dBuehwara, and the like, Plat. Rep. 344 C, 409 A; or some Adj. implying the latter, as G5. ovdty agiov decpod Hat. 3. 145; dbiceiv wodda, peyara, etc., _ Plat. Symp. 188 B, al.; odév, pndey dd, Ib. A, al. :—also, 45. epi 7a ‘puorhpia Dem. 571.15; 43. eis wa, cf. Bast. Ep. Cr. p. 15.—The pres. often takes a pf. sense, J have done wrong, Iam in the wrong, (the pf. being mostly, though not always, used in trans. sense), as el BI) dino, el pi ddixd ye if I am not wrong, implying certainty of being right, Heind. Plat. Charm. 156 A; v. 1. 1, fin. II. trans. c, acc. pers. to do one wrong, to wrong, injure, first in Hdt. 1. 112, 121, al. and Att. : —c, dupl. acc. to wrong one in a thing, Ar. Pl. 460; & roddobs pay enkev Dem, 556,27; 7a péyora, écxara ab. Twa Wolf Leptin. 20; but also, 45. rad wept tivos Plat. Legg. 854 E; a3. twa els SrdhPopos J bi SpOijs .. Kat ddiapOdpov ris yuxijs Dem. 325. 15 ;. cf. Menand. Incert, 3- 15,9: Sup. Adv. -wrara, Plat. | BAdqr pw Arist. Rhet. 2, 12, 15 :—Pass., fo be wronged or injured, pI one | i advapBopos — adedpOwros. dduenP Soph, O. C.174; a5, els rt Eur. Med, 265; peydra a. Aeschin. 65. 35 ; o¥i7' dduce? ovr’ ddtcetrat Plat. Symp. 196 B, etc.; the pres. dducetrar, —ovpevos is used for the pf. Hdlunrat, ~npevos (v. supr. I), Antipho 129. 6, Plat. Rep. 359A, etc., cf. dditep. 2. little more than ev or Kaas Toteiv; ad. yfv Thue, 2.71, etc.; imrov Xen. Eq. 6, 3. , %, a nettle, Diosc. Noth. 4. 94. Sa ating 4 aros, 76, (ddiéw) z eur done, a wrong, Lat. injuria, Hat. 1. 2, 100, al., and Att.: properly, a deliberate wrong, opp. to Gudprnpa and driéxnyua, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 8, 7, sq., Rhet. 1. 13, 16; G3, didpiorar TH Exovoly Id, Eth. N. 5. 8, 2: cf. ddiméw sub init. :—c, | gen. a wrong done to one, a5, rav vépov Dem. 586. 11: also, ad. ampos Twa Arist, Rhet. 1. 13, 3; 48. els te Dem. 983. 25; wept re Plut. 2. C:—ér ddixfjpart Géo0a to consider as a wrong, Thuc. 1. 35 ; also, Blan Ocivai 71 Dem. 188. 19; ynpierbat mT ev aduch pare eivat Hyperid. Euxen. 36. II. Ho which is got by wrong, ill-gotten goods, Plat. Rep. 365 E, Legg. 906 D. ; adixyors, = %, a doing wrong, Olympiod. in Job. 176. GBixnréov, verb. Adj. of dduéw, one ought to do wrong, Plat. Rep. 365 E; paper Exovras dd. elvat Id. Crito 49 A. , 6, a wronger, injurer, Eust., Jo. Chrys. — ois & GBiknricés, 4, dv, (adinéw) disposed to do wrong’, injurious, Plut. 2. 562 D, Ady. —K@s, Stob. Ecl. 2. 228. : GBuchw, Acol. for ddiéw, Sappho 1. 20, cf. Gaisf. Hephaest. p. 65. GSixia, Ion. -iy, 4, wrong-doing, injustice, offence, GBuxins apxewv Hat. 1. 130, cf. 4. 1, Eur. Or, 28, Plat. Gorg. 447 C, al.; TUxm a@AAov 7 Gbixig Antipho 141. 21. II. like ddtenpa, a wrong, offence, Hat. 6. 136; a8. karayvavai twos Andoc.1. 15;—in pl., Plat. Phaedo 82 A, etc. Gdtkide or 4ductw, Dor. for dducéw, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 138, al. GBixiov ypagy, an action against public wrong-doers (v. Att. Proc. P- 345 sq), of the suit against Pericles, Plut. Pericl. 324 mentioned by Harpocr., Hesych., E. M. II. in Hdt. 5. 89, of a hostile invasion, dnd 70d Aiywytéor ddiciov. adtko-Sokéw, (Sdfa) to seek fame by unworthy means, Diod. 31. I. Gdtkodokia, 4, an unfair plan, evil design, Polyb. 23. 16, 7. Gbikopaxéw, to fight unfairly, esp. in the law-courts, Alciphro 3. 29 ; dub. in Poll. 3. 154. GStko-pixta, 7, an unfair way of fighting, Arist. Soph. Elench, 1, 10. Gdixdpayos, ov, of horses, obstinate, Xen, in A. B. 344, 6. Gdtko-pyxtivos, ov, plotting injustice, Ar. Fr. 560. GStko-rhpov, ov, unjustly harming, A. B. 343. Gdtkompayéw, = ddicéw, to act wrongly, Plut. 2. 501 A, Philo 2. 329. aSixonpdynpa, 76, a wrong action, Stob. Ecl. 2. 194. G8ixo-mpayns, és, acting wrongly, Perict. ap. Stob. 487. 47, in Ion, form —mpnyns. GBtkos, ov, (Sin) of persons, wrong-doing, unrighteous, unjust: first in Hes. Op. 258, 332; ddtewrepos Ib. 270; then in Hdt. 2. 119, al., and very freq. in Att.; diay & ddikov dard Aesch. Cho. 398, cf. Supp. 404, etc.; ddiewraros Soph. Tr. to11:—dd. eis re unjust in a thing, és riva towards a person, Hat. |. c.; wepi twa Xen. Cyr. 8. 8, 6 and 27; c. inf., so unjust as to.., Ep. Hebr. 6. 10. 2. dd. tao obstinate, unmanageable, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 26; so, a5. yvdOos is the hard mouth of a horse, Id. Eq. 3, 5; cf. ddueépuayos. II. of things, wrongly done, wrong, unjust, Epypara Theogn. 380, Solon 15. 33; dbixa ppovéeiy Theogn. 395; épya Hdt. 1. 5; a8. Adyos freq. in Ar. Nub. ; ddixav xelpav dpyew to begin offensive operations, Antipho 126. 6, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 13; 70 dixaoy Kal ro a5., 7a Sikara Kal dda right and wrong, Plat. Gorg. 460 E, etc. ; a5. mAodros ill-gotten, unrighteous, Isocr. 10 D; % ddixos. . gvvayary) dvbpds Kal -yuvaixds the unrighteous union, Plat. Theaet. 150 A, cf. Herm. Opusc. 1. 77. III. a6. hpépa, i.e. dvev bindv, a day on which the courts were shut, Lat. dies nefastus, Luc. Lexiph. 6, cf. Archipp. Incert. 4. IV. Adv. —xws, Solon 13. 7, Aesch. Ag. 1546; rods a5. Ovjaxovras Soph. El. 113; etre dy di) Sixaiws ere ad. jure an injuria, Hat. 6.137; dicalws Kar dd. Plat. Legg. 743 B; od« a8. not without reason, h. Hom. Merc. 316, Simon. 92, Lysias 96. 5, Plat. Phaedo 72 A, GBiks-rpotos, ov, of unjust disposition, Crates Incert. 7: GBixd-xerp, XEtpos, 6, ), with unrighteous hand, Soph. Fr. 803. adiko-xpnparos, ov, with ill-gotten wealth, Crates Incert. 7. aBivés, , dv [a], radic, sense close, thick, v. Buttm. Lexil. s. v.: hence in Hom., 1. crowded, thronging, ddwiv xijp, like wumval ppéves, in physical sense, Il, 16. 481, Od. 19. 516; so too of bees, flies, sheep, Il. 2. 87, 469, Od. 1. 92. 2. vehement, loud, of sounds, 48. -ydos Il. 18. 316; Setpives déwvat the loud-voiced Sirens, Od. 23. 326:—but more often as Adv., frequently, or loudly, vehemently, ddwas aveveixato Il. 19. 314; also dévdv and ddwé as Ady., dduvdr your, kAatew, pu- Kac0a, crovaxjoa Hom.: Comp. dduvdrepov Od. 16. 216.—The word continued in use, though rare in Att. Poets, dd. Sdxos a deep bite, Pind. P. 2, 98; 45. Sdxpva thick-falling tears, Soph. Tr. 848 (lyr.); and freq. in Ap. Rh., as 45, tmvos, x@pa abundant, refreshing sleep, 3.616, 747 3 48. ebvf frequent wedded joys, 3.1206. (Some Gramm. wrote it with the aspirate, Scholl. ad Il. 2. 87, which would confirm its prob, relation to dipds; v. sub ddpds.) G-B.d5evr0s, ov, not to be travelled through, Themist. 206 D, Charito 7.3. &-Brolkynros, ov, unarranged, Dem. 709. 5. &-5lomos, ov, without commander, of a ship, Aesch, Fr. 261. G-Biéparos, ov, not to be seen through, Poll. 5. 150. Giopyavcrtos, ov, not organised or formed, Byz. G-Biopydveros, ov, having bad organs, Iambl. V. Pyth. 17. G-5:6p0wr0s, ov, not corrected, not set right, Dem. 50. 18 :—of books, unrevised, Cic, Att. 13. 21; cf. d:0pOwrhs. II. incorrigible, adtoptoria — ddpomepys. trremediable, Sovdeia App. Civ. 3. 90, ef. Diog. L. 5. 66; ddidpOwra ddixeiv Dion. H. 6. 20 :—Ady. -rws, Diod. 29. 25. ddvopioria, 7, indefiniteness, Nicom. Geras. G-Biopirros, ov, undefined, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 1, 2, al.: indefinite, adndov Kat a5, Id. P. A. 1, 1, 5, al. Adv. ~rws, Id. Phys. 1. 1, 3, al. a-Surdaciacros, ov, not doubled, and Ady. -rws, Eust. ‘ d-Stmdacros, and 4-5irdwros, ov, =foreg., Eust. G-Storakros, ov, undoubted, Ptolem. Geogr. I. 4. doubting, Eccl. :—Adv. -rws, Anth. P, 12. 1 51. GdwAtoros, ov, (SdAM¢w) not strained ot filtered, Galen. ablxacros, ov, (Stxa{w) not to be cut in two, Nicom, Geras. dBupéw, fo be free from thirst, Hipp. Coac. 218. 45lqr0s, unthirsting, not lacking moisture, Or, Sib. 1. 132, 185., 3. 403. G-5upos, ov, not thirsty, not suffering from thirst, Hipp. 180 B, Eur. Cycl. 574, Arist. P. A. 3. 6, 8. IT. act. quenching thirst, Hipp. Acut. 385, 394 :—Adv. —Yus, Id. Epid. 3. 1089. 4-5 , ov, unpursued, Synes. ap. Fabr. B. Gr. 8. 240 (ed. 1717). G-5iaporos, ov, not put upon oath, Lat. injuratus, Procop. Anecd. 18 B. G5puhs, Fros, 6, }, pot. for ddduaros, Hom. only in Od. of maidens, unwedded, wapévos dduns 6. 109, 228; so, dduhras adedpds Soph. 0.C. 1056. 2. like G5ynros, of cattle, once in Od., jytovor. . dduF- Tes 4.637. 3. c. gen., dipares vodcow unsubdued by .., Bacchyl. 34. a5piiris, Sos, 7, v. 1. for ddyA77 in Il. 23. 655. G5pyros, 7, ov, post. for ddduaros, in Hom, only in fem. and of cattle, unbroken, Boy fvw .. ddunrnv, jv ot ww ind Cuydy iyayev avip Il. 10. 293, Od. 3. 383; trmov .. eére dduhrny, Bpépos . . kvéovoar Il, 23. 266; ptovoy .. éére dduhrny, fH 7 Gdylorn Sapdcacba Ib. 655. 2. like dbphs, unwedded, of maidens, tapOévy ddphrn h. Hom. Ven. 82, cf. 133, Aesch. Supp. 149; of Artemis, ray aity dbpnrav Soph. El. 1239 ; of Atalanta, ris mpdobev dduqrns Id.O.C.1321. ITI. “Adynros, 6, as pr. n., Hom., etc. G5pokin, %, uncertainty, Call. Fr. 338: also 48pwA% in Hesych. and Arcad,: also a Verb d8pAG and Adv. dSpwAet, in Suid. Gdpwves or GSpwes, of, a kind of sea-fish, Opp. H. 3. 371. - d&vos, acc. to Hesych., Cret. for dyvés. ‘AvS0-Barys, ov, 5, one who has gone to the nether world, restored by Passow in Aesch. Pers. 924 (lyr.) for "AydaBarat. , + G560ev, Adv. from the nether world, Hermesian. 5. 3. adorderws, (Soud(w) without doubt, Anacr. 95. [ot |. c.] Gout, v. sub dvddva. G-SékyTos, ov, unexpected, Hes. (v. infr.); tay 45. xdpiv Soph. O. C. 249; used by Eur, in the concluding moral reflections of the chorus, ra Bonndévr’ obk eredr€aOn, Trav 5 ddoxhrav wépov ebpe Oeds Med. 1417, Alc. 1161, Bacch. 1300, Andr. 1286, Hel. 1690; fvppopd a3, Thuc. 7.29, etc.: 70 a6. the tinexpectedness, surprise, Id. 4. 36, al. II. in Pind. N. 7. 45 ddéenrov kat doxéovra may be either the inglorious and glorious, ot the unexpecting and the expectant. III. Adv. —rws, Thuc. 4.17; also adéxnnra, as Adv., Hes. Fr. 31, Eur. Phoen, 318; so, amd Tov ddoxnrov Thuc. 6. 47; é« Tod dd. Dion. H. 3. 64. G-5oxipacros, ov, untried, unproved, esp. in regard to civic rights, Lys. 140. 14., 175. 45, Aeschin. 56. 3, etc.; cf. Harpocr. Adv. -ras. a-5ékipos, ov, not standing the test, spurious, base, properly of coin, Plat. Legg. 742 A. II. metaph. without repute, ignoble, mean, Aakiopar dddkp’ drBios éxew Eur. Tro. 497; podoa Plat. Legg. 829 D, cf. Dem. 781. 3 :—Adv. —pws, Poll. 5. 160. 2. of persons, Plat. Rep. 618 B: rejected as false, reprobate, Xen. Lac. 3, 3, Ep. Rom. I. 28, 2 Tim. 3. 8, etc. GBdorecxéw [4], f. how, to talk idly, to prate, Eupol. Incert. 11, Plat. Phaedo 70 C, Xen. Oec. 11, 3, etc.:—Verb. Adj. —9réov, Clem. Al. 203. Go-héoxys, ov, 6, a prating, garrulous fellow, idle talker, esp. of reputed sophists; Swxparynv, Tov mrwxdv 46. Eupol, Incert. 10, cf. Ar. Nub, 1485 ; 7 Updd:xos, 7 rdv 45. els yé ris Id. Fr. 418; 48, 71s cop.orns Plat. Polit. 299 B, cf. Theaet. 195 B, Rep. 488 E. II. in good sense, a keen, subtle reasoner, Plat. Crat. 401 B, cf. ddoAcoxla It. (Prob. from ddnv, Aéoxn, talking to satiety: the a is long (as in d6n- xéres, v. GBéw), Eupol. and Ar. Il. c.; and in Mss, it sometimes has ¢ subscr, dSoAecyxeiv, as in Paris Ms. of Dem. 1462. 12.) adorcoxla [a], 7, prating, garrulity, idle talk, Ar. Nub. 1480, Isocr. 292 D, Plat. Theaet. 195 C; a foible of old persons, Arist. Rhet. 2. 13, 12; Theophr. wrote wept ddoAecxias, Char. 3. IL. keenness, subtlety, Plat. Phaedr. 269 E, Parmen. 135 D. GBSoheoxuKds [4], 7, dv, prating, 7d —Kéby garrulity, Plat. Soph. 225 D. 486-Aeoxos [a], ov,=ddorécxns, Monost. in Com. Fr. 4. p. 347, Anth, P. app. 236. Z G-Bohos, ov, guileless, without fraud, honest, copia Pind. O. 7. 98; in Att. esp. of treaties, d5. eipqvy Ar. Lys. 168; omrovbal ad. wat aBraBeis Thuc. 5. 18:—Adv., often in the phrase ddéAws wat dixalws without fraud or covin, Lat. sine dolo malo, Thuc. 5. 23; cf. Polyb. 22. 15, 2, with Liv. 38. 11, and y. sub 8éAos; so, mAoureiy dddAws Scol. 8 Bergk ; ddorwrepov A€yerOar, opp. to maTGs, Antipho 122. 42. _ II. of liquids, unadulterated, g , Aesch. Ag. 953 oT¥pag Diosc. 1.79; dp- yuproy Poll. 3. 86; metaph., avpars ddéAus Yuxas pure, Eur. Supp. 1029. , Ep. for €adov, aor. 2 of avddve. &8évqros, ov, (Sovéw) unshaken, Anth, P. 5. 268. k aBovis, %, post. for dndovis, Mosch. 3.47, Meineke Theocr. Ep. 4.11. [4] _ G-Bdtaoros, ov, unexpected, Soph. Fr. 215 b. 2. not matter of Opinion, i.e. certain, Plat. Phaedo 84 A. II. act. not supposing, i.e. knowing with certainty, Diog. L. 7.162 :—forming no rash opin- ion, Plut. 2. 1058 B: cf. d0fa:—Ady. -7Tws, opp. to Soyparixds, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 15, ete. II, act. un- jet a aBokéw, fo be ddotos, be held in no esteem, to stand in ill repute, Eur. Hec. 294, Dem. 374. 7; opp. to eddoxtueiy Arist. Rhet. 1, 12, 16. II. trans, to hold in no esteem, in contempt, rwd Plut. Lucull. 4:—hence in Pass., al Bavavoueat [réxvat] .. ddogoovrae mpds tov médew Xen. Occ. 4, 2. a86Enpa, aros, 76, disgrace, Plut. 2. 977 E. GSofta, 7, the state of an ddofos, ill-repute, disgrace, Hipp. Lex 2, Thuc.‘ I. 76, Plat. Phaedo 82 C, Dem., etc.: obscurity, Plut. Agis 2. II. contempt, App. Syr. 41. a-Sotoroinros, ov, not led by opinion, unreasoning, Polyb. 6. 5, 8. GBokos, ov, without dé¢a, inglorious, wbAcpor Dem. 58.6: disreputable, © téxvn Xen. Symp. 4, 56. 2. of persons, obscure, ignoble, Isocr. 286 A; dvwvupot kat 45. Dem. 106. 7, cf. Arist. Rhet. 2. 6, 24; of eunuchs, despised, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 61 :—Adv. —fas, Plut. Thes. 35. II.= mapdbotos, unexpected, Soph. Fr. 71; improbable, opp. to évbogos, Arist. Top. 8. 6, 1, etc.; 7d ddoférara A€yew Ib. g. 4. GBopos, ov, (5épw) =dvéxdapros, Suid. II. as Subst., ddopos, 6, =kd&puxos, a skin, Antimach., cf. Schellenb, ad Fr. 56. a-Sopros, ov, without food, fasting, Lyc. 638. d-Sopipopyros, ov, without body-guard, Arist. Pol. 5.12, 4. dos, eos, 76, satiety, loathing, only in Il. 11. 88 Tdpvev dévipe Hakpa, ddos ré puy ixero Ovpdy, where Heyne proposes dup’, adds ré puy ixero: vy. sub nv. aSos, 74, a decree, Inscr. Hal. reprinted from Newton in Cauer’s Delect. Inscrr. 131. 20; cf. Hesych, dSnpa, dBos* yidiopa, déypa, with Schmidt's note, p. 44. 84, and addend.:—and Eust. 1721, 61 cites a Verb dSéw from Hipponax, ddnre BovAn, iyour iipecke 7d BovAEvpa, so / that dew, d5os seem to be from 4/AA, dvddvw, taba, &Sos, 45octvn, Dor. for F5os, #50cdvn. &-Soros, ov, without gifts, h. Hom. Merc. 573. a-BovAeutos, ov, one who has never been a slave, Isae. ap. Poll. 3. 80, Arr. Epict. 2. Io, 1. aSouhla, }, a being without slaves: poverty, Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 2 3. d-5ovdos, ov, unattended or hed by slaves, d5ovAa Shpad’ éorias Eur. Andr. 593; c. gen., Tav Troovray adovAos unattended by .., Ael. N.A. 6.10. 2. having no slaves, too poor to keep a slave, Phryn. Com, Movérp. 1; cf. Ruhnk. Vell. Paterc, 2. 19, 4, Madvig Advers. 1. 580. II. impatient of slavery, dSovdérepos Tov AcdvTav Philo 2. 451. &-5otAwros, ov, unenslaved, unsubdued, Diod. 1. 53, Or. Sib. 5. 18, cf. 10, 22 (where ddovAevros seems to be an error); ddovAwror j5ov7q Crates OnB. 9. Btobiasts: ov, noiseless, Anth, P. 5. 294. G-Souros, ov, =foreg., Epiphan. 1. 262. “AiSo-hoirns, ov, 6, =“AcdoBarns, Ar. Fr. 198. 4. aSpata, Macedon, for ai@pia, Hesych. GSpiixts, és, =ddepxeqs, Hesych. Pp carte es, = ddpavys, restored by Dind. in Anth. P. 9. 135, for pavén. G-Bpaveua, 7, listlessness, weakness, Hdn, 2. 10, 17: Ep. dSpavty, Ap. Rh. 2. 200, etc. aa aSpiivéw, to be ddpavfs, Opp. H. 1. 296, Nonn. 32. 280. aSpiivis, és, (Spatva) inactive, powerless, feeble, Babr. 25. 3, Anth. P. 9. 359, Plut. 2. 373 D, etc.; of nations, Arr. Epict. 3. 7, 13; of plants, Comp. —éo7epos, Diosc. 3.124: Sup.-€oraros, Lxx (Sap.13.19). 2. intractable, of iron, Plut, Lycurg. 9, Lysand. 17. II. act. ener- vating, Plut. 2. 987 E. . GSpavin, 7, poet. for ddpavea. *ASpacrea, Ion. "Adpqorea, 7, a name of Nemesis, from an altar erected to her by Adrastus, first in Aesch, Pr. 936, v. Blomf. Gloss., and cf. mpockuvéw. (From 4, didpdoxw, =dvanddpacros airia, acc, to Arist. Mund. 7, 5: for other derivs. y. Schol. Plat. Rep. 451 A.) a8Spacros, Ion. dSpyoros, ov, (Siipdcxw) not running away, not in- clined to do so, of slaves, Hdt. 4. 142 :—in Il. only as prop. n. II. pass. not to be escaped, Dio Chr., cf. "ASpdorea. a&Spacros, and dSparos, ~ eared oe done, Hesych., A. B. 7. dSpddatus or dSpadatus, 7, v. drpapagus, seen %, a kind of tree, often confounded with dvépdéxvn, Theophr. H. P..1. 5, 2, Plin. N. H. 13. 22. d-Spériivos, ov, untouched by sickle, Soph. Fr. 804. GSp-ernBodos, ov, (d5pds) attaining great things, Longin. 8. 1. a-Sperros, ov, unplucked, Aesch. Supp. 663 (lyr.). dSpevw, post. for dpdevw, W5pevcas Or. Sib. 9. 310. GSpéw, fo be ddpds or grown up, hdpnews Diosc. 2. 107 :—pass. forms adpetro, a5pwmpevov (—ovpevoy) in Hesych, ddpyoros, Ion. for dSpacros, ov, Hdt.; so too “Adpyaros, etc. : *ASpias, ov, Ion. ASptns, ew, 6, the Adriatic, Hdt. 5. 9, etc. :—Adj. *Abpuiivés, 7, ov, (cf. dAexropis), but in earlier Att. "ASpunvés, Adriatic, KOpa tas ’Adpinvas dxras Eur. Hipp. 736 (lyr.); so, in Aesch, Fr, 67, Herm. restores ’Adpinval re -yuvaikes :—also ’ASpravuxés, 9, dv, v. 1. Arist. H. A. 6.1, 3, al.; “ASprarucés, Ath, 285 D; “ASpuiixds dydi- popeds i.e. a cask of Italian wine, called Adriatic because imported through Corcyra, Anth. P. 6. 257, Arist. Mirab. 104, Hesych.: pecul, fem. “ASprds, d5os, Dion. P. 92. d-Sptpus, v, not tart or pungent, Luc. Trag. 323. : 45p6-Bwhos, ov, in large pieces or masses, of bdellium, Diosc. 1. 80, cf, Plin. 12. 19. Abaaaehee, ov, with large head, Paul. Aeg. 6. 94. SG &Spo-peprs, és, of coarse, large grains, opp. to Aeropepys, Diod. 5. 26: coarse, of wine, Ib. 10. Adv, -@s, Galen. SO Arist. 4Bpd-prsos, ov, getting or asking high pay, Scymn. 352. : _ &pdopat, Pass, (aip/s) to grow ripe, come to one’s strength, Plat, Rep. 498 B: to be stout, Myro ap. Ath. 657 D. _ GSpés, 4, dv, in the primary sense it seems, like ddwéds (to which it is re- lated as xvdpds to kvdvds), to mean thick, stout, bulky : I. of things, xtova GBpiy mimrovoay ideiy falling thick, Hdt. 4. 31; ra&v dvOpdxav of geet the most solid, Hipp. 648. 55; kioves ad. large, Diod. 3. 47; Tovs adpordrous ray AéuBwv Id. 20. 85 :—strong, great in any way, dipds méAeuos Ar, Ran. 1099; pevuara full, swollen, Arist. Probl. 28. I, 33° 0f rain, violent, Id. Mund. 4,6; of fire, Plut. Solon 1; d59ypa Diod. 1.35; Swpeds re kal rypds ddpds dodvar in abundance, Id. 19. 86; of style, grandiose, Longin. 40,4; 7d d8., Lat. ubertas, grandilo- quentia, opp. to 70 iaxydy, Schif. Dion. H. de Comp. p. 65:—Adv. Comp., ddporépws Siarray to live more freely, Hipp. Aph. 1243; ddp. pappaxevery Ib.; also neut. as Ady., dépdy yeAdoat to loud, Antiph. Anyy. 2. 8, cf. Poll. 4. 9; a3pérepov meiv to drink more deeply, Diphil. Aip. 1. II. of persons, large, fine, well-grown, re 70 maudiov ddpdv yévnrar Hat. 4.180; 7@ macdl, émpy 2 éy Hipp. 232. 42; Tav maldav bam dépot Plat. Rep. 466 E; of ddpérepoe the best-grown, the stronger, Isocr. 255 C; in Lxx, of ddpot are the chiefs, princes, 4 Regg. ro. 6, 2. so of animals, yotpos Xen, Oec, 17, 10; Av«os Babr. 101; and in later Com., often of flesh, fish, etc., Antiph. *Axeotp. I, Adteup. I, 21, Alex. Tayo. 1, etc. 3. of fruit or corn, full-grown, ripe, bxes ein xapros a5, Hdt, 1.17, cf. Arist. Metaph. 4. 7, 8. 4, of an egg, ready to be hatched, Id. H. A. 6. 2, 7.—The word first occurs in Hdt., never in Trag., and is rare in the best Att. writers ; but the derivs. d5pérns, d5poctvn, dptvw occur in Hom., Hes., Soph., al. adpocta, 4, (Spdcos) want of dew, Joseph. A. J. 2. 2, 5. GSpocivy, 7, (d5pdés)=sq., of ears of corn, Hes. Op. 471. G5pé-oaipos, ov, with or in large balls or globules, of the padd- Ba§pov, Arr. Peripl. M. Rubri, p. 38, GBSporys, 7ros, 1), thickness, ripeness, vigour, strength, esp. of body, Il. 16. 857., 22. 363., 24. 6 (ubi vulg. dvdpéryra) ; of plants, Theophr, H. P. 7. 4, 11: metaph. of sound, loudness, Amarant. ap. Ath. 415 A. It. abundance, 2 Ep. Cor. 8. 20. GSpde, v. dipdopa. GSpua, ra, =dicpdSpva, said to be a Sicilian word, Ath. 83 A, Hesych. . dpvds, ddos, 7, (a copul., dpds)="Apabdpuds, Anth, P. 9. 664. GSpuvors, ews, %),a coming to maturity, Arist. Metaph. 10.9, 3,Phys.3-1,6. GBpuvrixés, 7, dv, ripening, strengthening, Epiphan. 1. 945. GBpive, (dipds) to make ripe, ripen, ddpvar Soph. Fr. 805 ; ddptvaw Xen, Mem. 4. 3, 8 :—Pass. to grow ripe, ripen, come to maturity, of fruit or corn, Hdt. 1. 193, Arist. Phys. 5. 6,6; of the embrya or young | animals, Id, H, A. 6. 10, 14., 9. 34, 3:—V. ddpéw, ddpdopar. a8Spurros, ov, (Spirrw) not scratching or tearing, Nonn. D. 11. 137. G-5pv , ov, unfenced, arelx.aros, aptAakros, dvev Sixacrypiov, Hesych. :—metaph., dovos nal dradatmmpos, A. B. 345. - &u-Boas, -yhwooos, —emys, -Adyos. —peAns, Dor. for 5v- éc, to want power, be incapable, Lxx (Sirach, in prologo).. BBivila, Ion. -iy, 4, want of strength or power, bodily inability or exhaustion, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12. 2. lly, inability, incapacity, Hat. 8.111, Antipho 129. 33, Plat, Legg. 646 ©, etc.; di’ dvvaplay ” Arist.G: A. 1. 18, 55, etc. ; c. gen., a5. tov dduceiv for wrong-doing, Plat. Rep. 359 B; 7@v mpaypdrwv for business, Arist. Pol, 5. 11.16; c. inf., Plat. Legg. 532 B, 3. poverty, Xen, Occ. 20, 22, Dem, 399. 20. 4. an impossibility, Arist. Pott. 25, 6. G-Stviipos, ov, = détvaros, Diosc. 5. 13. adiviiola, 4, =ddvvapia, Hat. 3. 79., 7-172, Thuc, 8.8; c. gen., a. Tod rE Id. 7. 8.—The. forms tes Dion, H. de Dem. 26, , Dinol. in A, B. 345, are prob. errors, Lob. Phryn. 508. euros, ov, not subject to a bvvagrhs, Synes. 19 C. ort, Ady. impotently, Suid. aBivirée, of persons, to be ddvvaros, to want strength, Epich. 147 Ahr., - Plat. Rep. 366 D, Arist. de Somn. 1, 8: c. inf,, to be unable to do, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 23, Arist. Eth. N, ro. 4, 10, Pol. 3. 16, 10, II. of things, to be impossible, Ev. Matth, 17. 20, Ev. Luc. 1. 37, cf. LXX (Gen, 18. 14). a Sivi v], ov, I. of persons, unable to do a thing, c. inf., . ace Epich. 130 Ahr. Eur. H, F. 56, etc.; advvaros elrety Rhet. 2. 2, 7:—Comp., tov 8uvarwrepov Tod ddvvarwrépov . pve éxew] Plat. Gorg. 483 D: Sup., -wraros Aéyew Eupol. Any. _ &. absol. without strength, powerless, weakly, Hat. 5:9: Eur. Ion 596, Andr. 746; of aBivaroe men disabled for service, incapable, whether as invalids or paupers, cf. Lys, bmp tod dbvvdrov, Arist. Fr. 430, Bickh P. E. 1. 323, sqq.3 €v ois rows puOopopeiv Aeschin. 14. 40; 43. cdpari Lys. 197. 26;.45. xphuact poor, Thuc. 7. 28; es 7 Plat. Hipp. Mi. 366 B :—so of things, disabled, vées Hat, 6. 16 :—10 68. want of strength, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 296 A; 7d 46. disabilities, Dem. 262. 24. TI. of things, that cannot be done, im, e, Eur, Or. 665, Hel. 1043, Plat., etc.; ddvvara BovAopat Lyne. Kevr, 12 :—ddv- yardy [ori] c. inf, Hdt. 1. 32, al.; or dddvard [éo71], Id. 1. 91., 6. 106, Thuc.; 45. tut dore.., Plat. Prot. 338 C: 7d dd. impossibility, Hat. 9. 60, Att.; 7d 48, xaprepetv Eur. 1. A. 1370; ToApay dbvvara ‘Id, Hel, 811; ddvvdrav épay Id. H. F, 318:—Comp., ddvvardrepov ér.., loldy re .. Plat. Theaet. 192 B, cf. Parm. 138 D: Sup., 8 57, may- tov ddvvarwraroyv Id. Phileb. 15 B. III. Adv. —rws, without power or skill, feebly, AéyeoOar Antipho 122. 42 5 dpiverbat Id. 127. 26: —dd. Zxew to be unwell, Plat. Ax. 364 B; to be unable, c. inf., Arist. Rhet. ad Al. 25, 3.—Little used in Poets, and of the Trag. only by Eur. 45¥-ouvos, &5v-mvoos, 45v-moAts, Dor, for H5v-. &5us, Dor. for #3vs. * se ddpdusoBos — tet — &-Bucdmnros, ov, not to be put out of countenance, shameless, inexorable, Plut. 2.64 F, etc. Ady. —rws, Ib. 534 B. fe7 f ov, (50) not to be entered, Pind. P. 11. 73 a5, éotw 6 rémos Strabo 650... II. mostly as Subst. the innermost sanctuary or shrine, Lat, adytum, Il. 5. 448, 512, Pind. O. 7. 59 (where however the is not determined) ; it is d5vrov, 70, in Hat. 5. 72, Eur. Ion 938 ; i. 6, in h. Hom. Merc, 247:—metaph., é« Tod 45. rHs BiBAou Plat. Theaet. 162 A; a5. ris Paddoons Opp. H. 1. 49. Sw, Att. contr. for deldw, q. v- ros, ov, (Swpaw) unbuilt, Nonn. D. 17. 40. Bye Bev [a], dvos, 4, Dor. for dndév, Mosch. 3. 9; cf doris. “Adav (a , wvos, 6, ="Adwvs, Anth,P.6.275; v. Burm. Propert. 2. 10, 53. Z » }, epith. of Aphrodité, Orph. Arg. 30: cf. Adavids. *ASdvevos, a, ov, of Adonis, Suid. *ASava, 74, the mourning for Adonis, celebrated yearly by Greek matrons, Cratin, Boux. 2, cf. "ASwvis :—hence ’Adwrid{ovoa (as if from *Adwvuitw, to keep the Adonia) as title of the 15th Id. of Theocr. *ASwviaxés, 7, dv, of or for Adonis, Arr. Epict. 4. 8, 36. *Adavds, d5os, ),=Adwvaia, Nonn. D. 33. 25. ’Al , ob, 6, the mourning for Adonis, Ar. Lys. 390. *ASavos, 6, rare form of “Adwvs, Meineke Com. Fr. 2, p. 188, Plut. 2, 706 C. IT. as Adj. os, ov, of Adonis: hence, 1. "Addviov, 76, a statue of him borne in the Adonia, Suid. 2. (sub. wétpov) a kind of verse, consisting of a dactyl and spondee, Herm. El. Metr. 715. “ASavs [i], s5os (also sos, Pherecr. Incert. 21), 6, Adonis, son of Cinyras and Myrrha, favourite of Aphrodité, @ tov “Adwvw Sappho 63 ; *Abwve dryopev kal tov “Ad. KAdopev Pherecr. Incert. 84; Gdwvs, i.e. 6 “A6., Theocr. 3. 47 :—hence, generally, an Adonis, a favourite, darling, bet “Addévibas abrods dxovev Luc. Merc. Cond, 35, cf. Alciphr. 1. 39, Anth. P, 5. 113. 2. ’Adwvidos Kio, cresses and suchlike quick- growing herbs grown in pots for the Adonia, Plat. Phaedr. 276 B, cf, Theocr, 15. 113: proverb., of any short-lived pleasure, v. Interpp. Plat. 1. c. II. a kind of flying-jish, elsewh. é&@xorros, Clearch, ap. Ath, 332 C, Opp. H. 1. 157, etc. G-Sdpyros, ov,=ddwpos, h. Hom, Merc. 168; mpés twos Eur. Hec. a II.=ddwpos 1, Eus. P. E. 782 C, G-Swpia, 7, incorruptibility, Poll. 8. 11. &-Sapoddkyros, ov, = ddapoddxos, Aeschin, 65. 21, etc. Adv.—rws, Dem, 310. 22., 342. 18. GSapodoxia, 7),=ddwpia, Dio C. Fr. 37. G-Bapodikos, ov, incorruptible, Anth. P. 9. 779, Nonn. &-Swpbdqmr0s, ov, =foreg., Hesych., Schol. Thue. 2. 65. E-BSapos, ov, without gifts, taking none, incorruptible, c. gen., dSapd- Taros xpnuarov Thue. 2. 65 ;—Adv. -ws, Poll. 8. 11. 2. unpaid, mpéaBevors C, I. 1625. 25. II. giving no gifts, c. gen., a5. Twos not giving it, Plat. Symp. 197D; ddapas édapnBodias by hunting from which no gifts were offered, Soph. Aj. 178. III. Gdwpa bapa gifts that are no gifts, like Bios éBiwros, Ib. 674; cf. ddcdapos. d-SaTys, ov, 6, one who gives nothing, Hes. Op. 353. as G€[}, Dor. for dei, Pind. P. 9.154 (si vera 1.), cf. Cramer An, Par. 3. 321. d-edvos, ov, undowered, Hesych., who also expl, it by moAvpepvos. Gévwros, ov, (é5vde) = foreg, : unaffianced, Lyc. 549. GeOdevw, &éAcupa, deg, —qT ip, —yT Hs, etc., Ep. and Ion. for d@A-. GeOAvov, Ep. and Ion. for GAov, the prize of contest, Il. 9. 124, Od. 8. 108. II. for d@dos, the contest, Od. 24. 169 and later Ep. Gét0s, ov, also a, ov, gaining the prize, or running for it, twmos Kady kat deOXin a race-horse, Theogn, 257; dé@dcos immos Call. Del. 113; pijkov dé0r. the apple of discord; Anth, P. 9. 637. ‘The contr. form GOAx0s is used in a restricted sense, GeOov, 75, dePAos, 6, Ep. and Ion, for d@Aov, dXos. GePAo-vixla, 7}, victory in the games, Pind. N. 3. 11, deOootvn, 7%, a contest, a struggle, Anth. P. 5. 294. dePAoddpos, oy, Ep. and Ion, for dOAopépos. dei [4], Ep. aict, aiéy (v. sub fin.), Adv. ever, always, for ever, for aye, Hom., etc.; often with other specifications of time, as Stapmepes aici, auvexes alel, éupeves aici, Hom.; ded kab? hpepav, Kal’ jpepay det, det kat kal? huepay, ded kar’ énaurdv, ded Bid Blov, etc., Heind. Plat. Phaedo 75, D, Schiif. Greg. 169 and Appar, ad Dem, 3. 265, Pors. Phoen. 1422; dep’ det until now, Pors. Or. 1679; also els del, eioact, éoacl, v. eloaet.—With the Artic., 6 det ypdvos eternity, Hdt. 1, 54, Plat. Phaedo 103 E, etc.; of ded dvres the immortals, Xen. Cyr. 8. 7, 32 ete. :—but, 6 alet Bactrevwr the king for the ee being, Hat. 9- 116; ot del Bind Lovres Dem. 585. 243 6 det évrds -yevdpevos every one as he got inside, Thuc. 4. 68; Tov det mpooruxdvra Dem. 557. 20; Toit ToUToV aie? éeyévo.or to their descendants Jor ever, Hdt, 1. 105, cf. 3. 83, etc.; in Aesch, Pr. 937, 0Gmre roy xparodvr’ del, the position of det is due to the requirement of the metre—Of this word 14 forms are enume- rated, Ahrens D. Dor. 378 sq.:—We here notice the following : 1 aiet, Ep, and Ion,, and in all Poets except the Att.: Hom, aoe def three times, when his metre required the rst syll, to be short. 2. aiev, bt by = Sepals the ult. was required to be short; occasionally also 68a, ofa 5 aba er er Fa op Pr. 428, Ag. 891, Soph. Aj. being long or short, as the oh aed € on 7 conioes Att. form, the rst syll. Gopyists often substituted the Ion uit key nee was lone the edit Peiee but io the b on, aiel, and introduced this form even s ? z est MSs. the true Att. form is often pre- age Sa ge Sad long, as in the Laur. of Soph., and the Rav. of +5 Ch ‘OS, €l0ael, Kaiw, Kralw, H Bion 1 I. 1, Tab, Heracl. in C, I, B774. rie 4. “, ria of pov cf. d€é-vaos, 6. Ht, Boeot., and 7. Aeol. ats or ay, & or “Ww, aePrarrIs — deipw. Ahr. D, Aecol. p. 156; di- is freq. in Inserr., as dtovros, etc. (The MAITP occurs in aifei, C.1.1: with aifév, dfidios, cf. Skt. atva (Ved,), évas (vitae ratio), Lat. aevum, aetas (aevitas), aeternus (aeviternus), Goth, aivs (aidv), aiveins (alwvios), aiv= Germ. ewig = ever.) N. B, Some compds. of del, which are in no way altered by compos., are left out: for they are written divisim in the best Edd., and they can always be found under the simple form. da-Bhaoris, és, ever-budding, Theophr. C. P. 1. 11, 6. ' deaBddoryos, ews, 7, a perpetual budding, Theophr. Ibid, det-BXacrtos, ov, = de.BAaorHs, Manass. Chron. 189. odos, ov, (BdAAw) continually thrown, Anth. P. 6, 282. de-Bpuis, és, (Bpiw) ever-sprouting, Nic. Th. 846. de-yeverta, 4}, perpetual generation, Iambl, ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 900. deu-yevernp, Tpos, 6, ever-generating, Orph, H. 7. 5. dev-yevérns, only in Ep. form atevyevérns, ov, 6, (yevéa0ar) epith. of the gods, like aitv éévres, everlasting, immortal, used by Hom. only at the end of a line, Oe@y alevyeverdov Il. 2. 400, al.; Oeois alevyevérnow 3. 296, al. det-yevijs, és, everlasting, Plat. Legg.773E,Symp.206 E, Xen. Symp.8,1. Gevyevvyris, ov, 6, (yevvdw) perpetual producer, epith. of Apollo (7 roy avrov det yiyvecOa Kat det yevvav), ap. Macrob. Sat. 1. 17. Gei-yvyros, ov, =devyevérns, Orph. Arg. 15. * G-edéAtos, ov, =sq., E. M. 21. 33. G-elSedos, ov, (* Feldw) unseen, dark, Hes, Fr. 61: obscure, Opp. H. 1. 86, etc. II. not to be looked on, and so, dazzling, Nic. Th. 20, (For didnAos, as dld.os for detdios, dmepelaros for dreipéotos, Buttm. Lexil. s. v. didnAos 7.) d-cdns, és, (* Feldw) unseen, without bodily form, immaterial, opp. to cwparoednys, often in Plat., as Phaedo 79 A. II. (eidévar) un- known, obscure, Plat. Ax. 365 C. III. (eldos) without form, Arist. Cael. 3. 8, 3. 2. dvceadys, unsightly, Philetaer. Kuv, 1:—Ady. ~64s, dub, 1, Theophr: C. P. 2. 4, 11. _ Gedia, 7, (derdqs 111) deformity, Joseph. B. J. 7. 5, 5. Ge-divnros [7], ov, ever-revolving, Anth. P. 6. 289. GetStos, ov, Adj. from del, as sempiternus from semper, everlasting, Hesych., Orac, ap. Didym. de Trin. 2, 17, 1. Ge-Bovdeta and de-SovAla, 7, perpetual slavery, Poll. 3. 80. del-Spopos, ov, ever-running, Greg. Naz. 168 B. . defSw, Ion. and poét. form (cf. deipw) used by Hom., Pind., and some- times by Att. Poets (even in trim., Aesch. Ag, 16, Eur. Fr. 188, Cratin. Incert, 142), also in Ion. Prose; Att. contr, qSw (also in Anacr. 45, Theocr.), Trag., Plat., etc. :—impf. #e:5ov Od., also Gedo Il., etc.; Att. qoov Eur. Alc. 761, Thuc, :—fut. deicowar Od. 22. 352, Theogn., but Gooua h, Hom. 5. 2., 32. 19, and always in Att. (for in Ar, Pax 1297 ioet is now admitted ; and in Plat. Legg. 666 D Pors, restored motav 6é Hoovcw ..pavhy ;): rarely in act, form delow Sapph. 11, Theogn. 4, Ar. Lys. 1243 (Lacon.), and late Poets (in Eur. H. F. 681 detéw is restored by Elmsl.) ; still more rarely dow (y. supr.) Babr. 12. 13; Dor, doedpar Theocr, 3. 38, ¢o@ Id. 1, 145 :—aor. Hetoa Call. Ep. 22. 4, Opp., Ep. deca [a] Od. 21. 411, and late Ep., decoy Eur. Tro. 513, Ar.; joa Ar. Nub. 1371, Plat. Tim, 21 B.—Pass., defSoua: Pind., Hdt.: poét. impf. deiSero Pind.: aor. ony, v. infr. 1. 1: pf. #owae Plat. Com. Aaxwy, I, 11.—An imper. aor, med. defoeo occurs in h. Hom, 16. 1, unless deiSeo be read,—Cf. d:-aetdw, én-, mpoo-, cvv-ddw, (From 4/ FEIA with a prefixed, as in deipm, défw, come deldw (4FelSw), dovdds, ania: cf, Skt. vad, vaddmi (loquor), vadas (sermo); Lith. vadint (voco) ; cf. also the later Gr. words t5w, #5ys.) [&: but @ in arsi Od. 17. 519, h. Hom. 27, 1, Theogn. 4, Theocr. 7. 41, etc.] To sing, ll. 1. 604, etc.: hence all kinds of sounds of the voice, ¢o crow, as cocks, twitter as swallows, hoot as owls, croak as frogs, etc., Arist. Mirab. 70, Theophr. de Sign. 3. 5, etc.:—also of other sounds, to twang, of the bowstring, Od. 21. 411; to whistle, of the wind through a tree, Mosch. 5. 8; to ring, of a stone when struck, Theocr, 7. 26 :—mplv vevixnnévat G5ev to crow too soon, Plat. Theaet. 164 A.—Construction :—éeid. rivi to sing to one, Od, 22. 346; but also ¢o vie with one in singing, Theocr, 8.6; d5. mpds addAdy 7 Avpay to sing to.., Arist. Probl. 19. 93 ia avAdy Plut. 2. 41 C ;—deloas .. xaipey Anuoxdéa, post. for eires, C. 1. 3256. 7. II. trans., 1. c. acc. rei, to sing, chant, pivw " debe werd. I. 1.13 marhova 1. 473; wAéa dvdpayr, vdoror, etc., 9. 189, Od. 1. 326; rdv Borwrioy vdpov Soph. Fr. 858:—also absol., a. dpdpi Tivos to sing in one’s praise, Od. 8. 267; els twa Ar. Lys, 1243: later simply = xadeiv, Ael. N. A. 2. 28:—Pass., of songs, to be sung, Hdt. 4. 353 Ta AexOévra Kal doOévra Plat. Lys. 205 E; dopa nadas Gober, opp. to Adyos Karas fnOels, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 55+ 2. c, acc, pers., to sing, praise, as Lat. canere, Pind. P. 5. 32, and Att.; hence in Pass., deiSerat Opépaic’ ijpwas is celebrated as the nurse of heroes, Pind, P. 8. 35. 3. in Pass. also, to resound with song, deldero may Tépevos - - Oadlas Pind. O. 10 (11). 92. de-eord, %, eternal being, Antipho ap. Harp.; cf. eveorw, dmeorw. delola, 7%, eternal life, Eccl. de{-Lwos, ov, Att. contr, delLws, wy, ever-living, everlasting, mop dei{wov Heraclitus 20; del(wy mbar, decChou méas, both in Aesch. Fr. 31; det(ws ryeved: Soph. Fr. 806; defCwv €drxos Ib. 807; deifws Oeds C. I, 4598; dei(hou Ywvyxas Melanipp. 6, cf. C. 1. 6199: metaph., dos diary Aesch, Supp. 988. II. dei(wor, 76, an evergreen plant, prob, houseleek, Lat. sempervivum, Theophr. H. P. 1. 10, 4, Plut., etc. delwdrys, nros, 7),=derCwia, Isid. Pelus. del-Lwros, ov, ever girded, aye ready, E. M. 22. 20. dea-ldwv, ova, ov, ever-living, de(wovra ..lepd Call. Del. 314; yeverijpos de{hovros Nonn, Jo. I. 343 deQwoucay pdrAny Anth. P. 1. 10, 35+ g 25 deu-OtAys, és, ever-green, Anth: P. 7. 198., 12. 256: metaph, ever- blooming, Xdpures Orph. H. 60, 5:—rd deBades Tav pvAdwy Diosc. 4. 88. der-Oiivijs, és, ever-dying, ever fearing death, Manetho 1. 166. deWepys, és, (8€pw) always warming, Eratosth. p. 144 Bernh. del-Poupos, ov, ever-warlike, Opp. C. 2. 189. det-OpvAnros, ov, ever talked of, celebrated, lo. Lyd. de Magistr. 3. 51. det-Kaptros, dv, ever fruit-bearing, Theophr. C.P. 1. 22, 4. é€\uos, a, ov, Od, 4. 244, but also os, ov 19. 341; collat. poét. form of dens, Od. 13. 402, Il. 14. 84, and Hdt.; contr. atkéAvos Theogn. 1344, Eur. Andr. 131 (lyr.) :—of things, words, and actions; more rarely of persons, Od. 6. 242. Adv. —iws, Od. 8. 231., 16. 109. d-eunns, és, unseemly, insulting, shameful, dekéa dovyoy dpdbyey Il. I. 456, al.; deteéa [efpara] éooa Od. 24. 250; Seopds Aesch. Pr. 97, cf. 525; deel odv orodp Soph. El. 191; detkéorepa érea Hat. 7. 133 obdéy dees mapéxegOar to cause no inconvenience, Id. 3. 24; deen pucOdv mean, scanty, Il, 12. 4353 so, ob..deméa..dmowa 24. 494. Ady. de:nas, Hesych.; Ion. -€ws, Simon, 13; demés as Adv., Od. 17. 216. 2. oddity deés éort, c. inf., it is nothing strange that.., Hadt. 3. 33., 6. 98, Aesch. Pr. 1043.—Cf. the Att. form ais. deta, Ion. -ty [7, whence in the Mss. often written —e/n], 7), outrage, injury, wacav deiny dmexe xpot (from Hector’s body) Il. 24. 19; pl. pn tis pot deias evi otk pawérw Od. 20. 308; decein meprémery Td Hat. 1. 73, 115; dwad}s ris a. Id. 3. 160.—Cf. the Att. form alia. dele, fut. «@ Il. (v. infr.), Ep. also detxioow Q. Sm. 10. 401: Ep. aor. detxiooa Il, 16. 545:—Med., Ep. aor. deueioodpuny Ib. 559., 22. 404:—Pass., Ep. aor. inf., deioOquevac Od, 18. 222. To treat unseemly, injure, abuse, Hom.; ob yap ey o° €xmaryAov de® I will do thee no great dishonour, Il, 22, 256, cf. 24. 22 and 54, etc.:—Med. in act. sense, Il. ll. c.—Cf. the Att. form aixi¢w. de-Kivycta, %, perpetual motion, C. 1. 3546. 35, Galen. det-Kivntos, ov, ever-moving, in perpetual motion, Plat. Phaedr. 245 C. Adv. -rws, Arist. Mund. 6, 37. det-Kapos, ov, continually revelling, Manetho 4. 301. def-AdAos, ov, ever-babbling, Anth. P. 5. 178. dev-Aapmns, és, ever-shining, Stob. Ecl. I. 494. dertBns, és, (AeiBw) ever-flowing, Nonn, Jo. 3. Vv. 34+ det-Arxvos, ov, ever-eager, Philo 1. 348. devdoyéw, fo be always talking about, Tt Eccl. GeAoyla, 4, a continual talking :—as Att. law-term, tiv 4. mporeive- oOat or mapéxety, to court continual inquiry into one’s conduct, Dem, 341. 16., 1306. 27. Gethos, ov, (€iAn) unsunned, Aesch. Fr. 419. del-papyos, ov, ever-greedy, Opp. H. 2. 213. det-pvnpdveutos, ov, ever-remembered, Joseph. A. J. 17. 6, 2. det-pvipev, ov, gen. ovos, ever-remembering, of good memory, Arist. Physiogn: 3, 14. del-pvyoros, ov, had in everlasting remembrance, ever to be remem- bered, épyov Aesch. Pers. 760; tapos Soph. Aj. 1166, Eur., etc.; per dey. papruplov Thuc. 1. 33; Tpowata Lys. 192. 24; dmace deiuy. 7 dpapria Antipho 138. 34. Adv. —rws, Aeschin. 52. 22. de-viits, és,=sq., Nic. ap. Ath. 61 A, in Ep, dat. pl. dewwaéeoot. del-vaos, ov, =dévaos, q. V. dev-vatrat, dv, of, a Milesian magistracy, which held its sittings on ship-board, Plut, 2. 298 C. dei-vynortis, cos, 6, 7, ever-fasting, Anth. P. 9. 409. dctvws, wy, Att. contr. for deivaos, v. dévaos. der-riOys, és, ever-suffering, liable to be perpetually acted on, Crito ap. Stob. 43. 42, cf. Philolaiis in Stob. Ecl. 1. 420. delrats, macdos, 6, %, ever-maiden, of the Virgin, Eccl. devrrdpQevos, %}, ever a virgin, Sapph. 96 (in Aeol. form dim, cf. Cramer An, Par. 3. 321), Eus. Laus Const. 17; of the Vestals, af fépacae ai deur. Dio C. 56. 5, cf. 59. 3. 2. in Pythag. language of the number 7, Philo 1. 46, 4973 cf. @yovos II. I. det-mhivos, ov, ever-wandering, Epigr. ap. Suid. &el-poos, oy, contr. —-pous, ovy, =sq., Aristeas, etc. del-piros, ov, ever-flowing, xpjvn Soph. O. C. 469. : delpw, Ion. and poet. Verb (cf. detw), used by Hdt., and also in Aesch. Th. 759, Pers. 660 (both lyr.); but the Att. form is aipw (q. v.), Acol. déppw (q. v.): impf. fepoy (ovy-) Il. 10. 499, Hdt., Ep. decpov Il, :— fut. dp [a], contr. from dep (which never occurs), Aesch. Pers. 795, Eur. Heracl. 322, Tro. 1148 (cf. é¢ewalpw) :—aor. 1 Hepa (ovr-) Il. 24. 590, Ep. detpa 23. 730, part. deipas Soph. Ant. 418 (in the speech of the ¢vAag):—Med., Hom., and in Soph. Tr. 216 (lyr.): fut. dpotjuae (v. sub aipw) :—aor., imper. delpao Ap. Rh., inf. defpacOae (dvr—) Hat. 7. 212, part. -duevos Hom. :—Pass., aor. ép0nv Ap. Rh., (wap-) Il. 16. 341, Ep. dépOny Od., 3 pl. depOev Il. 8. 74, subj. dep0@ Eur. Andr, 848, part. depOeis Hom., Pind., Hdt., Aesch. Ag. 1525: pf. fepyat Ap. Rh. 2. 171: Ep. plqpf. 3 sing. dwpro IL, Theocr., Ion. dopro (q. v.) for jjopro.—The form deipw, being Ion., is generally used by Hdt. and Hipp., as by Hom., except in Il. 17. 7243; also in Pind. and a few Lyric Blages of Trag., never in Att. Prose. Hom. however prefers the aor. 2 dpé to deipagOar: cf. aipw.—vV. dv-, dm-, Ala. a 44. personified, "Ap, dy dv Tis évopdoee ad Ala as in Lat. Jupiter for aér, Philem. Incert. 2, 4, cf. Diphil. Incert. 3.—CF. Buttm. Lexil. 8. Ve IL. the open space in baths, Galen. (a, ex- cept in Arist. Epigr. ap. Eust. 17. 37, Pseudo-Phocyl. 108. In Sopht El. 87, for & «+ V8 iadpotpos dnp, Pors. restored iodpoup’.) dors, ews, 7), (any) =dnpa, a blowing, Eur. Rhes, 417. he ory. 2 we SAFTHTOS, OV, uncongquered, not beaten, Thuc. 6. 70, - 914, fin., Dem. 309. 17. f s d hotles, for As ced i & Pa fa dae Plat. Rep. 375 B. Aovpos, ov, (dw, é io} ji edt 4 Blom an ¢ 4 A pate ge air, hence little, Aesch, Pr, 452, ubi v. Gyréopar, Dep. (dtyrns) to fly, read in in, 4, = anrns, Hes, CA 673. 4 diyrns, ov, 5, (Gu, énut) a blast, gale, Arat. 52 3- dvé Z, , a7 a2 €H010, Zepupowo, cvéeuayv anrat ’ 4 ° , anroppoos — aberéw. Il. 15. 626, Od. 4. 567, Hes. Op. 619: absol. a wind, Theocr. 2. 38 :— poét. word, of monral ra nvevpara dhras Kadodar Plat. Crat. 410 B. &nrép-poos, ov, contr, —povs, ovv, creating dijrat, a word coined by Plat. Crat. 410 B. dros, ov, an old word, only found in phrase, @dpoos dyror Il. 21. 395 (written @dpoos darov in Q. Sm. 1. 217); but quoted also from Aesch. (Fr. 2) by Hesych., djrous* peydAas :—prob. from dyt, in the sense of stormy, furious, terrible, like ainros: but cf. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. anto-pépos, ov, eagle-bearing, Aeyedves Or. Sib. 8. 78 ; v. derds sub fin. &-qrTnTOos, ov, later Att. for dfaanros. d-nxXos, ov, without sound, pavh Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 1. 11. dpeutos, ov, unwedded, jArwin Epigr. Gr. 372. 32. G0aAdocevtos, Att. —rrevros, ov, = dBaddaowros, Poll. 1. 121. pete Att. —rrla, 4, ignorance of the sea, Secund. in Galei Opusc. P. 039. 4-0ddaccos, Att. —rros, ov, without sea, far from it, inland, Menand. Tpop. 1. 9. II. not mixed with sea-water, oivos Damocr. ap. Galen., Horace’s vinum maris expers. % G0iAdoowros, Att. —Trwros, ov, (Gadacodw) unused to the sea, a land- Jubber, Ar. Ran, 204, Agath. Hist. p. 8. 8. 4-0adys or G-OadArs, és, of the laurel, not verdant, withered, Plut. Pomp. 31, Orac. ap. Ath. 524 B. GOadays, és, (64Amos) without warmth, Nonn. D. 37. 151., 40. 286, Paul. Sil., etc. Adv. -wéws, Hipp. Acut. 388. d-fapBis, és, fearless, Ibyc. 1, Phryn. Trag. ap. Hesych.; oxérov Plut. Lyc. 16. aPapBla, Ion. -ty, %, imperturbability, Democr. ap. Cic. Fin. 5. 29. &-PapBos, ov, imperturbable, Democr. ap. Stob. 38. 39. *AOava, ’“Adavar, "AOavata, Dor. for Adny-, v. AOnvN. G0ivicla, %, immortality, Plat. Phaedr. 246 A, al.; 6 5& Acpds éorw d@avacias pappaxov Antiph. AeA. 2. [penult. made long in Or. Sib. 2. 41, 150]. pasate: to make immortal, Arist. Fr. 601 :—Pass. to become or be immortal, Polyb. 6. 54, 2. II. to hold oneself immortal, Térat ot dPavarifovres Hat. 4. 93, sq., cf. 94; @' bcov evdéxerar GO. to put off the mortal, Arist. Eth. N. 10. 7, 8; cf. dwaSavarifw. Aivariopes, 4, the gift of or belief in immortality, Diod. 1. 1. &-Qdviiros, ov, also 7, ov (as always in Hom., rare in Trag., Elsm. Med. 807). Undying, immortal, opp. to @vnrés and Bpords, Hom., Hes., etc.:—hence d@dvarot, oi, the Immortals, Hom., etc.; d@dvarar Grrat, i.e. the sea goddesses, Od. 24. 47: Comp. —Wrepos, Plat. Phaedo 99 C. 2. of immortal fame, Tyrtae. 12. 32. II. of things, etc., everlasting, 40. xaxdv Od. 12. 118; xdpis Hdt. 7. 178; dpern, dpx7 Soph. Ph. 1420, O. T. 905; a0. cvxopayrns Hyperid. Lyc. 3; so, a9, Kréos, wvjun, dd€a, dpyn, etc. ; 40. 6 Odvaros death is a never-ending state, like Tennyson's ‘death that cannot die,’ Amphis T'vva:xoxp. 1. 2. G0. Opig on which life depended, Aesch. Cho. 620. III. of d0dvaroe the immortals, a body of Persian troops in which every vacancy was filled up by successors appointed beforehand, Hdt. 7. 83, 211; so, 40. dvqp one whose successor in case of death is appointed, (as we say, the king never dies,) Ib. 31. IV. Adv., d0avarws et5ev Anth, P. 9. 570. [ae- always in the Adj. and all derivs., v. sub A, a, fin.] G-Siviréw, to make immortal, Tzetz. Hist. 6. 740. Gavaro-rovss, dv, making immortal, Eus. V. Const. 4. 62. G-Otivas, és, undying, yxy Max. Tyr. 28. 2. Garros, ov, unburied, Il. 22. 386, Trag., etc.; dOarrov wOciv, Bad- drew, éay Td Soph. Aj. 1307, 1333, Ant. 205. II. unworthy of burial, Anth. P. 9. 498. GPdpy (not dédpa Piers. Moer. 184), 4, groats or meal, a porridge thereof, Hellanic. 179, Ar. Pl. 673, Pherecr. Meraaa. I. 3, Crates “Hp. 2, Nicoph. Xep. 2, Anaxandr. Wpwr. 1.42. (An Egypt. word, acc. to Plin. 22. 25; but v. sub dvdos.) [Oapy, ll. c.: written déqpy in Eust. 1675. 60, Epiphan.] 4-Qapoys, . discouraged, downhearted, Plut, Cic. 35: 70 d@apcés want of courage, Id. Nic. 4. Adv. —-os, Id. Pomp. 50. Wipadns, es, (el50s) like d8dpyn, Ruf. Ephes., Gramm. Gavpacria, %, the character of an d0atpaaros, Horace’s nil admirari, Strabo 61. The form d@avyacia is dub., Lob. Phryn. 509. &-Satpacros, ov, not wondering at anything (cf. foreg.), mpés Te Zeno ap. Ath. 233 B, M. Anton. 1, 15 :—Adv. -rws, Soph. Fr. 810; also abavpaori, Suid. II. not wondered at or admired, Luc, Amor. 13. v [a], ov, gen. ovos, not beholding, twds Synes. 147 D. Ady. —bvas, ig. dvemarnydvws, dmelpws, Poll. 4. 10, who also quotes the Subst. dPeapooivn, Ib. 8. G-0éaros, ov, unseen, invisible, Luc. Mar. 14. 2, Plut. 2. 7. not be seen, secret, Pseudo-Phocyl. 100, Plut. Num. 9, etc. act. not seeing’, blind to, rivés Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 31, Arist. Mund. 1, 5. Aenotn, 7, Ion. Noun, want of sight, blindness, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1.4. Ged, Adv. (Geds) without the aid of God, mostly with a negat., ob« abeei, Horace’s non sine Dis, Od. 18. 353, Philostr., Nonn., etc. 4-Qeta, 7), =dbedrns, Eccl. 4-Qelacros, ov, uninspired, ov G0. Plut. Cor. 33- Gaps, és, Ep. for depqs: v. sub dbepiw. 2. that may II. G0€MBw, fo filter, Hesych.:—Pass, (written d0éAS5opnac in A. B. 350), Diocl. Mederr, 1. a-Yeryns, és, unappeased, Nonn, D. 33. 200. GB yw, = duéryo, Hesych, :—Pass., d0éAyerat is drawn off or pressed out, Hipp. 47. 22, (expl. by Galen. d:nBefrat, SiexAverar) ; so éfa€Ayo- pat, Hipp. Art. 744.—For aOeAgts, v. dAdegis. GPéXeos, ov, (0 A. B. 352. a-Apavoros, oy, unbroken, undestroyed, unhurt, sound, Eur. Hec. 1; €tc.: not to be broken, Arist. Meteor. 4. 8, 5, etc. GOperros, f. 1. for drperros, Anth. P. 5. 178. GOpéw or GOpéw: fut. jow (v. Elmsl, Med. 519): aor. opt. dOphoese, inf. aBpjoa Hom., Soph.: aor. med. d@phaac@a: Timo 6: Ep. part. d0peto- Hevov Manetho 6.60. (The Root appears to be OEP, with a prefixed ; cf, @pdw.) To look earnestly at, gaze at, observe, perceive, iva ph Ts *Axaidv Brhpevov GOpnoee Il. 12. 391, cf. 14. 334; odd mp GOpjoa duvapny (sc. SevAAqv) Od. 12. 232, cf. 19. 478, Eur. Hec. 679, El. 827; [ot peOvovres] GOpeiv 7a méppw ob StvayTa Arist. Probl. 3. 9. 2. absol. or with a Prep. to look earnestly, gaze, 61 és mediov 7) Tpwikdy aOphocer Il. 10.11; GOpet observe, watch, Aesch, Fr. 225 ; Sedp’ dOpnaov look hither, Eur. Hipp. 300; Aevooer’, dOphoare Id. Andr. 1228; ob ydp ios dv dOpav by observing, Soph. O. C. 252. II. later, of the mind, ¢o look at or into a thing, to observe, consider, 7 Pind. P. 2. 129; TOAAG TuPécbat, TOAAA 8 dOphoa Soph. O. T. 1305, cf. O. C. 1032; apnoov airé Eur. Bacch. 1282, cf. 1327, etc.:—foll. by an interrog. or rel. clause, at rad7’ GOpyaov, et . . consider this also, whether .., Soph. Anf. 1077, cf. 1216; rdde roivuy dOpe mérepov.. Plat. Rep. 394 E; ape pr) ob .. Id. Phaedo 104 B, Gorg. 495 B; Ope Sr.. Id. Rep. 583 B; and Plat. generally uses this imper. form, but .40p@ Parm. 144 D, dOpav Tim. g1 E. 2. absol. dOpnoov, consider, Eur. I. A. 1416. IIL. ¢o perceive, ovacww dOp. Nic. Th, 164. G0pqpara, 74, =drrqpia, Hesych. &-Opqyytos, ov, unlamented, to expl. vavupvos, Eust. 928. 63. GOpnvi, Adv. (Opijvos) without mourning, Suid. GOpytéov, verb. Adj. of dOpéw, one must consider, Eur. Hipp. 379, Xen. Symp. 8, 39. 4-Op.d rte, ov, uncelebrated, Eust. Opusc. 237. 57. G-Oplyywros, ov, without coping, E. M. &-OpE, rptxos, 6, 4, without hair, Matro ap. Ath. 656 F: cf. d0pig. Gptrndeoros, ov, not worm-eaten, Theophr, H. P. 5.1, 2, where the Mss. d@pirniéoraroy : cf. Opimhdearos. GOpoet, Adv. of GOpoos, Philes 5. 149. G£potlw or &Ppoifo (Elmsl. Heracl. 122): fut. ow: aor. #Opoca Eur., etc, :—Pass., aor. 7Opoic@nv: pf. 7Opocpae: plapf. 7Opo.cro Aesch. Pers. 414:—the quadrisyll. form d@poi{w is used by Archil. 104, Anth. Plan. 308: restored by Dind. in Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 267, Ar. Av. 253: (48péos or dOpédos). To gather together, collect, esp. to muster forces, aOp. adv, orpareupa, Sivamy, etc., Soph. O. T. 144, Xen. An. I. 2, 1, etc.; Tpolay dp. to gather the Trojans together, Eur. Hec. 1139; mvedpa GPpo.goy collect breath, Id. Phoen. 851, cf. Arist. G. A. 2. 4, 53 mepimAokds Adyar GOpotcas having strung together, Eur. Phoen. 495 :— absol. to collect or hoard treasure, Arist. Pol. 5.11, 20:—Med. to gather Sor oneself, collect round one, Eur. Heracl. 1. c., Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 19 :— Pass. to be gathered or crowded together, etre mpos deOAa Shpyos 7)Opoi- (ero Archil. 1. c., cf. 60; és rv ayopiy dbp. Hdt. 5. 101; dOpocdévres having rallied, Thuc. 1. 50; 70 82. . €¥ymay HOpoicGn dicxircoe but the whole amounted collectively to.., Id. 5.6; évrad0a 7Opoifovro they mustered in force there, Id. 6. 44, etc.: to form a society, Plat. Prot. 322 B; dOpoocdévres having formed a party, Arist. Pol. 5. 5, 3;—of things, mept moAA@y GOpocbévtwy taken in the aggregate (cf. dOpor- opa 2), Plat. Theaet. 157 B. 2. in Pass. also of the mind, dOpoi{ec@ae els éaurdv to collect oneself, Plat. Phacdo 83 A, cf. 67 C; pdBos 70pa- ora fear has gathered strength, arisen, Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 34- GOpotaipos 7yuépa, a day of assembling, Eccl. : Gporors, ews, }, a gathering, collecting, mustering, arparod Eur. Hec. 3143 xpnudrov Thuc. 6. 26; af ray vepay a. Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 16, pocpa, 7d, that which is gathered, a gathering, Aaod Eur. Or. 874. 2. a process of aggregation, Plat. Theaet. 157 B. II. in Epicur. philos., the concourse of atoms, Diog. L. 8. 66. _ GPporcpds, 6, =dOpo.ois, Theophr. C. P. 1. 10,7: condensation, Ib. 5.2, 1. GPporeréov, verb. Adj. one must collect, Xen. Lac. 7. 4. G@poreriprov, 74, a muster-place, Eust. (?) aPpororikds, 4, dv, of or for collecting, like dOpotoipos, Eccl. in Gramm. collective, dvéuata: copulative, abvber pot. GOpdos, a, ov, rarely os, ov (Heraclid. Tar. ap. Ath. 120 D), or better G9péos as Aristarch. wrote it (Schol. Ven. Il. 14. 38), Att. pos, our, poét, dat. pl. dOpoiow Epigr. Gr. 1034. 26:—but in later writers the spir, lenis prevailed; (a copulat., @pdos). II. In crowds, heaps or ane, t crowded together, often in Hom. but only in ph; wee NS €s aOpdor Od. 3. 34, etc.; the sing. first in Pind, P. 2, 53 aOpda, of soldiers, in close order, Lat. conferto agmine, Hdt. 6. 112, Xen. An. 1. 10, 13, etc.; opp. to dovvraxrot, Id. Cyr. 8. 1, 46; in column, Ib. 5235 36; also, woAAat K@par dOp. close together, Id. An. $359. XE. brought together, in a body, G0péa mavr’ dméricev he paid for all at once, Od. 1. 43; GOpda wédus the citizens as a whole, opp. to Exacrot, Thuc. 2. 60; so, d@p. dtvayus Id. 2. 39, cf.1.141; dOp. Fv ait@ rd orparevpa was assembled, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 22; 7d aOpéoy their assembled force, Ib. 4, 2, 20, cf. An. 5. 2, 1; dOpdq ordyare with one voice, Eur. Bacch. 725 ; d@pdous xpivew to condemn all by a single vote, Plat. Apol. 32 B; modAods dOpdous iu@y Dem. 558.1; dOpous apOn was seen with all his forces, Plut. Themist. 12, cf. Id. Syll. 12 ; d0pdov Aeydpevoy used in a collective or general sense, opp. to xara pépos, Plat. Theaet. 182 A; % perdBaats GOpoa ~yiverat takes place at once, Arist. Pol. 5. 8, 3, opp. to éx mpocayaryijs Ib. 12 ; xarnpiev dOp. he fell all at once, Theocr. 1 Zs 49, cf. 25. 252; dOpdac wévre vueres five whole nights, Pind, P. 4. 231; kardoraots aOpéa kat aicOnrh Arist. Rhet. 1, 11,1; xdBapais d., opp. to xar’ dAtyov, Id, H. A. 7. 2,2; xarameiv GOpous tewaxiras at a gulp, Eubul. Avagw(. 1, cf. Plut. 2, 650 B, etc.; dOpdov exnayxdcew to burst out laughing, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 7, 6, cf. Hipp. 1281. III. multitudinous, or continuous, incessant, G0p. xaxérns Pind. P. 2. 65; ddxpv Eur. H. F. 489; Adyos Plat. Rep. 344 D, Arist. Meteor. 2. 8, 20, etc. IV. Adv. d@péov, all at once, v. supr. 11:—also in regul. Adv. d@péws Arist. H. A. 4. 8, II, etc.; d, Aéyew to speak gene- rally, Rhet. V. Comp. d@powrepos Thuc. 6. 34, etc.; later a Dpovarepos Plut, Caes. 20, Ath. 79 B, etc. ; cf. Lob, Phryn. 143. G-Opoos, ov, noiseless, only in Gramm. GBpodrys, Tos, 7, (GOpéos) a being massed together, Diog. L. 10. 106. GOpés, a, dv, for ddpés, Inscr. Aeg. in C. I. 4710. &-OpvAnTos, ov, not much spoken of, Jo. Chrys. GOputrros, ov, (Opimrw) unbroken, imperishable, Plut. 2.1055 A. Tr. not enervated, Pythag. Carm. Aur. 35, and often in Plut.; a@pumros els yeAwra never breaking into laughter, Plut. Pericl. 5. Adv. —rws, Id. Fab. ae aOpuipia, 7, a simple way of life, Plut. 2. 609 C. a0ipew, f. Now, to be aOvyos, be disheartened, lose heart, despond, és vécov meodv dupeis Aesch. Pr. 4743; oi’ ds GOvp@ Soph. Aj. 587; dé. tw at or for a thing, Id. El. 769, etc. ; émi rev Isocr. 41 B; eis 7 Plat. Soph. 264 B; mpdés 7 Thuc. 2. 88; 7 Id. 5. 91 :—also foll, by a relat. word, to be sore afraid, dbvpd 8 el pavjcopa Soph. Tr. 666; devas déup@ pr BAémov 6 pavris j O. T. 747. GPipnréov, verb. Adj. one must lose heart, Xen, An. 3. 2, 23; Tots map- ovat Tpdypacv ove 40. Dem. 40. 11. G0dpta, Ion. tn, 1), want of heart, faintheartedness, despondency, Hdt. I. 37, Soph. Ant. 237, Eur. H. F. 551; els d0. xa®tordvar or éupddrAcw wd Plat. Legg. 731 A, Aeschin. 79, 12; 40. mapéxewv twit Xen. Cyr. 4. 1,8; els 40, ataorhva Lys. 120. 23; év a0. eivac Xen, Hell. 6. 2, 24; adupiayv éxev Soph. |. c., Xen. ; 40. €umimre twi Xen, Mem. 3. 12, 6; —pl., 40. cat péBor Arist. Probl. 30. 1. G-Giplaros, ov, not exhaling, Arist. Meteor. 4. 8, 5. G-Oipos, ov, without heart, fainthearted, spiritless, once in Hom., doxe- Ages kai 40. Od. to. 463 ; xaxds wal G0. Hdt. 7. 11; od Tots a0. 4 TUXN fvAAapBavee Soph. Fr. 666, cf. O. T. 319; of nations, opp. to év@upos, Arist. Pol. 7. 7, 2; 40. efvas mpds 71 to have no heart for it, Xen. An. 1. 4,93 80, GOdpos éxew mpds te Id. Hell. 4.5, 45 GOvpums didryew Id. Cyr. 3. 1, 243 GOdums woveiv to work without heart or spirit, Id. Oec. 21, 5. 2. without anger or passion, Plat. Rep. 411 B, Legg. 888 A. II. act. unpleasing, 660i Aesch. Eum, 770 (if the line be genuine), % a0vptSwros, ov, (Gupis) without door or , Jo. Chr. aOuppa, 76, (d0vpw) a plaything’, toy, like ralynor, Il. 15. 363, Od, 18. 323, h. Hom, Merc, 40: like @yaAya, a delight, joy, "AwoAAd@Moy G0., of the Pythian games, Pind. P. 5. 29; d@Upyara Movoay, i, e. songs, Bacchyl. 48; d8pdv d@., of a pet dog, Epigr. Gr. 626, cf. 272. 10., 810. 4:—tare in Att., Eur. Fr. 274, Cratin. ‘Odvec. 16, Com. Anon. in Mein, 4. p. 663, Alcidamas ap. Arist. Rhet. 3. 3, 2 and 4. aOvppariov, 76, Dim. of foreg., Eupol. in Com. Fr. 5. p. 40, Philox. 3. 24: a pet, Luc. D. Mar. 1. 5. abtpoyAwrréw, to be dbupdyAwrros, v. Suicer s. v. bipoyAwrria, 4, impudent loguacity, Polyb. 8. 12, I. " a0tp6-yAwrros, ov, one that cannot keep his mouth shut (@ yAdoon 60- pat ov« émixevrac Theogn. 421), a ceaseless babbler, Eur. Or. 903. d0tpé-vopos, ov, making game of the laws, Hesych. G0vpos, ov, (Oipa) without door, Plut. 2. 503 C, Hdn., etc. II. metaph. open, unchecked, yA@rra Philo 1, 678, Clem. Al. 165; ordya Physiogn. abtpooropiw, = dbupoyAwrréw, Eccl. a0ipocropia, ),=ddupoyAwrria, Anth, P. 5. 252. abtp6-cropos, ov, =dbupiyAwrros, a0. dxw ever-babbling Echo, Soph. Ph, 188 ; cf. @@upos 11, A. B. 352. &-Oupaos, ov, without thyrsus, Eur. Or. 1492. 48upw [0], Ep. word, used only in pres. and impf., rare in Att. (v. infr.). Zo play, sport, of children, ds bre... mais... , do7 émet monon ddppara vyménow, dy admis ovvéxeve moot Kat xepaiv aOvpay Il. 15. 304; véos pev ody .. HAGT’ AOvpov Eur. Ion 53; Tax’ dv mpds dyndAacoe ..mdav abdpo Id. Fr. 325; revi with a thing, Ap. Rh. 4. 950 5 of dancing, Plat. Legg. 796 B; playing on an instrument, ard ryeridav Anacreont. 41. 10; ¢. acc, cogn., podoay dbUpay singing sportive songs, h, Hom. 18. 15 :—Med., simply, fo sing, h. Hom. Merc. 485. _ it. c, acc., mais av dOupe peydAa Epya (of Achilles) when yet a child he 32 sported with great deeds, did them in play, i.e. great deeds were the sports of his childhood, Pind. N. 3. 78; épya pwrév 40. to play the deeds of men, of an actor, Anth. P. 9. 505. 2. to sing, sing of, dperdy abipew Pind. I. 4. 67 (3. 57). Cf. mai. &-Hipwros [i], ov,=d8upos, ordua Ar, Ran. 838, Phryn, Com. Incert. 75. d-Qvoros, ov, =sq., ipd Simon, Iamb. 7. 56. , ov, not offered, i.e. omitted, neglected, iepd Lys. 175. 34- 2. not successfully offered, iepd a0., Lat. sacra inauspicata, not ac- cepted, Aeschin. 75. 12., 72. 16, cf. Soph. Ant. 1006 (é« Ovpdrow “Hoai- oros ov é\aumev) and v. daupos, dviepos :—metaph., dura makAaxav onéppara, of illegitimate children, Plat. Legg. 841 D, cf. Suid. s. y. d0u- ToL vapor. II. act. not offering, without sacrificing, d@vtov dredOeiy Xen, Hell. 3. 2, 23. &0G0s, ov, (Ga) :—unpunished, scot-free, Eur. and Oratt.; d0gous xa6t- ax Twds to secure their immunity, Dem. 31.17; d0Gov ddrévar ap. Dem. 549. 27 ; G0@os Gmadddrrev or -eqGat to get off scot-free, Plat. Soph. 254 E, Lys. 103. 28; dmépxeo@a Archipp. ‘Piv. 1; diapvyeiv Menand. Avo. 4. 2. c. gen. free from a thing, mAny@v Ar. Nub. 1413; but, dO. dducnudrow unpunished for offences, Lycurg. 157. 38, cf. Diod. 14. 76. 3. unharmed by, GOGos THs SiAurmov . . Svvagrelas Dem, 316. 18. II. not deserving punishment, guiltless, without fault, &y piv 40G0s dract Dem. 269. 4. III. act. causing no harm, harmless, Dem.(?) 1437.9. (The form and accent d0os is main- tained by Elmsl. Med. 1267.) “AQwos or” AQwos (as Choerob. wrote it to distinguish it from é0Gos), 7, ov, of mount Athos, Aesch. Ag. 285, ubi v. Blomf. G0@dw, (d0d0s) to hold guiltless, dor aOwody twd LXXx (Nah. 1. 3): —fut. pass, d0qwOncoua (Prov.). aYamevros, ov, unflattered, without flattery, ris {us yAdoons from my tongue, Eur. Andr. 460. II. act. not flattering, Teles ap. Stob. 524, fin.: hence rough, rude, harsh, Anth, P. 6, 168. a-Owpakurros [ax], ov, without breastplate or body-armour, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 31. &-Qadpykros, ov, =foreg., Nonn, D. 35. 162. (v. Ouphoow It), Hipp. 263. 3. *AQus [a], w, 6, acc.”AOw Aeschin. 72. 25, Theocr. 7. 77, etc., but in earlier writers “A@wy, Hdt. 6. 44 7-21, Thuc. 5. 3:—Ep. nom, ’AQé6us, ém, Il. 14. 229: later nom. Kear, wvos, Strabo 330:—mount Athos, -"Adws onate vara Anpuvias Bods Soph. Fr. 348. Agwors, 7), (40qdw) acquittal, Ctes. Pers. 61. ai, Dor. for ei, if, Epich. 44, 94, Ahr., al.:—in Hom. only al xe or kev, if only, so that, Lat. dummodo, always with subj., except in orat. obliq., as in Il. 7. 387; (in Il. 5. 279 Wolf writes al xe rime for TUX OUpt ; and in Od. 24. 217 émvyvéy should be written for émyvoin, cf. Spitzn. Il, 24. 688) ; so Dor. atxa, Epich. 19, 11, Theocr. 1. 4, al. Bs al (with accent), Ep. for ei ydp (v. ei VII. 2. b), to express a wish, O that! would that! Lat. utinam! Hom,; always with optat.; for in Od. 7. 311 al yap... aida 7’ Epi éxépev Kal ends yapBpods KadréecOat, some word like 0éAois must be supplied; so Hdt. 1. 27; so also ai alone, in Aeol. and Dor. writers. Cf. ai@e. ai, exclam. of astonishment or indignation, ha! Hdn. ap. Arcad. 183. 20, Joann, tov. mapayy. 32. 25, who quotes at rdAas, as in Ar. PI. 706. II. at (perispom.) exclam. of grief, ak! Lat. vae, only used in the dissyll. alaf (as we learn from Hdn. 7m. pov. Aég. 27. 13), not al ai or al ai (as in the Mss.). It is freq. in Trag., alat réAwas Eur. Hipp. 814; and repeated, aiat aia? peAéwy épywv Aesch. Cho. 1007, cf. Pers. 1039: often placed extra versum with an hiatus, ala? ixvotpat Soph. El. 136, cf. Tr. 969 :—later c. acc., aiaf rdy Ku0éperay Bion. 1. 28, etc. ; alat wérpov éxeivoy Anth. P. 7. 554, cf. 9. 424.—In Ar. Ach. 1083 the aia? of Lamachus is mockingly repeated by Dicaeopolis. at, Aeol. for dei. ala, %, Ep. form used for yata metri grat., Hom.; also by Trag., chiefly in lyr. passages: never in pl. II. Afa, }, orig. name of Colchis, Soph. Fr. 774: also part of lacie by Ib, aiaypa, 74, a wail, Eur. Alc. 873, etc. : alaypds, od, 6, Eust. aidfw, Trag.: fut. dw Eur. H. F. 1054 (restored by Herm. for ald¢ere) : aor. part. aldgas Anth. P. append. 127: to cry ala? or ah! to wail, IL. not drunken Trag.; and c. acc. fo bewail, Aesch. Pers. 922, Eur. 2. like dd{w, Ga (B), to breathe hard, ai. wat éxmveiv Arist. H. A. 4. 9. 20, cf. G. A. 5. 7, 24. alat, vy. sub al. Aidxevos, a, or, of seg , Soph. Fr. 434. Aiat5ns, ov, 6, son of Aeacus, Il. 9. 191, etc. alaxrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of alate, bewailed, lamentable, mipara Aesch, Th. 846, cf. Ar. Ach. 105: lamented, ree Epigr. Gr. 205. Il. wailing, miserable, Aesch. Pers. 931, 1 obi , Ion. ainvas, és, an old poét. word, first in Archil. 38 Setrvoy ainvés; next in Pind., alavis xépos, évrpov, Apds P. 1. 161., 4. 420, I. 3. 4;—then in Aesch. and Soph., vuxros alavn téxva Eum. 416 ; vurrds alavis Kvdos Soph. Aj. 672; aiavijs vécos Aesch. Eum. 479, 942; alava Béypara Id. Pers. 635; alav naviuproy avddy Ib. 940 ; Thédomos .. inreia, ds pores alavis 7H5e yh Soph. El. 506: of time, els roy alavfj xpivov Aesch. Eum. 572, Epigr. Gr. 263; and so in Adv. aiavas for ever, Aesch. Eum, 672.—The form atavés, which occurs as a v.1. in Eum. 416, 479, Soph. Aj. 672, El. 506 is prob. corrupt, v. Nauck anges Gréco- -Romains, 1862, 2. p. 441. (The prob. deriv. is everlasting, for ever, (as it must be with xpévos, and in Ady. whence might come the notion of never-ending, wearisome, as ab’pwros —aiyidub. other places cited, though this sense is commonly thought to connect the word with aivds.) oe , a, ov, of Ajax : 70 Aidvreoy his tomb, Philostr.; 7a Aidvreca (sc. tepd) festivals in his honour, Hesych.: Al. yéAws of insane laughter, Paroemiogr., v. Lob. Aj. 301 :—a post. form Aldvreos in Pind. O. 9. 166; Nic, ap, Ath. 683 E. - Aiavriins, ov, 5, son of Ajax, patron.: hence, one of the tribe Alavzis in Attica, Dem. 1399. 2. “ Ss, avros, 6, Ajax, masc, pr. n., borne by two heroes, the Greater, son of Telamon, the Less, son of Oileus, Hom. A nom. Alas occurs in, Aleman 68; acc. Alay, Pind. Fr. 179; voc. Alay (postulante metro) Soph. Aj. 482, elsewh. in Trag. Aias; pl. Aiayres, proverb. of deep tragedies, Arist. Poét. 18, 6. (Soph. derives it fancifully from aiat, Aj. 430.) eros, i.e. aiferds, 6, dial. form of derdés, Hesych. t, bah! exclam. of disgust or astonishment: but aifo‘, Bot, of laughter, - Ar, Pax 1066. aty-aypos, 6 and #, the wild goat, capra aegagros (cf. aif), Babr. 102. 8, om oe a 71 yyabev, Dor. for AiyOev, Adv., from Alyai (an island off Euboea), Pind. N. 5. 68. Alyaios, a, ov, Aegaean, médaryos Aesch. Ag. 659; dpos Aiy. mount Ida, Hes. Th, 484, v. Gaisf. ad 1. II. Aiyaios (sc. mévros), 6, the Aegaean, Plat. Eleg. 9. 1, Arist. Meteor. 2. 1, 10, etc. Atyatov, wvos, 6, Aegaeon, the name given by men to the hundred- armed son of Uranus and Gaia, called by gods Bpidpews (q. v.), Il. 1. 404, Hes. Th. 714, 817. (Prob. akin to dicow.) II. the Aegaean sea, mévriov T Al-yaiow’ Eur. Alc. 595, cf. Salmas, Solin. 1.125 F; where however others take it as Adj. agreeing with the following word d«rav. alyavén, 7), a hunting-spear, javelin, ll. 2. 774, Od. 4. 626, Anth. P. 6.57. (Perh. from aig, a goat-spear, cf. Od. 9. 156.) Sv, Adv. (dicow) rushing swiftly, impetuously, Ap. Rh. 2. 826. alyéa, 7, v. sub alyeos. atye.os, a, Ion, 7, ov, Ep, lengthd. for atyeos, which is used by Hom. only once, y. infr.: (aig). Of a goat or goats, Lat. caprinus, ai-yetov “vip Tupdy goats-milk cheese, Il. 11. 639; dox@ év aiyeiw in a goat's skin, 3. 247; atyeoy dandy éxov Od. 9. 196; aiyein xuvén a helmet of Roatshin, 24. 231; bipOeppory aiyénow Hat. 5.58; yada at-yeor Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 12. II. as Subst. aiyén (sc. dopa), 4, a goat's skin, Hdt. 4. 189; 7?}v aiyéay Joseph. A. J. 1.18, 6; and contr. aiy# Arcad. 105. 2. Atyes, a, oy, of Aegeus, Aesch. Eum. 682, acc. to Well. and Herm. : —Aiyetor, 76, (properisp.), his temple, Dinarch. ap. A. B. 354. atyetpos, 7), the black poplar (cf. Aevny), paxedvh, paxph Od. 7. 106., Io. 510, cf. Soph. Fr. 24; aly. bdarorpepées Od. 17. 208, cf. 9. 140., 5. 64, 70, Eur. Hipp. 211 (lyr.); with smooth bark and foliage chiefly at top, Il. 4.482; with trembling leaves, Od. 7.106: Arist. was aware that the tree was dicecious, aly. dxapros (Mund. 6, 37, cf. G. A. 1. 18, 60), and xkaproddpos (Mirab. 69): as a tree of the nether world, Od. 10. 510. aiyepav, avos, 6, a black poplar grove, Strabo 774. aielieus [@], ov, 6, (€Aatyw) a goatherd, Plut. Pomp. 4, Anth. Plan. 229. atyeos, a, ov, =alyeios, q.v. aiyepos, 7), =atyetpos, Com. Anon. in Mein. 4. p. 621. alyalw, to talk of goats, Eupol. Aiy. 9. aiyédeios, a, ov, of or on the shore, Aétius:—so aiyidebs, jos, 5, Nic, Th. 786:—aiywiAtrys, ov, 6, fem.—trs, «50s, Strabo 182, Anth, P. ' Io, Io. alyuiNés, 6, the sea-shore, beach, ll. 4. 422, Od. 22. 385, Hdt., and some- times in Att. Prose, as Thuc. 1. 7, Xen. An. 6. 4, 4; distinguished from Gxrq, Arist. H. A. 5. 15, 6;—also in lyr. passages of Eur., I. T. 425, I. A. 210; alyaddv evdov tpépe, i.e. he has a whole sea-beach (i. e. quantities of voting-pebbles, Yppor) in his house, Ar. Vesp. 120:— proverb., aiyiaA@ Aadeis, of deaf persons, Suid. (Not from dyvupe, ars, that on which the sea breaks, like durn; but from dfoow, dds, that over which the sea rushes (cf. al Iv, alyis 11, alyi(w). aiyahadys, es, (el50s) frequenting the shore, (Ga Arist. H. A. 1. 1,1 Be ; aiyids, ddos, 7), a white spot on the eye, Hipp, Coac. 218. d aty-Barns [a], ov, 5, goat-mounting, epith. of he-goats, etc., Pind. Fr. 2153 of Pan, Theocr. Ep. 5, Anth. P. 6. 31, aiyl- » WS, H, a goat-pasture, Anth. P. g. 318. aiy.-Borns, ov, 6, feeding goats, browsed by goats, Anth. P. 6. 334. aiyi-Boros, ov, browsed by goats, "18dxn Od. 4.606; so in Od, 1 3. 246, yaia must be supplied from y. 238. ; a aiyldvov, 76, Dim. of alg, a kid, Pherecr. Adrop, 4. aly(fw, (alyis) to rend asunder, Aesch. Fr. 60. alyi@addos or atyl@ados, 6, the tit, titmouse, Lat. parus, Aleae, Com. Tay. 2, cf. Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 4., 9. 15, 2. written oxyt., but v. Arcad. 55, A. B. 360. aiyos, also aiyloOos, 6, the hedge-sparrow or perth, the bunting, Arist. HLA. 9. 1, 18., 9. 15, 3. : i 2 atyl-Kvypos, rai goat-shanked, Anth. P. 6. 167. aiyt-kopets, éwy, of, goatherds; name of one of the f i Tribes, Hdt. 5. 66 (who derives it from Alyedpys a son ey bat ‘be Ton 1581, Plut. Sol. 23:—there were four Tribes at Cyzicus with the same names, C. I. 3665.—On the question whether these Tribes were Castes, v. Thirlw. Hist. of Gr. 2. p. 4 sq., Grote 4. p. 69, Clint. Fasti 1. | p. 53, Herm. Pol. Ant. § 94. (If from aif, xopévvuju, the literal sense would be goat-feeders. But Curt. takes the p to represent an older A, so that the Root would be the same as that of Bov-xoAos, al-modos, Lat. colo.) Ar. Av. 887, In the Mss, often and then that of dreary, dismal, direful, horrible, as in cong! akyihup [70], tos, 5, 4, (perh. from alg, Acinw) destitute even of goats, . atyiAos — aldjjpor. hence steep, sheer, mérpn Il. 9. 15, al. (not in Od.) ; also in Aesch. Supp. 794 (lyr.). atytos, 9, an herb of which goats are fond, perh. the same as alyiAwy, Theocr. 5. 128, Babr. 3. 4. aiyAdmov, 76, =aiyiday It, Diosc. 3.144. aiyidwy [7], wos, post. oros, Nic. Th. 857, 5, a kind of oats, wild oats, Lat. avena sterilis, Theophr. C. P. 5. 15, 15. II. a kind of oak with sweet fruit, v. 1. Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 2. IIL. an ulcer in the eye, lachrymal fistula, Diosc. 4. 71. Aiyiva, ns, %, Aegina, Il., etc. ; also Atywaty (sc. vfjos) Hdt. 5. 86:— hence, Aiywatys, ov, 6, fem. —Hrs, 50s, an Aeginetan, Hdt., etc.:— Adj. Atywvatos, a, ov, Cratin. TAoor. 2, al.; d8oAds Aly., 5paxpi) Aiy., etc,, Thuc. 5. 47, etc., v. Dict. of Antiqq. p. 811 ;—also y Crna h, 6v, Luc. Tim. 57, Paus., etc. aiyw8os, 4, v. sub atyGos. aiyt-vopets, éws, 6, a goatherd, Anth. P. 9. 318. atylvépos, ov, (véuw) feedixg goats: as Subst. a goatherd, Anth. P. 6. 221, cf. 9. 744. II. alyivopos (proparox.), pass. browsed by goats, Bordvn Anth. P. 9. 217. aiyloBos, 5, v. sub aty:0os. aiyl-oxos, ov, Aegis-bearing, epith. of Zeus, Hom.; later also of Athena. Alyi-rav, avos, 6, goat-Pan, goat-footed Pan, the Rom, Silvanus, Plut. 2. 311 B. aiyl-mhaykros, ov, wandered over by goats:—hence dpos AlyimAayxrov Mount Aegiplanct, near Megara, Aesch. Ag. 303. aiyt-165ns, ov, 6, goat-footed, h. Hom. 18. 2, 37. aiyt-mrous, modes, 6, , mouv, 76,=foreg., Hdt. 4. 25. aiyl-ripos, 6, a plant with a red flower, of which goats were fond, perh. buckwheat, Theophr. H. P. 2. 8, 3, Theocr. 4. 25; alyimupoy, 74, in Anth. P. append. 120. ¥ atyts, (56s, 7, I. the aegis or shield of Zeus, flashing forth terror and amazement, as described at length in Il. 5. 738 sqq.; and so prob. from the same root as dicgow, to move violently.—In works of Art the aegis appears on the statues of Athena, not as a shield, but as a sort of short cloak, covered with scales, set with the Gorgon’s head, and fringed with snakes (@vccavéeooa) ; hence «éAmos aiyidos Aesch. Eum. 404. The artists no doubt took the word to come from aif, and to mean a goatskin, v. Hdt. 4. 189, Dict. of Antiqq. s.v. 2. simply a goat- skin coat, Eur. Cycl. 360. Il. a rushing storm, hurricane, terrible as the shaken aegis, Aesch. Cho. 592; cf. aiyi(w, éravyifw, raravyls. III. a yellow kernel in the pith of the pine, Theophr. H. P. 3. 9, 3- IV. a speck in the eye, Hipp. Coac. 153. atyloxos, 6, Dim. of aif, Lxx. atyAdets, contr. atyAds, Dor. for aiyAjecs. alyAdlw, to beam brightly, Manetho 4. 264. alyAn, %, properly the light of the sun, radiance, Od. 4. 45, etc.:—then simply daylight, Xeve atyAn Od. 6. 45; els atyAay poreiy, i.e. to be born, Pind. N. 1. 55; ‘OAdpmov papyapdecoay alyAav Soph. Ant. 610 (lyr.) :—for Soph. Ph. 831 (lyr.) v. sub dvréya I. 2. any dazzling light, atykn xadxod the gleam of brass, Il. 2. 458; Tas muppdpovs *Apréudos aiyAas the gleam of her torches, Soph. O. T. 208 (lyr.); péAawayv atyhay, of dying embers, Eur. Tro. 549; cf. Virgil’s atro lumine taedas Aen. 7. 456. 3. metaph. splendour, glory, atyAn rodar, of swiftness, Pind. O. 13. 49; d:dadoros aiyAa Id. P. 8. 136. II. it is cited by Hesych. from Soph. (Fr. 524), as=yAldov, a bracelet, and from Epich. as=7é6n, a band; cf. A. B. 354, where other singular uses of the word are cited. alyAjeas, eooa, ev, dazzling, radiant, beaming, in Hom. always aiyAq- evtos ’Odvprov Il. 1. 532, Od. 20. 103; so, KAdpos al-yAjeooa h. Hom. Ap. 40; m@Ao aiyd. h. Hom, 32. 9; neut. as Adv., Ib. 31. 11 :—Dor. aiyAdes, contr. alyAGs, x@as aiyAder .. Qvodvw Pind. P. 4 411; ai- yAavra kécpov Ib. 2. 19; alyAdvra ompara Eur. Andr. 286 (lyr.). alyAnrys, ov, 6, the radiant one, epith. of Apollo, Ap. Rh. 4. 1716, alyAo-Bodéw, to cast beams of light, Manetho 4. 188. aiyAo-piivis, és, radiant, Anth. P. 12. 5. aiyo-Barns, ov, 6,=the older aiy:Barns, Anth. P. 12. 41. aiyé5opos, ov, (Sopa) of goatskin, Opp. H. 5. 356. aiyo-Ondas, ov, 6, the goatsucker, nightjar or fern-owl, caprimulgus Europaeus, Arist. H. A. 9. 30, 2, Ael. N. A. 3. 39. aiyo-képas, aros, 7d, fenugreek, foenum Graecum, Galen. aiyo-Kepevs, éws, Ion. Fos, 6,=sq. I, Arat. 386. aiyé-Kepws, gen. —xepw, dat. —xepw Manetho 1. 106, acc. —xepay Plut., Luc,; later gen. -Képwros Julian, cf. Thom. M. 193: (xépas): — goat- horned, Anth. Plan. 4. 234. II. as masc. Subst. Capricorn in the Zodiac, C. I. 6179, Arat. 286, Plut. 2. go8 C, Luc. Astr. 7. atyo-Képtihos, 6, perh. the horned owl, strix otus, Arist. H. A. 2. 15, 7. aly-dAcOpos, 6, goat’s-bane, prob. azalea pontica, a poisonous herb, Antig. Car. p. 30, Plin. H. N. 21. 13. aiyo-peAns, és, goat-limbed, Orph. H. fo. 5. aiyo-vopets, éws, lon. fos, 6, =alywopeds, a goatherd, Nic. Al. 39. aiyo-vépiov, 74, a herd of goats, Hesych. s. y. al-yordAuoy, etc. aiyo-vépos, ov, =aiyivdpos, Anth. P. 7. 397- aiy-dvuE, vxos, 6, }, =alyavvg, Anth. Plan. 4. 258. atyo-rlOnkos, 6, a goat-ape, Philostorg. H. E. 3. 11 ;—a goat-bearded species, acc. to Cuvier. aiyé-rAacros, ov, goat-shaped, Emped. Sphaer. 139. atyo-165ns, ov, 6,=aiyerdins, Anth. Plan, I. 15. alyo-mpécwmos, ov, goat-faced, Hdt. 2. 46. alyo-oxedys, és, goat-shanked, Tidy Philostorg. H, E. 3. 11, aiyo-rptxéw, to have goat's hair, Strabo 822. 33 aiyérpul, tBos, 5, 4, (rpiBw) trodden by goats, Dion, H. 19. 12. aiyo-pdyos, ov, goat-eating, epith. of Hera at Sparta, Paus, 3-15, 7- aly-6p0aApos, 6, goat’s-eye, a precious stone, Plin. 37. 72. aiytmds, 6, a vulture, often in Poets from Hom, downwards, aly. -yap- Pavuxes, dykvdoxeira Il. 16. 428, cf. Od. 16. 217, Hdt. 3. 76, Arist, H. A. 9. 1, 20 and 25 :—alyumids and -yWy differ (alyumot yurés re Nic. Th. 406), the former being the yy aly&yv (yunderos or imderos), the Limmer-geier, Vultur barbatus L., which preys on live animals (cf. Il. 17. 460, Od, 22.302, Soph. Aj. 169); the latter the carrion-vulture, V. cinereus. Aiyurriéle, to be like an Egyptian, to follow the Egyptians, i.e. to be sly and crafty, Cratin. Incert. 32, cf. Ar. Thesm. 922, Valck. Adon. Pp. 3573 Aly. 7@ déypart, of Plato, Eus. P. E. 698 D, cf. D. E. 20 Cc. 2. to speak Egyptian, Luc. Philops. 31. II. to be like Egy, i.e. be under water, Philostr. 831. iyumrtakés, 4, dv, of or for the Egyptians, Plut., etc. Ady.-«@s, Eccl, Aiyurnacpés, 6, imitation of the Egyptians, Eust. ad Dion. P. Aiyurnacrt, =Alyurrioti (as Dind. reads), Joseph. c. Apion. 1, 14. Aiytirwos, a, ov, Egyptian, Hom., etc. [In Hom. Alyurrin, Alyur- Tiov, etc., are necessarily a trisyll., Od. 4. 83, 127, 229., 17. 432: in Aesch. Supp. 817 Herm. restores Al-yérre.ov, metri grat.] ; At ow, to make like an Egyptian, i.e. swarthy, xpéav Comic. Anon. 95 B (ubi v. Meineke), Hesych. s. v. Aiyurriori, Adv. (as if from *Alyurri(w), in the Egyptian tongue, PP 2. 46, II. in Egyptian fashion, i.e. craftily, Theocr. 15. 48. Alyurri-ddys, es, Egyptian-like, Cratin. Min. I'vy. 2, ubi y. Meineke. , Alyurro-yevis, és, of Egyptian race, Aesch, Pers. 35. Alyurros, 6, the river Nile, Od. 4. 477, al.; though even Hes, calls it NeiAos. 2. King Aegyptus, Aesch. Supp. Io, etc. Be %, Egypt, Od. 17. 448, ete. ; Aiyurrévie to Egypt, Od. 17. 426. aiywdtés or alydAvos, 6, a small kind of owl, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 3., 9. 17, 2; written aizwAxos in 6. 6, 3. alyvut, txos, 6, 4, (vug) goat-hoofed, Anth. P. 6. 35. aiy-avixov, 74, goat's hoof, a plant, the same as Ardameppov, Diosc. aiy-wrés, dv, goat-eyed, of persons, Arist. G. A. 5.1, 17; also like those of a goat, of eyes, Ib., cf. H. A. I. 10, I. &iSaXos, ov, Dor. for dtdyAos. *AtBSas, Dor. for ’Azdns, “Acdns, freq. in lyr. passages of Trag. aiSéopar, Il., etc., Ep. imper. aidefo Il. 24. 503, Od. 9. 269: poét. also aiSopat, Hom., part. aldduevos Aesch. Supp. 362, Eum. 549, Eur. Phoen. 1489 (all lyr.) ; imper. aldeo Il. 21. 74:—impf., jd00vro Aesch. Pers. 810, etc., aidéovro Pind., poét. aidero Il. 21. 468 :—fut. aldécopat 22. 124, Att., Ep. aidéocopat Od. 14. 388; late aldecOnoopat Dio C. 45. 44, Galen., (€w-) Eur. I. A. goo :—aor. med, qdecdunv Od. 21. 28, Att. (v. sub fin.), Ep. imper. aiderca: Il. 9. 640:—aor. pass. pdéo0nv Hom., etc., and in Prose, Ep. 3 pl. aideoGer Il. 7. 93: pf. 75eopae (v. sub fin.): the act. form is found only in «ar-aldéw, q. v.: Dep. To be ashamed, to feel ashamed, c. inf., aidecdev piv dvnvacda deicay & brodéxOar Il. 7. 93; aldéopar dt ployer GPavdro: 24. 90; ald. yap yupvovoGa Od. 6. 221: rarely c. part., alSecar pev marépa mporeinov feel ashamed of deserting him, Soph. Aj. 506 :—absol., aldeqGels a sense of shame, Il. 17. 95. 2. mostly c. acc. pers. to stand in awe of, fear, but in moral sense, to fear his bad opinion, atdeto Geovs Il. 24. 503, Od. 9. 269; aid. Tp@as Il. 6. 442, cf. 22. 124, Od. 2. 65, etc. ; GdAnHAous aideicbe shew a sense of shame or honour one for another, Il. 5. 5303 so, ovde Oedy omy ydécar7’ neither regarded he .. Od. 21. 28; and of things, aideroa: péAabpoy respect the house, Il. 2 640; éxOpdv G8 aide? véxuy ; Soph. Aj. 1356; Tévd Spor aldecGeis Id. O. T. 647, cf. 1426:—in Pind. P. 4. 308 aidecOévres prob. means shewing a sense of shame in their strength, i.e. using it moderately :—also in Prose, Ala aidecbévres Hat. 9. 7, 1, cf. 7. 141; PoBodpat ye.. rods poxOn~ pods (ob ydp Snore eimoip’ Gv ws ye aldovpar) Plat. Legg. 886 A, cf. Euthyphro 12 B, Phaedr. 254 E; later also, aid. énl ru Dion. H. 6. 92; bmép Tivos Plut. Cim. 2. II. to respect another's misfortunes, feel regard for him, phde tt pe alddpevos.., und éAcatpay Od. 3. 96; ald. riv rev pndey ddixotvray evoéBaay Antipho 120. 25. III. as Att. law-term, to forgive or be reconciled to a person, said of a kins~ man who allows a homicide to return from exile (cf. dwenauri{w), av éAdy tis dxovciov pévov..aldéanra: wat app Dem. 983. 19, cf. 991 ., 1069. 2; Ib. 644. 1, Tov dAdvra én’ dxovciy pivy.. pevyev, Ews iy aidéonral ria Tov ev yever merovOdrav, it seems necessary to read mis, cf, 635. 22; so aldovpevos Plat. Legg. 877 A; qdecpévos Dem, 645. fin.: cf. dvatdea 11. aidéouysos, ov, iting sh or respect, venerable, Luc. Nigt, 26; holy, Paus. 3. 5,6. Adv. —pms, reverently, Ael. N. A. 2. 25. aiSeors, %, respect, compassion, aldécews kat pidavOpwrias Dem. 528. 8, aideoréov, verb. Adj. one must reverence, Eust. 1434. 35- aideorés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. revered, venerable, Plut. 2. 67 B. GiBnAos [1], Dor. -tSaAos, ov, (a priv., Fideiv) making unseen, anni~ hilating, destroying (cf. dpavi{w) : so always in Hom., as epith. of Ares, Athena, etc., Il. 5. 897; but mostly of fire, 2. 455, etc.; later, ruxa C. I. 3328. 5; drn Opp. H. 2. 487; mérpos Ib. 1, 150; aidados Txa Anth. P, append. 200 :—Adv. —Aws, = dAcOpiws, Il. 21. 220. II. pass. unseen, unknown, obscure, Hes. Op. 754, Parmenid, 135: as epith. of Hades, either in the Homeric sense, or dark, gloomy, Soph. Aj. 608 (lyr.). Poét. word, on which v. Buttm. Lexil. s. v.; cf. di{nAos. ivn, %, modesty, Zeno ap. Stob. Ecl. 2. p. 106, C. 1. 6236. pe ped ov, gen, ovos, ba: , modest, Xen. Lac. 2, 10, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 14, al.: Sup, aldqyovéoraros, Xen, An. 1.9, 5. Adv. —pévas, D Id, Symp. 4, 58. ’ yMp. 4, § 34 GiBHs, és, (a priv. Fideiv) unseen, annihilated, Hes. Sc. 477. act. not seeing, Bacchyl. 46. *Atdms, 6, post. for “Avdys ; y. sub 4dys. --aidfjoipos, ov, post. for aldécryos, Orph. Arg. 13.46. diBvos [G15], ov, also n, ov Orph. H. g. 21, etc. (del). Everlasting, eternal, for detdvos, h. Hom. 29. 3, Hes. Sc. 310; often in Prose, af xpévos Antipho 113. 36; &y@pa Thuc. 4. 20; &. otxnots, of a tomb, Xen. Ages. 11, 16; 4 d. odota eternity, Plat. Tim. 37 E; 4. orparnyia, dpxh, Bacthela, vavapxta perpetual .., Arist. Pol. 3. 14, 4.5 4. 15, 13 so, d, Baotheis, yépovres Ib. 3. 13, 25., 5. 6, 11; 7a d., opp. to 7d yevnra and pOaprd, Id. Metaph. 8. 8, 15, Eth. N. 6. 3, 2, al. :—és dédiov Jor ever, Thuc, 4. 63; also ad infinitum, Arist. P. A. I. 1, 14. ‘Gid.67 5, N70, 4, eternity, Arist. Cael. 2. 1, 7, Phys. 8. 1, 21, al. Gidvés, 7, dv, (a priv., Fedetv) poet. word, = dtdcos, aiins, unseen, hidden, dark, Hes. Th. 860 :—Iater, diSvqeis, eooa, ev, Euphor. 60; and didvis, és, Poéta ap. Plut. Thes. 1, Opp. H. 4. 245. aidoin, 7, =aidus, Or. Sib. 8. 184. aidSouikds, 7, dv, of or belonging to the alSota, Oribas. p. 184 Mai., Paul. Aeg., Aét. aiSotov, 74, often in pl. aidofa, 7d, the privy parts, pudenda, both of men and women, Il. 13, 568, Hes. Op. 731, Hipp. Aph. 1253, Plat., ete. ; also in sing., Hdt. 2. 30, 48, and mostly so in Arist. II. aidozoy sortie a sea animal, perh. pennatula, Nic. ap. Ath. 105 C, cf. Arist. oA. 4. 75-14, Le - A i aiSoios, a, ov, (alSouat) regarded with awe or reverence, august, vener- able,.in Hom. and Hes. only of persons, as superiors or elders, persons under divine protection, esp. of the wife or mistress of the house; then generally of women, deserving respect, tender, mapOévos aidotn Il. 2. 5143 tarely of the gods, 18. 394, 425, Hes. Th. 44; of guests and suppliants, often joined with piAos and devds in Hom. ; also aidotos absol. for ixé- tns, Od. 15. 373, ubi v. Schol. 2. later of things, deserving rever- ence, yépas Pind. P. 5. 22; aldovéoraros kredvew xpvads Id. O. 3. 76. II. act. bashful, shamefaced, Od. 17. 578, Plat. Legg. 943 E:—Ady. -ws, reverently, Od. 19. 243. 2. of things, shewing reverence, reverent, xdpis Pind. O. 7. 164; aid. mvedpa, Ad-yor a spirit, words of reverence or respect, Aesch. Supp. 29, 455- III. Comp. aidodrepos, Od. 11. 360, —€arepos, Dion. P. 172; Sup. aldoéoraros, Pind. O. 3. 76.—A poét. word; for the few places in which Plato uses it are from Poets. alSousdns, es, (ef50s) like the alSota, Arist. H. A. 5. 6, 3. aidopar, post. for aidéouat. “AiSos, Ep. gen. of an obsol. nom, “Ais, v. sub “Acdys, dns. ivy), %, late and incorrect form of aléquoodvn, C. 1. (add.) 4316 h. aidé-ppwv, ov, gen. ovos, (pphy) regardful of mind, compassionate, Soph. O. C. 237 (lyr.): respectful, mpés rwa Eur. Alc. 659. Gidpetn or -Ly [i], 4, want of knowledge, ignorance, Od. 12. 41; also in pl., Od. 10. 231., 11. 272 :—Ep. word, used by Hdt. 6, 69 in Ion, form GiSpnin or rather didpin. ae Kase . G-iSpyets, evoa, ev, later collat. form of sq., Nic. Al. 415. G-iSpis, «, gen. cos and eos, post. Adj. unknowing, ignorant, Il. 3.219, Pind. P. 2. 68; often c. gen., Od. 10. 282, Hes. Sc. 410, Aesch. Ag. 1105, etc. [The penult. is short by nature, long by position in Aesch. 1. c., Soph. Aj. 213 (lyr.).] : diBpo-Slens [Si], ov, Dor. Sluas, a, 6, unknowing of right or law, lawless, Pind. N. 1. 96. 1d-tSptros or dv-{Spuros, ov, unsettled, vagabond, like dvéarios, docs, of Timon the misanthrope, Ar. Lys, 809, cf. Dem. 786. 10; Spdpous ay. in vagabond courses, Eur. I. T. 971; . kaxdv Cratin. Sepip. 3, expl. by E. M. d ob« dv ms abr@ idpdcavro:—metaph. unsettled or unstable in mind, Philo 2. 112. 2. of a floating island, Dion. H. 1. 15, ef, Plut, 2. 925 F, Ady. -ras, Theod. Metoch.—The better form seems to’be diSpuros, though the other is freq. in Mss., v. Lob. Phryn. 730. JAiBwvets, éws (in Anth. P. 7. 480, éos), 6, lengthd. poét. form of “Atdys, Hom., Aesch. Pers. 650. Later authors, as Mosch., used the obl. cases ‘AiSovijos, fi, ja, with the first syll. long, metri grat. : trisyll. nom. Aldwveds in Soph. O. C. 1560. In Hesych., the form “Alden is corrected by Bentl. into Azeri from Il. 5. 190. saldes, dos, contr. ods, 7, as a na pron dy a mare Siew ca modesty, Il. 24. 453 6 8 ..dyopeder aldot pedrxin Od. 8. 172, etc. : a sense of shame, 5 edling of honour, self-respect, ali@ 0é08 evi Oupe cherish a sense of shame within you, Il. 15. 561; toxe ‘yap aléds «at déos shame and fear held them back, Ib. 657 (v. sub 60s) ; aldoé eixov 10. 238; 50, GAAG pe mwArer aldés Alcae. 55; dua moar exdvopery ouverbberar kat Thy alb& yuvh Hat. 1. 8; aidds ris €xet Plat. Soph. 217 D; aidds xal dien Id. Prot. 322 C; aldods éumimkacda Xen., ete. : —personif., Zyvi ctvOaros Opdvav Aiddés Soph. O. C. 1268. 2. regard for others, respect, reverence, aidods ovdemis érvxov Theogn. 1266, cf. Eur. Heracl. 461; aidds roxéwv respect for them, Pind. P. Pa 8s riv euhy al’® respect for me, Aesch. Pers. 699; al8@ AaBeiv éni ru Soph. Aj. 345 daxpiar révOipov alba tears of sorrow and pity, Aesch. Supp. 5773 70 yap tpapfvac pi) xax@s alb@ péper Eur. Supp. gi. 3. mercy, pardon, Antipho 114. 16, Plat. Legg. 867 E. II. that which causes shame or respect, and so, 1. a shame, scandal, aliés, ’Apryetor, xan’ @déyxea! IL. 5. 787, ete.; aldds, & Avucor wot pedyere; 16. 422; aldds pev viv He. . 17. 336. 2.=72 aidoia, Il. 2. 262. 3. dignity, majesty, aldds eat xdpis h. Hom. Cer. 214. (On the Homeric notion vd word, v. Gladstone, Hom, 2. 431 sqq.) altel, Ion. and poét. for del, q. v. vale~yev 3. post. for devyevérns, Il. 2. 409, Od. 2. 432, al. (For compds. of aici here omitted, v. sub de-.) : ii. $ 150; alOnp Copepds, aidys — aibiip. atei-yevis, és,=foreg., Opp. C. 2. 397: — aigAuot, v. sub dion Liehoupos, v. sub alAoupos. atéy, v. sub dei. , ov, lulling in eternal sleep, epith. of Death, Soph. O.C. 1578. aiés, Dor. for aiéy, aici. alernSév, Ady. like an eagle, Apollon. Lex, Hom. 68, Schol. Il, 18. 410. alertatos, a, ov, (derds 111) belonging to or placed in the pediment, G.I. 160. col. 2. 73. ov, =déreos: proverb., alériov xdpw éxricw, of those who repay benefits quickly, Apost. Cent. 1. 78. aieréeis, coca, ev, of eagle-kind, Opp, C. 3. 117. aierds, 6, v. sub derds. : aifqes, eooa, ev, late form of al(nds, Theopomp. Coloph. ap. Ath. 183 B. alfjios, 6, lengthd. form of ai(nds Il. 17. 520, Od. 12. 83, Hes. Se. 408. Gifpdos, ov, =didndos, unseen, Tov piv al{ndov O7jKev Oeds Il. 2. 318, as restored (for dpi{jAov) by Buttm. and others from the Scholiasts, Hesych., and Apollon. Lex. Hom.—On the change of 6 and ¢, cf. dptin- Ros, dpi{ndos and y. Curt. Gr. Et. p. 605. ; aifnos, lengthd. aifijtos, 6, in full bodily strength, active, vigor- ous, in Hom. of kings and warriors generally ; of the brother of Hecuba, Il. 16. 716: of a stout, lusty slave, recoepaxovraérns ai(nds Hes. Op. 439, cf. Th, 863 :—as Subst. a warrior, Cratin. Aax. 1; simply a man, Ap. Rh. 4. 268. These passages shew that the common transl. of youthful, youth, is inappropriate, except in the latitude allowed to the Lat. juvenis, junior, vy. Gladstone, Hom. 3. 41 sqq. (The deriv. is as yet not made out, v. Curt. Gr. Et. p. 615.) ainvas, Ion. for aidyjs, Archil. 38. ai: » in Il.*18. 410 Vulcan is called méAwp alnroy, prob.=dyrov, mi, ae tiecane Buttm., Lexil. s. v. 4. 6s, 6, Dor. for derds, alerds. aidadéos, a, ov, (aidadn) smoky, Ap. Rh. 4.777. aidaddeis 11. 2, Nic. Th. 750. aidadn, 7), (ai0w)=aiPadros, esp. soot, Luc. D. Deor. 15. 13; cf. Lob. PI . p. 114. iibahts [ae], és, =de.Badns, Orph. H. 8, 13. aifadtwv, wvos, epith. of the rér7if, prob.=aldaddes 11. 2, Theocr. . 138. elixien, éeaca, dev, contr. aiBadots, ofcca, ody: (ai@ados). Poet. Adj. smoky, sooty, wéAaOpoy Il. 2. 415, cf. Theocr. 13. 13; Kéms aid. black ashes that are burnt out, Il. 18. 23, Od. 24. 316. II. burning, blazing, xepavvds Hes, Th. 72; pAdé Aesch. Pr. 992. 2. burnt- coloured, i. e. red or reddish-brown, Nic. Th. 566. Z aifahoxopmia, 7, empty, boasting, that is nothing but smoke, Schol. Ar. Eq. 696. aiPados, 6, like Aryis, a smoky flame, the thick smoke of fire, soot, Hipp. 634.23, Eur. Hec. 911: also aidan. II. as Adj. ai@ados, ov, =aldaddes 11. 2, Nic. Th. 659. ai8GAbw, fo soil with soot or smoke, Eur. El. 1140:—Pass. to burn to soot, Diosc. 1. 79; poét. to be laid waste by fire, Lyc. 141. aifardbns, €s, (€f50s) sooty, black, Arist. Mund. 4, 20. aidddwors, ews, 4, a raising of vapor, Max. Tyr. 41. 1. aifadwrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. burnt to ashes, Lyc. 338. aide, Ep. for cide, as ai for ei, in Hom. ai’ dperes, Il. 1. 415, al. Gideos, Dor. for 7i8eos. aiSep-epBiiréw, to walk in ether, Anth. Plan. 328, : aiBépos, a, ov, also os, ov Eur. Fr. 836. Of aidnp or the upper air, and so, 1. high in air, on high, Aesch. Pr. 157, Th. 81, Soph. O. C. 1082, etc.; aifepia dvémra flew up into the air, Eur, Med. 440, cf. Andr, 830. ; 2 ethereal, heavenly, -yovn Eur. Fr.1.c. Adv.-‘ws, Iambl. Myst. 1.9. In Trag. used only in lyric passages; also in Arist. Mund. 2, 1 Wieay albepubins. €s, («lB0s) = alBepadns, Galen. peice aidepo-Bapwv [Gy], ovos, 6, 4, walking in air, Eust. Opusc, 183. 21, etc. aidepo-Biiréw, = aidepeuBaréw, Luc. Philops. 25. aidepo-Béckas, ov, 6, living in ether, Cercid. ap. Diog. L. 6. 76. aidepodpopéw, to shim the ether, Welck. Syll. Ep. 32. aifepo-Spopos, ov, ether-skimming, Cines, ap. Ar, Plan. 384, C. I. 1907. aidepo-adhs, és,=aldepmins, Plut. 2. 430 E. aiSepo-Aaparys, és, shining in ether, ovpavés Manetho 4. 29. aiepo-Adyos, ov, talking of ether and the like, of Thales, Anaximen. ap. Diog. L. 2. 45 hence al@epodoyéw, Ib. 2. 5, cf. 8. 50. aidepovipos, ov, (vépopat) =aidepoBdcxas, Hesych. aidepo-vopdw, to rule the sky, Manetho 4. 25, aifepé-mAaykros, ov, roaming in ether, Orph, H. 5. 1. aidepains, es, (€/5os) like ether, Plut. 2. 432 F. Ai@y, 7, name of a horse of Agamemnon, fiery, i.e. bright bay, Il. 23. 295 aiffjes, coca, ev, (aldw) =aidaddes U1. 2, Nic. Al. 394. ; aifjp, épos, in Hom. always 4; in Hes. and Att. Prose always 6; in Pind. and Trag. mostly 6 as always in Aesch., but # in Soph, O, T. 867 and often in Eur.: (aidw). Ether, the upper, purer air, opp. to dp (v. sub yoc., and cf. Arist. Cael. 1. 3, 13, Meteor. 1, 3, 8): hence heaven, as the abode of the gods, Il. 13. 192; Zeds aidép valwy 2, 412; and in later philosophy equiv. with the Deity, Zeds orw aidh Aesch.. Fr. 65 a, cf. Virg. G. 2. 325:—also the blue sky, sky, Ore 7 émiero vhvepos aidmp Il. 8. 556; but in 16. 365 a cloud is said to come aldépos &« dins, cf. alOpyyevns, and v. Spitzn. ad 1,: later it is used where dnp might stand equally well, Aesch. Pr. 1044, 1088, Pers. 365, Eur. Bacch. axAvées Ap. Rh, 3. 1264., 4-927; and Enr., Cyc}. II. of ants, = Av. 1393, Anth. aiOie — airXwos. 410, even has it for the fume from the Cyclops’ mouth. II. in Eur. Alc. 594, a clime, region. = és, burning : ai6i)s wémdos the robe of Hercules, hence proverb, of a demagogue, Paroemiogr., cf. Meineke Cratin. KAeoB. 4 aidwos, 7, ov, burning, Hesych., E. M. Aivtomife, to speak or be like an Ethiop, Heliod. to. 39. Aidlowp, oros, 6, fem. Aiftomts, fos, , more rarely Aldo as fem., Lob. Aj. 323: irr. pl. Ai@comfes Il. 1. 423,—whence Call. (Del. 208) formed a nom. Ai®torreds, fjos: (aldw, oy). Properly Burnt-face, i.e. an Ethiop, negro, Hom., etc.:—proverb., AiSiona ophxew ‘to wash a blackamoor white,’ Paroemiogr. II. Adj. Ethiopian, Ai@coms y~haooa Hdt. 3. 19; yi Aesch. Fr. 304, Eur. Fr. 230:—a form At@- émvos, a, ov, is found in Eur. Fr. 351: Ai®tomés, 4, dv Hdt., etc.: and as Subst, Ai®tomlia, 4, Hdt., etc. 2. in the literal sense, like af@oy, sun-burnt, Anth. P. 7. 196. aiddré, wos, 7), a pustule, pimple, Hipp. 427. 4. aldos, 6, a burning heat, fire, Eur. Supp. 208, Rhes. 95 :—later also al8os, eos, 74, Ap. Rh. 3. 1304. ( aiés, 4, dv, burnt, Ar. Thesm. 246, of a red-brown colour, Bacchyl. 13. aiovea (sc. rod), %, in the Homeric house, the corridor or cloister of the adAq, open in front like a verandah, on each side of the mpd@upov looking E. or S. to catch the sun, whence the name (for it was originally partic. of ai@w), dduov.. fers aidovonar rervypévoy Il. 6. 243, cf. 20, 11. Hom. makes it the sleeping-place of travellers who wish to start.early, Od. 3. 399: in Od. 4. 302 he says the same of the mpdéd5opos, prob. as including the ai@ouca. alforp, ors, (aids, dp) fiery-looking, in Hom. as epith. of metal, flash- ing, aidom xadx@ Il. 4. 495, etc.; and of wine, sparkling (not fiery- hat or strong, as others) ai@ora olvoy 4. 259, etc.; once of smoke, Od. 10. 152, where it prob. means red smoke, smoke mixed with flame, like ai@ados; later alboy proypés, Aaumrds Eur. Supp. 1019, Bacch. 594. 2. swart, black, Opp. H. 1. 133, etc.; al@om xoo@ Anth. P. append. 69. II. metaph. fiery, hot, keen, Lat. ardens, Apds Hes. Op. 361; Bacxavin Anth, P. 5.218: fiery, furious, dvip Soph. Aj. 224; Y. sub aldwy, aifpn, %, in Att. as well as Hom.:. later ai@pa, Piers. Moer. p. 184: (related to ai€hp, as yaorpa to yaorhp): clear sky, fair weather, Lat. sudum, rotnoov 8 ai€pny Il. 17. 646; ddAd par’ aldpn rérrarat dvépedos Od. 6. 44: rare in Att. Poets, as Eur. Fr. 781. 50, Ar. Av. 778. Poét. word, cf. aidpia. aidpnyevis, és, (yevéaGaz) epith. of Boreas in Il, 15.171, born in ether, sprung Jrom ether, (not act. making a clear cold sky, Spitan. Il. 1. c.); so a pnyeverns, Od. 5. 296, cf. Soph. O. T. 867. aifpnes, ecoa, ev, = aldpos, Pherenic, ap. Schol. Pind. O. 3. 28, Opp. II. fiery, Pind. P. 8. 65: C. 4. 73. atbpia, Ion. -ty, %, prose form for af@pn, first used however by Solon, 13. 22; & al6pins kat ynveulns Hdt. 7. 188; ef aidpias dorpdyw Cratin. Apam. 4, cf. Hdt. 3. 86, Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 31; aiOpias otons in clear weather, per purum, opp. to bray émvépedoy 7, Arist. Meteor. 2. 9, 11, al.; so ai@pins or —tas alone, Hdt. 7. 37, Ar. Nub. 371; Tis ai@pias Arist. Probl. 25. 18. II. the open sky, ind rijs ai€pias in the open air, Lat, sub dio, Xen. An. 4. 4, 14. 2. esp. of the clear cold air of night, Hdt. 2. 68; and so prob. in Hipp. Aér. 285. [t in penult. except in dactylics and anapaestics, Solon |. c., Ar. Nub. 371; cf. Meineke Com. Fr. 2. p. 34.] atOprate, to clear the sky, dépa Arist. Probl. 26. 8 :—but Hesych., Suid., etc., quote aidpe? in the sense of xecudcer, i.e. to be chill, cf. sq. alOpidw, to expose to the air, to cool, aléproas Hipp. 497, fin.; but just below p@pracpéva (from alépidw). II. intr. ¢o be clear, of the sky, ds 8 7Opiace Babr. 45. 9 (Meineke 70ptace). al€pwés, 7, i cxpgtiie Hesych. alOpro-Kovréw, fo sleep in the open air, Theocr. 8. 78. aifpios, ov, clear, bright, fair, of weather, h. Hom. Ap. 433; al@plou éévros Tov Hépos Hat. 2. 25. 2. also as epith. of Zevs, Theocr. 4. 43, Arist, Mund. 7, 2, Theophr. C. P. 5. 12, 2: of winds which cause a clear sky, Arist. Meteor. 2. 6, 18; esp. of the North winds, Ib. 2. 6, 22. IL. in the open air, kept there, Cratin. Ana. 5. 2. cold, chill, mayou pavévros ai@piov Soph. Fr. 162; for Id. Ant. 357, v. sub imraiOpios. III. ai@pov, 7d, an adaptation of the Lat. atrium to a Greek sense, Joseph. A. J. 3. 6, 2, Luc. Anarch, 2. aidpusins, es, («l50s) like the clear sky, Heracl. Alleg. 36. aifpo-Barns, ov, 6, walking through ether, of Abaris, lambl. V. Pyth. 1. 28. II. a rope-dancer, Manetho 4. 278. alOpo-Bodéw, to dart rays at, shine on, c. acc., Manetho 4. 224. , ov, whirling through ether, Manetho 4. 298. aidpo-mhavns, és, wandering in ether, Manetho 4. 586. aidpo-rodetw, to roam through air, Manetho 2. 383; also -€w. alOpos, 6, the clear chill air of morn, Od. 14. 318; cf. ai@pn, alépia. al€ps-rokos, ov, generated in air, Manetho 4. 339- alOpwros, ov,=aidpios, Manctho 4, 166, with v. |. al@wmd. al®vypa, aros, 76, (aidvoow) a spark: metaph., ai9. ebvolas, dégns Polyb. 4. 35, 7+, 20. 5, 4, cf. Plut. 2. 966, 21. Ova, 7, a sea-bird, prob. a kind of gull, Larus marinus, Od. 5. 337, cf. Arist. H. A. 5.9, 1; at. ixvBéAo Anth. P. 6. 23 :—epith. of Athena, as protecting ships, Paus. I. 5, 3. II. metaph. a skip, Lyc. 230. Qu16-Operrros, ov, feeding with gulls, Lyc. 237. : : aiduerip, jpos, 6, that which darts ae the air, of wild animals, arrows, etc., Opp. C. 2. 332, Anth. P. 6, 296. aidicow (cf, dv-, d-, war-, rap-a0Ucow): aor. map-aidvga Rind; J. 35 (akin to aiéw). To put in rapid motion, stir up; kindle, Soph. Fr. 486 :—Pass. to move rapidly, quiver, of leaves, Sappho 4. II. intr., Arat. 1033. ai9w, only found in pres. and impf., to light up, kindle, atdew nip Hat, 4.145, Aesch. Ag. 1435; Oeois ipa Soph. Ph. 1033; Aapmddas Eur. Rhes. 95, Theocr., etc. (whence perh. mip ai@ey should be read for mupaidey, Eur. Rhes. 41, 78, 823) :—metaph., oéAas dupaow aide: Anth. P. 12. 93; xéAor aid. Ib. 5. 300. 2. rarely intr. to burn or blaze, Pind. O. 7. 87; Aapmrijpes ovxér’ HOov Soph. Aj. 286. 3. in this sense the Pass. atfopat is used by Hom. always in part., wupds pévos aldopévoo Il. 6, 182, cf. 8. 559, etc.; aid. dadds 13. 320; ald. dades Od. 7. 101; so, Pind, O. 1. 2, Eur. Hipp. 1279, etc.; so, after Hom., aidera: ndddora [ra baréa} Hdt. 4.61; aidécOw 5% wip Eur. I. A: 1471; Sépar’ aldecOar doxey Id. Bacch. 624, cf. Xen. An. 6. 3, 193 metaph, like Lat. uri, épwrt aiOeoOac Xen. Cyr. 5. 1, 15, ef. Anth, P. 12. 83; also, ai@er’ épws (Ep. impf.) burnt fiercely, Ap. Rh. 3. 2096. (From 4/AIO come also ai0és, af@os, aidwv, prob. also aldhp, aidpn; cf. Skt. indh, indhé (accendo), iddhas (bright), édhas (firewood) ; Lat. aestus, aestas, aedes; A.S. ad (a pile); O. H. G. eit (fire); M.H.G. eiten (to glow).) aifwv, avos, 6, 7%, v. sub fin.: (ai0w). Fiery, burning, blazing, of lightning, etc., Pind. O. 10, 98; also of fiery smoke, Pind. P. 1. 44:— cf. aldo. II. of burnished metal, like aléoy, flashing, glittering, otSnpos Il. 4. 485, Od. 1. 184, Soph. ; ai@wves AeByres, Tpimodes Il. g. 123., 24. 233. III. of various animals, as in Hom. of the horse, lion, bull, eagle, and in Pind. O. 11. 20, of the fox:—some take it to be Jiery, fierce; others of the colour, like Lat. fulvus, rufus; others of their bright, fiery eyes; alOaves O7jpes Plat. Rep. 559 D. 2. metaph. of men, ablaze, fiery, like Virgil's igneus, Soph. Aj. 222, 1088, Hermipp. Moi. 1; aidwv Aja fiery in spirit, Aesch. Th. 448; Atuds aiOwy Epigr. ap. Aeschin, 80. rr (Anth. P. append. 205), Call. Cer. 68.—[The penult. of the oblique cases is sometimes shortd. in Poets,’ metri grat. Thus dvSpds aidovos is restored by W. Dind. (for at@omos) in Soph, Aj. 222 from the Laur. Ms.; ai#ova A.pdv (for ai@ora) by Bgk. in Hes. Op. 361; so vipoat dat. pl. from vfipor, in Theogn.; and ai#ova (wrongly altered by Musurus into af@wva) is cited by Hesych.] aixa [xa], Dor. for ef xe, éav, e conj. Valck. Theocr. 1. Io. , aixddAw, only used in pres. and impf.: (aldAos). To flatter, wheedle Sondle, properly of dogs (v. ad fin., and A. B. 21), c. acc., Soph. O. T. 597 (Mss. éxxadodor), Eur. Andr. 630; Tov deomérny fadAe Ar. Eq. 48; 7a pev Adyt aixddAdc pe flatter, please me, Ib. 211; Kapdiav éuhy it cheers my heart, 1d. Thesm. 869 :—of a dog, like catvw, to wag the tail fawningly, Babr. 50. 14. aixdos, 6, a flatterer, Hesych, (Perh, from the same Root as deny, dxéwy, v. *axn I.) aike, aikev, poét. and Dor. for éav. aixeta, y. sub aixia. , aixéAvos, ov, poét. for deuédvos, Theogn. 1344, Eur. Andr. 131. dixh [az], 4, (dtoow) rapid motion, flight, Lat. impetus, régwv dixal Il. 15. 709; éperpav Opp. H. 4. 651. Cf. flan. dihs [7], és, post. for dewps, Adv. dixds Il. 22. 336: in Trag. also alkys, és (cf. alxia), aixts mya Aesch, Pr. 472; Oavarous alxeis Soph. El. 206. Adv. aix@s, Soph. El. 102 (Mss. ddixws), 216, Plat. Com. Incert. 60. aixta, 4, Att. for the Ion. de:eln (q. v.), injurious, insulting treatment, an affront, outrage, esp. of blows, stripes, etc., Aesch. Pr. 177, Soph. El. 514, O. T. 748; in pl., Aesch. Pr. 93, Soph. El. 486, 511. 2. in Prose mostly as law-phrase, alias din a private action for assault, less serious than that for #Bpis (which was a ypapy), Plat. Rep. “5 D, 464 E, and often in Oratt.; jv 6 rijs BAGBns bpiv vdpos tAat, Tv 6 ths aixias, jv 6 ris UBpews Dem. 525. 14, cf. Lys. Fr. 27, Bockh P. E. 2. p. 102. 8. generally, suffering, disgrace, Thuc. 7.75. [alxia, wherefore Dawes, Pors., etc., would write aixeia, cf. decein: but vy. Ellendt, Lex. Soph.] aixtfw, Act. used only in pres., to treat injuriously, to plague, torment, twa Soph. Aj. 403, Tr.839; ofa storm, magav aluiCav poBqy bAys Id. Ant. 419 :—Pass. to be tormented, pres. in Aesch. Pr. 168 ; mpds kuvaiy édeordv aixo6évr’ Soph. Ant. 206; es 7d cGya aixioO7jvac mAnyais Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 19. II, more commonly as Dep. aixtfopat, Aesch. Pr. 195, Isocr.: fut. alxicowat Anth., Att. —vofpar (*ar—) Eur, Andr. 829: aor. #atoduny Soph, Aj. 111, O. T. 1153, Xen., but also gxloOnv Andoc, 18. 11, Lys. 105. 32, Isocr. 73 A, Xen. (for its pass. sense, v. infr.) : so, pf. jxvcpar Eur. Med. 1130, plgpf. yxtoro Plut. Caes. 29 :—in same sense as Act., c.acc., Il. c.: and even 7d xwpia aix. Dem. 1075.11; ¢. dupl. ace. pers. et rei, almifecOal ra 7a éo xara Xen, An. 3.1, 18; of. Ep. decci{w, aixuopa, aros, 74, an outrage, torture, Aesch. Pr. 989, Lys. 105. 29:— in pl. mutilated corpses, Eur. Phoen. 1529. ; aixtopés, 6,=foreg., Dem. 102. 20, and often in later writers. aixtorikés, 7, dv, prone to outrage, known from Adv. -«@s, Schol. Ven. B. 22. 336, Poll. 8. 75, and other Gramm. :—fem. aixiorpua, 7, (as if from a masc. almorhs), Suid. Ady. -«a@s, Schol, Ven. B. Il. 22. 336. alAov or dixXov, 76, an evening meal at Sparta, Epich. 20 Ahr., Aleman 71, cf. Ath. 139 B: another form aixvov is quoted by Hesych., Suid., Eust. :—cf. aodos. i, (Goon) Ga enaruhons dean dik G], fipos, 6, (atoow) the swift-rushing, Opp. H. 1. . . av 2) (evéouat) unapproachable, Hesych.; restored by Herm. in h. Hom, Merc. 346, for 58 é«rds. aixas, Adv. of aixhs. aidtvos, 6, a plait dirge, repeated, alAwvoy aidwoy elmé Aesch. Ag. 121 (lyr.), cf. Soph, Aj. 627 (lyr.), Eur. Or. 1395 3 (aid to be from af 36 Aivov, ah me for Linos ! Paus. 9. 29, 8; v. sub Alvos.) 2. Adj. ai- Awos, ov, mournful, plaintive, aidtvos kaxois Eur. Hel. 171; Bpépos atd, unhappy, C. 1. 6251 :—neut. pl. atAwa, as Adv., Call. Ap. 20, Mosch, I 3.1. aidotpios, 6, cat-mint, E. M. 34. 9. aidoupos, Arist. H. A. 5. 2, 7., 6. 35, 3, or aléXoupos, 6, 4, Hdt. and Comici Il, c. A cat, felis domesticus, Hdt. 2. 66, Ar. Ach. 879, Anax- andr. Io. 1. 12, Timocl. Alyumr. 1. II. later, a weasel, v. Moschop. 7. cxe5. 148. (Acc. to Buttm., Lexil. s. v. aléAos 5, from aiddos and ovpd, as expressive of the wavy motion of the tail peculiar to the cat kind.) aipa, aros, 74, blood, Hom., who often joins pdvos re xat alpa, etc. ; yuxijs dxparoy aiya Soph, El. 786; also in pl. streams of blood, Aesch. Ag. 1293, Soph. Ant. 120, Eur. El. 1176, Alc. 496. 2. of anything like blood, aipa orapvaAjs Lxx (Sir. 39. 26), cf. Anth. P. append. 69. 3. with collat. meaning of spirit, courage, obx €xwy aipa pale, spiritless, Aeschin. 76. 28; cf. Arist. de An. 1. 2, 21 alua pdcxovot tives tiv Youxqv. II. bloodshed, murder, Aesch, Cho. 520, Soph. O. T. tol, cf. Elmsl. Bacch. 139; Spatpov aipa ylyvera: a kinsman’s murder is done, Aesch. Supp. 449; elpyacra: unrpgov afya Eur. Or, 284, cf. 406; alya mparrew Ib. 1139; and even aia xraveiy, as if alya were a cognate acc., Soph. Fr. 153 :—é@’ aipare pevyew to avoid trial for murder by going into exile, Dem. 548, fin.; which in Eur. Supp. 148 is aipa pevyetv, v. Miiller Eumen. § 50 sq.—The pl. is used in this sense by Aesch. Ag. 1302, Cho. 64, 650, often by Eur., never by Soph.; aivara avyyova brothers’ corpses, Eur. Phoen. 1503.—The words of Soph. El. 1394 led Hesych. and others to interpr, afua as=pdyxatpa, but v. veakovnros. III. like Lat. sanguis, blood, blood-relationship, kin, alud re wat yévos Od. 8. 583 ; aipvaros els dyaboio 4. 611; of ofs € aiparéds ior yevéOAns Il. 19. 111; 7d alud twos his blood or origin, Lat. stirps, Pind. N. 11. 44; aly’ éupddcoy Soph. O. T. 1406; 6 mpds aiparos one of the blood or race, Id. Aj. 1305, cf. Arist. Pol. 2. 3, 7; pytpos THs éutjs év aipars akin to her by blood, Aesch, Eum, 606, cf. Th. 141; d¢’ aiuaros from the race, Soph. O.C. 245. 2. concrete of a person, & Aids... aipa Epigr. Gr. 831. 1; alya ody Ib. 722. 8; cf. 1046. 4, al. (The Root of the word is uncertain.) aip-aywyés, dv, (dyw) drawing off blood, Diosc. 3. 137. aipdxopta: or aipaxoupiat, Gy, ai, (xopévvupe) offerings of blood made upon the grave to appease the manes, Pind. O. 1. 146, v. Dissen, (g0):— the sing. in Plut. Aristid. 21.—Dor. and Boeot. word. _aipakrucds, 4, 6v, making bloody, Schol. Soph. Ant. 1003. ie h, ov,-verb. Adj. of aipdoow, mingled with blood, of blood, Eur. I. T. .aipadéos, 3 ov, bloody, blood-red, Anth. P. 6. 129, Tryph., Nonn., etc. atpahwris, (50s, %, a clot of blood, Diosc. 2. 95. aipddwrp, wos, 6, (aiuadéos) a mass of blood: a bloodshot place, Hipp. 207 C, 240. II, etc. II. as Adj. looking like clotted blood, xupds Aretae. Caus. x i 2. oy or 4 eae : atpatis, ews, 4, a letting o , Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 6. 2 aipds, ddos, , a gush or stream of blood, Soph. Ph. 697 (lyr.) ; = aipa- ‘ros fdots, as the Schol. has it. , %, a wall of dry stones, Lat. maceria, aipacids re Aé-yeww to build walls (v. Aéyw A. 1. 2, alpwactodroyew), Od. 18. 359; alu. A€fovres 24. 224, in Hdt. x. 180, 191, of the walls of Bab lon; of walls as the haunts of lizards, Id. 2. 69 ; aly. éyyeyAuppeévn Tuma, of a wall round an Egyptian temple, Ib. 138; of a defensible wall, Thuc. 4. 43; aip. oixodopeiv Dem. 1274, fin.; and in Theocr. 1. 47, etc., a boy is sitting ép’ aipacinow. (The sense of wall therefore is quite: certain ; that of thorn-hedge seems to rest on the supposed deriv, from aids. Cf: Buttm. Lexil. s. eerong fe be 5 ee a aipacto- , to bui 's, Theopomp. . Incert. II. siadanihea, es, (eldos) like an aipacid, Plat. Legg. 681 A. : , Att. —rrw: fut. -déw: aor. fpagta (v. infr.) ree aor. )uax- Eur. El. 574, but aiuay@nv Soph: Aj. gog ; part. Aesch. Pers. 595 :— oe. Verb ye cf. éf-, nad-arpdcow). To make bloody, stain with blood, medio Pind. I. 8 (7). 110, cf. Aesch. Ag. 1589; éorids OeGy Id. Th. 275; xeipas aludgar Borois to stain them in the blood of beasts, Soph. Aj. 453, cf. alypatw 11:—hence to wound, smite so as to make bloody, xpar éudv 749 avrixa wérpq ..aipdgw meodv shall dash my head against the rock, Soph. Ph. 1002; mérepos dpa mérepov aipdager; shall bring to a bloody oad, Eur. Phoen. 1288; so, mésea ddia. . aiudgeroy Ib. 1299; aiudfes .. ras adAupOdyyous @dds Id. Ion 168 ; absol., ror yap e%§ fivaccer Bédos their weapons wounded none, drew no blood, Id. Bacch. 761:—Med., jpdgavro Bpaxiovas Anth. P. 7. 10:—Pass, to welter in blood, be slain, Soph. Ant. 1175. 2. as medic. term, to draw blood, as by cupping, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac: I, 4. II. intr. to be bloody, blood-red, Nic. Al. 480, Opp. H. 2. 618. ; aipardw, to be bloodthirsty, cf. povde, prob, 1. Aleman 68. vata, 4, shedding of blood, Ep. Hebr. 9. 22, Eccl. : aipa é, év, in Eur, Or. 962 also és, dv, —_ Bloody, bloodstained, re chiefly used by Trag.; aip. xedpes, fipos, etc; pdrdé aipa- rnp Kad... dpvds, i.e. dp’ aiparos wat dpuds fed by the blood of the victim and the wood, Soph. Tr. 766: esp. bloody, murderous, mvetpa Aesch. Eum, 137; Tedxos aly. the fatal urn, Id. Ag. 15; aip. BrAdpa Id. Eum. 359; 6updraw b:apPopat Soph. O. C. 5525; aTdvos aip. caused the eeking wound, 1d, Ph. 695; cf. Onydvn. II. of thereof, pévos Aesch. Ag. 1065; orayéves aip. gouts blood, istin, oe 1B oen. 1415; aly. pods a bloody flux, discharge of blood, of blood, Eur. Hipp. Coac. 201. , ov, bringing blood : bloody, pépos Aesch, Th. 419. 4 * , « , aiAouptos — aimoppayTos. aipitta, 7, blood-broth; the Spartan black broth made with blood, Poll. 6. 57; cf. Manso Sparta 1. 2, p. 192. ai @, to stain with blood, aor. aiparica: médov yas Aesch. Supp. 662. II. to draw blood, sting, Arist. H. A. 4. 7, 6. aiptrixés, 7, dv, of the blood, Oepudrns Arist. P. A. 4.13, 273 typérns Id. G. A. 4. 8, 13; rpopy, HAn Id. P. A. 2. 6, 8., 3. 4, 3- II. =€vatpos, of animals which have blood, opp. to dvatpos, Id. H, A. 1. 4, 2, BP. A-'2. I, at, etc. aipdrivos, 7, ov, of blood, bloody, orvyph Arist. H. A. 6. 3, 23 ddxpua Schol. Eur. Hec. 238. , 76, Dim. of afya, a little blood, M. Anton. 5. 4. aiptirts, iS0s, , a blood-red cloak, Arist. Color. 5. aiparirys [ir], ov, 5, blood-like, Ai@os aip. hematite, a red iron-ore, Theophr. Lap. 37, Diosc. 5. 143; elAeds aip. a disease, Lat. convolvulus sanguineus, Hipp. 557. 12:—fem., afwariris pAéy a vein as conductor of blood, Id. 1286. 42; aip. xopdh a black pudding, Sophil, }vA. 2. aiptiro-S6yxos, ov, holding blood, Schol. Od. 3. 444. atpiiro-edns, és, like blood, blood-red, Diod. 17. 10. aipiiroes, decoa, dev, contr. aiparots, odcca (restored by Pors. in O. T. 1279 xGAa(a @ aiparoiao’ for xaddtns aiparos), ody, =aipa- typos, Il, 5. 82. 2. blood-red, or of blood, yiddes, ou@dit 16. 459., 2. 267; aipardey fé0s aicxtve spreads the blood-red blush of shame, Soph. Ant. 529; (so, polvix’, épv@nua mpoowmov in Eur. Phoen. 1488). 3. bloody, murderous, méA€pos, etc., Il. 9.650; épis Aesch, Ag. 699; BAaxai Id. Th. 348. aiptiro-orxés, dv, (Acixw) licking blood, pws aiu. thirst for blood, Aesch, Ag. 1478 (lyr.). alpiro-rovew, to make into blood: Pass. to become blood, Medic. atparorolnats, ews, %), a making of blood, Theophil. Med. ards, ), dv, calculated for making into blood, Galen. ere or aipo-trocta, 4, a drinking of blood, Porphyr. ap. Stob. . I. 1024. aiptiro-roréw, (rive, mordy) to drink blood, Schol. Ar. Eq. 198. aiptiro-marys, ov, 6, a blood-drinker, blood-sucker, Ar. Eq. 198: in fem. —m@ris, 150s, Manetho 4. 616. aipiroppodos, ov,(popéw) blood-drinking, Aesch,Eum.193, Soph.Fr.813. aiptiroppiros, ov, (séw) blood-streaming, ain. pavides a shower of blood, Eur. I. A. 1515. iis, és, (ora{w) blood-dripping, reeking with blood, Aesch. Pers. 816, Th. 836, Eur. Supp. 812, Ar. Ran. 471 :—in Aesch. Eum. 365 the word is against the metre: on Cho. 842, cf. deyaroorayhs. aipirs-pupros, ov, blood-stained, BéAn Anth, P. 5. 180. atpiro-xupns, és, delighting in blood, Suid. aiptiro-xdppys, ov, =foreg., Anth. P. 15. 28. aipiré, f. wow, to make bloody, stain with blood, aipdrov beads Bapdv Eur, Andr, 260; 5: mapydos dvuxa.. aiyarodre Id. Supp. 77 :—Pass., pndev aipardpeba Aesch. Ag. 1656; xpa@ras aiyarovpevo. Eur. Phoen, 1149; Tparwuévn xeipas Id. Bacch. 1135; cf. Ar. Ran. 476, Thue. 7. 84, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, Io. 2. to slay, aor. aiparacat Soph. Fr. 814. II. to make into blood, Medic. aipireins, es, (ef50s) looking like blood, blood-red, Thuc. 2. 49, Arist. Meteor. 1. 5, I, al. 2. of the nature of blood, Arist. G. A. 1. 19 9, P. A. 4. fa 4, al. : aipir-orbds, dv, bloody to behold, blood-stained, aip. xépat, of the Furies Eur. Or. 256; aip. depudrar d:apPopat Id, Phoen. 870. : atpdrwots, ews, 7}, (aiuardéw) a changing into blood, Galen. atpir-o, dros, 6, },=alyarwmds, Eur. H. F, 933) € conj. Pors. aipy-mérns, 6, Ion. for aixonérns, Apollon. in A. B. 602. aipnpés, a, dv,=aipvarnpds, Manetho 1. 338, of women; cf. Steph th S.V- eee r aipvov, 70, a basin for blood, v. 1. Od. 3. 444, for duvior, aipo-Bipys, és, heavy with blood, Opp. ne Pa pc: aio Babys, bathed in blood, Soph. Aj. 219, Nonn. aipo-BéAvov, 74, a word of dub. sense in C. I. 8558. aipo-Bépos, ov, blood-sucking, of certain insects, Arist, H.A.8--11 I; yao- tépas aip., of serpents, greedy of blood, Theocr. 24.18; €xidva CL 152 aipo-Sarréw, to revel in blood, Theophr. ap. Porph, ele aipé-Supos, ov, bloodthirsty, Luc. Ocyp. 97. aipo-86xos, ov, = aivaroddxos, E. M., Suid, ial és, aiparoedhs, Philo 2. 244. aipo-Kepyvov, 76, a slight cough with blood-spitts i aipo-Admns, 7, Blood-swekin obi Gre; ee Dan ewes, ban lace ; ' i sea 2. 221. Os uous person; aipoprtia, %, incest, Pandect. Gipo-rorns, = aluaromwrns, Or. Sib. 8. 94:— i eal Pie aes crn b. 8.94:—for alpomogta, #, v. Stob. o-rrvikds, 7, dv, spitting blood, Androm. ap. alo-nleras, ov, piped ges Lape ire: Galen, 13. 78, sq. aipsé-poos, ov, post. for aiudppoos, Nic. Th. 318. alpoppiyéw, to have a hemorrhage, bleed violently, éx pwav Hi Acut. 395; aipopparyet mAH00s there is a violent hemorrhage, Id Ap: os :—also impers. aipoppaye? Ib. 1252; ain, wi Id, Epid 1 mes E op-piiyys, és, bleeding violently, Hipp. 1029 F, Soph. Ph 825. aipoppiyla, 9, hemorrhage, Hipp. Aph.1259, etc.: a bloody flux ee an ore bleeding (esp., says Galen, from the nose), Hipp. Aph. i 253, an y pe evevness h, ov, liable to aipoppayia, Hipp. 79 B, etc. Adv. -xas, aipoppaydns, es, (el50s) =foreg. shoge gp. oH Oe atpdppavros, ov, (Jalvw) blood-sprink iene ue sprinkled, blood-boltered, @vota: Eur. onpeta atx. symptoms of hemor- € , FOF apoppoew — aivos, aipoppoéw, fo lose blood, Hipp. 129 H, 133 A, etc.: to have a aipép- poa, Ev. Matth. g. 20. aipdppowa, 7, a discharge of blood, bloody flux, Hipp. 167 A, 168 B, etc.; ai. &« pvéwy Id, Aér. 282. aipoppotSo-kaverms, ov, 6, an instrument for stopping hemorrhage, Paul. Aeg. 6. 79. aipoppoikés, 7, dv, belonging to aiudppoa, indicating or causing it, Hipp. Aph. 1254, cf. 168 B, ete. aipoppois, ‘dos, %, mostly in pl. aipoppotdes (sc. pAéBes) veins liable to discharge blood, esp. hemorrhoids, piles, Hipp. Aph. 1248, etc. Et, a kind of shell-fisk, Arist. H. A. 4. 4, 34 (v. 1. daroppatdes). Til. =aipéppoos I, Plin. N. H. 20. 81. aipdp-poos, ov, contr. —pous, ovy, flowing with blood, rp¶ Hipp. Art. 831; ai. préBes veins so large as to cause a hemorrhage if wounded, Id. Fract. 759, ubi v. Galen. ; suffering from hemorrhage, Id. II. as Subst., a serpent, whose bite makes blood flow from all parts of the body, Diosc. io8. 30, Nic. Th. 282; cf. aiyoppots 111. aipoppomdys, €s, ( aicxpo-mpemns, és, of hideous appearance, Schol. Eur. Hipp. 74, Suid. s.v. “ApxiAoxos. ; - po-mpocwrros, ov, of hideous countenance, Suid. s. v. prdokAjjs. aicxpoppypovéw, = aicxpoeréw, Incert. ap. Stob. 291. 13. alcyxpoppnpocivn, 7, =alacxpodoyia, Dem. Epist. 1489. 8. aicxpop-pypwv, ov, =alcxpoddyos, and Adv. —péves, Poll. 8. 81. aicypés, d, dy, also ds, dv Anth. Plan. 151: (aloxos). In Hom. causing shame, dishonouring, reproachful, veixercev . . aia xpois tnlesow | 41 Il. 6. 325, etc.; so in Adv., aloxpas événome 23. 473. II.=Lat. turpis, opp. to Kadds : 1. of outward appearance, ugly, ill-favoured, of Thersites, Il. 2. 216, cf. h. Hom. Ap. 197, Hdt. 1. 196, etc.; de- formed, Hipp. Art. 790; aicxp@s ywdrds with an ugly lameness, Ib. 829: but commonly 2. in moral sense, shameful, disgraceful, base, infamous, Hdt. 3. 155, Aesch. Th. 685, etc. ; aloxpots yap alcxpa mpaypar’ éxdiSdcnerar Soph. El, 621; aioxpdv [éo7c], c. inf., Il. 2. 298, Soph. Aj. 473, 1159, Plat., etc.; év aicxp@ 0éoOa ri Eur. Hec. 806 ; én’ alcxpots on the ground of base actions, Soph. Fr. 196, Eur. Hipp. 511 :—70 aioxpdy, as Subst., dishonour, disgrace, Soph. Ph. 476; 70 éudv alcxpév my disgrace, Andoc. 21.1; the Socratics and Stoics spoke of 7d xaddv kat 70 alaxpéy, Lat. honestum et turpe, virtue and vice, cf. Arist. Rhet. 1. 9, 1:—Adv. shamefully, Trag., Plat., etc.; Sup. aicxiora Aesch. Pr. 959, Soph. O. T. 367. 3. ill-suited, pi, & 6 xaipés Dem, 287. 25; alaxpds mpés 7¢ awkward at it, Xen. Mem. 3. 8, 7. III. instead of the regul. Comp. and Sup. alaxpérepos, —éraros, the forms alcxiav, aloxioros (formed from a Root aioxo) are used by Hom., Hadt., and in Att. aioxpérys, 770s, %, ugliness, deformity, Lat. turpitudo, Plat. Gorg. 525 A. II. obscenity, euphem. for fellatio, Schol. Ar. Ran. 1308. —In Tzetz., aioxpootvn, 7). ; aicxpoupyéw, contr. for alaxpoepyéw, to act obscenely, masturbare, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 206 :—Pass., rd aloxpoupyovpeva Diog. L. prooem. 5. aloxpoupyia, 7, contr. for alcxpoepyia, shameless conduct, Eur, Bacch, ap Be pl., Eus. H.E. 8. 14, 12. II. obscenity, Aeschin. 41. 13. aicxpoupyés, dv, contr. for aisxpoepyds, obscene, Galen. 9. 274. AicxtAeos, a, ov, of or like Aeschylus, Schol. Il. 19. 87. aicywvy [0], 7%, (aloxos) shame done one, disgrace, dishonour, és aicxivny pépet it leads to disgrace, Hat. 1. 10, cf. 3. 133 ; so, aloxdvny péper, €xer it brings, involves dishonour, Soph. Tr. 66, Eur. Andr. 244, etc.; alcx. mepioraral pe, ovpBalvee por Dem. 30. 24., 254. 2} alcxivp mimrev Soph. Tr. 597; mepuminrav Xen. Hell. 7. 3, 9 aicxtyny wepianrev rvt Plat. Apol. 35 A; alox. mpooBaddew TW Id. Legg. 878 C; é aicx. moretv twa Dem. 272. 18 :—of a person, aicxivn marpg Aesch. Pers. 774; aloy. rivds dishonour from .. , Dem, 17. 6. 2. alc, yuvanay a dishonouring of women, Lat. stupratio, Isocr. 64 D, 287 B; also, ypapeoOai twa -yévous aloxuvns for dishonour done to his race, Plat. Legg. 919 E. II. shame for an ill deed, Lat. pudor, personified in Aesch. Theb. 409; Aloxvvny od vopicaca Oedy Anth. P. 7. 450. 2. generally, like aldws, shame, the sense of shame, honour, wacav aicy. dpeis Soph. Ph. 120; 4 yap aiaxuvn mapos tod Civ .. vopiferar Eur. Heracl. 200; &¢ alaxtvns €xev to be ashamed, Id. I. T, 683; also, aioxdvny éxew tivds for a thing, Soph. El. 616; or aicxivn mids éxe pe Ib. 20; alcy. emi ri Plat. Symp. 178 D; inép tivos Dem. 43. 6; joined with dé0s Soph. Aj. 1079; with @Acos ~ and aiéws, Antipho 114, 22:—rare in pl., goovoay aicxvvaow Soph. Fr. 588; év alcxdvais éxw I hold it a shameful thing, Eur. Supp. 164. III. in late authors, as Orig. Philoc. c. 2, Schol. Ar. Eq. 364, =aldoiov; cf. rv Tod owparos aicx., Alcid. ap. Arist. Rhet. ‘eae %, a kind of Mimosa, Plin. 24.17. __ aicxivopévws, Ady. from aicxtvw, with shame, Dion. H. 7. 50. aicyuvréov, verb. Adj. of aicxvvopat, one must be ashamed, Xen. Cyr. . 2, 40. Vieni, %, bashfulness, Plut. 2. 66 C. : aicy’ és, 7, dv, bashful, modest, Plat. Charm. 160 E, Arist. Eth. N. 4-9) 3 ” alcx. modesty, Plat. Charm. 158 C:—Adv. —Ad@s, Id. Legg. 665 E. II. of things, causing shame, shameful, Arist. Rhet. 2. 6, 27. aicxuvrip, jpos, 6, a dishonourer, of Aegisthus, Aesch, Cho. 990; so karacxuvrnp, Id. Ag. 1363 :—otherwise aicxvvrhp occurs only in a late Inser. in C. I. 8664. aicyuvrypés, 7, dv, =aicxuyrnAds, in Comp., Plat. Gorg. 487 B. (It is disputed which is the more Att. form, Piers. Moer. p. 28.) aicyuvtikds, 7, dv, shameful, Arist. Rhet. 2. 6, 12. 3 al . 0, Ov, shameful, Pseudo-Phocyl. 176, ubi Bgk. aioxuvrnpots. aicyive [0]: Ion. impf. aicxtveoxe (kat-) Q. Sm. 14. 531: fut. -tv@ Eur. Hipp. 719, Ion. -vvéw Hdt. 9. 53 : aor. foxbva Il., Att. ca pf. foxvyxa Dio C. 58. 16, goxtxa Draco 12:—Pass., fut. aioxivotpat Aesch. Ag. 856, Ar. Fr. 21, Plat., rarely aioxuv@qcopat v. sub fin.: aor. noxvveny Hdt. and Att., poét. inf. alcxuvOqpey Pind. N. 9. 64: pf. foxvppae (v. infr. B. 1) :—cf. da, ér-auocxvvopat, Kat-aicxvve, To make ugly, disfigure, mar, mpécwnov, kouny Il. 18. 24, 275 alox. Tov tmmoy to give the horse a bad form, Xen. Eq. 1, 12. 2. mostly in moral sense, fo dishonour, tarnish, pnde -yévos warépav alaxuvéper Il. 6. 209, cf. 23. 271; Tiv Xndprny Hat. 9. 53; freq. in Att., as aicx. feviay rpameay Aesch. Ag. 401 ; Tovs mpds aipatos Soph. Aj. 13053 Tovs matépas Plat. Menex. 246 D. b. esp. to dishonour a woman, Eur. El. 44, ete.; alox. otras Aesch. Ag. 1626 ;—for Soph. Ant. 528, y. sub aipardes. 8. to dishonour, disdain, émxdpra Pind. P. 3. 38. B. Pass. to be dish ed, Lat. lia affici, véxus HoXup- pévos, of Patroclus, Il. 18. 180; els 7d o@pa aicy. Arist. Pol. §. 10, 17. II. to be ashamed, feel shame, absol., Od. 7. 305-, 18. 12, Hdt, 1. 10, Eur. Hipp. 1291. 2. more commonly fo be ashamed at a thing, c. acc. rei, aloxuvdpevor par dvdpav Od. 21. 323; THY duoyévecay Thy Eni aloy. Soph. O. T. 1079; also c. dat. rei, Ar, Nub. 992, Lys. 97. 12, etc.; and with Preps., alox. émi ruc Xen. Mem. 2. 2, 8; év ru Thuc. 2. 43; bwép twos Lys. 142. 24, Dem., etc. b. c. part. to be ashamed at doing a thing (which however one does), Aesch. Pr. 642, Soph. Ant. 540, Ar. Fr. 21, Plat., etc.; but ce. c. inf. to be ashamed to do a thing (and therefore not to do it), Hdt. 1. 42 82, Aesch. Ag. 856, Cho. 917, Plat. Rep. 414 E, Phaedr. 257 D, etc. ; though this condition must not be pressed absolutely, v. Apol. 22 B. a. foll. by a relat. clause, aicydveoOa ei or Hv .., to be ashamed that .., Soph. El. 254, Andoc, 34. 31, Plat., etc.; aloy. ui).., Plat. Theaet. 183 E. 3. c. acc. pers. to feel shame before one, Eur. Ion 933, 1074, Pherecr. Air. 1. 6, Plat. Symp. 216 B; tév ye pndev «idér’ aicxwv@qoera Philem. Incert. 51 D; c. acc. et inf., Eur. Hel. 415; HoxwOnpev Oeods .. mpododvar adrév Xen. An. 2. 3, 22:—also, aicy. mpés twa Arist, Rhet. 2. 6, 1. b. to reverence, Aeschin. 25. 36. aicxtvopa, aros, 76,=70 aldoiov, Lxx. ‘os, ov, made by Aesop, Quintil. Inst. 5. 11. dtras [7], 6, Dor. word for a beloved youth, answering to elomvfAas or eionvydos (the lover), Ar. Fr.576, Theocr. 12.14 (where it is said to be a Thessalian word), 23.63: also generally a lover, Xptcas (sc. ’A@avas) & dtrns Anth. P. 15. 26:—a fem. diris (-fos), occurs in Alcman 125. Cf. Miiller Dor. 4. 4,6. (Either from diw, a hearer; or from dm, anus, cf. elamvndas.) aite, Dor. for etre, _ airéw, cf. airnu: Ion. impf. atreov, Hdt.: fut. airfow: aor. area: pf. ira Aristid.; pf. pass. propa, etc. To ask, beg, absol. in Od. 18. 49, Aesch. Supp. 340. 2. mostly c, acc, rei, to ask for, erave, demand, ll. 5. 358, Od. 17. 365, Att.; d80v air. to beg one’s departure, i. e. ask leave to depart, Od. 10. 17; air. rit 7 to ask something for one, 20. 74, Hdt. 5. 17:—c. acc. pers. et rei, to ask a person for a thing, Il. 22. 295, Od. 2. 387, Hdt. 3. 1, al., and often in Att.; dikas air. Twa pévov to demand satisfaction from one for .., “Hdt. 8. 114; also, air. re mpés tevos Theogn. 556; mapé twos Xen, An. I. 3, 16. 8. c. acc, pers. et inf. to ask one to do, Od. 3. 1'73, Soph. O.C. 1334, Ant. 65, etc.; also, air. mapd twos dodva Plat. Eryx. 398E. 4. in Logic, to postulate, assume, Arist. An. Pr. 1.24, 2, Top. 8. 13, 2, ete. II. Med. to ask for oneself, for one’s own use or purpose, to claim, Aesch. Cho. 480; often almost =the Act., and with the same construct., first in Hdt. 1. 90., 9. 34, Aesch. Pr. 822, etc.; aireio@ai Twa b1ws .. Antipho 112. 413 often absol. in part., alrovpérw pot bds Aesch. Cho. 480, cf. 2, Theb. 260, Soph. Ph. 63; atroupévn mov revgerat Id. Ant. 778 ; airnoduevos éxphoaro Lys. 154.245 o¥ wp yap ‘airay, ob8t Aowad airovpevos Menand. “Tyuv. 5; alretsOar imép Twos to beg for one, Lys. 141. 35. III. Pass. of persons, to have a thing begged of one, airnbeis 7 Hat. 8. 111, Thuc. 2.97; alrevpevos Theocr. “14. 63: also c. inf. to be asked to do a thing, Pind. I. 8 (7). 10. 2. of things, to be asked, 70 airedpevoy Hat. 8, 112; tmmor yrnuévor bor- rowed horses, Lys. 169. 17. aimnpa, aros, 7d, a request, demand, Plat. Rep. 566 B, N. T. II. in Logic, a postulate, assumption, Arist. An. Post. 1. 10, 7. airnpaticds, 7, dv, disposed to ask, Artemid. 4. 2. -airnparabins, es, ( ° v ° J ” ALT XUVOLA — Airvaios. is used just like afria in the sense of cause, but not in that. of accusa~ tion. III. an occasion, opportunity, airtav poaiot Mowav évéBane gave them an occasion, argument, theme for song, Pind. N. 7.16 ; airiay mapéxew Luc. Tyrannic. 13. IV. the head or category under which a thing comes, Dem. 645.11. | (The word cannot but be from the same Root as airéw, though the connexion of sense is obscure.) airidfouat, Pass. to be accused, % wéAts alria{erae Xen. Hell. 1. 6, 5, cf. 123 qridgero Tuvds of a thing, Dio C. 38.10. The Act. is not found, i , aTos, 76, a charge, guilt imputed, AaBeiv ém’ airidpati twa ek Pr. 194; Tooicde Shoe Zeds én’ airidpacw aixifera: Ib. 255; cf. uc. 5. 72. onal used by Hom. only in Ep. forms, 3 pl. airwwvra, opt. aitiéwo, —wro, inf. airidacda, impf. #ridacbe, —dwvro :—fut. -doopat Ar. Nub. 1433, Plat.: aor. qrvdéodyny Eur., Thuc., etc., Ion. part. airs nodpevos Hdt.: pf. ridpac Dem. 408. 7, Ion. -inwat Hipp. (also in pass. sense, and aor, bridény always so, v. infr. 11): cf. ém—, xaT-arridopar: (airia). To charge, accuse, censure, blame, c. acc. pers., Taxa Kev wat dvairiov airdéwro Il, 11. 654, cf. 78; dvairiov airiiacOa 13. 775, cf, Od. 20. 135; Gods Bporot airibwyra Od. 1. 32; Kab p’ yridacbe éxagros Il. 16. 202; so also Soph. O. T. 608, Ph. 685, etc.; aiv. ws Hiapovs Plat. Rep. 562 D; air. ruvd twos to accuse of a thing, Hdt. §. 27, Plat. Rep. 619 C, Dem. 548. 21, etc. ;—c. inf., air. Twa moveiv 7t to accuse one of doing, Hdt. 5. 27, Plat. Criti. 120 C; alr. rivd ds... or 671.., Thuc. 1. 120, Xen. An. 3. 1, 7; alr. twa epi rvos Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 6; c. acc. cogn., air. airiay xara tiwvos to bring a charge against one, Antipho 144. 32:—in this sense, certain tenses are used as Pass. to be accused, aor. 1 qj7:dOnv (always) Thuc. 6. 53., 8. 68, Xen. Hell. 2. 1, 32; pf. riauae Thuc, 3. 61, Plat. Criti. 120 C; fut. airia- Ojcopat Dio C. 37. 56. b. in good sense, to give one the credit of being, suppose, o¢ ris airiGra: vopobérny dyafdy -yeyovévat; Plat. Rep. 599 E, cf. 309 C, Crat. 396 D; and v. airia m1. 2. 2. c. acc. rei, to lay to one’s charge, impute, rodro air. Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 29; Tatra Dem. 408. 7; c. dupl. acc., ri radra rods Adcwvas altipeOa; Ar. Ach. 514. II. to allege as the cause, air. ra airiov Plat. Phileb. 22 D, Gorg. 518 D; od 70 airov air. not to allege the real cause, Id. Rep. 329 B; tiva éxes alridoagba .. rodrou kipiov; Ib. 508A; dards 7é..kat GhAa pupia air. Id. Phaedo 98 D; ravavria Id. Tim. 88 A; dy riy meviay airidoar’ dv 1s Dem. 314. 20; Thy divny Arist. Cael. 2. 13, 23; 70 abréuarov Id. Phys. 2. 4, 5. 2. c. inf., to allege that, ov éyov air. Bucxeph evar Plat. Prot. 333 D, cf. Meno 93 D; iAlyyous é« pidrogopias eyyiyvecOat to allege by way of accusation that.., Id. Rep. 407 C; rijs iepas xdpas yridro elvac he alleged that it was part of.., Dem. 277. 11. airtacus, «ws,7,acomplaint, accusation, Antipho 1 32.25, Arist. Poét. 18. 3. ainaréoy, verb. Adj. one must accuse, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 11. Ii. one must allege as the cause, Plat. Rep. 379 C, Tim. 57 C, 87 B. almaricés, 7, dv, of or for accusation :—t aimiatixn (sc. mr@ats) casus accusativus; Adv. —x@s, in the accusative, Gramm. airvirés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. produced by a cause, effected, Arist. An, Post. 1.9 4; 70 airwaréy the beet, opp. to 70 atriov the cause, Ib. 2. 16, 1. mifw, Ep. form of airéw (not in Il., used once by Ar.) ; only found in pres. (except aor. part. aiticoas in Anth. P. 10. 66) to ask, beg, c. acc. tei, otro . . alri{wy kara djwov Od. 17. 558, cf. 222; Hie av airi(nr’ diprov Ar. Pax 120. 2. c. acc. pers, to beg of, airitew .. mavras érrotxdpevov pynorijpas Od. 17. 346. 8. absol., airi{ay Béoxew iy yaortpa by begging, Ib. 228, cf. 4. 651. aitto-Aoyéw, to inguire into the causes of a thing, account for, Plut. 2. 689 B; 7d (yrodpevoy Sext. Emp. P. 1. 181: also as Dep. airtoAoyéouat, Apoll. de Conj. 507. airtodoyntéov, verb. Adj. one must investigate causes, Diog. L. 10. 80. airodoyta, }, a giving the cause of a thing, Archyt. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 724, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 181. aitiodoyikés, hy dv, ready at giving the cause, inquiring into causes, airiohoyindraros, of Aristotle, Diog. L. 5. 32:—as Subst. 7d —edy ot h -«n (sc. réxvn), investigation of causes, Strabo 104, Galen. 2. otvbecpo air. causal conjunctions, Gramm, airvos, a, ov, more rarely os, ov Ar. Pl. 47: (v. alria). To blame blame-worthy, culpable, ret oi ri por aircot eiory Il. 1. 153, cf. 3. 164 Hat. 7- 214: Comp. airiwrepos, more culpable, Thuc. 4.703 Sup. rods adres. tarous the most guilty, Hdt. 6. 50; air. twos most to blame for a thing, Id. 3.52. 2. as Subst., airios, 6, the accused, the culprit, Lat. reus, Aesch, Cho. 68, etc.; of airio Tod warpds they who have sinned against my father, Ib. 273 ;—c. gen. rei, of alr. roo pévov Aesch, Cho. 117, cf. Soph. Ph. 590, Hdt. 4. 200. II. being the cause, responsible for, c. gen. rei, Hdt. 1. 1, etc; airids rivds trun being the cause of a thing fo a person, Lys. 135. 10, Isocr, 179 C; ¢. inf. with and without the Art. aizios Tov moeity Hat. 2, 26., 3 12, etc.; airs Oaveiy Soph. Ant. 11733 air, meppOjvat dryyedov Antipho 132. 14:—Comp., rod. . éAev- 9épav eivat .-alri@repov Dem. zor. 11, cf. 1234. 8; Sup., aiziwraros Vv TY OTEVY VavpayxToa mainly instrumental in causing the sea-fight Thuc. 1. 74, cf. Hdt. 3. 52; air. rod pi dmodaverv Dem. 469. 35. 2. aircov, 76, @ cause, often in Plat., etc.; ri mor’ ody dort A gi ie Ee pnbeva elnetv ; what is the cause that ..? Dem, 103. 17. ubi v. Dind.; rovro airiov drt. . Plat. Ph sit is i like airia 1, v. Indices Plat. et Arist. PRR Aine Bienes x ainains, es, (e750s) causal, Schol. Eur, Or. 439: 7) alrwBdes, formal, as opp. to 7d bAuedy, M. Anton. 4. 21, ete.: Adv. -dws, formally Clem. Al. 930. Il. of or respecting the cause, &yvoa 1d, 449. : ‘ Giriavupos, ov, (6vopa) named from a fault, Schol, Soph. Aj. 205. Airvaios, a, ov, of or belonging to Etna (Airvn), Pind, P, 3-121, 0.6, aitpia —‘Axadjmea. 161, Aesch. Pr. 365, etc. 2. metaph. huge, enormous, Eur. Cycl. 395: and so some explain it when used of horses, but better Etnean, Sicilian (for the Sicilian horses and mules were famous), Soph. O. C. 312 ; jestingly applied to the beetle, Ar. Pax 73; v. Schol. ad 1. et ad Ar. Ach. 347; cf. Phot. s. v. éxos Axeoraios, Plaut. Mil, Glor. 4. 2, 73. II. airvatos, 6, a sea-fish, Opp. H. 1. 512. airpia, for aidpia, barbarism in Ar. Thesm. oor. _ ditedAtos, v. sub aiywAcds. aidvys, Adv.,=dpvw, ealpyns, on a sudden, Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 1581 and other late writers:—the forms aidvydis, -8év, are cited in Hdn. Epim. 27, A. B. 1310, etc. aidvidios, ov, (or rather &dviStos (cf. dpyw) as Elmsl.). Unfore- seen, sudden, quick, Aesch. Pr. 680, Thuc. 2. 61, Arist. Eth, N. 3. 8, 15. Adv. —iws, Thuc. 2. 53; also -rov, Plut. Num. 15. aixpdes, aixpards, Dor. for aixynes, aixunrhs. aixpdfo, fut. dow, to throw the aixpn or spear, aixpas alypacer Il. - 4.324; &vbov aixpatev to play the warrior at home, Aesch. Pers. 756; aixpdoa 7d5¢€ to perform these feats of arms, Soph. Tr. 355. II. to arm with the spear, mpds Arpetatow #xpacas xépa (but Musgrave tpagas), Soph. Aj. 97. aixpiAwota, 7, (GAwats) a being prisoner of war, captivity, Diod. 20. 61. II. a body of captives, Id. 17. 70, Lxx, N. T. alxpidAwretw, =sq., Lxx, Ep. Eph. 4. 8. aixpiidorile, fut. iow, to make prisoner of war, take prisoner, Diod. 14. 37:—Dep. aixpadwrifouat, in same sense, Joseph. B. J. 4. 8, 1: fut. ~igouat Ib. 2, 4: aor. jxwadwriodyny Id. 1. 22, 1, Diod. 13. 24: pf. PXHGAw@TiopaL Joseph. B. J. 4. 9, 8:—pf. also in pass. sense, C. I. 3668, aixpidoricds, 7, dv, of or for a prisoner, Eur. Tro. 871. aixpiderts, dos, 7, a captive, Soph. Aj. 1228, Eur. Tro. 28. Adj. fem. of aixydawros, rds aixpadwridas xépas Soph. Aj. 71. at OTIS, ews, 7), =alxpadwota, Hesych. s. v. dpravy: so, atxpa- Awricpds, 6, Schol. Ar. Nub. 186. aixp-GAwros, ov, taken by the spear, captive to one’s spear, taken prisoner, Hdt. 6. 79, 1343; esp. of women, as of Cassandra and Iolé, Aesch. Ag. 1440, Soph. Tr. 417; cf. doprdAwros :—alxpddwror prisoners of war, Andoc. 32. 7, Thuc. 3. 70; alxyddAwroy AapuBdvey, dyew to take prisoner, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 37., 4.4, 13 alxp. ylyvec@a to be taken, Ib. 3.1, 7; of things, aiyy. xpywara Aesch. Eum. 400, cf. Ag: 334, Dem. 384. 13; vées Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 8; 7a aixpddwra booty, Ib. 4. 1, 26, An. 5.9, 4. IL. =aixpadrwrixds, dovrdoctvn aixp. such as awaits a captive, Hdt. 9. 76; evn Aesch. Th. 364. aixy7, %, (v. fin.) the point of a spear, Lat. cuspis, mapowWe 5¢ Adymero Soupds aixun xadxein Il. 6. 319; so, aixpr eyxeos 16. 315; the shaft being fvardy, Hdt. 1. 52. 2. the point of anything, dyxiorpou, xeparav Opp. H. 1. 216, C. 2. 451. IL. a spear, Iil., Hadt., and Trag.; mpds riv ‘alypuny érpamero took to his spear, Hdt. 3. 78; aixpy cide with the spear, i.e. in war (v. infr. 3), Id. 5. 943; TofovAKds aixpuh, of an arrow, Aesch. Pers. 239; v. infr. 3; rare in Att. Prose, Xen. Cyr. 4. 6, 4. b. perh. in the sense of a sceptre, Aesch. Pr. 405, 925, Vv. infr, IT. 2. a body of spear-bearers, like dons, Pind, O. 7. 35, P, 8. 58, Eur. Heracl. 276; cf. domis I, 2. 8. war, battle, Kanws % alxpr éornxee the war went ill, Hdt. 7. 152; Onpa@v with wild beasts, Eur. H. F. 158:—esp. in compds., as aixpdAwros, peralxpuos, dpatxpla: cf. ddpu. 4. metaph. of plague, pestilence, and the like, Aesch. Eum. 803 (if the word be not corrupt). IIL. warlike spirit, aixpa vewy O4AAa Terpand. 6; Opepe 8 aixpady ’Auderpiavos Pind. N. 10. 23; so, in Aesch. Ag. 483, Cho. 625, yuvackds or yuvarreta aixpd seems to be a woman's spirit; but Herm. interprets it imperium, sway, rule, vy. supr. I. 1. (Perh. related to dicow, as dpaxpyn to Spdscoua, Donalds. N. Crat. p. 224: Curt. takes it to be for dpy, from dh, dicis.) aixprets, Dor. deus, eooa, ev, armed with the spear, Aesch, Pers. 136, Opp. C. 3. 321. aixpyra [a], 6, Ep. collat. form of alyynrgs, Il. 5. 197. .aixpnrip, jpos, 6,=aixunrns, Opp. C. 3. 211. aixpyripios, a, ov, warlike, Lyc. 454. aixpnrns, of, Dor. -drds, a, 6, (aixun) poét. Noun, a spearman, warrior, esp. as opp. to archers, Il. 2. 543, Od. 2. 19, al.; cf. aix- pyra. II. In Pind. as Adj., 1. pointed, aixpards xepav- vos P. 1. 8. 2. warlike, aixp. Ovpds, N. 9. 87.—Fem. aixpytis (sic), E. M. 535. 39- aixp6-Seros, ov, (5€w) bound in war,=alxpadwros, Soph. Fr. 41, cf. E. M. 41. 3. a a ov, one who trails a pike, a spearman, Hat. 1. 103, ee 2. esp. like Sopupépos, of body-guards, Id. 1. 8., 7. 49. atija, Adv. quick, with speed, forthwith, on a sudden, often in Hom. (who also joins al~a pada, al~a & éwera Il. 4. 70, Od. 15. 193, straight thereupon); so also Theogn. 663, Solon 2, Pind. P. 4. 237, Aesch. Supp. 481 (in dialogue); rare in other Poets, and never in Prose. (Hence aiwnpdés, Aaunpéds, q. v-) alipnpo-kéAev0os, ov, swift-speeding, epith. of Boreas, Hes, Th. 379. aidmpos, 4, dv, (aia) quick, speedy, sudden, aiympos 5& wdpos kpvepoto *y6or0 satiety in grief comes soon, Od. 4. 103; Adoev 6 deyophy alnpnv he dismissed the assembly so that it quickly broke up, i.e. in haste, ll. 19. 276, Od. 2. 257; like Oohy dAeylvere daira Od. 8. 38.—Not used in Att.: cf. Aauwnpds. ; éto [%], Ep. word, often used by Trag. in lyrics (and so Hermipp. Moup. 2); once only in dialogue (Soph. O. C. 304); found only in pres. and impf. : but cf. ématw: (y. sub fin,), To perceive by the ear, to hear, c. acc. rei, ob dies & Té pyar; Il. 15.130, cf. 248; Néorwp 5& mparos seriwoy |, 43 die Lo. 532, cf. 21. 388, Aesch. Ag. 55, Supp. 59, Eur. Med. 148, etc. ; c. gen, rei, Soph. O. C. 304, Ph. 1410; c. gen. pers., déec pou . . BactAevs Aesch. Pers. 633, cf. 874:—also to perceive by the eye, to see, Od. 18. 11, Soph. O. C. 181:—generally, to perceive, ovx ates ds Tpdes . . ciarat dyxe vebv ; Il. 10. 160. 2. to listen to, give ear to, dixns Hes. Op. 211: to obey, Aesch. Pers. 8'74, Ar. Nub. 1166; cf. éraiw. (From AF comes also déras; cf. Skt. av, aviimi (tueri, favere), avas (gratia), Zd. av (tueri), Lat. au-dio, and perh. au-ris: Curt. would also recognise aic6-dvopa as belonging to this Root: cf. also derds.) (Hom. uses & always in pres., dlw; so also Aesch. Pers. 633, Soph. Ph. 1410; but dies, aiwy Soph. O. C. 181, 304, cf. ératw: in impf. aie Il. 10. 532., 21. 388 (as always in Trag.), but ditev Il. 11. 463, dfov 18. 222 :—+ is always short, except die in Hes, Op. 211, Aesch. Eum. 844, 878, and perh. diévreoa: in Od. 1. 352.) diw [@],=Gny, to breathe, found only once in the impf., éred pidov diov irop when I was breathing out my life, Il. 15. 252; like @vpor diode (cf. dtcOw). diay [2], Dor. for jidy. aidv, @vos, 6, but in Ion. and Ep. also #, as also in Pind. P. 4. 331, Eur. Phoen. 1484: apocop. acc. ai@, like Towed, restored by Ahrens (from A. B. 363) in Aesch, Cho. 350: (properly aifdy, aevum, v. sub aici). A period of existence (rd tédAos 7d tepiéxov Tov THs ExdoTov (ans xpdvov .. aldv éxdorov xéxAnrar Arist. Cael. 1. 9, 15): 5 Hf one’s lifetime, life, Hom., who joins yuxi) nal aid ; ke 8 aidy réparac Il. 19. 27; POive Od. 5. 160; Aetme tivd Il. 5. 685; dm’ aldvos véos ddeo (Zenod. véov) 24. 725; TeAevray roy ai@va Hat. 1. 32, etc.; ai@vos orepeivy twa Aesch. Pr. 862; al@va dorxveiy Id. Eum. 315; ovviiarpiBev Cratin. ’Apy. 1; aidy Aiaxday, periphr. for the Aeacidae (but Bgk. reads diwv), Soph. Aj. 645 :—dmémvevoer aidva Eur. Fr. 798; éuov kar’ ai@va Aesch. Th. 219:—this is the common sense in Poets. 2. an age, generation, Aesch. Th. 744; 6 péAAwy aldy posterity, Dem. 295. 2, cf. Plat. Ax. 370 C. 8. one’s lot in life, tiv’ aidy’ eis 73 Aourov ees ; Eur. Andr. 1215. II. a long space of time, an age, Lat. aevum, aidy yiyverat tis an age, Menand. Incert. 7; esp. with Preps., dm’ aidvos of old, for ages, Hes. Th. 609, N. T.; &¢ ai@vos paxpod, dmatorov Aesch. Supp. 582, 574; Tov &¢ al@vos xpévoy for ever, Id. Ag. 554, cf. Cho. 26, Eum. 563, Soph., etc.; dv al@va for ever, Plat. Tim. 37 D; Tov dravra ai. Arist. Cael. 1. 19, 14, Lycurg. 155. 423 eis Gmayra tov ai. Id. 162. 24; eis roy ai. Diod., Luc., etc.; én’ ai. Philo 2. 608, 2. a space of time clearly defined and marked out, an era, epoch, age, period of a dispensation, 6 aid ovros this present world, opp. to 6 wéAdwy, Ev. Matth, 13. 22, Luc. 16. 8:—hence its usage in pl., els rods al@vas Ep. Rom. 1. 25, etc.; eis rods al. Trav aidyvwy Ep. Phil. 4. 20, etc. ; dd r&v al., mpd Trav ai. Ep. Eph. 3. 9., 1 Cor. 2. 7; 7a TéAn TeV aiwvoy Ib. Io. II. 1. 496, 619. : B. the spinal marrow, h. Hom. Mere. 42, 119, Pind. Fr. 77, Hesych., E. M.; cf. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. 29. aiwvifw, to be eternal, Theod. Metoch. 355, Suid., etc. aidvios, ov, also a, ov Plat. Tim, 38 B, N. T. Lasting for an age (aidy 11), perpetual, péOn Plat. Rep. 363 D, etc. 2. like ditios, ever-lasting, eternal, dvw@debpov .., GAA’ od« aiwmoy Id. Legg. 904 A; cov rov ai. Tim. Locr. 96 C ; ob xpovin podvoy .., GAN’ aiwvin Aretae. Cur. M, Ac. I. 5. alwvidrys, 7TOs, 7), eternity, Eccl. . aiwvé-Bios, ov, immortal, Inscr. Rosett. in C. I. 4697. 4. aiwvo-mipeiov, 74, the place of everlasting fire, C. 1. go65 b. aiwvo-rékos, ov, parent of eternity, Synes. 322 A, etc. aiwvo-yapis, és, rejoicing in eternity, Hymn. in Clem. Al. 115. aidpa, 7, (deipw) a hine for suspending bodies, a swing, hammock, chariot on springs, Plat. Legg. 789 D, Plut. 2. 793 B, etc. ; v. Millingen Uned. Monum. f. 77, pl. 30. ° 2. a noose for hanging, a halter, Soph. O. T. 1264 (in the form éépa). II. a being suspended or hovering in the air, oscillation, Plat. Phaedo 111 E, Dion. H. 3. 47, etc. aiwpéw, fut. jou : fut. pass. -nOAcopar Dio C. 41.1, but —hoopas Aristid. Pp. 4797 aor. japhOny (v. infr.): pf. ié&pnuae Opp. H. 3.532: (delpw). To lift up, raise, iypov v@rov aimpe’, of the eagle raising his back and feathers, Pind. P. 1. 17: ¢o swing as in a hammock, aiwp. [yvvaixa)} émt «Alvns pepouévny Hipp. 617, cf. Aretae. Cur. M, Ac. 1. 4; Tods bpeas..imtp Ths Kepadrjs alwpav Dem. 313. 26:—cf. éwpéa. 2. to hang, twa éx rot drpdxrov Luc. J. Confut. 4, ef. Plut. Brut. 37 — metaph., jdper.. Amis, bre TOV Xdpaxa alphoovor excited them to think that.., App. Civ. 2. 81:—never in good Att. II. more freq. in Pass., to be hung, hang, 5€ppara wept rors wpovs alwpedpeva Hat. 7. 92, cf. xaTarwpéopat to hang in a bandage or sling, Hipp. Fract. 757 ; alwpoupévey rav dara being raised, lifted, Plat. Phaedo 98 D; alpa qepetro spouted up, Bion I. 25. 2. hang suspended, float in air, Plat. Lach. 184 A, Arist. Mirab. 79: to hover, of a dream, Soph, El. 1390: to vibrate, oscillate, Plat. Phaedo 112 B. 3. metaph. fo be in suspense, Lat. susp esse, ev xivdtve, to hang in doubt and danger, Thuc. 7. 77; alap. év dAdors to depend upon. ., Lat. pendere ab aliquo, Plat. Menex. 248 A; alwpndels iméep yeyddwv playing for a high stake, Hat. 8. 100; aiwp. tiv Yuxqv Xen. Cyn. 4, 4. aidpypa, aros, 7d, that which is hung up or hovers, Lyc. 1080. 2. a hanging cord, halter, Eur. Hel. 353: of hanging slings or chains, Id. Or. 984; v. sub xoupi¢w II. 1. 258 aidpyors, ews, 7, a hovering: suspense, Plat, Tim, 89 A. aiwpyros, dv, hanging, hovering, Anth. P. 5. 204. aa, Dor. Adv.=deqy, softly, gently, Pind. P. 4. 277. *AxdSypera or la [7], %, the Academy, a gymnasium in the suburbs of 3. on aidy and xpévos, v. Philo _ y - dpyiis Thy ax. dpedéobat Id. Vesp. 884. 44 "Axadymerkds — axavOoBoros. Athens (so named from the hero Academus, éy dpépmorow "Axadjou bod Eupol. “Agvp. 3), where Plato taught: hence the Platonic school of philosophers were called Academics :—proverb., ’AkaSnptndev jes of a philosopher, Apostol. Cent. 2.1. (Commonly written in the Mss, *Axadnyia. But the form ’Axadyed, acknowledged by Steph. Byz. s. V. ‘Exadjpeca, is here and there preserved in the oldest Mss. (as the Bodl. of Plato and the Ven. of Athenaeus); and that the penult. is long appears from several poét. passages, Ar. Nub. 1002, Epicr. Incert. 370, Alex. “Agwr. 1. 2, ‘Imm. 1.) *AxtSnpecds, 7, dv, Academic, C. I. (add.) 5814. GkiPaiperos, ov, (xafaipéw) not to be put down, Philo 2. 166. axiOapoia, 7, uncleanness, foulness of a wound or sore, Hipp. Fract. 772, Plat. Tim. 72 C. 2. moral foulness, impurity, foul depravity, Dem. 553. 13. , 3 : é a&xdPaptos, ov, (*a8aipos) uncleansed, impure, foul, anp Hipp. Aér. 283; of the body, Arist. Probl. 5. 27; of a woman, quae menstrua non habet, Luc. Lexiph. 19. b. unpurified, Plat. Legg. 866 A, 868 A; axdOapre thou beast! Bato Svveg. 1. 2. 2. morally unclean, im- pure, Plat. Phaedo 81 B, etc. ; also like wavidhdns, Achae. ap. Hesych. :— Ady., dxa8dprws éxewv Plat. Tim. 92 A. 8. of things, not purged away, unpurged, Soph. O. T. 256, Plat. Legg. 854 B. Etstact. me jit “+ cleansing, [pdppaxa] éAxéaw diafaprérepa Aretae. Cur. M. ut. I. 3, axiPerréopat, Pass. to be left void, Sext. Emp. M. Io. 3. axdPexros, ov, ungovernable, Pseudo-Phocyl. 180. Ady. -Tws, Cyrill. &-KiPoolwros, ov, unpurified, Epiphan. 1. 495 C. daa, ns, 7, (den, duls) a thorn, prick, goad, Lat. stimulus, Ap. Rh. 3- 1323, Anth. P. 6. 41. II. a ten-foot rod, used in land-survey- ing, Lat. acnua, acna, Schneid. Ind. Script. R. R.; cf. Call. Fr. 214. -kaworopntos, ov, not altered, Phot. dxoatpevopat, Dep. to behave unseasonably, Philo 2. 166, 280. dxatpéw, to be without an opportunity, opp. to edxaipéw, Diod. Excerpt. Vat. p. 30:— Med., impf. jeatpeiobe, in Ep. Phil. 4. 10, = éxwdveode Kaipov ov« éxovres, acc. to Phot. dxatpla, 4, unfitness of times, opp. to edeatpia, Plat. Phaedr. 272 A; to éyxaipia, Id. Polit. 305 D. 2. of bad bl énavray moddGy dx. Id. Legg. 709 A; Tay mvevparow Arist. Probl. 26. 13, I. 3. opp. to naipds, want of opportunity, viv dxaiplay riv éxeivou ratpov Pa Mahees voploavres Dem, 16. 4: also want of time, Plut. 2. 130 E. II. of persons, the character of an dxatpos, want of tact, importunity, Plat. Symp. 182 A, Theophr. Char. 12. e, dxatpizos, 7, ov, ill-timed :—proverb., 6 Tt Kev én” dkapipay yA@ooay 2d0, quicguid in buccam venerit, Schiif. Dion. Comp. p. 8. dxatptos, ov, post. for dxarpos, dx. Ayes, of untimely death, C. I. 6203. a as, ov, 6, an unseasonable brawler, Eccl. dxaipodoyéw, to prate unseasonably, Schol. Thesm. 39; -Aoyla, 7, Phot. hecowar 0s, ov, an unseasonable prater, Philo 2. 268, Eust. 208. 38. pitied 5 %), unseasonable talk, Lex. Havn. dxavpo-rappyota, %, ill-timed freedom of speech, Eust. Opusc. 225. 50, al,, and ouacrHs, ov, 6, Id. 1857. 2. dxatpo-repiTaryros, ov, walking at unseasonable times, Eccl. dxatpop-phpwv, ov, = dxaipoAdyos, Origen. a &-xatpos, ov, ill-timed, unseasonable, inopportune, és dxaipa troveiv, Lat. operam perdere, Theogn. 919; ov« dxatpa Aéyev Aesch. Pr. 1036; dx. mpodupia Thuc. f 65; éAevOepia Plat. Rep. 569 C; €mavos Id. Phaedr. 240E; fadvpta Dem, 241.8; yéAws Menand. Monost. 88 :—Adv. ~pws, Aesch. Ag. 808, Cho, 624, si Vet. Med. 11, Acut. 386: Comp. —orépws, Id. 955; neut. pl. as Adv., deatp’ dm@AAvro Eur. Hel. 1081. EE. of persons, importunate, troublesome, Lat. molestus, ineptus, Theophr. Char. 12; dx. wai AdAos Alciphro 3. 62. 2. c. inf. ill-suited to do a thing, Xen. Hipparch. 7, 6, in Compar. &xaxaAts, (50s, x, the white tamarisk, Diosc. 1. 118. f &-Kiixéudaros, ov, in no ill repute, Hesych., Method. Conv. Virg. 3. 20. &-ndxns, Dor. dxdkas [aedic], 6, post. form of axaxos, Aesch. Pers. 855 (lyr.); epith. of Hades, C. I. 1067; cf. GKannTa. chan, 6, epith. of Hermes in Arcadia, =sq., Call. Dian. 143. &xdxnré [céindix], Ep. form, =a. , guileless, gr epith. of Her- mes, Il. 16. 185, Od. 24. 10 (cf. éprovmos) ; of Prometheus, Hes. Th, 614. éxaxia (A), #, (dxf) an Egyptian tree, the acacia, Diosc. 1. 133. dxitixia (B), 9, (deanos) guilelessness, Dem. 1372. 23, Arist. Rhet. 2. 12, 15, Lxx, etc. , es, guileless, Eus., Phot. : Ady. -@ws, Iambl. Protr. p. 350 Kiessl. :—in Eust. 404. 8, d-kaxonPevros, ov. Reaxowabee, to be free from suffering, E. M. 86. 12 :—Ady. dxaxomra- Apoll. Mirab. 35. . ixotouds, dv, doing no evil, Jo. Chrys. &-Kixos, ov,.unknowing of ill, guileless, beni , Aesch. Pers. 664, Plat. Tim. 91 D. 2. innocent, simple, much like bq Ons or dmAois, Dem. 1153. I1., ane 13; dx. GvOpdmay rpémos Anaxil, Incert.1. Adv. , Dem. 1154. 18. 4 prea amie ag ov, uncorrupted, Harpocr., E.M. Adv. ~Tws, Epiphan. &-Kixotpyws, Adv., used to expl. eins, Schol. Dem. 393- 22- &-«dnuvros [xi], ov, =sq., Hierocl, Carm. Aur. Adv, ~Tws, Id. &xéxwros [Kd], ov, unharmed, Dio C. 77. 153 de. ebxm Epigr. Gr. 618. 39. II. unsubdued, M. Anton. 5. 18. axthavO%s, iS0s, , =dkavbis, Ar. Av. 872, cf. Pax 1076. mms, ov, 5, (dxadés, péw) soft-flowing, epith, of Ocean, Il. 7. 422, Od. 19. 434 :—in Orph. Arg. 1185, aka&Adp-poos, ov. a akadqhn, 7, a nettle, Lat. urtica, Ar. Lys. 549, etc. : metaph., amd rps II. a kind of mollusc @ ee Hog: like a nettle, urtica marina, of the actinia kind, Arist. H. A. 4. 6, 6., 8. 1, 7, al. 4s, és, without charms, c&pa Luc. Hist. Conser. 48; yj abxpnpa wat dx. (v. 1. dxaphs), Id. Prom. 14. pyTos, ov, not accepted by the gods, ill-omened, iepd Aeschin, 72. 16., 75.12; punoes Eus. H.E. 9. 3. d-kahA@morros, ov, unadorned, Luc. Pisc. 12. dkaNés, 4, dv, like Hxados, peaceful, still, Hesych., Eust. 1009. 30, E. M. or Ady. -Ad@s, Eust., E. M. , ov, uncovered, unveiled, Soph. O. T. 1427, Arist. H. A. 1. 5, 2; év dxadtmrw .. Big, of one who has no house over his head, Menand. Tox. 4 :—Adv. -rws, 3 Macc. 4. 6. &-KiADb As, és,=dxdAvmros, Soph. Ph. 1327, Arist. de An. 2. 9, 135 and dxdAudos, ov, Diog. L. 8. 72. Gxtipavro-héyyns, ov, 6, unwearied at the spear, Pind. I. 7 (6). 13. Gkapavro-payns, ov, 6, unwearied in fight, Pind. P. 4. 304. Gkapavré-trovs, 6, }, mov, 74, gen. wobos, untiring of foot, trmos Pind. O. 3. 5; also, du. Bpovry, djvy Ib. 4. 2., 5- 6. akdpavro-xdppas, a, 6, unwearied in fight, Pind. Fr. 179, in voc. dxa- pavroxdppay Aiav,—(kard ovvexdpopiy Tov Alay, as Choerob. observes, 106, 128 Gaisf.). SL ares, 5, (népvw) untiring, unresting, éAvos, Srepxevds, etc., Il. 18. 239., 16. 176, al. (not in Od.); immo Pind. O. 1. 140; Néros, > gone “3 oy 112 (lyr.); xpévos Eur. Fr. 597; da. movor unceasing, Arist. Fr. 596. een [xd], ov, sles n, ov, Hes. Th. 747, Soph. Ant. 339. Without sense of toil, hence, 1. like foreg., untiring, unresting, in Hom. always epith. of fire, Il. 5. 4, Od. 20. 123, al.; dvewoe Emped. 464; aOtvos Aesch. Pers. go1; di. yj earth that never rests from tillage, or inexhaustible, Soph. 1. c.:—neut. dxdyara, as Adv., Id. El. 164. 2. not tired or weary, Hipp. 752 D. II. act. not tiring, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 2.13. Adv. -rws or -ri,Gramm. _—[@xtiytiros, Soph. El. 164; but first syll. long in dactylic verses; v. A @ sub fin.] G-Kdppucros, ov, without winking, Hesych. s. v. doxapddpunros, G-kapmnys, és,=dapmros, Theophr. H. P. 3. 10, 4, etc. : dkapmla, 7),=dapipia, Hipp. Art. 822. dxapré-rrous, 6, 7}, with unbending foot, &Xépavres Nonn. D. 15. 148. G-Kaparros, ov, unbent, that will not bend, rigid, Hipp. Fract. 751, Plat. Tim. 74 B (in Comp.), etc. ; dx. x@pos évépwv, Virgil's irremeabilis, Anth. P. 7. 467; eis dx. oxéduny rpiBov Epigr. Gr. 193 ; 70 dx. the part that will not bend, Arist. H. A. 1. 15, 3. 2. metaph. unbending, un- flinching, Bovdai Pind. P. 4.128; yuxdv dxapmros Id. I. 4. 89 (3. 71); dxapmrq péver Aesch. Cho. 455; 70 mpds rods mévous, TO mpos émeixeray dxapmrov Plut. Lyc. 11, Cat. Mi. 4. Gxapipla, 7), inflexibility, Arist. P. A. 2. 8, 9. Gkav, avos, 6,=sq., only in Lxx (2 Regg. 14. 9). dxav0a [cx], 1, 7), (ann) a thorn, prickle, Arist. P. A. 2. 9, 2, Theocr. 7. 140, etc. : hence _1, a prickly plant, of the thistle or cardoon kind, xvvapos ax. Soph. Fr. 643, cf. 746: in pl. thistle-down Od. 5. 328; cf. dxavOos ;—used also in Lxx (Isai. 5. 4, where E. V. has wild grapes) cf, Ev. Matt. 7. 16:—proverb., ob ydp dxavOat no thistles, i.e. nothing useless, Ar. Fr. 407. 2. of the prickles or spines of the porcupine and of certain fish, Ion ap. Ath. gt E, Arist. H. A. 4. 5, 2:—also the thorns of certain plants, Arist, Plant. 1. 5, etc. 3. the backbone or spine of fish, Aesch. Fr. 270, Ar. Vesp. 969, Alex. Kparev. 1. 11, al.; of serpents, Hdt. 2. 75, Theocr, 24. 32:—also of men, Hdt. 4. 72, Hipp. Art. 791, Eur. El. 492, Arist. P. A. 2. 8,9, etc.; but improperly used of mamumnalia, acc. to Arist, An. Post, 2. 14, 4 :—technically, acc. to Galen. 2. 451, of one of the spinous processes of the vertebrae. 4, metaph. GnavOat (CyrHoewv), Cicero's spinae disserendi, thorny questions, Luc. Disp. c. Hes. 5, Ath. 97 D; cf. dxavO0-Barns, —Adyos, axavOwdns. Il. a@ thorny tree, prob. a kind of acacia, found in Egypt, the Mimosa Nilotica (whence gum arabic is obtained), Hdt, 2. 96 (cf. dxav@vos) : several kinds are mentioned by Theophr. ; ean j ni dxavOedv, dvos, 6, a thorny brake, Lat. dumetum, Greg. Naz., Eust., etc. GkavOijes, coca, ev, thorny, prickly, Nic. Th 638 GxavOnpés, 4, dy, with spines, of certain fish, Arist. dncavOnb5 » will spines, of certain fish, Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 16. Seattes 7", ov,=akavbopdpos, cited from Hdn. Epim. » OU, 0, a prickly thing, and so, 1. a kind of shark, prob. squalus acanthias L.., Arist. H. A, 6. 10, Sqes 9» 37 2. a kind of Grasshopper, Acl. N. A. 10. 44. 3.4 ‘prick! ; aspara, s, Theoph H. P. 6. 1, 3, Poll. é “4 een dkavOxds, 7, dv, thorny, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 6 &xdvotvos, 7, ov, of tharns, orépavos Ev. Mains - 17, Jo. 19. 5. 2. metaph. tho ix. d a 5 9:5 na wig ‘y dk. araprois Anacreont. 53. 12. II. of Reese , » loros Hat. 2, 96; rd dm. cloths made of its inner bark, dxdvOrov, 76, Dim. of dxavOa 2, Arist. H. A. 3. 7, 11. of Th onopordum acanthium, Diosc. 3. 18. fr lk ts, os, 7, a bird, the goldfinch, fringilla carduelis, or the linnet. r. linaria, Arist. H, A : 4 for the plant senecio Cail ap. Pik oe : ne ai tie Adj. prickly, rary n Kaa in. H. N. 25. 106, III. as fem. akavOlov, ovos, 6, i . dave rs, i, walking pone dors wkname of Ae a mene ee ie ee 198. ; a I. 4:—fem, dkav0o-Baris, c5os, Anth. P. 7. GavBoBéhos, oy, (BadAw) shooting thorns, pricking, pé5ov Nic. Th. 542. cy . - aes 6.32. Il. 6 dk, a surgical instrument for extracting bones, Paul. 2. a kind 3 , bJ ’ axavOoXdyos — axaracraréw. &kavOo-Aébyos, ov, gathering thorns, nickname of quibbling arguers, Anth. P. 11. 20 and 347; cf. dxavOa 1. 4. dkav06-vwros, ov, prickle-backed, Hesych. dxavO6opat, Pass. (davOa) to b prickly, Theophr. H. P. 7. 6, 2. GxavOo-mAnE, Fyos, 6, %, wounded by the prickle of a fish, ’Odvcceds dx. name of a play of Sophocles. dxavos, 5, Lat. acanthus, brank-ursine, a plant imitated in Corinthian capitals, dypds dx., Lat. mollis, Theocr. 1. 55, cf. Diosc. 3. 19; cf. avOa I. II. a prickly Egyptian tree, prob. the same as dxav0a 11, Voss Virg. G. 2. 119. dxavé s, és, of a fish, prickle-backed, Arist. Fr. 279. dkav0o-pdyos [a], ov, eating thorns, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 6. dxavOodopéw, to bear thorns, Greg. Nyss. dxavbo-pdpos, ov, prickly, bristling, éxivos Nonn. D. 13. 421. bearing thorns or thistles, Greg. Naz. dxav8o-puéw, to bear thorns or thistles, Diosc. 3. 21. dxav06-xoupos, 4, a porcupine or ahedgehog, Hesych.s.v. éxivos,Gramm. dxavOvAXs, (Sos, 7, Dim. of dxavbis (in form), aegithalus pendulinus, the pendulous titmouse, Eubul. Incert, 14, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 9., 9. 14, 2. dkavOadns, es, (ef50s) full of thorns, thorny, x@pos Hat. 1. 126; 7d fd5ov Arist. Probl. 12. 8, etc. 2. prickly, yA@rra Arist. H. A. 2.10, 2; Tpixes Ib. 1. 6, 6; of the vertebrae, spinous, Ib. 3. 7, 11, al. 3. metaph., Adyou dx. thorny arguments, Luc. D. Mort. Io. 8 ; dx. Blos Paroemiogr.; cf. dxavOa I. 4. dkavOav, avos, 6,=dxavOewv, Gloss. dxivilo, (deavos) to bear or be like dxavor, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 8. dxavixés, 4, dv, like the dxavos, Theophr. H. P. 4. 6, Io. &kavov, 76, Dim. of dxavos, Hesych. dxtivos, 6, (anh, axis) a kind of thistle, and the prickly head of some fruits, like the pine-apple, v. Theophr. H. P. 1. 10, 6, al., and Schneid. Ind. ; v. also Schleuin. Thes. Vet. Test. akivabns, es, like the dxavos, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 3. &-KamiAeutos, ov, free from tricks of trade, sincere, Synes. 187 D. &-KdamnAos, ov,=foreg.: Bios dx. a life without tricks, Strabo 513. &-katvucros, ov, unsmoked, wédr de. honey taken without smoking the bees, Strabo 400. d-xamvos, ov, without smoke, free from it, oxérn Hipp. Acut. 395: not smoking, making no smoke, mip Theophr. Ign. 71; @vala dkamvos an offering but no burnt offering, Luc. Amor. 4; so a poem is called Kad- Auémns de. Ovos Anth. P. 6. 321 :—but, deanva yap ality dodol Ovopev we sacrifice without a fire of our own, i.e. live at others’ expense, Poéta ap. Ath. 8 E. II.=foreg., Plin. H. N. 11. 16. a-Kamveros, ov, free from vapour, Eur. Fr. 781. 50. d-Kapadéxyros, ov, unexpected, Eust. 1127. 62. G-KdpSvos, ov, wanting the heart, Plut. Caes. 63: metaph. heartless, weak, Lat. excors, Lxx, Galen. II. of wood, without heart or pith, solid, Theophr. H. P. 3. 12, 1. &-Kapnvos, ov, headless, Anth. Plan. 116, C. I. 4746. dkipys, és, (xelpw) properly of hair, too short to be cut, hence generally, short, small, tiny, dxaph Twa évOvphpara Dion. H. de Isocr. 20. II, metaph. within a hair's breadth of, all but, dxapihs mepidrrmibwoa you have become all but as thin as Philippides (v. Meineke Com. Fr. 4. p. 100), Alex. Mavdp. 5; dx. éAwkas Menand. Incert. 226; karémecov dx. TO 5ée Id. Com, Anon. 3. III. mostly in neut. dxapés, 1. of Time, a moment, év dxape? xpdvov Ar. Pl. 244, Alciphro 3. 56, Luc. Tim. 3 (not é dx. rod xpdévov, as written Ib. 23); év dwape? alone, Id. Asin. 37, etc.; dxaph diadumdy (sc. xpdvor) having waited a moment, Ar. Nub. 496; also, dxapts pas in a moment, Plut. Anton. 28 ; #uépas yuds dx. Id. 2.938 A; én’ deapés Aretae. Caus, M. Diut. 2. 2. 2. d«apij is also used adverbially without reference to Time, mostly with a negat., od« dmodaves Tod b pépers dxaph not a bit, not at all, Ar. Vesp. 7o1; ov8 dxaph Ib. 541, Dem. 1223. 28; dxapi mavreda@s (v. 1. deapel or -pet) Xenarch. Topp. 1. 15; so, map’ dxaph within a hair’s breadth, Plat. Ax. 366 C. IV. 70 dwapés, a ring on the little finger, Poll. 5. 100, Hesych. dxapt, 76, a kind of mite, bred in wax, Arist. H. A. 5. 32, 2. dxaptatos, a, ov, (dxaphs) momentary, brief, mAovs Dem. 1292. 2; ef, Arist. H. A, 8.2, 11, Dion, H. 8.70. Adv. -ws, Alciphro 1. 39 (Meineke). dxapva, 7s, 7, 2 kind of thistle, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 6. a , to be dxapmos or barren, Theophr. H. P. 3. 3, 4- dxaptia, 7, unfruitfulness, barrenness, Aesch. Eum. 801, Hipp. 378. 491, Arist. Mirab. 122. 2. [dxapmin, Or. Sib. 4. 73.] G-Kdpmorros, ov, =dxdpmwros, where nothing is to be reaped, unfruit- ful, of the sea, like drptyeros, Eur. Phoen. 210; v. meplppuros 2. G-xaptos, ov, without fruit, barren, Eur. Fr. 890. 8, Plat. Tim. 91 C; c. gen., Aiuyn a. ixOdwv Paus. 5. 7, 3- 2. metaph. fruitless, un- profitable, révos Bacchyl. 19 ; Adyot Plat. Phaedr. 277 A; Ta dx, Arist. Eth. N. 4.3, 33:—Adv. ws, Soph. O. T. 25.4; cf. eapmés (A) III. II. act. in Aesch. Eum. 942, making barren, blasting. a-Kdprwros, ov, not made fruitful, without fruit, Theophr. C. P. 3. 13, 3. 2. metaph., xpyopds dx. an unfulfilled oracle, Aesch. Eum. 714; vixas dxdprwroy xdpw because of some victory which yielded her no fruit, Soph. Aj. 176 :—cf. xapmés (A) 111. ‘ TépynTos, ov, insupportable, Plut. 2. 733 B, Galen. patient, Niceph. Blemm. dxaprtos, ov, (xelpw) unshorn, uncut, Ath. 211 E. dxapoas, és, (xappw) not dried or withered, Nic. ap. Ath. 133 D. dxacKd, (* dxf 11) Adv. gently, dx. mpoBdvres Cratin. Nép. 5. II, im- 45 Gxdra, a corrupt word in Aesch. Ag. 985; Ahrens’ emend. (Yappis ded for Pappids dxdra) would suit the metre. a-cataBlacros, ov, unforced, unenslaved, Cyril. a-Ka se ov, irrefragable, Mé-yos Ar. Nub. 1229. d-KardyyeAtos, ov, unproclaimed, méAeuos Dion. H. 1. 58, App. Bell. Hisp. 434. 19. a-Katayveoros, ov, not to be condemned, 2 Macc. 4. 47, Ep. Tit. 2. 8, C. I. 1971 6, Epigr. Gr. 728. Adv. —rws, Eccl. KaTay » ov, unconquerable, Diod. 17. 26. a-Katadéxacros, ov, unbribed, Eccl. d-Karddecros, ov, not accepted, Eccl. d-kataSixacros, ov, not condemned, Eccl. &-xatadovAeutos, ov, =sq., Theod. Prodr. a-catadovAwros, ov, not enslaved, Schol. Eur. Hec. 417, 737. é-Karalyrijrws, Adv. without examination, Epiphan. d-Kataduptos, ov, disagreeable, Artemid, 2. 48, Eust. 149. 28, etc. d-Katatoxuvros, ov, not to be ashamed of, Eccl. d-Kataitlaros, ov, not to be accused, Joseph. B. J. 1. 24, 8, Cyrill., ete. a-KataxdAutros, ov, ed, LXX, Polyb. 15.27, 2, 1 Cor. 11. 5, 13. G-Katdkaptros, ov, not to be bent, Eust. Opusc. 220. 78. d-cardxavoros, ov, not burnt, Apollon. Mirab. 36. d-KardkAacros, ov, not to be broken, stubborn, Schol. Od. 10. 329, Eust. d-KatdkAuorros, ov, not open to the waves, Greg. Nyss. d-Katdkotros, ov, unwearied, Gramm. é-kataxéopntos, ov, unarranged, Plut. 2. 424 A. é-katakpdtyros, ov, not to be subdued: 7d —rov Eust. Opusc. 151. 22. d-Katdxptros, oy, uncondemned, Act. Ap. 16, 37., 22.25. Adv. —rws, Eust., étc, a-Kdraros, ov, not to be broken, Arist. Meteor. 4. 8, 5. G-Katéhykros, ov, incessant, Arr. Epict. 1. 17, 3, etc.:—Adv. —rws, Ib. 2. 23, 46 (where wrongly dxaradnkrin@s). II. acatalectic, in prosody, Hephaest. dkataAntréw, not to understand, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 201. a-katahytros, ov, that t be reached or touched, Arist. Probl. 19. 42: not held fast, M. Anton. 7. 54 :—Adv. -Tws, Schol. Il. 17. 75. II. not to be conquered, Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 7. 2. metaph. incompre- hensible, a word of the Sceptical philosophers, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 22, Plut. 2. 1056 F, Cic. Acad. 2. 9, 18:—hence, dxaraAnita, 4, the incompre- hensibleness of things, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 1, Cic. ad. Att. 13. 19, 3- d-KarédXaxtos, ov, irreconcilable, Zaleuc. ap. Stob. 280, 12, Diod. 12.20. Adv. -raws, dw. wodeueiy Dem. 153. 17. G-karahAndos, ov, not fitting together, heterogeneous, Arist. Mund. 6, 6, Dion. H. de Dem. 27, etc.: Adv. -ws, Diog. L. 7. 59 :—Subst. dkatahAndérys, nTos, 4%, or dkatahAnAla, 7, Apoll. de Constr. 194 and 199. phat SS ov, indissoluble, Dion. H. 10. 31, Ep. Hebr. 7. 16. d-Katapda0nros, ov, not learnt or known, Hipp. Acut. 384. d-kaTépaxtos, ov, not softened by kneading, Schol. Ar. Lys. 656. é-Katapdaxyntos, ov, unconguerable, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 8, M. Ant. 8. 78. a-katdépaxos, ov, =foreg., Eus. D. E. 424 D. d-katapérpytos, ov, unmeasured, Strabo 77, Nicom. Geras. I. 77. G-karavéyKacros, ov, not compulsory, Eus. P. E. 196 D, 199 A. d-katavixnros, oy, invincible, Athanas. a-Katavénros, ov, inconceivable, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr.13, and Gramm. a-KatavuKros, ov, without compunction, Eccl. a-katdteoros, ov, not hewn, C. 1. 160. col. 1.60, 68, al., Eust. a-caramdéAaurros, ov, unconguerable in wrestling, Schol. Pind. N, 4. 153+ Md p a ad ov, not to be set at rest, incessant, Polyb. 4. 17, 4, etc.: that cannot cease from, twwés 2 Ep. Petr. 2. 14. Adv. -rws, Schol, Ap. Rh. I. 1002. G-katamAnkros, ov, undaunted, Dion, H. 1. 81, Eus. H. E. 8. 7, 4. Ady. -rws, Dion. H. 1. 57. dxatarAntia, 7, undauntedness, Clem. Al. 498 (restored forxardamAngty). d-Katatévyros, ov, not to be worn out, xdcpos Philolatis in Stob, Ecl. I. 420. Fines eh ov, not to be swallowed, Lxx (Job 20. 18). d-karampaivros, ov, unappeasable, Schol. Soph. Tr. 999- a-karatrénros, ov, not to be scared, Schol. Il. 3. 63. a-Kkatdmrwrtos, ov, not liable to fall, Eust. Opusc. 187, fin. a-Kardpynros, ov, never: ing, ied, vods Epiph a-katdapdevros, ov, not watered, Cyrill. a-kardoBerros, ov, unguenchable, Galen. d-Kardcaoros, ov, not to be shaken, Hesych., Eust. Ady.—ras, Cyrill. Hpavros, ov, unsealed, unwritten, dx. évradpa a commission by word of mouth, Hdn. 3. 11, 19. G-kaTéoKetros, ov, inconsiderate, Eccl, a-Katacketacros, ov, unwrought, rough, inartificial, Theophr. H. P. g. 16, 6, et ibi Schneid., Lxx (Gen. 1, 2):—Ady. -rws, Dion. H. de Isaeo 15. II. not admitting of high finish, Vit. Hom. 218. a-Katdokevos, ov, without preparation, inartificial, v.1. Aeschin. 77-3, Dion. H, de Thuc. 27, Philostr. 249 :—Adv. —ws, Polyb. 6. 4, 7. II, without regular establishment, without a dwelling, Bios Diod. 5. 39- a-KaragKkomyros, ov, not to be gazed upon, airyh Greg. Naz. é-kardoKwrros, not liable to derision, Cyrill. a-Katacopucrros, ov, not to be put down by fallacies, Apoll. Tyan. 44. d-cataotiola, 7), instability, anarchy, confusion, LXx (Prov. 26.28), Polyb. 1. 70, 1, Dion, H. 6. 31, etc. II. unsteadiness, Polyb, 7. 4,8. Gkackatos, a, ov, (*dxy 11) gentle, dyaApua mAgvrou Aesch. Ag. 741. A ; dkaracrdréw, tobe unstable, Arr, Epict, 2,1, 12:—Pass., Lxx(Tob, 1.15). 46 . dxardoriros, ov, (xablornue) unstable, unsettled, Hipp. Aph. 1247 ; ax, — ye 383. 7: cf, per? Probl. 26, 13; modvurefa Dion. H. 6. 74 :—of men, fickle, Polyb. 7. 3 of fevers, irregular, Hipp. WAT: —Ady. -rws, ax. exe Isocr. peo B. II. oe pas rae a ek thick, obpov Hipp. 69 F, 149 F. a-Katacrépecros, ov, not to be laid low, képara Ann. Comn, Xaoros, not to be conjectured, Suid. aorpemros, ov, not to be overthrown, Schol, Pind. O. 2. 146. oos, ov, never-ending, ap. Stob. 374. 22: of style, not rounded, Dion. H. de Comp. p. 168 Schaf. dkatacxecta, 7, ungovernableness, Ptol., etc. dxardoxeros, ov, (aréxw) not to be checked, Pseudo-Phocyl. 90, Diod, Me 38, etc. Adv. -rws, Plut. Cam. 37. Kardrakros, ov, not to be placed under subjection, Dion. Areop. dxararpyros, ov, (katarerpaivw) not pierced, Galen. a-Kardrpunros, ov, not to be used up, Polyb. 3. 89, 9. bAekros, ov, not burnt up, Eccl. a-kardppacros, ov, inexpressible, Eccl. d-Katadhpévyros, ov, not to be despised, important, Lat. haud spernendus, Xen. Ages. 6, 8, Plut., etc. : & XpyTTOS, ov, unused, Eust. 812. 52. a-karaxapioros, ov, undigested, tAn Arist. Probl. 28. 3. G-Kardipexros, ov, (Wéyw) blameless, Eccl. Ady. —rws Cyrill. a-catdipevorros, not fabulous, Onpia Hat, 4. 191: kardyevaora is a mere conjecture, ; é-Karépyacros, ov, not worked up, unshapen, Longin. 15.5. II. undigested, rpoph Arist. P. A. 2. 3, 9: indigestible, Galen. 6. 484. G-Katevvaoros, ov, not put to bed, waking, Hesych. G-Karevodos, ov, not easy to travel, 656s Achmes Onir. 170, d-xarnydpyros, ov, blameless, Diod. 11. 46. G-KaTnXnTOS, ov, not encompassed by sound, Suid. structed in the rudiments of the Faith, Eccl. dxdriov [dei], 76, Dim. of dxaros, a light boat, used by pirates, Lat. actuaria, Thuc, 1. 29., 4. 67, Polyb., etc. II. a kind of sail, either used separately from the large square sail (uéya torlov, 606vm), or added to it in a fair wind; perh. a stay-sail, cf. 5éAwv: in Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 27, Iphicrates leaves his péyaAa ioria behind, ds én? vavpaxiav mdéov, and makes little use even of his dxdtia,—so that here they plainly were used separately; but in Epicur. ap. Plut. 2.15 D, a person desiring to increase his speed, dxariov dpdpevos pevye, cf. 1094 D, —so that here they must have been used in addition to the ordinary square sail; and in Luc. Jup. Trag. 46, 6 dveyos éumlarav 7p d0dvp nat éunindas Ta dxdria, the two are mentioned as both set together, cf. Hist. Conscr. 45 :—in Epicr. Incert. 2, there isa play on the double sense of Gxariov (sail and cup, y. dxaros 11), kaTdBadde Tdxdria Kal kvrna (?) aipov 7a pel( down with your stay-sail cups and up with your main goblets. . III. a sort of woman's shoe, Poll. 7. 93, Hesych. Iv. a little man, dwarf, Phryn. in A. B. 19,—rTods puxpods 7a odpara axdria A€é-yovaty. ros, ov, uninhabited, Theophyl. bpacros, ov, unnamed, nameless, Epicur. ap. Plut. 2. 898 D: dk. xévBpos the cricoid cartilage of the larynx, Greenhill Theophil. p. 110. a-ka&romros, ov, unobserved, Heliod. 6.14. - é-KarépQwros, ov, incorrigible, Cyrill., etc. > Gxtiros [tx], 4, (rarely 6, as in Hdt. 7.186): a light vessel, boat, Lat. actuaria, Theogn. 458, Pind. P. 11. 60, Hat. 1. c., Thuc., etc. ; cf. dedriov :—generally, a ship, Eur. Hec. 440, Or. 342. ; Il. a boat-shaped cup, Theopomp. Com. ’AAG. 2 (=Telest. 6), Antiph. “A-yp. 5; cf. éxarioy I, fin., Pors. Med. 139. _ a-Karou ov, not scarred over, Oribas., Paul. Aeg. a-Kdrrtiros, ov, unshod, Teles. ap. Stob. 523. 49+ d-«avhos, ov, without, stalk, Diosc. 2. 212. without shaft or stalk, Arist. P, A. 4. 12, 3- dkavoros, ov, (xalw) unburnt, Xen. An. 3. 5, 13- Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 24. II. unin- II. of a feather, 2. incombustible, é-Kavmmplacros, ov, not branded, of horses, Strabo 215: v. Kaurnpiaca. é-cavyyota, 7, humility, Eccl. pee Eada axKax’ axaxmpevos (on the accent, v. Ainth, Plan. 720 oh d-KéAcv0os, , res: i. ee. adie peas Ag. 731; Soph. Aj. 1263, Eur. El. a a pene fon slag ee Theophr. C.P. 1. 17,8 roe f sg id » soithont vain conceit, M. Anton. 1. 16: -Bokia, %, Zonar. ‘ov, without a vacuum, Diog. L. 10. 89. ov, shunning vain pursuits, Cic. Fam, 15. 17, 4, M. op lothes-mending, Plat. Polit. 281 B, at ide akaTacTaros — akeoTiKkds. d-Kévrnros, ov, needing no goad or spur, Pind. O. 1. 33. d-Kevrpos, ov, stingless, xnphves Plat. Rep. 552 C, 564 B: without spur, of a cock, Clytus ap. Ath. 655 E: without thorns, Bdros Philo 1. gl. 2. without force or energy, Lat. aculei expers, Longin. 21. II. not central, Manetho 5. 108. axévwros, ov, (xevda) unemptied, Eccl. ' Géopar [@], Ion. imper. deo (for dxéeo) Hdt. 3. 40; Ep. part. dued- pevos Il. 16. 29, Od. 14. 383, also in Pind. P. 9. 180: fut. deécopas Dio C. 38. 19, Ep. dxéooopat Musae. 199, Att. dxodpar Plat. Rep» 364 C: aor. Wxeodunv, Ep. imper. deooa, etc.: v. sub fin.: Dep.: I. trans. to heal, cure, c. acc. of the thing healed, €d«os dwecoat heal it, Il. 16. 523; Axe’ dxedpevor 16. 29; Papny dxéecacOa Hat. 4. 90; or of part healed, BAépapov dxéoao tuprdov Eur. Hec. 1067 ; also of the person, émt .. pdppaxa ndcowv jxécar’ healed him of his wound, Il. 5. 402, got, cf. 448; c. gen. morbi, votcov.. mw’ dxéow Bapvar-yéos Epigr. Gr. 803, cf. Paus. 8. 18, 8. 2. to stanch, quench, miov T dxéovrd re diay Il. 22.2, cf, Pind. P. 9.180. 8. generally, to mend, repair, vijas dxedpevos Od, 14. 383; often applied to a tailor or cobbler, like Lat. resarcire, Luc. Fugit. 33, Necyom. 17; to a spider, mending its web, Arist. H. A. 9. 39, 43 cf. dxeorhs, dxeorixds. 4. metaph., di. dpaprdda Hdt, 1. 167; 7a émpepdpeva Id. 3. 16; Kandy, dxos Soph. Ant. 1027, Tr. 1035, cf. Eur. Med. 199; phvewa Antipho 128. 4; ddi«nyua Plat. Rep. 364 C ; dmopias Xen. Mem. 2. 7, 1. II. intr. or absol. to apply a remedy, make amends, GAX’ dxewpeOa OGacor~ dxeorai ro ppéves écOAay Il. 13. 115; GAN’ axécacbe, pitor Od, Io. 69, ef. Hdt. 3. 40, Plat. Phileb. 30 B. III. the Act. déw occurs in Pseudo-Hipp. 412. 34, C. I. 511. 18; cf. éfaeéopar ; and dxéerar in pass. sense, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 1; d#eouévov Tod Kaxod Id. Caus. M. Diut. t. 6; aor. dwecOjva Paus. 2. 27, 3. Gxepardopat, Pass. to be dxépaios, Eust. 277. 16. G-Képatos, ov, Prose word (used by Eur.) for the poét. denparos, un- mixed, t5wp Arist. H. A. 8. 24, fin., cf. 6. 21, 4. 2. of a person, pure in blood, Eur. Phoen. 943. IL. entire, unharmed, unravaged, dx, dmorAapBaveay tiv médw Hat. 3.146; y7 Thuc. 2. 18 (perh. with allusion to xepal{w); dx. Svvayus, of an army, in full force, fresh, Id. 3: 33 éav mT dowes Kal dx. C. I. 989 6, ggi b. 2. in many rela-~ tions, déparoy ds ohoayu Mevedéw dAé€xos inviolate, Eur. Hel. 48; [réxvn] 4BAaBis cat dx. Plat. Rep. 342 B; pvAaxes ris oixelas dxe- paiov [xwpas] Dem. 17.13; otota dx. Id, 1087.24; Amides, Spun Polyb. 6. 9, 3., I. 45, 2, etc.:—é duepatov anew, Lat. de integro, Id. 24.4, 10; or, in a fresh, entire state, Lat. re adhuc integra, Id. 6. 24, 93 év dkepaiw éay to leave alone, Id. 2, 2, 10:—Ady. -ws, Cic, ad Att. 15., 21. 8. of persons, uncontaminated, guileless, Eur. Or. 922: c. gen., Gi. Kaxdv 70Gv uncontaminated by .., Plat. Rep. 409 A. dkeparoown, %), guilelessness, innocence, Ep. Barnab., Suid. Gkepardrys, 770s, %, integrity: freshness, Polyb. 3. 73, 6. G-Képacros, ov, unmixed, pure, twds from a thing, Plat. Polit. 310 Dz. II. that cannot be mixed or confounded, Dion. H. de Comp. 22. priest ov, («épas) without horns, Plat. Polit, 265 C, sq., Arist, H. A. 2. 1, 51, al. d-Képauvos, ov, =sq., of Capaneus, Aesch. Fr. 1 5. G-Kepativwros, ov, not struck by lightning, Luc. J. Trag. 25. axépSeua, 4, want of gain, loss, Pind. O, 1. 84. G-KepSns, és, without gain, bringing loss, Soph. O.C. 1484, Plat. Crat. 417 D, etc.:—bringing no gain, Dion. H. 6. g:—Ady. —8@s, without profit, gratis, Arist. Pol. 5.8, 19, Plut. 2. 27 D. II, not greedy of gain, Plut. Arist. 1. Gxépxioros, ov, (xepxicw) unwoven, Anth. P. 7.472. -Kepkos, ov, without a tail, Arist. P, A. 4. 10, 52. Gxepparia, 7, (épua) want of money, Ar. Fr. IQ. d-xepos, ov, =axepws, Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 31. dxeprexdpns, ov, 6, (xelpw, xdun) with unshorn hair, ever-young (for the Greek youths wore their hair long till they reached manhood), epith. of Phoebus, Il. 20. 39, h. Hom. Ap. 134, Pind. P. 3. 26 and late Poets: cf. detpexduns :—Nonn. has a dat. pl. axepoexdpoow, D. 14. 232. &-Kepxvos, ov, without hoarseness, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. Io. act. curing hoarseness, 1d. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 8. d-Kepws, wy, gen. o, = dnéparos, Plat. Polit, 265 B, cf. depos. aképwros, ov, (xépas) not horned, Anth. P. 6, 258. dxeola, 7, =dxeors, Hipp. 6. 33- deol pBporos [4], ov, healing mortals, of Aesculapius, Orph. L. 8. dxéowpos, ov, (duéouat) wholesome, healing, Plut. 2. 956 F. dkéovos, ov, healing, epith. of Apollo, Lat. opifer, Paus. 6. 24, 6. dxeors, ens, }, a healing, cure, Hat. 4: 90, 109; Tov etpdyevor mavot- névous dxéoes C. 1. 434. II. name of a salve or plaster, Galen, Aesoe, 24 Viana ots Rend, P. 5. 86, Aesch. Pr. 482, Anth. Peat , » and akeopios, ov, curable, Hesych. (nisi leg, Pi ah ores, ov, post. Adj, healing disease, Anth. P. 9. 516 (e conj. ali Bag he ws Sfive! Adie need pain a fall Nonn. D. 7. 86. the steed, Soph, 0. C. N4. \j+» Gu. yards the rein that tames xeoriptov, 76, a tailor’s shop, Liban, dxeorhs, ov, 0, =dxeorhp, Lyc. 1052, Alciphro 3. 27 ;—in the Phrygian dialect acc. to Schol. Il. 22. 2, Eust, 1254. 2, E.M. 51. 7. 2. are~ ee iparion payévrav menders of tor clothes, Xen, Cyr. 1.6, 16 (with v. 1. qnrat, cf. Phryn. p. 91 (Lob.)), v. sub Gréopa I. 3, dxeorikés, 4, dv, fitted for healing or repairing : 4 -«h (sc. réxv7) ’ rT. | en axeoropia — aklyyros. dxeoropia, %, the healing art, Ap. Rh. 2. 512, Anth. P. 9. 349, al., etc. axeoropts, idos, 7, fem, of dxéorwp, Hipp. 295. 48. ae dxeorés, 7, dv, curable, Hipp. Art. 825; mpa@ypa Antipho 140. 15 :— aor. dxearat ppéves éo0day the spirit of the noble is easily revived, |. £3. 115. dxéorpa, 7, a darning-needle, Luc. D. Mort. 4. 1. La, %,=sq.: a sempstress, Luc. Rhet. Praec. 24. axeotpls, ios, , fem. of dxeorhp, a midwife, Hipp. 254. 50. dxeorrpov, 74, a remedy, Soph. Fr. 427. dxéorwp, opos, 6, a healer, saviour, PoiBos Eur. Andr. goo, axerhopia, 7, healing, salvation, Maxim. xarapy. 167. deo-opos, ov, bringing a cure, healing, c. gen. rei, Eur. Ion 1005, Astydam. ap. Ath. 40 B. dxeo-wdivos, ov, allaying pain, Paetus in Hipp. 1279. 2, Anth. P. 9. 815, C. L. 5973 ¢. G-Ké Ss, ov, without head: of dxépador, fabulous creatures in Libya, Hadt. 4. tg1, cf. Plin. 5. 8. 2. without beginning, dd-yos, pdOos Plat. Phaedr. 264 C, Legg. 752 A; orixo: de., hexameters which begin witk a short syllable, Ath. 632 D, Gaisf. Hephaest. p. 181. 8. aipeots dx. a sect with no known head, Suid., etc. ; dxépadot, schismatics, Eccl. II. =dripos, Horace’s capitis minor, Artemid. 1. 35. dxéw, v. dxéopat sub fin. II. v. sq. dkéwv, ovra, (v. sub dxf 11) a participial form, used by Hom. as Adv. like deny, stilly, softly, silently, ll. 1. 34, Od. 9. 427, etc.; used in sing. even with pl. verb, dxéwy Saivucbe 21. 89, h. Hom. Ap. 404; but dual dxéovre Od. 14. 195; never in pl—Though dxéovoa occurs Il. 1. 565, Od. 11. 141, yet dxéwv stands also with fem., ’A@nvain dxéwy jy Il. 4. 22.—Ap. Rh. 1. 765 has an opt. dxéois, as if a Verb dxéw, to be silent, really existed. Cf. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. an, %, a Subst. cited by Gramm. (Hesych., Suid., Eust., E. M.) in three senses, I. a point, (cf. axis, dxwv, dxava, dxavos, axovh, axpos, dds, the term. —hxns, the part. dxaxpévos, also dxwxh, and perh. dxpuh, aixpn; Skt. agan (dart), dgus (swift); Zd. aku (a point); Lat. acus, acuo, acer, ocior, and perh. acies; O. H. Germ. egg-ja (acuo).) EES silence, (cf. dkhv, dxéwy, Gna, dxacka, dxackaios, Ka, ixora, hKa- dos). III. healing (whence dxéopa, and perh. aixddos, aixddAdw) Hipp. 853 C, 866 B.—Curt. suspects that 1 and 11 belong to one and the same root ; the common notion being that of soothing, gentleness. axqSera, 7), (dendqs) carelessness, indifference, in pl., Emped. 441, Ap. Rh. 3. 298. dxnSepdvevros, ov, (xndeudv) neglected, slighted, Eccl. a-KySeoros, ov, uncared for, unburied, Il. 6.60: so in Adv., —Tws, without due rites of burial, or (peth.) without care for others, recklessly, remorselessly, Il. 22. 465., 24. 417, cf. Anth. P. 9. 375. a-«qSevros, ov, unburied, Plut. Pericl. 28, Joseph. dxndtw, fut. fom, Q. Sm. 10. 16., 12. 376, but aor. defdeoa Il. 14. 427: (dxnoqs). To take no care for, no heed of, c. gen., od tis €b dundecer Il. l.c.; od pév pev (Gyros dxhdes, GAAd Oavdvros 23. 70; gavrod 8 dxnde Svorvxodvros (imperat.) Aesch. Pr. 508, cf. Mosch. 4. 81 :—ef. dpedéw, d-Kndqs, és, I. pass. uncared for, unheeded, unburied, dppa piv "Extop xeirat dx. Il. 24. 554; 7) airws xeirar de. Od. 20.130; oépar’ dxndéa Keira Od. 24. 187, cf. 6. 26., 19. 18. II. act. without care or sorrow, Lat. securus, o@p’ dmodxphoovra axndées Il. 21. 123, cf. 24. 526, Hes. Th. 489, Anth. P. 11. 42. 2. careless, heedless, Tov 5é yuvaixes dundées ob nopéovao Od. 17. 319; taking no care of, maldwy Plat. Legg. 913 C. akndla, Ion. -ty, },=dendea: indifference, torpor, from grief or ex- haustion, Hipp. 272. 39, Cic. ad Att. 12. 45, Aretae., etc. dxySidw, fo be careless or reckless, Basil., Io. Chrys. torpid, exhausted, weary, Lxx (Ps. 60. 2., 142. 4, etc.). a-KHAnros, ov, to be won by no charms, proof against enchantment, Plat. Phaedr. 259 B:—hence unconquerable, inexorable, in Hom. only once, denanros véos, Od. 10. 329 (a line susp. even by old Gramm.) ; pavia dx. Soph. Tr. 999 (lyr.), also of persons, Theocr. 22, 169. a-xnAlSaros [7], ov, spotless, pure, LXX. dknpa, 76, =dxeopa, a cure, relief, ddvvdav Il. 15. 394- , ov, unmuzzled, Eccl. axkqv, (v. sub dey 11) an accus, form used as Adv. séilly, softly, silently, Hom. mostly in phrase, d«hy éyévovro awry Il. 3. 95, al.; also, of & ddd any icay 4. 429. G-«ihmevtos, ov, not in a garden, wild, Posidon. ap. Ath. 369 D. d-«knos, ov, without a garden, xijros dxnwos Greg. Naz. é-«npacta, %, purity, Hesych. (4xnpeota in Ms.), Apollin. Psalm. d-Knpdoros, ov, Ep. form of dxhparos, unmixed, olvosOd.g.205. IT. untouched, Lat. integer, dx. Aepaves meadows not yet grazed or mown, h. Hom. Merc. 72; dvOos dx. pure, fresh, Anth. P. 12.935 oxfwrpa dx. powerful, C. 1. 4158. F axhparos, ov, (xepavvupr) like dxépacos, g ) Un= defiled, pure, properly of liquids, #5wp Il. 24. 303; wordy Aesch. Pers. 614; xedpa, bpBpos Soph. O. C. 471, 690; dx. xpuods pure gold, Hat. 7. 10, I, Simon. 64, cf. Plat. Rep. 503 A, Polit. 303 E. _ iL metaph., 1. of things, untouched, unhurt, undamaged, Lat. integer, ofxos Kat KAFpos, erhpara Il. 15. 498, Od. 17. 532; sedqos Aesch. Ag. 661 ; dviat strong reins, Pind. P. 5.433; ax. eéun unshorn hair, Eur. Ion 1266; dx. Aepdév an unmown meadow, Id. Hipp. 73; ax. pitta, wécpos Xen. Hier. 3, 4, Cyr. 8. 7, 22; émorhyun, Hn Plat. Phaedr. 247 D, Legg. 735 C; dx. pappyaxa spells that have all their power, Ap. Rh. 4. 157 — in Hadt. 4. 152, 7d éumdpiov rodro Hy ax. rodroy rv xpdvoy, it may be 2. to be a casita? taken for either untouched, unvisited (like du. dA-yeot suprt.), or in full 4 47 force and freshness. . 2. of persons, Lat. integer, wapBévos dx. an undefiled virgin, Eur. Tro. 670; so, de. Aéxos Eur. Or. 575; and c. dat., duxhparos GA-yeot, TUxats untouched by woes, etc., Eur. Hipp. 1113, H. F. 1314: mostly c. gen., d«. xaxdv without taint of ill, Ib. 949; dx. yapor Plat. Legg. 840 D; de. wbivew free from throes of child-birth, Ap. Rh. 1.974, etc. Cf, dxépacos, dxnpdotos, dxparpyys. G-«nptos (A), ov, unharmed by the Kijpes, generally unharmed, Hom. (never in II.), Od. 12. 98., 23. 328; Yuya denpion, = dbavaron, free from the power of the Fates, Pseudo-Phocyl. 99. II. act. unharming, harmless, paB5os h. Hom, Merc. 530; juépa Hes. Op. 821. d-Kiptos (B), ov, («fjp) without heart, i.e., I. lifeless, Hom. (never in Od.), dunpiov alfa ridnor Il. 11. 392, cf. 21. 466. II, heartless, spiritless, Lat. vecors, a€ mov déos ixe Gxnpiov 5.812; juevor ab Exacror dichptot 7. 100. dxnpéraros, a post. Sup. of denparos, Anth. P. 12. 249. é-«npuxrel and —rt, Adv. without needing a flag of truce, Thuc. 2. 1: but in Dio C. 50. 7, without admitting one; cf. sq. , a-Kfpuktos, ov, d, unproclaimed, dn. wéAepos a sudden war, Hdt. 5. 81; but also a war in which no herald was admitted, truceless, implacable, Xen. An. 3. 3, 5, Plat. Legg. 626 A; fv yap domovdos Kat dinpuxros ipiv mpds rods cards TéAcuos Dem. 314. 16 (cf. domovdos) ; dx. €xOpa Plut. Pericl. 30. 2. without herald, 76 dx. THs 6500 the fact that the journey was unprepared by heralds, App. Mithr. 104 :—Adv, —rws, without needing a flag of truce, Thuc. 1. 146; cf. foreg. II. not proclaimed victor by heralds, inglorious, unknown, Eur. Heracl. 89, Aeschin. 86. 37. III. with no tidings, not heard of, Soph. Tr. 45. axipwros, ov, («npdw) unwaxed, Luc. Icarom. 3, Polyaen. axnxéSarar, dkny épevos, v. sub dxéw, dunxedav, dvos, 6, =dxos, Hesych, 4-«BSqAevTOs, ov, =sq., Philo 1. 565, etc. &-«(BSndos, ov, unadulterated, genuine, Plat. Legg. 916D; démpa wat de. Luc. Hermot. 68. 2. metaph. of men, guileless, honest, Hdt. 9. 7, 1, Phryn. in A. B. 371. Adv. —Aws, Isocr. 3 C. £ axvbvbs [&], 7, dv, weak, feeble, faint, Hom: Od., always in the Comp., eldos dxidvérepos 8. 169, cf. 5. 217., 18. 130; insipid, éecpa Archestr. ap. Ath. 117 A.—Ep. word, found also in the Prose of Hipp., 27. 43, etc. © axiBaSqs, es, (els, eldos) pointed, Theophr. H. P. 4. 12, 2. axtBards, n, Ov, =foreg., Poll. 1.97., 10. 133, A. B. 331, Hesych. II. 70 dx., a plant, =morhpiov 11, Diose. 3. 15. a-«iOadpts, 1, gen. cos, without the harp, Aesch. Supp. 681. d-«ikus, vos, 6, 4, powerless, feeble, Od. 9. 515., 21. 131. I: weakening, vodoos Orph. Lith. 22.—Ep. word, used by Aesch, Pr. 548 (lyr.), and in the Ion, Prose of Hipp. 504. 5. dxlvaypa [det], 76, —ypos, 6, =Tivaypa, —ypds, Poéta ap. E. M. 48. 39. dkwdens, 6, Lat. acindces (Hor. Od. 1. 27, 5), Persian word, a short straight sword, often in Hdt., who declines it -eos, ei, -ea, 3. 118, 128., 4. 62., 9. 107; but in 7. 54.,-.9- 80, almost all the Mss. give acc. dxwvaeny, axiwdkas (as in Xen. An. 1. 2, 27, al.) for -ea, -eas; dx. énixpuaos, (prob.) a Persian sword kept in the Parthenon, C. I. 139. 16, ubi v. Bickh. ; also, v7) rdv daevdeny, a Scythian oath, Luc, Tox. 38; v. Dict. of Antiqq. s. v. [Zin Horace]. axww5ovi, Adv. of sq., without danger, Suid. G-xivSivos, ov, without danger, free from danger, Simon. 51., 107, Eur. I, A. 17, Thuc. 1. 124; muperot Hipp. Aph. 1260; dperai dxivé, virtues that court no danger, i.e. cheap, easy virtues, Pind. O. 6. 14, cf. Thuc. 3. 40; dx. elval rin tov dyava Hyperid. Lyc. 7; dx. yépas, of silence, C. I. 6308. II. Ady. -vws, Eur. Rhes. 584, Anti- pho 120. 3, etc.; 4 dk. dovAeia Thuc. 6. 80; 7d du. dwedOeivy abrovs their departure without danger to us, Id. 7.68: Comp. dawduvdrepov with less danger, Plat. Phaedo 85 D; Sup. dmvduvérara Civ Xen, Mem. 2. 8, 6. dxw5ivorns, 770s, 6, freedom from danger, Galen. : &-kw5ivedys, €s, ( , — dkms. d-«Xtros, ov, , indeclinable, Soa : Ael. Dion. wrote ept dkdtrov trav. Ady., dxdirws éxew Eust. 162. 32. ecg unshaken, unmoved, Synes., Suid., C. I. 8672. Ady. =rs, Cyril. :—in Galen. 9. 205, dxAovos, ov. . F d-«Aomros, ov, not stolen, Greg. Naz. ; II. not liable to seduction, Id. III. not furtively concealed, dyxcarpov Opp. H. 3. 532. &-KADSavicros, ov, not lashed by waves: generally, sheltered from, Auuiy Gk. Tay mvevparuy Polyb. Io. 10, 4. 5 G-KAvoros, ov, =foreg., Lyc. 736, Plut. Marius 15, Nonn., etc. ; Aruiy Gd. Diod. 3. 44; fem., AdAw dxdvoray Eur. I. A. 121. ; G-«hiros, ov, (KAdw) unheard, Epigr. Gr. 1046. 91 :—the sense is dub. in Plut. 2. 722 E. G-Kov, 6, 7), without twig or branch, Theophr. H. P. 6. 6, 2. , OV, (HALOw) unspun, oThpoves Plat. Com. Incert. 53. Gxpdto, fut. dow, (dept) to be in full bloom, be at the prime, flourish : I. of persons, Hdt. 2. 134, Plat. Prot. 335 E; dx pacerv Chpart, popn, Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 23, Plat. Polit. 310 D, ete, 5 so of cities and states, Hdt. 3. 57., 5.28; dp. 70 oGpa dad ray X’ era péxpe tov € kai p’ Arist. Rhet. 2. 14, 4. 2. to flourish or abound ina thing, mAovr@ Hdt. 1. 29; mapacxevp waon Thuc. 1.1; vedrnre Id. 2. 20; ev Tit Aeschin. 46. 23. 3. c. inf. to be strong enough to do, Xen. An. 3. 1, 25. TI. of things, dxpage: 6 m AE HOS, % vdcos is at its height, Hipp. Aph. 1245, Thuc. 3. 3., 2. 49; ampatoy Oépos mid-summer, Id. 2. 19; of corn, to be just ripe, Ibid. 2. so also, jwika . . dxpator [6 Ovpds] when passion was at its height, Plat. Tim. 7o D; depagovoa pwn Antipho 127. 25; dxyate mavra émpedelas ded- peva require the utmost care, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 40. 3. impers., c. inf., depacer Bperéwy exeoOat ‘tis time to.., Aesch. (lyr.) Th. 96; viv yop dxp. Tede .. fuyxaraBiva now 'tis time for her to .. , Id. Cho. 726. Gkpatos, a, ov, in full bloom, at the prime, blooming, flourishing, vigorous, m@Ao Aesch. Eum. 405; #8 Id. Th. 11; dapatos pvow in the prime of strength, Id. Pers. 441; dxp. Tv dpyny Luc. Tim. 3; Kade Giepard Epigr. Gr. 127; 76 dxpadrarov Dion. H. 5.22:—dxp.mpos épwra, Lat. nubilis, Anth. P. 7. 221, cf. Luc. D. Deor. 8. 2, Ael. N. A. 15. 10:—so in Adv., dxpatws éxav xard riv Hrixiav Polyb. 32. 15, 7: —of things, at the height, 6 dxpatéraros xaipos ris Hpépas, i.e, noon, Polyb. 3.102, 1; 70 dxpaioy rod xepavos Arr. An. 4. 7, I, etc. II. in time, in season, Lat. opportunus, ws dxpatos . . uddor (Wakef. depai” ay), Soph. Aj. 921; dxp. hyépar the seasonable days, Ath. 180 C, cf. Anth. P. Io. 2. éxpaorys, od, 5, =foreg., Hdn. 1. 17, 24. dxpaoriKés, 7, 6v,=dxpaios, dxp. uperds Galen. 10. 61 5, of a kind of continuous fever, when the amount of heat is kept up steadily through- out; also dudrovos. Ady. —Kis, Theod. Metoch. 59. axpy, 7, (vy. sub ds 1) a point, edge: proverb., én fupod dxujs on the rasor’s edge (v. sub fupdv) ; dxpi) pacydvou, gious, 6ddvTav, Pind., etc. ; Kepkldav dual Soph. Ant. 976; Adyyns duh Eur. Supp. 318 ; duqidégcor dicpat both hands, Soph. O. T. 1243; modoty dxpal the feet, Th. 1034; mupds dxpal, Eumupor dxpat, v. sub pets. II. the highest or culminating point of anything, the bloom, flower, prime, zenith, esp. of man’s age, Lat. flos aetatis, dxpa) #Bns Soph, O. T. 741; év ride Tov KddAous axyq Cratin. Mur. 13; odpards Te Kab ppovacews Plat. Rep. 461 A; perpios xpdvos dupis Id, Rep. 460 E; dxpt Biov Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 20, etc.; els dehy @Ody Eur. H. F. 532; & deuh dva= dpa Ce Plat. Phaedr. 230 B; & airais rats dxpais Isocr, 147 A; aicpy éxewv, of corm, to be ripe, Thuc. 4. 23 TooovrToy Ths akpis torep@y Isocr. 418 D; rijs dxpis Anyew to begin to decline, Plat. Symp. 219, A:—then in various relations, as d. tjpos the spring-prime, like Milton’s ‘the point of dawn,’ Pind, P, 4. 114; d. 6épovs mid-summer, Xen. Hell. 5. 3, 19; 4. mAnpwparos the highest condition, prime of a crew, Thuc. 7. 14; 4. rod vavrixod the flower of their navy, Id. 8. 46; a. rijs dbgns Id. 2. 42 :—al dxpal the crisis of a disease, Hipp. Aph. 1245 :—generally, strength, vigour, éy xepds axud Pind, O. 2. 113, cf, Aesch. Pers. 1060; 4. wodav swiftness, Pind. 1. 8 (7). 83, of. Aesch. Eum, 3705 ppevav Pind. N. 3. 68; Bapbs deué terrible in strength, Id. 1. 4. 86 (3. 81):—periphr. ‘like Bia, dep Onoeday Soph. O. C. 1066. : III. of Time, like xaipés, the time, i.e, the best, most Sitting time, often in Trag., fyi’ dy 5) mpds yao Henr’ dxpds Soph, O. T. 14925 épyav, Abyav, Epas dept the time for doing, speaking, ama still, Id, Ph. 12, El, 22, Aj. 8115 c. inf., coveér Fy péddrew a. Aesch. Pers. 407, cf. Ag. 1353; dmmAdx Oar 8 d. Soph, El, 1338; én” dpiis elvat, c. inf., to be on the point of doing, Eur. Hel. 897, cf. Ar. Pl. Some to co a et Cot aby at i ed c ime, Dem, - 4 i the right moment, Isocr, (Epist.) a he ‘; pease 1% oe sete to let it pass, Plat. Rep. 460 E. Cf. fie sq. sprees 3 axprhy, ame og kph, used as Ady Tare in Att., 7d oxevoddpa.. d é 7‘ ; iver, Xen, hn. 4. 3,361 (aoc, 1 ie ao eect rae te or Bix Sayed 13) 12.5 3. 17, 5, al.; also Theocr. 4. 60, Anth. aap tn Poly i ee a véos dy C. I, 6864; strengthd., és, h, dv, dkyh pets t 5 rs 5 tiv bs vy jones meee Pi ye Oe ee PVCS, ov, (not dxunyd : 1. L rn dxpnvos ctroo Il. |, Sie hide poe whe - 163) ae J - Jo . : absol., vhaorias, dxunvous Ib 207; dey : me Mle Tb. 346 ‘enh is said to have been Aeol, = ryote ‘ Gone ei pene le aah im ge dxphs, Fros, 5, 4, al a: others from eapety.) » also as neut., Paus. 6, 15, 5; C. I. 428: (dpa): unwearied, ll. 11. 802., 15. 697, Aesch, Fr. 330, Es eS ; + much like ért, as yet, still, very =dkdpas, untiring, b . , BJ , akyTEel — akovy, Soph. Ant. 353; mvAal dep. Anth, P. 9. 526:—also in late Prose, as Dion. H. 9. 14 (ubi male depyqrny), Paus. 1. c., Plut. Cim. 13. G-Kpyrel and —ri, Adv. without toil, easily, Joseph. B. J. 1. 16, 2. dxpntos, ov, (apy) = dxphs, unwearied, moctv h. Hom. Ap. 520. II. not causing pain, Nic. Th. 737. axpo-Sérns, ov, 6,=sq., Poll. 10. 147. Gxpd-lerov, 76, (riOnut) the anvil-block, stithy, Ul. 18. 410, Od. 8. 274. axpdwov, 7d, Dim. of sq., Aesop. dxpov, ovos, 6, orig. prob, a meteoric stone, thunderbolt (v. sub fin.), XGAxeos dxpav odpavddey katy Hes. Th. 722, cf. 724. II. an anvil, Il. 18. 476, Od. 8. 274, Hdt. 1. 68: metaph., mpds dxpovr ydd- keve yA@ooay Pind. P. 1. 167; Adyxns dxpoves very anvils to bear blows (as the Schol. takes it), Aesch. Pers. 51; so, dropévery mAnyds dxpoyv Aristopho ‘Iarp. 1; TiptvO0s dkpwr, i.e. Hercules, Call. Dian. 146. 2. a pestle, a Cyprian usage acc. to Hesych. III. = ovpavés, and d«povidar = odpavida:, Hesych., cf. Aleman 111 (ubiy. Bgk.). IV. a kind of eagle, Hesych. V. a kind of wolf, Opp. C. 3. 326. (With the above-cited senses, cf. Skt. agma (a stone, meteoric-stone), agmaras (lapideus) ; O. Norse hamarr ; O. H. G. hamar (hammer) ; Lith, akmi (a stone).) mt dkvaptros, dxvatros, dkviidos, = dyv-. dxvnpos, ov, (xvhun) without calf of the leg, Plut. 2. 520 C. a-Kvnopos, ov, without irritation or itching, Hipp. Offic. 747. dxvnortis, 10s, 7, (dxavos) the spine or backbone of animals, Od. ro. 161. II. a plant, Nic. Th. 52. dxvioos, ov, (x«vica) without the fat of sacrifices, Bods Anth. P. 10. 7; so Cobet restores Bwpotor map’ dxvicorc: in Luc. J. Trag. 6, 2. meagre, spare, of persons, Theophr. C. P. 2. 4, 6; of food, Plut. 2. 123 B. dxvicwros [ov without the steam of sacrifice, Aesch. Fr. 422. axon, 4, Ep. dxoun (the stem being d«of, as in dxovw=dxdfw) :—a hearing, the sound heard, éxadev 5€ re yiyver’ dxovn Il. 16.634. 2. the thing heard, news, tidings, werd warpds dxoviy ixécOa, Bivat to go in quest of tidings of his father, Od. 2. 308., 4. 701, cf. Anth. P. 7. 220; xara tiv SdAwvos dxohy according to Solon’s story, Plat. Tim. 21 A, cf. 22 B, 3. the thing heard, a hearing, report, saying, Same, Pind, P. 1. 1624174; dxod copois a thing for wise men to listen to, Ib. 9. 135; don toropeiv, mapadafeiv Tt, etc., to know by hearsay, Hat. 2. 29, 148, etc.; éwlorac@a: Antipho 137. 17, Thuc. 4. 126; so, €{ dons Aéyev Plat. Phaedo 61D; ras dxods Tay mpoyeyernuévwr traditions, Thuc, 1. 20; doa. . Adywy Id. 1. 73; axon paprupeiy to give evidence on hearsay, Dem. 1300. 16; dxony mpogdyey to bring hearsay evidence, Ib..14; Baptv . . dons Pépov Auth. P. 6. 220. tf, the sense of hearing, Hat. 1. 38, etc.; joined with dys, Plat. Phaedo 65 B, etc.; ofs dra péy éorw, dxoai 5¢ ove vaow Philo 1. 474. 2. the act of hearing; hearing, és dxody éuny to my hearing, my ear, Aesch. Pr. 690; yapuy dpapeiy dxoaio: Simon, 41; dfeiay dxony . . dd- ryois &Sovs Soph. El. 30; dxof xAvew Id. Ph.1412; deoais déxeoGat, eis dwods épxerai 7 Eur. 1. T. 1496, Phoen. 1480; 8 dxofjs aicbdve- oOa Plat. Legg. goo A; oddevds dxony bremay Eur. H. F. 962 (perh. in allusion to the herald's cry, dkovere dew); Tots axpodpact Tas dxods dvar@éva Polyb. 24. 5, 9. 3. the ear, drmdreca 8 obdiv dpnp’, émBpdpeor 8 dxovai Sapph. 2.12; dmecGie pov tiv dx. Her- mipp. =rpar. 7, cf. Pherecr. Incert. 24; dvoty dxoats xpivev with two ears, Arist. Pol. 3. 16, 12. III. a hearing, listening to, dxohs afvos worth hearing, Plat. Theaet. 142 D; els dxony davis within hearing of the voice, Diod. 19. 41. a-xotAvos, ov, without hollows, Hipp. 409. fin., Eust. Opusc, 194. 3. 2. without stomach, Galen. 5. 384. G-«orhos, ov, not hollow, Arist. H. A. 3. 5, I. G-Kotpyros, ov, sleepless, unresting, of the sea, Aesch. Pr. 139, cf. Theocr. 13. 44, Diod., Plut., etc.; dw. Sdepvor C. I. 1778; of the Emperor, Epigr. Gr. 1064. g:—the form d-koipioros, ov, is dub. in Diod. Excerpt. 616. 48. d-Kowos, ov, not common, Themist. Or. 142 A. axowwvycia, 7, the non-existence of community of property, Arist. Pol. 2.5, 12. II. unsociableness, Stob. Ecl. 2. 320. III. ex- communication, Eccl. G-Kowavyros, ov, not shared with, yapous dxowdynroy ebvay a bed not shared in common with other wives, Eur. Andr. 470. 2. not to be communicated, évopa LXx (Sap. 14. 21). II. act. having no share of or in, c. gen., vouwr Plat. Legg. g14 C: also c. dat., dx, Tots KaKots Arist. Top. 3. 2,8; absol. unsocial, Plat. Legg. 774 A: inhuman Cic. Att. 6. 3, '7:—so in Adv. —rws, Ib. 6. 1, 7. IIL. excommunicated, Eccl. dxowvwvia, 7, unsociableness, Ep. Plat. 318 E. dxolrys, ov, 6, (a copul., xolrn, cf. dAoxos) a bedfellow, spouse, hus- band, Il. 15. 91, Od. 5. 120, Pind. N. 5. 51, Soph. Tr. 525, Eur. :—fem. dxoutis, tos, #), a spouse, wife, Il. 3. 138, Pind., Aesch, Pers. 684, Soph., Eur.—Poét. words, cf, Plat. Crat. 405 C. ' d-Kodkeuros, ov, not to be won by flattery, Plat.Legg.729A. —S» TI. act. not flattering, Teles ap. Stob. 524, fin.:—so in Ady. ~ras, Cic. Att. 13. 51, I. G-Kohuikos, ov, not flattering, Diog. L. 2. 141. n dodiicta, 7, licentiousness, intemperance, excess, opp. to cwppocvyn, Hecatae, 144, Antipho 125. 35, Thuc. 3. 37, Plat., etc., cf, Arist. Eth, N. 2. 7, 3; in pl., Lys. 146. 34, Plat. Legg. 884. ; dxodacralve, fut. ava Ar. Av. 1226, to be licentious, intemperate, Ar. 1, c., Mnesim, ‘Inmorp. 1. 19, Plat. Rep. 555 D, al. ékokdocracpa, 7d, (as if from *deokacTatw) = dxohdornya, restored by Dobree in Ar. Lys. 399, for dxéAaor’ dopara; and Meineke suggests 5 axorkacrdopara for -dara in Anaxandr. Incert, 24, cf, Alciphr. 1. 38. $ akokdornpa, aros, 7d, an act of dkodacia, Plut II. 20, Orig. akokaaryréov, verb. Adj. (as if from *dxoAacréw), one must behave licentiously, Clem. Al. 2. 28. akoAaorta, 4, probl. |. for dwoAacta, Alex. Tad. 1. 6; v. Meineke. - G-«éAagros, ov, Lat. non castigatus, unchastised, undisciplined, un- bridled, 6 Sijyos Hdt. 3. 81; SxAos Eur. Hec. 607; orpérevpa Xen, An. 2. 6, 9; so Plat, etc. 2. commonly, unbridled in sensual pleasures, . licentious, intemperate, opp. to a@ppwv, Soph. Fr. 817, Plat. Gorg. 507 C, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 2, 7; mepi 7: Id. H. A. 6. 18, 8; mpds ve (v. fin.) : —so in Adv., dwoAdoras éxetv Plat. Gorg. 493 C; Comp. -orépas éxew mpés tt to be too intemperate in a thing, Xen. Mem. 2. I, I. dkoAAnri, Ady, of sq., Herm. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 1078, &-KédAnTOS, ov, not glued or adhering to a thing, tii Galen. not to be so fastened, incompatible, Dion. H. de Comp. p. 42. d-KoAXos, ov, without glue, not adhesive, Theophr, C. P. 6. 10, 3. GKoAAvBioros, ov, v. sub «dAAUBos I. &-Koh, os, ov, not curtailed, Eust. 727. 39. dkodos, ov, %, a bit, morsel, like ywpds, Od. 17. 222, Anth. P. 9. 563, cf. 6. 176: Boeot. for éOeaxs, Strattis boty. 3. 7. (Curtius suggests that dxoAos and afAoy may perh. be akin to the Skt. 4/ag (to eat).) axodoviéw, fut. jaw, to be an dxddovOos, to follow one, go after or with him, esp. of soldiers and slaves :—Construct, mostly c. dat. pers., Ar. Pl. Ig, etc.; d«. 7@ iyoupévy Plat. Rep. 474 C; also with Preps., de. pera tivos Plat. Lach. 187 E, Lysias 193. 18, etc; Tois cpa per’ éxeivaw jxodovbour, rais 8 edvoias peb’ hye Foay Isocr. 299 C; dk. ovv Tit Xen, An. 7. 5,33 Karémy rivds Ar. Pl. 13; very rarely c. acc., as Menand. Incert. 32, cf. Lob. Phryn. 354:—absol., often in Plat., etc. ; dx, ép dpmaryijs, of soldiers, Thuc. 2. 98; dxoAovday, 6, as Subst.,= dxédovOos I, Menand, KéA, 3. II. metaph. ¢o follow one in a thing, Jet oneself be led by him, tH vamp tivés Thuc. 3. 38; Tois mpaypacwy, Tois Kapois to follow circumstances, etc,, Dem. 51. 14., 730. 18: to obey, rots vépos Andoc. 31. 35. 2. to follow the thread of. a discourse, Plat. Phaedo 107 B, etc. 8. also of things, to follow upon, to be consequent upon, in conformity with, dxorovbeiv Tots eipn- Hévos Plat. Rep. 332 D; etAoyla . . ednbeia dx. Ib. 400 E, cf. 398 D: to follow the analogy of, to be like, Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 3, al. 4. absol. dxoAovOel, it follows, Lat. sequitur, Id. Categ. 12. 2,—Only in Att. Comedy and Prose: cf. d«éAouv8os. dxodovOnats, ews, %, a following, sequence, Arist. Rhet. 3.9,7. 2. lusion, Id, An, Pr. 1. 46, 17. II. obedience, a ’ Def, Plat. 412 B: axodoulyréov, verb. Adj. one must follow, absol., Xen. Qec. 21,7; 70 Ady Plat. Rep. 400 D. dxoAovdntikés, 4, dv, disposed to follow, rais émOuplas, rots mabece Arist. Rhet. 2. 12, 3, Eth. N. 1. 3, 6. ; dkodovila, 4%, a following, attendance, train, Soph. Fr. 818, Plat. Alc. 1, 122C. 2.-a series, continuous succession, Clem. Al., etc.; Kat’ dxo- AvvOiav in regular succession, Hdn. 8. 7. II. a following upon, con- | formity with, rots mpaypact Plat. Crat. 437 C: a grammatical agreement, right construction (cf. dvaxodov6la), Dion, H. de Comp. p. 178. 2. obedience, M, Anton. 3. 9. IIL. a consequence, Philo 2. 497. * axohoviickos, 5, Dim. of dxdAovOos, a foot-boy, Ptol. ap. Ath. 550 A. dxéAoubos, or, (a copul., eéAevGos, Plat. Crat. 405 C) :—following, at- tending on; mostly as Subst. a follower, attendant, footman, Lat. pedi- sequus, Ar. Av. 73; Stovot mais dx. tory who keep a lacquey, Eupol. Koa. I. 3; often in Att. Prose, Antipho 115. 19, Thuc. 6. 28., 7. 75; Plat. Symp. 203 C, etc.; of dxdAovOor the camp-followers, Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 36: also fem., Plut. Caes. 10. 2. following after, c. gen., TAdTa@ . . Noprdwy di. Soph. O. C. 719 (lyr.). 3. following or consequent upon, in conformity with, c. gen., Taxddov8a Tay faxav Ar. Ach. 438, cf. Plat. Phaedo 111 C: but mostly c, dat., Id. Legg. 716 C, Tim. 88 D; dxddrovda rovros mparrev Dem. 312. 25; ax. Tots elpnuévors éort 70 deppho@a Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 1 ;—absol. correspondent, Lys. 162. 26; agreeing with one another, Xen. An. 2. 4, 19, Hyperid. Euxen, 36 :— Adv. —@ws, in accordance with, rots vépors Dem, 1100. 14, cf. Diod. 4. 17: absol. consistently, eixérws wat dx. Aristid. 2. 142.—Used once by Soph. 1. c.; otherwise only in Com. and Prose. akodovréw, for dxoAovew, barbarism in Ar. Thesm. 1198. d-«oAtros, ov, without bay or gulf, Ael. N. A. 15. 16. a-KédupBos, ov, unable to swim, Batr. 157, Strabo, Plut. ako} a, Ep. ly [1], 4, want of tending or care, Od. 21, 284, Themist: a-Koptoros, ov, untended, Diog. L. 5. 5, Nonn. G-Képpwros, ov, unpainted, Themist. 218 B. dkopos, ov, (dun) without hair, bald, Luc. V. less, Poll. 1. 236. d-Kopracros and d-Koptros; ov, unboastful, Aesch. Theb. 538, Ib. 554- a-Kophevros, ov, inartificial, Dion, H. de Comp. 178, 200. P d-Kopipos, ov, unadorned, boorish, Archil. 158; éyo & dxopwos ‘rude I am in speech,’ Eur. Hipp. 986; d«. eat paddos A. B. 369, cf. Diogs L. 3. 63. Adv. -yws, Plut. 2. 4 F. dkovdw,. fut. Row, (dxdvn) to sharpen, whet, paxatpas Ar. Fr. 551; Adyxnv Xen. Cyr6. 2, 33:—Med., dxovac0a paxaipas to sharpen their swords, Id. Hell. 7. 5, 20. 2. metaph, like @yyw, dfdve, mapaxo- vaw, Lat. acuo, to provoke, inflame, yA@oaav jxovnpévos Poéta ap. Plut. Comp. Lys. c. Syll. 4, cf. Xen, Occ. 21, 3; Ovpoy én’ Amid: Twds deovay Demad. 180. 30. G-kév5tA0s, ov, without knuckles :—without blows, Luc. Char. 2. éxévy [%], §, (v. sub duet 1) a whetstone, hone, Lat. cos, ABivn Chilo 1, H, 1. 23: of trees, leaj= Hermipp. Mojp. 1, etc,; a, Nagia (the best were a Pind, Is 50 6 (5). fin. 2. metaph., défav exw dxdvas Avyupas emt yAdoog I have the feeling of a whetstone on my tongue, i.e. am roused to song, Pind. O. 6. 141: esp. of persons, like Horace’s fungar vice cotis, of "Epws, Anth, P. 12. 18, cf, Plut. 2. 838 E, Greg. Naz. ap. Suid. s. v. oben Gxévyois, ews, }, a sharpening, Hesych., E. M. s. v. Bpuypés. dkovias, ov, 6, a kind of fisk, Numen. ap. Ath. 326 A. Space ov, (xovidw) unplastered, not whitewashed, Theophr. H. P. LEG dkovov, 74, in medicine, a 5 bing on an dxdvn, Diosc. 1. 1 &-Kovlopros, ov, without dust, opp.to kovcopr@bns, Theophr. H.P.8. 11, 1. Gkovirt [ri], Adv. of dxéviros, without the dust of the arena, i.e. with- out a struggle, without effort, Lat. sine pulvere, of the conqueror, Thuc. 4. 73, Xen. Ages. 6, 3; but, ef radra mpoeiro dxovirt Dem. 295. 7. dxovirikés, 7, dv, made of dxdviroy, Xen. Cyn. 11, 2. akévirov, 74, =sq., Lat. aconitum, a poisonous plant, like monkshood, wing on sharp steep rocks (év dxévas), or in a place called "Axévat, heophr. H. P. 9. 16, 4, cf. Sprengel Diosc. 4. 76, Theopomp. Hist. 200: —also dxéviros, 7}, Schneid. Nic. Al. 42. 2 Gkéviros, ov, (Koviw) without dust, combat or struggle, Q. Sm. 4. 319. IL. =dkd&veros Diosc. 1. 6 :—Adv. -rws, Id. dkovri [7], Adv. of dxwy, for dexovri, Plut. Fab, 5, etc.; but not in good Att. (Lob. Phryn. 5). ‘ dkovrias, ov, 6, (dxwv) a quick-darting serpent, Lat. jaculus, Nic. Th. 491, Galen., Luc. II. a meteor, mostly in pl., Plin. H. N. 2. 23. ovrifw, fut. Att. @, (dxwv) to hurl a javelin, or absol. to throw, dart, tivés at one (cf. croxdCopat), Aiavros . . dxdvrice paldipos “Exrwp Il. 14. 402, cf. 8, 118; also, Alas .. ép’ “Exrop: .. ter’ dxovricca 16, 359; ax. és or cad’ Surov Od. 22. 263, Il. 4. 490:—the weapon is mostly put in dat., # Kat dxdvrice Soupi darted with his spear, ll. 5. 533; a. dovpt pacv@ Ib. 611, al.; also in acc., dedvricay df€a dodpa darted their spears, Od, 22. 265; dxovri{ovor Oapelas alxpas éx xetpay Il, 12. 44, cf. + 422, Pind, I. 1. 33: to use the javelin, rogedew nat ax. Hdt, 4.114; dx. dd tOv trey dpbds Plat. Meno 93 D. 2. after Hom., ¢, acc, pers. to hit or strike with a javelin, or simply to aim at, Lat. petere, dx. tov ody Hadt. 1. 43, etc.; hence in Pass, to be so hit or wounded, Eur. Bacch. 1098, Antipho 120, ult., Xen. 3. dk. éavrds én rorapédv to hurl themselves, Eus. H. E, 8. 12, 4. 4. to shoot forth rays, of the moon, Eur. Jon 1155; in Med. ¢o flash, Arist. Mund, 2, 11. “II. intr. to dart or pierce, ecw yijs Bur. Or. 1241. &kévriov, 74, Dim. of dxwy, a dart, javelin, h. Hom. Merc. 460, Hat. I, 34, al. 2. in pl. the javelin-exercise, Plat. Legg. 794 C. dxdvriots, ews, }, the throwing a javelin, Xen. An. I. 9, 5. . akévtiopa, aros, 76, the distance thrown with » Aspen évrds dxovric- paros within a dart’s throw, Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 16. II. the thing thrown, a dart, javelin, Strab. 576, Plut. Alex. 43, etc. III, in pl.=the concrete dxoyriorat, Id, Pyrth, 21, Gkovricpés, 5,=dxdyriois, Xen. Eq. Mag. 3, 6, Arr. An. 1. 2,6; as a game, C. I. 2360. 24: @ darting out of liquids, Galen., Eust., etc. 2. dxovricpol dorépay, of shooting stars, Procl, paraphr. Ptol. 147. pecific for the eyes, prob. powdered by rub- ak » pos, 6,=sq., Eur. Phoen, 142. Il. as Adj. darting, hurtling, tptawa Opp. H. 5. 535 :—metaph., éayBo Christod. Ecphr. 359. ax! , ob, 6, a darter, javelin-man, Il, 16. 328, Od. 18. 262, Hadt. 8. go, Aesch; Pers. 52, Thuc. 3. 97, etc. dxovrurticés, 7, dv, skilled in throwing the dart, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 63; Sup., Ib. 6. 2,4; 7a dxovriatucd the art of throwing the dart, Plat. Theag. 126 B. hecttieerse, tos, #, Ion. for dudyriats, the geome of the dart (like the Eastern jerid), dxovrioriy eiadiceat Il. 23. 622 dc édos, ov, spear-throwing, Ap. Rh. 2. 1000. . res a bKos, ov, receiving (i.e. hit by) the dart, or watching (i.e. — ing) hes dart, Simon, Se ae “ a ovTO-> , ov, carrying a dart, Nonn. D, 20. 140. dévrws, Ady. of dxwy, ae déxov. dkoéds, dv, =dxovorixds, Plat. Com. Incert. 61. , Ady. of dxomos, Liban. ; ees 25 Goria, %, (dronos) freedom from fatigue, Cic. Fam, 10. 15. ~ aay ov, pelts not wearying, 686s Arist. Mund.1,2. IT. untiring, unwearied, Stob, Ecl. 1. 952 >—Ady. —doTws Schol. Soph, Aj. 852; also —ao7i, Socr. H. E. 6, 11. ; omros, ov, without weariness, and so, aL. untired, kaTa- nvetaoa Plat. Legg. 789 D. 2. free from trouble, Amips. Incert. 14. _ II. act. not wearying, Sxnots Plat. Tim. 89 A; of a horse, easy, Xen, Eq. 1, 6; rots rerpdmoow v 7d éordvar Arist. P. A. 4 10, 55- 2. removing weariness, refreshing, Hipp. Aph. 1246, Acut. 395, Plat. Phaedr. 227 A: (sc. pappakor), 76, a restora- tive, Galen., etc. ; dx. wddAaypa Diosc. 1. 93; in Galen, also dxomos, 7): —Ady. -mws, Theophr. C. P. 4. 16, 2. III. (from «ér7w) not worm-eaten, Arist. Probl. 14. 2. 2. not broken or ground, , Alex. Aphr. : — ie (wompl(a) not manured, Theophr. C. P. 4. 12, 3. ov, with little re wes in the bowels, Hipp. Acut. 394. Theophr. H. P. 8. 6, : * my producing Tittle excrement, of food, Hipp. Acut. 393. &xépectos, ov, (Kopévvups) Att. for dxépyros, insatiate, Trag., in lyr. passages (vy. dwdperos); c. gen., aixpas dxdpeoros Acsch, Pers. 999: “—in Soph. O. C. 120 (6 mévraw axoptoratos, most insatiate, most shameless), the word is either sync. for dxopeoréraros (cf. péooaros, yéaros), or is the Sup. of dxopys (a word cited by Hesych. s. v. dryxopés II. = foreg., gs | , aKovnols — akoveT kos. Lat. i s, ot(ds Aesch. Ag. 756; olparyé Soph. El. 123 ; velen Eur. Med. 638; -ydors dxopéoros (as Prien for ~rordros) Aesch. Pers, 545. II. act. not satiating, Aesch. Ag. 1331. 2. not liable to surfeit, pista Xen. Symp. 8, 15. E Gképeros, ov, used in Trag. (metri grat.) for dxdpeoros, Aesch. Ag. 1114, 1143, Soph. El. 122. akopys, Pa v. sub dxdpearos. ; Gkopnros, ov, (Kopévvupt) insatiate, unsated, c. gen., ToAEpoU, paxns, dGmeiXdwy Il. 12. 335., 20. 2., 14. 479 (never in Od.), cf. Hes. Sc, 3465 mpordday h, Hom, Ven. 71: cf. dxopeoros. II. («opéw) unswept, untrimmed, Ar. Nub. 44. : . Gxopla, 1, (dxopos) in Hipp. 1180 F, a not eating to satiety, moderation in eating ;—but in Aretae. Cur, M. Ac. 2. 2, dx. worot, prob, an insa- tiable desire of drinking. ty : Gkopirys [7] oivos, 6, wine flavoured with axopos, Diosc. §. 73. ‘dkopva, 7), a prickly plant, Theophr. H. P. 1. 10, 6 and 13, 3. y Gxopos, ov, =dxdpecros: untiring, ceaseless, Lat. improbus, eipecia Pind, P, 4. 360. Gxopos, 7), the sweet flag, acorus calamus (Sprengel iris pseudacorus), its root being dxopov, 76, Diosc. I. 2. Gkdpidos, ov, (copy) without top, without beginning, Dion. H. de Comp. 198. II. =sq., Hesych. G-Kopidwros, ov, not to be summed up, Hesych. s. v. dxpira. dxos, eos, 7d, (dxéopat) a cure, relief, remedy, resource, Cc. gen. rei quae avertitur, nax@v Od. 22. 481, cf. Il. 9. 250, etc.; vuppie@y EdwAlow Aesch. Cho. 71; «vBous . . , repmvdv dpyias dxos Soph. Fr. 380; xaxdv Kak® d:50ds axos Id. Aj. 363 :—absol., dxos ebpety Il. g. 250; diCno@at, éfeupety, exmoveiv, AaBeiv, woeicOa, Hdt. 1. 94., 4. 187, Aesch. Supp, 367, Eur. Bacch. 327, Plat., etc.:—in literal medical sense, Hipp, Acut. 383; and (by a medical metaph.), dos évréuvev, Tépvety, Aesch. Ag. y (cf. Cho. 539), Eur. Andr. 121:—dxos [éo7], c. inf., dos yap ovdev Tovde Opnvetabat it boots not to... , Aesch. Pr. 43. 2. a means of ies Dy thing, c. gen. rei, guae expetitur, owrnptas Eur. Hel. 1055. Gkoopéw, fut. now, fo be disorderly or unmannerly, to offend, oi dxoo- podvres Soph. Ant. 730, Ph. 387, Lys. 140. 42, Dem, 729. 7; dit. mept tt to offend in a point, Plat. Legg. 764 B. Gkoopnes, ecoa, ev,=drocpos, Nic. Al. 175. G&kéopyros, ov, («ocpéw) unarranged, unorganised, Plat. Gorg. 506 E, Prot. 321 C:—Adv. -rws, Id. Legg. 781 B. 2. of style, un- adorned, Dion. H, de Thuc, 23, etc. 3. unfurnished with, trwi Xen. Oec. 11, 9. dxoopta, %, disorder, Plat. Gorg. 508 A: extravagance, excess, Adyar Eur, I. A. 317 :—in moral sense, disorderliness, disorderly conduct, Soph. Fr. 726; in pl., Plat. Symp. 188 B, Il. an interregnum (vy. xéapos 11), Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 14. d-Koopos, ov, without order, disorderly, puyh Aesch, Pers. 4703 de. kal Tapaxwins vavpaxia Plut. Mar. 10:—in Hom, once, in moral sense, disorderly, unruly, of Thersites’ words, Il. 2. 21 3 :—Adv. —pws, Hdt, 7. 220, Aesch., etc, II. xécpos dxoopos, a world that is no world, Anth. P. 7. 561, but in 9. 323 of an inappropriate ornament. dxoordo or ~€w, (dxoorh) only used in aor, part., immos dxoorhaas ént parvy a horse well-fed at rack and manger, a stalled horse, Il. 6. 506., 15. 263 :—cf. kptOdw, Buttm. Lexil. s, v. dxoorhaas. oor, 7), barley, Nic. Al. 106. (Said to be a Cyprian word, cf, Buttm. Lexil, ubi supr.) G-Koros, ov, without grudge, Hesych. dxovdfopa. [ax], Dep. =dxovw, io hear, hearken, or listen to, do5od Od. 9. 7, cf. 1 feast, like xadcio0at, 483. 10.—In h. Merc. 423, also dxovdto, axoun, %, Ep. for ra é. v.). a Gxotpeutos, ov, (ovpedw) unshaven, unshorn, dkoupos, ov, (Kodpos for Képos) childless, Pe ~ AI. (covpd) unshaven, unshorn, Ar. ovoelw, Desiderat. of drove, Hesych., thé series of words requi dkovota [ax], %, involunta dkovotdfopar [ax], c. gen., 3- 73 dards dxovalecOov ye are bidden to the Lat. vocari, Il. 4. 343 :—absol, ¢o listen, Hipp: Hesych., Suid., etc. without male heir, Od. 7. Vesp. 477, Lyc. 976, Strabo. to long to hear, Soph. Fr. 820; and in tes dxovoelwy for dkoveTiav. : ry action, Soph. Fr. 822. $ im aor. I. Pass, ¢o do a thing unwillingly, Lxx (Num, 15. 28). dxouci-eos [4], ov, heard of God, Anth. P. 6. 249. akovorpos [i], 1, ov, audible, Soph. Fr. 823, akovctos, ov, Att. contr, for dexovctos, Gkovcrérns [aK], nT0s, },=dxovcia, Hesych. s. v. dé«nrt, etc. dxovors [a], ews, }, a hearing, Arist, de An, oe Se dkovcpa [ax], aros, 76, a thing heard, such as music, 7doroy dk. the sweetest strain the ear takes in, Xen, Mem. 2. 1, 31, cf. Arist. Eth, N, 10. 4, 7, Menand, Incert. 115; dx. xa 6pdyara Arist. Pol. 7. 17, ye 2. a rumour, report, tale, Soph. O. C. 517 (lyr.). ovopariKds, 7, dv, willing or eager to hear :—oi dxovoparixol the Per oners in the school of Pythagoras, Clem. Al, 246. crear 76, Dim. of dxovepa, Pseudo-Luc, Philopatr. 18. ee ig Adj. of dwovw, one must hear or hearken zo, c. gen. ys, Fe es. ee I. A. roto, Xen., etc. ; c. acc, rei, Plat. Rep. 386 : + absol., Soph. .T. 1170. : 2. dxovoréos, a, ov, to be hearkened vt Tov Kparouvraw éarl navr’ dxovaréa Id, El, 340.—Cf. dxovw Iv. overs [2], 00, 5, a hearer, listener, Menand. Incert. 403. xh eo Page aa Agathem, Geogr. 1. 1, Dion. H., etc. Pag K = fal, nh, ov, of or for the sense of hearing, ataOnors ax. - 2. 37 F3 médpos dx. the orifice of the ear, Galen.: 7d dx. the and used by Themist. Or, 90D). 2, of things, insatiate, unceasing, d LSaculty of hearing, Arist, de An, 3: 2, 5 2, =dxovoparixds, ° , p ‘sy , akouo'Tes — akpaTicTos. c. gen., Arist. Eth. N. 1. 13, 19, Arr. Epict. 3. 1, 13 :—Adv. -x@s, Sext. Emp. M. 7.355. . IL.=dxovords, Schol. Eur. Or. 1281. dxovords, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of dxovw, heard, audible, h. Hom. Merc. 512, Plat., etc. ; opp. to Oeards, Isocr. 42 C. II. that should be heard, Soph. O. T. 1312 ; dxotca: 8 ob dxota’ Sums OéAw Eur. Andr. 1084. ’ dxourifw [a], fut. iow, Att. «&, to make to hear, rwé 7 or Tivds LXX: in Pass., to hear, Byz. Gkovw [a]: Ep. impf. dxovoy Il. 12. 442: fut. deovooua (the Act. form dxovow first occurs in Alexandr. Greek, as Lyc. 378, 686, Lxx, Dion. H., etc., cf. Winer’s Gramm. of N. T. p. 9, Veitch’s Irreg. Gr. Verbs s. v.): aor. #xovea, Ep. deovoa Il. 24. 223: pf. dxfoa, Lacon. dxovea Plut. Lyc. 20, Ages. 21: later 7 : plqpf. denxdev Hat. 2. §2., 7.208, Lycurg. 15; jenxdev Xen. Occ. 15,5; old Att. junxdy Ar. Vesp. 800, Pax 616 (ubi v. Schol.); d«nxén Plat. Crat. 384 B.—Rare in Med., pres. (v. infr, 1. 2): Ep. impf. dxovero Il. 4. 331: aor. jxovodyny Mosch. 3. 120.—Pass., fut. dxovcOjcopa Plat. Rep. 507 D: aor. jovodnv Thuc. 3. 38, Luc.: pf. #*ovepa: Dion. H. Rhet. 11. 10, Pseudo-Luc, Philopatr. 43 dxhxovopa in Luc. de Hist. Conscr. 49 is now corrected. (The Root seems to be KOT, i. e. KOF, with a prefixed; cf. xoéw, axon.) To hear, Hom., etc.: KAvev, dxodoa (Aesch. Cho. 5) is ridiculed as tautology by Ar, (Ran. 1173, sq.), but cf. 11. 3.—Construct., properly, c. acc. of thing heard, gen. of pers. from whom it is heard,—as radra Kaduyods ijxovoa Od. 12. 389, cf. Soph. O. T. 43, etc.; the gen. pers. being often omitted, wav7’ Pe Adyov Id. Aj. 480, etc. ; or the acc. tei, dkove Tov Oavdvros Id. El. 643, cf. 644 :—often however c. gen. rei, pooyyiis, xrdmov to have hearing of it, hear it, Od. 12. 198., 21. 237; Adyov Soph. O. C, 1187. b. c. gen. objecti, to hear of, hear tell of, ax, marpés Od. 4. 114; to this a partic. is often added, dx. marpds TeOvnwros Ib. 1. 289, etc.; in same sense, c. acc., 287: this in Prose is commonly a. wept twos, as first in Od. 19. 270, cf. Eur. I. T. 964. c. in Prose the pers. from whom the thing is heard often takes a Prep., dxovew 7 dad, éx, mapa, mpds tivos, as first in Il. 6. 524, cf. Hat. 3. 62, Soph. O. T. 7. 95, Thuc. 1. 125; rarely bd revos, Xen. Oec. 2, 1; rarely also c. dat. pers., as Il. 16. 515, Soph. El. 227. d. not often c. dupl. gen. pers. et rei, to hear of a thing from a ‘person, as Od. 17. 115, Dem. 228. 12. e. the act or state of the person or thing is added in part. or inf.,—in part. when the hearing amounts to certain knowledge, otherwise in inf., as ef mrdocovras ip “Exropt mavras dxovoat should he hear that all are now crouching under Hector, Il. 7. 129, cf. Hdt. 7. 10, 8, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 12, Dem. 31. 3; but, dx. abrov dABtov eiva to hear [generally] that he is happy, Il. 24. 543, cf. Xen. An, 2. 5, 13, etc.:—this is often changed for dxovew Or or ds with finite Verb, as Od. 3. 193, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 33; also, du. obvexa Soph. O. C. 33. f. c. gen. et partic. to express what one actually hears from a person, tadr’. . Hxovoy capOs Odvocéws A€éyovTos Soph. Ph. 595; dx. twos A€yovros, duadeyouévov, Plat. Prot. 320 B, Xen. Mem. 2. 4, 1.—Hom. once uses the Med. for Act., dxovero Aads diris Il. 4. 331. 2. to know by hearsay, €£0.5' dxotvwv Soph. O. T. 105: this sense sometimes involves an apparent use of the pres. like a pf., vijeds res Supin muxAnoneras, ef mov dxoves Od. 15. 403, cf. 3. 1933 and so in Att. Prose, Plat. Gorg. 503 C, Rep. 407 A, Luc. Somn. 13. 3. absol. to hear, hearken, give ear, esp. to begin a proclamation, dxovere Ae@ hear, v. Aads I sub fin.: for Soph. O. T. 1387, v. my? 2. 4. of dxovovres readers of a book, Polyb. 1. 13, 6, al. IT. to listen to, give ear to, c. gen., Il. 1. 381, etc.; rarely c. dat., dove dvép wnSopévy to give ear to him, Il. 16. 545; by an anacoluth. with gen, of part. after a dat., Srre of Gx’ Heovoe . . Oeds edfapévaco Ib. 531. 2. to obey, Bacihjjos, Geod Il. 19. 256, Od. 7. 11; so in Med., Aewpidrou 8 dxoverat [mavra] Archil. 69. 8. to hear and understand, kdvovres ob« jxovoy Aesch, Pr. 448. III. after Hom., serving as Pass. to €¥ or Kak@s Aéyewy Tid, to hear oneself called, be called so and so, like Lat. audire, eimep dp6’ dxovers, Zed, Soph. O. T. 903 (cf. Aesch. Ag. 161); kakOs ax. ome tivos to be ill spoken of by one; pds Twos Hat. 7. 16, 1; wept tuvos for a thing, Id. 6. 86, 1; €d, naxds, dpiora dic, Lat. bene, male audire, Hdt. 2. 173., 8. 93, Soph. Ph. 1313, Antipho 138, 13, etc. 2. with nom. of the subject, dove xaxds, xadds, Soph. O. C. 988, Plat. Lys. 207 A; viv médaxes wal Oeois éxOpol. . dxovovar Dem. 241. 13, etc. ; 3. sometimes c. inf., jeovoy eiva mpa@rot were said or held to be the first, Hdt. 3.131; so also, dxodoopat pev &s epuv olxrov mAéws Soph. Ph. 1074. 4. c. acc. rei, dx. xakd, to have evil spoken of one, Ar. Thesm. 388, cf. Soph. Ph. 607 ; so too, dx. Adyov écddy Pind. I. 5.17; phuas.. kaxds Hovey Eur. Hel. 615. 5. ows dx., to hear it so said, i.e. at first hearing, Wolf. Dem. Lept. 235, Schiif. Mel. 80; ds orm y° dxodoa Plat. Euthyphro 3 B; ds ye obrwot dxodaa Id. Lys. 216 A. IV. in Scholl. ¢o understand so and so, subaudire, Schol. Eur. Or. 333; 7t nt Tewos Schol. Hipp. 73; so dxovoréoy, Schol. Or. 1289, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 86. dpa, Ion. dkpy, 7, (fem. of axpos) like dxpoy, the highest or furthest point: 1. a headland, foreland, cape, ll. 4. 425., 17. 264, Od. 9. 285, Soph. Tr. 788, Plat. Criti. 111 A; dxpav imepéev (metaph.) Aesch. Eum. 562; «déymrrev Menand. ‘AA. 9. 2. a mountain-top, peak, Soph. Fr. 265, etc.; metaph., «iparos dxpa the top or summit, Eur. Fr. 232. 38. used by Hom. only in the phrase ear’ dxpns (though this may mean Kar’ dxpns médews, v. infr. 3), vdv dAeTo Taga Kat dxpys “Taos almewh from top to bottom, i.e. utterly (so Virg., ruit alto a culmine Troja, sternitque a culmine Trojam, Aen. 2. 290, 603), Il. 13. 772, cf. 15. 557., 24. 728; so, wéAw aipeav war dxpys Hat. 6. 18, cf. Plat. Legg. go9 B; (cf. xar’ dxpav mepydpow édeiv wéAw Eur. Phoen. 1176); also, €Aacey péya Kdpa Kar’ dxpns a billow struck him from above, Od. §. 313; so in Att., yfv. marpdav..mpjoa xar’ drpas ’ 51 utterly, Soph. Ant. 201; and metaph., cat’ dkpas ds mopBovpeba how utterly .., Aesch. Cho. 691, cf. Soph, O. C. 1242, Eur. I. A. 778, Thue. 4. 112, Plat., etc. :—cf. dxpnOev, nardxpyber, xpas. 4. the castle or citadel built on a steep rock overhanging a town, Lat. arx, Xen. An. 7: I, 20, etc.; cf. Nieb. R. H. 3. n. 311: this is called depy méAs in Hom., and in later times d«pdémodcs. 5. an end, extremity, Arist. H. A. 3. 2, 8., 3. 11, 5 ; map” dxpas (acc, pl.) at the ends, Eur. Or. 128. axpdavros [xpd], ov, (xpataivw) =axpavros, without result, unfulfilled, Sruitless, Lat. irritus, Il. 2. 138, Od. 2. 202. dxptiyyjs, és, (xpa(w) not barking, deparyets kbves, of the gryphons (like nip dvnpaoroy, etc.), Aesch.Pr. 803. Hesych. expl. plot by ducxepés, axdnpov, dgbxodov, and in A. B. 369 we read dxparyyes (1. duparyés)” dxpdxodov, whence Meineke Com. Fr. 3. p. 452 suspects the word to be a compd. of dxpos, dyos; Herm. of dipos, dyn. Cf. dwAaryyl. axpdSavros, ov, (kpadaivouar) unshaken, Philo 2. 136,etc. Adv. —rws, Nicom, Harm, p. 8. dxparjs, és, (dupos, dnut) blowing strongly, fresh-blowing, of the north and west wind, Od. 14. 253., 2.421, Hes. Op. 592; si dxpags erit, if it shall be clear weather, Cic. Att. 10. 17. Ady. dkpact mAciv to sail with a Fresh breeze, Arr, Ind. 24, 1. dxpatos, a, ov, =dxpos, often in Hipp. (as Epid. 1. 954., 3. 1066), and Galen, in plur. 7a dxpata, the extremities (of the body); in the Mss. and Edd, almost always written dkpea. Il. dwelling on the heights, epith. of Hera, Eur, Med. 1379; of Aphrodité, Paus. 1. 1, 3., 2. 32, 6; of Artemis and Athena, Hesych. s, v. dapla (leg. dxpata); of éy dxpo- more Geol dxpatot [clot], xat worAtc7s, Poll. 9. 40. &-KpalmiiAos, ov, without from drunk , Arist. Probl. 3. 17. 2. of certain wines, not producing such nausea, Ath, 32 D. 3. of certain herbs, counteracting nausea, Diosc. 1. 25. éxparpvijs, és, syncop. form of dxepato-pavfs (which is not in use), = dxépaios, unmixed, pure, eépns axp. apa Eur. Hec. 537; bdwp Ar. Fr. 98: metaph., wevia dup. sheer, utter poverty, Anth. P. 6. 191. It. untouched, unharmed, entire, Lat. integer, Eur. Alc. 1052, Thuc. 1. 19, 52. 2. c. gen. untouched by.., dup. T&v karnteAnpevwy Soph. O. C. 1147; «dpous dxparpveis puppivns free from .., Lysipp. Incert. 3. d-«pavros, ov, poét. Adj., like the Homeric dxpéayTos, unaccomplished, * unfulfilled, fruitless, idle, érea, ¢dntdes Pind. O. 1. 137, P. 3. 41; Téexvat Aesch, Ag. 249 :—neut. pl. as Adv., in vain, Pind, O, 2. 158; axpavra Bd{w Aesch. Cho.. 882; od Gxpavr’ éxdpvopey Eur. Bacch, 435; Gkpavr’ d5vpe Id, Supp. 770.—For Aesch. Cho. 65,-v. sub d«paros 2. axp-atéviov, 76, (dgwv) the end of the axle, Poll. 1. 145. axpacta, 4, (axparos) bad mixture, ill temperature, opp. to edxpacia, dup. dépos an unwholesome climate, Theophr. C. P. 3. 2,5; da riv dxpy- olny, of meats (nisi legend. dxpaotny, intemperance), Hipp. Vet. Med. 10, dxpictla, ,=dxparea, q. v. akparera [xpi], 7, (dxparns) want of power, debility, vedpav Hipp. Aph. 1253. II. the conduct and character of an Gxparhs, in- continence, want of self-control, opp. to éyxpaérea, Plat. Rep. 461 B, Legg. 734 B, etc.; dup. j5ovav Te nal émOuyudy Ib. 886 A, etc.—The prevailing form in later writers is depacta, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 1-4, Rhet. I. 12,12, Menand. Aeco. 4; and this form occurs in Mss. of Plat. (Rep. 1. c., Gorg. 525 A) and Xen, (Mem. 4. 5, 6, al.): the form dxparia also occurs in Mss. of Hipp, Coac. 145, Plat., etc., prob. by error :—yv. Lob. Phryn. 524 sq. 4 dxparevopat, Dep. (dxparhs) to be incontinent, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 2, 1., 7. 3, 3, etc.: censured by Phryn. p. 442, who quotes however Menand. Incert. 449.—The Act. occurs in Plut. ap. Stob, 81. 40. ° dxpareutixés, 7, dv, arising from incontinence, ddieqpara Arist. Rhet. - 2. 16, 4. ancpiréeo, to be dxparhs, Hipp. 600. 35, Poll. 2. 154. apis, és, (patos) powerless, impotent, yjpas Soph. O. C. 1236; madia. Hipp. Aph. 1247; of paralysed limbs, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. \ II. c. gen. rei, not having power or command over a thing, Lat. impotens, yhdoons Aesch, Pr. 884; pavijs Hipp. 447- 243 opyis Thuc. 3. 84; Ovpod Plat. Legg. 869 A; dp. rv xetpwv, of persons with their hands tied, Dion. H. 1. 38 :—also, intemperate in the use of a thing, dppodiclev, olvov Xen. Mem. ¥. 2, 2, Oec. 12, 11; so, dep. xépdovs, tips intemperate in the pursuit of them, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 1, 7; also’ with Preps., dp. mpos rdv oivoy Arist. H. A. 8. 4, 2; wept ra mépara Id. P. A. 4. 11, 5; and c. inf., dp. efpyec@al rivos unable to refrain from .., Plat. Soph. 252 C. 2. absol. in moral sense, without com- mand over oneself or one’s passions, incontinent, unbridled, licentious, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 1, sq.3 dup. oréua Ar, Ran, 838; vndds Aristias ap. Ath. 686 A:—Adv., departs éxew mpds Te Plat. Legg. 710 A. 3. also of things, uncontrolled, immoderate, damdvn Anth. P. 9. Fa oupor .» dxparés incontinence of urine, Aretae, Caus. M, Ac, 1.6; so in Adv., dupart ra odpa éxxéewv Id. Caus. M, Diut. 1. 7. &-kpatyros [pi], ov, uncontrolled, Arist. Meteor. 4. 7, 11: incontrol- lable, émOvpia Hdn. 1. 8. II. incomprehensible, Eccl. dxparia, 7, v. sub depdraa. F dxpar(fopar, fut. topar: Dep.: (deparos). To drink pure wine (me- rum): hence, to breakfast, because this meal consisted of bread dipped in wine (Ath, 11 C, sq.), Ar. Pl. 295, ubi v. Schol., Canthar. Incert. 1 — c, acc., dp. koxkdynra to breakfast on plums, Ar. Fr. 505 a; puxpov Ari- stom, Incert. 1:—metaph., c. gen., duryods jupariow aogias Philo 2. 166. dxpdriopa [kpa], aros, 7d, a breakfast, éws duparicparos &pas Arist. H. A. 6. 8, 3, cf. Ath. 11D. pe ligeee arirpes, 6, breakfasting, . 16D. yar ba [xpa], - the Nis. reading in Theocr, 1. 51, mply #} dupd- TioTov émt Enpoior Kabign,—defended by Herm., who eines duparie- 2 52 tov émt énpoict, having made a dry breakfast, i.e. none at all. One Ms. gives dvapioroy, dinnerless ;—if this be received, émt £npotar must be joined, leave him on dry ground, i. e. bare and destitute ;—so, of ships, we have én’ ovj5ei xadicoa h. Hom. Merc. 284; cf. Ovid's in siccd destitui, GxpGro-Ka0ev, wos, 6, a hard toper, Hyperid. ap. Prisc. 18. 25. akpatomocia, Ion. dxpytotoctn, 7), a drinking of sheer wine, Hat. 6. 84, Hipp. Aph. 1257; akpGrototéw, to drink sheer wine, Arist. Probl. 3. 5: GxpGro-mérys, ov, Ion. dkpytomérys, ew, 6, (mivw) a drinker of Sheer wine, Hdt. 6. 84. akparos, Ion. dxpyros, ov: (xepavyvyu) : 1, of liquids, unmixed, pure, sheer, unadulterate, esp. of wine, Od. 24. 73; dkpnro omovdat drink-offerings of pure wine, Il. 2. 341 4. 159; olvos mavy axp, very strong indeed, Xen, An. 4. 5, 273 ofvos axpyros wine without water, Lat. merum, Hdt. 1. 207, etc.; and dxparos (without oivos), Ar. Eq. 105, and freq. in Com.; so, dxparoy, 76, Arist. Poét. 25, 16, Ath. 441 C; also of milk, Od. 9. 297; of blood, Aesch. Cho. 578, etc. :—said to mean dark-coloured in Hipp. Epid. 1. 966:—Adv. ~rws, Id. 107 C. Oty of any objects, dxp. odpara pure, simple bodies, Plat. Tim. 57 C; dup. Hé\ay pure black, Theophr. Color. 26; d&paros vif (sheer night) should perh. be read with Schiitz in Aesch, Cho. 65 for axpavros, cf. axparoy oxdros Plut. Nic. 21; dup. oxd Id. 2.932 B. 3. of qualities, pure, absolute, dep. vods Xen. Cyr. 8, 7, 20; mas..% dxp. Sucatoodyn mpos Gdiciay dip. éxet Plat. Rep. 545 A, cf. 491 E. 4. of conditions or states, pure, untempered, absolute, trhevOepia, hdovy, Plat. Rep. 562 D; ddvyapxia Arist. Pol. 2. 12, 2, etc.; dp. vduos absolute law, Plat. Legg. 723 A; dxp. pedSos a sheer lie, Id. Rep. 382 C:—so Adv. dxpd- Tws, absolutely, entirely, dxp. pédas or Aevkds Acl. N. A, 16. 11, Luc. D. Marin. 1. 3. 5. of persons, hot, intemperate, excessive, violent, dxparos dpynv Aesch, Pr. 678; dxparos éA0é come with all thy power, Eur. Cycl. 602. 6. so of things we feel, dxparos dpyn Alcid. ap. Arist. Rhet. 3. 3, 2; twepos Soph. Fr. 678; dip. Siappora Thuc. 2. 49; xp. xadpa Anth. P. 9. 71; pdBos Joseph., etc. II. a Comp. dxparéarepos (as if from dxparjs) Hipp. Vet. Med. 10, Hyperid. ap. Ath. 434 D, Arist. Probl. 3. 3: Sup. dmparéoraros Plat. Phil. 53 A: but pardrepos Plut. 2. 677 C ;—cf. Lob, Phryn. 524. dkpiiré-cropos, ov, unbridled of tongue, Schol. Eur. Or. 891. dkparérns, nros, }, an unmixed state, oivov, pédtTos Hipp. Acut. 393. dxparo-pédpos, 5, and &kparo-pépov, 76, a vessel for pure wine, elsewh. yuernp, Cic. Fin. 3. 4, 15, Poll.'6. 99., 10. 70, Joseph. B. J. 5. 13, 6. dxpdrup [i], opos, 6,=dxparhs I, Soph. Ph, 486. II. = departs Ui, dep. Eavrod Plat. Rep. 579 C, Criti. 121 A. ; II. dxpiirds of dxparhs: v. sub voce, dxparas {al Ady, of dparos. &xpaxodkw, to be passionate, only in pres, part., Plat. Legg. 731 D. &xpGxoXla, Ion. dxpnxoAln, 1), passionateness, a burst of passion, Hipp. 1212 H: later dxpoxoAta, Sopat. ap. Stob. 313. 30, Plut. _dxpa-xodos [@], ov, quick or sudden to anger, e, Ar. Eq. 41; gov dxp. an ill-tempered dog, Id. Fr. 5353 pédooa Epinic. Myyo. 1 ; dxep5os dxp. a wild pear that pricks on the least touch, Pherecr. Incert. 32:—also dkpéxodos, oy, Arist. Eth. N. 4.5, 9, Philo, Plut., etc. s II. generally, in passionate distress, Theocr. 24. 0c (The forms dxpa- XoAos, —Xodéw, are confirmed by all the poetic passages, as also by the Ion. form a4xpyxoAla in Hipp.; and in A. B. 77 dxpaxohos is co teen Plat. Rep. (411 C), where the bulk of the Mss. give dupéxoAor, w ox in Legg. 731 D, 791 D is read dupdx.; cf. Eust. 1243. 23. 1735. 4 i The orig. form seems to have been dupaxoXos, and this Le S| Ja ened from dxpard-yoXos, v. axpnré-xodos, and cf. Lob. Phryn. 643 ts this sense was forgotten, the form Lepxconon was gradually introduced.) ea, v. sub dxpaios. i re taped h, by, like an dxpépaw or twig, Theophr. H. P. OF 8. dkpépav, ovos, 5, or better dxpepay, dvos, Arcad. 14.2, Suid.: ( oe properly a bough or branch, which ends in smaller branches an twigs, Arist. Plant, 2. 10, 3, Theophr. H. P. 1. 1,9: but also, simply, a branch, twig, spray, Simon. (?) 183, Eur. Cycl. 455, Theocr. 16. 96. a pos, ov, at eventide (cf. dxpos 11), Nic. Th. 25, Anth. oa 633 :—dupéomepov as Adv., Hipp. 1216 B, Theocr. 24. 75; for whic Arist. ap. Ath. 353 B says rv dpxéomepoy (nisi legend. dup OTEpOY). dxp-48ns, ov, 6, a youth in his prime, Anth, P. 6, 71., 12. 124. - Bos, ov, in earliest youth, Theocr. 8. 93- ; ‘ vos, ov, without head-band, Opp. C. 1.497, Christod. Ecphr. 62. é , v. sub axpar—. dxpyros, akpyro-roctn, —réTys, ¥ ane ssa " ipp. Brac. 778. pai dxpia, 74, =dxpa, depia fivds Opp. C. 2. 552- Eee sar = depiBbe, LXX ; censured by e 5.152: akpiBacpa, 76, é , ob, 6, a close enquirer, LXX. “aiptBesa [spi], 4, - ¥, 22, etc.; rev mpaxbévrav Antipho 127. 12, cf. Lys. 148. 38 :—often with Brees in ae Sina 5 Westies, = dunn with minuteness or precision, Plat. Theaet. 184 C, Tim. 23 D, ete. ; bid maons dup. Id. Legg. 876 C;—els Thy dup. pidogodeiy Plat. Gorg. 487 C;—es 3 esa oe. Pol. 7.11, 9 ;—mpos Thy dxpiBeay Plat. Legg. 769D; mpos dxp. Arie. fe Resp. 16 :—#) dup. Tod vav7iKod its fine state, exact Beeline, uc. i 13; dup. vopov strictness, severity, Isocr. 147 E, ef, Isae. 65. 7 :—pl. niceties, Plat. Rep. 504 E. 2. niceness, punctuality, also A ra ness, pedantic precision, Polyb. 32.13, 11. _ 8. parsimony, rug ity, Plut. Pericl. 16; #8wp d¢ dupiBelas éork ri is scarce, Plat. Legg. 844 B.—Hardly to be found save in Att. Prose. . dxprBéu,Schol. Pind, N. 4. exactness, literal or minute accuracy, precision, Thuc. 1 = “muperds returning precisely at its time, Id. Epid. 1. 943. Ss iad . dxparoxwOwv — dxprros. Gkptpijs, és, exact, accurate, precise, made or done to a nicety, in all sorts of relations, Eur. El. 367, Thuc., etc. ; Siarra Hipp. Aph. 1243 3 Bet -0 exact, precise, strict, uxaorgs Thuc. 3.46: exact, consummate, pos Plat. Rep. 342 D: painfully exact, over-nice, precise, curious, Id, 762 D; dupiBis Tors Oppact sharp-sighted, Theocr. 22. 194 :— so also of arguments, Ar, Nub. 130; of thoughts and notions, Eur., etc., cf, mepioads 11, 3 :—7d dicpiBés = dxpiBea, Hipp. Vet. Med. a1, Thue. 6. 18 :—very freq. in Adv. —Bds, to a nicety, precisely, aupiBas eldévat, éricrac@at, KaBopay, pabeiv, etc., Hdt. 7. 32, etc. ; depiBas ay repicad~ pow Aesch. Pr. 328; opp. to éxAds, Isocr. gt D 3 to rum (in outline, roughly), Arist. Eth. N. 2. 2, 3; axpiBds wal podrs, Lat. vix ac ne vie idem, with the greatest difficulty, Plut. Alex. 16: $0, obi eis dxpiBes Ades at the right moment, Eur. Tro. gor; én’ dxpiBés Eus, H. E. 6. 31, 2, al. 2. parsimonious, frugal, stingy, akp. Tovs tpémous Menand. ap. Stob. 387. 45, v. Gaisf. adJ.; dupiBws darrao@ar Andoc, 33. 19.— Rare except in Att., and mostly in Prose: the Comp. and Sup. —éorepos, -toraros, freq. in Plato, with -éo7epov, -€orara, as Adverbs, (The sense points to dipos as the first part of the word, but -{8ys remains dub.} dxptpl, Adv. exactly, Theodos. Gramm. p. 74. &xptBo-8{xaros, ov, severely judging, dxp. emt 70 x¢lpov extreme to mark what is amiss, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 10, 8. ; GxptBdrexros, ov, stated with precision, Eccl. 2 axptBoroyéopar, Dep. to be exact or precise in language, investigation, etc., absol., Plat. Rep. 340 E, Crat. 415 A; also c. acc. rei, to weigh accurately, Id. Rep. 403 D, and Oratt. ; Tadra navra tbrép THs dAnbetas dxpiBoroyodpar Dem. 232. 5; Hod mept TovTaw axptBoroyoupévov Id, 307. 9.—The Act. is found later, as in Dion. H. de Dem. ult, &kptBodoynréov, verb. Adj. one must weigh accurately, Arist.Rhet. 3.1, 10. TBodoyia, 7, exactness, precision in speech, investigation, etc., Arist. Rhet. 1. 5, 15. 2. parsimony, stinginess, Id, Eth. N. 4. 2, 7. GxptBo-Aoyos, ov, precise in argument, in pl., Timo ap. Diog, L. 2. 19. GxptBde, fut. dow, fo make exact or accurate, Eur. Hipp. 469; dxp. rade to be perfect in bearing these hardships, Xen, Cyr. 2. 2, 13; to arrange precisely, Ar. Eccl. 274:—Pass. to be exact or perfect, Ar, Ran. 1483; HepBAc0a mpds macay dperjy Arist. Pol. 3. 7, 4.—The Med. is later, as Joseph. A, J. 17. 2, 3, Eust. 1799. 33, etc.; but v. daxpiBdw. 2. to investigate accurately, to understand thoroughly, ot ra8° 7jxpiBandres Eur. Hec. 1192, cf. Xen. Cyr. 2. 2,9; Tovvoud pov od axpiBois; are you sure of . .? Plat. Charm. 156 A. 3. absol. to be exact, corre- spond exactly, Arist. Meteor. 2.6, 9; dxp. wept rt Id. G. A. 5.1, 36, cf. 4. 10, 10, de An, 2. 9, 2.—Cf. d:-, éf-anpiBow. axpiBopa, 74, exact knowledge, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 36. &xptBwors, %, exact observance, véuov Joseph. A. J. 17. 2, 4. akptBwréov, verb, Adj. one must examine accurately, Philo 1. 357. axptdvov, 74, Dim. of dxpis, Diosc. 2, 116. &xptSo-PyKn, 7, a locust-cage, Theocr. 1, 52, Longus I. Io. axptBo-payos, ov, a locust-eater, Diod. 3. 29, cf. Strabo 772. Gkpifw, (akpos) to go on tiptoe, Eur. Fr. 574: cf. é¢axpiar, Gps, os, 7, (dxpos) Ep. Noun, a hill-top, mountain-peak, Hom. only in Od. and always in pl., depes veudeooat the windy mountain-tops, Od. 9. 400, cf. h. Hom. Cer. 383: generally, a hill-country is called dupes Od. 10. 281;—in sing., Tepyaplns itp dxplos C. I. 3538. 18 :—cf. dxpis. axpis, f50s, 4, a locust, Lat. gryllus, Il, 21. 12, Ar. Ach. 1116, al. Gkptoia, %, (dxpros) want of distinctness and order, confusion, Xen: Hell. 7. 5, 27. II. want of judgment, bad judgment or choice, perversion, Polyb. 2. 35, 3. III. the undecided character of a disease, its not coming to a crisis, Hipp. Epid. 1. 945. akp-loxtov, 74, the end of the icxtov or hip, Medic. Guptri [zi], Ady. of dxprros, Lys. Fr. 56, Gramm. dxptré- jovhos, oy, indiscreet of counsel, Manetho 4. 530. ,akprroyuros, ov, perh. with confused, unsteady gait, Emped. 31'7 (Sturz axpiroxeipa), axplrd-Saxpus, , shedding floods of tears, Anth. P. 5. 236. dxpiro-< 8, és,=dxpiréuvb0s, Theod. Metoch. 77. Axplropibes, to babble, Eust. 349. 17: pOta, 4, babbling, Id. 1878. 4. Axplro-pilos, ov, recklessly or confusedly babbling, Il. 2. 246; ef. depi- Tos I. I. II. évecpor dps hard of interpretation, Od. 19. 560. axptros, oy, (ueplve) undistinguishable, confused, disorderly, widOos Il. 2. 7965 dupera TAX dyopevery Od. 8. 505 3 THuBos dxp. one common un- ee grave, Il. 7. 337; Gp. maryos a confused mass, Hipp. ap. alen. ; cf. Plat. Gorg. 465 D, 2. continual, unceasing, axea ll. 3. 412; neut. as Adv., mevOnnevar dxprov alet Od. 18. 174., 19. 120; Bnpov ai diproy h, Hom. Merc, 126 :—Opos dp. a continuous chain of Mountains, Anth. P, 6, 225, 3. after Hom. in Poets, countless, akp. GoTpay oxdos Eur. Fr. 596; pupia pda Kat dp. Opp. H. 1. 80; G@kpiTov TANBeL cited from Babr., etc, II. undecided, doubtful, vetved, deOXos Il. 14, 205, Hes. Sc. 311; axptrav bvrow while the issue Was doubiful, Thuc, 4. 20; dxp. &pis kat rapaxn Dem. 231. 8: un- certain as to time, Arist. Meteor, 2. 5, 43 muperos dup. a fever that will ees to a crisis, Hipp. 399. 22; and so Ady. —rws, Id. Epid. 1. 941; GkpiTas weyis ris dutdrns without decisive issue, Thuc. 7.71. 2. unjudged, untried, of persons and things, dupiréy ria «reivewv, dvaipeiv, ete to put to death without trial, Lat. indicta causa, Hat. 3. 80, as 67, cf. 8, 48, Dem, 212. 23; dxp, dro8ayety Antipho 135. 10, o. Pelle ap. a cause not yet tried, Isocr. 385 A, cf. Plat. Tim. 51 d age: subject 10 no judge, mpurams, Aesch, Supp. 371:—Adv., dupirws mokrelvey Dion, H, tr, 43. IIT. act. not giving a judgment, 3: in Med., Sext. Emp. M.1, os Hdt, 8, 124: not capable of judging, rash, headstrong, Polyb, 3. 19, 9; axprrogudXos — axpovuxé, so, dkpira unxavdpevot engaged in rash attempts, Eur. Andr. 549. 2. not exercising judgment, undistinguishing, of the Fates, Anth. P. 7. 439, cf, 5. 284; axpire Saipor, of death, Epigr. Gr. 204. 3. dxpiré-puAdos, ov, of undistinguishable, i. ¢. closely blending, leafage, Opos Il. 2. 868. axptré-huprtos, ov, undistinguishably mixed, Aesch. Theb. 360. axpiré-dwvos, ov, to explain BapBapdpeyvos, Apoll. Lex., Hesych. dxpodLopar, =dxpodoua, Epich. 75 Ahr., Menand, ’Eyy. 2 (si vera 1.) axpdapa, aros, 76, (dxpodopat) Lat. acroama, like dovcpa, anything heard, esp. with pleasure, anything read, recited, played or sung, as a play, musical piece, etc., Xen. Symp. 2, 2, Hier. 1, 14, Arist. Eth. N. Io. 3, 7, and freq. from Polyb. downwds. II. in pl. for the concrete, lecturers, singers, or players, esp. during meals, Polyb. 16. 21, 12, al. axpoGparuds, 4, dv, designed for hearing only, ai dup. didackadta the esoteric doctrines of philosophers, delivered orally, Plut. Alex. 7; cf. dxpoarikds, écorrepids. dxpodopat, 2 sing. impf. #xpodco Antiph, *Emd. 2: fut. -dcopar [4] Plat. Apol. 37 D, etc.: aor. ijepododuny Ar. Ran. 315, Plat., etc.: pf. jxpédpae Arist. H. A. 4. 10, I1: aor. *«podOnv (in pass. sense) Joseph. A, J. 17. 5, 2, Aristid.: Dep. (Perh, from the same Root as #Avw, with a prefixed: cf. AA, Iv.) To hearken to, listen to: Construction as with dxovw, c. gen. pers., Antipho 129. 38, Plat. Euthyd. 304 D; c. acc. rei, Thuc. 6. 17, etc.; but sometimes also c, gen. rei, Thuc. 2. 21, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 285 D. 2. absol. to listen, Ar. Lys. 504, Pherecr. Wevd. ©: 6 depodpevos a hearer, Eupol. Anu. 6; esp. of those who hear lectures, a pupil, disciple, Plat. Rep. 605 C, Xen. Symp. 3, 6; hence like a Subst. c. gen., dvijp "ApearoréAous jxpoapévos Strabo 608, cf. Plut. Caes. 3, and v. depéapa, adxpoaris. II. to attend to, obey, rwds Thuc. 3. 27, Lys. 158. 35, Plat. Gorg. 488 C: absol. to submit, Thuc. 6. Io. dxpdaats, ews, 7, a hearing, hearkening or listening to, Antipho 129. 41, Thuc. 1. 21, 22, etc. ; dxp. moveioOal Tivos, = dxpoda0a, Andoc. 2. 21; KAémrew Ti dxpéacww byay to cheat you into hearing, Aeschin. 58. 37. 2. obedience, rivés Thuc. 2. 37. II. the thin listened to, a recitation, lecture, Hipp. 28. 1 5, Polyb. 32. 6,5 ens dxp., name of a work by Arist. III. =dxpoarjpor, Plut. 2. 58 C. axpoaréov, verb. Adj. one must listen to, rev kperrévev Ar. Av. 1228. ‘dxpodriptov, 76, a place of audience, Lat. auditorium, Act. Ap. 25. 23: a lecture-room, Plut. 2. 45 F. II. an audience, 1d. Cato Ma, 22. * adkpoaris, of, 6, a hearer, Lat. auditor, of persons who come to hear a public speaker, Thuc. 3. 38, Plat., etc.: one who hears a teacher, a dis- ctple, a pupil, Arist. Pol. 2. 12, 7, ef. Eth. N. 1. 3, 5. II. a reader, lecturer, Plut. Thes. 1, Lysand. 12. axpodriés, 7, dv, of or for hearing, dep. Xyot esoteric discourses (v. dxpoaparixds), Arist. Fr. 612; juc0ds dp. a lecturer's fee, Lat. honorarium, Luc. Encom. Dem, 25. Adyv., depoarin@s éxewv to be fond of hearing, Philo 1. 215, etc. dxpoBapovéw, = dxpoBaréw, Hippiatr. p. 265. axpoBdpwv, ov, (Baivw) walking on tiptoe or erect, Greg. Naz. axpoBiréw, to walk on tiptoe, skim along, of ostriches, Diod. 2. 50; of haughty people, Philo 1. 640, etc.: v. Lob. Aj. 1217. II. to climb aloft, Polyaen. 4. 3, 23. axpoBiricés, 7, dv, fit for mounting, Lat. scansorius, Vitruv. Io. I. axpé-Biiros, ov, = dxpoBdpar, txveoty dxpoBdroow Nonn. D, 47. 234. axpo-Bidys, és, tinged at the point or slightly, Auth. P. 6. 66. pa skimming the surface of the water, Nonn. D. 1. 65. &xpo-Bedrs, és, with a point at the end, Anth. P. 6. 62. axpo-BeNXis, (os, 7), the point of a dart or spit, Archipp. “Hp. 3. dkpo-Bynpatilw, =dxpoBaréw, Hesych., Schol. Il. 13. 158. dxp6-BAaoros, ov, budding at the end, Theophr. H. P. 1. 14, 2. axpoBodéw, to be an dxpoBdaos, to sling, Anth. P. 6. 106. axpoBodys, és,=dxpofeAs, Anth. Plan, 213. a&kpoBoAta, %, a slinging, skirmishing, App. Civ. 1. 84, etc. BoAtfopar: aor. jxpoBortoduny Hdt., Thuc.: Dep. To throw from afar, to fight with missiles, as opp. to close combat, to skirmish, mpds twa Thuc. 4. 34; absol., Id. 3. 73, Xen. Cyr. 8. 8, 22 :—metaph., dup. éreot Hat. 8. 64.—The Act. only in Anth, P. 7. 546, and Hesych. axpoBddwors, ews, 7, a skirmishing, Xen. An. 3. 4, 18, etc. &kpoBéAtopa, aros, 76,=foreg., App. Pun. 36. axpoBoAopds, od, 6, =dxpoBdrArots, Thuc. 7. 25, Xen. Hell. 1. 3, 14, ete. a&kpoBodtorys, of, 6,=sq., Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 28. Gxpo-Bodos, ov, pass., struck from afar, Aesch. Theb. 158. _ It. GxpoBddos, 6, one who throws from far, a skirmisher, Hesych., Suid. d&xpoBuoréw, to be uncircumcised, LXXx. dxpoBuoria, 7, the foreskin, Lat. praeputium, Lxx, Act. Ap. II. 3- II. the state of having the foreskin, uncircumcision, Ep. Rom. 2. 25, etc. 2. collect. the uncir ision, i.e. the uncir : Ib. 2. 26., 3. 30, etc. (The deriv. from xpos, Bia is difficult to understand, Perh. the word is a corruption for d«poroo@ia; in which case the Adj. dxpéBuoros, ov, occurring as v. 1. in Lxx and in Eccl, writers, must have been formed from the Subst.) : dxpo-yéveos, ov, with prominent chin, Arist. Physiogn. 6, 40. axpoyaviatos, a, ov, (yavla) at the extreme angle, dxp. AlOos the corner Soundation-stone, Lxx (Esai. 28. 16), Ep. Eph. 2. 20. dxp6-Seros, ov, bound at the end or top, Anth. P. 6. 5. axpo-Sikatos, ov, =dxpiBodixaros, Clem. Al. 413. dxpé-Spua, rd, fruit-trees, Plat. Criti. 115 B, Xen. Occ. 19, 12. x Fruits, Arist. H. A. 8. 28, 8, Probl. 22. 8;—acc. to Geop. Io. 74, properly of hard-shelled fruits, as acorns, chestnuts; so Spvds dxpa in Theocr, 15. 112 :—the sing. occurs in Anth, P. 9. 555, Ath. 49 E. dxpo-éAuxros, ov, twisted at the end, Paul. Sil. Ambo 178. 53 dxpéferros, ov, ((éw) boiled or heated slightly, Diosc. 2. 146. Kpo-Levyia, 7d, = CetyAn, Hesych., Poll. 1. 253. pase Tyee ov, slightly leavened, Galen. F dxpo-OdAumros, ov, burnt at the end, Lat. adustus, Hesych. dpdbev, Adv. from the end or top, Arist, Physiogn. 6, 20, Nic. Th. 337. dxpé-Oeppos, ov, very hot, cited from Philes de Propr. An. GKpo0, Adv. at the beginning, c. gen., vuerds Arat. 308. dxpo-Giyijs, és, touching on the surface, touching the lips, pthnua Anth. P. 12. 68. Adv., dxpobtyas éuBdarew just to dip in, so that it is hardly wetted, Diosc. 2, 105. dxpolividfopar, Dep. to take the dupoBina, take of the best, pick out Sor oneself, Eur. H. F. 476. dxpo-Sivov [67], 74, Eur. Phoen. 282, Thuc. 1. 132, Plat. Legg. 946 B; but mostly in pl. dxpodina, in Pind. also dxpé0tva: (dxpos, als) The topmost or best part of a heap; hence the choice part, first/ruits of the field, of booty, etc., to be offered to the gods, like dwapxat, Simon. 109, Hadt. 1. 86, go, al., Pind., and Trag.; dxpdé@va modéyou, in Pind, O, 2. ie the Olympic games, as being founded from spoils taken in war.—Properly a neut, Adj., as in Aesch. Eum. 834 dxpoOivia 6n offerings of firstfruits. Post-hom. word, rare in Prose, axpobadpat, dios, 5, , (Owphocw I) slightly drunk, Arist. Probl. 3. 25 tenant’ H5n 7° dxpoOwpax’ évra Diphil. ‘Hp. 1; Ion. -Odpyé, Hipp. ap. Erotian. p. 178. dp ros, ov, fruiting at the top, potvig Theophr. H. P. 1. 14, 2. dxpo-keAaivid, only used in Ep. part. dxpoxeAaindav, growing black on the surface, of a swollen stream, Il, 21. 249; cf. Nonn. D. 18. 156. dxpoxépata, 74, (xépas) the ends of sail-yards (cf. xépas VIII), Poll. 1.9 also dkpéxepa, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 566. &kpoxronov, 74, (xlar) the capital of a pillar, Philo 2. 147. —so, dkpo-kvedrs, és, Luc. Praec, Rhet. 17, Lexiph. rz. axpéxopos, ov, (xdun) with hair on the crown, epith. of the Thracians, who either tied up their hair in a top-knot, or shaved all their head except the crown, Il. 4. 533: with hair at the tip, of a goat’s chin, Polyb. ap. Strabo 208:—in Poll. 2. 28, dxpoxépys, ov, 6. II. with leaves at the top, tufted with leaves, Eur. Phoen. 1516, Theocr. 22. 41; esp. of the palm, Diod. 2. 53, Dion. P. roto. *Axpo-xépwvOos, 4, the citadel of Corinth, Eur. Fr. 1069, Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 4. axpoKiparéw, (xia) to float on the topmost waves, a bombastic word ridiculed by Luc. Lexiph. 15. Gkpo-KaAtov, 7d, mostly in pl. the extremities of the body, esp. of ani- mals, the snout, ears, trotters, pettitoes, Lat. trunculi, Pherecr. MevaaA. 1. 14, Telecl, Incert. 13, Ar. Fr. 109, Archipp. “Hp. 2, Arist. Probl. 23. 40, I, etc. ;—the sing. in Antiph. Kopiv@. 1, Alex. KvB. 1, Eubul. “Auadé. 1. axpdodevov, 7d, (Acia) = dxpoBinoy, Suid. dxp6-Aos, ov, with the ends made of stone; fdavov dup. a statue with the head, arms, and legs marble, the rest wood, Anth. P. 12. 40; cf. Miiller Archiéol. d. Kunst, § 84. 1. &xpo-Aivov [Ar], 74, the edge of a net, Xen. Cyn. 2. 6., 6. 9, ubi olim: (ut in Poll. 5. 29) dxpwAenov. dxpé-Aivos, ov, at the edge of the net, Opp. C. 4. 383. dxpo-Almiipos [Ar], ov, fat on the surface, Alex. Movnp. 7. dxpo-Aoyéw, to gather at top, araxvas Anth. P. 9. 89. dxpododta, 4, a mountain ridge, hilly country, Polyb. 2. 27, 5,Strab. 699. axpododitys [Tt], ov, 6, a mountaineer, Anth. P. 6. 221. dxpé-Aodos, ov, high-crested, peaked, mérpar Opp. C. 1. 418, Anth. P, 12. 185 :—as Subst. a mountain crest, Plut. Poplic. 22. : axpo-Airéw (avy, to play with the ends of the belt, as if untying it, Anth, P. 5. 253. j 5 axpé-paddos, ov, having short,wool, dub. in Strabo 196, where Coraés proposes paxpdpaddos. ae axpo-pavis, és, on the verge of madness, somewhat mad (cf. dxpdxodos, dxpoOepat), od ppevnpys dnp. Te Hadt. 5. 42. axpo-peiioos, ov, =dxpoOwpaf, Schol. Ar. Ach, 1132, Vesp. 1190. &xpo-poArB8os, ov, leaded a the edge, Aivoy Anth. P. 6. 5. dxp-oppdArov, 74, the middle of the navel, Poll. 2. 169. dxpov, ov, 76, (neut. of dpos) like dxpa, the highest or furthest point. la tain-top, peak, it, Pap-yapov, depov “1dys Il. 14. 292; dxpoy drepBadgev Od. 11. 597; 7a dxpa the heights, Hadt. 6. Ioo, Plat., etc. 2. a headland, foreland, cape, Zovnov dxpor *AOnvav Od, 3. 278. 8. an end, extremity, Ta a. Tis Paddoons Plat. Phaedo 109 D; dpa xep@v the hands, Luc, Imag. 6; if axpav at the end, Ar. Fr. 94; & @xpou Com. Anon. in Mein. 4. p. 653 ;:ér depos Plat. Soph. 220 D :—a border, frontier, Polyb. I. 42, 2. II. metaph. the highest pitch, the height, mavdogias dxpov Pind. N. 1. 14; els dxpov ixéoOat to the highest pitch, Simon. 58; «ls dxpoy dbus exceedingly, ‘Theocr. 14. 61; én dupov adduxéobat, eddeiv Plat. Polit. 268 E, Tim. 20 A; mpds dxpw yevécOa Id. Phaedr. 247 B: dupa, Ta, the heights, highest point, otro 100’ dyper rv dxpaw dvev névov Soph. Fr. 463; 7 dpa rots dxpois drodidévat the highest place to the highest men, Plat. Rep. 478 E; dxpa pépeo@ar to win the prize, Theocr. 12. I. oul: Theocr. 15. 142; v. Valck. Adon. p. 414. ‘ III. Spvds dxpa, v. sub dxpddpva. IV. in the Logic of Arist. 7a dxpa are the major and minor terms of a syllogism, as opp. to the zégov or middle, cf. péoos III. 4. dxpoviiyas, (vicow) Adv. touching at the edge, Galen. : axp6-vuKros, ov, = dicpd-vuxos, Procl. etc.; in Manetho 5. 177, -vUKTtos, dxpb-vuk, vurros, },=dxpovuyia, night-fall, A. B. 372, Suid. dkp-ovixl [7], Adv. with the tip of the nail, for dxpawvyi, Anth. P. 12. e 2. of persons, “Apyeos dpa TeAaoyol the oldest rulers of - dxpo-kvédatos, ov, at the beginning of night, in twilight, Hes. Op. 5655 54 126 (Cod. Pal. depovvyj, from an Adj. -vvxis; but cf. abrovuyi). Cf. dxp-dvuxos, akpovixta, 7, =depdvuf, Suid., Tzetz. Hes. Op. 565. axpé-vixos, ov, at night-fall, at even, Arist. Meteor. 2. 8, 28, Theophr. Sign. Pluv. 1. 2, Theocr. 31. 3, Nic. Th. 761:—neut. as Adv., Arist, Probl. 26. 18, axp-dvixos, ov, =dxpévuxos, Anth. P. 6. 103, Q. Sm. 8. 157. rol 8 » €s, fastened or nailed at the end, Nonn. Io. 4. 23. axpd- , ov, f. 1, for dxpdmAoos, q. v. axpémactos, ov, (mécow) sprinkled on the surface: slightly salted, Sopat. ap. Ath. 119 A, Xenocr. Aquat. 5. akpo-rax 7s, és, thick at the end, Moer. 346. Gxpo-mevOns, és, exceeding sad, Aesch. Pers. 135 (lyr.): but Paley - dBporevOeis, mourning effeminately, from the Schol., cf. d8pd-yoos. dxpé-mndos, ov, muddy on the surface, Polyb. 3. 55, 2- dxpoms, disabled, yA@aooa Hipp. 1259 H, 1221 G:—but the readings are doubtful, see Littré 4. p. 410. axpé-mA00s, ov, contr. —tAous, ovv, swimming at the top, skimming the surface, Hipp. 451. 38 (v. Galen. Gloss. p. 420), Aretae., Plut, :— restored for dxpdéraGos in Hipp. 95. 263 :—superficial, Id. Epist. 1286. akporroSyrt or —tri [77], Adv. (wovs) on tiptoe, stealthily, Luc. Prom. I, etc. f dxpo-roAetw, to traverse the top, Manetho 4. 79. dxpé-roAts, poét. dxpd-mrodts, ews, #, the upper or higher city, hence the citadel, castle, Lat. arx, és dxpémodw Od. 8. 494 (in Il, only divisim, Gupyn mds, v. xpos 1), Pind. O. 7. 89, Hdt. 1. 84, etc.; rad’ és dupd- mrohw Aesch, Theb. 240, cf. Eur. Or. 1094; as the seat of a tyranny (in arce tyrannus, Juven.), Philo 1. 401, 417. 2. in Att. writers the Acropolis of Athens, Andoc. 10. 31 (cf. Hdt. 1. 60., 8. 51); which served as the treasury, Thuc. 2. 13; as a record office, C. I. 84, 85, 87, ali; yeypapOar év 7H dxpowdrc, dvevexOjvar eis dxpdmodw to be entered as a debtor to the state, Dem. 1337. 24., 1327. 253 (in this sense the Art. is often omitted). II. metaph. of men, d«pdéroAus kat pros ev Snuw Theogn. 233; dxp. “EAAdvwv, of Corinth, Simon. 137: also the most important part, chief stronghold, ris yuxijs, Tot owparos Plat. Rep. 560 B, Arist. P, A. 3. 7, 11, cf. Plat. Tim. 7o A. dxporddos, ov, (woAéw) high-ranging, lofty, ev dxporddooww bpecow Il. 5. 523, Od. 19. 205. ’ dxpo-répos, ov, boring through, piercing with the point, dBedoi Od. 3. 463. 2. proparox., dxpézopos, ov, pass. with an opening at the end, avpeyg Nonn. D. 2. 2, II. (wopevopat) going on high, Ib. 46. 136. axpo-rroaGia, Ion. -(n, #, the foreskin, Lat. praeputium, Hipp. Aph. 1257, Arist. H. A. 1. 13, 3: batov, 74, Poll. 2.171. (Cf. depoBvaria,) dxpo-rérys, %, a hard drinker, Nonn. D, 14. 108. lous word akpovuxia — depwpia, ; Theaet. 152 E; ris piAocopias Clem. Al., etc. ; also, axpos els gudoco~ giav Plat. Rep. 499 C; mept dmdopaxtay Id. Legg. 833 E:—so also in Sup., highest, most excellent, Id, Theaet. 148 C, al. 2. of things, highest, extreme, cvpcpopa Alex. Tapavr. 4 (as amended) ; vnareta Diphil. Any, 1:—Sup., Plat. Phil. 45 A. IV. as Subst., v. sub axpa, axpov. V. neut. as Adv. on the top or surface, just, dkpov én’ dyOepixov Oéov Il. 20. 227; dxpov ént prypivos Ib, 229; so, dxpa e én’ airas BaOuidos Anth, P. 7. 428, 3. - b. exceedingly, ovd' dpa Tiphecoa Theocr, 27. 43; dkpov épwrav elddros, xpa haxas Anth, P. 7.4483 dxpov éxav coins Epigr. Gr. 442; dxpa pépova’ dperijs Ib. 2245 cf. Gxpov 11. 2. also in the rep. Adv., dxpws dveorad@a to be . 855. b. utterly, completely, Plat. Rep. 543 A, Ath. 248 F; ydvos dxpws Euphro “AS. 1. 5. ol és, (ofwopar) rotten at the end, Hipp. 382. 41. dkpo-ctSnpos, ov, pointed or shod with iron, Anth. P. 6. 95. axpo-oxipia, 7), a hill-copse, Tab. Heracl. in C.I. 5774.65, 71; cf. oxtpos. Gkps-codos, ov, high in wisdom, Pind. O. 11. 19, Dion. H. de Demosth, 51. , ov, without tassels, Athanas. 2. 116, Geop. 20. 22. dxpo-ornProv, 74, the chest, Arist. Physiogn. 6, 10. dxpo-ortyis, iSos, 7, an acrostic, i.e. a short poem in which the first letters of the verses form a word, Dion. H. 4. 62, Cic. Divin. 2. 54 :— also, -orixtov, 74, Or. Sib. 8. 249., II. 17, 23. Gxpo-orodvov, 74, the gunwale of a ship, Plut. Demetr. 43, Callix. ap. Ath, 203 F. II. also=dpAacrov, Diod, 18. 75, Paus. 9. 16, 3. Gxpo-orbov, 74, the edge of the lips, Dion. H. de Comp. p. 164. Il. =dxpopiator, Eust. 1153. 38. Gkpo-opaipia, ra, the rounded tips of the fingers, Exrmerins Anecd. Med. p. * a&kpoopahs, és, (opdAAw) apt to trip, unsteady, Plut. 2. 713 B; dxp. mpos iryleay precarious in health, Plat. Rep. 404 B:—so in Adv., dkpo- opadds éxew Plut. 2. 682 D. II. act. apt to throw down, slip- pery, dangerous, Polyb. 9. 19, 7- gupeeeyes, 7d, a sort of woman's shoes, Hesych.; &kpoodipta ap. oll. 7. 4. Mier on he, és, cloven at the end, Theophr. H. P. 3. 11, 1. Gkpo-rehevriov, 74, the fag-end of anything, esp. of a verse or poem, Thue, 2.17, Phryn. A. B. 369: hence the burden, chorus, cf. Dio C. 63. 10. Gxpo-revis, és, stretching high, Nonn. D. 7. 310. Gxpérys, 770s, 7), (depos) an extremity, Hipp. Vet. Med. 17, Arist. Plant. 2.9, 12. II. an extreme (in point of height), opp. to weodrns, Id. Eth. N. 2. 6, 17:—metaph. excellence, Dion. H. de Demosth. 2, etc. G-KpoT70s, ov, not beaten down, Heliod. g. 8. II. not struck together or in unison, én tapavdra Kaxpérnra xtipBadra Com, Anon, in Meineke 4. p. 606. turned up at the point, Hipp. Moch dxpotous, 6, the extremity of the leg, i.e. the foot, an for dxpos mous in Hipp. Fract. 285; v. Lob. Phryn. 603, cf. dxpdxetp. ap: ov, 76, the end of a ship's prow, Strabo 99 Tol. , 76, the tip of the wing, Anth. P. 6. 229; dxpdmrepa gordy, the men in the wings of a company, Opp. C. 4. 127. axp6-mroAts, %, poét. for dxpdrods, axpopprtos, ov, (i(a) not striking deep root, Basil. axpop-plvov, 76, (pis) the tip of the nose, Poll. 2. 80. &xpop-piprov, 74, the fore-end of the pole, Poll. 1. 146. | xpos, a, ov, (on the Root, v. dif 1) at the furthest point or end, and so either highest, topmost, Lat. summus, or, outermost, Lat. extre- mus: 1. highest, topmost, dxporary agp Il. 1. 499, al.; é& dupy mode =ev dxporddre, Il. 6. 88; e aupys wodos Ib. 2575 axpy Oddy 13. 5233 Papyipe dup 14. 3523 Adwovres . . péAav Uap Gxpov at its surface, 16, 162; dxpnv te v the surface of the skin, Od. 22. 278, cf. infr. v; én’ dxpav dpéwy on the mountain tops, Soph. O. T. 1106; cf. drdropov; Sup., dxpordros dpdporct Orac. ap. Hdt. 7. 140. 2. outermost, nar’ depas omthdbos on the edge of . . , Soph. Tr. 678; méd.ov én’ dupov Id. Ant. 11973 esp. of the extremities of the body, d«py xelp, dipor wé5es, dicpos wate the end of the hand, ends of the feet, #ip of the shoulder, Il. 5. 336., 16. 640, etc.; dxpos mots, xelp the foot, hand itself, Hdt. 1. 119 and (prob.) Thuc. 2. 49, cf. apdxeip ; yAaaoav dxpay Soph. Aj. 238; dxpas Tis nopns by the ends of the foliage, Cratin, Incert. 138 :—én’ dxpwy [BaxriAwy] on tiptoe, Soph, Aj. 1230, ubi v. Schol.; so, comically, én’ dpa muyiblov on tip-tail, Ar. Ach. 638, cf. Plat. Tim. 76 E; d«poraros xeiAeow Epigr. Gr. 547. 8 :—oix dn’ dupas ppevés not from the outside of the heart, i.e. from the inmost heart, Aesch, Ag. 805, cf. Eur. Hec, 242; dkpos puedds the inmost marrow, Id. Hipp. 255 ; Gxpo.ot Aatpous paoédas with the mere edges of the sail, i.e. under close-reefed sails, so as to escape the fury of the wind, Id. Med. 524 (where the Schol. interprets with sails full set, but y. Ar. Ran. 1000, et ibi Schol.). II. of Time, axpos denotes completeness, dupa adv éonépa when eve was fully come, Pind. P. 11. 18; dupov Oépos mid-summer, Hipp. Aph. 1247; dxpas vuxros at dead of night, Soph. Aj. 285; cf. dxpéomepos: though in some later compds. dxpos signifies that the time is only just come, cf. axpé-vuxos, —pavns, dxpwpia. IIT. of Degree, the highest in its kind, prime, exceed- ing good, consummate, excellent, Lat. capitalis, 1. of persons, Hdt. 5. 112., 6. 122, Aesch. Ag. 628; Berparov yvapov dxpos Ib. 1130; pavris Soph. El. 1499; of wavrn dxpot, of dxpérarot Plat. Theaet. 148 C; ois dxpos Ta dxpa dmoddévat Id. Rep. 478 E: then of any extremes (opp. to pécos), as of classes in a state, Arist. Pol. 4. 12, 4: of moral conditions, Id. Eth. N. 2. 7, 8, ef. Ib. 8. 1 and dxpoy 111:—often with an acc. modi added, yuxiv ov« dupos not strong of mind, Hdt. 5. 124; depot 7a work wa 7. 111; dxpos Opryty quick to anger, passionate, 1. 735 Evipdomn dperiy dxpy 7. 53 so c. gen. modi, of dxpot THs mongews Plat. b axporopéw, to lop off, shave the surface, Xen. Oec. 18, 2. Gxpdropos, ov, (réuvw) cut off sharp, abrupt, of a precipice, Polyb. 9. 27, 4, Philo 1. 82; % dxp. (sc. wérpa), Lxx (Ps. 113. 8, cf. Job 28. 9, Deut. 8.15): of a stone, sharp, Theodot. Exod. 4. 25. &xpé-rovos, ov, strained to the utmost, muscular, Polemo ap. Ath. 552 D. a-Kporos, ov, unapplauded, Hesych. dxp-ovAos, ov, curled at the end, Arist. Physiogn. 6, 42. axp-oupavia, 7, heaven's citadel, Luc. Lexiph. 15. Gpouxtw, (dxpov, éxw) to haunt the heights, Soph. Fr. 290. axpo-dais, és, = dxpopavys, Nonn. D. 4. 130. Gxpo-Piirnprdw, to shine or to be white at top, only in Ep. part. dxpopa- Anptoavra Nonn. D, 2. 460. dkpo-diivas, és, just dawning or bright-shining, often in Nonn. akpo-pins, és, grown at the tip or end of a branch, Theophr. H. P. 9. 5.1. II. high-bred, Synes. 180 B; dp. vods Id. 60 D. dxpo-pvAag, dios, 6, governor of a citadel, Polyb. 5. 50, 10. dxpd-pudXos, ov, with leaves at top, Theophr. H. P. 1. 14, 2. axpodvoroy, 74, (pioa) the snout or pipe of a pair of bellows, Soph. Fr. 824, Thuc. 4.100; fnyara .. émbdexviva révr’ dw dpopvatwy fresh from the bellows (or, as we say, from the anvil), Ar, Fr. 561. II. a comet’s tail, Dio C. 78. 30. dipo-xdué, 6, },=adxpoPapag, Ap. Rh. 4. 432. dxpo-xivijs, és, yawning at top, dépua Anth. P. 6. 57. : axpd-xerp, xetpos, #, later form for dpa xélp, i.e. the hand, whereas xelp includes the arm, Galen. ; in Ptol. also axpoxerpov, 76. Cf. dxpdmous. axpo-xeipifo, to seize with the hands, Aristaen. 1. 4 II. more usual in Med. ¢o struggle at arm's length, of a kind of wrestling, in which they grasped one another's hands, without clasping the body (the latter being called ovprdoxn), Arist. Eth. N. 3-1,173 axp. Tue or mpds Twa, Plat. Alc. 1, 107 E, Posidon. ap. Ath. 154 B; cf. Ruhnk. Tim. dxpoxetpuars, cas, %,=sq., Hipp. 374. 3; and to be restored in 364. 16 (for dipoxeipit), 372. 38 (for —xetpift). axpoxepropes, 0, wrestling with the hands, akpoxeipioris, 07, 6, a handwrestler, Paus. axpo-xAlapos [7], ov, just warm, axpoxodéw, -xoALa, ~xodos, v. sub dxpax-. dxpoxopdav, dvos, #, (xop3}) a wart with a thin neck, Hi p. Aph. 1248, Plut. Fab. Ty Galen., etc. ; distinguished from Huppnea, 7a, Paul. Aeg. 4. 15 :—axpoxopBovabys, es, troubled with warts, Dio C. Fr. 16 ; axpd-ptAos, ov, bare or bald at top, Hipp. 1133 Boer dxpd-pwdos, ov, wdds at the end, Schol. Ar. Eq. 960. d-Kpurrros, ov, unhidden, Eur. Andr, 836. Adv. -rws, A. B. 8. G-Kpvoraddos, ov, free from ice, xwpn, Hdt. 2. 22. f : axp-wAénov, 74, the point of the elbow :—y. sub dxpodtvioy, axp-opla, 2; the point of the shoulder, acromion process, Hipp. Att. 791: Luc. Lexiph. 5, Galen. 6. 4, I. lukewarm, Hipp. Acut. 394. ” ” ¢ ak pov — axupos, in a horse, the withers, Xen. Eq. 1, 11, cf. Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 19:— so dxp-optov, 7d, Hipp. Art. 780, Arist. H. A. 8.5, 4. Cf. Greenhill Theophil. 176. 13. dxpwv, ovos, 6, and dkpwvapuov, 75, =dxpoxwAov, Hippiatr. p. 32, etc.; like acro in late Latin. dxpwvia, %, in Aesch, Eum, 188 is taken by H. Steph, as =dxparnpiac- és, mutilation, which Herm. (Opusc. 6, 2. p. 41) calls impossible: the Schol. interprets xaxod dxpowia by kak@y dOpo.ots, the height of woe, and in A. B. 372 the word is expl. by d@poicpara, dxpérns, axpuh :—but the passage is prob. corrupt, v. sub. yAodrs. Gxpwvixia, 7, (dvug) the tip of the nail : hence, the ridge or top of a mountain, = dxpwpea, Xen. An. 3. 4, 37, Hell. 4. 6, 7. axpavixos, ov, (dvut) with nails, claws, hoofs, etc., xepds axpwvuxa, the tips of the fingers’ or toes, Anth. P. 12. 82; ixvos dxp. the traces of one walking on his toes, Plut. 2. 317 E, cf. 325 B:—dkpa@vvE, Suid. axpapea, 7, (pos) a mountain-ridge, Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 10, Theocr. 25. 31, etc. dxpwpta, %, (pa) daybreak, Theophr. Sign. Pluv. 3. 5. dxpwrnptatw, to cut off the axpwrhpia, of ships, tas mpepas hxpwrn- placay cut the beaks off the prows, Hdt. 3. 59 :—so in Med., rds rpujpes dxpwrnpagdpevor Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 36; pf. pass. in med. sense, #xpwrn- piagpévor rds rarpibas having foully mutilated their countries, Dem. 324. 22. 2. of persons, to cut off the hands and feet, mutilate, Polyb. 5. 54, 10, etc.; pndty dxparnpiaons évOdde, Inscr. on a statue, C. I. 6855. II. intr. to form a promontory, to jut out like one, Polyb. 4. 43, 2, Strabo 28. axpwtyplacpa, 74, mutilation, Hesych. v. ropia, Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 478. akpwrnpiacpés, 6, mutilation, Diosc. 7. 1, Poll., etc. Gxpwrnpvov, 7d, (pos) any topmost or prominent part, axp. Tod ovpeos a mountain-peak, Hdt. 7. 217, cf. Pind. O. 9. 12. 2. a cape, pro- ‘montory, Hdt. 4. 43, Pind. O. 9. 12, Thue. 1. 30. II. the end or extremity of anything, dxp. vnds a ship’s beak, Lat. rostrum, Hdt. 8.121; dxpwrhpia mpvpyns h. Hom. 33. 10. 2. in pl. the extremities of the body, hands and feet, fingers and toes, Hipp. Aph. 1258, Acut. 390, Thuc. 2. 49; axp. dworunOjcecOa Lys. 105. 29; Ta axp. THs Nixns her wings, Dem. 738. 14, cf. C. I. 150. 22., 151. 10. 3. in pl. the angles of a pediment, i.e. the top and ends of base, on which stood statues, Plat. Criti. 116 D, Plut. Caes. 63, etc. dkpwrnpiddys, es, like an dxpwrhpiov, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 726. axparns, ov, 6, (dxpos) a chief, v. sub dypérns. dra, 7d, the Latin acta, C. I. 2927, al. axralw, fut. cw, (de7h A) to banquet on the shore, to enjoy oneself, Lat. in actis esse, convivari, Plut. 2. 668 B, in the proverb., onuepov axracw- pev,—v. Lob. Aglaoph. p. 1021, Hesych. s.v. d«rq. II. =dk- taivw, E. M. dxtata, as, %,a fine Persian state robe, Democr.ap. Ath. 525 D. Il.a marble ball, Clearch. ap. Ath. 648 F; cf. derirns. IIT. v. sub deréa. dxratvw, to lift up, raise, deraivew oraow to raise myself so as to stand, to get on my legs, stand upright, Aesch, Eum. 36 (Bdow is an emendation written over ¢rdow in the MS.) :—so also in the form dk- Taivéw, dxrav@oa Anacr. 137; bray dxrawdon éavrd Plat. Legg. 672 C.—Both forms are recognised by the Gramm., dxraw@oa .. 7d iyaoa nat eEGpar nal perewpioar’ (Plat. Com. $a, g), . . AlaxvAos od- ner Gxtatve dyat Bapurévws, olov odkér’ dpOodv Sivayae évavrdy Phryn. in A. B. 23. 7, cf. 373. 18, E. M. 54. 34, etc. V. Ruhnk. Tim. s.v., ef dxra I, dnaxraive, drepucraivopat, dkrtatos, a, ov, (4nrH) on the shore or coast, as epith. of Ionian cities, Thuc. 4.52: so, Axrata (sc. yf), %, an old name of Attica, =a«r7 (A), I. 2, Call. Fr, 348. 2. dwelling on the coast, belonging thereto, Oeot Orph. Arg. 342; Bdrpaxor Babr. 25. 6. dréa, contr. dr, %, the elder-tree, sambucus nigra, Hipp. 564. 1., 609. 31, Theophr. H. P. 1. 5, 4, etc. The uncontr. form appears in Luc. Tragop. 74, where the Mss. give the faulty form deraia, Cf. A. B. 23, Lob. Paral. 337. G-«réiivos, ov, without property, poor, rivos in a thing, Anth. P. 7. 353. d-Krévirtos, ov, uncombed, unkempt, Soph. O. C. 1261. dxréov, verb. Adj. of dyw, one must lead, Plat. Rep. 467 E, etc.; eiph- vnv dréov one must keep peace, Andoc, 28. 28, Dem. 91. IT. a one must go or march, Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 5. a-creptioros, ov, unhallowed by funeral rites, Anth. P. 7. 564. d-«repys, és, =foreg., Or. Sib. 3. 481. G-Krépiotos, ov, =dkreptiaros, Soph. Ant. 1071; cf. maords. akrh (A), %, a headland, foreland, promontory, deri mpodxovoa Od. 24.82; drat mpoBAjjres 5. 405., 10. 89; opp. to AcuHy, Il. 12. 284; often with epithets denoting a high rugged coast, tpyxeia, bYnAq Od. 5. 425, ll. 2. 395; tpaxéa Hat. 7. 33; orupads Aesch. Pers. 303 ; dpol- «dvoros Soph. Tr. 752; ordv Bpépovoe dvrimdjyes derai Id. Ant. 592 :—even of the rugged banks or strand of rivers, drat EAdpov, NeiAov Pind. N. 9. 96, L. 2.62; Siudevros Aesch. As. 697; ’AxépovTos Soph. Ant. 813.—Rare in Att. Prose, as Xen. An. 6. 2,1, Lycurg. 149 sq. 2. generally, a tract of land running out into the sea, a penin- sula, or generally. coast-land, drat dipdora of the N. and S. coasts of Asia Minor, Hdt. 4. 38; of Africa, conceived as jutting out from Asia, 4. 41, cf. 177; of Cape Sepias to the S. of Thessaly, 7. 183, al.; of Mt. Athos, Thuc. 4. 109; of Italy, Arist. Pol. 7. 10, 3; an old name of Attica, like "Axraia, Soph. Fr. 19, cf. Suid. s. v. II. generally, any edge or strand, like the sea-coast, Lat. ora, as xdparos dxth of a sepulchral mound, Aesch. Cho. 722, cf. Ag. 493; xXAwpd d., of a moun- tain, Soph. Ant, 1133; Adpuos a. of an altar, Id. O. T. 183. (Com- monly derived from @yvupe, as pyyyly from piyyvupt, the land haa § 55 which the waves break: but Curt. remarks that the Root of dyvupe is FAT, whereas there is no trace of the F in é«r7.) axry (B), %, an old poét. word for corn or meal, Anuhrepos dxrh Il. 13. 322., 21. 76, cf. Eur. Hipp. 138, Epin. Mvye. 9 ; aan Gdopirov d, Od. 2. 355, cf. 14. 429, Il. 11. 630;—in which places the sense of Jine meal or flour seems to suit, and so the Scholl. take it, deriving the word from @yvu. But, as in der (A), here also, there is no trace of the F; and in Hes. Anuhrepos a. plainly means corn, either still in the fields, or not yet ground, Sc. 290, Op. 32, 464, 595, 803; so that in this word also the deriv. from dyvupe becomes dub. dxrq, contr. for d«réa, q. v. dtnpovéw, to be derhpov, live in poverty, Eust. Opusc.96.83., 220.17. dxrnpootvn, %, poverty, Poll. 3. 111., 6. 197, and Eccl, G-erqpav, ov, gen. ovos, without property, poor, xpuaoio in gold, Il. gs 126; absol., der. wevia Theocr. 16, 33; cf. Plut. Sol. 14. a-KThy, vos, =derhyw, E. M. a-«ryota, %, =dxrnpootyn, Eccl. d-«rnTos, ov, not worth getting, Plat. Hipp. Mi. 374 E. dxtivndéov, Adv. like a ray, Luc. Salt. 18. dxtivoBodéw, to send forth rays, Philo 1. 638 :—Pass. to receive the rays of the sun, Isid. Char. ap. Ath. 94 A, Eust., etc. akrivoBoAia, %, the shooting of rays, Plut. 2. 781 A: in Manetho I. 322, durivnBorin. dxrtivo-ypipta, 7), a treatise on radiation (by Democritus), Diog.L.9. 48. dxtivoedys, és,=derihdns, Philo 2. 559. durivées, ecoa, ev, =dxrivarrds, Or. Sib. 8. 191 [with f, incorrectly]. durivos, 7, ov, (dxrf) of elder-wood, Theophr. H. P. 5. 3, 3: but prob. dsréivos should be restored, Lob. Paral. 337. dktivo-pépos, ov, bearing rays :—as Subst., a radiated shell-fish, Lat. pecten, Xenocr. Aquat. p. II. axrivadys, es, like rays, Philostr. 133. Adv. -8as, Galen. dxrtivwrés, 7, dv, furnished with rays, Lat. radiatus, Philo 2. 560. dxriov, 76, =dierh (A), Ael. N. A. 13. 28. dxrvos, ov, (dxrh), of or on the sea-beach, epith. of Pan as god of the coast, Theocr. 5.14; of Apollo, Ap. Rh. 1. 402: cf. dAéwAayeros, Atwevirns. arts [7], ivos, 9, a ray, beam, dxrivecow éoixdres Hedi Il. 10. 547, cf. Aesch. Pr. 797, etc.; dwris alone, Od. 5. 479, Emped. 225, Soph. Tr. 685, Arist. Meteor. 3. 4,17, etc.; dvd péooay dxriva, i.e. from the south, Soph. O. C. 1247; derives reAevT@oat sunset, Eur. Ion 1136 :—also of lightning, dxrives orepomas dropnyvipevat Pind. P. 4. 352; @ Ads deris, matvov Soph. Tr. 1086; of the eyes, Pind. Fr. 88. 2. metaph. brightness, splendour, glory, axrls ayavev, ka- Ady Epyparov Pind, P. 11. 72, I. 4. 72 (3.60); derives OABov splendid fortunes, Id. P. 4. 454. II. like Lat. radius, the spoke of a wheel, Anth, P. 9. 418. Poét. word, but used by Plat. Tim. 78 D, and not seldom by Arist. d-«tvetos, ov, unbuilt : uncreate, Eccl. dxtirys [7], ov, 6, (drm) adweller on the coast, Anth.P. 6.304. II. dr. AiBos stone from Aitica (cf. derH (A) 1. 2), i. e. Pentelic marble, Soph. Fr. 72, Hyperid. ap. Harpocr. s. voc, G#T7. é-«tiros, ov, poét. for deriros, untilled, h. Hom, Ven. 123. axros, 4, dv, brought, (dub. word, v. sub vaxrés). d-«riitros, ov, noiseless, Eust. 964. 60:—Adv. dxrumi, Polemo. aurwdpios, 6, the Lat. actuarius, C. I. 4004. dxtwp, opos, 5, (yw) a leader, Aesch. Pers. 557, Eum. 399; as prop. name, II., etc. II. a leash, =dyoryeds, Hesych. dxtwpéw, from akr-wpds, 6, a guard of the coast, both in Hesych. a- pynros, ov, without a steersman, Plut. Caes. 28, Luc., etc. a-KUBeuros, ov, risking nothing upon a die: cautious, prudent, M. Anton. 1. 8. ee ra ise och d-cuntiptov (sc. pappyaxor), 76, a drug to cause abortion, Hesych. astene, ie Koehn) like dvappédi:ros, Lat. invenustus, without charms, Cic. Fam. 7. 32, 2, Eunap. Io. akv0os, ov, (xdw) unfruitful, Call. h. Apoll. 52: also devuros. &-«tKAvos, ov, one who has not gone the round of studies, opp. to éyxv= «wos, Plat. Com. Incert. 62. é-Ktiduorros, ov, not to be rolled about: metaph., xpadin de. an un- daunted heart, Timon ap. Ath. 162 F. II. of Protagoras, od« dx. not without volubility or versatility, Id. ap. Sext. Emp. M. 9. 57. dxvdos, 6, a kind of acorn, given to swine with the BdAavos, Od. 10. 242, Arist. H. A. 8. 6, 4: the fruit of the ilex (mpivos), Amphis Incert. 6, cf. Theophr. H. P. 3. 16, 3. (Perh. from same Root as Skt. dg (edere).) d-Kipavros [0], ov, not washed by the waves, Yapabors én’ dxvpdyrors on sands washed by no waves, i.e. on the sands of the stadium, Eur. Hipp. 235, cf. 229. II. waveless, calm, wéXaryos dx. Luc. D. Marin. 5. r. a-Kiparos [0], ov,=foreg. 1, Poéta in A. B. 6. d-Kdpos, ov, =dxvdpavros, Arist. Probl. 23. 4, Plut., etc.: metaph., dx. Bioros Eur. H. F. 698. axtpov [0], ov, gen. ovos, (Koya) =dedparros, Pind. Fr. 259, Aesch. Ag. 566: metaph. calm, Bios Plut. 8 B, etc., v. Wyttenb. ad 1. aktpov [BD], ov, gen. ovos, (xvéw) without fruit, barren, of women, Eur. Andr. 158; of the earth, Moschio ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 242. &-Kipis, és,=druvxqs; hence dxdpynpa and deuppa, 7d, Hesych., E. M. a-Kipla Adfews, impropriety of language, Hermog. -Kiplevtos, ov, not ruled, suffering no master, Eust. Opusc. 252. 31. axupo-héxrnros, ov, incorrectly used, Eust. 569. 6 (ubi male dxupio-). dxupodetla, 7, =dxupodroyia, Eust. 1770, fin., etc. axDpodoyéw, to speak incorrectly, Philo 1. 216, Gramm. axipodoyia, 4, an improper phrase, Dion. H. de Lys. 4. d-kipos, ov, without authority, opp. to KUptos, and so, I. of 56 laws, sentences, etc., of no validity, unratified or obsolete, pidiopa Andoc. 2. 11; diey Plat. Legg. 954 E; ovvOjnat Lys. 150. 353 dkupov moeiv, karaoTioa, Lat. irritum facere, to set aside, like dxupody, Plat. Prot. 356 D, Isae., etc.; dupov yiyvec@a, elvat, to become or be of no force, to be set aside, Plat. Legg. 954 E, etc.; vdyos dxtpors xpwpern, ie, having laws, but not enforcing them, Thuc. 3. 37. II. of persons, having no right or power, dx, moveiv twa Xen. Hell. 5. 3, 243 wabiordvar Lys. 115. 42; twéds over a thing, Plat. Theact. 169 E; dxvpo nmavrow .. yevnoecbe Dem. 342. 2; c. inf, Plat. Legg. 929 E. 2. so too of things, dxuporépa xplars a less trustworthy decision, Plat. Theaet. 178 D; dxupos dyopeds the voting urn into which the neutral votes are said to have been thrown, Schol. Ar. Eq. 1150, Poll. 8. 123: 7a dupa the unimportant parts of the body, Galen., cf. Arist. G. A. 4. 4, 41. III. of words and phrases, used in an improper sense, Lat. improprius, Cic. Fam. 16. 17, 1 :—so Ady. pws, Eust. 457. 41, etc. Gxipda, fut. dow, to cancel, set aside, Dion. H. 2. 72. dictipwors, ews, 7, a cancelling, Dion. H, 8. 21. axupwréov, verb. Adj. one must cancel, Strab. 362, Clem. Al. 223, Aixtpwros, ov, verb. Adj. unconfirmed, Eur. Ion 800. dkiros, ov, (xJw) =dxvOos, Hesych. &xxaA(Bap, =xpé8Baros, Lacon. word in Hesych. 6s, 6,=@pos, Hesych. (Curt. takes this to be the same as Lat. ala (i.e. axla), Dim. axilla: cf. dgowv.) A-Kabovcros, ov, not tested, Ar. Lys. 485; v. kbdwv. axoKy [4], %, (dun 1) a point, edge, Lat. acies, Soupds, BéAcos, éyxeos Il. 10. 373-, 13. 251., 22. 327, cf. Od. 19. 453, Theocr. 22. 195; also in late Prose, Luc. D. Mort. 27. 4; duis being the usual Att. word. ‘Gxddvorros, ov, not divided into clauses (k@Aa), Dion. H. de Comp. 23. G-Kwdos, ov, without limbs, mutilated, Paus. 1. 24, 3- II, ill- jointed, and so moving slowly, Schol. Od. 12. 89. &-KoADros, ov, unhindered, Luc. Tim. 18, C. I. 2321. 8, etc. Adv. ~ros, Plat. Crat. 415 D; also dewAvri, Democr. in Fabr. Bibl. 4. 338. G-Kopacros, ov, without revelry, Liban. _a-Ke Tos, ov, not ridiculed :—Ady. -rws, Luc. V. H. 1. 2. dev [a], ovros, 5 (deh 1) a javelin, dart, smaller and lighter than the éyxos, Il. 15. 709, Od. 14. 531, al., Pind. P. 9. 37, Eur. Phoen. 1402, etc. dxwv [a], dxovca, dxoy, Att. contr. for déxwr. _dkavirros, ov, (xavitw) unpitched, Diosc. 1. 6. rif s, ov, without a conical top, midos Joseph. A. J. 3. 7; 3- _&-Kamros, ov, not having oars: unequipt, A. B. 373, Hesych. a-Kwmos, ov, without oars, Anth. P. 9. ae GAGBa or GAGBq, %, a kind of ink, Hesych. ahi Bapxéw, fo be dAaBdpxns, Joseph, A. J. 18. 8, 1., 20. 5, 2- GAGBdpyys, v. sub ’ x78. - xta [GA], %, the office of dAaBdpxns, Joseph. A. J. 20. 7,33 & dAafapxins [Tt], Anth, P. 11. 383. nad 1 Dim. of dndBinoros, Eubul. rep. 7. aX ms (sub. AlGos), ov, 6, calcareous alabaster, Theophr. Lap. 6: also iris, c5os, 4, Ath. 206 C; v. sub dAdBaorpos. OtKn, ), a case for alabaster ornaments, Dem. 415.5: gene- rally, a small box or casket, Ar. Fr. 463: v. dAdBacrpos. ‘ oros [ada-], 5, a box or casket of alabaster (cf. dAaBaatirys), Hdt. 3. 20, Ar. Ach. 1053, Crates 2. 6, Alex. Eicou. 1, Mavip. 4. In the places cited the best Mss. preserve the form in dAdBaoros, which is recognised as the old and correct form in A. B, 206, Phot. Lex. s.v. AjxvOov. The other form dAdBacrpos occurs in the common dialect, as Lxx, N. T., Plut., etc.: Dor. acc. pl. dAaBdorpas Call. Lav. Pall. 15. —A neut. dAdBaorpov occurs in N. T., pl. dAdBaarpa or —ra in Theocr. te Anth. P. 9. 153. ad bdpos, ov, carrying alabaster vases, Aesch. Fr. 354- o-evd5as, Adv. like alabaster, Diosc. 4. 77. : pos, Vv. GAGBacros. GAGBn, v. sub dAdBa. ah GAdBys or GAAGBys, 77s, }, a fish of the Nile, Strabo 823; in Plin. alabetes, ; &AGGe [AA], Adv. (GAs) 2o or into the sea, Il. 1. 308, etc. ; also, eis ddade Od. 10. 351. II, GAade pica, name of the second day of the Eleusinian mysteries, the 16th of Boédromion, Polyaen. 3. 11, 2. GAé-Spopos [aA], 4, dithyrambic word in Ar. Av. 1395,—by some derived from GAAopa, the bounding race; by others from GAs, a race over the sea. Sarg dAaloveta, 7, the character of an ddalév, false pretension, imposture, kery, Ar. Eq. 903, Plat. Gorg. 525 A, etc.; described by Arist. Eth. N. 4. 7, Theophr. Char. 23; bm ddagoveias Ar. Ran. 919; in pl. Id. Eq. 290, Isocr. 237 B:—metaph., dA. xopday their over-readiness to sound, opp. to édpvnots, Plat. Rep. 531 B.—That the penult. is long appears from Ar. Il. c., Menand. Incert. 195 ; dAa{ovia [¢] only in late ., Or. Sib. 8. 32. ! % Blo ad 7, an imposture, piece of quackery, Aeschin. 87. 41: in pl. guackeries, Ar. Ach. 87, Aeschin, 25. 23. vahaloved fut. 29 abit Dep.: (dAa¢év). To make false preten- sions, Lys. Fr. 42, Plat. Hipp. Mi. 371 A; of the Sophists, Xen. Mem. I. 7, 5, etc.; mept nos Wen, KoA. 10, Isocr. 293 B. B..c:.ace. ign, pretend, Arist. Oec. I. 4, 3- : xe petals ov, 6, a boaster, braggart, Hdn. Epim. 183. GAalovixés, 4, 6v, disposed to make false pretensions, boastful, braggart, Hipp. 20. 14, Xen. Mem. I. 2, 5, Arist. Adv, -«@s, Plut. Mar. g. aNatovo-xauve-bAdapos, 6, a swaggering empty babbler, Archestr. ap. Ath. 29 C. ddafdy [4A], dvos, 6, %, (@An) properly a wanderer about the country, > ’ , > , ; axupow — aapmys. vagabond, the Scottish landlouper, Alcae. Com. Incert. 5. ; II. like dydprns, a false pretender, impostor, quack, esp. of Sophists, Cratin. Incert. 41, Ar. Nub, 102, Plat. Phaedo 92 D, al.; cf. Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 12, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 7, 11, and v. dAa{oveia. 2. as Adj. swaggering, boastful, braggart, Lat. gloriosus, Hdt. 6, 12; dA. Adyou Plat. Rep. 560 C:—Sup., jdov) dAaConardrn (not -erary, v. Eust. 1441. 27), most shameless, Plat. Phil. 65 C. GAdGera, GAGOAs, Dor. for dA7O-. GAG0els, v. sub dAdopat. ; G-AdOnros [AG], ov,=GAnoros, which nothing escapes, Aesop., Eust., and late writers. GAaive [GA],=dAdopa, to wander about, Aesch. Ag. 82, Eur. Tro. 1083, El. 204, 589, Cycl. 79; ddA. ré5a dvarnvov (vy. Baive A. Tl. 4), Id. Phoen. 1536; always in lyrics, except Eur. Or. 532.—Cf. 7Aaivw. Gdavos, dv, f. 1. for dAeds; cf. HAeds LU. GAaxKdra, 4, Dor. for jAaxarn. Ghakd, Dor. for dAad7, q. v. SS : GhGAGy4, 7), a shouting, Soph. Tr. 206; cf. dAaA}, dAadd tw. aypa, aros, 7é,=sq., Call. Fr. 310, Plut. Mar. 45. GAahaypos, 6,=dAadrayj, Hdt. 8. 37. II. generally a loud noise, Tupmavev, avdovd Eur. Cycl. 65, Hel. 1352. > Gdaddfw: fut. —dgoua Eur. Bacch. 593, -dfw Lxx: aor. AdAaga Eur., Xen., etc., poét. dAdAaga Pind. O. 7. 69 :—Med., Soph. Fr. 479, Arr. An. 5. 10: (formed from the cry dAaAai or ddadn, as €AeAiCw (B), 6AoAU{w from similar sounds: cf. dv-, ér-, cvv-adada (a). To raise the war-cry, 7@ Evvadiy 7AdAagay (v. |. #AéAigav) Xen. An. 5. 2, 14, cf. 6. 5, 27, and so in Med., Arr. I. c.; c. acc. cogn., vieny ddadaler to shout the shout of victory, Soph. Ant. 133. 2. generally, to cry or shout aloud, Pind. 1. c., etc.; of Bacchus and the Bacchae, Eur. Bacch, 593, 1133, etc. 3. rarely of a cry of pain, RAGAaCe ducbv7j- okov povw Eur. El. 843 (where Valck. éopadace), Ev. Marc. 5. 38, Plut. Luc. 28. II. rarely also of other sounds than the voice, to sound loudly, Wadrpos 8 ddaddfe Aesch. Fr. 55; x¥uBadov ddaddQov 1 Ep. Cor. 13.1: cf. dAaAaypds I, dAaAnrés.—Poét. word used by Xen. and in late Prose. GAGAat [GA], exclam. of joy, in the formula dAaAat i) mandy, Ar. Ay. 1763, Lys. 1291 ; and restored in Av. 953 for dAaAdy. GAaAdELos, J, epith. of Ares, Cornut. N. D. 21. édadarés, 6, Dor. for dAadnrds. GAadH [GAG], Dor. ddadé, §, (dAadal)=ddaAnrés, a loud cry, paviat 7 ddadai 7 dpwopévwy Pind. Fr. 224; ddAadal aiaypdrov (v. 1. GAadayat) Eur. Phoen. 337 :—esp. the cry with which battle was begun, hence the war-cry, battle-cry, Pind. N. 3. 109, I. 7 (6). 15.—’AAaAd personified by the same Poet, «Ad0’, ’AAaAd, toA€pov Ov-yarep, Id. Fr. 225, cf. Plut. 2. 349 C. GAGAnpar [GAG], pf. of dAdoyar, but only used in pres. sense (and part. Hpevos takes the accent of pres., Od. 14. 122), to wander or roam about, like a beggar, Hom. mostly in Od., as 2. 370., 15. 10, etc.; of seamen, payrdios dAddnobe 3. 72, cf. 313; of a departed spirit, dA. dy’ edpumvAts “Aidos 8H Il. 23. 74; -of things, pupla Avypd kar dy- Opdrous GAGAnrat Hes. Op. 100 :—once in Trag., Eur. Andr. 307 (lyr.). Cf. dAaAvKTnuat. G-AdAnTOS, ov, unspeakable, unutterable, Anth. P. 5. 4, Ep. Rom. 8. 26. GAGAnros, 08, 6, (GAadal) the shout of victory, Il, 16. 78: the war-cry, battle-shout, Hes. Th. 686, Pind. P. 1. 13% 2. generally, a loud shouting, Il, 2. 149. 3. rarely, a cry of woe or wailing, 21. 10; comically, 7@v 5€ mAaxotvraw . . Hv dd. Teleclid. "Aud. I. 13. a 3) rarely of other sounds, a loud noise, abAdv Anth, P. 6. 51. GaXla, %,=Tovnpia, dragia, Soph. Fr. 220. Gdadke [diAa], 3 sing. aor. 2 (also 2 imperat., Theogn. 13) Hom., Hes., Pind. ; subj. (v. infr.) ; opt. dAdAxous, -xot, —Korev Od. 13. 319, Il. 21. 138., 22. 196; inf. dAadnévevar, —éuey Tl, 17. 1§3-, 19. 30, GAadxeiv only in Anth, ; Part. ddaAKwy Il. 9. 605, Anth, To ward or keep off, rk rine something from a person, Il, 19. 30, etc. ; more rarely ri Tivos al. 539: also, Gd. ri run pads Od. 10, 288.—No other tenses are in use in Hom., for Wolf rightly altered the fut. dradunoe (Od, 10. 288) into aor. GAdAKpor; but Ap. Rh. 2. 2 35 formed a fut. dAaAKhoovoww, and Q. Sm. 7 267 a pres, dAdAkovaw. (From W AAK come dAadxe, dAKabeiv, GAKh, Gwap, ddripos, GAxrhp, dAééw: identical with WVAPK (v. Ad. IV), whence dpkéw, Lat. arceo, arx, arca; cf. Skt. of the aka a (defendo) : prob. dptyyw also is a modification Akadxopevyts, ios, epith. of Athena, Il, 4. 8., 5. 908: acc. to Ari- starch. from the Boeot. town Alalcomenae, but better from dAaAxeiv, the P pia ee hea Ben ones, éws, of Zeus, E. M. v\? 4 Socot. month, answering to the Att. uauaxrnpiay, ate 1569, Plut. Aristid. 21, cf. Miiller Orchom, p. at. Ee 1 egpeagale aig @ remedy, Phavorin., Zonar. » , Speechless, dumb, Aesch. Fr, 57, Lxx (Ps. 37 (38). 13) 3 A aie 9. 17, etc. ; neiwerba dr, Epit. in C. L. 6233. 8. ahvyt, YY, t= Avyyds, a gulping, choking, Nic. Al. 18. Kermpat [GAG], a pf. formed by redupl. from dAverém (like GAdAn- Hat from dAdoyat), once in I], (10. 94), od8€ por Frop Eumedov, GAN i ria in anguish, am sore distressed. ; : TETOS, OV, (Adumw) wi : : the nether world, re A pared ‘es ce é h. oe ne es the margin of the Laur, Ms.); dA res : C e bom uh - 7 Shee often Th, 2331, cf. 3333; oxtros Anth. Pg. g4meo Grelee een + OF eyes, Hipp. Progn. 37; aA, #Alou out of the GM, Soph. Tr. 691; ddaugas “Aidos edvds Anth. P. append; aXapmia — &ddomuat. 260. Phoc. 1. Gdapmia, %, want of light, Theol. Arith. p. 6. 19, Phot. GAdopat [aA], Ep. 3 pl. dAdwvrat, imper. dAdw (v. infr.), but used by Hom. mostly in contr. forms dAdo@e, dAdwpevos, impf. AAdpyy, Ep. GdGro, fut. dAnoopa (dn-) Hes, Sc. 409 (but v. |. dwadqoaro): Ep. aor. 4AnOny Od. 14. 120, 362, Dor. part. dAa@eis Aesch. Supp. 870 : cf. GAdAnpat: Pass.: (4An). To wander, stray or roam about, Hom., Hdt., and Att. (though in Prose wAavdoyar was the commoner form), of4 Te Anoripes .., Tol 7 dAdovrat yas wapOépevor Od. 3. 73; Tis dU- arnvos dhapevos évOd8 indver 6. 206; pi) maDapev 7 dddpevor Hat. 4. 973; aicxpas dd@pae Aesch. Supp. 98 ; dovros vnAiwous 7° GA. Soph, O. C. 349: esp. to wander from home, be banished, like pev-yey, Ib. 444, Thuc. 2. 102, Lys. 105. 41, Dem. 440. 21; é« aéOev by thee, Soph. O. C. 4363 ;—often with a Prep., dvd orpardv ofc: dAGaGe Il. 10. 141; Kam- mediov .. olos GAa@ro 6. 201; moAAd Bporav ém dare GAdpevos Od. 15. 4923 iis ém éxxdrois pois Aesch. Pr. 666; él ¢évns xwpas Soph. Tr. 300, cf. Isocr. 76 A; otrw viv... dddw xara méyrov Od. 5.377, cf. Aesch, Supp. 870; vopddeoat yap év SebOais ddGrar Ar. Av. 942: also c. ace, loci, GA. yijv to wander through or over the land, Soph. O. C. 1686; wopOpods dd. Eur. Hel. 532; pea Theocr. 13. 66; cf. rAavdw Ir. 2. c. gen. to wander away from, miss or be without a thing, edppootvas ddarat Pind. O. 1.94; Yuxiy ddGra: THs wdpob’ eimpagias Eur. Tro. 635. II. metaph. to wander in mind, be perplexed, Soph. Aj. 23. dads, dv, not seeing, blind, Od. 8. 195, etc. (v. fin.), never in Il., and used by Trag. only in lyric passages; 7d ¢wrav dAadv yévos Aesch. Pr. 549; GAaot, as opp. to Sedopedéres, the dead, Id. Eum. 322; of the eyes, Soph. O. C. 150, 243, Eur. Phoen. 1531; €Awos dAadv a blinding wound, i.e. blindness, Soph. Ant. 974: II. like Lat. caecus, dark, obscure, vépos Ap. Rh. 2. 259. III. invisible, imperceptible, pOiots ddan Hipp. 412. 24, restored by W. Dind. for GAAn, or (as Galen. Lex.) dAata. (If it be a compd, of d privat. and Adw video (though the existence of this Verb is dub., v. s. voc.), the accent is exceptional, and is so taken by Arcad. 38.) [@Ados Od. |. c., etc. ;—hence, in Od. 10. 493., 12. 267, for Havrios GAGod, the best Edd. give pavrnos GAdod with the ult. of Hayrnos lengthd. in arsi, Herm. El. Metr. p. 347.] GAtio-cKxomd, Ion. 1h, 7, a blind, i.e. useless, careless watch, Il. 10. 515 (ubi v. Spitzn.), 13. 10, Od. 8. 285, Hes. Th. 466. dhio-réKos, ov, bringing forth young blind, Suid. GAGba, to blind, dpOarpod ddawoat to blind him of his eye, Od. 1. 69., 9. 516; c. acc., Anth. P. 7. 601. Gharabdvés, 7, dv, (dAawatw) easily exhausted, i.e. powerless, feeble, arixes, oOévos, pos, etc., Il. 4. 330, Od. 18. 373, h. Hom, Merc. 334, al., cf. Hes. Op. 435; Comp., dAamabyérepor yap éceode Il. 4. 305.—Ep. word, used by Aesch. without the a euphon. (cf. dAama(w), dvats Aaabyéy being restored by Musgr. for Aémadvov in Eum. 562. ahatradvocivn, 7, feebleness, Q. Sm. 7. 12. Graf [GA], Ep. impf. dAdwaoy Il. 11. 503 : fut. dgw 2. 367, Aesch.: Ep. aor. dAdwafa 11. 750, Theogn. 951 :—Pass., Il. 24. 245: aor. ddaraxOny (é-) Or. Sib. To empty, drain, exhaust, Od. 17. 4243 GX. réAw to sack or plunder it, Il. 2. 367; and of men, Zo over- power, destroy, 5. 166., 11. 503, al.: metaph., [olvos] é« xpadias dvias dvipiv dX. Panyas. ap. Ath. 37C. Ep. word (cf. éfadamd(w) used by Aesch. without the @ euphon. (cf. dAamadvés), Aamagew doru Kadpeiov Big Theb. 47, 531; and Triclin. gave erhvy .. Motpa Aamage (for Motp’ dAamdger) in Ag. 130. (The Root appears to be AAIT with a prefixed, cf. Aamdoow: but Curt. hesitates to connect these words with Admro, q. v.) fdas, dros, 74, (GAs) salt, acc. to Suid. only used in the proverb GAaow Het ; but the nom. occurs in Arist. Mirab. 138, and often in late Prose, as Plut. 2. 668 F, Ev. Matt. 5. 13, etc. ddacraive, =sq., Hesych. dhacréw, (dAacros) to be full of wrath, jAdoreov Se Geol (as trisyll.) Il. 15. 21; gywtey .., kal dAaornoas eros nvda 12. 163, cf. Call. Del. 239, ete., and v. éradacréw. adacropta, 7, wickedness, Joseph. A. J. 17.1,1. . addoropos, ov, under the influence of an dddorwp, Aesch. Fr. go (in acc. masc. dAdoropoy): suffering cruelly, GAacrépoow dpparav KiK- Aos Soph. Ant. 974 (lyr.). ddacros, ov, lon. dAnoros Philo: (a privat.,Aa@eiv, AnPopa). Not to be forgotten, insufferable, unceasing, wevOos, dxos Il. 24. 105, Od. 4. 108, Hes. Th. 467, cf. Aesch. Pers. 990 ; éxafoy GAacra Soph. O. C. 538: neut. as Ady., dAacroy ddvpopa I wail i t, Od. 14. 174. 2. of persons, as in Il. 22. 261, where Achilles calls Hector Gdaore, thou whom I will never forget nor forgive !—an accursed wretch, Soph. O. C. 1482; so, marpds .. GA. aia Ib. 1672: cf. dAd- oTwp. Poét. word, used by Trag. only in lyr. passages. GAdorwp, opos, 6, the Avenging Deity, destroying angel, Lat. Deus Vindex, with or without daiyov, often in Trag., as Aesch. Pers. 3545 Ag. 1501, 1508; dA. obuds Soph. O. C. 788 ; ef dAaarépawy vooeiv Id. Tr. 1235; dA. MeAomdav, proverb, of utter ruin, Xenarch. Bour. 1; generally, BovedAav dAdorwp the herdsmen’s plague, of the Nemean lion, Soph. Tr. 1092; as fem., of the Sphinx, Nicoch. Incert. 4; cf. Bidorwp I. II. pass. he who suffers from such vengeance, a pol- luted or accursed wretch, Aesch. Eum. 236, Soph. Aj. 3743 peapot “: ot xédranes wad GAdoropes Dem. 324. 21; BapBapdy te . . kai ddd- sTopa tov bidurnov dmokadav Id. 438. 28; dvOpwn’ addorwp Bato *Avbp. 1.5, cf. Meineke 3. p. 186; cf. dAdoropos. 2. metaph. obscure, dperiv ..dpaupdy nat ddAapmf Plt. (The and signf, oft 57 ddagros brings it into close connexion with dAdorwp. But Curt. refers this last word to 4/AA in aAn, dAdopat.) GAdras, dAGrela, Dor. for dAjrns, dAnreta. GAatwos, 7, ov, (dAas) made of salt, AOos Clem. Al, 461. dddriov, 76, Dim. of Gas, Aesop. Garo, Dor., 3 sing. aor. I of GAAopat. &-harépnros, ov, not hewn square, ap. Clem. Al. 452. Gddro-mrwAla, %, the trade of vending salt, Arist. Oec. 2. 4, 2. G-Adxavos, ov, without herbs, Greg. Naz. GAa-Gmis, Sos, , pecul. fem. of sq., Emped. 185. Gda-wnds, dy, blind-eyed: dark, Lat. caecus, Nonn. Jo. g. 14. GAawris, vos, 7%, (dAadw) a blinding, dp0adpod Od. g. 503. Gda-arp, Gros, 6, },=dAaards, Synes. Hymn. 3. 583. &ABaptos, 6, the Lat. albarius, a plasterer, C. I. 9863. adyewvés, 4, dv, (Gdyos) giving pain, painful, grievous, Aesch. Pr. 197, 238, Soph. O. T. 1530, Eur. Med. 1037, Thuc., etc.:—Ady. -vas, Soph. Ant. 436, Ph. ro11, Plat. Gorg. 476 c. II. rare in act. sense, feeling pain, grievously suffering, suffering, Soph. O. C. 1664.— The Comp. and Sup. in common use are dAyiav, GAyoros, though Plat. has dd-yewérepos, -draros, Gorg. 477 D, Symp. 218 A; so Arist, Probl. 9, 8, and v. 1, Isocr. 306 A. The Hom. form is dAeyevés, q. v. éAyeol-Swpos, ov, bringing pain, Sappho 125, Opp. Hal. 2. 668. adyeot-Oijos, ov, grieving the heart, Orph. H. 64. ddyéw, fut. yaw, (GAyos) to feel bodily pain, suffer, ddyhoas smarting with pain, Il. 2. 269, etc.; to suffer, be ill, Hdt. 4. 68; more fully, ddyjoas ddévnc Il. 12. 206: the suffering part in acc., as dAynoov jjmap Aesch. Eum, 135; tds yvd@ous ddyhoere Ar. Pax 237; Tov ddxrvdoy Plat. Rep. 462 D; 7d Gypara Ib. 515 E. 2. to suffer hardship, i} GAds i emt yijs ddyqoere Od. 12. 27. II. to feel pain of mind, to grieve, be troubled’ or distressed, dd-yeiv Yuxny, ppéva Hdt. 3. 43, Eur. Or. 608, etc.: day. 7wi to be pained at a thing, Hdt. 3- 120, Soph. O. C. 744, etc. ; émi rive Id. Aj. 377, etc. ; dud re Hat. 4. 68; mepi re or Tivos Thue. 2. 65, Eur, Andr. 240; but also c. gen., adryeiv xpi) tUXNS wadvyxdrov Aesch. Ag. 571, cf. Eur. Hec. 1256: c. acc., dAy@ pev épya Aesch. Cho. 1016 ; mpagiv Hv HAyno’ éy@ Soph. Aj. 790 (v. sub xalpw, dopa): c. part., #Ayno’ dxovcas Hdt. 3. 50, Aesch. Pers. 844; dGAy& xAvov Soph. Ph. 86; dpa@v Eupol. Any. es III. trans, to cause pain, 7a ddyobvra (dA-yivorra ?) Clem. Al. 933. dAyndav, dvos, %, a sense of pain, pain, suffering, of body, Hdt. 5. 18, Eur. Med. 24, Plat. Prot. 354 B; éduvn tis 7 day. Id. Rep. 413 B, al. II. of mind, pain, grief, Soph. O. C. 215, Eur. Med. 56, al. (With the termin. -75av in this and yatpndwr, cf. Lat. torpedo, lib-ido, cup-ido.) Gdynpao, 76, pain felt or caused, suffering. Soph. Ph. 340, Hipp. Vet. Med. 10, Eur., etc. ; ot éore AUmns ady. wet{ov Menand. Incert. 121. adynpés, 4, dv, painful, Lxx (Ierem. 10. 19, al.). ddyyors, ews, 7), sense of pain, Soph. Ph. 792, Ar. Thesm. 147. Gdyivées, ecoa, ev, (GAyos) painful, grievous, Hes. Th. 214, 226, Mimnerm. 11, Xenophan. 2. 4. dhyiwv, ov, GAyvoros, 7, ov, irreg. Comp. and Sup. of dd-yewds, formed from Subst. dA-yos (as KaAAlwy, -1aros from KdAAos, aicxiov, -t0ros from aicxos). More or most painful, grievous or distressing. Of the Comp., Hom. has only neut. dAyioy, in signf. so much the worse, all the harder, T@ 8 Gdyov, al «° WeAgow.. dupe paxeoOa Il. 18. 278, cf. 306, Od. 4. 292: he has Sup. only in Il. 23. 655, #7’ Gdylorn dapa- cacOa (of a mule) :—but both are common in Att., as dAylav Aesch. Pr. 934, Soph. Ant. 64; dAyoros Id. O. T. 675, ete.: cf. GA-yewds fin. [In Hom, dAyiov, but T always in Att.] ddyos, eos, 75, post. Noun, pain of body, Il. 5. 394, Soph. Ph. 734, 1379; in Hom. mostly in pl. pains, sufferings, ddyea redxer Il. 1. 110; a, macxey 2. 667, al, 2. pain of mind, grief, distress, Il. 1. 2., 3. 97, Od, 2. 41, etc.; Tv 8 Gya xappa Kat adyos Bre ppéva 19. 471; a. demédAcoy 14. 32; dvqxeoroy Il. 5. 394; but more freq. in pl., Il. 2. 39, al.; 7a xtvrar’ dAyn Kady Eur. Supp. 807; bm’ dd-yous from pain, Aesch, Eum, 183 ; aioxdvas éuas in’ dd-yéwv from grief for my shame, Eur. Hel. 201. II. later, anything that causes pain, Bion 2. 11, Anth. P. 9. 390. (Hence ddeye:vds, dd-yewwds, dAyéw, etc. : cf, also yA@ooaXyos.) adytive [0], Ion. impf. daydveone (ér-) Q. Sm. 4. 416: fut. iv Soph. O. T. 332, etc.: aor. #Ayova Soph., etc.:—Pass,, with fut. med. ddA- yuvodpat (in pass. sense) Id. Ant. 230, Eur. Med. 622: aor. #AyUvOnv: —Trag. Verb, used by Eupol. Ajy. 2, Xen. Apol. 8, and in late Prose, to pain, grieve, distress, twa Aesch,, etc. :—Pass. to feel or suffer pain, be grieved or distressed at a thing, Twi Soph. Ant. 468, etc. ; émi tive ’ Eur. Tro. 172; 7¢ Soph, Ph. 1021: c. part., elowdoved 7’ pAyivOnv Kéap Aesch. Pr. 245. GhSatve, rare po’t. Verb, used only in pres. and impf., except Ep. aor. 3 sing. #Adave Od. Il. citand, (not elsewh. in Hom,), and dAdhoacKe Orph. Lith. 364, cf. év-aAdaive ;—Causal of ddAdjoKxw, to make to grow, nourish, strengthen, péde’ HASave wotmért Kady she filled out his limbs, Od. 18. 70., 24. 368, cf. Aesch. Th. 12; @vpdv GAdaivoucay ey edppo- otvas Id. Pr. 540: ¢o increase, multiply, ds obe edge yA@ooar . . Gd- daiver waxed Id. Th. 557. (From 4/AAA come also dAdjoxe and *ANShwos (a name of Zeus, Method. in E. M. 58. 20): diff. from AAO in éA@aive, etc.; though both prob. come from the older Root AA, v. sub dAgos.) aASqes, ecoa, ev, waxing, increasing, Maxim. ™. Kat. 533. wo, to grow, wax, Aniov GddnoKovTos Il. 23. 599. trans, = dAdaivw, Theocr. 17. 78, Epigt. Gr. 511. : GAS opat, = dAdjoKw, y. sub GAOaivw, and cf. évaddaiver, ‘ rE. 58 GAéa [GA], (A), Ion. GAey, , (An, GdA€opar) an avoiding, escaping, flight, eyyv0 por Odvaros .., ob8° édén Il. 22. 301 (not in Od.): c, gen. shelter from a thing, berod Hes. Op. 543: cf. dAekpn. Ep. word. &Xéa [aA], (B), Ion. dX€q, 1%, warmth, heat, of fire, Od. 17. 23 (not in -l.) ; but more commonly of the sun, év dAéy -yevéo@ai Hipp. Vet, Med, 15; moréecOar mepimdrous év ad. Id. Aér. 285; ev Karareipevos Ar, Eccl. 541; dAéas wai yixous in heat and cold, Plat. Eryx. gor D, cf. Arist. Meteor. 2. 5,17; mv@yos xal adéa Id. Metaph, 5. 2, 7; in pl., Id. Probl. 5. 40, etc.: in late Prose animal heat, Plut. 2. 131 D, 658 C, etc. (From the same Root seem to come én-aAjs, ein (q. v.), though the breathing makes a difficulty in this word.) GXedLo, to be warm, Arist. Probl. 1. 39, de Resp. 4. 93 cf. Actor. GAcaive, aor. dva Ael. V. H. 9. 30, (dAén (B)) to warm, make warm, Hipp. 523 (acc. to Littré), Arist. Probl. 6. 3, P. A. 2. 10, 7. II. intr. to grow warm, be warm, Ar. Eccl. 540; GA. mpos Td Tp Kabnyevn Menand. Incert. 235. GXcavrixés, 7, 6v, fit for warming, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 179. GAéaoGar, dAéacGe, Ep. aor. 1 forms of dAéopat. GAcyewés, 7, dv, Ep. for dayewds, painful, grievous, atyyn, paxn, Ul. 5. 658., 18. 248; elpeoin Od. 10. 78; pepypvépara Pind. Fr. 245: c. ~ troublesome, immot ddeyevol dayhpevat Il. 10. 402. Adv. Q. mM. 3. 557- GAeyifo, Ep. Verb, only used in pres. and impf.: (@Aéyw). To trouble oneself about a thing, to care for, mind, heed, in Hom. (only in Il.) always with a negat., c. gen., rev ovr werarpémp ob8 ddeyiCes Il. 1. 160, al. ; Tév pev ap ove ddéye marhp 11, 80, cf. Hes. Th, 171: absol., 6 & dphpevos ob« ddeyiCe od8 Sera Il. 1 5. 106; in late Ep. c. acc., eye de pay ob dAcyifw Q. Sm. 2. 428; rarely without negat., ds zpla pev tixret, bto exdéme, ev 8 GdeyiCer Musae. ap. Arist. H. A. 6. 6, 1; jpdav ar. C. I. 6280. 42 :—Pass., ode ddeyCdnevos Anth. P. 5. 18. GAeyive, Ep. Verb, used by Hom. only in pres. and impf.: aor. dAé yova Ap. Rh. 1. 394, med. dAeydvaro Emped. 445: (GA¢ya). To mind, heed, care for, Hom. (only in Od.) always c. acc. datra or darras, Gras & ddeyivere dairas find your meals elsewhere, 1. 374; dair’ dAé- yuvov, of invited guests, 13. 23; but, dairas éloas.. dAeyuverv to pre- a a ei for guests, 11. 186; later, SoAoppottyny Gdeyivov h. Hom. erc. 361. : ddéyo, Ep. Verb, used also by Pind, and once in Aesch. (lyr.), only in pres., to trouble oneself, have a care, mind, heed,mostly with negat.: as absol., ob GA. to have no care, heed not, Lat. negligo, Il. 11. 389, Od. 17. 390; KUves ode GAéyovaat careless, reckless.., Od. 19. 154; but without negat., Artal ddéyovot xodoa walk with good heed, ll. 9. 504, II. with a case, 1. c. gen. to care for, ob8’ GAAHAav Gdeyovow Od. 9. 115; 0d yap KiAwmes Aids .. dAéyovow Ib. 275, ef. Simon. 37. 10; Bwydy ddéyovres obdév Aesch. Supp. 752; without negat., Yuyfs ad. rep Ap. Rh. 2. 634, cf. C. I. 6280. 65. 2. rarely c, acc. to heed, regard, respect, Oe@v dmw ov ddéyorres Il. 16. 388, Hes. Op. 251: without a negat., vy@v SmAa.. ddéyovoww take care of, Od. 6. 268, cf. Pind. O, tr (10). 15, 1. 8 (7). 103. IIT. Pass. aréyeoOa év Tit, to be regarded or counted among’, Pind. O. 2. 142. (Commonly deriv. from a copul., Aéyw, to count with, and Pind, in the last passage seems to have taken it in this sense. Hence ddeyi{w, ddeyivw: the connexion with dAeyervds, dd-ye.vés, etc., is more than doubtful.) Gdeewés, 4, dv, (dAéa (B)) Lying open to the sun, warm, hot, xwpn Hdt. 2. 25; opp. to puxewéds, Xen. Cyn. 10, 6; xerdw Id. Symp. 4, 38; GXéq, v. sub adda. ’ Gdens, és, like dAcewés, warm, in the sun, tmvos Soph. Ph. 859 (lyr.) : —so the Mss. read and so the Schol. interprets; but the conj. of Reiske, ddens, is very plausible. eet Gidea, %, (@An) a wandering about, A. B. 376, Hesych. GXcia, },=dXela, like byela for bylea, v. |. Artist. Occ. 2. 4, 2, Hdn, GAectavros, ov, (Acaiva) unmasticated, tpopn Arist. P. A. 3.14, 9- Gdelara, 74, (dAéw) wheaten flour, Od. 20. 108; cf. dAeupov. . 13, C. 1. 2782. 25, al.; v. Schneid, Vitruv. 5. 10, 5. P i rales ark clr hence (cf. anelpes 1), the trainer and teacher in astic schools, Lat. aliptes, lanista, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 6, 7, Polyb. 27.6, 1, C.1. 418, al. 2. metaph. a teacher, rv moAcrucey Plut. Pericl. 4; 7s xaxtas Sext. Emp. M. 1. 298; cf. Wyttenb. Plut. 2. 133 B. éAeurrixés, 4, dv, of or for the ddelarns, trained under him, Plut. 2. 619 A:—% -Kn (sc. Téxv9), the art of training, Tim. Locr. 104 A. Adv. —x@s, like an Gdeinrns, Schol. Ar. Eq. 492. ddeurrés, dv, verb. Adj. of dActpw, anointed, smeared, Clem, Al. 240. G-Aeumros, ov, (Acinw) not left behind, unconquered, minrns, dAnTHS C. 1. 5909, 5912-15, 6883-4. : aa — drecrwp. GXclarpra, 7, fem. of ddcirrys, Lys. ap. Poll. 7. 3; a title of plays by Amphis, Antiphanes, etc, Gheuntpov, f. 1. for éfdAeurrpov, q. Vv. Gels, civa, év, v. sub ciAw I. : GXevrov [a], 74, a cup, goblet, =denas (Ath. 783 A), Xxpuoevov Il. 11. 774, Od. 3. 50, al., Call. Fr. 109: also as masc., ddecos, 6, At. Fr, 521. II. the hip-socket, Marsyas ap. Ath. 479 C; cf. KoTvAn 2. eid %, (GAn) = dAirnya, Suid. , V. sub dAcrnpds. : ears, ov, 6, (GAn) suk who leads or goes astray, a sinner, of Paris and the suitors of Penelope, Il. 3. 28, Od. 20. 121 :—aaAelTys Tivos a Sinner against one, Ap. Rh. 1. 1338:—cf. ddurpos, dAotrys, ddorrds. GAevroupynota, 7), exemption from Accroupyiat, a late word for the Att. drédeia, C. 1. (add.) 4315 2; censured as evreAés by Poll. 8. 156. S G-Aevrotipynros, ov, free from derovpyiat, Lat. immunis, Gd. magav Tay Aecroupyiay Decret. Byz. ap. Dem. 256. 10, cf. Dinarch., ap. Poll. 8+ 156; davpBoros Kai aa. C. I. 2271. 45., 2693 d. 10. ¢ GAeupa, 764, collat. form of sq., Hes. Th. 553 (Mss. dAepap), Hipp. 620. 47, Aesch. Ag. 322, Call. Fr. 12, Q. Sm. 14. 265, C, I. 5953- , Gdeupap, aros, 7d, (dAcipw) unguent, anointing-oil, oil, fat, used in funeral sacrifices, Il. 23. 170, Od. 3. 408, etc.; GAeupap dad xéBpou, dad aiAAtkumplwy oil of cedar, etc., Hdt. 2. 87, 94. _IL. generally, anything for smearing with, hence in Theocr. 7. 147, pitch or resin, to seal wine-jars—Cf. foreg. Gheahatirns dpros, 5, bread baked with oil, Epich. ap. Ath. 110 B. Gherps-Bros, ov, one that lives by anointing, contemptuous word for GAcinrns, Ar. Fr. 578. 2. generally, poor, Philo 2. 537, Hesych. GAeldo, Hdt., Att.: fut. yw (éf-) Eur. 1. A. 1486, Plat.: aor. #Ae~a Hom., Att., Ep. dAeula Od. 12.177: pf. dAnAtpa (a—) Dem. 1243, fin., (€£-) Aristid.:—Med., fut.-ouar Thuc. 4, 68: aor, jAEayny Att., Ep. GA~ Il. 14. 171:—Pass., fut. dAecpOhoopar (€£-) Dem. 792. 43 aor. I jAcipOny Hipp. 514. 6, Plat. Lys. 217 C, (@¢—-) Eur., etc.; but aor. 2 é£-nAigny is read from Mss. by Bekk. in Plat. Phaedr. 258 B, ef, Joseph. A. J. 17.12, 2, Dio C. 55.13: pf. dAmjAcupar Thuc. 4. 68, (€é-, ir) Dem. 791. 13, Xen. Occ. 10, 6.—The pf. forms dAnAepa, GAfAeppat, HAecpa, HAetwpyar occur in Mss., v. Arist. H. A. 5.19, 8., 5- 23, 3, Plut. Marcell. 17, Luc. Pisc. 24 and 36, etc. (From 4/ATII with a prefixed, v. sub Aémros.) To anoint with oil, oil the skin, as was done after bathing, the Act. referring to another, Med. to oneself, Aodaat KéXer Gyepi 7’ Gdcipar Il. 24. 582; but Hom. elsewhere always adds Aira ot Aim’ éAalw (v. sub Alma), navra Noéccaro Kal Aim’ dAeuev Od. 6. 227; Aoeooapéve kat ddrcwapév dia’ édaig Il. 10. 577, cf. 14. I71., 18. 3505 applied to anointing for gymnastic exercises, dima pera Tod yupvacecbar jarctparro Thuc. 1.6; Alva ddcipeabat Id. 4. 68. 2. to supply the oil for the gymnasts, dAepovons ris méAcws C. I. (add.) 1957 g, cf. 2820 A, 3616-17, al. :—Pass., of Gdcupdpevor the youths at the gymnastic schools, those who were in training for the games, Ib 108 b, 256, 1183, al.; dAcl- pecOa mapa 71 to attend a gymnastic school, Arr. Epict. 1. 2, 26; cf. ddelnrns 2. 3. metaph. to prepare as if for gymnastics, to encou- rage, stimulate, Demad. 180. 29, Plat. ap. Diog. L. 4. 6; #Aeper [éav- Tov] én rov KAwooy App: Civ. 2. 16, cf. Plut. Themist. 3: cf. dAetrrns 2. II. like éradeidw in Hom., generally to anoint, daub, plaster, besmear, Lat. linere, ovata ddcia to stop up the ears, Od. 12. 47, 177, 200; dA. aipart Hdt. 3.8; piarw Xen. Oec. 10, 53 yepvbip Plat. Lys. 4 a. III. to blot out, efface, cf. ddoupn IT. ups, €ws, 7), an anointing, Arist. G. A. 5. 5, 5, al. or custom of anointing, Hdt. 3. 22. GAexréperos, ov, (dAdcrwp) of a foul, @a Synes. 167 D. Gdexropwevs, éws, 6, a chicken, Ael. N. A. 7.47. Gerropts [di], (50s, #, fem. of ddéerwp and dAextpuwr, a hen, Epich. 96 Ahr.:—the word was found both in Trag. and Com. (acc. to Phryn. p. 228, ubi Vs Lob.), being used as a generic name, v. Arist. H. A. 5.13, 2., 9-9, 3; Adpraval dd., a small kind, Ib. 6. 1, 3- A-rare form dXex- Tpvovis occurs in Schol. Ar. Nub. 226, where however Suid. dAexropis, ef. Galen, 12. 285; and Ar. introduced a form éXexrpvava, by analogy 6 pete Nub. Pe dexropickos, 6, Dim, of ddéxrwp, a cockerel, Babr. 5. 1., 97. 9- dAeKropd-Aodos, 6, cock’s comb, aohee Plin. H. N. “s 2 che ; adexropo-povia, %}, cock-crow, i.e. the third watch of the night, Aesop. 44 de Furia, Ev. Marc. 13, 35, and Byz, writers, d-Aexros, ov, not to be told, indescribable, Pherecr, Incert. 20, Polyb. 30. 13, 12, etc. G-heerpos, ov, unbedded, unwedded, Soph. Ant. O17, etc.; GAexrp, avuppa yapav QuiAAnpara, much like ydpos dyapos, a marriage that is no marriage, i.e. a lawless, unhallowed marriage, Id. El. 492; aA. (da Eur. Tro. 254 (lyr.); dAexrpa ynpacxew, as Adv., Soph, El. 962. GAextptawa, 7, v. sub ddexropis. dAexrpudveros, ov, of a fowl, kpéas Hipp. 645 A. dXekrpvoviov, 76, Dim. of ddcerpudy, Ephipp. ’OBeA. 1. 8. GAektpvovo-THAys, ov, 6, a poulterer, Poll, 7. 136. Gdextpvovo-rpodos, 6, a cock-feeder, Aeschin, ap. Poll. 7. 135- dAextpvovedys, es, (¢/805) like fowls, Eunap. in Phot. Bibl. 24. adexrpvo-medAns, ov, 6, = ddexrpuovorddns, Lob. Phryn. 669. 2 maa ga or -mwAnriptov, 76, a poultry-market, Phryn. Com. ap. Poll, 7. 135. dAextpudy [a], dvos, 6, a cock, gallus gallinaceus, Theogn. 864, etc., ef, Arist. H. A. 4. 9, 14, etc.; 6 GA. de ’tis cock-crow, Plat. Symp. 2230. ‘IL. 4, =dAexrptawa, a hen, Ar. Nub..663, Fr. 237, Plat. Com. Aaid, 1, Theopomp. Com. Elp. 3, etc. Cf. Gdéxrwp, ddexropis. 2. a method ri ddéeetwp [4] (A), opos, 6, post. form of dAekrpudy, a cock, ws éBdnoe. ad€éxTwp — a7. da, Batr. 191, cf. Pind. O. 12, 20, Simon. 81, Aesch. Ag. 1671, Eum. 861; also in later Prose, Arist. Fr. 271, C. I. 523. 27. Il. a husband, consort, Tzetz. Lyc. 1094, and so perh. in Soph. Fr. 730, (Perh., like dxoirns, ddoxos, from a copul., Aé«erpov.) GXéxrwp (B), opos, %, (a privat., Aéyw) =dAexrpos, Ath. 98 B. GAexw [@)],=aréw, to ward off, adénos meviny Anth. P. 6. 245, ex conj. Salmas. pro dAéyois :—for the fut. dAéfw, etc., v. sub dréfw. Gd-éAarov, 76, salted oil, Galen. GAfparos, dAendrws, Dor. for jAeu-. GXev and dA, v. sub eiAw UT. GXet-alOpios, ov, screening from the chill air, Soph. Fr. 120. *AXctavipitw, to be on Alexander's side, Apolloph. ap. Ath. 251-D. *Aketavipioris, 08, 6, a partisan of Alexander, Plut. Alex. 24. *Adetavipo-KéAak, axos, 6, a flatterer of Alexander, Ath. 538 F. GAé-avBpos, ov, (dvnp) defending men, médA«pos Inscr. ap. Diod. 11. 14. II. ‘the usual name of Paris in Il., cf. Aesch. Ag. 61, 363. ieee es, (e(50s) Alexander-like, Menand. Incert. 39. GAckavepia, #7, shelter from wind, Polyb. Mai. 2. 451. Gdet-dvepos, ov, keeping off the wind, Od. 14. 529, Philo. 1. 666. GAEnpa, aros, 75 (GA&EwW) a defence, guard, help, Aesch. Pr. 479; GA. mpos tt a defence against .., Dion. H. 7. 13. aXe§-tvwp, opos, 6, aiding man, as the name of a physician, Paus. 2. 11, 6, in Dor. form —dywp. GAgEnors, ews, 7, a keeping off, defence, mpds GA. rpanécOac Hat. 9. 18. 2. a helping, assistance, Hipp. 1279. 14. GAcEqretpa, 4, Anth. P. 9. 764, Nonn.; fem. from GheEnrnp, jipos, 6, one who keeps off, Lat. averruncus, dd. waxns stemmer of battle, Il. 20. 396; Aoipod aA. a protector from plague, Ap. Rh. 2. 519; kaxav Epigr. Gr. 831. 13;—rare in Prose, rais tarpiow ddegn- Thpes eivar Xen, Occ. 4, 3. II. as Adj., updos dA. Opp. H. 4. 42. GdeEnrhptos, a, ov, fit or able to keep off, defend or help, esp. as epith. of the gods, like Lat. Averrunci, Zebs dX. Aesch. Theb. 8; ¢vAov dA. a club for defence, Eur. H. F. 464. 2. ddegnrhpiov (sc. Pappaxov), 76, a remedy, medicine, Hipp. Acut. 393: @ protection, Xen. Eq. 5, 6; dA Lg oneres a charm against .., Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 43 GA. votoor . I. 1897. adetqrwp, opos, 6, =dArctnrhp, Zed dde~Hrop, Soph. O. C. 143. Gdett-dpy [ap], , (dpa) she that heeps off a curse, or (from”Apns) she that guards from death and ruin, Hes. Op. 462; dA. papvos a wand that served as an amulet, Nic. Th. 861.—The masc. dAefvdpys occurs in Paus. 9. 25, 6, cf. Hesych. Gdeki-Bedepvos, ov, keeping off darts, Auth, P. 6. 81. Gkcti-yapos, ov, shunning marriage, Baxxat Nonn. D. 40. 541. Gdeti-cdixos, ov, keeping off ill or mischief, uhvs Il. 10. 20, cf. Hes. Op. 123, Paus. 8. 41, 8: c. gen., dipys dd. Anth. P. 6. 170; as epith. of Heracles, Luc. Alex. 4, etc., cf. Schol. Ar. Nub. 1375; of Hermes, Ar. Vesp. 422. GAeki-Aoyos, ov, promoting or supporting discourse, ypdypara Critias (Fr. 1. 9) ap. Eust.1771. 44 (from Ath. 28 ubi Schweigh. AegiA.), A. B. 382. ddcti-pBpotos, ov, protecting mortals, Aéyxm Pind. N. 8.51; dA. Top- mai sacred processions to shield men from ill, Id. P. 5.122. dXett-popos, ov, warding off death, rproot adX., i.e. Apollo, Artemis, Athena, Soph. O. T. 164. adetpov, 76, = ddrcénrnpiov, Nic. Th. 702; also dAéfvov, Ib. 805, Al. 4. ddckus, ews, 7), help, E. M. 59. 22. II. Kao dAcgw rov “Hpaxdréa vopiCovor Aristid. 1. 60. GAcki-dappanos, keeping off poison, acting as an antidote, pavins against it, Hipp. 1274. 19. II. dAcgupappaxoy, 74, an antidote, Lat. remedium, Plat. Polit. 279 C, Theophr. H. P. 9.15, 73 “AAegepdp- Haka, title of a poem by Nic. 2. a charm, spell, "Epéota rots yapovow .. Aéywv ad. Menand. Maid. 2. 3. generally, a remedy, twés against a thing, Plat. Legg. 957 D. ddett-xopos, ov, helping or favouring the chorus, A@jvaC.1.511.1.17. Gdéw [Gi], Ep. inf. dreféuevar, -évev Hom.; fut. ddrefqow Id.: aor. opt. drefqoee Od. 3. 346 :—Med., fut. drcejoopar Hdt. 8, 81, 108.— Besides these tenses (formed as if from dAeféw), we find others formed from aAéko, fut. dAgtw, aor. HAega (vy. sub dm-addgw) :—Med, fut. ddré- fopa Soph. O. T. 171, 539, Xen. An. 7. 7, 3: aor. ddéfacGar Il, Hdt., and Xen. An. I. 3, 6., 3. 4, 33) 5+ 5, 21. Cyr. I. 5, 13 :—for the aor. 2 dAaadxe, GAKabeiv, v. sub voce, (For 4/AAK, vy. sub dAadxe.) To ward or keep off, turn away or aside, like dpvvw, and constructed like it ;—c. acc. rei, Zeds 74 y' dAekhoee Od. 3. 346; c. acc. rei et dat. pers., Aavaoiow drefhoev kaxdy jap will ward it off from them, Il. 9. 251, cf. 20. 315; GAAHAas . . ddegéuevar pdvov aindy 17. 365, etc. :—then c. dat. pers. only, to assist, defend, ddeféyev GdApAowow Il. 3. 9, cf §- 779, al., Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, 2; absol. to lend aid, Il. 1. 590.—Med., adé- fac0a to keep off from oneself, Lat. defendere, ddégac0at . . kdvas 75% nai dvdpas Il. 13. 475, cf. Hdt. 7. 207; also, dAéfacOat wept ru or Tivos Ap. Rh. 4. 551, 1488: absol. to defend oneself, Ul. 11. 348., 15. 565, Archil. 66, Hdt. 1. 211., 2. 63, al., Soph. O. T. 539, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 133 also c. dat. instrum., 008 & ppoyridos éyxos, @ Ts dnéferat Soph. O. T. 171. 2. in Med., also, to recompense, requite, Tods eb Kat kakas mo.obvras ddetdpevos Xen. An. I. 9, 11.—Soph. alone of the Trag. has the word, except in compd. dm; and Xen, is the chief authority in Att. Prose. II. =dAéyw, to take care of, protect, only in the derivs, GAefis, dAegi-uBporos, —xopos. oe dAgopat [HA], contr. dAedpar Theogn. 575, also dAewopar Od. 24. 29, Hes. Op. 5333 part. dAedyevos Simon. Iamb. 7. 61: impf. adéovro (é-) Il. 18. 586:—but chiefly used by Hom. in aor., v. infr.; inf. dA€ac@ar, -elacGat Hes, Op. 732, 503; part. dAevdpevos Od, 9. 277, Theogn. 400. 4 59 (Prob, from same Root as dAn, dAdopat : cf. ddevw, dAvonw, br-adevoua, bn-addiono.) Ep. Dep., to avoid, shun, c. acc. rei, éyxea 3 GAAHAoW Gdedspeba Il, 6. 220; HAevaro xdAneov &yxos 13. 184; euov éyxos dAevat 22. 285; dAevaro xijpa pédawvay 3. 360; Ards 3 drcdhpeda phy 5. 34; oppa 70 Kiros .. dh€arTo 20, 147; kakdv.., 7d Kev obmis . . dA€aiTO Od. 20, 368; pd@ous pev tmeppiddous dAgacbe 4. 774; rarely c. acc. pers., Oeovs 7) detdipev 7) dAéacPa g. 274 :—c. inf. to avoid doing, Ai@ov & ddgacOa émavpeiv Il. 23. 340; ddeveras (Ep. for —nrat) Hrepomever Od. 14. 400. 2. absol. to flee for one’s life, flee, rov pev ddevd- Hevoy Tov 5 xrdpevoy Il. 5. 28; obre .. puyéety bivar' or’ GAéacOan 13. 43603 wh mus. . ddéyra Od. 4. 396. GXeds, dv, =dAceuwds, Hesych., E, M. IT. v. sub Aeds It, aXedrys, nTos, }, (GAjs) an blage, like d@p , Galen. Ge6-ppwv, ov, gen. ovos,=Homer’s ppévas #Aeds, Hesych., E. M. 59, 45. Cf. jAeds. G-Aer{Swros, ov, without scales, 7a weddxn Arist. P. A. 4. 13, 233 and so Schneider, for the faulty form Aeros, in Ael. N. A. 12. 27. &-Aémorros, ov, not scaled, unscaled, Archestr. ap, Ath. 311 B. unpeeled: of flax, not hackled, Schol, Ar. Lys. 737- ddeors, ews, 9, (dAéw) a grinding, Geop. 2. 32, cf.dAnots: also ddeo- pds, 6, restored from Mss, for dAeorayv in Joseph. A. J. 3. 10, 5. Gdeopa, aros, 76, meal, Tzetz. adecréov, verb. Adj. from dé, one must grind, Diosc. 5. 103. GXérns, ou, 6, a grinder, v. sub dvos VII. 2. aderds, 6, a grinding, Plat. Anton. 45; cf. dAgrds. thing ground, meal, Eust. Opusc. 260. 35, etc. dderpeva, fut. edow, strengthd. from ddéw, to grind, Od. 7. 104. Gde-rpiBiivos [aA ..T], 6, (rpiBw) that which grinds or pounds, a pestle, Ar. Pax 259, 265, 269. , dAetpts, (Sos, , a female slave who grinds corn, Lat. molitrix, yuh; dderpis Od, 20. 105. 2. at Athens, one of the noble maidens who prepared the meal for the offering-cakes, Ar. Lys. 643, Eust. 1885. 9. GAetpo-1d8t0v, 76, the constellation Orion, Petav. Uranol. p. 258. Gdetav, Gros, 5, = dAérns, dd. dvos, the upper mill-stone, v. Ovos VII. 2; also GAerwy alone, Dieuch. ap. Ath. 263 A, Eust., etc. dieu, v, sub dAevoua. aneeainnn pros, 6, bread of wheaten flour (dAevpa), Diph. Siphn. ap. Ath. 115 C. Geupo-OyKn, 77, a flour-bin, Hesych, GAcupo-pavtetov, 74, divination from flour, Oenom. ap. Eus. P. E. 219. GAeupé-pavtis, ews, 5, one that divines from flour, Clem. Al. Io. fin., Hesych., etc.; as epith. of Apollo, Lob. Aglaoph. 2. 815: cf. dAgrrépavrts. Gdeupov [a], 7, but mostly in pl. dXeupa (dAéw), = Homer's dAciara, wheaten flour, distinguished from dAgera, Hdt. 7. 119; &« piv Tay KpiOay GAgura ar i é« 88 r&v mupay GArevpa Plat. Rep. 372 B, cf, Legg. 849 C, Xen. An. 1. 5, 6, Arist. Probl. 1. 37 ;—in sing., Ar. Fr. 141, Sotad, “Adevp, I. 24, Arist. Probl. 21. 1. 2. generally, meal, Gx. xpl@vov Diosc. 1. 94, ete. : dAcupo-rroréw, to make into flour, E. M. 62. 54: —movta, %, Eust. GAcups-ryaI8, ews, 7), (07)0w) a flour-sieve, Poll. 6. 74, A.B. 382. the flour sifted, fine flour, Suid, GdevphSns, es, (elds) like flour, Galen. GAevw, used rarely by Trag. in lyr, passages as the Act. of dAevopae (v. sub GAgouar), to remove, keep far away, Lat. averruncor, syncop. imp. dAev, for dAeve, Aesch. Pr. 568; fut. dAedow Soph. Fr. 825; aor. imper., dAevoov dvdpav UBpw Aesch. Supp. 528, cf. Theb. 141; 1a Geol . . xaxdv ddcdoare Ib. 87. aa Géw [a]: impf. #Aovy Pherecr. “Ayp. 1: aor. #A€eca Id. Incert. 18, Hipp., etc., Ep. dAecoa (kar—) Od.: pf. dAnAexa Anth, P. 11. 251 :—Pass., pf. dAnAeopa: Hat. 7. 23, Thuc. 4. 26 (where however Bekk. GAjAeuat; and that this is the true Att. form appears from the metre, if rightly given by Meineke, in Amphis P'uvaucop. 1): aor. HA€oOnY Diosc. 1.173. To grind, bruise, pound, ward mupdv ddecoay (which properly belongs to Karadtw), Od, 20.109; HAovy 7a avria Pherecr, |.c.; Bios dAnAepévos a civilised life, in which one uses ground corn and not raw fruits, v, Meineke Amphis l. c.; GAe, pvAa, dda grind, mill, grind! a song in Plut. 2. 157 E, Bgk. Carm. Pop. Lyr. 43. (From 4/AA come also ddAjOw, ddivw, ddetata, dA€eTos, GAevpoy (but not dAgurov), ddodw, dAws, ddan: Buttm, and others connect this Root with FEA in eiAw, which view is supported by the form ovAai (barley-groats). But there is no trace of the F in ddéw and its derivs.; and the cognate words in Lat, and others point to the loss of an initial M, so that the orig. Root may have been MAA, MOA, Lat. molo, mola, etc. ; v. sub pvAn.) *é)éw, only used in Med. dAéopat, q. v. édewpn, Att. —pd, 7, (dAdouar) avoidance, escape, Il. 24.216; ad, Ta eipécbat escape, relief, Hdt. 9. 6. 2. c, gen., a means of avoiding, a defence or shelter from, dniwy dvdpOv ax., of a palisade, IL 12. §7; of a breastplate, 15. 533; oxeviy BeAéwy ad, (mock heroic verse), Ar. Vesp. 613; used also by Arist., 7?)v wept 7d cpa aA., of armour, P. A. 4. 10, 2g,.cf. 4. 5, 23;,H. A. I. 1, 3X5 9.8, 1, ete. adehoow: vy. Ads II. adn [a], %, wandering or roaming without home or hope of rest, Od. 10. 464, al.: &pyerae 3° dAn a troop of wandering ghosts (Hesych, G0pocpa), Soph. Fr. 693. 2. wandering of mind, distraction, Lat, error mentis, Eur. Med. 1285, Plat. Crat. 421 B. II. act., dAae Bporay Sicoppor, of storms suck as keep men wandering without haven and rest, Aesch. Ag. 195. (From the same Root seem to come dAvw, dAvoow, etc.; cf. dAvw.) én [a], %, the Lat. ala, a squadron of horse, C. 1. 3991, al. 4%, #, only used in pl. dAai, Lat. salinae, salt-works, ddal Tov dpuxray Il. II. the It. _——. | 60 aAnyds — aces. a@yv Strabo 561 (as restored by Meineke); “Adus . . dvduaara: ard Tov ‘dda Gs mapappet (the gend. shows it is not from GAs) Id. 546; so dAais is restored for dAAats, Id. 831 ; dAds, dAais for GAAas, GAAats in Dion. H. 3. 41; and no doubt ray dAd@y belongs to this word, not to dAs, Ib. 2. 55. Gh-nyos, dv, carrying salt, Plut. 2. 685 E. G-Anbipyntos, ov, free from lethargy, ever wakeful, C. I, 2804, Hesych., etc. GA7Pea [GA], 4, Dor. dAdGera; Ep, also Aneta, but the forms aAn- Gein, —ntn in Mss. of Hadt. are: false, v. Dind. de Dial. Hdt. p. xi: (4An- Ons): I. truth, opp. to a lie, or to mere appearance : Zs in Hom., and Pind., only as opp. to a die, and Hom. mostly has it in phrase dAndeinv xaradégat, Il. 24. 407, al.; GA. dwoemeiy 23. 361; maidds wacay dd, pvOeia@at to tell the whole truth about the lad, Od. TI. 507, cf. Pind. N. 5. 31; so too in Hdt. and Att., dmAG@ ydp éore Ths aX. &m Aesch. Fr. 173, cf. Eur. Phoen. 472; xpao0ar 7H GA. Hat. 1. 116 ; eimac rH dA. Id. 6, 69; 4 GA. wept twos Thuc, 4. 122, Soph. Tr. 91; aX, éxetv to be true, Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 1: also in ph, rats dA. yphoba Isocr. p. Ig0 A; Tas dA, Aéyery Menand, ’Agp. 3, al. :—’AAOea was the title of a work by Protag., Plat, Theaet. 161 C, 162 A, Crat. 391 C. 2. in Att. also opp. to appearance, truth, reality, #) dX. Tov mpax0évraw Antipho 11g. 21; Tav Epyaw 7) GA. Thuc. 2. 41; pyphpara GAndeias Plat, Polit. 300 D:—in adverb. usages, 7H dAnOela in very truth, Thuc. 4. 120, etc.; so, Tais dAnGelarovy Philem. Incert. 40 a, cf. Babr. 75. 20; rarely (without the Art.) dAn@etq; as Plat. Prot. 343 D ;— also with Preps., én’ dAnOetas in truth and reality, Dem. 323. 26; én Tis GAnOeias Kal Tod mpayparos Id. 538. 4; but, éw ddndela for the end or sake of truth, Aesch. Supp. 628, Ar. Pl. 891; also according to truth and nature, Theocr. 7. 44;—per’ ddnOetas Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 27, Dem. 19. 1;—xard thy ddr. Isocr. 242 A, etc.; ear’ GAndeay Arist. Pol. 3. 6, 6, etc. ;—¢dy dAnOeiqg Aesch, Ag. 1567 ;—mpds dAjP«ay Diod. 5. 67, etc, 8. in Polyb. real war, as opp. to exercise or parade, 5. 63, 13, etc. 4. the true event or realisation of a dream or omen, Hat. 3- 64, Damon ap. Schol. Ar. Pl. 1003; ef. dAnOfs I. 3. II. the character of the arnOhs, truthfulness, sincerity, frankness, candour, Hdt. I. 553 dAa@eia ppeva Aesch, Ag. 1550; cf. Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 12., 4.7- III. the symbol of truth, a sapphire ornament worn by the Egyptian high-priest, Diod. 1. 48 and 75, Ael. V. H. 14. 34: so of the Thummim, Lxx. levers, ews, %,=dAnOea I, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 394- GAnYeurts, od, 6, a truthful, candid man, Max. Tyr. 21. 6. “ddnPeurixés, 4, dv, truthful, frank, candid, Arist. Eth. N. 4.7. Adv. ~Kis, Eust. 385. 6, etc. 2 GAnVevw, fut. edow Xen. Mem. 1.1, 5, al.i—to be dAnOys, to speak truth, Aesch. Theb. 562, Hipp. Progn. 42, Plat. Rep. 589 C; mept 7 Id. Theaet. 202 B; and with neut. Adj., dA. av7a to speak truth in all things, Batr, 145 TOAAG GA. Xen. An. 4. 4, 153 so also, Tas béea Huépas 7Andevoe he rightly foretold.., Ib. 5. 6, 18; GA. Tods éraivous to prove their praises ¢rue, Luc. Indoct, 20. 2. of things, to be or prove true, onueia Hipp. Progn. 46:—Arist. often uses the word ; in Act. of reasoners, to arrive at the truth, Metaph. 3. 5, 2, al.; in Pass. of argu- ments, to be in accordance with truth, Top. 5. 4, 2 sq-, al.; fut. med. in same sense, Eth. N. 1. 10, 7, al.; GAnOeveo@ar xara Tivos to be truly predicated of .., 1d. Metaph. 3. 6, 10:—Med. in act. sense, fo speak truth, Xen, Cyr. 4. 6, 10 Sree ote pws we read énl rovrors GAn- Oevopéevors on the fulfilment of these conditions). A aAndis [a], es theohe, és, i Aas 58 GAnbes 7d pt) ANOov, said Heraclit.) :—unconcealed, and so true, real, as opp. to false, or to apparent : I. in Hom., as opp. to Wevdys, in phrases dAnBea pu0jcacbat, eimeiv, d-yopevav, ddnbes enorety Il. 6. 382, Od. 13. 54 3. 254, 247, al.; in Hadt,, and Att., 7d dAnés, by Trag. crasis Tad0 s, lon. rwAnbés (Hdt. 6. 68, 69), or Ta GAnOH, by crasis TaANO}, etc. 5 aAndét 23 XphicGa Hat. 1. 14, etc. ; GAnPeorarn mpdpacrs Thuc. 1. 23. 2. of persons, truthful, frank, honest, in Hom, only once, GAnOhs yun Il. 12. 433; so, GA. vdos Pind. O. 2. 167 ‘ martyyopos Aesch. Theb. 439; GA, «perms Thuc. 3. 56; olvos da, gore ‘in vino veritas,’ Plat. Symp. 217E, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 4.7; GAnOes elvar def 7) ceuvdv. ee Incert. 478. B. of oracles, ¢rue, unerring, Lat. certus, dhabea @axoy Pind, P. 11, 11, cf. Eur. Ion 1537, Soph. Ph. 9933 of dreams, Aesch. Theb. 692; cf. dAj0eaT. 4. II. of qualities or events, true, real, gidos Eur. Or. 414; GA. 70 mpax6éy Antipho - 15. 2. realising itself, coming to fulfilment, dpa Aesch. Theb. oA 4 a Eum. 796; and y. dAn&vés. III. Ady. ddnOas, so truly, Simon, 5, Hdt. 1. 11, al., Aesch. Supp, 310, etc. b. reali “9 actually, in reality, -yévos réBe Znvés ear dd. Ib. 5853 GA. ovbev etnnacpéva Id. Ag. 1244; so Thuc. 1. 22, etc.; 7hy dAndes fer (sc. ovaav) Antiph. Tprr. 1. 6;—also, ds dAnO@s Eur. Or. 730, Plat. Phaedr, 63 A, etc.; } wev yap ds dAnOGs phrnp Dem. 563. 33 oad GAndéws as if really, Hdt. 3. 1553 so also, of GAndEi Ab-yw Bacrrées really, Id, I. 120. 2. also neut. as Ady., proparox. GAnOes ; itane? indeed? really? in sooth? ironically, Soph. O. T. 350, Ant. 758, Eur. Cycl. 241, Ar. Ran. 840, Av. 174; cf. éreds 11:—but 7) ddndés in very truth, really and truly, Lat. revera, Plat. Phaedo 102 B, etc.; so, 7d arov Thue. 7. 67. f as ees , Dep. whaoeta Hat. 1.136., 3. 72, Alciphro 3. 39, 59 — Act. Gdn@ito only in Plut. 2. 230 B. fe GAnPtvo-Aoyla, #, a speaking truth, Plat. ap. Poll. 2. 124, Polyb. GAnPivés, 7, dv, agreeable to truth: 1. of persons, truthful, trusty, Xen. An. 1.9,17,Dem. 113.27. 2. of things, real and true, genuine, opp. to apparent or sham, Plat. Rep. 499 ©, ete. ; ixévs Amphis Aevx. Z 1; méAayos Menand. ‘App. 1: 7a GA. real objects, opp. to 7a. yeypapupéeva, Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 4; so of persons, és dA. dvdp’ dwoBhvac to turn out a ‘enuine man, Theoer. 13. 15 :—Adv. —vas, truly, really, Isocr. 111 B, lat., etc.; (Av GA. to be really alive, Plat. Tim. 19 B; da. yeydunner ; ae Pid. 1. huswinice (Far caee ywota, 7), (yv@var) knowledge of truth, Dion. Areop. inveo ete és, Sa truth, Hesych. : Ghn96-pavris, 6, %), prophet of truth, Aesch, Ag. 1341; cf. Kaxdpavris. AAnPopd0éw, to speak truth, Democr. ap. Stob. 140. 26. GAn96-p090s, ov, speaking truth, Democr. p. 627 ed, Gal. Ghn90-mrovéw, to make or prove true, 7 Euthym. GX0-opkéw, to swear truly, Chrysipp. ap. Stob. 196. 58; v. émopxew. GAnPoowvn, 7, post. for dAjbaa, Fheogn. 1226. GAn06rHs, ros, 7), =dANVea, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 472. GAnPoupyns, és, (*épyw) acting truly, Heracl. Alleg. Hom, 67. a [@], later form of the Att. dAéw, only used in pres. (and impf., Lxx), Theophr. C. P. 4. 12, 13, Diod. 3.13, Anth. P. 11.154. V. Meineke Com. Gr. 2. 285. *Adnrov rediov, 75, (dAn), lit. the land of wandering, in Lycia or Cilicia, Kar mediov 7d *AAtpoy clos dAGTO, . . maTOV oyeny ddecivwv (where there is a double play on dAdro, dAceivay), Il. 6. 201, cf. Hdt. 6. 95. GANS, ov, (Ajiov) without corn-lands or fields, poor in lands, opp. to modvAmuos, Il. 9. 125, 267. G\nKvo-meHAqs, ov, 6, (Lat. halec) a dealer in fish-pickle, C. 1. 9185. GdyKros, ov, (Ajyw) unceasing, C. I. 6303 (postulante metro); cf. G@AANKTOS. GAnAeka, GAAepar or -eopar, v. sub dAéw, to grind. GAnAtha, GARAypar, v. sub drcipar. ’ GAnpa [aA], aros, 74, (dAéw) fine meal: used metaph. by Soph. of a Jine-witted, wily knave, such as Ulysses (like mauméAnua, tpippa), Aj. 381, 390 (lyr) :—cf. AdAnua. GAjpevar, GAfjvat, v. sub eiAw IIL. ala %, (@An) a wandering about, Dion. P. 716: in pl., Ap. Rh. 2. 1264. Dieter [a], ovos, 5, %, (dAdopar) a wanderer, rover, Gdjpoves dvdpes Od. 19. 74; of planets, Anth. P. 9. 25; and absol., Od. 17. 376. Ep. word. GAné, nos, 6, a kind of pulse, Alex. Trall. &-AnTros, ov, not to be laid hold of, hard to catch, Plut., etc. ; in Comp., GAnrrérepos less amenable, Thuc. 1. 37, 82, 143. II. incom- prehensible, Plut. Nic. 11, al. EII. in Stoic philosophy dAnrra are things not to be made matter of choice, opp. to Anwrd. Gdns, és, Ion. word equiv. to Att. dOpdos, thronged, crowded, in a mass, Lat. confertus, Hdt. and Hipp. ; either in pl., ds dAées e’qoay of “EXAnves Hat. 9. 15, cf. 1. 196., 3. 13, al.; or with collective nouns, GAjs yevo- pévn waca % “EAs 7.157; drs éov 6 orpards Ib. 236; adéot piv .., opp. to évi 8% éxdorw.. 4. 184; Kara pev va .., dddes B.. 7. 1043 XpEovrat Empophuacte . . ode ddéot not all put on table at once, 1. 133: —to this word Gottl. refers Hes. Op. 491, dAéa Aéoyny the crowded hall, where others take dAéa = dAcewdv. Adv. —éws, Hipp. 604. 49. (From 4/°AA, akin to FEA in efAw, cf. aor. 2 pass. édAnv, GAjvat: hence also deAAqs, doAAhs, GAs, adit [a], ddia [aA], praia.) [@, as appears from Hes. 1. c., if tightly referred to this word, but at all events from Call. Fr. 86, and dAi¢w.] adqors, veg Shae of the course of the sun, Arat. 19. » (dAew) a grinding, Achmes Onir. ; Dp. Q. a & 4 Onir. 194, Geop. 9. 19, ddnopes, 5, (dAéw) a grinding, crushing, Ignat. Rom. §. G-Ayjorevtos, ov, unpillaged, Joseph. A, J. 18. 9, 4, Arr, Epict. 4. 1, 93. G-hyoros, ov, v. sub Gdactos, F GAnrela, Dor. GAGreia, }, a wandering, roaming ; SvomAdvos dda- “rap Aesch. Pr. goo (lyr.) ; Gdareia Bedrov Taratppov Eur. Hel. 523, ch. 934+, GAynrevo, fut. ow Eur. Heracl, 515 :—to be an dAnrns, to wander, roam about, mostly of beggars, Od. 17. 501, al.; but also of hunters, 12. 330: of exiles, Eur. |. ¢., Hipp. 1048, etc. adqrn [i], ov, Dor. dddras, a, 6; voc. dAfjra Soph. O. C. 1096, Dor. dddra tb. 165: (dAdopat). A wanderer, stroller, rover, vagabond, i ee — ay in Od., and always of beggars (17. 420, al.); . di vic va sere Ag. 1282, Cho, 1042, Soph. O. C. 50, 746, eed aia “6 i alge ie Haxp@v ddAdray révev one who Aas Bios adtrns Hae sd op ‘ Aj, 888. _ 2. as Adj. vagrant, roving, sy Segre ws ie as so fem. dA¥jrts, Sos, as the name of a song dAnro-ad4s é like ist, Fr. 472, Poll. 4.55, Hesych.s.v.; cf. é&pa 11. » €, meal, meal-coloured, Hipp. Coac. 217. hoe meal, flour, (cf. édevpor), Hipp. Art. 802, Rhinthon ap. GAnrés, 4, powt. for ddrerés, mill, Babr. 29. 1. GAqrvs, vos, 4, Ion. for dy, Call. Fr. 2 aNGata, %, wild mallow, marsh mallow’ ‘Theophe HP. 9. 15, 5 —as prop. name, Ill. 9. 555. f "a Cashier at aea “ appertgeing heal, Lyc. 582: fut. dA@now Nic. Th, 587: aor. HAOnca red? digs: 112 :—Pass. to become whole and sound, pres., émjyv 7d 3 oy é atant, Hipp. 472. 4: Ep. impf. or aor. dA@ero xeip Il. 5: dion). Hoge hes Sm. 9. 475 (where perh. dAdopévn is better, Hi P re A > Nona (dm—) Il. 8. 405: aor. GAOcaOHvar (cvv-) a tak 19 2 D (ch. dxGecOjvae from ax@opat) :—later aor. med. mrOnoapny Poeta de Herb. 44: cf. aegis. (With 4/AAO, cf. Skt. ardh (to thrive), ardhukas (thriving), Za. ared (to grow).) cis GA. émpd@n was sold to grind in the GNGekts, ews, H, a healing, cure, Hipp. Fract, 758, Art. 800 (where arbevs — arivdyars. 61 Galen. d@eAgis), cf. Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 2 :—a fut. med. adOeEopar (as if from *dAGéocw) =GAGjoopat, occurs in Caus. M. Diut. 2. 8. GNevs, des, 5, a healer, physician, Hesych. GAOHes, coca, ev, healing, wholesome, Nic. Th. 84, 645. aMeoripia, rd, remedies, Nic. Th. 493.” GOqoKw or dMioKw, = ddAdaivw, Hipp. 472. 31. Gos, «os, 76, a healing, medicine, E. M., Hesych. GXia, Ion. -n [GA-, v. sub ddAns], 7%, an assembly of the people, in Dor. states, answering to the Att. é«#Anota, as at Sparta, dA. cvAAéyew Hdt. 7. 134; at Byzantium, Decret. ap. Dem. 255. 21; at Corcyra, C. I. 1841-5; in Sicily and Magna Graecia, Inser. Sicil. ib. 5475-91, Tab. Heracl. ib. 5774. 118., 5775. 10: cf. dAiacpa, ddtata, doAAfs, Hraia. II. Hdt. uses the word generally, dAiny moreta@a, at Miletus, 5. 29; at Thebes, Ib. 79; of the Persians, 1. 125. GAva [cA], %, (GAs) a mortar for pounding salt, a salt-cellar, Archipp. “Hpaka, 6, Strattis Kino. 2; ddudv rpumay to clear out the salt-cellar, a mark of extreme poverty, (as Persius, digito terebrare salinum), Call. Ep. 51. 1, where however it is written parox. dAtn. ‘GAtddys, ov, 6, (GAs) a seaman, Soph. Aj. 880 (lyr.). Ss, poét. —aleros, 6, the sea-eagle, prob. the osprey, falco haliaétus L., Eur. Fr. 637, Ar. Av. 891, Arist. H. A. 9. 32. aAv-a4s,-és, (dnp) blowing seaward, only in Od. 4. 361, cf. Nitzsch ad 1. Gdvata, 7,=dAcd, #Acaia, at Epidamnus and Tarentum, Arist. Pol. 5. I, 9, Hesych. Avakés, 7, dv, Dor. for jAraxds. GAt-avOqs, és, properly sea-blooming, hence =GAumdpqupos, bright pur- ple, Anth. P. 5. 228., 7. 705. dAuapés, dy, (diAs) salted, Bust. 1506. 61. GAtds, ddos, 7, (GAs) of or belonging to the sea: ddtds (sc. ebpBa), }, a Fishing-boat or bark, Arist.H.A. 4.8, 12, Moschioap, Ath. 208 F, Diod. 3. 21. Gduas, v. dAcs sub fin. eee 76, (dda) a decree, Bovdas Inscr. Sicil. in C. I. 5475. 5, cf. ~76, -9I. aNabeta, Dor. jAvaorhs. -GMlacros, ov, (Ard¢opar) unbending, unabating, not to be stayed or turned, paxn, bpyados, ydos Il. 14. 57., 12. 471., 24. 760; méA€uor 3 @Xlacrov eyeipe 20. 31; GA. avin Hes. Th. 611; neut. as Adv., pn &Xiacrov dbdpeo nor mourn incessant, Il. 24. 549; and in same sense, piv adlacros ppicoe Eur. Hec. 85. II. of persons, undaunted, Eur. Or. 1479.—Ep. word, used twice by Eur. in lyric passages. 4-A\Pdveros [av], ov, not honoured with incense, Plat. Com. Wor. 1. GXl-Barros, ov, dipped in the sea, drowned therein, Nic. Al. 618 [where &Ai- in arsi]. GhiBas, avros, 5, a dead body, corpse, Hippon. 102 ; évepot al dal- Barres Plat. Rep. 387 C; cf. Schol. Ar. Ran. 188, 196. 2. the dead river, i. e. the Styx, Soph. Fr. 751, cf. 831. 8. dead wine, i.e. vinegar, €Bnfay olov (v. 1. olvov) adiBavra mivovres Call. Fr. 88 ; vy, E. M. 63. 52. (Nothing is known of the origin of the word; for the notion of the Gramm. that it properly means dry, withered (a privat. and ArBas) is refuted by the fact that the quantity is G@A/Bas. Hesych, cites a Lacon. word d«yad:Bap = xpaBBatos, which may be related.) 4A(Baros, ov, Dor. for #AiBaros. Gd-Bidts, és,=ddAlBarros, wodvdova chpab’ dduBadh restored. in Aesch. Pers. 275 (lyr.), for dAiSova o, moAvBapy. GA PSvw [0], Acol. for *aAcdUw, to sink or submerge in the sea, vias Gi Bddover Call. Fr. 269: to hide, aor. dAiBStcaca Lyc. 351. Perh. it should be written da? 66-. 4XL-Bpexros, ov, washed by the sea, Anth. P. 7. 501, Nonn. GAC-Bpopos, ov, murmuring like the sea, Nonn. D. 43. 385. GXi-Bpoxos, ov, =ddAiBpexros, Ap. Rh. 2. 731. GAi-Bpwros, ov, swallowed by the sea, Lyc. 760; also 4A(-Bpws, eros, Id. 443. G\lySouTos, ov, post. for dAiSovmos, Opp. H. 5. 423, Nonn. Gdt-yelrav, ov, gen. ovos, near the sea, Ep. Hom. 4. Gdi-yevas, és, sea-born, of Aphrodité, Plut. 2. 685 E. : GAtyKvos [a], ov, resembling, like, dd. dorépt wad@ Il. 6. 401; GA, adavaroow Od. 8. 174; GA. ipwecow C. I. 6235. 3 ;—but the compd. évaAlyxtos is more freq.—Ep. word, used once by Emped. 138 and Aesch. Pr. 449 dvetpdrow ddlyeio poppatow. (Of uncertain deriv. : perh. akin to , WAtKos.) ; a-Aryt-yAwooos, ov, with no clear-toned voice, not voluble, Timo ap. Sext. Emp. M. 9. 57. . GAt-Bivas, és, sea-tost, Dion. P. go8. GX{-Bovos, ov, sea-tost, v. sub dAiBapys. . 4At-Soumros, ov, sea-r ding, of Poseidon, Orph. H. 17. 4: cf. dAly5-. EAL-Bpopos, ov, running over the sea, Nonn. D. 43. 281. ddtela, 7%, (GAceds) Jishing, Arist. Pol. 1, 8, 7, Oec. 2. 4, 2, Strabo, etc. ; cf. dAcia, . “‘Adteta, 7d, Dor. for ‘“HAreia, the festival of the Sun, at Rhodes, Lysipp. {?) Incert. 2; v. Meineke 5. p. 52. G\v-ebqs, és, sea-coloured, Numen. ap. Ath. 305 C. dA-epys, és, working in the sea, fishing, Opp. H. 4. 635: also GAv- epyés, ov, Nonn. D. 40. 306. IL. =ddoupyjs, purple, E. M. dAt-epens, és, sea-fenced, sea-girt, of Aegina, Pind. O. 8. 34; of the Isthmus, Id. I. 1. 10; dA. dxOa Id. P. 1. 34. GXleupa, aros, 76, (dAredw) a draught of fish, Strabo 493. GAtevs, 6: gen. éws, Ion. fos, and contr. dAi@s Pherecr. Incert. a7; acc, pl. dAéas Antiph. MAove. 1. 17, Alex. "05. 2; gen. ddcéwy Id, “EAA. I. 5: (GAs, GAxos), One who has to do with the sea, and so, la ete. 2. a seaman, sailor, Od. 24. 419; €péras GAdjas rowers on the sea, 16. 349; so, ddceds orpards Opp. H. 5. 121, v. Bérpaxos I. Ghteurijs, ov, 6,=foreg. 1, Theodoret. Ghteurikés, 4, dv, of or for fishing, dd. mAoiov a fishing-boat, Xen. An. 7-1, 20; ddA. eddapos a fishing-rod, Arist. P. A. 4.12, 11; GA. Blos a Jisher’s life, 1d. Pol. 1. 8, 8 ;—% -nf (with or without réxv7) the art of Jishing, Plat. Ion 538 D, Soph. 220 B; 7a “AAtevrixd a poem by Opp. on this subject. II. of persons, engaged in fishing, Arist. Pol. 4. 4, 21. GAretw, (GAs) to fish, Ev. Joann, 21. 3: to be a fisher, Plut. Anton, 29, Luc., etc,; dA. Ti)v @dAaccay to fish it, Basil.: metaph. of an avenger, adedery Td LXX (Jerem. 16. 16). II. only the Med. occurs in Att., Plat. Com. Etjpwm. 2; “Adevopévn as title of a play by Antiph. ; cf. Ath. 544 C, Thom. M. 36. GXifw (A): aor. GAtoa Eur. H. F. 412, (ovy-) Hadt., Xen.:—Pass., aor, #AloOnv Hdt., Xen.: Ion. part. pf. ddwpévos (without augm.) Hdt. 4. 118., 7. 172: (aAjs). To gather together, assemble, of military forces, Hdt. 1. 77, 80, 119, etc. ; dA. eis €v Eur, Heracl. 404 :—Pass. fo meet together, Hdt. 1. 63, 79., 7-172: to be massed into a globe, Emped, 241.—Rare in Att., the Act. being used twice by Eur., once by Plat. Crat. 409A; the Pass. by Xen., An. 2. 4, 3., 6. 3, 3, Arist. Probl. 2. 28., 24. 9: genefally, the compd. ovvaAl(m is more freq. [@-, Elms]. Heracl. |. c.] GXile (B) [2%], fut. iow, (GAs) to salt, and Pass. to be salted, Arist. H. A. 6.15, 10, Probl, 21. 5, Lxx, N. T. II. to supply with salt or salt food, Arist. H.A.8.10, 2, al.: Pass., of sheep, to be supplied with salt, Ib. 3. &At-Lwvos, ov, sea-girt, Anth. P. 7. 218. GAl-Lwos, ov, living on orin the sea,Anth. P. 7.654, Pancrat.ap, Ath. 321 F. 4Xtm, 7, Ion. for dAta, adunyis, és, (dyvupe) broken on by the sea, érpa Opp. H. 3. 460. GAripns, «s, (épécow) sweeping the sea, kum Eur. Hec. 455. GAujrwp, opos, 6, post. for ddceds I, Hom. Ep. 16, GAt-nxys, és, resounding like the sea, Musae. 26: cf. dALBpopos. GAO.os, Dor. for #ALBcos. &-hiOos, ov, without stones, not stony, of lands, Xen. An. 6. 4, 5 Ss without a stone set in it, of a-ring, Poll. 7. 179. XII. free from the stone, as a disease, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 2. 3, GAt-KdkaBov, 74, .a plant, prob. physalis Alkekengi, Diosc. 4. 72. ‘Aducapvacoés, Ion. -vyods, 9, a Doric city of Caria, Hdt., etc. + ‘Aducapvaccets, éws, Ion. -vyoeds, eos, 6, a Halicarnassian, 1d, :— ‘Aducapvacod0ev, Adv. from Halicarnassus, Luc. de Dom. 20—On the forms with single o, v. Buttm. Ausf..Gr. 2. p, 387: in Newton’s Halic. (Inscr, 1) a gen. pl. ‘AAccapvaréwy occurs. . Gducta, %, Dor. for jAcKia. ; &Xt-KAveros, ov, sea-washed, sea-beaten, of a coast, Soph. Aj. 1219 (lyr.); GA. map xOovt Me:paéws Epigr. Gr, 113; ad. d€uas Anth. P. g. 228. 2. high-surging, névros Orph. Arg. 335. GAl-Kpyros, ov, wearied by the sea, wépimva aX. the care and toil of a. sea-life, Paul. Sil. Ambo 198. 2 Ght-kvipis ios, 6, 4, danvn Gd. a sea-horne.car, Nonn, D, 43. 199. &Xikos, a, ov, Dor. for #Aixos. GAukéds, GAucérys, worse forms for dAveds, dAvedrns. GAt-Kpas, Gros, 6, 4), mixed with salt-water, Eust. 1559. 50. GAu-Kparwp [a7r—], opos, 6,=sq., Theod, Prodr. 5. 422. GAt-Kpelwv, ovros, 6, lord of the sea, Eust. 57. 27. Gdu-Kprmts, tos, 6, 4, at the sea's edge, Nonn. D. 1. 289. GAu-KpdkiAros, ov, shingly, pebbly, Orph. Arg. 337. éAL-Krimos, ov, groaning at sea, in bad weather, of ships, Soph. Ant. 953 (lyr.); also, dA. xdpa roaring on the sea, Eur. Hipp. 754 (lyr.). GAt-cipwv [0], ov, surrounded by the sea Anth. P. 9. 429. GAuKadys, worse form for dAvewdys, Theophr. H. P. g. 11, 2. GAt-pédv, ovros, 6,=movropédav, Ar. Thesm. 323. dAtpevia, 7, want of harbours, Hyperid. in A. B. 78, Poll. 1. ror. G-Aipevos [i], ov, without harbour, harbourless, Lat. importuosus, ‘Aesch. Supp. 768, Eur. Hel. 1211, Thuc. 4. 8, etc. 2. metaph. shelterless, inhospitable, épea, dvrAos Eur. Hel. 1132, Hec, 1025; Gdlpevoy dépos avAaka Ar. Av. 1400; «apdia Eur, Cycl. 349. GAtpevorns, 7, = dAmevia, Xen. Hell. 4.8, 7. GXl-pixtos, v. sub dAlopntros. GAtpos, ov, (GAs) of or belonging to the sea, Lat. marinus, Hesych. ; 7a dhipa the sea-side, LXX (Jerem. 17. 6). II. as Subst., GAcpor, 76, a shrubby plant growing on the sea-shore, perh. salt-wort, Antiph. Mrnp. 1, Theophr. H. P. 4. 16, 5: in Diosc. also GAtpos, 6, I. 120. a-Aipos, ov, banishing hunger, Plut. 2. 157 D. GAipiphes, ecoa, ev (uipw) flowing into the sea, rorapol Il. 21. 190, Od. 5. 460; cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 936; cf. sq. . GXt-pipys, és,=foreg., Orph. Arg. 346, etc. II. =GAuos (A), Ap. Rh. 1. 913, Phanocl. 1. 17, Anth. Plan. 180. ; Gdwb5éo or GAtvbo [4], (the pres. is only found in Pass.): the aor. qAica and pf. #AtKa only found in comp. with éf: (the formation of these tenses with 7 exactly resembles the form é«vAioa from xudwdéa or kvAiviw) :—to make to roll. II. Pass., mostly used in partici- ple, rolling in the dust, like a horse (cf. dAwdnOpa), dArvSovpevos Plut. 2.396 E; ddwddpevor papdOou Nic. Th. 156; dAddnOels Ib. 204 ; qAwSnpevos rolled over,-over-turned, Dinarch. ap. Suid. 2. me to roam about, ddAny é dGAdAns eis xOdv’ dAwdépevos Anth. P. 7. 7365 o} wept Thy "Axadjpecav.ddwdSodvra Alciphro 3. 14, cf. 31. : Gdw5H0pa, 4, a place for horses to roll in, Lat. volutabrum (cf. kovi- orpa), cf. Ar. Nub, 32: metaph., dAwdhOpa émdy, i.e. long rolling words, Id, Ran. 904. Se 3 GXlvbqous, ews, 4, a rolling in the dust, an exercise in which the Jisher, Od. 12. 251., 22, 384, Hdt. 3. 42, Soph. Fr. 118, Plat., {, wrestlers rolled on the ground, Hipp, 364. 13., 308. 26. 62 GAtvSopat, v. sub ddiwvdéew, GAivaKrepa, 7%, (v}xw) fem. as if from *éduwyerhp, swimming in the sea, Anth. P. 6. 190 [with 7 in arsi]. Xijs, és, swimming in the sea, Anth. P. 6. 29. GXtvos, 7, ov, (GAs) of salt, xévBpor Hat. 4. 185; Toto Ib. &-Ntvos, ov, (Aivoy) without a net, without hunting toils, dA. Ohpa a chase in which no net is used, Anth. P. 9. 244. GXiva, (dAéw) =Aerrdve, to pound, Soph. (Fr. 826) ap. A. B. 383. r1:— but Hesych. gives ddwety (leg. ddivetv)* drelpev ;—dAivat* emadeipat. GAuE, Dor. for Haig. Gg, teos, 5, =x dvdpos, Ath. 647 D. GXl-favros, ov, worn by the sea, xoupddes Anth, P. 6. 89; dA. pdpos death by being dashed on the beach, Ib. 7. 404. Gus, 6, Dor. for fAtos. Gvos (A), a, ov, also os, ov Soph. Aj. 357, Eur. Heracl. 82: (GAs) :— of the sea, Lat. marinus, epith. of sea-gods, nymphs, etc., Hom. etc. ; GXiovo yépovTos, i.e. of Nereus, Il. 1.556, Hes. Th. 1003, cf. Od. 4. 365, al.; Geat GArat sea-goddesses, Nereids, 18. 432; of Apollo, Arist. Mirab. 107, cf. dAimAaryeros ; GA. Wapaor the sea-sand, Od. 3. 38; GX. mpov Aesch. (lyr.) Pers. 131, 879; «dpa Id. Supp. 15; vais, mara, mpvyvn, etc., Pind. O. 9. 111, Soph. O. C. 716, etc.; dAla Spds, perh. the same as dAipdAotos, Eupol. A?y. 1. 4; v. Meineke ad 1. Gos (B), a, ov: (GAn, HAlOt0s):—like pdratos, of things, fruitless, unprofitable, idle, erring, €ros, wvO0s, wévos, BéAos, Spxioy, etc., Il. ; in Od. only with 68és, 2. 273, 318; of a person, Il. 10, 324: neut. GAroy as Adv,, in vain, 13. 505; and so best taken in 4.179; so also Soph. O. C, 1469; but regul. Adv. ~—iws, Id. Ph. 840.—Ep. word, used by Soph. in lyric passages. Lo-rpedys, és, feeding in the sea, sea-reared, p&xat Od. 4. 442. Arde, Post. Verb, only used in fut. dAcdow, aor. #Alwoa, Ep. dhiwoa: a fut. med. occurs in act. sense, Maxim. m. xarapx. 582, in pass., Ib. 512: (Atos 8B). To make fruitless, disappoint, Awds véov ..dAadoat Od. 5.104; 00d’ dAlwoe Bédos nor did he hurl the spear in vain, Il. 16.737 ; ox HAlwoe Todmos spake not the word in vain, Soph. Tr. 258. 2. =diordw, to destroy, 7d pév Ts ov .. dAuwoe Soph. O. C. 704. G-Aimdpis, és, not fit for a suppliant, dr. Opig (perth. with a play on Almapds,—not sleek and smooth), Soph, El. 451. &l-racros, ov, sprinkled with salt, Aristom, P'éyr. 2,:Eubul. ’Apané, I. 10, Archestr. ap. Ath. 399 E. GAl-meSov, 74, a plain by the sea, sandy plain, Theophr. H. P. 7. 15, 2, Lyc. 681; so the plain in Attica near Piraeeus was called, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 30; but Ar. (Fr. 30) wrote év dAcwé5q with spir. lenis, says Harp. [aAz— in arsi, Lyc. 1. c., which prob. explains the form dA‘oedor in Poll. 1. 186.] GXimis, és, (Ados) without fat, meagre, poor, Ath. 315 D: without any fatty substance, Strabo 195 : in Medic. not thick and fatty, of lotions as opp. to salves, Aretae. Caus, a= eee 2. 7. II. (Aci, Armeiv) ‘ailing, mpoxoai Poéta ap. Porph. rascal s§ ov, roaming the sea, & Way, Wdv dAlmdayere . . pavyd prays the Chorus of Greek seamen at Troy (so, below, Apollo is sum- moned to come “Ikapiav tmép meAayéwv), Soph. Aj. 695; of Trito, Anth. P. 6. 65; éxus Gd. Epigr. Gr. 1033. 15 :—cf. dAlmAnKTos. &dv-rrAdvijs, és, sea-wandering, Anth. P. 11. 390. &\u-mdivia, }, a wandering voyage, Anth. P. 6. 38. &X-mAtivos, ov, =dAuAavns, Opp. C. 4. 258. 2 &Av-TAetpov, ovos, 5, =wAedpa I, Marcell, Sid.27in Fabr. Bibl. 1. p.17. - &At-mAneros, Dor. -mAakros, ov, sea-beaten, of islands, Pind. P. 4. 24; _Oadacadrdnkros in Aesch., whence ddimAaxros is restored in Soph. Aj. 597 (lyr.) for dAt@Aayeros. v-mAHE, Fos, 5, }, =foreg., Call. Del. 11, Anth, P. 6. 193. &i-mAoos, ov, contr. -mwAous, ovv, covered with water, Tetxea Il. 12. 26. II. later act. sailing on the sea, vais Arion 17 (Bgk. p. 873): as Subst. a seaman, fisher, Ap. Rh. 3. 1329, Call, Del. 15. en ov, redolent of the sea, Musae. 205. _Gdu-répos, ov, through which the sea flows, diaopag Luc. Tragoed. 24. nets nears tSos, 4, a bird, on the same as moppupis, Ibyc. 7; cf. adund, s Opis, Aleman 12 (26). are + ov, of sea-purple, of true purple dye, 7jAaKara, pape Od. 6. 53., 13. 108; ofSya Arion 18 (Bgk. p. 873). &Au-rolnros, ov, scared by the roar of the sea, Nonn. D. 8. 58. Gduppiyis, és, (Anyum) breaking the waves: oF rather pass., against which the tide breaks, axéredos Anth. P. 7. 383- ‘ &Atp-palorys, 6, (Jalw) ravening in the sea, dpdxow Nic, Th. $28. &Xippavros, ov (fatvw) sea-surging, méyros Anth. P. 9. 333- &Xlp-pyros, ov, =aArppayys, deipades Anth. P. 7. 275. , ov, also a, ov Anth. P. 7. 6, 624 :—sea-roaring, sea-beat, xévs, vnds Anth. Il. c. IL. roaring, @éAagca Orph. Arg. 1296. , ov, =foreg.; aA. mépor the roaring friths, or the pathways of the roaring sea, Aesch, Pers. 367, cf. Soph. Aj. 412 (lyr.); also, da, > Bas Eur. Hipp. 1205, Mosch. 2. 128: cf. dAb , GAlKTUTOS. AXip-porfos, ov, = aAtpp66.0s, Nonn. ae 3. 322, etc. ‘os, ov, washed by the sea, Anth. P. 12. 55- ddoos a surging sea itself, Aesch. Supp. 868 (lyr.). ; Gus [dais], Adv.: (v. sub dAgs). In heaps, crowds, swarms, in abund- ance, in plenty, Lat. affatim, and in a modified sense, sufficiently, enough, ; L. in Hom. mostly joined with Verbs, dis erorharac II. da. Lat. satis : Oi Il. 2. 90; mept 8% Tpwal drus Hoav 3. 384; xdmpos dds Ké- On ar: ao8) aus i of jaav dpovpa Il. r4. 122 :—from the con- i times takes the sense of just enough, like perpiws, et 3 dds too pees, Bur. Med. 629; épepe wawdv Gris Id. Alc. 907. 2. in Hom, also often closely attached aXtvdopnat — aNiorpa. gold and silver ix abundance, gold and silver enough, Od. 16. 231, ef. I. 22. 340; vija Gris xpicov Kal xadxod vnfcacba: Il. 9. 137 ; Gus xé- pados (v. sub xépados) 21. 319; GAs 5° ebGdes EAauov Od. 2. 339 ;— this Homeric usage is rare in Att., dAcs Bioroy eipov Eur. Med, 1107; Avmas Gus éxwv (Elmsl. Avans) Id. Hel. 589:—rarely with an Adj., GXs Ha0’ dvapotos Aesch, Ag. 511. 8. ddus (sc. éare) ’tis enough, obx Gdus, Srre..; ist not enough, that..? Il. 5. 349; } odx ads, @s..; 17. 450, Od. 2. 312; so, Gus, iv’ & pes Saxpdwv Soph. O, T. 1515; and absol. Gs enough! Id. Aj. 1402 :—in Att. c, acc. et inf., "Apyelovot Kadpetous Gdus és xeipas édOeiv Aesch. Theb. 679 ; c. dat. et inf., Gus 5¢ eAdew rodpor Hy éuol Kaxdv Eur. Alc, 1041, cf. Soph. O. T. 685. 4. like an Adj., as the predicate, GAis ydp 7) wapotoa oupppopd Eur, Alc. 673, cf. I. T. 983, Soph. Tr. 332. 5. Gaus (sc. eiué) with a part. added, Gas vocova’ éyw enough that I suffer, Id. O. T. 1061; Gds éy@ dvervy Gv Trag. ap. Arist. Eth. N. 9. 11, 5. 6. in Att., like Lat. satis, c. gen. rei, enough of a thing, dds éxewv THs Bophs Hadt. 1. 119, cf. 9. 27; mppovas Gdis y’ tmdpxe Aesch. Ag. 1656, cf. 1659 ; Gis [ears] AcAcypvévor Id, Eum. 675 ; dAts Adyar Soph. O. C. 1016; Gdus apuns pot Ar. Fr, 421; to conclude an argument, kal rovTwy piv GAs Plat. Polit. 287 A; «at wept piv rovrov ads Arist, Eth. N. 1. 5, 6, etc. II. a form GAus, or dAtas, in Hippon. 101, cf. E. M. 63. 18, Joann. Al. rdv maparyy. p. 38.12; and read by Dind. in Eur. Ion 723 (lyr.), dAcas GAras 5 mapos dpxaryés, where the Mss. dAlcas. GAis, fos, 7), (GAs) =dApupis, Eust. 706. 56. éXoBn, %,=drarn, Hesych. Shcsibe, to pollute, Lxx (Dan, 1. 8, al.):—éAloynpa, aros, 76, a pollution, Act. Ap. 15. 20. dAtoKopat [aA].a defect. Pass., the Act. being supplied by aipéw(aAtoxw only in proverb €Aepas piv ob ddloxe, Paroemiogr.): impf. jAcoxduny (never éaA-) Hdt., Att.: fut. adAdoouar Hadt., Att.: aor. #Aew Od. 22. 230, always in Hdt., and sometimes in Mss. of Att. writers, as Plat. Hipp. Ma. 286 A, Xen. An. 4. 4, 21, but the common Att. form was édAwy [4, Ar. Vesp. 355, but & Anth. P. 7. 114., 11.155; & in all other moods, etc., except in part. dAdve Il. 5. 487]; subj. dA@, Os, @ Aesch. Theb. 257, Eur. Hipp. 420, Ar. Ach. 662, Vesp. 898, etc., Ion. dAdw, ddd Il. 11. 405., 14. 81, Hdt. 4.127; opt. ddoiny Plat., Ep, dAginv Od. 14, 183., 15. 300; (the subj. dAwy and opt. dAqgy are often confounded, y. ll. Il. 9. §92., 14. 81, Hdt. 4.127); inf. dA@va Il. 21. 281, Att., Ep. dAdpevae Tb. 495; part. ddovs Il. 2. 374, Att., v. supr.:—pf. fAwxa Hat. 1. 83, Antiph. S7par. 1, Xenarch. Mop?. 1, and often in Dem. ; but commonly in Att. é4Aaxa [GA] Aesch. Ag. 30, Thuc., etc. (and in Mss. of Hdt,, I. 191, 209) :*plapf. #A@Kew Xen. An. 5. 2, 12.—On the forms ffAwv éddwy, jana éddoxa, v. Veitch Gr. Verbs s. v.—Of these Tenses, Hom. uses only the aor.—Cf. mapaAfokopar. (The fact that dAlcxoya, with its tenses, serves as a Pass. to aipéw, aor. 2 efAov, éAciv, points to 4/AA= FIBA (cf. éFdAow), ini the sense of take, v. Lob. Rhem, 163. It seems to be unconnected with dyGAicxw, v. sub voc.) To be taken, conquered, fall into the enemy's hand, of persons and places, Il. 2. 374, al., Hdt., Trag., etc.; dAwoerat (sc, 6 Kpéwv) Soph. O. C. 1065 ; dAloxeaOat els modepious to fall into the hands of the enemy and be taken by them, Plat. Rep. 468 A; év ro.avrats fuupopats Id. Crito 43 C. 2. to be caught, seized, of persons and things, Oavarw dddvac to be seized by death, die, Il. 21. 281, Od. 5. 312; also without Oavary, Il. 12. 172, Od. 18, 205, etc.; dvdp’ &e Oavdrou Kopica 5n ddwxdra [sc. véow] Pind, P. 3. 100; éddAwoay els ’AOjvas ypaypara letters were seized and taken to Athens, Xen, Hell, 1,1, 23:—in Ar. Ach, 700 there is a play on the law-phrase (y. infr. 11, 2); rots airdv mrepois ddtondpecba, of an eagle, i.e. by a feathered arrow, Aesch. Fr. 129, v. omnino Pors. Med. 139 (viii) :—to be taken or caught in hunting, Il. 5. 487, Xen. An. 5. 3, 10 :—also, aA, inv Aesch. Eum. 67; dérarais, pavia Soph. El. 125, Aj. 216; in’ €pwros Plat. Phaedr. 252 C, étc. ; voonpart, Siappoia, etc. Arist. Probl. 30. I, 19, etc:—absol. to be overpowered, Soph. Aj. 649; ddobs épdvevoa, Lat. mente captus, Id. O. C. 547 (as Herm. for addovs, but v. dvous) ; Hig vikn adioKovrat by one victory they are ruined, Thuc. I. 121. 8. in good sense, to be won, achieved, attained, Soph. O. T. 543, Eur. Ale. 786, Xen. Cyn. 12, 22; cf, ddwrds I. II. to be caught or detected doing a thing, ovre od dAdoea ddinéwv Hdt. 1. 112; ém- fet cas ts Say: fab tn cre ‘ a st. or Adj., the part. dy being omitted, ob yap 8) poveds dAdaopuat Soph. O. T. 576; poixds yap dy tUxNs dAots Ar. Nub. 1079; also, aA. év xaxoior Soph, Ant. 496. 9 often as Att. law-term, to be convicted and condemned, in full, ddods 77 Bi Pl n , et ’ 7 OKT Plat, Legg. 937 C; Arroragiou ypaphy jrwxévar Dem, 549. I, cf. Antipho 117. 18., 118. 26:—dA. mG YHpw Andoc. 30. 10:—c. gen. criminis adavat pevdopaprupiay, dotpareias, dceBelas, etc, (sc. ~ypaghy) v. ch voce.; dA, Oavarov to be convicted of a capital crime, Plut, 2 , 2 D; also, dAotaa Sinn a conviction, Plat. Legg. 937 D wae ai Fe oe . d\topa.,75,a water-plant, Alisma Parnassifoliaor Planta 7 Dicks aie ant phates, ov, sea-resounding, Nonn. D. 39. 362. ‘ afr “TPNKTOS, ov, washed by the sea, Lyc. : Hesych. has dato, erence a)* HAtcpéva, and Suid. a lg pain, ag ve TAPTOS, OV, sown or sprinkled with sal; ” oan areata ith sa ¢, Eust.1827.61, Hesych.,E.M, Gdt-orépavos, ov, sea-crowned, sea s.V. TampoBavn :—so, d ddv-oredrjs Arg. 146. GXi-rrovos, ov, sea-resounding,, paxiat Aesch, P groaning on the sea, of fishers, Opp. 4. Re a Te), 9, 6v, (GAlgw) salted, pickled, Anth, P, -girt, vijoos Alex. ap. Steph. Byz. Oaoos Epigr. Gr. 208. 16, cf. Orph. II. 9: 377, Strabo 197. to a Noun, xaAndy re xpuody Te dis | Aor , éAlorpa, 4, = GAw6nOpa, Poll, 1. 183. aXlorperros — adda. -Gdl-orpenros, ov, sea-tost, vads Anth. P. g. 84. _GXtraive [cA], Ep. Verb (also used by Aesch. in lyr. passages) chiefly found in aor, 2 act. and med. :—Act., in aor. #Atrov IL., Theogn. 1170, Aesch. Eum. 269 ; subj. dAirp Pseudo-Phoc. 208; opt. dAéroipe Aesch, Pr. 5333 part. dAcrmy Aesch. Eum. 316 (restored by Stanl. for ddurpa@r) : later Ep. aor. 1 dAirnoa Orph. Arg. 642:—Med., ddcraivera (v. 1. dXirp-) Hes. Op. 328: aor. dAlrovro, dAtrwpat, dduréoa Hom. : part. dAirnuevos, with accent*and sense of pres. (formed as if from adirnmt, cf. riOjpevos Ep. for riOéyevos), v. infr. (Akin to dAn, dAdopat, etc.?:—hence ddcirns, ddorrds, ddurfpios : dAutpaivw is merely an Ep. form.) To sin or offend against, c. acc. pers., ée yap 5h p’ aware kat Arey Il. 9. 3753 Oris op GAlrnra dudocas 19. 265 ; aBavdrous adrécbat Od. 4. 378; "AOnvainy adlrovro 5. 108; so Hes. Sc. 80 (ubi leg. wey’ for per’), Theogn., l. c., Aesch, Eum. 269 ; cf. ddrrpéw. 2. c. acc. rei, to transgress, Aids 8 dAirwpar éperpuas Il. 24. 570; Spxov, omovdds Ap. Rh. 4. 388, Opp. H. 5. 563. 3. c. gen. to stray from, Gdirnoev draprot Orph. |. c.; cf. Call. Dian. 2 55. 4, the part. Gdurjpyevos is used =ddurpés, as an Adj., Oeois ddurhyevos sinful in the eyes of the gods, Od. 4. 807; cf. dArripepos. G-Aurdveuros, oy, only found in poét. form dAduT-, q. Vv. Adv. -ws, A. B. 374, E. M. 57. aA s, és, stretching to or along the sea, Diod. 3. 44. Il. flat, low, of lands, Strabo 307, Arr. Ind. 21. 9; ambulatio ad. a walk on a flat place, Cic. Att. 14. 13, I: of boats, flat, Plut. Them. 14: of the sea, shallow, Polyb. 4. 39, 3, App. Civ. 2. 84. GAGréppov, ov, bounded by the sea, Anth. P. 9. 672. aAirnpa, aros, 76, a sin, offence, Anth. P. 5. 278. GAit-Npepos, ov, missing the right day, untimely born, like hAtréunvos, Hes. Sc. gt (€ conj. Guieti pro ddurjpevor), cf. E. M. 428. 10. GXirnpoowvn, ,=ddirnua, Orph, Arg. 1315. EXirhpov, ov, gen. ovos, (dArreiv) =sq., Il. 24.157,186, Call. Dian. 123. aXtriptos, ov, (dArreiv) sinning or offending against, c. gen., Tov GALTN- plow . .raiv rips Ged Ar. Eq. 4453 évaryets wal GA. ris Oeov, Thuc. 1.126; so, kowwoy Gdirhpiov . .dmdavrwy the common plague of all, Dem. 280.27; GAt- THhptos “EAAGSos Aeschin. 76. 7. 2. absol. sinful, guilty, Lat. homo piacularis, Lys. 137.19, Andoc. 17.11; parrarydpas . . ddurjpuos (i. e. 6 GA.) Eupol. Koa. 10, cf. Anu. 7, Menand, Incert. 38. II. =dAdo- = an avenging spirit, Antipho 125. 32., 127.1; cf. Ruhnk. Tim. s. v. aAirnpidys, es, (ei50s) abominable, accursed, ruinous, olorpos Plat. Lege. 854 B; ordots Id. Rep. 470 D. dAtrnpds, ov, =dArrhpios : but in Soph. O.C.371, ag GAernpod ppevds must be corrupt, for the « is short; Toup suggested «dAurnpiov, Herm. nag Gdovrnpod, Dind. nag ddcrpias. Ghirys [i], ov, 6, =dAcirns, Hesych., Lex. de Spir. p. 209, etc.; whence it is restored by Herm. in Eur. Heracl. 614 for dAdrav, which is against the metre: but, II. dXirys [7], ov, 6, =@addcaros, Lex.-de Spir. ib., Hdn, Epim. 181, 263 ; whence it is restored by Ahrens in Epich. 24. GXird-pnvos, ov, =the Homeric 7Arréunvos, Suid., etc. GXiré-Eevos, ov, sinning against one's friend, Pind. O. 10 (11). 7. GXtro-ppocivn, 4, a wicked mind, Anth. P. 7. 648. &Xtrpatve, Ep. for dAvraivw (when required by the metre), absol. Zo siz, offend, Saris GArtpaive: or bs Kev Gdrrpaivy Hes. Op. 241 (vy. Aeschin. 49: 27.5 73- 4)3 fy mev GAurpaivys Anth. P. 9. 763; oddéy GA. Tryph. 269. t-tpeis, és, sea-bred, Q. Sm. 3. 272, Nonn. D. 24. 116. aXitpéw, =ddcraivw, Aesch. Eum. 316; but Auratus restores dAuréy. &Xtrpia, 7, sinfulness, mischief, Soph. Fr. 42, Ar. Ach.go7; v.sub dAcrypés. GXitps-Bros, ov, living wickedly, wicked, Nonn, D, 12. 72. &Xitp6-voos, ov, wicked-minded, Orac. ap.Eus. P.E.168, Epigr.Gr. 1052. GXirpés, dv, syncop. for dArrnpés, sinful, sinning, wicked, Il. 8. 361, Theogn. 377, Solon 13. 27, Pind. O. 2. 107: but in Hom, also as Subst., daipoow dArrpés a sinner against the gods, Il. 23. 5953 and in milder sense, a knave, rogue, Od. 5.182; a fem., ddcrpijs dAd@exos Simon. lamb. 7. 7. aXtrpoowvy, },=dArrpia, Ap. Rh. 4. 699 (in pl.), Anth. P. 7. 574, etc. 4Xi-rpodos, ov, living by or on the sea, of fishers, Opp. H. 1. 76. GAl-rpoxos, ov, rushing through the sea, Ibyc. 49, in metapl. acc. sing. GXirpoxa: cf. etrpoxos. 8ALpir0s, ov, sea-beaten, sea-worn, yépav Theocr. Anth. P. 7. 294. GXi-ritros, ov, sea-beaten, ddA. Bapy griefs for sea-tost corpses, Aesch. Pers. 945 (lyr.): as Subst. a seaman, fisherman, Eur. Or. 373- GXi-ripos, 6, a sort of salt-cheese, Anth. P. 9. 412. aA 6w, to shipwreck, and metaph. to ruin, Sophr. ap. E. M. 776. 46 :— adr pOepHoa dpavica, Hesych. Cf. Lob. Soph. Aj. p. 358. GdupGopia, %, a disaster at sea, shipwreck, Anth. P. 9. 41. 4di-bO6pos, ov, destroying on the sea: as Subst. a pirate, Anth. P. 7.654. GXi-pAowos, 5, 4, sea-bark, a kind of oak, Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 5, al. GAv-ppootvn, 7, =ikavt ppédynars (from GAts, ppqy), Hesych.; Adj. aAt- poves, Naumach. 63 ;—but prob. onlyf. ll. for xaArppootvn, xadidpoves. 4Xi-xAawos, ov, purple-clad, Nonn. D. 20. 105 ; cf. dAumdppupos. GXup or GAup, =érpa in Hesych., v. sub jAlBaros. GAxdlo, to put forth strength or prowess, E. M. 56.11., 66,10 :—Med., HAKaCovro* jptyovro, ap. Hesych. Dia GAKGOeiv, post. aor. with no pres. in use (v. sub dAéfw), fo assist, cited in A. B. 383 from Aesch, (Fr. 425) and Soph. (Fr. 827): cf. duuvadety. GAxata, #, a lion's tail, Ael. N. A. 5. 39, Opp. H. 5. 264: cf. dAala, GAxaios, a, ov, (4Axq) strong, mighty, dépv Eur. Hel. 1152 (lyr.). a\kap, 74, only used in nom. and acc.:—a safe, uard, defence, ovre rt ce Tpwecow diopat GAxap ececOar Il. 5.644; GAkap ’Axa@y 11, 823, but -yhpaos dAkap a defence against old age, h. Hom. Ap, 193. Ep. word, used by Pind, P, 10, 81, Pseudo-Phocyl, 120, (Akin to Am.) I, 453 «0uBy g 68 GAGs, v. sub dAxjes. GAxéa, 7}, a kind of wild mallow, Diosc. 3. 164. GAkein, %, a poisonous plant, Orph. Arg. 925. Gdkh, %, (v. sub dAadxe) strength as displayed in action, prowess, courage, boldness, and so distinguished from pwn (mere strength), poét. word (used also in Hdt., and later Prose, as Tim. Locr. 103 B, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 6, 12, Pol. 8. 3, 7, etc.), in Hom. joined with o6évos, Bin, jvopén, pévos, Il. 17. 212, Od, 22. 237, al.; esp. in phrase émepévos aAKhy ; so, ppecty cipevos ddxhy 20, 381; dveca dAxhy 9. 231 :—later also, xepds Aug Pind. O. 10 (11). 122} Onpla és dAuhy dduiua Hat. 3. 110: gene tally, force, power, might, awhwav ddrhy (like o..uaxnv) Eur. Supp. 683 :—in. pl. feats of strength, bold deeds, Pind. N. 7. 18} Eur. Rhes. 933- II. strength to avert danger, a safeguard, defence, and so help, succour, aid, Acds dAxh Il. 15. 490, cf. 8. 140; ovd€ ris dAnh Od. 12. 120., 22. 305; mov Tis dAwy; Aesch. Pr. 545 ; GAxi) BeAéwy Soph. Ph. 1151; d5opés Eur. Phoen. 1098 :—but, dA«h rivos defence or aid against a thing, Hes. Op. 199, Pind. N. 7. 142, Soph. O. T. 218, cf. GAkap :—dAxhy roeiabax or TiévaL to give aid, Soph. O. C. 459, 15243 és or mpds dAxiy rpémecOar to turn and resist, stand on one’s guard, Hdt. 2. 45., 3. 78, Thuc. 2. 84; orpépas mpds dduqy Eur. Andr. 1149 ; és dAxiy éAGeiv Id. Phoen. 421; dAcps peprijoOa Hdt. 9. 70; éy ols éorw dAxn where [death] is helpful, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 6,12; cf. bropéve II. 3- III. battle, fight, Aesch. Theb. 498, 569, 876, Eur. Med. 664. GAxn, %, the elk, Paus. 5.12, 1. (Cf. Skt. rigas, risyas (a hind of ante- lope), Lat. alces, O. H. G. elaho, A.S. elch.) GAkhes, egca, ev, valiant, warlike, h. Hom. 28, Anth. P. 6, 277: Pind. (O. 9. 110, P. 5. 95) has it in Dor. contr. form dAxgs, Gv7os. éAKnorhs, of, 6, a kind of fish, Opp. H. 1. 170. . GAxi [Tt], metapl. post. dat. of dAxq, might, strength: Hom. has it im phrase dAxt remoOws (five times) of wild beasts; once of Hector, Il. 18. 158; cf. Theogn. 949. GAKBrdbes, ai, a sort of shoes (from ’AAKiBiddys), Ath. 534 C, Poll. 7. 89. &xi-Bios, 7), with and without éxvs, a kind of Anchusa, used as an an- tidote to the bite of serpents, Nic. Th. 541:—also éAxtBtdSerov or —dbtov, 76, Diosc. 4. 23, 24, Galen. 13. p. 149. GAkt-pixos, 7, ov, bravely fighting, or a defender in the Fight, of Athena,, Anth, P. 6, 124. Gdxipos, ov, also 7, ov Soph. Aj. 401:—strong’, stout, brave, of men and things, Tp@es, éyxos, Sodpe Il.11. 483., 3. 338, Od. 22. 125, ete.; so in Comp. —wrepos Hdt. 1. 79, 103, 201, Xen., Arist., etc.; Sup. -wraros Eur. Phoen. 750; dAmpos 7d wodcumind Hat. 3. 4; és dAniy dacima Ib. 110; then in Pind., Soph., and later Poets; dA«. wax Eur. Heracl. 683 :— proverb., méAat mor’ hoa GAxipor MrAnjacon, like ‘fuimus Troés,’ ‘times are changed,’ Anacr. 85, Ar. Pl. 1002 :—rare in Prose, Plat. Rep. 614 B (where there seems to be a play on’AAxivov), Arist. H. A. 8. 29,1., 9. 41, 12. GAxlppwv, ov, gen. ovos, (phy) stout-hearted, Aesch. Pers. 92 (lyr.). GAxrnp, jpos, 6, (v. sub dAaAxe) one who wards off, a protector from a thing, c. gen., dpjs, cuvav Kat dyvSpay Il. 18. 100, Od. 14. 531; so in Hé&. Th. 657, where the dat. depends on yéveo, Pind. P. 3. 13. adxriprov, 7é, a help, antidote, rwés against a thing, Nic. Th, 528, etc.; and so prob, Eur. Fr. 698 (cod. dperhpia). aAkvéverov and -tov, 746, bastard-sponge, a zodphite, so called from. being like the halcyon’s nest ; the latter form occurs in Diosc. 5. 135. aAxvovis, (50s, %, in form Dim. of dAxcvmy, but in usage =GAnvdy, Ap. Rh. 1. 1085, Epigr. Gr. 205, C. I. 3333. II. as Adj., dAxtiovides, ai, with or without 7épa:, the fourteen winter days during which the halcyon builds its nest, and the sea is always calm, hence haleyon days, proverb. of undisturbed tranquillity, Ar. Av. 1594, ubi v. Schol., cf. Theocr. 7. 57, Arist. H. A. 5.8, 9 sq., Philoch. 180 ;—also, GAxuéveror 7uépar in Arist. 1. c., cf, Ael. N. A. 1. 36. aAxvav, dvos, %, the kingfisher, halcyon, first in Il. 9. 563, cf. Simon. 12, Ar. Av. 251, Arist. H. A. 5.8, 8. (That the spir. asper, prob. due to the notion that the word is a compd. of GAs, «Ja (vy. dAxvovis), is incorrect appears from Lat. alcedo, O. H. G, alacra.) *ddww, = ddéfw: v. ddxabeiv, dAad«e. GAG, Conjunct., being originally neut. pl. of GAos, with changed accent, in another way, otherwise: AAG therefore serves to limit or op- pose sentences or clauses, being stronger than 6é€. I. to oppose single clauses, but, Lat. autem, the preceding clause being negat., freq. from Hom. downwds.; in this case it always stands first in its own clause, except in late Poets, as Call. Ep. 5.11 KAewlou dAAd Ovyarpt didov xapiv.—When two clauses are strongly opposed, dAAd is preceded by pév if the first clause be affirmative, by od pévoy if negative; év@ dAAoe pey mavres érevphunaay ’Axatol, GAN’ ob« Arpeidy . . , Il. 1. 24; od povoy Gna, dAAd 7oAAd«s Plat. Phaedr. 228 A :—in the latter case to heighten the opposition zai mostly follows dAAd, as Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 13., 2. 7,63 GAAa kal is also found after oddév, ovdeis, etc., but on the contrary, Wolf. Leptin. 460. 2; so too obx (or pi) Sr, obx (or 2) Sms, are followed by GAAd.., wat..,not only.., but... The first clause is also often strengthd. by various Particles, as rol, 7 Tot, etc., and GAAd by the addi- tion of yé or Suas.—Special usages of dAAd with single clauses: be in hypothet. sentences, the apodosis is often opp. to the protasis by dAAd, GAAd kal, GAAG Tep, yet, still, at least, Il. 1. 281., 8. 154., 12. 349, ete.: so, after etmep Te... , GAAG Te. . Il. 10. 226, dAAa Te Kat... Il. 1.82: also in Prose, after ef. .,GAAG.., or GAAG.. ye Plat. Phaedo 91 B, Gorg. 470 D, etc.; € «al peréxovot.., GAX od ... Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 12 :—less often after Conjunctions of Time, as émerdj, Od. 14. 151; eel, Soph. O.C, 241. 2. after Hom., dAAd is sometimes attached to a single word, GAAG viv, GAAA TE xpéve, tandem aliquando: but in fact the usage is elliptic, and may be explained from the foreg. head, as in Soph, El, 411, 64 t & Geol warpGor, cvyyéveade 7’ GAA voy (i.e. ei ph mpdrepor, AAA voy 76), cf. Ant. 552, O. C. 1276 :—this usage is very freq. in Trag., v. Elmsl. Eur. Heracl. 565, Med. 912 :—so, éay ob GAAG viv +’ én, i.e. édv opv [17 GdAore], GAAA viv ye . ., if then now aft least ye still. . , Dem. 37: 19g: v. infr, 11, 2. 3. after a negative dAAd sometimes=dAX’ 7} (q. V.), except, but, ottre or aitios dAdos, GAAA . . ToKHE no one else, but .., Od. 8. 312; ob5€ rs GAAn gaivero -yade, GAN’ odpavds BR Oddagoa 12. 404; emacer odris GAN’ &yh Soph. O. T.1331; Hdea... ove Earw GAA Tobros Arist. Eth. N. 10. 5, 10, cf. 7.12, 1; ef, the re- Verse process in our word but=be out, except :—so also, rdov, ob« ev @ keivrac padAov, ddr’ év @ # dda «TA. not more that in which they are lying, but .., Thuc. 2. 43; odx SwAwy 7d mA€ov, GAAA danayns Id. 1. 83. 4. after a vocat., like 5€ 1. 5, Plat. Euthyphro 3 C. ce to oppose whole sentences, but, yet, Lat. at : 1. often in quick transi- tions from one subject to another, as in Il. 1.134, 140, etc.; so too dAAd wat &s 1.116; GAd’ ovd' &s.., Od. 1. 6:—after Hom. also in quick answers and objections, nay but. ., well but . ., mostly in negation, Ar. . Ach, 402, etc.; but not always, Plat. Prot. 330 B, Gorg. 449 A, When a number of objections follow in quick succession, both questions and answers are introduced by dAAd, as, wérepov jrowy oé 7. .; GAN’ dary Tow; GAAA wept mradinav paxdpevos; GAA pear émapdynoa; Xen. An. 5. 8, 45 (when all after the first may be rendered by or); so, @AAd piv .., answered by dAAd, Arist. Pol. 3. 16, 4q.:—in vehement answers Plato often uses vi) rods Beods GAAG.., wa Al GAAG.., Gorg. 481 C, Phil. 36A, cf. Alc. I. 110 B, C, al.:—Hom. also has dAAd at the beginning of a speech, to introduce some general objection, Od. 4. 472, cf. Xen. Symp. init. 2. dAAd is used, esp. by Hom., with imperat. or subj., to remonstrate, encourage, persuade, etc., like Lat. tandem, GAN’ (1, GAN’ dye, GAAA taper, ddAd TiBecHe Hom.; so, GAN’ Epre’ ds TaXLaTa Soph. O. C. 1643, cf. Ant. 1029, etc.: the vocat. sometimes goes before dAAd, as, ® Pivtis, GAA Cedfov Pind. O. 6. 37: ¥. supr. I. 2. 3. often to break off a subject abruptly, dAAd ravra pey Ti def Aéyery; Soph. Ph. 11, cf. 756, Tr. 467, etc. 4, a number of Att. phrases may be referred to this head, as elliptic, ob pay GAAG, ob pevTor GAAG. ., it is not [so], but .., 6 tos mire wal pcxpod adrov éerpaxhAtcev* ov pry [éferpaxnducer], GAX’ érépecvey 6 Kopos it did not however [throw him], but .., Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 8; cf. Plat. Symp. 173 A:—so, ob GAAG Ar. Ran. 58, 498 :—even after 5é, dpeis 5€ pw’ GAAA ratdt cvppovetaare Eur, Hec. 391. III. when joined with other Particles, each retains its proper force, as, 1. dAX’ dpa, much like GAAd in quick transi- tion, Il. 6. 418., 12. 320; but in Att, to introduce an objection founded on something foregone, Plat. Apol. 25 A; also in questions GAA’ dpa . .; Id. Rep. 381 B. 2. GAX’ obv, but then, however, Hdt. 3. 140, Soph. Ant. 84, etc.; also in concession, well then, Plat. Prot. 310 A; and in apodosi, yet at any rate, GAN odv ye Plat. Phaedo g1 B, cf. Aeschin. 66. 5. 8. dAAd yap, often with words between, Lat. enimvero, but really, certainly, as, GANA yap Kpéovra Aetoow .., mavow yous, but this is irregularly placed for dAAd, Acdoow, tavow “ydous, Eur. Phoen. 1307; and so we find the collocation in Soph. Ph, 81, cf. Elmsl, Heracl. 481, Med. 1035; but the Verb accompanying dAAd is often omitted, Hat. 8.8, Aesch. Pr. 941: this usage in the negative form GAX’ od yap is earlier, Il. 7. 242, Od. 14. 355, al., Soph. O. T. 1409 :—also, aang yap 54, GAAG yap To, Soph. Aj. 167, Ph. 81; v. ob yap GAAd. 4. el.., quid si. .? 11. 16.559. 5. GAA’ F in questions, Lat. an vero? ergo? GX #, 70 Aeydpevov, kardmy éopris jeopev; Plat. Gorg. 447 A, cf. Prot. 309 C, Elmsl. Heracl. 426: cf. ddd’ #j (suo loco). 6. GAG is followed by many words that merely strengthen it, as dAX’ iro: Hom.; GAAG To Aesch, Pers. 798. etc.; GAAG pévrot, GAAA phy, v. sub why IL. 35 GAAG . . ye concessive, GAA’ Eporye . . palverat nay .., Plat. Theaet. 157 D; so, dAAd 34, mostly with words between, Soph. Aj. 1271, O. C. 586, etc.; GAAd péy 57) Kal adréds Plat. Theaet. 143 B. aAAGyBnyyv, Adv. alternately, Theognost. p. 161. 20. 2 ‘addayh, 7, (GAAdoow) a change, Aesch. Ag. 482, Plat., etc.; dAAaya Btov Soph. O. T. 1206; 4 «ara rémov d. Arist. de Spir. 8. II. exchange, barter, whether buying or selling, Plat. Rep. 371 B, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 5, 10, sq., Pol. 1. 8, 8; so in pl, did rds GAA. for purposes of exchange, Ib. 3. 9, 6. III. in late Gr., a change of horses, a fresh stage, Eust. 531. 21; v. Ducang. GAXGyin, }, = foreg., Or. Sib. 2. 157. u a adda aros, 76, that which is given or taken in exchange, kawwns diairns Hipp. Vet. Med. 9. 2. the price of a thing, Anth. P. 12. 132, Lxx (Deut. 23. 18). ypés, 6, =foreg., Arcad. 58, 5, Manetho 4. 189. GAAakréov, verb. Adj. one must change, Plut. 2. 53 A. ~ GAAaKrixés, 4, dv, of or for exchange: % -Kh or 70 —dv the business of exchange, aaah ge) C; ete bere ri Eth. N. 5. 5, 6. wrtov, 76, Dim. of dAAGs, Moer., Thom, M. 2 pte és, sausage-shaped, GAX. bphy, xirav the allantoid mem- brane of the foetus, Soran. p. 68 Dietz., v. Greenh. Theoph. p. 332. dAXavro-rotds, 6, a maker of ddAGvres, Diog. L. 2. 60. GAAavromwA kw, to deal in dhAdyres, Ar. Eq. 1242. GAdavro-1dAqs, ov, 6, a dealer in dddGyres, Ar. Eq. 143, etc. , Adv. = évdaAag, C. I. 4957 (prob. 1). Drake, ews, }, exchange, barter, Arist. Lis a M. f. 34, 12. 6 GAAGs, Gyros, 6, forced-meat, a sausage or black-pudding, Ar. Eq. 161, . 3, etc. hee, i Att. —rrw: fut. dgw: aor. #AAaga: pf. HAAGXa (dw) Xen. Mem. 3. 13, 6, (St) Dionys. Com. @eap. 1. 1o:—Med., fut. qoaeg foua Luc. Tyr. 7, (dv7—-) Eur. : aor. #AAagdpyy Eur., Antipho 138. 35, "Thuc., etc.: pf. (in med. sense), HAAayHa (év—) Soph. Aj. 208:—Pass., | aA cydnv — adAMrEyyuor. fut. dAAax@fjoopar and dddayioopa, the former always in Trag., the latter in Prose; aor. jAAGXOqy and jAAdyyy, the former most freq. in Trag., the latter in Prose; v. Veitch Gr. Verbs: pf. #AAaypat Antiph. Oud. 1, Anth.; plapf. #AAaxro Hat. 2. 26.—Freq. in compds. dyr-, dr, b1-, &-adAdoow, etc. To make other than it is (from dAAos), to change, alter, 7. Emped. 67, 157; xpordv, «léos Eur. Med. 1168, Bacch. 53; 70 éavrod efdos els moAAds poppas Plat. Rep. 380 D; xdpay Id. Parm. 139 A. II. ddd. zi twos to exchange, give in exchange for, barter one thihg for another, ris o7s Aarpelas Ty éuny dvo- mpagiay .. ov dv Gdddga’ eyw Aesch. Pr. 9675 Te dyrt Tevos Eur. Ale. 661; and in Med., rv mapavrixa éAniba . . obdévos dy pAAdgavro Thue, 8. 82; cf. dvradAdoow, infr. 1. 2. to repay, requite, pédvov povedow Eur. El. 89. 3. to give up, leave, quit, obpavtoy $@s Soph. Ant. 944, cf. Eur. I. T. 193; v. infr. M1. 2, and Tapad- Adoow. 4. Med., ixvos &w rpiBov ddddocecba to remove one’s position, Eur. El, 103. III. to exchange, take one thing for another, xdsov rovabA0d twapedyros Theogn. 21; also, wév@ mévov ara. to exchange one suffering with another (nisi leg. mévov), Soph. Fr. 400 ; WpAarrépuec@ dv Sdxpva Sdvres xpvatov should take in exchange, Philem. Sap5. 1 :—aAA. Ovnroy eds to assume it, Eur. Bacch. 53, cf. 1332 :—more freq. in Med., 7é twos one thing for another, edSatpovias Kakodatpoviay Antipho 138. 34, cf. Plat. Legg. 733 B; 7a oixnia xaxd GAAd~agPat Toto: TAnsiow: to exchange them with them, Hdt. 7. 152; hence, fo buy, te dvr’ dpyvpiov Plat. Rep. 371 C; 8¢ dvs i) xat. mpdcews addarreaOai ri tur Id. Legg. 915 D. 2. to take a new position, i.e. go to a place, ddAdcoev “Aida Oaddpovs Eur. Hec. 483 (where the sense of ‘having escaped death only to fall into slavery,’ has also been suggested) ; méAuw éx mdAews Plat. Polit. 289 E; so, mutare in Hor, Od. 1. 17, 2, etc. IV. absol. ¢o have dealings, whether as buyer or seller, in Med., pds 7wa Plat. Legg. g15 E. 2. to al- ternate, oxirrp’ GAddoowr €xev to enjoy power in turn, Eur. Phoen. 74, cf. Plat. Tim. 42 C:—Pass., dperal . . dAAacodpevar in turns, Pind. N. 11. 40, ef. Arist. Probl. 25. 22.—Cf. duei8w throughout. &dAaxaj, Adv. (GAAos) elsewhere, in another place, dAAos dAAaX} one here, another there, Xen. An. 7. 3, 47; GAAore dAAaxF now here, now there, Id. Mem. 1. 4, 12. GhAax60ev, Adv. from another place, Antipho 124. 16:—éAAayx6O, Ady. elsewhere, somewhere else, Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 8 :—dAAayéoe, Ady. elsewhither, to another place, Xen. Cyr. 7. 4, 7, Arist. Fr. 381 :— GdAaxod, Ady. elsewhere, somewhere else, Soph. O. C. 43, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 20.—These forms are censured by Thom. M. and Moer. as being less Att. than dAAo#er, dAAob, dAAove. G)Aeyov, GAACEat, v. sub dvadréyo. G\AerrahAnXia, %, accumulation, Eust. 12. 3. GAA-err mros, ov, one upon another, Td adder. accumulation, Paus. 9. 39, 4, Gramm. : alternate, Eccl_—But in most passages, except in late authors, Editors write divisim GAA’ ér., v. Alciphro Fr. 6, 11, Heinichen Eus. H. E. 2. 6. G\Aq, Adv., properly dat. fem. of dAdAos: I. of Place, 2. in another place, elsewhere, Il. 13. 49, Soph. Ph. 23, Xen.; in Hdt. also 7H GAAzy, 2. 36., 4. 28 :—c. gen. loci, dAAos GA TIF wéAEws One in one part of the city, one in another, Thuc. 2. 4; GdAoTe GAA (as in adXax7, q. v.), Xen. Hell. 1. 5,20; dAAy wat GAAp here and there, prob. 1, Id. An. 5. 2, 29; GAAnv wal GAAqy Plat. Euthyd. 273 B. 2. to another place, elsewhither, ll. 5. 187, Od. 18. 288; épxerae GAAg, i.e. is lost, I, I. 120, cf. ddAws II. 3 fin.; GAAor GAAn Hat. 1. 46, cf. 7. 255 adAn lodoa: Id. 4-114. II. of Manner, in another way, somehow else, otherwise, ll. 15. 51, Hat., ete.; 7H GAAn moAAayh Hat. 6. 21; cov tay mp Plat. Symp. 189 C; Gddp mas Xen. Cyr. 1. I, ¥, ete. 5 ,=GdAa I. 3, except, but, after negat. words, esp. oddels or pnbels, which are often joined with dAAos or repos, as, ovdels GAX’ 7} éreivy no one except she, Hadt. 9. 109; pdtv dAdo Bowety eivas GAndis dar 7 70 guparoeibés Plat. Phaedo 81 B, cf. 83 A, 97 D, Rep. 429 B, Cte. ; apyupiov pev ode exw GAN’ 4 puxpdy 7 Xen. An. 7. 7, 533 80 after questions implying a negat., Plat, Phaedr. 258 E:—in Ar. Ach. IIIT, 1112, for GAA’ H .., GAN’ 7 . . Kriiger’s emendation GAA’ ieee GAX’ 7 .. should prob. be accepted. (‘This form is best explained as= GAXo %, other than, except, the accent of ddAo having been lost; indeed the phrase appears in full in Hdt. 1. 49., 9. 8, ddd & that. . , cf. dAdo 71.) meas’ hase sistas arr’ 4, in questions, v. dAAd m1, 5. GdA-1yopéw, (ayopeta) to speak so as to imply something other than what is said, to interpret allegorically, allegorize, "EXAnves Kpévoy dA ee Xpivov Plut. 2. 363 D, cf. 996 B:—Pass., to be spoken allegorically, Ep. Gal. 4. 24; ddr trae 6 And, bi Se vig 4:24 nyopeirat 6 “AméAAay eis Tov “Hor, GAAHYopHTHS, 08, 4, an allegori » OV, O, orical expounder, Theodoret., Eust.:— &AAnyoptorv Eus. H. E. 271 A, ubi Dind, -yray. ’ adAnyopla, 7, an allegory, i. e. description of one thing under the image of another, Longin. 9. 7, Cic. Att. 2. 20, 3, in pl. :—an allegorical expo- sition of mythical legends, Dem. Phal, Iol, Plut. 2. 19 E; y. sub érdévoa ur, TI. metaphorical language, Cic. Orat. 27. : GAAnyopicés, 7, dy, allegorical, Longin. 32, etc Phal. 254. cis GAAnyopus, Adv. allegorically, T . é a cally, Tzetz. (?) ap. Schol. Aesch. Pr. 428. Spe the ov, post. for @Ankros, unceasing, ceaseless, véros Od. 12. 325; d6vvat Soph. Tr. 985: implacable, Ovpds Il. 9- 636.—So ’AAAnKTH is restored for "AAnera (the Fury) in Lue. Tragop. 6. : GAAnA-altioL, of, one the cause of the other, Justin, M. Adv. -«®s, Dem. ; z . b GhAqA-Eyyvor, a, bound in law one Jor another. mutual curetiee, Rvz.s GAAnAEvdeTOt — EANOMAL. - GdAnA-évEero1, a, bound one into the other, Byz. G@AnAlfe, to lie together, sensu obsc., A. B. 383, Clem. Al. 222. Two other usages are noted by Hesych., ddAmAifew* GAAws Kat dddws A€yerv, and GAAmAiCeaOac: 7d GAANAOUS émxerpHaat. md , ov, in pl. devouring one another, Hesych. s. v. dAAnAO- (BwBsrar (leg. GAANAcSecTal). GAAndo-ypadia, 7, the writing of amabaan poems, Eust. 55. 39. GAAnAo-Siabdxws, Adv. in continuous succession, Eccl. GAnAo-Spopor, a, running from one to another, Nicet. Eugen. 2. 314. GAAnAoKTovéw, to slay each other, Hipp. 1282. 32, Arist. Fr. 268. ' GAXAnAoKtovia, 4, mutual slaughter, Dion. H. 1. 87, Philo 2. 567. GAAnAo-KrSvos, ov, of things, producing mutual slaughter, daires Mo- schio ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 242; (#Aos Dion. H. 2. 24. GdAnAopaxla, 4, a mutual fight, Schol. Il. 3. 443. GAAnAo-paxor, a, fighting one with another, restored by conj. in Arist. H. A 2 I, 26 for dAAnAopayor. GAANAS-rpoTroL, a, exchanging forms, Linus ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 282. GAAnAo-rpbdhor, a, feeding one another, v. dhANASptACL. Ss %, mutual striking or wounding, Democrit. ap. Stob. _Ecl. 1.-348. adAnAouxéw, to hold together, Eust. Opusc. 316. 15 ; Pass., Ib. 308. 9. dAAndouxia, 4, a holding together, Dion. H. de Comp. p. 202 Schiif. ; ve Diosc. 5. 144. GhAnAodyo1, a,(€yw) holding together, Epicur. ap. Diog.L.10.99, Hesych. GAANAohiyéw, fo eat one another, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 25, Fr. 299. GdAnhopiyla, 7, an eating one another, Hat. 3. 25, Plat. Epin. 975 A. adAnho-payor, a, eating each other, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 17, Orac. ap. Paus. 8. 42, 6; 7 GAA. dvouia Sext. Emp. M. 2. 32; GAA. diac Telecl. Aud. 4; cf. GAAnAopaxos. adn pogBovia, , (pOdvos) mutual envy, Dion. H. 4. 26. GAAnAopPopéw, fo destroy one another, Euseb. H. E. 1. 2. GAAnAopOopla, 7}, mutual slaughter, Plat. Prot. 321 A. GAAnAo-H0opos, ov, destroying one another, Max. Tyr. GAAHAS-rdor, a, fond of each other, Geop. 20. 6 (v. 1. —rpda). adAndogovia, Dor. AAAGAO-, %), mutual slaughter, Pind. O. 2. 74. GAnho-pévor, a, murdering one another, Aéyxat Pind. Fr. 137; xetpes, paviae Aesch. Theb, 931 (in Dor. form dAAaA-), Ag. 1575; dderpoi Xen. Hier. 3, 8. G&dAnAo-héverys, ov, 6,=foreg., Justin. M. 1 Apol. 39. GhAnAo-hins, és, in pl., grown out of one another, Plut. 2. 908 BE. alteri, alter alterum ; hence’ mutually, reciprocally, used of all the three persons, Il. 4.62, Od. 1. 209, etc.:—in Od. 12. 102, by the common punctuation, dAAqA@y must be taken for rod érépov ; but if the stop be ‘put after wAnoloy (v. Schol.), there is no difficulty. Of the dual, Hom. uses dat. GAAjAotiv for ddAAow, perh. also as gen. Il. 10. 65; but, tovrw ..év GdAjAaioe Aesch. Pers. 188; in Prose the dual is rare. Often with Preps., év dAA7Aos, among one another, Pind. P. 4. 397, etc.; «is GAAHAOus, pds GAANAous Aesch. Pr. 491, 1087 ; mt or mpds dAATALLS Od. 22. 389, Aesch. Pers. 506, Ag. 654; é£ GAAHA@Y Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 23, Arist.; map’ GAAHAv Hadt.; map’ GAAnAous, —a, Plat. Gorg. 472 C, Phaedr, 264 .B; &’ dAAjAow Arist. An. Pr. 2, 5, 3, etc.; per’ GAAAwY Id. Probl. 30. 1; im’ GAAA@Y Aesch. Theb. 821. &\Any, ace. fem. of dAdos, used as Adv., elsewhither, to another place: but, GAAnv Kai ddAnv aroPréray eis twa again and again, Plat. Euthyd. 273 B. GAME, tos, , Lat. alicula, a man’s upper garment, Euphor. Fr. 112, Call. Fr. 149, v. Miiller Archiol, d. Kunst § 337.6: also dAAné, nxos, }, E. M. G\Aoros, ov, Ep. for d-Acoros, (Alocopat) inexorable, “Atsns Emped. Fr. 50 (ubi v. Meineke), Anth. P. 7. 643. an Avediehutned: Ep. for d-Arrdveuros, inexorable, Anth. P. 7. 483. &)\Xo-yevns, és, of another race, a stranger, LXXx, Ev. Luc..17. 18. aNhoyhanots, h, the use of a strange tongue, difference of tongue, Joseph, A. J. 1. 5, 1. ANAS yNenenanis, ov, using a strange tongue, Hdt. 2. 154. GdAoyvoew, (yvo—, yvavar) Ion. Verb, to take one for another, to mis- know, not know, add\doyvwoas Kpoicoy (Ion. for ddAoyvonaas) Hat. 1. 85. II. to be deranged, Galen. Lex. Hipp. GAXo-yvaes, Bros, 5, },=sq., Emped. 194, in dat. GAX6-yveros, ov, mis-known, unknown, strange, bijpos Od. 2. 366. adAoSarés, 7, dv, (dAdos, v. sub todamds).. Belonging to another people or land, foreign, strange, Il. 16. 550, Od. 17. 485, Pind. N. 1. 33, Aesch. Theb. 1077, Xen. Cyr. 8. 7, 14, etc. :—a later form is dAAoBaarjs, és, mentioned in E. M. 68. 2, and found in a few passages of later writers: cf. Bast. Greg. p. 891. : GAACSnpla, 4,—=drodnula, stay in a foreign land, Hipp. 558. 45; & GAdodnuig (for év dAAw dhuw), abroad, Plat. Legg. 954 E. il. concrete, a crowd of foreigners, Poll. g. 21; who also uses the Adj. GAAS-BypLos, ov, foreign, 3. 54. ee : GAdo-Bixns, ov, 6, having strange notions of justice, Or. Sib. 3. 390, (and ¢ conj.) Ib, 11. 216. ’ é GAAoBo0k~ew, to opine that one thing is another, mistake one thing for another, Plat. Theaet. 189 D, 190 D: and dAAobokia, 7, a mistake of this kind, Ib. 189 B, 190 E: cf. ddXAoppovec. Xe GAAb-Bokos, ov, holding a strange or wrong opinion, Athanas. GdAo-cOvijs, és, of a foreign nation, Diod. 2. 37, Joseph. A. J. 15. 11, 5. GAdoeOvia, 4, difference of nation, Strabo 534. &Ado-ad4s, és, of different form, looking differently, robver’ ap’ adda | 65 «dea pavéckero mévra dvaxt: Od. 13. 194, [where dAdoedéa is a trisyll., as if dAAwSy; unless we follow Pors. in adopting the reading of the Harl. Ms., dAAoedéa paivero, i. e. ddAofF adéa, vy. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. Gcovdjs 3. not.] Adv, -d@s, Diog. L. 10. 104, where éAteoe:das is a plausible conj. &Xdo0’, by elision from dAAob, often in Hom. GAobev, Acol. GAA0Ga (rejected by Apoll. de Adv. 563): Adv. :— Jrom another place, dAdoPev ddAos one from one place, another Srom another, ll. 2, 75, etc., cf. Aesch. Ag. 92, 595, etc.; GAdoBer eiAfAovde he came from abroad, Od. 3. 318; dAdobéy obey from some place else, 7. 525 in Att., dAAobev Sevodv or droGevodv from what other place soever, Plat. Legg. 738 C, Gorg. 512 A; ovdapd0ev Gddobev Id. Phil, 30 A:—e. gen. loci, dAAoey Tay “EAAHvay Id. Legg. 707 E. dhAobt, Adv., elsewhere, in another place, esp. in a strange or Soreign land, Od. 14. 130, al. (never in Il.): ¢. gen., GAAoM% -yains in another or strange land, Od. 2. 131; but, GAAo®& marpys elsewhere than in one's native land, i.e. away from home, 17. 318; GAAoGt mou or my somewhere else, Plat. Phaedo gt E, Soph. 243 B: in Att., dAAo& ovdapod, mayra- X0v, ToAAaXod, etc., Plat.; in Plat. Lach. 181 E, followed by relat. &y ofs.., as if it had been év dAAos rémors; GAAOGt Kat GAAOBP On one side or another, Arist. Meteor. 3. 5, 12. II. in other ways, from other causes, Thuc. 1. 16; GAAob obdapod in no other way, Plat. Prot. 324 E, Symp. 184 E, etc. III. sometimes also with Verbs of motion, where properly it should be dAAoge, Antipho 112. 7, and (with v. 1. ddAoge) Xen. Hell. 2. 2, 2, Dem. 918. 5. GAA6-Opoos, ov, Att. contr. -Opous, ovy (as always in Trag.). Speak- ing a strange tongue, én’ ddAoBpdous dvOpémous, kat’ ddAcPpdous avOp. Od., as I. 183., 3. 302., 15. 453; .€m GAAoOpdwy dvOp. 14. 43: gene tally, foreign, orpatds Hat. 1. 78 ; Alyumros Id. 3. 11; médAts Aesch. Ag. 1200; strange, alien, yvmpn Soph. Tr. 844.—Not in good Att. Prose. GdA-owla, %), changing of wines, drinking several wines, Plut, 2. 661 C. GAAovs-popdos, ov, strangely formed, Hanno Peripl. p. 3. ddXoios, a, ov, (dAAos) of another sort or hind, different, with a notion of comparison, Il: 4. 258, Od. 16. 181, Pind., etc.; dAAore dAAoios Pind. I. 4. 8 (3. 23), etc.; dAAotéy 71, euphem. for caxdy 7, other than good, Hdt. 5. 40; €f 7 yévorro dddotov Diog. L. 4. 44; dv .. [5 Adyos] ddXrordrepos pay Dem. 1442. 11; cf. érepos:—from its comparative force, it maybe foll. by 7. ., Hdt. 2. 35, Plat. Apol. 20 CG, etc.; or by a gen., Id, Legg. 836 B:—but an:actual Comp. dAAotdrepos occurs Hdt. 7. 212, Thuc. 4. 106, Dem: 1. c., Arist. de Cael. 1. 10, 9; later dAdo éorepos, Schol. Od, 2. 190, Eust. 2. simply, different in kind, Pind. P. 3. go, 187. II. Adv. -ws, ‘otherwise, Plat. Lys. 212: Comp. —érepov Xen. Mem. 4. 8, 2: neut. pl. as Adv., differently, Emped. ap, Arist. Metaph, 3. 5, Ir. addovb-orpodos, ov, of irregular strophés, i. e, not consisting of alter- nate strophé and antistroph¢, Hephaest. 9. , GAAovo-cxHpov, ov, of changed or different form, Diog. L. 10. 74. GdAouérys, 770s, 4, difference, Hipp. 296. 19, Plat. Tim. 82 B. GAAovoTpotréw or —€opat, fo vary, Galen. Lex. Hipp. II. trans, to alter, Hesych. GA mos, varying ; and Adv, —mws, Eccl. &Aors-xpoos, ov, contr. -xpovs, ouvv, (xpda) of changed or different colour, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 206. GdAoréa, fut. dow, (4AAo‘os) to make different, to change, alter, Hipp, Progn. 37, Plat. Rep. 381 A, etc, II. Pass., fut. -w6jcopar Galen. 3. 641, etc., but -waopuar Id. 3. 761:—to become different, be changed, Hipp. 342. 24, etc., and freq. in Att. Prose; dAAowovcOat Tijv wapnv Thuc. 2, 59; TH dpe Xen. Cyn. 9, 4; dAAolwow GddAotodabat to undergo an alteration, Plat. Theaet. 181 D; rare in Poetry, éAow7’ Wotca: roves dv 7AAOtwpévous Eur. Supp. 944. 2, to be estranged, Dio C, 37. 11. 3. to be changed for the worse, Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, fe 4. to be deranged in mind, Lat. mente alienari, Polyb. 8. 29, 5. GdAolwpa, aros, 7é,=59., Damox. Sdvzp, 22, GdAolwors, ews, 7, a change, alteration, Plat. Rep. 452 C, etc.; v. GdAordw IT. I. 2. aberration of mind, Polyb. 3. 81, 5. GhAowrikés, 7, dv, fit for changing, Arist. Sens. 4, 12, Phys. 8. 5, 15, ddAowrés, 7, Ov, changed, changeable, Arist. Phys, 3. I, 5, etc. d\Aoxa, Aeol. for dAAore, Theocr. ; &ASKoros, ov, of unusual nature or form, strange, monstrous, mis- create, portentous, Hipp. Fract, 750, Ar. Vesp, 71, Crates ap. A. B. 15, Plat., etc.; GAA, mp@ypa unwelcome, against the grain, Thuc. 3. 49; GAA, évopa a strange uncouth word, Plat. Theaet. 182 A: c. gen., dAAo- Korg yvauq Tay mapos with purpose utterly different from .., Soph. Ph, 1191. Ady, -rws, Pherecr. Incert. 26, Plat. Lys. 216 A.—Cf. Ruhnk. Tim. (Prob. derived directly from &AAos, —xoros being a mere termination, cf. vedxoros, waAl-yxoros ; for it is difficult to suppose, with A. B. 14. 28, that «éros can be used like dpy7 = 00s.) GAAopar: impf. jAAdpyy Xen., etc.: fut. dAodpar (bmep-) Xen. Eq, 8, 4, Dor. dAevpyar Theocr, 3. 25., 5.1443 aor. | #Aduny Batr, 228, Eur. Ion 1402, Ar. Ran. 243 (cf. the compds. with eis-, év—, ég-), part. GAdpevos [1st syll. long] Ar. Av. 1395; but the obl. moods are mostly from the aor. 2 }Adpnv (which again is rare in indic.), subj. GAqrae [@), Il. 21. 536, Ep. also GAerat 11, 192; opt. dAoluny Xen, Mem. I. 3, 9 (cf. eo); inf. ddéo@ar Opp., etc.; part, ddAdpevos [a], Aesch. Eum, 368 (lyr.), Xen., etc.: to the aor. 2 also belong the Ep. 2 and 3 sing. dAao, dATo, part. dAyevos only in compds., exc. GAuevos in Opp. Hal. 5. 666 (the only forms that take a smooth breathing). (From /AA come also GA-pa, GA-ars, GA-rhp; cf. Skt. sar (ire, fluere); Zd. har (ire); Lat. sal-io, sal-tus, sal-to, sal-ax.—In a Boeot. Inscr, (Keil p. 69) is ‘Em- , Faarns, as if the Root were Fad.) . To spring, Mat: bowed, properly 66 adro, of living beings, pi) .. és reCyos GAnrar Il, 21. 536; eet x’ .. els trmous Gaera: (Ep. for —yrat) 11. 192; els GAa GAro 1. 532, (but, #Aaro névrov Call. Dian, 195); é bxéov ..GAro xapa¢e Il. 6. 103; adro war’ OvAvpmov 18. 616 :—dAdrcoOa emi Tin to leap os or against, 21. 174, Od. 22, 80; émt orixas Il. 20. 353 :—c. inf., dATo Oéew, mére- | a0a: h. Hom. Cer. 390, Ap. 448: absol. of a horse, Xen, Eq.8,4. 2. of things, Garo diords Il. 4.125; of sound, Plat. Phaedr. 255 C; of parts of the body, to throb, GAAerar d@0adpds Theocr. 3. 37, cf. Arist. oe 24, 2, and y. dAya II. Hopdos, ov, of strange shape, Hipp. 379. 51., 380. 24. GAdo-1d0ea, 7), the state or an dnrowabie Bos Bd p. a ce GdAo-riOns, és, having influence on another, pijpa GdX. a transitive verb, opp. to avromadés (a neuter), Apoll. de Constr. 175 :—Ady. -0@s, transitively, Eust. 920. 27. 2. of pronouns, non-reflexive, E. M. 496. 45, cf. 34. 5 ‘ GAdompécahhos, 5, i.e. dAAoTE mpds GAdov, leaning first to one side, then to the other, fickle, epith. of Ares, Il. 5. 831, 889; mAodros Anth. P. 15. 12, cf. 1. 34. (Acc. to some from GAAopat, cf. Lat. Salisubsulus : v. Nake Opusc. p. 107.) Gos, 7, 0: (From 4/AAA come also dAAd, GAAoios, dAAérpios, GdAnrov, GdAAdcow, Lat. alius (old L. alis, alid), aliquis, alienus, etc. ; Goth. alis (dAdos), aljathré (dAAaxé0ev) ; O. H.G. ali-lanti (ausland), alles, elles (else): cf. évtot). Another, i.e. one besides what has been mentioned, either as an Adj. or as a Pron.: when used as an Adj., its Subst. is either in the same case, or in gen., dAAos "Axaidy or ’Axatds, Gvdpay dddos or Bpords dAAos Hom., etc. :—dAAos pev .. dAdAos BE .., one... another .. , rarely the one . . the other . . (of two persons, etc.) Il. 22. 493, and Att.; but also, 6 wév.., dAdAos be. . Il. 6, 147, and Att. ; repos wv .. , dAdos dé. . Il. 9. 3133 GAAos wey .. , erepos 5€ .. Hat. 1. 32; 6 pev érepos.., 6 8 Gddos Eur. I, T. 962; but dAdo in pl. only stands in the second clause, Spitzn. Il. 9. §94. II. the follow- ing usages may be distinguished: 1. GAAos zis or Ts GAAos, any other, some other, Hom. ; ovd5ets dAXos no other ; GAAOL TOAAOL or TOAAOL Gddot, or WoAAol Kat GAAot many others, Att.; €f Tis GAAos, Lat. si quis alius, Thuc. 6. 32, etc.; also, ef 71s wal GAAos Xen.'An. I, 4, 15, etc., y. sub ¢l VII. 1. d. 2. dddos is often joined with other of its own cases or adverbs derived from it, dAAos dAAo 4 owe man says one thing, one another, i.e. different men say different things, Xen. An, 2.1, 15; GAAos GAAw éAeyev Plat. Symp. 220 C; GAdos GAAp éexpdmero Xen. An. £3 19; but the Verb may be in pl., mapaAapBavew dAdos dddov én’ GAdov, rv 8 én’ GAdov xpeiq.. . ebéueda TéAW voya Plat. Rep. 369 B, cf. Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 4, etc.: the pl. dAAox is used when the several patties are pl., Aetmovar Tov Adpov . . GAAor GAAobey Xen. An. I. 10, 13; and so prob, GAAox should be restored in Hell. 7. 1, 15 ;—v. sub ddAaxy, GAAn, GAAnY, GAdober, dAdoceE, dAdorE, GAdou, GAAvdrs, 3. dAdAos wal GAXos, one and then another, one or two, Xen. An. 1. 5,12; so, GdAo Kal GAdo one thing after another, Id. Cyr. 4. 1, 15. 4. re- peated for emphasis, dAAos dAAos tpémos quite another sort, Eur. Phoen. 132. 5. 008’ dAdos for obdérepos, Theocr. 6. 45. 6. joined with the Art., 6 GAdos, the other, the rest, all besides what has been mentioned ; in pl., of dAAou (in Hdt. contr. GAdox), all the others, the rest, Lat. ceteri, freq. from Hom. downwards, who has GAXot sometimes in same signf., Spitzn, Il, 2. 1; Td GAAa, contr. 7adaa or (as Wolf, Anal. 2. p. 431) TaAAa, Lat, cetera, reliqua, not alia, Hom., etc. ; mi & xpuaés Pytherm, (Bgk. Lyr., Scol. 1, p. 1287); in Att. often used as Ady. for the rest: sometimes also of time,=rdv dAAov xpévoy Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 2; (where observe that 6 dAAos xpévos is usu. said of past time, 5 Aouwds xp. of future, Wolf Leptin. 462. 1; but 4 GAdos xp. of future, Lys. 139.45); of re dAdo Kal.., 7d re ddda Kal... all others, and especially .., Hdt. 1. 1, etc. ; dada Te 8% ele, kai. . Plat. Theaet, 142 C; (v. sub dAAws 1):—r0 dAdo is much less freq. than 7a GAG. 7. @dXos is used with Numerals, when it must be rendered by yet, still, further, etc., méumros morapos dAdos yet a fifth river, Hdt. 4. 54, cf. Aesch. Theb. 486, Soph. Ant. 1295. 8. in enumerating several objects, where it seems pleonast., but serves to bring them into sharper contrast, as, dpa Thre kal dppirodrot xiov dAAat with her their mistress came attend- ants also, Od.6.84; teroBev dddow pynorhpay (where Athena is oken of), 1. 132, cf. 9. 367., 13. 266; and freq. in Att., wap dyyéhov Der other than myself, Soph. O. T. 73 0d yap Av xopros v5 GAXo Bév5pov ovdév there was no grass nor any tree at all, Xen. An. 1. 5, 53 ™poro- pady ob ry traBedlav pdvov dAAAd Kal GAdqy HBpwr besides, Aeschin. 23. 26; cf. Herm. Soph. Ph. 38, Heind. Plat. Gorg. 473 D, Stallb. Plat. Apol. 36 B:—Hom. also often has it almost pleonast. with a Comp., s ceo velsrepos GAdos ’Axaidy Il. 15. 569, cf. 22. 106, al. 5 with a Sup., diup@raros dA Od. 5. 105; also with mAyotos Il, 4. 81, al. ; with fs or pévos, Eur. Med. 945, Plat. Charm. 166 E.—On the other hand GAAos is said to be omitted in phrases like & Zed «al Oeol Ar. Pl. 1, cf. Il. 6. 476. III. much more rarely like dAAotos, of other sort, different, Ul. 13. 64.5 21. 22. 2, in this sense sometimes like a Comp., ¢. gen., dAAa 7&v dicate other than just, Xen. Mem. “48 5 so also followed by #.., when either a negat. goes before, oi5 Dds obdey dAdo (or ovdév), #.., nothing else than.., Hat. 1. 49., 7. 168, Thuc. 4.14; ob5ev Gddo-y’ i) mrigas Aesch. Pers. 209 ; & pndey GdAo 4 Bavoeirai 71s which one only thinks,’ Plat. Theaet. 195 E:—or, more often, the clause is interrog., als dddos f) ya ..3 Aesch, Pr, 440; 7h huc. 3. 39, etc.; Th 5’ dAdo 4 mova. .; dddo H..; what else than. .? Bar: ellipt., 71 dAdo (sc. maa xo) 4 immonévraupos yiyvopat ; Be a. cowed Soph. Aj. 128, Ar. Ach. 39; op pos — adrdrpuos. sometimes by GAAd, Il, 18. 403., 21. 275., 24. 697 :—for dAdon, H.., v. sub voce.—Hence come several secondary signfs. : 8. other than common, strange, foreign, diAdos dirns Od. 23. 274- 4. other than what is, untrue, unreal, 4. 348., 17.139: 5. other than right, wrong, se Plut. 2. 187 D, etc.; cf. dAAws :—€repos is so used in better Greek, v. €repos III. 2. door, Ady. (GAAos) to another place, elsewhither, Od. 23.184; @Ados didAoge one one way, one another, Aesch. Pers. 359; GAAog’ . . dupa Oarépg 8 voov éxovra Soph, Tr. 272: to foreign lands, GAX..éeméumew to export, Xen. Hell. 6. 1, 11 :—joined with another Ady., dAAoce ovda- péce to no other place, Plat. Crito 52 B; GAA. woAAaxéce to many other places, Id. Phaedo 113 B; moi dAdoge ; to what other place? Id. Menex. 241 E; GddAové mor to some other place, 1d. Theaet. 202 E :—often also c. gen., dAAog€é mor THs SeAlas to some other part of Sicily, Thuc. 7. 51; dAAoge 70d odparos Plat. Legg. 841 A:—in the phrase GAAoge bro dy dgiiep Plat. Crito 45 B it is not=dAAaxod, but put for it by attraction to dzror. G\dore, Acol. dAAoKa A. B. 606, Adv.: (dAAos, Ste). Another time, at another time, at other times, first in Hom., who commonly opposes G@ddore.., GAAoTE.., at one time..at another.., now..now..; also, bre pév .., GAdore dé Il. 11.65; dAdore pev .., GAdAoTE F adre Od. 16. 209, Hes. Fr. 44; rér’ dAdos, dAdob’ drepos Soph. El. 739; wore péev xakdv, Gddor’ em’ éaOddv Epme Id. Ant. 367: GAAoTe pév.., Tére bE Xen. An. 4. 1, 17: sometimes the former dAAore is omitted, porray [@AAor’] évapyijs raipos, dAdor’ aiddos Spdxav Soph, Tr. 11; [@AAor’] €m dxrais, dAdo’ év mévrov oddw Eur. Hec. 28 ; sometimes the latter, Soph. O. C. 1675 :—dAdAore wal GAdore now and then, Xen. An. 2. 4, 26 :—very often joined with dAdos, etc., mpds GAAor’ GAXov sometimes to this man, sometimes that, Aesch. Pr. 276, etc.; so too, GAAws GAAoTe at one time one way, etc., Aesch. Theb. 1071; dAAo7’ GAAD, GAAOBL, GAAogE, etc, Go 1, anything else, in interrog, sentences, mostly foll. by #, # aot GdAo tT paiverat . . i) Adyos; Plat. Phaedr. 258 A, cf. Phaedo 64 C:— hence often, mostly in Plat., in an elliptic phrase, equiv. to dpa ..; or nonne ..? implying an affirm. answer, GAAo 71 7) mewvnoovat; (i. e, dAAO 7 melgovrat 7) mewnoova ;) will they not be starved? Hat. 2. 14, cf. 1. 10g; so, dAdo Tt 7) Hpeua emavackeydpeOa; shall we not calmly re- consider? (i.e. let us do so), Plat. Theaet. 154 E, cf. Phaedo 70 C, Meno 82 D, Gorg. 481 C, etc.; 7@ Siaréyer od viv; GAAo Te 7) Enol; is it not with me? Id, Alc. 1. 116 D:—sometimes with other words interposed, GAAo 7 Aéyes 7) Td5€; Id. Symp. 200 D, ef. Phaedo 79 A, 106 A, Crito 50 A, etc.:—so, dAdo 7 TARY. .; Id. Soph. 228 A :—but often GAAo 7 or GAAoTi..; stands alone, GAAo Tt ody . . ZAeyes ; did not you say? Id. Gorg. 495 C, cf. 470 B, Theaet. 165 E, Rep. 337 C, etc, II. rarely without a question, dwéyvoa rod GAAo Tt 7) Kpareiv ris yas Thuc. 3. 85. GAAorpratw, zo be ill-disposed, Lat. alieno animo esse, Polyb. 15. 22,1. GdXorpis-yvopos, ov, thinking of other things, absent, Cratin, Mavénr. 3. sped 6, a busy-body in other men’s matters, 1 Ep. Petr. . 15, Dion. Ar. OTpLo-Kdparos, ov, labouring for others, Eccl. Gdorpto-hoyéw, to speak of things foreign to the subject, Strabo 62. a. ov, ever changing in form, epith. of nature, . H. 9. 23. oTplo-vopéw, to assign things to their wrong place, opp. to d:avé- pew én ra abray Exacta Plat. Theaet, 195 A. we to adopt Soreign customs, Dio C. 52. 36. ; Spiel ci to —— with hres Solk’s business : to excite com- s, Polyb. 5. 41, 8:—hence & a 7 i i bother follk's bag ose, otpiompayia, 7, a meddling with GdAorprompdypov, ov, busy about other einem :—dAAotpionpaypooivy, %, meddlesomeness, Plat. Rep, 444 B. érptos, a, ov, (dAAos) of or belonging to another, Lat. alienus, opp. to téos, H ; eon 3 tos, Hom, etc.; GAA. Bioros, ynis, éxea Hom.; GAA. yuvty another man’s wife, Aesch. Ag. 447 (lyr.); GdAoTpiav xapioacOa to be boun- ote what is another "sy Od, 17.452; yvabpoiar yeAolw Gddorplooy, nid h, eet eae a a face unlike one’s own, of a forced, unnatural gh, ighed with alien lips’ (Tennyson ; cf. Val. Flacc. 8,164), or (as Eust.) laughed where laughing is out of place, unseasonably, Od. 20. (ose par varomed the phrase, malis ridere alienis, but applied Y)5 » HHaow eiprov by the help of another's eyes, Soph. (lyr.) O. C. 146; ob GAA. drny not inflicted by other hands, 1d. Ant. T259 :—proverb., GAAérpioy day Gépos to put one’s sickle itovces 5 neighbour's corn, Ar. Eq. 392, cf. Hes, Th ia x iii SetsrOcs to a 92, cl. Hes. Th. 599; dAdotpiwraros Tots xpnaGat to deal with one’s body as if it absolutely belonged niga ’ ee I. 70; wa @Adérpia, contr, 7ddAérpia, what be- ms gs to — bed ~~ ee 7. Semvetv Theop. Com. ’08, 3, : le » Joreign ii = oe ~ pas a mere stranger, Od aes bie Pagers, “3 Hat. 3. 155 es Bab pee af 16. 102 3 ob8€ 71s dAXorplaw no stranger, 8 parts ella ; Te otKelos 6 rebvews Plat. Euthyphro 4 B; oudeis Sort Hot GAX., dv F xpnords Menand. TMepikesp. 2; GAAoTpId Tepos TaY mardi less near than thy children Hat eet dire ead opp. to olwesdrepos, Arist. Eth. N. 8.12, 4. cf a 2 rapier ie GrArAbrprn iyiv dvres Isocr. 6c. 9 Aa See Ope enon ae dat., Plat. te A oF. 300 ©. 2. of things, alien, strange, » etc. ; €t Te mpdrepoy yévovev ddAXbrptoy Dem ; f dddorpl an a , ee a + _ eprmabdg = enemy's country, oes 218 A ck. tit 7 83 ¢. acc tlepes oe Snuonparias dAAérpia Lys. 190. 12 5- Sea wasaes yk ts Fs ov Decret. ap. Dem, 289. 15. b. foreign 4 Purpose, Plat. Rep. 491 D, Dem. 289. 14, etc. ; Solk’s business, meddlesome, Xen. Cyr. 4. j—also followed by Any, also oy Pe dxnros mpd.., Hat. 3.853 dAdos drt... , Aesch. Pr. 467; mapd.., Plat. Phaedo 80 B, etc.: and when joined with a negat., | p Sup by Arist, Cates, 15, TIT. Ady., ddAorpiws éxew or dianel- ador porns — ddroyla. : aba mpds twa to be unfavourably disposed towards .., Lys. 911. 4 Isocr. 266 C, 96 B: Comp. -idrepoy less favourably, Dem, 228. 12. 2. strangely, marvellously, Epigr. Gr. 989. 2. GAAotprérys, y70s, 4, alienation, estrangement, opp. to oixeidrns, Plat. Symp. 197 C, Polit. 261 A: of persons, Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 17; Twos mpds twa Ep. Plat. 318 D, cf. Decret. ap. Dem. 282. 26. GAdorpropityéw, to eat another's bread, Eust. 1404. 9. &Aotpto-payos, ov, eating another's bread, Soph. Fr. 309. &AAorproppovéa, to be estranged, be ill-disposed, Diod. 17. 4. GdAotpié-hpwv, 5, %), otherwise-minded, Theod. Metoch. 499, Eust. GAdorpré-xpws, wros, 6, 4, changing colour, Anth. P. 11. 7. &Xorpid-xwpos, ov, of a strange land, Joseph. A. J. 3. 12, 3. adAorpiéa, fut. dow :—c. gen. pers. to estrange from, Tav cwpdray Thy médw ov« dddorpiodyres Thuc, 3. 65; GAd. éavrdy dnd THs Aevroup- vias to withdraw oneself from it, shift it from one’s own shoulders, Dem, 1233. 11. 2. c. dat. pers. o make hostile to another, rv xd@pav Tots mokeutors Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 16 :—Pass. to become estranged, be made an enemy, twit Thuc. 8, 73; dAdorpiodcbar mpbs Te to be prejudiced against a thing, Dion. H. de Thuc. 27. 8. in Pass. to be alienated from one’s true nature, Plat. Tim. 64 E. 4. in Pass. also, of things, to be alienated, fall into other hands, dAXorpiodrat 4 dpxh Hat. 1. 120. &ddotp €ws, 1), estrangement, tivds from one, App. Civ. 5. 78; twos eis rwa Ib. 3. 13 :—ris funpaxtas obx Spota % GAA. its estrange- ment, its loss, Thuc. 1. 35. &)Aotpotréw, to be changeable, Hesych. aAAotporia, 7), variety, Eccl. GAXS-rpomos, ov, in another manner: Ady. -ws, Arist, de Plant. 1. 3, 5, Gramm, a&ddorimwros, ov, differently formed, Manetho Apotel. 4. 75. GAAo-paviss, és, appearing otherwise, Nonn. Jo. 11. 47, etc. GAdo-pdcow, to be delirious, Hipp. Progn. 44; rejected by Lob. Phryn. 607. GXX6-hiiros, ov, (*péve) slain by others, A. B. 386, Hesych. (palvopa) =ddAdoparys, Nic. Th. 148. GAdodos, ov, Ep. for dAogos. GAAo-ppytwp, opos, 5, one of another pparpia, C. I. 5785. 11. aAAodppovéw, (GAAdppwy) Ep. and Ion.Verb, to think of other things, to give no heed, GAX’ fipny Gddoppovéov Od. to. 374; of one in a swoon, to be senseless, Kd 5 GAdoppovéovra .. cicay Il. 23. 698; Keir’ GAA. Theocr. 22. 128, cf. Arist. Metaph. 3. 5,14; td rovrar ddAoppovijca were seized with frenzy by reason of the thunder, etc., Hdt. 5. 85 ; dAver kal GAA, iwd ris d5bvys Hipp. 467. 6, cf. 607. 43 (where Littré dAAo- pacer). II. to be of another mind, have other views, Hat. 7. 205. adoppootvn, 7}, absence or derangement of mind, Poll. 8. 163. GAAS-hpwv, ovos, 6, %, thinking differently, Manetho 4. 563. GdAo-hins, és, changeful in nature, Nonn. D. 2, 148. Gdopidée, to adopt foreign customs or religions, LXx (4 Macc. 18. 5). GdodiXia, 7, foreign matter, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 106. GAdodirtopos, 5, adoption of foreign customs, LXX (2 Macc. 4. 13). GAAGS-hiAos, ov, (puvdyH) of another tribe, foreign, Lat. alienigena, Hipp. Aér. 289; és dAAdpvAov .. xOdva Aesch, Eum, 851; dv@pamo Thue. 1, 102, Plat. Legg. 629 D; méAepuos GAA. war with foreigners, Plut. Camill. 23:—comic phrase, pa@¢av én’ GAA. alien, not one’s own, Eupol. Koa. 1. 12. 2. of a different kind, (Ga Diod. 3. 18. opwvéw, to speak another tongue, Eust. Opusc. 122. 50. G\odovia, %, confusion of tongues, Joseph. A. J. 1. 4, 3. Ab-wvos, ov, speaking a foreign tongue, LXX, Hesych. Gddoxpotw, to change colour, Arist. Probl. 4. 29. GddSxpora, %, change of colour, Adamant. Phys. 2. 25. GAX6-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, ov, changed in colour, Eur. Hipp. 174 (lyr.) :—so also, GAA6-xpws, wros, 5, %), looking strange or foreign, ld. Phoen. 138, Andr. 879. GAAvBis, Ady. (dAAos) Ep. for dAAove, elsewhither, used by Hom, only with dAdos, dAAviis GAAOs one hither, another thither, ll. 11. 486, Od. 5. 71, al.; tpémerar xpws dAdvdis GAAD his colour changes now one way, now another, ll. 13. 279; imitated from Hom. by Eupol. KéAax. 1. 11, * ddAtecke, dAAvovea [0], Ep. for dvédve, dvadvouca, GAduras, v. sub dvadvrys. S Gddas, Dor. GAA@s (A. B. 581), Adv. of GAAos, in another way or manner, otherwise, in other respects, Hom., etc.: in Att. often joined with other Advs., AAws mws in some other way, dAAws ovdapas in no other wise, Plat. Rep. 343 B, 526 A, etc.: mws d. Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 39. 2. nai dddas, and besides, d-yhvap tort Kat dddas Il. 9. 699; a womtan is described as very tall xa? d, everdns Hat. 1. 60, etc. ; dpiorov nal &. pportpwrérov Plat. Phaedo, fin. ;—so a. 5é. . Hdt. 6, 105. b. at all events, any how, éremep kat &. @0ére .. Hat. 7. 16, 31; so dAAws alone, ei a, BovAorro Id. 8. 30; émetmep GAdws . . eis “Apyos xlets Aesch, Cho. 680. 3. often in Att. phrase GAAws re kal .., both otherwise and so, .., i.e. especially, above all, Aesch. Eum. 473, Thuc. 1. 70, 81, ete.; strengthd., d. re mavrws xat.. Aesch. Pr. 636, Eum. 726; a. Te xat..is mostly followed by el, #v, érecdy, especially if.., Hipp. Aph. 1246, Thuc. 2. 3; or by a part., Id. 4. 104., 7. 80:—so also d. re Xen. Mem. i. 2, 59, Cyr. 1. 6, 43. II. otherwise than something im- plied, differently, rodr’ ob« éorw a. efrat to deny it, Hdt. 6.124; od« a. Aéyw I say no otherwise, i.e. 1 say so, Eur. Hec, 302: hence several special usages : 2. in far other manner, i.e. better, Il. 14. 53, Od. 8. 176, etc. 3. more freq., otherwise than should be, i. e. heedlessly, at random, without aim or purpose, without reason, Od. 14. 124, Hdt. 3. 16., 4. 77, etc.:—also fruitlessly, in vain, like parny, Il. 23.144; and II. freq. in Att., GAd’ ¢. wove? Soph. O.T. 1151, cf. 333; with a Subst t 67 eldwdov d. a mere image, Id. Ph. 947, cf. Eur. Hec. 489 ; dpOpoy a. Id: Tro. 476; mapd xaipoy d, Id. 1. A. 800; dpiOpds, mpoBar’ d. Ar. Nub. 1203; dxAos d. eal Backavia Dem. 348, 23, cf. Thuc. 8. 78; also Thy a., v. THVGAAws :—for nothing, like mpotxa, Lat. gratis, Hdt. 3. 139 — also otherwise than right, wrongly, perversely, Dem. 1466. 5, etc. GApa, 7d, (GAAopat) a spring, leap, bound, Od. 8. To3, 128 (and in later Poets, myinua being the prose word); the leap, of one of the contests in the games, Simon. 153; Awa wérpas or werpatov a leap or fall from the rock, Eur, H. F. 1148, Ion 1268 ; xpnpvav &. ©. 1. 3026; oixetov .. dAp’ ént tipos Eur. Hel. 96; xuvijs Apa the leap of the lot from the helmet, Soph, Aj. 1287:—in Eur. El. 439 Achilles is called xodpoy dAya rodayv,—the abstract being put for the concrete, cf, Anth. P. append, 273. II. in Medic. a pulsation, palpitation, esp. of the heart, Hipp. 269. 7., 382. 45; and so Plat. Tim. 70D must be taken, v. Stallb. ; cf. GAAopat sub fin. Gdpa, 74, (dAdw) =dAoos, Lyc. 319. GApata, 4, =GApn, brine, Ar. Fr. 366, Nic. Fr. 3.18; in pl., Diosc. 2. 205. GApatvopar, Pass. to become salt, Theophr. H. P. 7. 5, 4. GApas, ddos, %, salted, steeped in brine, édda Ar. Fr. 190; és Tas dA- yddas (sc. éAdas) Hermipp. Incert. 2, cf. Eupol, Tag. 3, Ar. Fr. 345» Theophr. Char. 21. GApda, to be or become salt (cf. dAun 11), Theophr. H. P. 8. 10, 1 (ubi v. Wimmer p. 289), C. P. 6. 10, 5. ; GApevors, ews, #, brine for pickling, Diosc. 3. 91 :—dApeuris, 08, 6, a seller of pickled fruit, 1d. 1, 27 :—GApetw, (GApn) to steep in brine, pickle, Id. 2. 134. GAp, %, (GAs) sea-water, brine, Od. 5. 53, Pind., and Att.: spray that has dried on the skin, Od, 6. 219: a salt incrustation on soil, Hdt. 2. 12. 2. after Hom., the brine, i.e. the sea, Arion 3 (Bgk. p. 872), Pind. P. 4. 69, Aesch. Pers. 397, etc. 38. salt-water, brine used for pickling, Hdt. 2. 77, Ar. Vesp. 1515; 7 Oaola d, Cratin. "Apy. 3; é& dun ehew [rov ixOty] Antiph. A, 1, cf. Bubul. Kapm. 1; xaranviyew Sotad. "Ey«a, 1. 21, etc. II. saliness, esp. as a bad quality in soil, Xen.Oec, 20, 12; in the juices of plants, Theophr. H.P.8. 10,1 ; cf. dApdo, GApies, ecoa, ev, salt, briny, mépos dAp., i.e. the sea, Aesch, Supp. Sat (lyr.) ; but Herm., metri grat., dApudecs, pia, 74, salted provisions, Menand, Tpog. 1. 5. Gdpotrocta, 4, a drinking of brine, Jul. Afr. Cest. p. 279. éApo-mbrys, ov, 6, drinking brine; fem. —wérts, t8os, Ath, 32 E. GApipife, to be saltish, Arist. H. A. 9. 6, 5, Diosc. 2. 156. GApiipis, iSos, 4, anything salt, and so, 1. a salt humour, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1089: a salt scum, Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 13. 2. salt-pickle, Plut, 2. 801 A. 8. salt soil or land, Theophr. C..P. 2. 5,.4, Lxx (Job 39. 6); cf. dAimedov. II. saltness, Diod. 3. 39. GApips-yews, wv, (yf) with salt soil, wedids Philo 2. 111. GApipés, d, dv, (GApun) salt, briny, Hom. only in Od., and always in phrase, dApupdy tSwp the salt sea-water, 4. 511, etc.; dAp. méyros Hes. Th. 107; a6’ dap. Gda Epich. 26 Ahr., Eur. Tro. 76; dAp. BévOea Pind. O. 7. 105; dAp. morapés, of the Hellespont, Hdt. 7. 35. 2. in Att. Prose, of taste, salt, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 31; aiva Plat. Tim. 84 A; of drinking-water, brackish, Thuc. 4. 26; of soil, Theophr. C. P. 6. 10, 1; opp. to pwpds (insipid), Com. Anon. 220. 8. metaph. bitter, distasteful, like Lat. amarus, axon, yerrévnpa Plat. Phaedr. 243 D, Legg. 705 A, Alcm, 116, cf. Ath. 121 E; GApupd xAalev to weep bitterly, Theoer, 23. 34. b. piquant, Plut. 2. 685 E. GApipérys, 770s, %, saliness, Hipp. 1200 A, Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 13. GAptpasns, es, ( II, Pass. to be slighted, g overlooked, Eur. I. A. 1094, Thue, 1. 68; é«pevyer rapedovpevoy Soph, ~~. gee — 76 amehis — ameractper ros. O. T. 111: od8' teivd por dpede?rar Xen. Oec. 12, 2; of Hyednpévor aOpamor Thuc, 2. 49:—Adv. sjpeAnpéves, carelessly, Xen. An. 1. 7, 19. III. dpéAe, v. sub voc. - GpeArs [ti], és, (uéder) careless, heedless, negligent, Ar. Lys. 882, Xen. Mem. 2.6, 19; pA Te KdpeAhs Eupol, Mod. 10; dpyds.. xat dy, Plat. Rep, 421 D, etc.:—so in Adv. -A@s, carelessly, Thuc, 6. 100; Comp. —é€orepov, Id. 2. 11. 2. c. gen. careless of a thing, Plat. Soph. 225 D, etc.; wept ria Isocr. 391 A:—so in Adv., dued@s éxew twés Plat. Legg. 932 A; mpds re Xen. Occ. 2,7; wept twa Id. Cyr. 1. 2, 7- 3. c. inf., od« dpuedrs moceiv not negligent in doing, Plut. 2. 64 F. II. pass. uncared for, unheeded, Xen. Hell. 6.5, 41. 2. ovb« duedés éori por, c. inf., 1 am anxious to. . , Luc. Dips. g. dweArs [4], és, (uéAos) unmelodious, Poll. 2. 117. dpeAnréov, verb. Adj. of duedéw, one must neglect, turds Isoct. 190 C: also in pl., dueAnréa éort twos Arr. An. 1. 24, I. II. Gpedn- Téos, a, ov, to be neglected, Luc. Tim. 9, Arr. An. I. 7, 5. d-pednris, of, 6, one who neglects, Galen. 4. p. 390, Lob. Phryn. 514. GpéAnros, ov, like dyeAhs, not to be cared for, unworthy of care, TAN’ dyédnra pédker Theogn. 422.—The Ady. dyeAnri in Luc. Tim. 12 is prob. f. 1. for duedryet dpeAta, 7, post. for duéAca, Eur. I. A. 850, Fr. 187. GpeAxtéov, verb. Adj. of duéAyw, one must milk, Geopy 18. 3. Gpedkrés, dv, milked, or to be milked, Arcad. p. 83. Tos, ov, not to be delayed or put off, Luc. Nigr. 27. Adv. -Tws, Polyb. 4. 71, 10; also dpeAAnrtt, Themist. 208 C: v. sub duéAnros. Gpedkts, ews, }, (auéAyo) a milking, Pind. Fr. 73, LXxx (Job 20. 17). G-peAgdyros, ov, without melody, Aristox. p. 293. TOS, ov, not id be blamed, pn without reproach, ed IA. 1158, Cycl. a prrovs tpas eeigare Dem. 300.17; Gpeurros Xpovov in mh of time, Aesch. Pers. 692; du. 7 blameless in a thing, Menand, Vevd. 4; mpds te Aesch. Supp. 629. 2. of things, perfect in its kind, detnvov Xen. Symp. 2, 2; din Plat. Legg. 945 D3; au. wavra éxev Xen. Mem. 3.10, 2; dy. b1d trav pidwv Id. Ages. 6, 8; dp. éxeivy without blame to her, Plut. Sull. 35: Comp. dyepmrérepos, less blame- worthy, Plut, Ages. 5 :—Adv. —rTws, so as to merit no blame, so that nothing can be said against, right well, Aesch. Supp. 269, Soph. Ph. 1465, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 10. TI. act. not blaming, well content, dpepmrdy twa moteioGar Xen. Cyt. 4. 5, 52., 8. 4, 28:—so, duéumras 5éxeobai twa Tb. 4. 2, 37. “ie a és, mostly in pass. sense, =depmros I, Inscr. Vet. in C. I. 3 (p. 9); Pind. O. 6. 78, Aesch. Pers. 168, Supp. 5815; cf. dudusyros :— poét. form, used also in late Prose, as Plut. Cim. 2. ; Il. act., = dpepmrros I, Plut.2.610E; dy. rév dpedcay Id. Aemil. 3:—Adv. ~pis, Ion, -péws, Orph. H. 42. 11. a dpepola, %, a being dpeupns, adrdaxrijpt 5 ode dp. pidois a mediator has no freedom from blame on the part of his friends, Aesch, Theb. 909 ; dpepupias xdpw for avoidance of censure, Soph. Fr. 259. G-pepipi-porpos, ov, not complaining of one's lot, M. Anton. 5. 5. dpevar [4], for déyevas, Ep. inf. pres. from do, to satisfy, Il. 21. 70. [a], dv, also 9, 6v Opp. H. 2. 58 :—poet. Adj. used by Hom. chiefly of ghosts or shades of the dead, fleeting, vervav dpevnya. Kapnva Od. 10. 521, 536. 11. 29, al.; also of dreams, 19. 562; of one wounded, dpevnvos €a x ‘o rumpot Il. 5. 8873 rare in Trag., du. dvfjp, of Ajax unnerved by disease, Soph. Aj. 890; vextov dy. dyadpa Eur. Tro. 193 (lyr.). 2. after Hom., of mortal men generally, fleeting, Seeble, gun Sumit dvOpdésmow h. Hom. Cer. 3523 oxvoerdéa pvr dp. Ar. Av. 686. ~ 8, in the Prose of Hipp., Arist., etc., feeble, weakly, laxvotar kad dpevnvoiot Hipp. Prorth. 109; dp. pawn Arist. Probl. 11. 6, 2; of dxevrpot opines . « brepor Id. 9. 41, 12, cf. Tim. Locr. 100 C :— 0, dy. KAjpa, podAdov Theophr. C. P. 3. 14, 5, H, P. 3. 9, 1 —neut. as Adv., feebly, faintly, dpevnvov pOéyyecOae Arist. Probl. I.c.; dpav Philostr. 889 ; gacivery Arat. 905. (Prob. from a priv., pévos, without strength, feeble.) bw, to weaken or deaden the force of a thing, dpervacer 5¢ oi alxpiy Il. 13. 562; tds émBéoas cited from Synes. - d és, =dpevqvés, Eur. Supp. 1116 (lyr.)- Dor, for ant Eo, [4], eae to pluck or pull, Lat. decerpo, distringo, avOe dyépyoay aiéa Sappho 121; merddwv dno .. xepl_kapndy dpéptwv Eur. H. F. 397 (lyt.); dy. as éAdas Com, Anon. in Meineke 5. p. 123. —In 8 . . Spuds dypia Theoer. 26. 3, cf. Ap. Rh, 4. 1144, Nic. Th. 864, etc.—It is never used of liquids, for in Ap. Rh, 1. 882 dyéAyouor should be read. ae [EPT, with @ pre~ fixed, come also dpopyés, duépyn; also dudpyvupe (with o prefixed) ; ef. Skt. marg, marghmi (abstergeo); Lat. mergae, merges. Akin to , ¥. Gpedya.) |, fut.ow Orph. : aor. #pepoa Ep.du-:—Med., aor. part. dpep- — a ass cy :—Ep. Verb, rarely used in Trag., never in Att. Prose: (cf. dw-apetpw). To deprive of one's share, bereave one of, amerce one in, always of something properly belon, hg wince en, rei, SpOadrpav pry dpepoe Od. 8. 64; € : ae aldvos iene Sc. 331, ef. Simon. 115 (v. infr.) 5 «d ph crac .. 0 Gpepoe maTpas Pind. O. 12. 24: also c. dupl. acc. pers. et rei, Tisny Hpepsev 'OAVpma déipar’ €xovras h. Hom. Cer. 312 Pass. fo be bereft of a thing, gidys aiavos dpepOfs Ul. 22. 58; ob0¢ 7 Bards dpépdeat Od, 21. 2905 70 hrap Ths éxpons dpepbev Aretae. Cur. M, Ac. 2. 6:—rarely c. acc. rei, dv. . naprov dpepbaar (v. |. dpépowor, v. infr. bereave of natural Theophr. H.P. 9.8, 2. 2. c. acc. pers. only, 20 berea ; pt atic iuotoy dpépoat Il. 16, 53: s0 also, bocce 8 dpepdev airy) xadweln the glare bereft the tyes of power, blinded them, Il. 13-349 cf. 2 G-peréatperros, ov, without turni Hes. Th. 698; évrea tatpds xadd, 7d... xamvds dueépde robs the arms of lustre, tarnishes them, Od. 19. 18; so in Med., péyyos Guepoduevos having quenched it, Anth. P. 15. 32. 8. once the Act. seems to be used in the sense of the Pass., zo Jose, Blov Eur. Hec. 1029 (lyr.). II. in later Poets used like dpuépyw, to pluck, Aeuwriov dvOos dpyépoas (nisi leg. duépfas) Anth, P. 7. 657. (From 4/MEP (yelpoyar), with a prefixed ; Pind. uses the form dyeipw.) Gpépera, 4), indivisibility, Dion. Areop. G-pephs, €s, without parts, indivisible, Plat. Theaet. 205 A, Parm. 138 A, Arist., etc, ; 70 dpepés, introduced into Latin by Cicero, Plut. Cic. 40 :—Ady. —pais, Clem. Al. 5.42. 2. 7d dyeph (in the Logic of Arist.) summa genera, An. Post. 2. 19, 6, cf. Metaph. 12. 8, 25. Gpepiatos, a, ov, indivisible, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2.1046 D. Gpepivéw, to WP Gpépipyos, lamb. V. Pyth. 5, Eccl. Gpepipvia, %, freedom from care, Lat. securitas, Plut. 2. 830 A, C. I. 2778; dp. ths Seonoreias Hdn, 2. 4, 13. G-pépyvos, ov, free from care, unconcerned, Menand, Incert, 20; Bios Anth. P. 9. 359:—Adv. —vas, Hdn. 4. 5, 15, C. 1.6254. 11. II. pass. uncared for, unheeded, Soph. Aj. 1207. III. driving away care, Anth. P. 11. 24 :—dpépiuvoy, 74, the name of a plant, Plin. H. N. 25. 13. Gpéptos, Dor. for suépios. G-pépioros, ov, undivided, indivisible, individual, Plat. Theaet. 205 C, Tim. 35 A, Arist., etc. Adv. -rws, Iambl., etc. G-peppnpel, Adv. carelessly, Eust. 1416. 10, An. Ox. 2. 313. Gpepoxorros, Dor. for Ayepdxorros. &epos, Dor. for fuepos. Gpepot-yipos, ov, robbing of wedlock, Nonn. D.’7. 226. ee ov, depriving of mind, maddening, Noon. D. 1. 388. S, €0S, 7), deprivation, Eust. 1585. 46. ~ppwv, ov, =dpepaivoos, Hesych. G-peotrevtos, ov, without a mediator, Synes.; Adv. -rws, Athanas. G-peroAdBnros, ov, immediate, Eust. Opusc. 73. 75., 209. 48, etc. G-pecos, ov, immediate: dyeca wal dvanddenra, of propositions that cannot be proved syllogistically by means of a middle term, Arist. Anal. Pr. 2. 23, 4, Post. I. 3, 2, etc. Adv, dudows, with nothing intervening, immediately, C. 1. 9539, Olympiod. G-peréBiros, ov, not passing over, dperéBarov pijua an intransitive verb, Gramm. Adv. —rws, intransitively, Schol. cl %, unchangeableness, Arist. Phys. 5.6, 3, Theophr. C. P. d-peraBAnTOos, o, unchangeable, Philolaos ap. Stob. Ecl. r. 420, Arist. Metaph. 4.12, 4; dy. eis GAAa Tim. Locr, 98 C: 70 dperdBanrov = foreg., Plut. 2. 1011 A. Ady. ~Tws Tambl., and -ré Schol. Il, ‘oXos, ov, =foreg., Philolaos ap. Stob. Ecl. 1.420, Dion. H. 7.83: —Ady,-Aws, Eccl.:—in Music, without change of key-note, Arist. Quint. 17. a-perayvworos, ov, unalterable, implacable, yicos Joseph. A. J. 16. 10, I. 2. not to be repented of, i5ovz Max, Tyr. 1. 4. Gperadoaia, %, the not giving, avarice, Schol. Od, 17. 407 d-perddoros, ov, not imparting, Basil. :—not sharing, i.e. ‘excomsanes ono. Adv., dueradirws (hy to live without giving to any one, Plut. Beros, ov, unalterable, ir “ra bea, ae immutable, Polyb. 2. 32, 5, etc. Adv. -pEeTaKivyTos, ov, not to be moved fr 7 Plat. Ep. 343 A, Arist. Phys. 4. 4,18 idierhs gages nee bagesen moved, Id. Eth. N. 2. 4, 3, Ne ane G-perdxhacros, ov, not to be broken, yeas Ry as TOS, OV, irrevocable, uncontrollable, Polyb. 37. 2, 7, Heliod Les seicogtaatl “, inflexible, Basil. ap. Greg, Naz.:—also, dpetakAtros, G-perédnnros, ov, not to be taken in anot a jeriNAosros, oe aiandiag leone Purine se de Pron, 8. se Smee tl tre dperapédnrov éari ri re one has nothing ices oh Gas a 11. II. of persons, unrepentant, feeling no regret Oy ee dviaros Arist. Eth. N. 7. 7, 2, cf. 9. 4, 5 :—Adv. ~ra The nists eet 4 de Fur.; also ri, Phot, niet 2 ae Themnighe aaa petavaorevtos, ov, not immigrant i d-peravénros, ov, =dperaperrros — Sede ig 493- unrepentant, Ep. Rom. 2. 5 :—Adv. —rws Ve Curt, - Delph. p. 87. : a ATELTO , aah i ay hae “a be persuaded to change, inexorable, Arist. An. ‘Ady : PD. 4. 55 35 Gu. imd Adyou Id. To 16 . ~Tws, Epicur. ap, Plut. 2. 1117 F, ZY of thincs P. 5. 4, 10: te adfa 7 compa Diod. Excerpt. 612, Pe . Ings, unchangeable, -petamAacros, ov, not toh 1 d-peratolyros, ov, ec a or altered, Stob. Append. 42. d-peramraroros, ov, infallible, Gage Her tee Moda ee aperarrwcta, 7, unchangeableness, Arr, Epict. 3 d-peramrwros, ov, unchanging, unchangeable ) inflexible, 70 dp. rhs yvepns f II. act. Inscr. in Young’s Hierogl. 46, 2, 8, Hierocl. Abyor povipor Kat ap, » Pail Id. M. Mor. 2. —Adv, —rws, Id. Dio. Clem, Al. 201, oe sed, angeable, unchanging, like ov uniformity, Plut. 2, 135 B:—Ady, — 5 v. —rws, Clem, Al, 858, etc, 2. not to be Sot rid of or put away, Plat. Rep. 378 E. nue r Y ; y & round, without regarding, Max. . , A aperartpopos — apmuikTos. ‘Tyr. 11. 5 :—Ady. dyeracrpenri [i] or -et, without turning round, straightforward, ltévat, pevyery Plat. Rep. 620 E, Legg. 854 C. d-per opos, ov, not to be turned round, unalterable, Plat. Rep. 620 E, Legg. 960 C. Adv. -pws, Epiphan. tpemros, ov,—foreg., Plut. Thes. 17. Adv. -rws, Eccl. Guerarpomia, 7), immovableness, Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 1082. omros, ov, =dyuerarpenros, Orph. H. 58. 17. G-perddopos, ov, not to be transferred or changed, Cyrill. d-p aoros, ov, not to be interpreted, Hesych. G-peraxelpurros, ov, not hanselled, new, Ar. Fr. 579. eult to handle, Hesych. s. v. Opirror. Gpérepos, Dor. for iuérepos. G-peremproros, ov, not lightminded, Basil. G-péroxos, ov, having no share of, &yxAnuatov Thuc. 1. 39 (though the words are prob. spurious, but cf. Sext. Emp. M. 7. 93). d-perpys, és, poét. for sq., Orac. ap. Diod. 12. 10. dperpyota, 7, late form of duerpia, Epigr. Gr. p. xix. &-pérpyros, ov, also 7, ov, Pind. I. 1. 53: ed, i able, immense, Lat. immensus, névOos, wévos Od, 19. 512., 23. 249; GAs Pind. 1. c.; dp Ar. Nub. 264; exhaustless, podoa Anth. P. 7. 75. 2. unnumbered, countless, éperyot Eur. El, 433. Adv. —rws, Jo. Chrys. Gperpl, Adv. of dyuerpos, pérpy Udap mivovres, du. 5 pafay Zornes Proverb. ap. Suid. dperpia, 7, (derpos) excess, immoderateness, disproportion, opp. to ovpperpia, éuperpia, Plat. Tim. 87 D, Rep. 486 D, etc. 2. infi- nity, countless number, Id. Ax. 367 A, in pl. dperpo-BaOys, és, immensely deep, Opp. H. 1. 85. Gperpé-Bros, ov, of immensely long life, Anth. P. append. 129. dperpo-erns, és, unmeasured in words, unbridled of tongue, Il. 2. 212. Gperpo-kiikos, ov, immensely bad, Eunap. ap. Suid. Gperpo-rabys, és, excessive in passion, Alcin. Introd. in Plat. p. 118. dperpo-mérys, ov, 6, drinking to excess, Anth. P. 9. 644. d-perpos, ov, without or beyond e, i " ive, boundless, Lat. immensus, Simon. 7. 16; opp. to werpyrés, Plat. Legg. 820°C :—so in Adv. —rpws, Id, Phaedo 86 C, etc.; also neut. pl. duerpa as Adv., Babr. Il. difi- II. 10. 2. immoderate in moral sense, Plat. Legg. 690 E, etc. :— Adv. —rpws, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 34. 3. never-ceasing, rértvyes Simon. 224. 4. disproportionate, Plat. Tim. 87 E. II. without “rp prosaic, opp. to éuperpos, Critias 3. 4, Arist. Poét. 9, 2, Dion. + tC. Gpevopat, for due{Bopa: in Acol. poets (v. duel fin.), but not found in pres., to surpass, conquer, dpevoac@ dyriovs Pind. P. 1. 86, cf. P. 6. fin.; dpedoecbe Ticaydpoy Fragm. ap. Eust. Opusc. 56. 85. *Apevotas, 5, Boeot. for Apeias, Keil’s Inscrr. 11. 41. dpevot-emis, és, surpassing words, ppovris Pind. ap. Eust. Opusc.56.86. dpevorzos, ov, (duevopar) passable, Ap. Rh. 4. 297. Gpevot-mopos, ov, with interchanging paths, rpiodo Pind. P. 11. 58. Gin, %, @ shovel or mattock, Ar. Ay. 1145, Pax 426, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 34. 2. a water-bucket, pail, Lat. hama, dais kat oxdpaus dpv- cacGa, proverb. of great abundance, Plut. 2. 963 C. 3. a harrow, rake, Geop. 4. Ion. for duns, Ath. 645A. (Prob. akin to dudw.) api, Adv. (properly dup, dat. fem. of dués=ris), in a certain way: hardly to be found save in the compd. dun-yéan or—mp, in some way, somehow or other, etc.,=dmagodr, Plat. Prot. 331 D, Rep. 474 C, al., cf. Ruhnk. Tim. s..v., Elmsl. Ach, 608; v. s. duds, duod, duds. duty, Hebr. Adv. verily, of a truth, so be it, Lxx, N.T.:—rd duty, certainty, N. T. dprvov, 74, v. 1. for dymiov, in Diosc. 5. 110. &-pyvis, tos, 6, 4, =sq., Joseph. A. J. 19. 4, 6. apyviros, ov, (unviw) not angry or wrathful, Hdt. 9.94; Bdgis Aesch. Supp. 975 xetuav “Axaidv ode dunviros Oeois sent on them not but by the special wrath of heaven, Aesch. Ag. 649 (where Dobree corrected "Axaiois ob« dunvros Gedy). Adv. -rTws, Ib. 1034. G-phviros, ov, not informed of, Heliod. 8.13. In Byz. an Adv, -d7i. &-pipiiros, ov, not to be drawn out, i-e. tedious, yipas Ap. Rh. 2. 221; Adyot A. B. 20. Gpns, nros, 6, a kind of milk cake, Ar. Pl. 999, Antiph. Avomp. 1, Menand. “Tro. 11, etc. dpnréov, verb. Adj. of duaw, one must reap, An. Ox. 3. 226. auntie [4], fpos, 6, (dudw) a reaper, Il. 11.67: metaph. one that mows down, a destroyer, Christod. Ecphr. 376 :—as Adj., dunrijpe timw in form like a sickle, Nonn, D. 26, 302 :—fem. dparepa, E. M Gpnriptov, 76, a sickle, Max. Tyr. 30. fin. Gpnricés, 4, dv, (dunros) of or for reaping, dpémavov dp. a reaping- hook, Ael. H. A. 17. 37. apntickos, 6, Dim. of duns, Telecl. Ad. 1. 12, cf. Pherecr. Mepo. 1.7. dunros [a], 6, (d4udw) a reaping, harvesting, Il. 19. 223 (where it is metaph. of, slaughter). 2. harvest, harvest-time, Hes. Op. 382, 573, Hdt. 2. 14., 4. 42, and in late Prose. II. the crop or harvest gathered in, or the field when reaped, Lat. seges, Dion. P. 194, Arat. 1097 ; with.another Subst., Antovo duhrowo Opp. C. 1. 52'7:—metaph. of a beard, (Shakspere’s ‘ chin new-reaped ’), Anth, P. 11. 368.—The more accurate Gramm. vary the accent, writing duos for signf. 1, dunrds for Ii, as in tp-ynros tpvynrés, ordpynros onoprrés, etc., Arcad. 81, E. M. 83, etc. ; whereas Ammon. precisely reverses the statement. ‘The reason- able rule seems to be that in signf. 1 the word is a Subst., and therefore is to be written dunros; in signf. 11 an Adj. (sub. xapnés, otros), and therefore dunrdés; v. omnino Spitzn. Excurs. Xxx. ad Il, duntpts, 50s, }, fem. of dunrip, Poll. 1. 122. G-yHrwp, op, opos, without mother, motherless, Hdt. 4. 134, Eur. Ion $ 77 109, cf. 837. II. that is no mother, unmotherly, wyrnp dphyrwp Soph. El. 11543 of a young wife dying in childbed, Epigr. Gr. 365.» | dpnxavaw, =sq., Opp. H. 3. 328, Anth, P. 9, 591, etc., in Ep. forms, dunxavoworv, —dov. éunxavéw, fut. jaw: impf. yunxavour, Plat. Com. E’p. 3 :—to be dyuyj- xavos, to be at a loss for, or in want of, xphparos ovdévos Hat. 1. 35, cf. Ap. Rh. 4. 692; also, dy. wept tivos about a thing, Eur. I. T. 7343) c. acc., Tépya Aesch, Ag, 1178, etc.; tadra Eur. Heracl. 492; c. dat., dp. Ocopdrorot Aesch. Ag. 1113 :—often followed by a relative clause, dunx. wérepov.., %.., Soph. Ph. 337; du. Sma tpdmwpar, Soe tpamotuny Aesch. Ag. 1532, Pers. 458; mot €@w Soph. El. 1174: absol., Aesch. Supp. 379, Eur. Andr. 983. 2. c. inf. not to know how to do, éocav ovpBareiy dynxav® Neophro ap. Schol. Eur. Med. } 668; xpdvos.., dv AavOdvey dunxav® know not how to escape, Antiph. Incert. 72. 3. dunxavav Broredw I live without the ne-' cessaries of life, Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 19:—cf. dwopéw, which is the word’ preferred in Att. Prose: but in Thuc. 7. 48, 7a pév dwopqcey, 7a 8 ere dpnxayjoew, some distinction is intended. dpnxavis, és, post. for dufyavos, h. Hom. Merc. 447, in gen. pl. -éav. In Dion. H. 1. 79 4xavqs has been restored from Vat. Ms. ' d-pnxavytos, ov, =dunxavos I, Joseph. A. J. 1. 19, 7 dub. : dpnxavia, Ion. —ly, #, like dwopia, want of means or resources, help- { lessness, impotence, Od. 9. 295, Theogn. 385, and (in pl.) 619; then in Hdt. 8, 141, Pind., and Att. ; Om’ dunxavias Ar. Av. 475. II. of | things, hardship, trouble, xetwavos dunxavin Hes. Op. 494- dpnxivo-epyos, dv, unfit for work, Hes. Fr. 13. Gunxdvo-roréopar, Dep. to go awkwardly to work, pnxavorotéovra dunxavoroéeoOa Hipp. Fract. 772. d-pqXavos, Dor. dpdxavos, ov, without means or resources, at a loss, helpless, impotent, dunxavés tvos in trouble about one, Od. 19. 3635 méptpoy ait@ TH mode 8 dy. Ar. Ran. 1429; Gp. nal Grexvos Plat. Polit. 274 C; of animals, opp. to edphxavos, Arist. H. A. 9. 11, 1: hence, 2. (where the dunxavos is the cause of his own situation) incapable, awkward, appabées xat dp. h. Hom. Ap. 192; Tov dp. dphodv Aesch, Theb. 227; dy. yuvf Eur. Hipp. 643; dp. eis re awkward at a thing, Id. Med. 408 :—Adv., dunxdvws éxeev=dunxaveiv, Aesch. Cho. 405, Eur.,.etc. 8. c. inf. at a loss how to do, unable to do, 76 5¢ Bia mohitav Spay duhxavos épuv Soph. Ant. 79; au. 6 re xp) A€yew Dem., 1392. 16, etc. 4, dp. cvppopa=dynxavia, Simon, ap. Plat. md 344 C. II..oftener in pass. sense, allowing of no means: 1 impracticable, impossible, hard, c. inf., dunxavds éooe mObécOat Il, 132 726, cf. 14. 262. b. of things, rodro & dy. ebpeiv Pind. O. 7. 455 650s du. eicedOeiv a road hard or impossible to enter on, Xen. An, I. 2, 21: but also dujyavdy éor, c. inf. ’tis hard, impossible, du. tore yevéoOa Emped. 102, cf. Hdt. 1. 48, 204, Soph. Ant. 175, etc.:— absol., duhxava impossibilities, dunxavev épav Ib. go, cf. 92; de~ vos .. etpeiv nag dunxdvev mépov Aesch. Pr. 59; &« trav dy. mépovs ebynxdvous mopifew Ar. Eq. 759. 2. against whom or which nothing can be done, irresistible, in Hom. the,common usage, applied tox Zeus, Hera, Achilles ; dunxavds éoor, ay. dev Il, 10. 167., 16.29. ba of things, dunxava épya mischief. without resource, help,-or remedy, ll. 8.130; so, du. déos Hes. Th. 589; xhdea Archil. ;,xaxdv, din, Gdyos, fuppopa, véoos Trag. c. specially also of dreams, inexplicable, not to be interpreted, ‘Od. 19. 560. 8. in Att., also, extraoxdinary, inconceivable, infinite, immense, peyé0n Plat. Phaedo 111.D; jdovat Id. Phil. 46 E; dynxavoy eddatpovias an i ivabli t of happiness, Id. Apol. 41 C:—often c. acc., dufxavos 1d péyebos, 7d KaAAOs, TH mANOos, etc., i.e. inconceivable in point of size, etc., Plat. Rep. 584 B, 615 A, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 38; but also c..dat., du. wAgGer Te Kal aromicc Plat. Phaedr, 229 D. b. in this sense, Plat. also is fond of joining the words with the relatives ofos, aos, and the Ady. with. ds, as, dunyavor écov xpévoy an inconceivable length of time, Phaedo 95 C; dunxdvy bow tAéou by it is impossible to say how much more, Rep. 588 A; dyhyavdv 7 oloy quite indescribably, Charmid. 155 'D:—so in Adv., dunxdves ds e} Rep. 527 E; du. ye &s opddpa Phaedr. 263 D. dp-n@os, ov, with the dawn, Herm. Orph. Arg. 486. dpta, %, a kind of tuuny, which ascends rivers, perh. the bonito, scomber, Sotad. "Ey«Aet, 1. 26, Arist. H. A. 2. 15, 14., 4.8, 8., 6. 17, 14, al. :— also dptas, ov, 6, Matro ap. Ath. 135 F:—in many passages the gender is uncertain, Epich. 30 Ahr., Archipp. ‘Iy@. 7, Arist. H.A.1.1, 24., 8.2,24,al. d-plavros, ov, undefiled, pure, tiwp Theogn. 447; dos Pind. Fr. 106; Aesch. Pers. 578 calls the sea simply % dylavros; dp. rod dvoctov mépe Sree from the stain of ungodliness, Plat. Legg. 777 E; yduoe of dp. Epigr. Gr. 204. 13. 2. not to be defiled, Dion. H. 2. 75. A i 6 dy. AiBos a greenish stone like asbestos, Diosc. 5. 156. dptas, ov, 6, =dyla, q. v. G-ptyhs, és, (uéyvupe) unmixed, pure, FSovat Arist. Eth. N. 10. 3, 2; dy, Tt Kat kaBapoy Id, Metaph. 1, 8: c. gen. rei, without mixture of a thing, Plat. Menex. 245 D; so, du. mpds dAdnAa Id, Polit. 265 E; dy. ri Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2.3. Adv.—y@s, and (acc. to Hdn. Epim. 254) —yi. GulStov, 7d, Dim. of duis, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 234. Gp.0a, a kind of cake, perhaps the same as duns, Anacr. ap. Hesych. &plOeos, Dor. for dpibeos, Gplpéw, dprOpds, by Ep. metath. for dpiOuéw, dpiOuds, Call. Cer. 86, Fr. 339, Theocr, 13. 72 Ahr., Simon. 1343 cf. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. p. 172. d-picros, ov, unmingled, that will not mingle, Emped. 172, 321; au. Bon cries that will not blend or harmonise, Aesch. Ag. 321; &s duixror avOpwmos épay Acévtwv Babr. 98. 19. IL. unmixed, pure, Bios, hdovA Plat. Phil. 61 B, 50 E:—éy. tii unmixed with a thing, Id. Polit. 310D; duera ward ortxoy, of regular yerses, such as Ep. or lamb., ] at if ‘supr.); so, metaph,, qofov 78 cuor\a — auvynnovew. Hephaest. 118:—Adv. —rws, Superl. -rérara, Plat. Phil. 59 C. III. of persons, not mingling with others (as ueyhvat is used of in ); i ible, iable, savage, of Centaurs and Cyclopes, Soph. Tr. 1095, Eur. Cycl. 428; dpdxawa Anaxil. Neorr. 1.3; 70 duexroy=Gpu- fla 11, Hipp. Aér. 294; dy. marhp morose, Eur. Fr. 502;—dp. Tu having no intercourse with others, Ib. 429 ; so of laws and customs, dy. vouipa Trois GAAos Thuc. 1. 77; mpds GAAnAa Plat. Soph. 254D. db. without sexual intercourse, Plat. Polit. 276 A; dvipés with a man, Phintys ap. Stob. 444. 28. 2. of places, dy. ala an unhospitable land, Eur. I. T. 402; rézos Isocr. 202 C, 7 , &pAAa, 7s, }, (from dza,—nothing to do with tAn). A contest for superiority, a conflict, rav vedv GydAay . . id€o0at, of a sham fight, Hdt. 7: 443 Gp. immwy a race, Ib. 196; then in Pind., and Att.: pippappd- Tos duiddacs in racing of swift chariots, Soph. O. GC, 1063, cf. El. 861 ; Gp, dyabGyv dvbpav a contest of brave men, Dem. 490. 1; xépay Plat. Legg. 834 E. 2. c. gen. rei, iaxvos Gu. a trial of strength, Pind. N. 9. 273; mrepv-yov GulAdas Aesch. Pr. 124; modoiv, Adyar, ppovhuaros Eur, IA. 212, Med. 546, Andr.214; dperfs Plat. Legg. 731B; c. gen. objecti, Gy. A€etpow a contest for marriage, Eur. Hipp. 1141, cf. Ar. Eq. 556, Thuc. 8. 6:—instead of the first we also have ap. wept Twos Isocr. 21 A}; instead of the second an Adj. is often used by the Poets, dy. mAovTos, ToAUTEKVOS a striving after wealth or children, Eur, I. T. 412, Med. 557; the gen. sometimes stands for an Adj., dy. aiparos, = alpard- eooa, Id. Hel. 1155. 3. durdAay ribévat, mporiBévar to propose @ contest, Eur. Andr. t020, Med, 546; dmuAdav moveiaBar to contend eagerly, Sxws..Hdt. 8. 10; dy. émovodvro they had a race, Thuc. 6. 32; Gu, rovetoOae mpds twa Plat. Legg. 830 D; els dp. epxeobat, eeddciv Eur. Tro. 617, Hec. 226; mpds Gu. éddetv Id. Med. 1082; GmAAa -yey- verat a struggle arises, Thuc. 8. 6. GpiAAdopar: fut. -Acopar Ar., Plat,: aor. #ysAAHOnv Eur., Thuc. (v. infr.) ; later #pcAAnodyny Plut. Arat. 3, Luc. Paras. 51, Aristid., etc. : pf. piAAnpar Eur. :—cf. &-apshAdopar: (dsdAa). Dep. to compete, vie, contend with another, Lat. aemulari, Hat. 4. 71, Pind. N. to. 58, and oft. in Att. :—Construction, . dat. to vie or strive with one, Hdt. 1. c., Eur. Andr, 127, etc.; mpés twa Id. H. F. 960 (v. infr. 2); c. dat. rei, fo contend in or with a thing, GAAoow dpsdAnels Ady Id. Supp. 195, cf. H. F. 1255; immo, rofois Andoc. 32. 34, Plat. Rep. 328 A, Legg. 834 A; wan twos about or for a thing, Luc. Char. 20; mepi rive, Pind. N. 10. 58; éé or mpds te Plat. Legg. 830 E, 968 B; inép Twos Polyb. 5. 86, 8 :—the of contest is added in a relat. clause with ds .., or Smws .., Plat. Rep. 349 C, Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 14:— the kind of contest is added in a cognate acc., du. ordd:ov being =dp. Guida oradiou Plat. Legg. 833 A. 2. in pass. sense, 7d meCdv . . mpos GdAHAous dyurAndév being matched one against another, Thuc. 6. 313 TOAN’ GwAANOévTa made subjects of contest, Eur. Fr. 809. 2. II. of a single person, fo strive, struggle, hasten eagerly, émi 7 to a point, Xen, An. 3. 4, 443 mpds 7 to obtain a thing, Plat. Rep. 490 A, Arist. Bat. 9. 8,7, al.; dedp’ bier ae Paty = Or. 4565 . eee soryie bev AX Id. Hel. wl PBA 'BCO; CC, HMrANBEYY ps ¢ Ber eked UeNhan. yéo0 4yddG0G; how shall I groan loud enough? Ib. 164, cf. Hec. 271. III. Hesych. has the Act. dmAAGv,=épifew, wat eis Taxos ypapev. e pact usps” 16, a conflict, struggle, Soph. El. 493; v. sub Gdex- Tpos ;—Ka0’ dyihAduara mparos Inscr, Cyr. in C. I. 5149 6. GpAdnréov, verb. Adj. one must vie, mpds 7 Isoct. 154 E. 2 P, fipos, a competitor in the race, tpbxovs dyiAdnrijpas Aiov, v. sub Tpdxos B. THpLos, _ ov, of a contest, Poll. 1. 181:—70 dy. a place of “quad <2 éb contest, Plat. Soph. 225 A Spar . , bv, of or for a contest, Plat. . * ae pig padhatied in one's pa ee rN ie ee 7], ov, inimitable, xaperes Ani . 5 108; Twi in a thing, Piva nua Mi Js etc. :—Ady. —rws, Id. Nic. I. II. not imitated, Id. 2. 53 D. ; apts Ion, —{n, 4, @ being dyuxros, and so, I. unmixedness, purity, Theophr. C. P. 4. 16, 2. II. of persons, want of inter- course, dAApAwv Thuc. 1. 3; mpés twa Luc. Tim. 42: unsociableness, Isocr. 130 A; also, dyugin xpnuarav want of money dealings and com- merce, Hdt. 2.136. 2. abstinence from sexual intercourse, Aristaen. 2. 3. , ov, keeping up with horses, i.e. fleet as a horse, Soph. Ant. 985. II. dyumrot, ol, infantry mixed with cavalry, Thuc. 5. 57, Xen. H +B, 23. : wrt dpls, fi eae pe RES Vesp. 935s Thesm. 633 :—it is corrupt in Aesch. Pape ans pyle are dpuryns, és, poet, for , Nic, Al. 195. . a-piors, és, hot hateful, Plat. 2.10 A: Comp. duuséorepos, less dis- agreeable or troublesome, Xen. Eq. 8, 9. Adv. -o@s, Philo 2. 57. i, Ady. of dysoGos, Archil. 38, Eur, Tro, 409, Dem. 731. 20; xpnuarov Kat nen dy, without reward of money or honour, Plut. Arist. 3. [¥ Archil. 1. c. d-pic Ola, %, the state of an duoOos, App. Hann. 17. d-pr0 80s, = without m4 or pay, opp. to €4pia8os, and so, a pass. unpaid, unhired, dowh Aesch. Ag. 979, ef, Soph. Fr. 832, ete. ; umn, dp. Evvepmopos Aesch. Cho. 733: ch dyuodi. 2. act. without ing, Luc. D. Meretr. 12. ‘os, ov, not let, bringing no return, olxos Dem. 865.20. ai: unhired, Diod. 18. 21. Adv. -ri, Justin. M. é-picia, 4, a being not hated, Clem. Al. 474. ribagie eal aay ov, =sq., Damase, in Wolf's An, 3. 250. G-plorvAdos, ov, not cut into small pieces, E. M. d-pucxos, ov, without stem or stalk, Theophr. H. P. I, 10, 7. 3- 7) 5. d-pxtpos, ov, without head-band or girdle, maides Gpurpot girls who | have not yet put on their woman's girdle, i.e. unmarriageable, Spanh. Call. Dian. 14; cf. d{woros. . . ; G-pitpo-xitaves, of, epith. of Lycian warriors, in Il. 16. 419, wearing no girdle (uirpa) with their coat of mail (xirwv), cf. birpoxiraves: but as this seemed strange, others interpr. having had their plrpar stripped Jrom their bodies, or (from a copul.) having the girdle joined to the coat of mail: vy. Schol. Ven. B ad 1. jon ov, not bound with a head-band, Nonn, D. 35. 220. ortahtes, eco, ev, (miyvupe, pexO7jvar) epith. of Lemnos in Il. 24. | 753, h. Hom, Ap. 36, inaccessible, inhospitable, like duseros TI, of which Word it seems to be a lengthd. form: others wrongly take it = dprxAddns. Gpp-, post. for dvay-, e.g. duplydny for dvaplyiny, etc. Gppa, aros, 74, (dmrw) anything tied or made to tie, and so, l.a knot, &. Avew, dvarrew Hat. 4. 98; &. woretoGar Xen. Eq. 5, 1. 2. a noose, halter, Eur. Hipp. 781. 3. a cord, band, ld. Bacch. 697, etc.; a, mapSevias the maiden girdle, Anth. P. 7. 182, cf. Epigr. Gr. 248. 8. 4. the link of a chain, Themist. p. 32. 5. pl. huggings in wrestling, Plut. Fab. 23: also the wrestler’s arms, Id, Alcib. 2. 6. 8 3 a@ measure of length (like our chain),=40 mhxets, Math. Vett. Gppa, 7), a mother, esp. in a convent, C. I. 8979; also dppas, Eccl. Gpparile, (dupa) to tie, bind, Oribas. 4. 404 Daremb, 4 , TO, Dim. of dupa, a bandage, Galen. Gppaticpos, 6, a bandaging, treatment by bandages, Oribas. Gupeptterar, Gupéve, post. for dvapeulfera, dvapéeve, dppes, old Acol., Dor., and Ep. for jpeis, Hom. Gupécov, poet. for dvd péoov, Hes, Gppt, ews, 76, an African plant, ammi Copticum, Diosc. 3. 70. Gppr, dup, old Aeol., Dor., and Ep. for juiv, Hom. pry, dpplyvupt, poet. for dvdurya, dvaplyyupu, Gupivos, 7, ov, =Ydppuvos, sandy, Arr. Peripl. M. Rubri p. 145. Gpprov, 76, (dupos) cinnabar in its sandy state, Lat. minium, Diosc. 5. Tio, cf. Theophr. Lap. 58. : dpptrys, 6, also dppins, %, (sc. AlBos) sandstone, Plin. 37. 10. Gupo-Barys, 6, (Baivw)=dpupodtrns, Acl. N. A. 6. 51. popos, 6, a sandy place for racing, A. B. 208. Gppo-Surms, 6, a sand-burrower, a hind of serpent, more generally called dupds, Strabo 803: cf. dupoBdarns. We have the Dor. form s, of a crab, in Anth. P. 6.196; cf. Lob. Pathol. 1. 472. [¥, but ef. xnpapodirns, cvcvpvodvrns.] er és, like a bandage, Oribas. Gppo-Kovia, 7, sand mixed with lime, cement, Pozzuolana, Strabo 245. Gpps-verpov, 74, potass mixed with sand,—the two being fused together produce glass, Plin. 36. 27. Gppo-mAvota, %, sand-washing, Olympiod. PeOnns » SEO a aperele. Ton. ty, %, poét. for duopla, which is not found in use, Zeds olde potpay 7 dppopiny 7’ dvOpdérav what is man’s fate and what is not, or their good fortune and their bad, Od. 20. 76, cf. Anth. P. g. 284. Gppopta, 7), =dyopia, Epigr. ap. Dem. 86. 23. dppopos, ov, post. for dyorpos (q. v.), without share of, without lot in, esp. in something good, c. gen., dupopos . . Koerpay ’Queavoio Il. 18. 489, Od. 5. 2753 Kadav Pind. O.1.134; mévrov Soph. Ph. 182; réxvev ap. bereft of children, Eur, Hee, 421; éAnidos Anth. P. append. 349. 2. later, simply free from, without, du. xaxéryros Q. Sm. I. 430; ddivev Anth. P. 7. 465, II. absol. unhappy, Il. 6. 408., «adie ovK aup. Pind. N, 6. 26. POS OF Gppos (cf. Hp-aypos), 1, sand, Plat. Phaedo 110 A, etc, It. sandy round, a racecourse, Xen. Mem. 3. 3,6. (Re- lated to dyados as Ydpypos to ~dpuabos,) Gpp6-rpodos, ov, growing in sand, Anth. P. 4. 1, 20. dppo-pivas, és, sandy, x0dv dup., of Egypt, Epigr. Gr. 430. Gppé-xpieos, 6, a gem, resembling sand veined with gold, Plin. 27. 11. Gppo-xwota, %, @ sanding or silting up, Paul. Aeg. 3. 48. Gppo-Kworos, ov, sanded up or over, Eust. 690. 5. 4 S, €S, («l5os) sandy, gravelly, Arist. H. A. 5.15, 144 6.15, 4. Bp, wvos, o, the Libyan Zeus-Ammon: said to be an Egyptian word, Hdt. 2, 42 (ubi v. Bahr), Pind. P. 4. 28, etc.:—femn, Adj. ’Appovis, ios, Libyan, A. dpa the seat of Ammon, ie. Libya, Eur, Alc. 114, El. 734 :—Phot. has Apponds, dos, Appovaréy, 76, rock-salt, v. Beckmann Hist, Invent, 4. 306. 2. the gum of an umbellated plant, gum-ammoniac, Diosc. 3. 38. Gpvapos [apy-], 5, (duvds) a descendant, son, gr , Lye. 144, 872, etc.: in Poll. 3. 19 also Gpvdpwv, ovos, 6. apvdpov, Dor, for dprjpor, Pi ae, fy fem, of duvés, a lamb, v.1. for duvis, Theocr. 5.3; dat. i re a8 g en. 31.41). Alexandr. word, Ruhnk. Ep. Crit, p. 187. dpvdcer, dpvécee, Dor. for dvauvfia-, Bockh Pind, P. 1. 47 (91)- dpvacrréw, Gpvacros, Dor, for duvyor-. dpveios, OP; ofa lamb, duy. yAaiva a lambskin cloak, Theocr. 24. 61. dpvi, %, fem. of dvds, a ewe-lamb, Orph, Arg. 319. Lt ryig me ie, Pb 3-354 lat jin Eu of. e un = h- pov, unmindful, Diog, L. 1, 86. a Yr nena Earner Gpvnpovéw, Aesch., etc.: fut how Isocr, 28 b , Aa » 285 E: aor. quvnpdvnoa Id, 96 D, Xen., etc.:—to . ations be unmindful, absol., Aesch, Eum. * Bn. to make no mention of, not speak of, Eur. I. T. 361, Thue. 3. 4o, Lys. 189. 14; so, ayy. re mept twos Thue. 5. g 18 :—dependent clauses are added cither in partic., duvnpovels cavroy Gpynnooivy — anopos. Spavra; do you forget your doing? Plat. Theaet. 207 D; or in a relative clause with Src .. , Id. Rep. 474 D.—The faulty form —povetw is found in Diog.L.5.72,v.1.in Plut. 2.612 D, Luc, Hist. Conscr, 18; y. Lob. Phryn. 566. dpynpoowvn, , forgetfulness, Eur, lon £100. -pynpev, Dor. dpvdpov, ov, gen. ovos:—unmindful, Sorgetting, for- getful, Pind, I. 7 (6). 24, Soph, Fr. 780, Plat.; rwvds of a thing, Aesch. Theb. 606, Eur. H. F. 1397, Antipho 115. 29: esp. unmindful of hind- ness, ungrateful, Arist. Eth. N.9. 7,1. 2. pass. forgotten, not men- tioned, Eur. Phoen. 64 :—Ady. —pévws, Cosmas Topogr. II. ’Apr7- Hoves, of, a council of 60 at Cnidus, Plut. 2. 292 A. G-pvycia, 7), =AH0q, forgetfulness, LXX (Sap. 14. 26, Sirac. 2. 25). GpvnoikdKéw, to be duvnoixaxos, rds Nic. Damasc.:—Pass. to enjoy an amnesty, Diod. 18. 56. d-pvynoudkntos, ov, not maliciously remembered, duvnoedknroy more Oa duapriay Polyb. 40. 12, 5. Gpvnoixia, 7%, forgivingness, LXx (3 Macc. 3. 21), Clem. Al. 474. a-pvnoikdiKos, ov, forgiving, Nic. Damasc., Eccl. Adv. -xws, Id. d-pvqorevtos, 4, unwooed; not sought in lawful wedlock (but as a concubine), Eur. Phoen, Fr. 13; neut. pl. as Adv. without honourable wooing, Pseudo-Phocyl. 186. wnoréw, Dor. dpvarréw, =dyrynyovéw only used in pres. to be unmind- ful, to forget, Soph. El, 482, Arat.847:—Pass. to be forgotten, Thuc. 1.20. dpvnotia, 7, forgetfulness of wrong: hence an amnesty, Plut. Cic. 42, Ant. 14 ;—in better authors ddea. IL. dyvnoriny éxew tiwds = dyvnoreiv, Diog. L. 9. 14. d-pynoros, ov, forgotten, no longer remembered, Theocr. 16. 42, Lyc. 1230. 2. act. unmindful, forgetful, A. B. 13. dpviov (not so well durov), 76, a bowl in which the blood of victims was caught, Od. 3. 444. 2. the membrane round the foetus, Emped. ap. Poll. 2. 223; also duveios xirwy: cf. mwAlov I. II. Dim. of duvdés, Hermipp.’A@. yor. 2 (ubi E. M. dyvios), dpvis, i50s, j,=dyurh, Theocr. 5. 3. Gpuvo-Kav, 6, (Koéw) sheep-minded, i. e. a simpleton, Ar. Eq. 264. &pvos, 6, a lamb, Soph. Fr. 708, Ar. Av. 1559; dpvol tods tpémous lambs in temper, Ar. Pax 935: as fem, in Theocr. 5.144, 149, Anth. P. 5. 205 ;—though we have also duvy or dyuvis—The oblique cases are seldom found, dpvds, dpvi, dpva, etc., being used instead; v. sub dpvds, (Curt. regards the mw in dpyds as representing the F in dfs (6Fis), Lat. ovis, Skt. avis, but doubts the deriv. of Lat. agnus from the same Root,) Gpvo-épos, ov, f.1, for wavvoddpos, q. v. Gpoynrt, Ady. of sq., without toil or effort, Il. 11. 637. G-pdynros, ov, (yoyéw) unwearied, untiring, h. Hom. 7. 3. Gpobel, Adv. in Thuc. 5.77, from a Lacedaem. State-paper, prob. (from a privat., “d00s) without quarrel or faction, vy. Ahrens D. Dor. p. 481.— The form in -ei is warranted by Theognost. Can. p. 165; so that the reading apd0t, in any way (cf. 0d8-apnd01) cannot be maintained, Gpdbev, Ion. dpdbev, Adv.: (duds). From some place or other, TOv Guddev ye, Od, .. elm xal Hpi, of which from what source soever . . tell us also, Od. 1. 10; apudOev yé robev from some quarter or other, Plat. Gorg. 492 D, Legg. 798 B; dyuddev alone, Opp. C. 1. 401: cf. duq, dpor, ovdapdder, and y. Ruhnk, Tim. s. v. Gpot, Ady. (duds) somewhither, dpovyéro A. B. 204. GpoBabios, a, ov, =dporBaios, Opp. C. 4. 349, Anth. P. 12. 238. GpoBadis, Adv. (4uorBn) by turns, alternately, dy. dAdobev dAAos one after another, Theocr. 1.34; dy. dvépos dvnp Ap, Rh. 4. 199;—so, apor- BaSév, Ap. Rh. 2. 1226, Tim. Locr. 98 E. II. in turn, again, C. 1. 4738. Cf. duoBndis. GporBatos, ov, also 7 or a, ov, (duorBh) giving like for like, retri- butive, detrva Pind. O. 1. 63; vépeots, pdvos Anth. P. 10. 123, Opp. C. 2. 485 :—Adv. —ws, in requital, Luc. Amor. g. II. interchanging, alternate, reciprocal, Emped. 179; dpotBaia BiBAta interchanged letters, Hdt. 6. 4; du. xdaps an exchange of favours, Ap. Rh. 3. 82:—7rd dpo.Baia, alternating verses, sung by two persons one in answer to the other, carmen amoebaeum, Plat. Rep. 394 B; so, dyorBain doda Theocr. 8. 31, cf. Il. 1. 604: answering as in dialogue, Schol. Ar. Pl. 253, 487. GpoBds, ddos, %, pecul. fem. of foreg., xAaivay.., # of mapexéoxer dyo.Bas which lay beside him as a change of raiment, Od. 14. 521. dpoBy, 7, (duelBw) a requital, recompense, return, payment, Hom. (only in Od.), Hes., etc.; ood 3 dgidv tori dpoBAs Od. 1. 318; dAdo didov xaplecoay dpoPiy ..éxardpBns for the hecatomb, 3. 58; € Epdovrt Kaxhy dnéOnuas dp. Theogn. 1263, cf. Eur. Or. 467; “yAveetay péxOur dp. Pind. 5. 88; dyavais dp. twa rivera to requite him by a like return, Id. P. 2.43; otas du, é “Idcovos xupet Eur. Med. 23 ; dporBal rv Ovordv Plat. Symp. 202 E. 2. a repayment, compensation, ricovot Bowy émené dp. Od. 12. 382; epy dvr’ ddikav yademiy éréOnuev dp. Hes. Op. 332. 38. value given in exchange, T@ aKvTO- Topw dvr trav imobnudrov dp. yiverar kar’ dgiay Arist, Eth. N. 9. 1,1; Ty dy. momréoy ard riv mpoaipeow Ib. 7; Séka prev ap, Pint. Lyc. g. 4. an answer, doxhpov ev Th ap. Hat. 7. 160. II, change, exchange, Tas dy. motetaOat Strabo 502; of money, Plut. Luc. 2. III. change, alternation, xax@y Eur. El. 1147; éoprav Plat. Legg. 653 D. 2. transformation, Diog. L. 9. 8. GpoBndls, Adv. (dyor8H) alternately, in succession, Il, 18. 506, Od. 18. 310; also GpouPnSyv, Ap. Rh 2. 1071, Orph. L. 685. Cf. dporBadis. 4a v, Ady.,=foreg., Hipp. 1281. 48; so Aristarch. in Il. 18. 506. GporBds, 6, (dyelBw) one who exchanges, a successor, dporBot soldiers that relieve others, elsewh. d:d50 x01, ll. 13. 793- TI. as Adj. in requital or in ge for, véxuy vexpav dp. dvri5ovs Soph. Ant. 1067. dpopéw, to have no lot or share ina thing, Thales ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 292; c. gen,, Plut. Alex. 23, etc. Hence dpotpypa, 7d, loss, want, Hesych. 79 d-porpos, ov, like dupopos, without lot or share ina thing, 7ivds Aesch. Theb. 732, Eum. 353, etc.; mostly of those who are shut out from or bereft of some good, Tav Kaddy kcal dya0Gv dy, Plat. Symp. 202 D;. Tis TOD Beiov auvovatas Id. Phaedo 83 E; ris dperfs Arist. Eth. N. 1. 13, 14:—rarely, freed from some evil, du. tBpews, peraBodfs Plat. Symp. 181 C, Polit. 269 E, 2. absol., like Gupopos, unfortunate, Eur. Phoen. 613, Plat. Symp. 197 D. II. c. gen. pers., Trav karober dup. Oecd having no portion with them, Soph. Ant. 1071.—In Pind. N. 6. 26 dupopos is now read; y. also yapopos. Gpodyatos, a, ov, (duédyw) of milk, made with milk, pa¢a dépodyaln Hes. Op. 588; others take it =d«pata (from duod-yds Achaean for dxpy), bread of the best flour ;—and this interpr. is adopted by Buttm. Lexil. s. v. duodydés 8: in Leon. Tar. (Anth. P. 7. 657), he takes dpod-yaios paords to be an udder at its dupi, i.e. distended. Cf. dporzyés. Gpodyevs, éws, 5, amilk-pail, Lat.mulctra, Theocr.8.87, Anth.P.g. 224. GpoAyh, %, a milking, Eumath. p. 10. apddyrov, 76, a milk-pail, Theocr. 25. 106. dpodyés, 6, an Homeric word, of which the exact sense and origin are as yet obscure :—Hom. always joins vuerds duody@, to mean either the four hours before daybreak (the time of true dreams, Od, 4. 841; the autumnal rising of the dog-star, Il. 22. 28); or the four hours after sunset, Il. 22. 317: and so, generally, at night-time, in the dark of night, Il, 11. 173., 15. 324, h. Hom. Merc. 7, cf. Avedpws; so also later, as in Orph. H. 33. 12, dyod-y@ without vuerds :—vuerds duoryédy also occurs in Aesch. Fr. 66; and Eur. is said by Hesych. to have used it as an Adj., vikra dporydv = Copepdy, cxorewhy: but in Eur. Fr. 781.6 (where it stands alone, ob duodydr egopdptere, et mov ris éorw aiparos xapat mead), it seems (if genuine) to be a clot of blood, cf. Herm. Opuse. 3- 137, sq.—(The natural supposition that duéAyw is the Root, and that dyodyés meant milking-time, cannot be sustained. Buttm., comparing Eust. 1018. 21 (who says that duodyds is an old Achaean word for dxpun), makes vuerds du, to mean the depth or dead of night, though not necessarily midnight ; cf. duodyaios.) dpdduvros, ov, (uoAvvw) undefiled, LXx, Xen. Ephes. 2.9, Muson. ap. Stob. 167, fin, II. not defiling, not leaving any mark or stain, Galen., etc. Ady. -rws, Epiphan. d-péponros, f.1. Aesch. Cho. 510, where Herm. restored dpeuph Tov? érewarny Adyor, for the Ms. reading dpoppyrovdertvarov. dpoppos, ov, (uopph) blameless, Aesch, Eum. 475; mpds Spay Ib. 678. II. act. having nothing to complain of, restored by Ro- bortellus for duopdos, Ib. 413. Gpdépa, 7, a sweet cake, Philet. 34, cf. Ath. 646 D. d GpopBatos, oy, only in Nic. Th. 28, 489, acc. to the Schol. rustic, pas- toral, or dark; cf. dpopBds, duodyatos. dpopBas, ddos, 7, fem. of duopBés: dpopBddes Nvppat in Ap. Rh. 3. 881 (acc. to Schol.) rural or attendant Nymphs. GpopBevs, ews, 6, = dpopBds, Opp. C. 3. 295. dpopBevw, to follow, attend, c.dat., Nic. Fr. 35 :—Med. éo let follow, make to follow, Id. Th. 349, Antim.(15) ap. Steph. Byz. s.v. AUpy has GpopBéw. GpopBirns, 6,=dydpa, Ath. 646 F, prob. f. 1. for dpopirys. GpopBés, 6, a follower, attendant, Spanh. Call. Dian. 45: esp. a herds- man, shepherd, swain, Opp. C. 1. 132, Nic. Th. 49: ef. duopBas. ‘it. as Adj. dark, Schol. Nic. Th. 28; and it may be noted that duopB@ is also a v. 1. for duoAy@ in Hom. (The whole family of words is of un- certain origin, and only found in Alex, Poets.) Gpopyevs, éws, 6, one who presses out the dudpyns, Poll. 1. 222. Gpopyn, 7, Vv. sq. II. the plant producing dpopyis, Schol. Aeschin. 27. 21 ed. Dind. X dpopyns, ov, 6, (duépyw) the watery part that runs out when olives are pressed, olive-lees, Lat. amurca, Arist. Color. 5, 22, Theophr. C. P: 6. 8, 3; in Hipp. Aph. 1260, the Mss. give dpépyn, 7- Gpopyiiiov, 7d, Dim. of duopyis, Paus. ap. Eust. ad Dion. p. 525. Gpdpytvos, ov, epith. of rich cloths and stuffs, made of apopyis, of Amorgian flax, xiravia Ar. Lys. 150 (described as biapavy, Ib. 48); xirav Antiph, Myd. 1, C. 1. 155.12; #dAvppa Clearch. ap. Ath. 255 E; 7a dpdpywa (sc. iuatia) Aeschin. 14. 3, cf. Béckh P. E. 1. 141. dpopyls, fos, %, fine flax from the isle of Amorgos, resembling Bucoos (Harpocr.), dAomos du. unhackled flax, Ar. Lys. 736. II. proparox. dpopyts, ews, 4, = apndpyns, Arcad. 29. 22, Suid. Gpopypés, 6, (dpépyw) a gathering, Mel. 129 Brunck ; but the Pal. Ms, (12. 257) gives &va p6xOor for ev’ dpopypdr. dpopyos, 6, (duépyw) one who squeezes or drains, apopryot, mérews bAcOpor Cratin. Sepp. 13, ubi v. Meineke. II. in Emped. 222, we have dvéyor Aaumrjpas dpopyovs lanterns protecting [the light] from the winds; v. Mullach. ad 1.: many Mss. give dpoupyovs. For Cratin. Madé. 4, VY. omn. Meineke. Gpopta, 4, poét. dupopia, q. v. dpopirns, 6, dpros, =dydpa, Lxx (1 Paral. 16. 3). Gpopos, ov, =dporpos, dppopos, c. gen., réxvwv Eur. Med. 1395. ‘II. absol. unlucky, wretched, restored by Pors. for duotpos in Soph. O. T. 248. dpopdla, %, skapelessness, ins Hermes ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 318. If. unshapeliness, unsightliness, Eur, Or. 391, Arist. Phys. 1. 7, 8. fs d-popdos, ov, misshapen, unshapely, unsightly, yr Hat. 1. 196; yijpas Theogn. 1021; orodny yy dpoppov dul cp’ Exes Eur. Hel. 554: cf. d&popos, II. without form, shapeless, Plat. Tim. 51 A; c. gen., dpophos éxeivay dnacdv trav ideay without partaking of their form, Ib. 50D; 4 ¥An Kal 70 dy. Arist. Phys. 1. 7, 13- III. metaph. un- seemly, unbefitting, Plat. Legg. 752 A: degrading, lb. 855 C.—Sup. dpoppécraros (as if from dpoppys) Hdt. ibid.; but a regul. Comp. b -6érepos, Xen, Symp, 8, 17; Sup. -éraros Plut. Mar. 2, ete. 80 Gpopdive, to make misshapen, diyigure, Antim. in An, Ox, 30 :—so dpopdou, Schol. Il. 2. 269. d-pépdwros, ov, (Hoppsw) not formed, unwrought, Soph. Fr. 243; #ai doxnpdarioros Tim. Locr. 94 A. pa Gués or dpds [a], 7, dv,=quérepos, our, ours, Hom., Pind, and | Trag. II. in Att. Poets also for éués, when a long penult. is Tequired by the metre, Aesch. Theb. 417, Cho. 428, 437, Soph. El. 2 588, 1476; fo0nv warépa rov dpoy ebdoyodvrd ce Id. Ph. 1314, v. Dind. ; cf. Eur. Hel. 531, I. A. 1455 ;—also Lacon. in Ar, Lys, 1181. | —lIt has been proposed to write dyés in the former sense, dyés in the latter; but neither Grammarians nor Mss. enable us to determine any tule.—The form 7yés seems to be an invention by the Gramm. as Ion. and Att. for duds, related to juérepos as ods to oérepos. Gpés [a], an old word equiv. to «ls or 7s, only found in the Adv. forms dyod, dui, duot, duds, duddev. (Cf. Goth, sums (some one), suman (sometime, once): perhaps from the same Root as Ga.) Gos, Dor. for #yuos, as, when, Theocr. 4. 61, etc. dporov, Ady. from dporos (v. infr. 11), insatiably, incessantly, restlessly ; in Hom. always joined with Verbs expressing passion, desire, etc., esp. with pepdaat, pepads, peuavia, striving incessantly, full of insatiate long- ing, Il. 4. 440, etc.; duorov xAalw reOvedra I continually, 19. 300; du. KexoAwpévos implacably angered, 23. 567; pevealvay Hes, Sc. 361 ; #plovor duorov ravvovro they struggled resélessly forwards, Od. 6. 83: later, vehemently, violently, Ap. Rh. 2. 78, etc. :—later reg. Adv. —rws, Schol. Il. 4. 440. II. as Adj. dporos, ov, furious, savage, Op Theocr. 25. 242; Als Ib. 202 (ace. to Meineke); mop Mosch. 4. 104. —Ep. word. (Prob. from same Root as wéyova with a intens. or euphon.) Gpod, Att. duod, Adv. of duds (=7ls), somewhere, dyod yé Tov some- where or other (restored by Bekk. for dAAou yé mov), Lys. 170. 12: cf. dyddev, dpa, dpor. dpoupyés, dv, v. duopyés 11. ‘ Gpovota, 7, the character of the &povoos, want of education, want of taste or refi t, rude Eur. Fr. 1020, Plato, etc. ; II. want of harmony, al. 2. of sounds, unmusical, discordant, 7603 ce oe @5ai Id. Phoen. 807, ete. Povcorns, 770s, 7,=dpovola, Agath. ; G-pox Get or -0¢ [7], Adv. without toil, Aesch. Pr. 208, Eur. Bacch. 194. &-p6x0nT0s, ov, =sq., Opp. C. 1. 456. Adv. ras, Babr. 9. 2. d-poxQos, ov, free from toil and trouble, of persons, Soph. Fr. 359; au. Bios Id. Tr. 147. 2. shrinking from toil, xapdia Pind. N. to. 55, Eur. Fr. 242. 3. not tired, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 33- ; : Gpr-, poét., esp. Ep, and Lyr., abbrev. for dvam-, under which will be found words beginning with dum. . . ip noon eee ie os, poét, for dvdmados, J . O. 7. 110, however Bockh dp wédov Ocivat, i.e. maAov dvabeiva: :—but in Theocr. 28. 4 (acc. to Herm.) Dor, for dupiados. dpravpa, aumave, etc., vy. dvam—. ; : tee GpreBiov, dpmeSinpes, apméAayos, should be written divisim au medio, i.e, dvd medioy, etc. Gumetpw, poet. for dvameipw. dprred-dvOn, 4, =olvavdn, Luc. V. H. 2. 5- Gprédea, #, a vineyard, C.1. 2097. GptréXetos, ov, of a vine or vil , Suid. dprreAcdv, Svos, 5, post. for dumeddv, Theocr. 25. 175- ; dpreArcds, 4, dv, of the vine, Hipp. 405. 347—Adv. -«@s, Arr. Epict. 2. 20, 18. : dprrédwos, ov, also, 7, ov, of the vine, waprés, Hdt. 1.212; olvos dpm. gr Saar opp. to ‘Gas plbivos, etc. Id. 2. 37, Ae ogy Arist. P. A. 3.5, 10; dum B a vine stick, Lat. vitis, ee 5. II. metaph., ypads dpmedivy, anus vinosa, Anth. 7. 384. édvov, 75, Dim. of dumedos, Ar. Ach. 512, Pax 596. gel GpareAls, (Sos, 4), Dim. of dpmedos, a young vine, vine-plant, Ar. Ach, 995- II. the bird dpumedtoy, Ar. AV. 394, cf. Poll. 6. 52. III. a sea-plant, Opp. Ix. 2. 7. ‘Cargtae i aeAtris, 150s, %, of or for the vine, dum. ij vine-land, Lapis Rosett. a I. 4697. 15 A if Il. in Strabo 316, % dpm. v7 is a bitu- minous earth, used to eure us in the vine. 7 dpeAlov, 6, a hind ig sartan Oe, Opp. Ix. 3. 23 cf. dpmedis II. dpareAo-yevijs, és, of the vine hind, Arist. Phys. 2. 8,12, épmedb-Beopos, 4, a Sicilian plant used for tying up vines, Plin. 17. 23. es, exa, ev, but fem. ets Il, 2. 561 :—rich in vines, vine-clad, of countries, Il. l.c., 3. 184., 9. 152, Theogn. 784, Pind. ete. = 2. vine-stick, Nonn. D, 14.102; dpm. xavXia vine- “Gpareho-Acven, , the wild vine, elsewh. Aevii) dyredos, Plin, 23. 1. M4 an intermixture of vines, Luc. V. H. 1. 9. dprreAo-rrovia, 1, = dumedoupyla, Eust. 1619. 59. $ i , ‘ov, 76, a leek, alliumampeloprasum, Diose.2.186,Ath.371F. _ ones vine, Lat, vitis, Hom. (but never in Il, except in the Adj, ‘dymeddeis), etc. ; upd Kal “ited ee Od, 9. Bee is 133» Hadt. - y viv mept 70 tepdv KomrovTes, in a collective sense tee Bs aha eer su is called dpdcos dumédou, Pind. O. 7. 3, and dymédov mais, N. 9. 124, (a5 reversely, the vine is olvov unTnp, Aesch. Pers. 614, Eur. Alc. 757). 2. dum, dypia or even the wild vine, ot peth. some kind of bryony, Theophr, C. P. 9. 14, 1, Diosc. 4. 181 sq.: also, 8. a sea-plant, clematis maritima, Theophr. H. P. 4. 6, 2. II. a spear, N. ms 1. 6 3c an fer an engine for protecting besiegers, Lat. vinea, Apollod. in Math. Vett. p. U Le , auTAaknua — amuvTikds. euph;, and y inserted as in duBporos, v. karamhaxdv.) {When the first syll. is to be short, it is written dwA-; nay, Pors, and Elmsl, hold this to be the true form everywhere (ad Eur. Med. 115); against them v. Herm, Opusc. 3. p. 146; cf. Ellendt Lex. Soph.] Poét. Verb, used just like duapravw, never in Hom. (who used instead éBpord(w, RpeBporov) : I. c. gen. to miss, fail or come short of, dvopéas ob dymdaxwy Pind, O. 8. 89, cf. Soph. Ant. 554, 1234. 2. to lose, be bereft of, ei Tovd’ jumdaxor (sc. madds) Soph. Ant. 910; dpiorns dwAa- Kav dddxou Eur, Alc. 241; A€eTpwy Grand Id, 1. A. 124. II. absol. to fail to do, sin, err, do wrong, Ibyc. Fr. 51, Eur. Hipp. 892, Andr. 948, etc. ; also c. neut. pron., &s 748 HymAaxov when I committed these sins, Aesch, Ag. 1212; hence also in Pass., ré 8’ smAdunrar TdvbE pot; Id. Supp. 916. Gprhdknpa, 76, an error, fault, offence, Aesch. Pr. 112, 386, etc., Soph. Ant. 51, etc.—Poét. word, used by Lycurg, ap. Plut. 2. 226 E:— also, metri grat., darAdknpa Aesch. Eum. 934. dprAdkyros, vy. sub dvapmAdKnros. épmdaxta, },=dprddenpa, Theogn. 204, Pind., Trag. (but in Trag. dymhdxnua is more common); dymAaxiasct ppevay, much like Homer's oppjow dracdarinaw, Pind. P. 3. 24; Tuvds dumdaxins rowais ddéet ; Aesch, Pr. 564; dpmdaxiat trav mapodev Eur. Hipp. 832. Gprddkvov, 76, =dyrdaxia, Pind, P. 11. 41; cf. apdpriov. GprrAakiokw, v. sub dumdaxeiv. dprvelw, Ep. for dvamvéw, durveupa, dpmvod, poét, for dvdmvevpa, dvanvon. dumvve, apmrvivOn, dprviro, v. sub dvamvéw, duore, i, e. dv more, with opt., o that! Schol. rec. Aesch. Pr. 971. dpmpetw, to draw along, drag, alxpadwrov iumpevoay Lyc. 1298; Gvipa . . dumpevoyres Call. Fr. 234: metaph., Avmpdy Biov dumpedoe will drag on a wretched life, like duagevewv, €Anew, Lyc. 975, cf. 635:— ‘only found in Alex. Poets, except that Ar. once uses é¢apmpetw.—The -Nouns dptpov, 76, dumpos, 6,.are given by Gramm, in the sense of a rope for drawing loads, Suid., Schol. Ar. Lys, 289. Gprraca, dpmrratny, v. sub dvaréropat. Gpnixdto, to bind the front hair as with a band (dymut), kioow kat orepavowow dumveacbe’s Anth. P. 13. 6. Gpurrucrhp, jpos, 6, (dumug) a horse's head-band, Aesch. Theb. 461. Gprucripov, 76,=dyumuernp, Soph. O. C. 1069 (where pddapa is a mere gloss, as is plain from Hesych. s. y.). Gprvk, vos, 6, but 7 Soph, and Eur. (from dyn, Acol. for dui). A woman's head-band, snood, apparently of metal (cf. xpucdumug, Aurapdy- mu), Il, 22. 469, Aesch. Supp. 431, Eur. Hec. 464. 2. the head- band of horses; also a bridle, Q. Sm. 4. 511: cf. dyruxrnp. II. anything circular, a wheel, Soph. Ph. 680. GprodAnpa, (Dor. for dvan—), 76, indemnification, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774- 110, 155. : Gumurife, to ebb, of the sea, Philo 1. 298 :—so in Med., Eust. 688. 52. Gyros, gen. ews, Ion, cos, later also dos, Lob. Phryn. 340, for avd- mors (from dvarivopat), v. infr.:—a being sucked back, i.e. of the sea, the ebb, opp. to tAnppupis or paxta (Ion. pnxin), Hdt. 2. 11., 7. 198., 8. 129, Arist., Plut., etc.; in pl, generally, the ebb and flow, the tides, Hdhn, 3. 14.—The full form dvatwrts is only found in Pind. O. 9. 78, and in late Prose, as Polyb. 10. 14, 2, Arr., ete. 2. the retiring of a stream, Call, Del. 130. II. the return of humours inward from the surface of the body, dum. ray xupav Hipp. 47. 1, cf. Schol. ap. Gaisford E. M. p. 2467. GpuySadéa, contr. -Aqj, the almond-tree, Eupol. Barr. 8, Theophr., etc. dpvySddeos, a, ov, of or belonging to almonds or the almond-tree, v.1, for duvy5addes in Nic, Th. 891 (ap. Ath. 649 D). Gpvy5an, 7, an almond, Phryn. Com. Incert, 6, etc., v. Ath. 52 C, sq. dpvy5aA4, 7), contr. for duvydadéa, q. v. dpuySdaAwos, 7, ov, of almonds, xpicpa Xen. An. 4. 4, 13. dpvySdaAuov, 76, Dim. of duuyddAn, Hipp. 484. Io. dpvy5aMs, fdos, 7, Dim. of duuyddAn, Philox. ap. Ath. 643 C. dpvySaXirns [7], 6,=sq., Plin. 26. 8. GpvySaAo-eSns, és, like the almond or almond-tree, cited from Diosc. dpvydaAdeas, evoa, ev, =dpuyddreos, Nic. Th, 891. Gpuy5aAo-Kkardkrys, ov, 6, an almond-cracker, Ath. 53 B. a&pvySirov, 7d, f. 1. for duvydaAn, Philyll. Ppewp. 2, Piers. Moer. p. 10. dptySidos, %,=duvy5ad7, Luc. Merc. Cond. 5. k dpuypa, aros, 76, (duicow) a scratching, tearing, wodds dp. Xairns Soph. Aj. 633 ; 6vdxov dudypara Eur, Andr. 827. dpuypos, 6, (4uvoow) a scratching, tearing, a conjecture commonly received in Aesch. Cho, 24; Herm, diarypois. dyvbts [0], an old form of dpa: I. of Time, together, at the same time, Od. 12, 415. II. oftener of Place, together, all together, dpudis nxAhonero Il. 10. 300; dpvdis kakécaga 20.114; doréa, + mayer dpvbis 12. 385; duvdis ioradow =ovnoraor, 13. 336; prdya dpvdis €Baddoy they threw the burning embers together, 23. 217: often in late Ep. Cf. duddis. (The word is Aeol. like d-yupa, dAAvois; hence the spir. lenis.) apuSpHes, eooa, ev,=sq., Nic. Th. 274. apvdpés, d, dv, like duaupds, indistinct, dim, faint, obscure : 1. of impressions on the eye, duvdpd xorpds a rock dimly seen through water, Archil. 54; (so in Paus. 10. 28, 1, we read of a picture % Polygnotus, dpvbdpa ora bh Te 7a €ibn rev ixOtuv,—ands paddov 7) ixOds eixd- oes); dp. ypdppara scarce legible letters, Thuc. 6. 54, cf. Plat. Theaet. 195 A; dp. péyyos, xp@pa Arist. Meteor. 1. 6, 12., 3. 2, 4:—Ady., dpvbpas Préway, Spay Id. H. A. 4. 10, 13.) 5- 30; 8; dy. pipetabal re to represent its form obscurely, Ib. 2. 8, 6; du. Exe to be indistinctly marked, Id. G. A. 3. 5, 6. 2. of impressions on the mind, dy, «fos $ 81 a shadowy form, Plat. Tim. 49 A; dy. mpds dAn@eay faint in comparison with truth, Id. Rep. 597 A; &¢ duudpav dpydvew by imperfect organs, Id. Phaedr. 250 B; pavreia duvdpérepa rod 7 capis onpalvey too obscure .., Id. Tim. 72 B; dy, éAmis Plut.; etc. :—Adv. dy. cat od8tv capas Arist. Metaph. 1. 4, 4; dp. Oryydvew rivos Ib. 1. 7, 1 3—Comp. dpvipdrepoy, Plat. Soph. 250 E. (The origin of the word is unknown; cf. dpaupés.) Gpudpoopat, to become indistinct or feeble, Dion. Areop. Gpudpérns, 770s, %, indistinctness, Phot. Bibl. 491. 14, ete. GpvSpwors, ews, 1%, a making indistinct or feeble, Galen. G-pvedos, ov, without marrow, Arist. P. A. 2. 9, 15. Gpilo, v. sub pio, Gpunotla, }, a being uninitiated, A. B. 406, Hesych. s, v. dvopytas. d-pinros, ov, uninitiated, profane, Andoc, 2. 38, Lys. 107. 38; dy. kat dréAeoros Plat. Phaedo 69 C: c. gen., du. ’Adppodirns not admitted into the mysteries of Aphrodité, Aristaen. Epist. 14. II. in Plat. Gorg. 493 A, B, with a secondary sense, as if from pw, =ob Svvdpevos pve, unable to keep close, leaky. G-pwOnros [0], ov, unspeakable, unspeakably many or great, xphuara Dem. 49, fin. ; sand cal mpdypara dpvdnra mapéxwy 520.20; ap. TAR Gos puay Arist. H. A. 6. 37,2; dpvOnrov Scov diapéper Id. Pol, 2. 5,8. d-pi0os, ov, without mythic tales, motnats Plut. 2. 16 C. dpuxdAar’ al dxides Tov Berar, mapa TO duviooev, Hesych. = [®], ov, of places, where no herds low, Anth. P.g. 150. *"AptAa, av, ai, a Lacon. city, famous for the worship of Apollo, IL, etc. :—"Apurdatos, or “Apuxdaets, éws, 5, an Amyclean, y. Xen, Hell. 4-5, 11, Arist. Fr. 489:—ApuxdAaiov, 76, the temple of Amyclaean Apollo, év Ap. Foed. ap. Thuc. 5. 18 and 23; év7@ *Ay. Strabo 278.— Ady. “Apurdadev, Adv. from Amyclae, Pind. N. 11. 44. "Apurdat, ai, a sort of shoes, named after Amyclae, Theocr, 10. 35} also "ApurdatSes, ai, Poll. 7.88, Hesych., ete. : *Apurdailw, to speak in the Amyclean (i.e. Laconian) dialect, Theocr. 12. 13. dpurréov, verb. Adj. of dudacw, one must scarify, Matthaei Med.p. 151. G-piKrnp, npos, 6, %, without nose, Strabo 711. Gpukricés, 7, dv, (dutoow) fit for tearing, lacerating, Plut. 2. 642 C: —Ady. -Kés, Schol. Nic. Th. 131. IL. of certain medicines, provocative, Cael. Aur. apvAvov, 75, Dim. of duvAos 11, Arist. Probl. 4. 21, Plut. 2. 466 D. d-pihos, ov, not ground at the mill: hence of the finest meal, pros Poll. 6. 723 cf. foreg. II. as Subst., duvdos, 6, a cake of fine meal, Ar. Ach. 1092; so in Pax 1195, Dind. (from Mss.) has restored tovs for Tas, cf. Theocr, g. 21, Teleclid. Srepp. 2, etc. 2. dyvdor, (sc. dAevpoy), 74, fine meal, prepared more carefully than by common grinding, cf. Plin. H. N. 7. 18:—a cake of such meal, Ath, 647 E: starch, Diosc, 2. 123. G-pupev [0], ov, gen. ovos: dat. pl. dudpwow Epigr. Gr. 451, 594: (#a@pos, by an Aeol. change, as xeAdv7 into xeAvvn: Hesych. has popap* p@pos). Blameless, noble, excellent, otkos 63 dpveds kai dp. Od, t. 232; dua xparepos wat du.3.111. In Hom. applied to all distinguished persons, so that it became a mere honorary epithet or title, like our honourable, illustrious, excellency, implying no moral excellence, being given in Od. I. 29 even to Aegisthus :—but never used of gods, for Aes- culapius is dudpov as a physician, Il. 4.194; and the nymph in 14.144 was a mortal. II. of things, ds 5 dv dptpov abros ép xat dpdpova «idp Od. 19. 332; Ocdv bm dytpour mourp Il, 6. 171; paris 10. 19; $0, épya, réfov, dpynOpds, etc.—Oft. in Hom.; twice in Hes. (Th. 264, 654); once in Pind, O. 10 (11). 33; never in Att. Poets. dpiva, ns, %, the warding off an attack, defence, requital, vengeance, Philod. in Gomperz Herk. Stud. p. 107, Plut. Caes. 443 cf. Lob. Phryn. 23. GpivdOw, a pres. assumed by the Gramm. (Draco 59, E. M. 8. 18) as lengthd. form of dudv@: but all the forms assigned to it belong to an aor. RuvvaGoy, with which may be compared the aor. forms dA«aGeiv, diwxabetv, eixabeiv, eipyabeiv, cxeOeiv: vy. Elmsl. Eur. Med. 186, Dind. Soph. El. 396, Ellendt. Lex. Soph. s. v. elxa@eiv. The inf, therefore is dpuyabeiy (not -a0ev), imper. Med. duvva8od (not -d00v). To defend, assist, c, dat. pers., el oois pidos duvvabeiy xp7Ces Eur. Andr. 1079, cf. 1. A..gt0; Guvvaderé por Ar. Nub. 1323; absol., dgcar 3 dpvvadeiv [at gvppopai] Soph. O. C. 1015 :-—Med. to ward off from oneself, repel, tov’ duvvadod Yéyov Aesch. Eum. 438: to take vengeance on, pi) . - dpuvddorrd o¢ Eur. Andr. 721. *Apuvias [v], ov, 6, (duvvm) masc. pr. n.; so ’Aptrras. II. also used as appellat., 6 Gupds edOds hy dpuuvias on its guard, Ar. Eq. 570. dpivreipa, 7}, fem. of duvyrnp, a protectress, Gloss, apuvréov, verb, Adj. of duvvw, one must assist, c. dat. pers., Xen, Cyr. 8, 6, 6; so also pl, dpuvré’ éore ois xocpoupévors Soph. Ant. 677. II. one must repel, Ar. Lys, 661. Gpuvrnp, jpos, 6, (4pdvw) a defender: dpuyrijpes, in Arist, H. A. 9. 55 6, are the front points of a stag’s antlers. x Gpuvriptos, ov, defensive, duuvrhpia SmAa Plat. Legg. 944 D (cf. infr. 11); dp. réxvac Ib. 920 E:—c. gen., pdppaxov du. yhpws an antidote for.., Ael.N. A. 6. 513 méae rev Syyparov dy. Ib. 12. 32. zr. as Subst., dpuvraptov, 76, a means of defence, Plat. Polit. 279 C, sq.: a defence, bulwark, Polyb, 18. 32, 2: @ weapon of defence, Plut. 2. 714F: dy. Tod KaKod an antidote for.., Acl.N. A. 3,41; dp, ef dwopay a way of escape from.., Ib. 3. 22. 5 dpuvtixds, 4, dv, prompt to repel an affront or attack, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 5,6; of animals, opp. to @uAakrixa Id. H. A. 1. 1, 31 370 dp. épyavov Id, P. A. 4.6, 13. 2. fit for keeping off: } dpuvrixn Xetpwvev Plate Polit. 280 E, 3. 4 du. Spun the instinct of revenge, ene 2.457 C. 9. Aor. 2, v. sub duuvd0w :—Med., Ep. impf. duuvduny Il. 13. 514: fut. duv- 82 Gpivrwp, opos, 6, post. Noun, a defender, helper, aid, ll. 13. 384, Od. 2. 326, etc. 2. a repeller, dvappoocvvdev Simon. 11. 3. an avenger, marpdés Eur. Or. 1588. Cf. dpuvrip. Gpuve [i]: Ep. impf. dpdvoy Il. 15. 731: fut. duiva, Ion. tvéw Hat. 60, 3 pl. -edax Id. 9. 6: aor. 1 Hpiva, Ep. duvva [a] Il. 17. 615: for voopat: aor. I Huvvdpny; aor. 2 (vy. sub dpuvddw) :—Pass. rare (y. infr.c). (From 4/MTYN come also dyuva, dutvrwp (with a prefixed), pdyn (pretence); Lat. munio, moenia (and prob. murus), munus, im- munis, com-munis, muni-ceps, etc.) To keep off, ward off, Hom., mostly in Il.—Construction in Hom., 1. c, acc. of the person or thing ¢o be kept off, c. dat. of pers. for or from whom the danger is kept of Aavaotow Aoryov dutvev to ward off ruin from the Danai, Il. I. 450, cf. 341, Od. 8. 525 :—the dat. is often omitted, as, ds Aovydv dyvvet Il, 5. 603 (and so in Plat., e.g. Legg. 692 E, dpivew tov Bap- Bapov, cf. A. B. 79). b. often the acc, is omitted (though Aorydy or the like may easily be supplied), and then the Verb may be rendered ¢o defend, fight for, assist, aid, succour, ap. @perot, cotaw ergot Il. 5. 486., 6. 262, etc., cf. Od. 11. 500; so in Hat. 8. 87., 9. 6, and Att., roadr’ dive “Hpaxde? such aid ye give to H., Eur. H. F. 219; dy. TH more, 7® Shyw, etc., Ar. Eq. 577, 790;—with an inf. added, rots yey ode jpivare awOvar so that they might be saved, Thuc. 6. 80. 2. c, gen. from whom danger is kept off, Tp@as duuve vedv he kept the Trojans off from the ships, Il. 15. 731, cf. 4. 11., 12.402; (Aavady dad Aoryoy Gpdvas Il..16. 75, Od. 17. 538 is commonly written dao, as if the Prep. belonged to Aavaéy ; but it must belong to the Verb in Il. 1. 67, jipiv dad Aovyoy audvat, and is better taken so generally, v. Spitzn. Il. dec.) b. here too the acc. may be omitted, as du. vn@y to defend the ships, Il. 13. 109. 8. absol. to repel assaults, to aid, defend, xeipes dpivew hands to aid, Il. 13. 814; dpivew elot «at dddor Ib. 312; so, @ {wdicacral .., dutvare help! Ar. Vesp. 197; Ta apdvovra means of defence, Hat. 3. 155. 4. once with mept, duvvépevas wept Marpé- xAor0 (like the Med. 1. 3) Il. 17. 182; so in Prose, du. bmép THs “EAAGBos Plat. Legg. 692 D; dp. mpd ravrav Polyb. 6.6, 8. 5, lastly c. dat. instrumenti, c0éve du. to defend with might, Il. 13. 678. II. rarel like Med. 11, to requite, repay, ¢py dptvovow kaka Soph. Ph. 602; dpuu- vew ..7ois Adyous Tad to repay with words, Id. O. C. 1128, B. Med. fo keep or ward off from oneself, to guard or defend one- self against, often with collat. notion of requital, revenge : 1. mostly ¢. acc, rei, duivero vndets Fuap Il. 13.5143 duvyecbac popov Aesch., Ag. 1381; 7d dvaTuxés yap niyever’ Gpiverat Eur. Heracl. 303; etc. —b. ©. acc, pers., dp. Thy Aapelov arparify Hat. 3.158; execvoy qudvavro Soph. Fr. 514, cf. 278. 2. that from which danger is warded off in gen., as in Act. (1. 2), duvydpevoe opdv abray Il. 12. 155 5 vydv jpv- yoyro Ib, 179 :—so too in Prose, tv map’ tudv dy. Plat. Legg. 637 Cc. 3. with wept, dutvecOar wept marpys Il. 12. 243; wept Ta olxelwy Thuc. 2. 39; also, imép tuvos Xen. Cyn. 9, 9; cf. supr. I. 4 4, absol. to defend oneself, act in self-defence, dpdbvecOa pirov al Il, 16. 5 56 3 hv ovddapBavdpevos dpdynra Hat. 1. 80, cf. 4.174, al.; aad’ dptvou Ar. Eq. 2443 Tod dptavros kat od rod dpuvopévov Antipho 128. 45 ; 008° duuvdpevos GAN’ bndpxow Isocr. 356 A, cf. Plat. Gorg. 456 E; xax@s macxovra dp, dvriipGvra axis Plat. Crito 49 D; édy Ff xapies, du. ale Att. -rre: Ep. impf. duvocov Il.: fat. €w Il: aor. iipvta Nonn,, Ep. du Anth. P. 7, 218:—Mied., pres., Hipp. 8. 176 Litt.: aor, part. duvgduevos Anth. P, 7. 491:—Pass., fut. dpuxojcopar Aquil. V.T.: aor. part. duvxdéy Anth. P. 11, 382, Ath.:—cf, nar-, mepi- aptoow: (vy. sub fin.), To scratch, tear, wound, lacerate, xepol 6 dpvoce Il. 19. 284: to tear in pieces, mangle, Hat. 3. 76, 108 ; Gp. Tots dvugiv, of the eagle, Arist. H. A. 9. 32, 5:—esp. of any slight surface-wound, from whatever cause, fo prick as a thorn, Longus I. 14; sting as a fly, Luc. Muse. Encom. 6; dpporépaow ay. to strike.., Theocr, 22. 96, etc.: in Medic., to scarify. II. metaph., od 3 évdb0% Gupdy dpsbgers xadbpevos thou wilt tear thy heart with rage, Il. 1. 243; Kapdlav autooe spovris care tears or gnaws my heart, Aesch. Pers. 161; ppv Gpiacera pdBy Ib. 115: so in Lat. animum pungere, animo pungi. (From 4/MYK (with a prefixed), come also dpugts, duvxn, duvxddar, cf. Lat. mucro: perhaps vucow (to prick) may be akin. sain , paps le ov, not initiated, Cyrill,; d-puornplacros, ov, Schol. Theocr, _ amivrop — aupapaw, &-puort [7], Adv. (uv) without closing the mouth, i.e, at one draught, duvort mivev Luc. Lexiph. 8, etc. Gpvortife, to drink deep, jytoriua Eur. Cycl. 565; pres., Plut. 2. 650 B. Guvons, vos and ios, 4, (duvorl) a long draught of drink, dpvariv mpomeiv, wivew Anacr. 62, 2 (ubi vy. Bgk.), Epich. 18 Ahr.; €Axvoae Eur, Cycl. 417. 2. deep drinking, tippling, Id. Rhes. 438, et ibi Schol. II. a large cup, used by the Thracians, noted as topers, dpvorw éedamrey Ar. Ach, 1229, Amips. Incert. 1, cf. Hor. Od, 1. 36, 14. woros, ov, =dydyros, Dion. Areop. G-pucxpés, 4, dv, (uicos) undefiled, Parth. ap. Hephaest. 9, and prob. 1, in Soph. Fr. 834 (though Suid. hesitates between duuxvds, duuxpds, Gpuonapés): cf. Lob. Pathol. 1. 227. Gpixh, }, (4udcow) a scratch, tear, skin-wound, laceration, duvxds karapvgavres Phryn. Com.’Ep. 1: of marks of strangling, Dem. 1157. 5 :—scarification, Medic. II. =dpvgis, in sign of sorrow, duuxds komropévey dpeidrey Plut. Solon 21. GptxySov, Adv.,=dyvé: hence, slightly, E. M. me ees: ov, (duvxh) scratched slightly: metaph, superficial, t. Ax. 366 A, Gpuypds, 6,=dyrfis; dy. fipéwy a sword-wound, Theocr. 24. 124. dpuxvés, dpuxpés, v. sub duvoxpds. Gptxaddys, s, (el50s) like a scratch: chapped, ¢¢4vOnpa Hipp. Coac. 189 A :—of the pomegranate flower, Theophr. H. P. 1. 13, 5. Ne , old poét. abbrey, for dvad- (cf. dum—) ; but more common for before a vowel. Gpddyapar, to stand round and admire, Q. Sm. 7. 722. Gu-tiyardto, Ep. Verb, used by Hom. only in impf. dupayawafoy and part. pres. Med, -owevos; in later Ep. only in pres, and impf.:—to em- brace with love, treat kindly, greet warmly, Lat. amore amplecti, Od. 14. 381, Ap. Rh. 3. 258, etc. ; so in Med., Il. 16. 192, h. Cer. 291. Gudiydmde, Ep., like the foreg., aor. dupayarnoe h, Hom. Cer. 439; +4 meee sepeyentores (i.e, Pandora), Hes, Op. 58 ; duparyarg Orac. . . Exc, Vat. p. 1. : appayelpopat, Med. to gather round, used by Hom. only in aor. 2, eat 5€ pv Guparyéporro Il. 18. 37, cf. Ap. Rh. 4.1527: hence in later Ep. we have a pres. duaryépouat, Theocr. 17. 94, Opp. H. 3. 231., 4. 114; cf. dupnyepéOopa. peek, a pres. assumed by Gramm. for deriv. of jypyyvdour, but v. dupvyvoéa. Gp-pa54, dudddny, V. sub dupaddy: ppablyy, v. dupddios, LOS, a, OV, (poet. for dvapddios which does not occur, v. duda- bév): public, yapyos Od. 6. 288. II. acc. fem. dppadiny as Ady. (cf. abrocxedinv),=dypadéy, publicly, openly, aloud, Lat. palam, Il. 13. 356; so also in later Ep. Gp-padév, Ady. post. for dvapadiy =dvapavddy (dupavddv), publicly, openly, without disguise, opp. to AdOpn, Il. 7. 243; to epupnddv, Od. 14. 330; to BdAq, 1. 296; dud. Badréav, xrelvew, dyopevev, eimeiv Hom. —lIt seems to be neut. of an Adj. dupadés, 4, dv, which occurs in Od, 19. 391, 7) Gupada épya -yévouro, discovered, known. A form dphadiy is used by Archil. 60. Gphatve, post. for dvapaivw, Gpd-dtooopat, Pass. to rush on from all sides, float around, dupi 86 7 diocovras Il, 11. 417 ; appt BE xairar dpos discovro 6. 510., 15. 267. nay ap ae “ make float around, restored for duatpéw in Aretae. . M. Ac. 1. 1. dppdxavbos, oy, (dixavOa) surrounded with prickles, dud. dépas, of the porcupine, Ion ap. Plut. 2. 71 F (al. dpp’ dxav@av), Gpddans [a], es, Dor. for dppnens. dppar @, to shout around, Nonn, D. 40. 98. GpdtdAdAnpar, to wander round about, Opp. C. 3. 423. snbadnds, Adv. strengthd, for dAAdg, alternately, Poéta ap. Ath. 116C. al , to change entirely, Opp. C, 3. 13. phaprdrar, f. 1. for Agpapi@rat, q. v. Gphavadelkvupe, fo exhibit all round, Or. Sib. dpdavbév, Adv., poét. for dvapavddv, Pind, P, bavéew, pott, for dvapaveiy, inf. Gpupatovén, (dgwv) go unsteadily, on their axles, A. B. 23. Sppapapi, Ep. Verb, to rattle or ring around, rebxea dppapaBnoe Il, 21. 408 :—so GupaipaBite, in Ep. impf. dupapaBifev, Hes. Sc. 64. noah e = ia me airy two left hands, i.e. utterly awkward or clumsy, . us, formed on the a 1 é . sre wee Hesych,, Eust, nN eY, OE ADR ae ie pie Pict, %, Ep. for dpacta (cf. dumdanéw), speechlessness caused b: es ggg oF rage, diy BE muy dupaain Fara AdBe Il. 17. Son, Gphavtis, ews, 7, (avgew) the branches have been lopt off in the "apart, tori wrTew, to ring around, kdbpubes 8 dud? adoy di G&udadde, Ep. Verb, to touch = Feel bees othov ed fi 08 powoa Od, 4. 277; kal x dAads,. draxpivere pe ojua & a day b feeling it, 8. 196 ; to handle, régoy edfoor dupadd, 71h aupad vated dupapders Orph. Lith. 522 ; Ion. impf. dupa ? est 5 ja sing. also in Med. just like the Act., rov itv. xed ne 86 : oar ae 461. 2. like Lat. tractare, of persons wee aa ; = (Ep. for dupapaoGar) easier to deal with, Il eke gp ya dupapdaadar know how to handle it, Od. 8 303) eee oe Stkoer e it, Od. 8. 215, cf. 19. 475.—This Verb is used by Aretae. in Ep, fi - i [is Lge Maeno P. forms -dua4 Caus, M. Diut, 2. 4, Cur, M. 12 (10). 204. dP. 9. 73. fut. of dvapaivw, h. Hom. Merc. 16. totter: metaph. from wheels loose hard growth round the places where Pine-tree, also dugupva, Theophr. H, P. appexas — auduBaivo. Gpheaxds, ddos, 5, (sc. juépa) the day next after the twentieth, the twenty-first, C. I, 2448. m1. 1: cf. Hesych. s. v. dup’ eleds. éopat, Pass. fo surround, Philet. ap. Strabo 168, in tmesi; cf. Mein. Anal. Alex. p. 349. GudeAcAtfopar, Pass. to swing or wave to and fro, Q. Sm. 11. 465. Gpdéductos, ov, post. for dudrédA-, coiled round, Eur. H. F. 399. GudeAloow, post. and Ion, for dudueA-, to wrap or fold, dupedigavres xépas Eur. Andr. 425, cf. Hipp. 8. 140 Litt.; pres. in Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 4:—Med., dupedi~acOat yvabous réxvors to close their jaws upon the children, Pind. N. 1. 62. GpéAkw, to draw around: Med., dupédrecOat m1 to draw a thing round one, i. e. be surrounded by it, Dion. P. 268. GpdeAutpsa, to wrap round, Lyc. 75 :—and dpeAvtpwors, ews, %}, a wrapper or coating’, Id. 845. : be » post. pf. part. of durévvupe. pevérrw, strengthd. for évérw, Nic. Th. 627. bétrw, post. for dudtémar. bepelBw, to fix around, (vydv dup. twit Lyc. 504. pepéspa, to cover up, Anth. P. 11. 37. bepxys, és, fenced round, midos Achae. ap. Hesych. bepuOatvw, to redden, make red all over, Q. Sm. 1. 60. bépxopat, Dep. to come round one, surround, Hom. only in aor. 2, C., HE KOupdaw auphdrvde .. di7h Od. 6.122; we Kvions dup... 12. 369. hépw, dp-pevyw, poet. for dvap-. béxdive, v, sub dudixdonw. bexvOn, apuhéxiiro, v. sub dudixéw. apdéxea, v. sub duréxo. Gudnyepopar, Ep. for dupayelpopat, augt 8 iyyepeOovro Od. 17. 34. Gpoyens, €s, (din) two-edged, double-biting, pacyavov, fipos ll. 10. 256, Od. 16. 80, etc.; xévrpov, Sdpu Aesch. Pr. 692, Ag. 11493; €yxos, yévus Soph. Aj. 286, El. 485; of lightning, forked, mupds dupnens Béorpuxos Aesch. Pr. 1044. II. metaph., dup. yA@rra a tongue that will cut both ways, i,e. maintain either right or wrong, Ar. Nub. 1160; of an oracle, cutting both ways, ambiguous, dud. nat dimpdcartos Luc. Jup. Trag. 43. Gpd-npepivos muperds, a quotidian fever, opp. to didrprros and Terap- Tatos, and also to vuerepivds, Hipp. Epid. 1.944, Plat. Tim. 86 A; cf. Piers. Moer. p. 46 :—so, dpdptpepos (sub. ruperds), Soph. Fr. 448. Gudnpedas, és, (Epépw) covered on both sides, close-covered, epith. of Apollo's quiver, Il. 1. 45. Gudtpys, es, (*dpw) fitted or joined on both sides, AaBav dypijpes ev@uvor dédpu, i, e. the double rudder used in Greek ships (v. r7SdAcov), Eur. Cycl. 15; fvAa dd. the wood of the funeral pile regularly piled all round, 1d. H. F. 243; dup. oxnvat dwellings well fastened or secured, Id. Ion 1128. II. (épécow) with oars on both sides, only in Gramm. ; cf. dunpixds. Gpdnpikds, 7, dv,=dupnpns It; dxariov dup. a boat in which each man pulled two oars or sculls, Thuc. 4. 67. Gudtpiotos, ov, (épifw) contested on both sides, contested, disputed, doubtful, dppnpiorov eOnxev, i.e. made it a ‘drawn’ race, Il. 23. 382; yévos ayo. Call. Jov. 5; veiwos Ap. Rh. 3.627; éAmldes Polyb. 5. 85, 6. Gpot, Prep. with gen., dat., and acc.—(With 4/AM®, ambh, amb, cf. dyugis, duBw, dunt, dumérit ; Skt. abhitas; Lat. amb- in ambages, am- biguus, ambulo, amplector, etc.; O.H.G. umpi (Germ. um)) :—Radic. sense, on both sides; chiefly used in Poets and Ion. Prose; cf. wept. A. ©. GENIT., almost wholly poét., I. Causal, like évera, about, for, for the sake of a thing, duqt midaxos paxecOa to fight for the possession of a spring, Il. 16. 825; dupt yuvainds Pind. P. 9. 184, Aesch. Ag. 62; dugt Aéerpwv Eur. Andr. 123: hence like mpdés in en- treaties, mpds Znvds .. SoiBov 7 dpi for Phoebus’ sake, Ap. Rh. 2. 216. 2. about, i. e. concerning a thing, of it, like wept c. gen., or Lat. cirea for de, only once in Hom., dugt giddryros deldey to sing of love, Od. 8. 267; once too in Hdt., 6.131; more freq. in Pind., as, dygt Sapdvav O, 1.56, and Eur.; for Soph. Ph. 554 v. sub évexa. II. of Place, about, around, round about, is a post-Hom. usage, aut radrys vis wédwos Hdt. 8. 104; Tov dydt Aiwvas rpdxov Eur. Hipp. 1133; appt mérrov ind onérov fipn ordcayres under cover of their cloaks, Id. Or. 1458. B. es DAT., I. of Place, on both sides of, dup’ dxéecor Il. 5. 723; dui Kepadrp, Gpos, arhOecor about the head, etc., Hom.; appl of around him, Il. 12. 396; por dup’ ad7@ around me, Il. 9. 470; like- wise, dupl mept ornGecor Od. 11. 609 :—then, just like epi, all round, xpéa dupt dBedrois éretpav they fixed the meat round, i.e. upon, the spits, Od. 12. 395; menapuévy dye’ dvixeror Hes. Op. 203 (cf. mepl B.1), 2. in a more general relation of Place, at, by, near, with, like ént, dugt mérpot paxeoOat at the gates, Il. 12. 175; dul parw on the helmet, 3. 362; dup mupi on, over, or by the fire, 18. 344; dup éuoi by my side, Od. 11. 423; esp. of hanging or lying over one, Il. 4. 493, Soph. Aj. 562; audi youvac: mimrey Eur. Alc. 947. as of Time, dAlg dypt évi in the compass of one day, Pind. O. 13. 51. III. generally, of Connexion or Association, without any distinct notion of Place, freq. in Pind., dup’ dé0Aas in, Jor them, N. 2. 26; dup cogia P. 1. 22; cod audi rpomy N. 1. 42; én’ Epyouow dpi re Bovdais P. 5.160; so, Epis dupt povorxh Hdt. 6. 129, and later, e. g. Luc, D. Deor. 20. 14. IV. Causal, about, for, for the sake of, dug’ “EXévn pdxecba Il. 3.70; dul yovacnt aryea mao xe Ib. 157: about, of, regarding, concerning, 7. 408, Od. 1. 48; elmay dpp’,’Odve nt Od. 14. 364; du’ énot for me, Soph. O. C. 1614; dpi oo Aesch. Ag. FEEEEESS & 9 28 fet 83 Hdt. 3. 32, ef. Soph, Aj. 303. 2, like wepi, Lat. prae, of impulses, api répBe, dupt pope, prae pavore, for very fear, Aesch, Cho. 547, Be yt a ; oe 6uy@ Soph. Fr. 147 :—and of the means, dup’ dpera éxecOa for, through it, Pind. P. 1. 155; éua dppt ava by m skill, Id. P. 8. 47, cf 0, 8. 55. Meier. aes C. c. acous., which is the most freq. in Prose: I. of Place, as with dat., about, around, mostly however with a sense of motion, dupl pay pGpos Baroy Il, 24. 588, cf. Od. 10. 365; BABes . . dup? Aw- dovnv Aesch. Pr. 830; dupt Boplay éxrnfe nacrdda Eur. H. F. 984. 2. of general relations of Place, dud’ GAa by the sea, Il. 1. 409; dupt péeOpa somewhere by the banks, 2, 461; also, dudt mept “pnvnv somewhere about the fountain, 2. 305; dudt doru all about in the city, 11. 706; dupt Yduabor all on the sand, Soph. Aj. 1064; zept nidanas dui Theocr. 7. 142. 8. of persons who are about one, of dupt Upiapov Priam and his train, ll. 3. 146, cf. 2. 417, 445; of dul Répfea his army, Hat. 8. 25; but of dup! Meyapéas kat ALactous are the same as immediately afterwards of Meyapées cal Sdrdoror, Hat. 9. 69. Hence the peculiar Att. usage, of dud? Tpwrarydpay the school of Pro- tagoras or even Protagoras himself (and in later authors it is often used for the single person), Plat. Theaet. 170C; of audi WAdrwva, the Plato- nists, of dupt Eb@vppova Euthyphro’s friends, Heind. Plat. Crat. 399 E:— 7a dpi 7 that which concerns a thing, 7a dup) riy Siacray the domes- tic arrangements, Xen, Cyr. 8. 2, 6: cf, wepl o. 1. 5. 4, like dugi B. III, kAalew dui tiva to weep about or for one, Il. 18. 339; pvt- casa dupt twa to make mention of one, h. Hom. 6. 1; «eAadéovre Paya dpi riva Pind, P; 2.27, cf. Aesch. Theb. 843; duel vv -youspevos Soph, Fr. 937. 5. Att. phrase, du@i re €xew with an Ady., to set about a thing, be occupied about or with it, Aesch, Theb. 102, Xen. Cyr. 5. 5, 44, etc.; so elva, dkarpiBav, orparevdecOar aGypi te Id. An. 3. 5,14, etc.: cf. mepl c. 1. 3. II. a loose definition of Time, throughout, for, rov Kody audi Biorov, roy bAoy audi xpévov Pind. O. 1.157., 2.553 dup Wreddav Stow Aesch, Ag.826; dudi Tov xetpava Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, 22, etc.: cf. wept c. 11. 2. so of Number, dup? Tas dwdexa pupiddas circiter, about 120,000, Xen. Cyr, 1. 2, 15 :—just like eis, except that with dud the Article is usual, not so with eis. D. Position. In Poets dpi sometimes follows its case, of 5€ uy dpoi Od. 23. 46. But it never suffers anastrophé, E. M. 94. 16. Hi. WITHOUT Case, as Adv., about, around, round about, on both or all sides, very often in Hom., who often so places it, that it may be either an independent Adv., or separated by tmesis from a Verb, as in Il. 5. 310: often the foreg. Verb must be repeated, as in Od. 10. 218. Also dpqt mepi as Adv., Il. 21. 10. 2.=duois 11, by oneself, apart, h. Hom. Cer, 85; but v. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. dupis-12. F. In Compos., I. about, on both sides, so that it sometimes seems to stand for do, and reminds one of dupa, ambo, e.g. duiaro- pos, =Sloropos, apypiados. 2. all round, on all sides, as in dpqu- Baddw 1. 3, duprapBdva, dudirapns. II. Causal, for, for the sake of, as in dupipaxopat, dudirpopéew. G. Prosopy, v. sub zrepi H. Gpdrdyvipar, Pass., 2o be broken around, tivi Joseph, B. J. 4.10, 5. dpprafw, Plut. C. Gracch, 2; fut. -dow Alciphro 3. 42: aor. yjpplaca Anth. P, 7. 368, C. L. 5128. 25, Polyaen.: pf. jupiaxa (ovv—) Clearch. ap. Ath. 256 F:—Med., fut. -dcoyuat (uer—-) Luc.: aor. judiacdpny Apollod. 2. 1, 2, etc.; pf. qpiacua: in med, sense (xe7—) Diod. 16. II :—dyquélw is a common vy. |. in Plut., etc.: cf. dw, pet-, ovv- apdiato: (from dypt, as avriagw from dy7i). Later word for dudrévvust, to put garments round another, put on him, twi te Themist. :—Med., dudiacacdai 71, Lxx (Job. 40. 5), Apollod. 1. c., etc. II. to clothe; twa Plut. 1. c.; ipariows tuwvd Alciphro 1. c.: metaph,, of a grave, dorea juplacey Anth. P. 1. c, dpoliidos, ov, (GAs) sea-girt, constant epith, of Ithaca in Od., as 1. 386, 395; of Lemnos, Soph. Ph. 1464. 2. later of Corinth, between two seas, Horace’s bimaris Corinthus, Xen. Hell. 4. 2, 13; so Pind., O. 13. 57, calls the Isthmian games dupiador Moreddvos reO poi. i wakres, wy, of, nickname of the dithyrambic poets, because their odes often began thus,—dyol por ad&is dvaxra or audi por abre, dvag, v, Ar. Nub. 595, et Schol. ad 1. éuduavakrile, to sing dithyrambic hymns, Ar. Fr. 151, cf. Suid. s.v. ; paos, ov, Att. “Apdidpews, w, (a choriambus in Soph, O. C. 1313), Amphiaraiis, the Theban hero and seer, Aesch,, etc.: prob. also called “Ayqus in Aesch. Fr. 361. dudtas, 6, a bad Sicilian wine, Nicostr. Oivor,1: in Hesych., dys. apoliors, ews, 6, (dupiatw) a garment, LXX (Job. 22, 6, al.). audlacpa, aros, 76, a garment, Ctes. Pers. 19, Luc, Cyn. 17. dudiacpés, 6,=dudiacs, Theophil. Protosp, app-tdxe, of a bird, 2o fly about shrieking, in irreg. part. pf. duqudxuia, Il. 2. 316. dpdiBatvo, fut. —Bycopat, etc.: (v. Baivw), To go about or around, hédvos pécov obpavoy audiBeBhxer the sun in his course had reached mid-heaven, Il. 8. 68. 2. to bestride, dug’ évt Bodpare Batve he bestrode a beam, Od, 5. 371; twmov dud, Call. Del. 1135 dup. On- Actas, of a cock, Babr. 5. 8. 3. to bestride a fallen friend, so as to protect him, dpi kaovyvirw BeBaws Il. 14. 477 (cf. weptBaivw I. 1): hence, __, of tutelary deities, to guard, protect, KiAAav dpuuBéBnxas Il. 1. 373 dalpoves dudiBdvres rédw Aesch, Theb. 175 :—so, of a wild beast, ¢o guard its young, Opp. C. 3. 218; or its prey, Xen. Cyn. To, 13. II. 4o surround, encompass, wrap round, c. acc., vepeédy oxdmedov audiBeBnke Od. 12. 745 o& mévos ppévas duquBEBynev Il. 6. 355, cf. Od. 8. 541; Tapaypor dudiBdvr’ exov paxns Eur. Phoen. 890; dui 7 Oavdry airis AOyos A€yerat about her death it is reported, b 1406; & potpa,.. ota pe. . duquBao’ éxes Id, Andr. 1082: also c. G2 B4 dat., Tpwov védos dudrBéBnte vnualy Il. 16. 66; 4 1s bandage which embraces a oan cae without peed Pag i, A 799. ms iy an asthe ee Opacos dupeBaiver Eur, Supp. 609 ; dud aca pAdg oivov, where the metaph. is taken fr ne spreading round a vessel on the fire, Id. Alc, 738. oe a at poet 6, epith. of Poseidon at Cyrené, =éppl-yaios, -yarqoxos, zetz, Lyc. 749. GppiBardw, fut. -BadJ, etc. (vy. BédAo) ;—Med., Ep. fut. 4upiBadred- Hat Od. 22. 103. To throw or put round, used by Hom. mostly in tmesi: I. of clothes, etc., to put them on a person, like Lat. circumdare, like duduévyuja, c. dupl, acc, pers, et rei, appl b¢ pe XAaivay . . Badev 75 xiréva Od. 10/365, cf. 4513 dpol Bé pur paxos ~- Badey 13. 434; also c. dat. pers., duct 5€ wor panos . . BaAoy 14. 342; yg 5 “ACHyn pos . . Bad’ aiyida Il. 18. 204; OTOAIY. aupeBenne o@ kdpq Eur. H. F. 465; yépas xépats Pind. P, 5. 42 :—Med. to put round oneself, put round one, Lat. accingi, 50s 5& pdxos dpquBahéadat ‘ee 6. 178, cf, 22. 103, etc.; Grepavors . . du. mAokapors Eur, Bacch. i—then dupiBarov ‘OéAapov Séyov I built a chamber over him, Od. 23. 192; tvydy EAAGd dup. Aesch, Pers. 50, cf. 72; xparhp tmvov dudiBadrre Gybpaot Eur. Bacch. 384; Aevehy rhvd .. ek pedaivys 4; pan tpl xa I put on, get white hair, Soph. Ant. Simon. 154. c, for the Med. the Act. is sometimes used, eparepoy pévos GupBardyres [éavrois], like émerévor ddxqy, Il. 17. 7423 dovAocivay duiBadrotca xdpa [éavrqs] Eur. Andr. 110; and reversely the Med. for the Act., duptBaddAcoGar didav eri ru Id. Andr. 1191 :— | Pass., Uuvos dupiBdddrerar copay pyriecor song is cast (like a net) over the minds of poets, Pind. O. 1. 14. 2. to throw the arms round, so as to embrace, c. dat. pers., du’ ‘Odvo7e . . xeipe Baddyre Od. 21. 223; Gupt 52 xeipas Setpy Badr’ ’Odvoqe 23. 208; aut Se madt . . Bare ™HXEE 24. 3473 but, dupd 52 xeipas BddAoper, of seizing or taking prisoner, 4. 454; also, dug 5% xeipa .. Badev eyxet grasped it, 21. 433; dupi 5¢. . Bare youvact xelpas, as a suppliant, 7. 142. 3. reversely, c. acc. pers. fo encompass, embrace, dup. ria xepot, wAevas Eur, Bacch. 1363, Phoen. 306; also simply, dup. twa to embrace him, Td. Supp. 70; dud. pddov dpyiOwy to surround them with nets, Soph. Ant. 344; ¢o strike or hit on all sides, twa Bédeot Eur. H.F. 422. b. metaph., dul «rvmos ovata Badd Il. 10. 535. II, to force or move round, 7d dpOpov Hipp. Art. 780 H. III. to doubt, repi tivos Polyb. 40. 10, 23 also followed by inf., ds .., or e&.., Ael. N. A. 9. 33, Clem. Al. IV. intr., dup. els rémov to go into another place, Eur. Cycl. 60. 2. to-be doubtful or uncertain, Arist. Eth. E. 7: io 8 va ae ae 37- ‘ GpdiBiors, ews, }, a going round, detce 8 by aupiBaow . . Tpwov (i. e. rods dud Baivovras Tpwas), Il. 5. 623; Bi fio LB. GpdParhp, jpos, 6, a defender, guardian, of angels, Synes. p. 324. “dpptBros, ov, living a double life, i.e. both on land and in water, am- phibious, of frogs, Batr. 59 3. orépa Anth, P. 6. 43, cf. Plat. Ax. 368 B:—the word is said by Theophr. (Fr. 12. 12) to have been first used by Democritus. GpptPAnpa, aros, 76, something thrown round, an enclosure, Eur. Hel. jo. IL. a garment, cloak, wéwdous Te robs mplv Aapmpa 7 Gp- piBrAnpara Ib. 423; mavorAa dud. coats of panoply, Id. Phoen. 779. apdiBryorpeuticy (sc. Téxv7), 7, net-fishery, Poll. 7. 139. apdiBryorpetw, to catch with a net, Aquil. V. T. Gpouprnortpires, 7, dv, serving for a net, Plat. Soph. 235 B. GpdiBAqorpo-cbys, és, net-like, dup. xirwv prob. the retina, Poll. 2. 71, cf. Greenhill Theoph. 159. 6. : appiBAnotpov, 76, (dupiBddrdrAw) anything thrown round: 2 a casting-net, Hes, Sc. 215, Hdt. 1. 141., 2.95; dupiBAjotpy meptBar- Aecdar Menand. ‘AA. 15. b. metaph. of the garment thrown like a net over Agamemnon, Aesch. Ag. 1382, Cho. 492, and (without any play on the former sense) Soph. Tr. 1052 ; also, dupiBAnotpa owparos, pain tags, thrown around the body, Eur. Hel. 1079. 2. a fetter, bond, Aesch. Pr. 81. 3. of walls, dupiBAnorpa rotxev Eur. I. T. 96. -Gpo(Brntos, ov, put or thrown round, paxn Eur. Fr. 698. ONTOS, ov, sounding round, resounding, Call, Del. 303. 2. notsed abroad, far-famed, Anth. P. 9. 241. GpdiBoreds, Gvadopa, %, ulceration, Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 2. 3 and 9. ‘ Gvddoors, ews, 7}, (dvadiSwpr intr.) a growing up, growth, as of plants Theophr. C. P. 2.1, 4: a bursting or issuing forth, as of fire, wind, water, Arist. Mund. 4, 16, Diod. 2.12; exhalation, Plut. 2, 31 E. Ld, (trans.) a distribution, e.g. of viands at dinner, Ath. 210 E. 2. of food, digestion, Polyb. 3. 57, 8, Plut. 2.654 A: metaph. digestion of knowledge, Id. Pericl. 2, III. in Gramm. a throwing back of the accent, v. dvadidapu Iv. 2. GvaSoriKés, 7, ov, distributive, digestive, c. gen., Greg. Naz. dvaSoros, ov, given up or to be given up, Thuc. 3. 52. GvadovAbu, to reduce to slavery again, App. Civ. 4. 29 :—hence, ava SovAwors, 7, Byz. dvadoxy, 7, a taking up, undertaking, révav Soph, Tr. 825. surety, bail, Polyb. 5. 27, 4, ubi v. Schweigh. ava5oxos, ov, taking upon oneself, giving security for, mpos Ti ader- pny av. Tov Xpnparov Menand, Xnp. 3. II. as Subst. a security, surety, Dion. H. 6. 84, Plut. Dio 18. dvadpayetv, aor. 2 inf, of dvarpéxa. dvadpipnréoy, verb. Adj. one must run up or back, Procl. in Plat. Gvadpémw, to break off, pluck, Nonn. D. 9. 120:—Med. #o cull, pyrope- Kovs Adyous dvadpépacdat Themist. 332 D, dvadpopy, %, (dvarpéxm, -Spapeiv) a running up, rising, as of the sap, Theophr, C. P, 4. 5, I. 2. a sudden throb of pain, Hipp. Coac, 168. dvadpopos, ov, running up, of a fish running up a river, Alex. Trall. - dvaduve, , to come to the top of water, Batr. go. ; dvadvopat, Ep. 3 sing. dvdverac [0]: fut. -dvcopa [d]: aor. dvediod- PNY, Ep. 3 sing. avo or ero: Dep, with act. aor. dvédoy, subj. dvaddp or opt. dvadvn [2] Od. 9. 377, inf. dvadév, apoc. for -B0vat, suggested by Dind. for dyidety in Aesch. Cho. 805 : pf. dvadéddxa (v. ddw). To come up, rise, esp. from the sea, c. gen., dvédv modus dAds HiT’ bpixdn Il. 1. 359; dveivcaro Aiwyns Od. 5. 337; also c. acc., dved0caro nope Oadaoons Il, I. 496: absol., efmep dvadice médw Ar. Ran. 1460; so, Agpodirn dvadvovévy, a famous picture by Apelles, Plin. 35- 39, 15. 2. of rivers that have disappeared into the earth, to come up again, Arist. Meteor, 2. 2, 24. Il. to draw back, shrink back, withdraw, retire, Od. 9. 3775 dvadivar dy Aady és Syrdov Il. 7. 217: to shrink back, hesitate, shirk, Lat, tergiversari, érowpds elu’ éyorye, Kode avadv- opat, Sdxvew Ar. Ran, 860, cf, Xen, Symp. 5, 5, Dem. 102. 12., 109. 12., 406, 20:—of springs, to Jail, Plut. Thes, 15. 2. rarely c. ace. 2 Cie reel en dvéverat méAeyov II, 13, 225; in imitation of hic adverba 7d dmohoynuéva, to shrink from one’s ad- missions, Theaet. 145 C, cf. Euthyd, 302 E, ore her bs drawing back, retreat, escape, Plat. Euthyd. 302 E: ge » Shunning, esp. to serve as a soldier, Plut. Cim. 18 dvadvopés, 5,=foreg., Schol. Od. 5. 337. : sie dva-eBvos, 7), without presents from the bridegroom, without bridal gifts, Il. 9. 146 (ubi y. Spitzn.), 13, 366. (dva remains without “eT Sgt because of ~ F, avaFedvos, cf. dvdeArros: but prob. ekk. is ri in restoring dy- i.e. dy-€ Fd i ; sarod Cone aa Hom.)° éeBvos, i.e. dy. éFedvos, éedva being the dv-aetpw, to lift up, of a wrestler, II. ; ip, of Hw dvdep’, 4 bya oé Il. 23. 7245 dvderpe Siw Xpugoto Tadayra took them, mbes them -off i Gh 778; dBavaron pidas dvd xeipas deipac Virgil’s palmas "ad sidera tendit, Il.7.130:—Med. to lift up in one’s arms, carry off, Ap.Rh.4.94.— parks. phisd rg Rh. 1. 1078; of a ship, to float Orph. Arg. 279, vi mT0$, ov, like deAmros, unlooked ‘or, GVvaen: Y } ; ; Th, 660. (Properly avaFeArros, v. er as ni rk avacEw — avadys. av-attw, to enlarge, increase, Q. Sm. 1. 460: to make grow, dvOos Coluth. 241. dvaeprdw, lengthd. for dvacipw, Anth. P. 6.195: Nonn. has -d¢w. Gvalaw, inf. (ny, to return to life, be alive again, Ev. Luc. 15. 24 and 32, C.I, 2566: in Ep. form —(4w, Nic. ap. Ath. 133 D, C.I. 8695. Cf. Bidw. dvalelw, Ep. for dvaCéw 11, Anth. P, 9. 626. avalepa, atos, 76, (dva(éw) a boiling or bubbling up, Gramm. dvaleous, ews, 4), a boiling up, of fire, Arist. Mirab. 40, évafevyvups and -va, fut. —Cevgw: (v. Cevyvums). To yoke or harness again, dvaCevyvivat tov orpardv to move off the army, Hdt. 9. 41; dy. 70 orparémedov to break up the camp, Ib. 58; dv. mpds rdv IoOpdv 7ds vfjas to move them back . ., Id. 8. 60, 1. 2. absol. to break up or shift one’s quarters, mostly in part., dvaCevgas #Aavve Thuc. 8. 108, cf. Xen. An. 3. 4, 373; dy. én’ otxov to return home, Plut. Pomp. 42; dy. did Supias to march through .., 1d. Anton. 84. avafevtis, ews, }, a breaking up one’s quarters, marching off or forth, Plut. Ages. 22: a return home, Plut. Cor. 31. avakéw, fut. —(éow, to boil up or bubble up, éx yijs Soph. Tr. 702; mp dvé(ece Arist. Mirab. 39; of a lake, Ib. 89. 2. dva(. edads to boil or swarm with worms, a kind of disease, Plut. 2. 337 B (where edAds is a cognate acc.) ; but also, evAat dva¢éovow Id. Artox. 16. 3. metaph., of passion, ¢o boil over, Arist. Probl. 27. 3, 2, Plut. 2. 728 B; also of persons, dv. xéAov to boil with rage, Ap. Rh. 4. 391. II. Causal, to make to boil, Hipp. Act. 387: cf. dvacelw. dvalnréw, to examine into, investigate, Lat. anquirere, Tas airias Plat. Legg. 693 A; and in Pass., Hdt. 1.137, Ar. Lys. 26, Thuc. 2.8: to investigate philosophically, ra jmd yijs Plat. Apol. 18 B:—¢o search out, discover, rovs 5pdcavras Dem. 1331. 1 (v.1. (yrfjoat). dvaly S, €S, ), investigation, Plat. Criti. 110 A. évaliyn, 7,=dvaCevgis, Polyb. 3. 44, 13, etc. dvaliyéw, to push back the bolt (Ci-yaOpov), to unbolt, ri Oipay dva- (uywoas Ar. Fr. 581, cf. Hesych. dvalipée, to leaven thoroughly, cause to ferment, yiv xiv dvatupot Theophr. C. P. 2. 1, 3 :—Pass. to ferment, Diod. 1. 7. dvalipwots, ews, 4, fermentation, yijs bd yedvos Theophr. de Ign. 18. avafw, Tarent. for dvdcow, Ahrens D. Dor. rot. dvalwypadétw, to paint completely, delineate, Strab. 354, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 222, Clem. Al. 435 :—Subst. dvalwypagyots, ews, 7), a picture, paint- ing, in Chrysipp. ap. Diog. L. 7. 201, and late writers. avalwypéw, to recall to life, Anth. P. 7. 594, Nonn. D. 29. 155. dvalavvupt or tw, fut. -(dow, to gird up again, recall a soldier to service, Themist. 224 A:—Med., dv. rds dapvas to gird up one’s loins, Ep. Petr. 1.13; dv. wémdous Nonn. D. 19. 73; dve(wopévor, Lat. alte praecincti, Didym. ap. Ath. 139 D. dvafworovéw and avafwée, fo recall to life, Eccl. dvalwniipéw, to rekindle, light up again, in tmesi, dv’ ad od Camupeis vein véa Eur. El. 1121; Oepy@ 7d Oepyoy dy. Arist. de Spir. 5, 12 :— Pass. to gain fresh life, strength, and courage, Plat. Rep. 527 D, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 46. II. intr. in Act., Plut. Pomp. 41, etc. Cf. Piers, Moer, 170. dvalwmipycis, ews, %, restoration of strength, Joseph. A. J. 12.8, 1. avaloorpa, 4, (Cavvups) a hind of bandage, Galen. dvalwrixés, 7, dv, reviving, encouraging, Eccl. dvalaw, v. dvatdw. dvalowors, ews, 4, a recalling to life, Theophyl. GvaSaAAw : aor. dvéOnra Ael. V. H. 5. 4, N. A. 2. 25 (v. OdAAW) — to shoot up again, sprout afresh, Ael. ll. c,:—fut. med. in pass. sense, dvabadhoera oraxus Anth. P. 7. 281: cf. dvanréw. II. trans. to make to flourish, LXx (Sirac. 11. 22., 50. 10). avi 7, to warm again, cherish, Anacreont. 34. 21; and Subst., avé0akips, 7, Olympiod. in Plat. Phaedo. dvabapoéw, Att.-Oappéw, to regain courage, Ar. Eq. 806, Thuc. 6. 63., «71; Tw at a thing, Id. 6. 31; mpds re Plut. Alex. 31 :—Subst., dva- aponots, %, recovery of courage, Eust. dvabapotve, Att. -Oappivw, to fill with fresh courage, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 23. 2. intr.=foreg., Plut. Lucull. 14. dvaQedopat, Dep. to plate again, Plut. 2. 586A. dvd0epa, post. dvOepa, aros, 7d, (avari@nut) properly, like dvd0nua, anything offered up or dedicated, Theocr. Ep. 13. 2, Anth. P. 6. 162, C. I. 2093 d, 3971 », al. 2. in usage, mostly, anything devoted to evil, an accursed thing, LXx (Levit. 27. 28, Deut. 7. 26., 13.17, al.) ; of persons, Ep. Rom, 9. 3, I Cor. 12. 3, ete. II. a curse, v. dvaGeparifw I. 1. dvabepitilw, to devote to evil, LXx (Num. 21. 2, Josh. 6. 20, al.) ; dvabéyart dv. Deut. 13.15; but dva0évari dy. éavrods to bind them- selves by a curse, Act. Ap. 23.14:—Pass. to be devoted to evil, LXx (Num. 18. 14). 2. to excommunicate, C. 1. 8953, —55, —59. al. II. intr. to curse and swear, Ev. Marc, 14. 71. dvaSepirikds, 7, dv, worse form for dva@nparitéds, Gramm, ; also, dva0epatiatos, a, ov, Schol. Il., v. Lob. Phryn. 543. dvabepiriopés, 6, a cursing : excommunication, Byz, dvaSepatretw, to rear with care, Tovs BAagrovs Theophr. H. P. 4. 13, 3. dvabepifw, to glean, Hesych.; cf. dvaxadapdopa. ~dvabeppatve, to warm up, heat again, Anth. P. 11. 55 :—Pass. to be- come warm again, recover heat, Hipp. Epid. 1. 940, 970, Arist. H. A. 6. 15, 6: to grow feverish again, Hipp. Progn. 42. dvaGeppacia, 7, a warming again, Oribas. 2 a dvdbeots, ews, #), a setting up in public, a dedicating of gifts in temples, dy. oxevijs, rpirodos Lys. 161, 38., 162. 3. Il. a putting off, adjournment, Poll. 9. 137. III. a laying on, imposition, axOeos Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 2..2. eee 97 avaferéov, verb. Adj. of dvariénju, one must put off, Plat. Legg. 935 E. II. one must ascribe or attribute, ti tut Id. Menex. 240 E. ‘ avabéw, to run up, én bévdpa Acl. N. A. 5. 54, ete. 2. of plants, to shoot up, Ib. 2. 36. II. to run back, return, Plat. Tim. 60 C. dvaPewpéw, to look at, observe carefully; to view or observe again, Theophr. H. P. x. 5, 1., 8. 6, 2, Diod. 12. 15. dvabedpyors, ews, #, clase observation, Diod. 13. 35, Plut. 2. 19 E. dvabqKn, 7, =dvddeots, Hesych. dvadnAdkw, to rear by suckling : metaph. to rear a tree, of the root, Philo Byz. de vit Mir. 1. avabnAéw, like dvabéddw, to sprout afresh, ob8' dvabnAjoe: Il. 1. 236. ava0npa, aros,7d, (dvariOnus) that which is set up,and then, like dyaApa, a votive offering set up in a temple, such as tripods, statues, etc., Hdt. 1. 14, 92, Soph. Ant. 286, etc. ; dv. é« Aecroupyav Lys. 175. 26. 2. used by Hom. only in first sense of dyaAua, a delight, ornament, uodmh T épxnotis re 7a yap 7’ dvabhqpara Sarréds Od. 1. 152, cf. 21. 430, C. 1. 26 (in the old form dvd@epa) ; so children are called rots rexovaw. dvdOnya Bidrov Eur. Fr. 522; and fame is dv. copias, Plat. Hipp, Mi. 364 B; of a slave in a temple, dv. méAews devoted to this service by the. city, Eur. Ion 310. Cf. dvdOepa. dva0nparixés, 7, dv, consisting of votive offerings, ripat Polyb. 27.15, 3. avdbhacts, ews, 7, a squeezing out, Erotian. avaPAdo, to crush in pieces, Ep. aor. dvé0Aagca Q. Sm. 8. 94. : ava9hiBw.[7], fut. Yo, to press hard, Anth. P. 7. 23., 9.668; dv. peiOpoy els xphynv to force it up, Strabo 173, cf. 754. dv-aO\os, ov, without contest, not warlike, Luc. Calumn. 12. dvabodbw, to make muddy, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 35, and (in Pass.) G. A. 3. ay las 2. metaph., dv. rd éxi twa to trouble his mind with suspicion against .., Philostr. 559; and in Pass,, to be troubled, id rijs dvias dveO0A000" % kapdia Pherecr. Mupp. 8. 4 ava0éAwors, ews, 7), a making muddy, dv, dn@v a thick mixture of the juices of herbs, Plat. Legg. 824 A. dvabopeiv, inf. aor. 2 of dvabpwoxw. dvabépvipat, =dvabpwoxw, Ael. N. A. 1. 30., 12. 18:—the Act. form dva8opvuw in Dio C. 63. 28. dvaoptBéw, to cry out loudly, commonly in applause, Lat. acclamare, dy, ds eb A€yor Plat. Prot. 334 C, cf. Xen. An, 5. 1,3; ws €0 elndvros, Tivos av. Ib, 6. 1, 30, cf. Plat. Euthyd. 276 B. II. c¢. acc. to applaud, \d. Symp. 198 A. dvd0peppa, aros, 76, a nursling, Aealvas Theocr, 23. 19. avaOperros, ov, brought up, of a slave, Ap. Civ. 4. 43. avaOpelis, ews, 7), fresh growth, Hipp. Aph. 1243, q.v- es av-abpée, to look up at, view narrowly, observe closely, like dvaBewpéw Eur. Hec. 808 ; dv. & Swe Plat. Crat. 399 C :-—Pass., Ta épya tx Tay Adywy dva0potdpeva compared with . ., Thuc. 4. 86. dvabpnvéw, to lift up one’s voice in wailing, Dio C. 74. 13- avd0pyors, ews, 7), close observation, Timo 24. dva0pumropar, Med. to indulge in affectation, Poll. 6. 185. ; &valpdokw, post. and Ion. dv@p—: 2 aor. ~opeiy Xen. Lac, 2, 3: an aor. I dvaOpwéwor in Opp. H. 3. 293: (v. OpwaKw). To spring up,, bound up, rebound, as a stone, iy 8 dvabpwoxov rérerat Il. 13. 1403, of blood, Emped, 350 ; of men, bs 8 duBdoas péya dvophower Hat. 7.28, cf, Anth. P. 9. 7743 dva@pwoxe ént tov tno springs upon it, Hdt. Fs 64." dvabudw, to be again at ‘heat, of swine, Arist. H. A. 5. 14, 23., 6. 18, 28 ; and prob. to be restored in Pherecr., v. Meineke 2. p. 268, évabipiaors, ews, }, a rising in vapour, which is distinguished as twox fold, iypd or drpidwdns, and gnpd or Kkanvwbys, Arist. Meteor. 2. 4 al. 2. a word used by Heraclitus to describe the soul, an exhalation, Arist. de An. 1. 2, 19; cf. éempwois. ; évabipide, fut. dow [a], to make to rise in fume or vapour, Theophr, Ign. 38 :—Pass. to rise in fume or vapour, Arist. P. A. 2.7, 11and 12; of fire, Id. Meteor. 1. 3, 27 3. of the earth, ¢o send forth vapour, Ib, 2. 4, 145 oivos dvabvpuadels Plut. 2. 432 E; of smoke, Luc, V.H. 1. 23: metaph., pioos dvabupuGrat Polyb. 15. 25, 7- II. Med. to draw up vapour, of hparrerivovrés pacww ée Ths Badarrns Tov HAvov ay, Arist. Probl. 23. 30. dvabtw (A), to dart up, burst forth, idwp Call. Cer. 30. dva0dw (B), to sacrifice again, in Pass., v. 1. Dio C. 37. 46. & , fut. igw, to call upon, shout aloud, Hesych. ; dvatSea, Ep. and Ion. dvaSeln; Att. also dvatSeta, Ar. Fr. 29, cf. Elmsl. Med. 608 ; also! dvat5(y Archil. 64: (dva:dyjs).. Shamelessness, impudence, effrontery, dvaideiny émetpéve clad in impudence, ll. 1, 1493 dvasdelns émiBivat Od. 22. 424 (v. émBalyw A.I.4); dvadein Xpecopevos Hdt. 7. 210. cf. 6. 129; dvaidelas Aga Soph. El. 607; per avatdelas =dvadas, Plat. Phaedr. 254 D; els rov6’ Axev dvadeias Dem. 232. 17, etc. II. in the court of Areopagus, Al@os dva:delas was the stone of unforgivingness, on which stood an accuser who demanded the full penalty of the law against, one accused of homicide (v. atd€opat III), Paus. 1, 28, 5; the accused stood on the Aldos #Bpews, Ib. dvaSéopat, Dep.,=sq.; dvacded dub. |. in Pythag. ap. Diog. L. 8, 8. An act. form dvatdnkdres is cited by Suid. ‘ avarSevopat, Dep. fo behave impudently, Ar. Eq. 397; cf. Lob, Phryn. 66. dv-aSnqpov, ov, shameless: in Adv. —pévws, Galen, dvaiSny, faulty form for dvéény, q. v. ee | dy-aiSys, és, (aldgopar) shameless, reckless, of Agamemion, & ye dvaidés Il. 1. 158; of Penelopé’s suitors, Od. 1. 254, al., and Att.5 6péup’ avadés Soph. El. 622. 2. c, gen., Kudacpdv dvaidéa dnio-, Thros insatiate of strife, Il. 5. 593: II. of things, as, in Od. 11. 598, the stone of Sisyphus is called Adas dva:dqs, the reckless, ruthless 3 Pf stone (cf. Il, 4. 5214 13. 139); later, rézpos dy, Pind. ~ To (11). fin, 5, ‘ 98 éams dv. greedy, 1d. N. 11.59; py’ dvaud) Soph. O. C. 516; Adyor Tay raid dvaidéorepot Ar. Eq. 383 :—1d dvaides~dvalbeen, mpos tdveades dyaydv Eur. I. A. 379; evOa raévedts pare Diphil, Incert. 29; eis dvasdés . . 86s por ceavrdv Soph. Ph. 83; émt 7d dva- déorepov Tparécba Hat. 7. 39. III. Ady. -8s, Soph. O. T. 35+ Eur., Ar., etc. w-alSyros, ov, =foreg., Ap. Rh. 3. 92, 4. 360. GvarBifopar, = dvabéopa, Ar. (Eq. 397) ap. A. B.; but in the text dvaidedverat, dvatcow, to stir up, rouse, Soph. Fr. 486 ; pddya Eur. Tro. GvalOw, to light up, set on fire, Eur. Gycl, edo inflame hse; Mosch, 1. 23 :—Pass. to be inflamed, Opp. C. 2. 188. II. to blaze up, dvjOov . . Aapwripes Aesch. Cho. 536 (as the Schol. must have read for dv#A@ov: for he interpr. it by dvéAapwayv). gcd Ady. of sq., without bloodshed, Themist. 90 A: so dvatpak- és, Nic. Th. go. dv-aipaxros, ov, bloodless, unstained with blood, Lat. incruentus, dv. puyat Aesch. Supp. 196; xpés Eur. Phoen. 264; Bwpds Pyth. ap. Diog. L. 8. 22. & TOS, ov, =dvatpos, drained of blood, Aesch. Eum. 302, Poéta ap. Ath. 63 B. a availa, %, want of blood, Arist. P. A. 2. 7, 8. , &y-aipos, ov, (alua) opp. to dvaipos, without blood, bloodless, of parts of the body, Plat. Tim. 70 C, Prot. 321 B, Arist. H. A. 1. 16, §., 3. 19, 5, al. II. of certain animals, oft. in Arist., H. A. 1. 4, 3, al. a apkos, ov, with bloodless flesh, of the cicada, Anacreont. 43. 17 (with v. 1. dva:p’, doapxe). THS, 770s, 7%, =dvatpia, Arist. P, A. 4. 1, 2. dv-alpwv, ov,=dvatpos, without blood, bloodiess, epith, of the gods, Il. 5. 342; of fish, Ion ap. Ath. 318 E; of wine, Plut, 2. 692 E. & , Adv., like dva:parri, without shedding blood, ob yap dvat- Hori y éudxovro Il. 17. 363, cf. Od. 18. 149. dvatvopat: impf. #vawdpny, Ep. dvawéyny, late also dvpvéunv Agath.: aor. qvnvaynv, subj. dvqyyrat, inf. Sncnnt ef, dm-avalvopar : Dep. ct Le aivos: or, acc. to Buttm. a reduplicated form of the negat. 4/AN.) 1, c. acc, to refuse or reject with contempt, spurn, o@ 8 dvalverat wat 7d od dapa Il. 9. 679; ds 5é «’ dvavnra [opéas] Ib. 510; 7&v dAdAwy obriva dvaivopat on no one of the rest do I turn my back, Od. 8. 212; and without a notion of contempt, mplv piv dvaivero épyov dexés refused, declined to do it, Od. 3. 265; xarerdy Kev dvivacda ddow en "twould be hard to refuse a gift, 4.651; 50, &s pndev dvaivowro épyov Xen, Cyr. 2. 1, 31. 2. to renounce, disown, dos . . ov« jvalvero Aesch, Ag. 300; 008 ofdy tT dvivacOa méow Eur. Med. 237; dvatverat 5& Aéxrpa Id. Hipp. 14, cf. El. 3113 fas... dvalvorr’ dy (sc. Siadewriny) Plat. Phil. 57 E; rodrov.. dvatve; Dem. 954. 7- II. c. inf. to refuse, decline to do, #valvero Aovydv apovat Il. 18. 4503 ElecOat wey dvqvaro 23. 204; and with pleon. negat., dvaivero v éheabat he said no, he had received nothing, Ib. 500; od« dvaivoyat Oaveiv Aesch. Ag. 1652, cf. Supp. Sor ;—so, ed .. eater el &yd €vopar (for éue €ceaOar) Isae. de Menecl. Hered. § 27. III. absol. to refuse, aldecOev piv dvfvacbat Il. 7. 93: to deny, od8 adrds dv. 9.116; éredi) mépnay dvaiveat Od. 14.149; cf. Dem. 1415. 28:—of a woman, to refuse her favours, Plat. Com. a. 7, Menand. Su. 6. IV. c. part. to disown doing or having done, od« dvalvopat vix@pevos Aesch. Ag. 583 ; dvalvopat * Yijpas Suey eloopav I am ashamed to look on thine old age, Herm. Eur. Bacch. 251, ef. I. A. 1502, H. F, 1124.—A poét. Verb, me not unknown i Prose, as the — ples ea ' valpena, aros, 76, =é ov, Scho! . Rh, 2. 264. , dvalpecis, ews, 7}, a ‘ahing up or alia esp. of dead bodies for burial, deréwy Eur. Or. 404; vexpav Thuc. 3 109, 113; ot dy ph ebpeO@ow és dvalpeow 2. 34, cf. Antipho 137. 26, Lys. 191. 11; dvalpeow dotva Eur. Supp. 18 :—so in a sea-fight, vavayiov dv, Thuc, 7.72; Tv vava- yar Xen, Hell. 1. 7, 5. 2. a taking up, dv. wat Géots Stdww Plat. Legg. 814 A, cf. Antipho 123. 9. 8. an undertaking, épyov Plat. Legg. 847 B. II. a destroying, destruction, Xen. Hell. 6. 3, 5; rexav kal orev Dem. 385. 3: abrogation of laws, Plut.Cic.34. 2. direct confutation of arguments, opp. to Siaipeots (confutation by drawing a distinction), Arist. Soph. Elench. 33, 7. ; dvatperéov, verb. Adj. one must take up or take away, Diosc. 5. 116, dvaipérns, ov, 6, a destroyer, murderer, Schol. Ar. Pl, 1147, Procl, paraphr. Ptol. p. Igo. & 6s, , dv, destructive, Arist. Rhet. 2, 8, 8; dy. twos Plut. 2. 427E. Adv, -xds, negatively, Diog. L. 9. 75. - , ov, (aipéoua) incapable of choosing the good, Timon ap. Sext. Emp. M. 11. 164. ‘ dvatpéw, (v. alpéw):—to take up, Lat. tollere, dveddvres dad xGovds having raised the victim from the a so as to cut its throat (cf. avepta), Od. 3. 453- 2. to take up and carry off, bear away, esp. of hard-won prizes, Il. 23. 736, cf. 551, Hdt. 5. 102 (cf. infr. B. 1). 3. simply, fo take up, waida Pind. P. 9. 105; 7a dora Thuc. 1.126, 4. to take up bodies for burial, dveAdvres kat Karakdatoayres Ar. Vesp. 386; cf. Xen, An. 6. 4, 9; but this is more common in Med., v. infr. II. 10 take away, make away with, destroy, of men, to élkov, Hom., Hat. 4. 66, Aesch, Cho. 1004; o& pév hyerépa WApos dv, Eur, Andr. 517; also, Oavdros dy, Plat. Legg. 870 D (v. sub éfépiaros); é modkerelas Toadra bnpla dv, Dinarch. 110. 36, etc, 2. of things, to abolish, annul, cancel, Avyapxtas Xen. Cyr. 1.1, 1; ordow dmd mpdmbdos dvedAéy conj. in Pind, Fr. 189 (228); vépov Aeschin. 59. 13; biadheny Isae. 36. 32; oTHAnv Andoc. 14. 6; Gragiay Dem, 38, B. I. 3 Kill, like atpéw, 14, ete; & wéoou dv, BAaopnwlas Dem, 141. 15 & LJ , avaidyros — avairow. aydixatrny dvedbvras paptuplay Id, 837. To. 3. to destroy an argument, answer or confute it completely, Plat. Rep. §33 ©, and oft. in Arist. ; esp. to confute directly, opp. to darpéw (v. dvatpeois 11. 2), Arist. Soph, Elench. 18, 3., 22, 9. II. to appoint, ordain, of an oracle’s answer to an inquiry made, 6 eds avrots dv. mapadodvat Thue, 1.255 ods Ay 5 eds dvéry Plat. Legg. 865 D, cf. 642D; dvetrer Beois ofs Eber Oew Xen. An. 3. 1, 6; also c. acc. et inf, dvetaé puv Baorréa eivar Hdt. 1. 13: —but 2. more commonly absol. ¢o , give a response, dvetre } Tlv0in, etc., 1. 13, etc., and in Att. ; dy. re mept Twos to: give an oracle about a thing, Plat. Legg. 914 A; pavrelas dv. to deliver oracles, Dem. 1466. fin.: so in Pass., Dem. 530. 26. B. Med. fo take up for oneself, take up, obdoxdras dvédovTo Il. 1. 449; domlda, éyxos 11. 32., 13. 296; Kuvény Hdt. 1.84; dixnrva Arist. H. A. 8. 19, 13:—lo gain, win, dv. ’Oddpma, tiv *Odvp- mada, tiv vixny Hat. 6. 36, 70, 103; and generally, dv. émppo- atvas Od. 19. 22; eddaipoviay Pind. N. 7. 83, cf. Theogn. 281; av. «Ajpov Plat. Rep. 617 E; and in bad sense, dvetdos omapydvov dy. Soph. O. T. 1035; ef a’ dvedoluny if I should receive thee, i. e. into my ser- vice, Od. 18. 357; otra dy. to get forage, Hdt. 4.128; mownhy Twos av. to exact punishment from one, i.e. revenge oneself on him, Id. 2. 134. 2. to take up and carry off, snatch away, kovpas dvédovro QvedAat Od. 20. 66; dvaipotpevos oixade pépev Plat. Legg. 914 B; dvelharo Salywy C. I. 4137. 8. to take up dead bodies for burial, Hat. 2. 41., 4. 14, Thuc. 4. 97, etc.; marépay dpioray ompad’, dv dvethéuny Eur. Supp. 1167 ;—in this sense, more rarely in Act., v. supr. A. I. 2:—also of one still living, Eur. Hel. 1616, Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 135 Tods vavaryous Ib. 1. 7, 4.and 11; Tovs déxa otparryovs Tods obK ave- Aopevous Tods &x vavpaxias Plat. Apol. 32 B:—Pass., dvatpeOévrav Tav vexpov .., trys dvnpebn Id. Rep. 614 B, al. 4. to take up in one’s arms, Il. 16.8: hence, to take up new-born children, own them, Lat. tollere, suscipere liberos, Plut. Anton. 36, cf. Ar. Nub. 531. 5. to conceive in the womb, like cvAAapBavw, Hdt. 3. 108., 6. 69. 6. to take up money at interest, Dem. 1212. 3. II. to take upon oneself, undertake, Lat. suscipere, néyous Hdt. 6.108: méAepdy Tit war against one, Id. 5. 36; moA€uous dvarpodpeda Eur. Supp. 492, cf. Dem, II. 4; also, dv. €x@pay Plat. Phaedr. 233 C; €xOpay mpds twa Dem. 71. 2; dv. dnpdatov epyov to undertake, contract for the execution of a work, Plat. Legg. 921 D, cf. A, B, Dem. 53. 21. 2. to accept as one’s own, yvapnv Hat. 7. 16, 1; 7a odyduara 7a dad tov BapBapwv ieovra. 2. 525; dy. pidropvyiny to entertain a love for life, 6. 29; Tov map avrdv reodvra [«djpor] dv. Plat. Rep. 617 E. III. to take back to oneself, undo what one has done, cancel, avyypaphy, cvvO)xas, etc., Dem. 916. t0., 1180. 6. dvatpw, fut. dvap®, to raise, lift up; in Med.,"Ews yap Aevedv Spy dy. Eur. El. 102; in Pass., dvapOels, of Ganymede, Anth. P. 12. 67. dvavobijs, és,=dvaicbyros, Max. Tyr. 17. 5. dvarcOnota, %, want of feeling or perception, Plat. Tim. 52 B (v. sub dmoxvaic) : insensibility to pleasure or pain, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 8, 6., 3.11, 7 _ 2. stupor, Plat. Tim. 74 E, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 1.5: want of M 5 OF tion, Plat. Ax. 365 D. ; GvarcOnrevw, =dvarcOnréa, Diose.; also in Med., Id.; v. Lob, Phryn: 349:—in Tzetz. also dvaraOytalve. GvacOntéw, to want perception, Dem. 302. 3; dv. Takarmuplas to be without sense of weariness, Joseph. A. J. 11. 5, 8. dvataOnros, ov, without sense or feeling, insensate, unfeeling, Hipp. Vet. Med. 14, Plat. Tim. 75 E, Xen.; dv. tivés without sense of a thing, Plat. Legg. 843 A; dv. kat vexpds Menand, Incert. 157; dv. % apy the sense of touch is Jost, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 7 :—Adv., dvarcOfrws wavrowv Hipp. Epid. 3. 1115; dv. éxew to be insensible or indifferent, Tsocr. 256 A, cf. Thuc. 1. 82. 2. without perception ot common sense, senseless, wanting tact, stupid, Id. 6. 86; of dv. @nBaio those blockheads .. , Dem. 240. 10:—rd dvalo@nrov = évaca6nola, Thue. 1. 69. _ XL. pass. unfelt, Oavaros Thuc. 2. 43; ddparov kat dAAws dy, Plat. Tim. 52 A, etc. 2. not subject to the senses, insensible, (sensum effugiens Lucret.), Plat. Tim, 52 A, etc.; év dv. xpdv in an unappreciable time, Arist. Phys. 4. 13, ree Post. 7, 9. dvaroipow, impf. dvaioipouy ; subj. aor. dvaioipmowot :—Pass., pres. and impf.: aor. dvatowpdOny, pf. dvaroiuwpa all in Hdt, Ion, Verb (v. inft.), to use up, use, spend, consume, rdv xodv .. dvacolyov he used up the earth, Hadt. 1, 185; iva pi) roy atrov dvacipwowor 3. 150:— Pass., olvos dvacatpodrat 2. 60 ; ed(dve dvipt névre huepac dvarorpoov- Tat I. 72, cf. 2. 11., 5. 53: often dy. és rt to be used for a purpose, or spent upon a thing, eis riyv tnmov éxardy radavra dvaicipodro 3. 9°; boa €8 Tuppainy dvatotpdOn 2.125; Taddvraw yidcddes dvaroipovrat (sc. és Ti mupapida) 2.134; also, mod radra dvatoipodra ; where (i.e. how) is are disposed Of? 3.6; det émppdoa iva (i.e. és rh) } yj dvator- pwn 1. 179.—If this Verb be a compd, of dvd, alowpdw (from aioipos), it never occurs in the simple form: like its compds, mpo—, mpoo-avaot~ 6m, it is used almost exclus. by Hdt. (the Att. words being dvartoxe Man fe ote unless Se is right in restoring the pf. dvpatyoxas from in oe Poets anas in Xen, Cyr. 2, 2, 15: kaTatctpow, however, occurs dvarolpaopa, aros, 74, = Att. dandy, that which is used up, TA dvaiot- Hopara TH orparih the war-expenses, Hat. 5. 31. : dvaicow [diva-], Att. contr. dvdeow, used also by Pind.: (v. dto- 0), To start up, pi) mply dvalgear, . vies Axady Il. 4.114; bre di) . . dvalgevey "Odvoceds whenever he rose to speak, 3. 216; ih mplv dvaigeway ..vies’Axaidy: of thought, ds 8 ér’ dvatoce (al ay aig) véos dvépos 15.80; of a spring, to gush forth (y. sub mpyh) pri; jaa so in later Poets, wvedds orépyaw évris dvd eee! i ithi goowy springing fresk within “f ’ bJ § f avatayys — avaxearaiwars. the breast, Aesch. Ag. 77; ép0ol dvptay mdyres Ear. Hel. 1600; Bayds dydooow an altar rising up, Pind. O. 13. 153; (for Aesch. Pers. 96, v. dyagow fin.) ;—rare in Prose, dvatove voonua Hipp. Progn. 43; dvdgas, of a hare, Xen. Cyn. 6, 17. 2. c. acc., dvaitas . . dppa kai imrous having leapt upon it, Il. 24. 440. 8..c. inf. to begin eagerly to do, ss 1 C. 1. 107. VaAoXHS, és,=dvaloxuyros, A. B. 207. dvarxuvréw, to be dvaicxuvtos, to be sh impudently, Ar, Lys. 460, Thuc. 1. 37, Andoc. 20. 17; pds Twva Xen. Symp. 8, 33: also c. part., dvaraxuvret wordy he is impudent enough to do, At. Thesm. 708 ; av. diadeydpevos Plat. Crito 53 C; c.acc.cogn., rota. . dvatcxvy- Tovow Arist. Rhet. 2. 6, 1. 2. trans. to treat shamelessly, and Pass. to be so treated, 6 dvatoxuvra@y mpds Tov dvaoxvyTodpevov Ib. 3. 11, 3. dvaroxtvrnpa, aros, 76, an impudent act, Hyperid. Fr. 254, Poll. 6. 180. avaroexuvria, %, shamel , impudence, Ar. Thesm. 702, Lycurg. 169. 22, etc.; dm’ dvacxuytias Plat. Symp. 192 A. dvaroxuvto-ypaos, 6, an obscene writer, Polyb. 12. 13, I. dv-aloyuvros, ov, shameless, impudent, Eur. I. A. 327, etc., Ar. Pax 182, Andoc. 31. 20, Plat., etc.:—7d dvaioxuyroy,=dvauwyuvria, Eur. I. A. 1144:—Adyv. -rws, Plat. Apol. 31 B: Sup., dvacxuytérara Fone Lak 99 call upon me? Id. H. F. gto. III. 40 call back, recall, mostly in Med., afua ris dv médw dyadéoar’ tracldov Aesch. Ag. 1021, etc.: esp. to recall from exile, Plat. Phaedo 89 A: to recall a general from his command, Thue, r. 131: to call back from battle, dvaxadciobae TH odAmyy to sound a retreat, receptui canere, Xen. An. 4. 4, 22: to call back hounds, Plat. Rep. 440 D, in Pass. 2. in Med. Zo recall, recollect oneself, Hipp. Epid. 1. 966, ubi v. Galen. ; so, dv. rov véov e ayvotas Tim. Locr. 104 C :—hence, ¢o recall, make good, Ta dpaprh- para Lys. 107. 32. & sv, to re-beautify, A. B. 14. dvakiAumrtpia, ra, the festival of unveiling, when the bride first took off her maiden veil, and received presents from the bridegroom, Poll. 3. 36; cf. Timae. Fr. 149. II. the presents themselves, Lys. Fr. 8 ; in sing., Plut. Timol. 8 ;—also called dvaxdAvmrpa and Oedpnrpa. dvaxdAumros, ov, uncovered, LXX (acc, to Alex. Ms.). GvaxdéAumrpa, 74,=dvaxadvmripia I, Diod. 5. 2. dvaxidtmnrw, to uncover, reveal, rt mpés twa Polyb. 4. 85,6; dv. Aédyous to use open speech, Eur. I. A. 1146 :—Med. to unveil oneself, un- veil, Xen. Hell. 5. 4,6; but Eur. Or. 294 has it so in the Act., v. Pors. ad 1, (288). II. to remove a covering, Brepdpow ph dmoxadup- dévraw Arist. de Sens. 5, 245 so perh. in 2 Ep, Cor. 3. 14. avOparav Dem. 819. 7. II. of things, shameful, abominable, Bopa Eur.Cycl. 416, cf. Thuc. 2. 52. dv-alryros, 7, ov, unasked, Pind. Fr. 151. 8. ‘ dy-auriohdynros, ov, for which nd cause can be assigned, Diosc. Ther. I. p. 417 F, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 52. dy-aitwos, ov, also a, ov Hdt. 9. 110, Aesch. Cho. 873, cf. peratrios :-— in the best authors, only of persons, not being the fault or cause of a thing, guiltless, dvairiov airidacOa Il. 13. 775, cf. Od. 20. 135, etc. ; dvairios GOavdros guiltless before the gods, Hes. Op. 825, cf. Eur. Med. 730; dv. mapa rx Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, Io. 2. c. gen. rei, guiltless of a thing, Hdt. 1. 129., 7. 233, etc.; pdvov, xaxdv Aesch. Ag. 1505, Cho. 873; «axias Plat. Tim. 42D; dppootyns Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 10:—otx dvairiéy éort, c. inf. it is blamable to do, Ib. 5. 5, 22. II. not being the cause, ro dy. T1Wévar ws atrioy Arist. An. Pr. 2.17, 3, cf. Rhet. 2. 4, 8:—in Ady. dvacriws, Sext. Emp. 3. 67. dvavros, v. dvaros. Gvarwpéw, to lift up, Eavdv . . és Hépa . . dvyd@pyoe Coluth. 153; plqpf. pass. dvyépyro in Nonn. D. 16. 342. dvaxayxalw (v. xaxd(w), to burst out laughing, pé-ya navy dvakary- xaeas Plat. Euthyd. 300 D: dvexdyxace pada oapdéviov Rep. 337 A. dvaxiPalpw, to clear out, clear completely, rods mépovs the veins, Anaxipp. ’Ey«. 1. 16; by pruning, Theophr. H. P. 1. 3, 3:—Pass., of a mine, to be cleared out, Arist. Mirab. 52; of the air, to become quite clear, Plut. Flamin. 8. II. Med. ¢o clear or sweep away, 7d Bdp- Bapov dvanadaipecda éx THs Oaddoons Plat. Menex. 241 D (so Act. in Dion. H. 1. 12) ; 7d mpd modav Polyb. 10. 30, 8; 7iv mapadlay dvar. Plut. Alex. 17. 2. to cleanse, purify, as metals, Plat. Legg. 678 D. 3. dvaxabaipecOat Adyor to clear up or enucleate a subject, Ib. 642 A. 4. medic. term, to cleanse upwards, i.e. by vomiting or expectoration, Hipp. Aph. 1253, etc. dvaxdPapots, ews, 4%, a clearing away, Polyb. 5. 100, 6. clearing up an obscure passage, explanation, Gramm. dvaxiSaprixés, 7, dv, promoting vomiting, cited from Diose. dvakd0npat, Pass. to sit upright, Luc. Ocyp. 112. avaxd0ito,, to set up: whence Med. fo sit up, ént ri kdlyny Plat. Phaedo 60 B. II. intr. ¢o sit up in bed, Hipp. Progn. 37 :—to sit up, of a hare listening, Xen. Cyn. 5, 7. dvaxatvifw, to renew, Tov 1éA€pov Plut. Marcell. 6, cf. App. Mithr. 37: —Pass., ris €xOpas dvaxexamopérns Isocr. 141 D. dvaxalvicts, ews, 7), a making new, renewal, Suid., Eccl. dvakawiopés, 6,=foreg., Clem. Al. 392. dvakatvotrotéw, = dvaravitw, Eccl.; so, dvaxawvoupyéw, Anth. P. 14. 60; and dvakatvéw, in Pass. fo be renewed, 2 Ep. Cor. 4. 16, Coloss. 3. 10, dvakalvwors, ews, 7),=dvaxaiviois, Ep. Rom. 12. 2, Tit. 3. 5- dvaxatov, 74, v. dvaykaiov. dvakaiw, Att. -Kdw: aor. dvécavoa Eur. Cycl. 383: (v. ealw). To kindle, light up, 4 of wip dvénace Od. 7. 13, Hdt. 4. 145, etc.:—Med. to light oneself a fire, Hdt. 1. 202., 8. 19 :—metaph. to kindle, dpegw Plut. 2. 1089 A. 2. Pass. to kindle up with anger, Hdt. 5. 19. dvaxidéw, post. dyk-: (v. Kadéw):—to call up, esp. the dead, Aesch. Pers. 621, Eur. Hel. 966, in Med. II. to call again and again; and so, 1. to invoke again and again, appeal to, Oeods Hdt, 9. go, Eur. Phoen. 608, al.; rds émavuplas Tov Geod dva- wah@y Plat. Rep. 394 A; Tovs mpoydvous Dem. 799. 9, etc.:—so in Med., rdv airis daipov’ dyxadovpern Soph. Tr. 910; Kexdnpévous piv dvaxadrobpel’ ab Ocovs Eur. Supp. 626; c. inf., dvaxadodpat fuppdxous éAGeiv Beods Soph. O.C. 1376: also, to lament often, Pind. Fr. ror. 2. to summon, cite, Hdt. 3. 127, Andoc. 7.6: to cite before a court, Lys. 144. 34 :—Med. to call to oneself, send for, summon, Hdt. 2. 121, 1, Thuc. 7.73; els rods pupious dv. Xen. Hell. 7.4,33. 3. to call by a name, dv. xaxovs Eur. Tro. 469 ; Aavaovs Thuc. 1.3; with the Art., dvaxadodyres Tov mpodérny Xen. An. 6. 6, 7, cf. Cyr. 3. 3,43 so in Med., Plat. Rep. 471 D:—Pass., Apyefos dvaxadoupevos Soph. El. 683 ; so, prob., 7@ Anpviw 7G8’ dvaxadovpéry tupt this far-famed Lemnian fire, Id. Ph. 800. 4. to call on, call to, esp. for encouragement, dAAjAous Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 35, etc.; Tods rprnpdpxous dvopaort ay. Thuc. 7. 70; and in Med., Ib. 735; dvaxaAcio@a rds «vas to cheer on the hounds, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 19:—c. acc. cogn., riva orovaxdy .. dvaxahécwpat ; If.a Eur. Phoen. 1499; avawaAeis we tiva Body; with what cry dost thou | dvaxdAuipus, 7, an uncovering, Dion. Arcop. dvaxapmriptov, 74, prob. a place to walk backwards and forwards in, Eus, V. Const. 4. 59. dvakdparrw, to bend back, Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 6, in Pass. II. to make to return, Antiph. ’A6. 1. 2. mostly intr. to bend back, return, ratty dijyyov 70 dpos dy. és 7a elpyrar Hat. 2. 8; 4 mepipepa én’ dpxiw dy. Arist. de An, 1. 3, 20, al., cf. Plat. Phaedo 72 B; wéAw ay. Arist. Gen. et Corr. 2. 10, 12, etc. b. to walk up and down, Diog. L. 2.127, cf. Plut. 2. 796D. ce. in Logic, of the terms of a proposition, to be converted, Arist. An. Post. 1. 3, 4, de An. lc. da. dvaxdpnrov, name of a throw of the dice, Eubul. Ku. 2. dvaxdpip-epws, wros, 5, a herb the touch of which was said to bring back love, a kind of sedum, Plut. 2. 939 D :—Hesych. writes it paroxyt. dvaxapipl-mvoos dvepyos, a returning wind, a kind of whirlwind, Arist. Mund. 4, 15. dvaxapipis, ews, 4, a bending back, Hipp. 278. 39, Arist. Meteor. 7 OL8, 5 a a ov, without a spine, of certain fish, Hdt. 4. 53. 2. of plants, without thorns, Theophr. H. P. 3. 12, 9. évaxdtrrw, to gulp down, Hdt. 2. 93, Ar. Av. 579, Arist. H. A. 5. 5, 9, al. dvdkap, Adv. (xdpa) up to or towards the head, upwards, Hipp. (nisi legend. dvd nap), cf. émixap, xardxapa, vakaprepéw, to endure, to support, Eumath. p. 130. dvdkavots, ews, 7), a setting on fire, kindling, Plut. 2. 248 D. dvaxaxAdlo, to boil up, burst forth, Opp. C.1. 275. dvaxdyAacts, ews, 4, a bursting forth, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 367. dvdkaris, ews, ), a gulping down;Arist, G. A. 3. 5, 15. évaxéarat, Ion. for dvdeewrat. ’Avdera, wv, 74, the festival of the Dioscuri, Lys. ap. Dion. H., Poll. 1. 373 Vv. sub”Avaxes. dvdetpar, post. dyk-: (v. xefyat) :—serving as Pass. to dvarl@nt, to be laid up as a votive offering in the temple, to be devoted or dedicated, xpyntipés of .. & xpboeot dvaxéara: (Ion. for-Kewrar) Hdt. 1.14; dv. év ip@ Id. 2.135; mpds rots iepots Lys. 118. 30:—metaph., alvds runt dy- xerat praise is offered or devoted to one, Pind. O, 11 (10). 8, ef. 13. 48; Adyos TO Oe@ Plat. Symp. 197 E. b. to be set up as a statue in public, Dem. 420. 8, cf. Plat. Rep. 592 B, C. 1. 6280 B. 8; so, xptceo dvaxel- peOa Theocr. 10. 33, cf. Lycurg. 154.19; v. sub fornpe A. ITT. 1. 2. to be ascribed or offered, ai mpages dv. rivt Plut. Lycurg. 1; # tyyepovla dy, rit Id, Aristid. 15. II. way or ravra dvanerat és riva, everything is referred to a person, depends on his will, Hdt. 1..97., 3. 31; so, c. dat. pers., mdévraw dvaxeipévey Trois AOnvaios és ras vais since they had their whole fortunes depending on their ships, Thuc. 7.71; ént oot rade mavr’ dvadwerae Ar. Av. 638; dmavra.. ént rh TUxn HGAAOV dv., 7} 7H mpovolg Antipho 130. 4; of persons, cot dvaxelpeoda Eur. Bacch. 934. III. later, to lie at table, Lat. aceumbere, Arist. Categ. 7, 3, Fr. 565, Diphil. Incert. 41, etc., v. Ath. 23 Cr cf. dvaxdlvw, dvaninro. ’Avdkevov, 74, (Avaxes) the temple of the “Avaxes or Dioscuri, Andoc. 7. 10, cf, Dem. 1125. 24, C. 1. 1949; cf. dvaykaiov. dvanelpw, fut. —xep®, to shear or cut off, rip up, Strabo 775. dvakexaiAuppéves, Adv. pf. pass. openly, Nicet. Ann. 220 A, Schol. dvaxékAopat, poet. for dvaxadéw, to call out, h. Hom. 18. 5. dvaxéhados, 6, a loud shout or din, Eur. Or. 185, where Schol. uses the Verb dvaxeAabdéw, ; ‘i : dv-Gxéopar, Dep. to mend up, make good, Ael. N. A. 5. 19. Reasipheris and —bw, to mix up Sagal dvd. epnrhpa Képacoey Od. 3. 390; olvov dvexepdvyy yAvedraroy Ar. Ran. 511: metaph., Plut. Cato Mi. 25: Pass., roAA@ TO Ovnr@ dvaxepavvupéry Plat. Criti. 124 A; aor. pass., —epdcOnv Plat. Tim. 87 A; -Kp@dels Plut. Rom. 29, etc. —cf. dvaxipvapat, “Avaxes, wy, of, the Dioscuri, Pollux and Castor, corrhpow dvanow Te Atooxotpo C. 1. 489, cf. Plut. Thes. 33, Cic. N. D. 3.21: prob. an old pl. of dvag :—cf.Avaxeor, aa, “Avarot. dv-dxeoros, ov, incurable, like avjxeoros, Erotian. dvakepdAatsw, to sum up the argument, of an orator, Dion. H. de Lys. 9; so in Med., dv. mpds dvéuvnow Arist. Fr. 123 ;—Pass. to be summed up, ev 7d Ady tobrw Ep. Rom. 13.9. dvaxepadatwors, ews, %, a summary, Dion. H. 1. = 2 ie, Oy 100 dvaxepidawrids, 7, dv, fit for summin : 70 dy, =foreg., Di de the Ady. —Kais, ne 1579.-8, firs - et ae dvaxy w, to spout up, gush forth, dvaxh«er atya ll. 7. 262; dvany- tle iipws 13.705; wérpys from..,Ap.Rh.3.227. 2. rare in Prose, fo bubble up, throb violently, Plat. Phaedr. 251 B. IL. Causal, to make to spout out, freq. in late Ep., Wellauer Ap. Rh. 4.600. [¢ Ep., cf. xnxetw.] GvaknpuKros, ov, proclaimed, Dion, Areop. : but, 2. in Poll, 8. 139, seemingly = d«npueros. : avaxnputis, ews, 7, a proclamation, Poll. 8.139. dvaknpicow, Att.-rTw, to proclaim by voice of herald, publish abroad, pévov Tov Aateov Soph. O. T. 450: Pass., ui) dvaxnpuy0f % BdeAvpia els rédwv Aeschin. g. 16. 2. c. acc. pers. to proclaim as r, Tos vika@yras Ar. Pl. 585:—Pass., dvaxnpuxojvat Hdt. 6. 103, ef. Thuc. 5.50. II. to put up to auction, Hdt. 1. 196. III. ¢o offer by voice of herald, av. cHatpa rivos Xen, Mem. 2.10, 2. & is, és, =dynxeoros, Eupol. Aly. 27. GvaxtSwros, oy, (dxis) pointless, Arcad. 82. dvanuctw, =dvaxyxiw, Pind. Fr. 184. dvaxivSivetw, to run into danger again, to run a fresh risk, c.inf., Hat. 8. 100; c. dat., dv. vavpaxipor Id, 8.68, 1; c. part., dy. ovp- Baddovra Id. 9. 26. dvaxivéw, fut. ow, to sway or swing to and fro, Hat. 4. 94; dv. rds xetpas, of pugilists, Cicero’s brachia concalefacere, cf. dvaxivnats. II. to stir up, awaken, Lat. suscitare, vdcov dy. (others take it intr., but needlessly), Soph, Tr. 1259; dv. Onpta to stir them up (to fight), Plat. Legg. 789 C; dv. méAeuor, ardary, etc., Plut., etc.:—Pass., défar dva- wenlvqvTat Plat. Meno 85 C. Sora aros, 74, a swinging of the arms as an exercise, Hipp. 364. 5: cf. sq. avaxivyots, ews, %}, a swinging to and fro of the arms as a preparatory exercise of pugilists: generally a preparation, prelude, Plat. Legg. 722 . II. excitement, emotion, ppevav Soph. O. T. 727. dvaxipvapat, Dep. to mix, dvaxipyara: wordy Soph. Fr. 239: metaph., giAlas .. dvaxipvacOa to join in closest friendship, Lat. jungere amicitias, Eur. Hipp. 254, v. Pors. Med. 138; cf. veoxpds. II. as Pass., dajp HAlou duriow dvakipyvapevos tempered by .., Plat. Ax. 371 D:—an Act. dvaxipynow occurs in Philo 1. 184. dvaxhale, fut. —«Adyga: aor. 2 dvéeAdyov Eur. I. A. 1062: aor. 1 dy- écdayéa Ael. N. A. 12. 33 :—to ery aloud, scream out, Eur. 1.c.; of a dog, to bark, bay, Xen. Cyr..1. 4, 15 ; of geese, to cackle, Ael. 1. c. dvakAalo, Att. «Adm, to weep aloud, burst into tears, dvaxdavoas péya Hat. 3. 14, cf. 66. 2. c. acc..to weep for, kara pellw 7) dva- wdalew Hdt. 3.14; so in Med., dpiv 7d5°. . dvawAdopat Soph. Ph. 939; Tas mapovoas arvxias dv. mpds buds Antipho 119. 24. vakAdots, ews, , (dvaxAdw) a bending back, flexure, Hipp. 751 C: a bending or turningover, Diod. 5. 30. II. reflexion of light or reverberation of sound, Arist. An. Post. 2. 15, 1, Sens. 2, 6, al. ; so of the wind, Id. Probl. 26. 40: of water, dv. moveia@a: to have its course turned, Polyb. 4. 43,93 av. THs sapkds moetoG@a: to make it elastic, Arist. Probl. 37. 6. avaxAacpos, 6,=foreg., Paul. Aeg. . dvdwAacros, ov, (dvaxddw) bent back, reflected. declinable, Plut. 2. tor D. dvaxAavpds or —KAavopés, 5,=sq., Dion. H. 6. 46. avdkAavors, ews, 7, («Aaiw) lamentation, Dion. H. 9. 33: dvakAdw (v. xAdw) to bend back, {vAa Hipp. Fract. 761; dvaxddoas bépnv Eur. Or. 1471 :—Pass., tloyu Tov Tpaxnrov dvaxerhacpévn with one’s neck bent back, Theopomp. Com. =zpar. 15 but in Medic., dva- wexAacpévor persons whose eyelids are turned back, Hipp. Coac. 126, acc. to Foés. 2. to break short off, Thuc. 2. 76., 7. 25. 3. metaph., dv. én’ ddAa thy diavoay Plat. 2. 359 A. II. of light, in Pass. to be reflected, Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 16., 3- 5» 13» al.; Tocovrov dvaxhacdiva that [the rays] should be so much reflected, Ib. 1. 6, 11; of sound, to be reverberated, Theophr. de Sens. 53, cf. eaTaxAdw IIT; of a ball, to rebound, Arist. Phys. 8.'4, 19- 2. dvarAdpevos, in metre, of an irregularity in Ionic verse, Hephaest. 321. dva-nXers, e:dos, 7, a picklock, Poll. 7. 107. dvaxAnpa, aros, 76, =dvdedAnors, dv. Tod fudpod Julian 421 B, dvakAnpdw, fo re-allot, and dvaxhnpwors, 7), re-allotment, Schol. Pind. _O. 7. 110 Béckh, avaxAnors, ews, }, (dvaxadéw) a calling on, invocation, Oe@v Thuc. 7. 41; a@ salutation, address, Plut. 2. 35.A. 2. a calling aloud, ot Bdrpaxo .. dvakAnoea xpaivrat Ib. 982 D. II. a recalling, dy, Oepuns moréegOat Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 2. 7, cf. Caus. 2.12. 2. _restoration, revival, Id. Caus. M. Ac. 1. 6, cf. M. Diut. 1.7. 3.4 retreat, dv, cddmvyy: onuaivew Plut. Fab, 12, cf. Alex. 33. dvaxAnripia, 74, a festival on a king's proclamation, Polyb. 18, 38, -, 28. 10, 8. ; Path, nh, ov, fit for exhorting, mpos duévoray Plut.Lyc.4. II, jit for recalling; 70 dvaxdnrixov onpaivey or gadmifew to sound a re- treat, Dion. H. 8,65, Anth. P.11.136. Adv.-«ds, Schol, Eur. Phoen, 818. * dvaAnros, ov, called back to service, Lat, evocatus, Dio C. 45.12. évaxAtpa, 74, a slope, ascent, Lat. acclivitas, Apollod. Pol. p. 32. évakXtvo-madn, #), =maypdriov, Martial. 14.201; cf.Salm.Solin. 206A. ' dvawAwrhprov, 74, a recumbent chair, Erotian. p. 88, Hesych.: also dvaxAwrpov, 76, Poll. 6.9. dvaxXlve, post. dyKA-: (v. KAivw) :—tolean one thing upon another, [régor] mori yaip dyedivas having laid it on the ground, Il. 4, 113; v, €avTovs rm ps évayriov, of sailors struggling against the wind, Arist. II. in Gramm. Mechan. 7, 2:—mostly in Pass. fo Jie, sink, or lean back, to recline, Lat. 2 fee Nc avakepah awrikds — avaxo7y. resupinari, dvaxdivOels ntce tmrwos Od, 9. 3713 of persons asleep, 18. 189; of rowers, 13. 78; of the elephant, Arist. H. A. 2, 1,9 :—later also for kataxAtvopua, v. sub avvavakAivopat, 2. Pass. also, of ground, to lie sloping upwards, Geop.2- 3:1: II. to push or put back, and so fo open (v. dviny 11), OUpyy ayKAwwas Od. 22.1 56; so of the door of Olympus, jyiv dvaxAivat TuKivoy vépos HS emBeivat Il. 5. 7515 and of the door of the wooden horse, Od. 11. 525; cf. Call. Ap. 6; Ti Odpny Tiy KaTampKTIY dy. i.e. the trap-door, ‘Hdt. 5.16. III. fo throw the head back, and so to lift up, Ti THs yuxiis abyhy Plat. Rep. 540A. IV. fo breach a wall, of a battering ram, Paus. 7. 24, 10, GvéxAtows, cos, , a lying or leaning back, reclining, Hipp. Coac. 197, Arist. Categ. 7, 3 II. a back to lean against, BdOpov dvakdow éxov C. I. 2139. Y dvakAiopos, 4, the back of a chair or couch, Hipp. Art. 783. &vaxAtros, ov, reclined, év dippw Aretae. Cur, M. Ac. 1. 2. Ja dy, Opdvos =dvakdyrhpior, Plut. Rom. 26. dvaxdovéw, fo toss up and down, Opp. H. 3. 478. 2. absol. avakdilw, fut. vow, to wash up against, Ap. Rh. 2. 551. to boil as with waves, Plut. 2. 590 F. dvaxAdOw, of the Fates, o undo the thread of one’s life, to change one’s destiny, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 38; Morpav vip avexdooav [al Modeaz] C. I. 6092. dvaxvaSéAAw, io excite by scratching, of quails, Poll. 7. 136., 9. 108, Hesych. dvaxvéarw, to make old clothes fresh by fulling : metaph., dy. Tas dAdorpias émvoias to vamp them up as new, V. Meineke Lysipp. Baxx. 5. Gvaxvaw, to scratch up, A. B. 9. dvaxvicde, to perfume thoroughly, fill with vapour, Tryph. 349. évakoyyvto, dub. in Hipp. Mochl. 845, for dvoxwxevo. dvaxoyxtArdto, («yyx7) to open and counterfeit a seal, Ar. Vesp. 589. 2. =dvaryapyapi(w (sc. Hart), Plat. Symp. 185 D, cf. Eupol. A. 5, Ruhnk. Tim. dvakoyxitAtacpés, 6, gargling, Ath. 187 A; and dvakoyxtAtacrév (sc. padppaxor), 7d, a gargle, Plat. Com. Incert, 13. / erie, -topés, =-id(w, -tacpds, Poll. 6. 25, Aretae. Cur. M. Cc. 1.7. “Avaxot, wy, of, =”Avaxes, Koen Greg. p. 592, cf. Hesych. &vaxow6de, fo communicate or impart something to another, Twi ze, Lat. communicare aliquid cum aliquo, Plat. Crat. init. (v. 1. dvasotve- owpeba). 2. dv. Tn to communicate with, take counsel with, Ar. Lys. 1177; dv. rois pavreot Plat. Legg. 913 B; dv. rots Oeois mepi twos Xen. An, 3. 1,5; av. rt bmép Tevos Arist. Mirab. 133. II. Med., with pf. pass. dvaxexoivwpac Xen, An. 5. 6, 36:—properly, to communicate what is one’s own to another, so of a river, dvaxowovrac 7® “lorpy 70 vdwp mingles its water with the Ister, Hdt. 4. 48; so, dv. 70 USwp mpos rv myyhv Paus. 5. 7, 3, cf. 8. 28, 3- 2. much like Act., to.impart, twi 7: Theogn. 73 (in irreg. imper. dvaxolveo), Xen. An, 5. 6, 36, etc.; dvaxowwotcbal rx to consult.one, Plat. Prot. 314 B, Xen. Hell. 6. 3,8; mpds rods olxéras dvaxowovrat Theophr. (?) ; absol., Bovdopévous dvaxowvotcbat re nal és Adyov éAGeiv Ar. Nub. 470, cf. Plat. Prot. 349 A.—V. Piers. Moer. p. 20, and cf. cupBovAcio. dvakoivects, €as, 4), communication, Schol. Ar. Pl. 37. dvaxorpiivéw, to rule or command in a place, Anth. P. append. 67. avaxonnilor, to crow aloud, to begin to crow, Psell. GvakoAdw, to glue on or to, glue together, Diosc. 2. 161. GvaxdAAnua, 76, that which is glued on, Diosc. 2. 164. dvakohAnrixds, 0, ov, of or for gluing, Diosc, 2. 161. dv-arohovbia, %, in Gramm. an anacoluthon or inconseguence, where a sentence begins with one construction and changes as if it had begun differently, Dem. Phal. 153. dv-axddov0os, ov, inconsequent: Ady. —Ows, Dion. H. de Rhet. 8, 13, sie a 2. 469, etc. vakodmatw, («dAmos . i cay com ( ) to tuck up one’s gown, gird oneself up, Ar. Gecnaais foreg., E. M. 410. 20. dvakoAupBdw, fut. qow, to come w iving’: * 7 the ater Theophy, H. Ps rat P after diving : trans..to bring up from dvaxopda, to get hair again, Luc. D. Meretr. 12. 5. avaKopBéopar, Dep. to gird oneself up for action, ap. Geop. 10. 83, I. dvakopidh, %, a carrying away again, recovery, T@V TAoiwv dv. Decret. ap. Dem, 250, 13. 2.a recovery, é« vécov Hipp, Vet. Med, 171. _ 3.4 return, Arist. H. A. 8. 12, 9 dvakopile, pot. dykou—: (v. xoultw):—to carry up, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 20:—Pass., Dinarch. 98. 43: esp. to be carried up stream, or up the country, Hdt. 2, 115. II. to bring back, recover, Xen. Mem. 2. 10, I :—Med. (with pf. pass, Xen. An. 4. 7,1 and 17), ¢o bring . ae gd with one, Hdt. 5. 85, Thuc. 6. 7:—Pass. to be brought 14. : t. neg etc.; and of persons, to return, come or go back, Pa Sea uc. 2. 31: to get safe away, escape, Lat. se recipere, olyb. I. 38,5; so in Med., éaurdv dvanoplCecdar tx .., Plut. Arat. 5. te 2. in Med. also, 7d Mnieias eros dryroptcac@at to recall 4 oer , bring to pass, Rind. P. 4.153 dv. rdxav daypdvew to bring it * upon oneself, Eur. Hipp, 831 (lyr.). III. to restore to health, strengthen, Hipp. Fract. 756: metaph., memovnevia é¢ dpxijs dvaxex- opicbat Thy olkoupévny Aristid. 1. 225. year int, verb, Adj. of Act. one must restore to health, Paul. eg. 2. of Pass. one must return, Ach. Tat. 5. 11. dv-txovrito, intr, to dart or shoot up, aia 8 dvnedyrige Il, 5. 113; so a water, Hdt..4. 181. 2. Causal, Philostr. 906. vakomrm, 7), a beating back, a checking, hinderance, Lat. retusio, Plut. b) , b. rr avYaGKOTT®O —— avaxwdavi Go. 4.76 F, etc. IL. the recoil of the waves, Id, Pyrrh, 15. III. water left after flood-tide, stagnant water, Strabo 174, Plut. Alex. 44. avaxémrre, to drive back, Oupéwy 8 dvéxomrev byjas Od. 21. 47. 2. to beat back an assailant, Thuc. 4. 12, cf. Plut. Caes. 38. 8. dv. vadv to change a ship’s course, Casaub. Theophr. Char. 25. II. to cut fF or knock out, ri Kepadny, Tos dpOadpovs Diod. 14. 115; Tas yes dvaxoreis Philostr. 664. III. to check, stop, dovdnv Coluth. 123 :—Pass. to be stopped, rwéds from a thing, Luc. Alex. 57; to stop short in a speech, Id. Nigr. 35. : Gvaxopéw, to sweep again or out, A. B, 14. dvaxés, 5, =dvag, like pudacds for gvAag, cf.”Avaxot. dvaxocpéw, to adorn anew, restore, C.1. 6830. 14, v. 1. Aristid. 1. 225. dvaxocpotrovéw, fo bring into the world again, Eccl. dvaxougitw, fo lift or raise up, Soph. Fr. 24; dv. 5¢was-Eur. Or: 218; éavrov eis dvéBaow, of a horseman mounting, Xen. Eq. 7, 2; of a ship, dy, kapa BvOGv Soph. O. 'T. 23; 6 dip dy. Tov doxéy Arist. Probl. 25. 13 :—Pass. to feel lightened or lifted up, dvexovpia@ny déuas Eur. Hipp. 1392; to rise in spirits, like dvamrepodpa:, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 28. avaxotduots, ews, , relief from a thing, xax@v Soph. O. T, 218. dvaxotpiopa, aros, 74, a relief, Hipp. 364. 4. dvaxpayyatve, = dvaxpd¢w, Hesych, dvaxpaSevw, to swing upwards, brandish, Hesych, :—also —Kpadalva, and, in Greg. Naz., -kpaddw. dvaxpdfw, fut. -xpdfouar Lxx: aor. dvéxpityov, the tense most in use; late dvéxpaga Lxx: (v. pd¢w). To cry out, lift up the voice, of men, énet. . dvéxparyov Od, 14. 467; ef re wépay . . dvéxpayov if I raised my voice too high, Pind. N. 7. 112; é évds ordparos anavres dvéxparyov Ar. Eq. 670, cf. Vesp. 1311, etc.; ob dvéxpayev, of a dying man, Antipho 134. 29 ;—foll. by a relat., dvéxpayov ws eb Aéyou Ar. Eccl. 431, cf. Xen. An. 5.1, 14; TyAtkadr dvexparyere, ws .., Dem. 583. 17; c. inf., dvaxpayévrwy Radda . . Plut. Phoc. 34. 2. rarely of animals, &v yAadé dvaxpayh Menand. Incert. 5. 11. dvaxpaows, ews, 7), a mixing with others, Plut. Alex. 47, etc. Gvaxpavydfe, fut. dow, to cry aloud, A.B. 396. dvaxpavyacpa, 76, a loud outcry, Epicur. ap. Cleomed. 2. p. gt. dvaxpécopar, Med. to begin to play, o& amas dpris dvaxpéxerar each bird tunes its voice for thee, Anth, P. 9. 562. dvaxpepdvvupy: podt. dyxp-: Pass. -xpéuapac: (v. xpeudvvupe):—to hang up on a thing, magoddw dyxpeudoaca Od. ¥. 440; Tas médas dvexpépacay és rv dupémodu, as a votive offering, Hdt. 5.77; 7a dmAa mpds 70’ AOnyaoy Ib. 953; dv. Tuva to hang him up, Id. g. 120; but, dy. [éavrév} to hang oneself, Diod. 2. 6:—Pass., dvaxpepapévov rob véxvos being hung up, Hdt. 2. 121, 3; Tovrov.. Tod dvaxpepacdévros Id. 9. 122, cf. 7. 194. II, to make dependent, dv. &{ GAANAwv Tiv duvayuy Plat. Ion 536 A; so, dvaxpepdoas [dyads] dad ray éAnidor Aeschin. 68. 2; dv. riv ior eis twa Polyb. 8. 21, 3. dvaxpepacps, 6, a hanging up, A. B. 447. dvakphpvnp., = dvaxpeyavyyjz, App. Mithr. 75; dv. Onptov rijs. obpas by its tail, Clem. Al. 274. dv-axptBis, és, inaccurate, Eust. 878. 37, etc.; also dvaxpiBos, ov, Nicet. Ann, 363 A. dvaxptve [7], fut. va: (v. xplyw) :—to examine closely, to question, inter- rogate, esp. judicially, TMavoaviay Thuc. 1. 95, cf. Antipho 116. 6, Plat. Symp. 201 E; dv. twa rd6ev ¢% Diphil. "Eym. 1. 2. to inquire into a fact, dv. robs épyacapevous to inquire who had done the deed, Antipho 118. 10 :—Med., dy. rowa ris ora: what remedy there shall be, Pind, P. 4. 111. IE. used at Athens in two technical senses : 1. to examine magistrates so as to prove their qualification, Dem. 1319. 21., 1320. 18, cf. Arist. Frr. 374~-5, and v. doxtpacia. 2. of the magis- trates, to examine persons concerned in a suit, so as to prepare the matter for trial (v. eloayoryeds 11), Andoc. 13. 35, Isae. 54. r1, Dem. 1175. 28; ov Gpxovra davaxpivayra elodyew [riv dixny] Arist. Fr. 382:—Med., ove dvexpivaro ravrny [ri ypaphy| he did not have it examined, of the plaintiff, Dem. 548.1; cf. dvaxpiots. IIT. in Med., absol., dva- xplvecbat mpos Eavrovs to dispute or wrangle one with another, Hat. 9. 56. dvakpiows, poét. dyxp— (cf. dvedyxprros), ews, , at Athens, the pre- vious examination of parties concerned in a suit, a preparation of the matter for trial, Xen. Symp. 5, 2: this was the business of the presiding magistrates, who were said dvdxpioty didévar or mapadiddvac , (Plat. Charm. 176 C, Legg. 855 E), while the parties were said els dvdxprow yee (Isae. 57. 26, etc.); hence, pnd els dyxprow eddeiy, i. e should not even begin proceedings, (where however the Schol. explains és adyxpwow by és paxny, cf. dvaxpivw m1), Aesch. Eum. 364; so, ov8 dy. pot dacets you will not allow methe first forms of law, Plat. Charm. l.c.—Each 101 dvaxpovorixés, 7, dv, fitted for checking, mAnyh Plut. 2. 936 F. avaxpotw, post. dykp-, to push back, stop short, check, immov xahu@ Xen. Eq. 11, 3; 70 (edyos Plut. Alc. 2. 2. dnd xepood vija.. dvaxpoveokoy thrust her off from shore, Ap. Rh. 4. 1650: cf. dvdepouats, dvaxpovoréor. II. in Med., dvaxpovecOar mpdpynv to put one’s ship astern, by backing water, Ar. Vesp. 399, cf. Diod. 11. 18; or dvaxpoverGa: alone, Thuc. 7. 38, 40; also, xpodecOa mpiyvny, v. xpovw 9 s—in Hdt. 8. 84, we have éml mpduvny dv., in the same sense, but é7¢ mpbpyny dv. occurs just below, and Valck. would restore ér in the first passage: metaph., rdv'Adyov maduy dy. to put back and make a fresh start, Plat. Phil.13 D; wave . . puxpdv dvaxpovduevos Luc. Nigr. 8; dv. abOus emt owHppova Biov Plut. Cleom. 16. 2. in Music, to strike up, like dvaBdan- AeaGat, Theocr. 4. 31: hence to begin a speech, Polyb. 4. 22,11. III. dvaxpovew xepoty (apparently) =dvaxporeiv, Autocr. Tum. 1. dv-akpwrmptacros, ov, unmutilated, Eust. 31. 41, Schol. Thuc. 3. 34. dvaxréopat, fat. qoomar: pf. dvéernuae Soph. Fr. 328: Dep. :—to regain for oneself, get back again, recover, Tupavvida, dpxiv av. dntaw Hdt. 1. 61., 3. 73; “Apyos és éwivrods dv. 6. 83; Sapna marpds Aesch. Cho. 237; dv. twi 7 Diod. 16. 14:—to repair, retrieve, édartr&oes Polyb. 10. 33, 4. 2. to refresh, revive, ompara, puxds Id. 3. 60, 7., 87. 3: dvakr. éaurdév, Lat. recolligere vires, Valck. Adon. 365 B. 3. to reinstate; Lat. restituere in integrum, rods érrakéras Dio C. 44. 47: torestore, replace, vaovs Id. 53. 2. II. c. ace.) pers. to win. a person over, gain his favour or friendship, Hdt. 1. 50, Xen. Cyr, 1. 3, 9, etc.; also, pidov dv. rid Ib. 2. 2, Io. , dv-arréov, verb. Adj. of dvaya, one must bring up, pdéyua Ga Tod oréparos Hipp. 268. 1. II. one must refer, eis rhv Any Tas: airias Arist. G. A. 5.1, 43 cf. dvdyo I. 2. dvanrnots, ews, }, a regaining, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 978:—a re- covery of strength, etc., Hipp. 10. 2, Theophr. ap. Ath. 66 F. dvaxryréos, ov, verb. Adj. to be recovered, Philostr. 55. 2. dva-. xrnréov, one must recover, recruit, revive, Antyll. ap. Oribas. p. 136. dvaxtytiKés, 4, dv, fit for recovering, dub. in Diosc. dvaxrife, to rebuild, Strabo- 403 :—Pass., C. I. 8646, al. avakriots, ews, , a rebuilding, new creation, Clem. Al, 632. avaktirys, 6, a precious stone, Orph. Lith. 192: also yaAarrirns. dvaxropia, 7, (dvderwp) lordship, rule, Ap. Rh. 1. 839: management of horses, h. Hom. Ap. 234. , dvaxrépwos, a, ov, belonging to a lord or king, royal, tes Od. 15. 397- II. dvaxrépov, 76, = dvaxropov, Hesych., Suid. ; in Hdt. 9- $5 dvdxropov is the best reading. dvakropov; 76, a hing’s dwelling, only in Byz.: mostly of the dwelling: of gods, a temple, shrine, Simon. 180; 7d xpumrov dy. Soph. Fr. 696; @éribos els dv: Eur. Andr. 43, cf. 117, 1112, Ion 55, Rhes. 516; 70 ipdv év "Edevain dvaxropoy (where ipér is prob. a gloss), Hdt. 9. 65. *Avaxro-rehéorar, dy, of, (reAéw) the presidents of the mysteries of the Corybantes, cf. Paus. 10. 38, 7, Clem. Al. 12. dvdkrwp, opos, 6, = dvaf, Aesch. Cho. 356, Eur. I. avaxvicKw, to copulate again, Arist. H. A. 6.19, 1 dvaxiixde, to stir up and mix, mix up, Ar. Ach. 671, Pl. 302, al. dvaxukAevw, =sq., App. Civ. 4. 103. dvaxukdéw, to turn round again, dvaxtchea d5épas Eur. Or. 231: metaph. ¢o revolve in one’s mind, meditate upon, Luc. Nigr. 6. pi al intr. in Act. to come round again, Arist. Gen, et Corr. 2, 11, 9; ai avrat béfas dv. év ois dvOpwmos Id. Meteor: 1. 3, 8:—so in Pass., dv. mpds airy Plat. Tim. 37 A; ai réxat wodAdms dv. mepl. rods. abrovs Arist. Eth. N. 1. 10, 7. IIT. in Pass. also, like Lat. versari, dv. év rais éxxAnotas Ath. 44 F. dvakvKAqots, ews, 7), Polit. 269 E. dvakurAtkds, 4, dv, easy to turn round, of a verse that will read either backwards or forwards, dvdorpepov 7) dvaxuxAuxdy, Titul. in» Anth. P. 6; 323. dvaxukAtopos, f.1. for dvaxvdropds, q. v. dvakukdow, =dvaxveréw, Anth. P. 9. 342, in Pass. dvakvkAwors, ews, },=dvaxvkAnots, a wheeling about, trmnov taypa~ tos Hdn. 4.2, 19; dvax, Tv mokireLav a revolution.of states, Polyb.6. 9, To. dvaxtA.opes, 6, a rolling upwards or back, Dion. Areop. ;—of Time, Diod. 12. 36, as restored by L. Dind. for —«uedAropds. avaxtAiw [7], to roll away, dvaxvdtov obaias Alex. KuBepy. 1. 7. dvaxupBadralw, («dpBador) only in Il. 16. 379, dippor dvexvpBarlafoy the. chariots fell rattling over, cf. 11. 160; al. dvexupBaxtafov (from kipBaxos), they fell headlong ; v. Spiten. atts! 5 Lie tans upside down, Lyc. 137, Nic. Th. 705. dvakumrw: fut. -evpoua Ar. Av. 146; Yo Luc. D. Mar. 3. 1: aor. T. 1414. a coming round again, a circuit, revolution, Plat. party was required to make an affidavit (dvta@poota or Siwpooia) that his cause was just. Cf. dvaxpivw 1. 2, and v. Dict. of Antiqq. 2. generally, inguiry, Plat. Phaedr. 277 E. dvaxpotiAife, = dvaxporéw, Hippoloch. ap. Ath. 129 C. a dvaxporéw, to lift up and strike together, ri xeip’ dvexpéirno bp H50- vijs Ar. Pl. 739; dvaxporhaas rds yeipas Aeschin. 33. 36: absol., of 8 dvexpérnoav applauded vehemently, Ar. Eq. 651, Vesp. 1314.—On a poét. form dvaxopréw, v. sub xporéw; and cf. eyxporéa. ‘ dvaxpovors, ews, 7, a pushing back, esp. pushing a ship back, backing water, Thuc. 7. 36; also, 4 maAw dy. Ib. 62; so, dy. twrov, with the bit, Plut. 2. 549 C. 2. recovery of self-possession, Ib. 78 A. II. in Music, the first touching of an instrument, beginning of a tune, Strabo 421; cf. dvaBoan. 2. in metre, anacrusis, a half-foot pre- Jixed to a verse, on which the voice is checked, as i-hie AdAce Tlacay Soph. O. T. 154; cf. Herm. Elem. Metr. p. 11. évaxpouoréov, verb. Adj. one must check, Xen. Eq. 10, 12. dvéxupa Hat. 5. 91, Att.: pf. dvaxéxdpa Eur. Cycl, 212, Xen. To lift up the head, Hdt. 5.91; dvaxexupws with the head high, of a horse, Xen. Eq. 7, 10; #dryxdas éxe and keep your head up (for xat dvaxtyas), Ar. Thesm. 236; é édpopf momiApara Ocdpevos avaxinrow pte his head back, Plat. Rep. 529 B; esp. in drinking, Arist. H. A. 9. 7, 6, cf. Eur. I. c. II. to come up out of the water, pop up, Lat. emer gere, Ar. Ran. 1068 ; é« rijs @addaons els tov évOdbe rénov Plat. Phaedo 109 D; dv. péxpt Tod abxévos, opp. to xarabdivat, Id. Theaet.. 171 D, cf. Phaedr. 249 C. b. metaph., re & abrav addy Tt dva- xbyor Id. Euthyd, 302 A; of persons, to rise out of difficulties, to breathe again, Xen. Oec. 11, 5. r dvakiplwots, 7, authoritative confirmation, Hipp. 24.42 (al.dvaxpicews). dvaxupros, ov, curved upwards or backwards, Gloss. avakuptow, fo curve upwards or backwards, Eumath. p. 13. I dvaxwSwvilw, to try by the sound, ring, Ar. Fr. 288. 102 évaxaxtw [0], 40 wail aloud, névakwxdtoas dd Aesch, Pers. 468, cf. Soph. Ant. 1227; kdvakwxte.. dgdv pOdyyov utters a boud shrill wail- ing cry, Ib. 423. avd-Kwhos, ov, docked, curtailed, dv. xutwvicKos, a ‘cutty sark,’ short frock, elsewh. émvyovaris, Plut. 2. 261 F ; of a camel, short-leg ged, Diod. 2. 54 (acc. to Schneid.). dvakwpa, 7d, a district, Pythag. word, Béckh Philolaos, p. 174. dvaxwp@déw, to bring again on the stage, quiz in a Comedy, dub. in Plut. 2. 10 C. dvax@s, Adv., =émpedrds, carefully, dvands éxew Twds to look well to a thing, give good heed to it, Hdt. 1. 24., 8. 109, Thue. 8, 102, Plut. Thes. 33; in Plat. Com, Incert. 23, for rds @pas dv. éxwv, rijs or Tas should be restored.—Said to be a Dor. word, Erotian, s.v., but used in Att. (From dvaxés=dvaf, a manager, cf.” Avaxes.) GvaKo xh, dvakwxevo, v. sub dvoxwy7y. dvaddlopar, Dep. to take again, wopphy Mosch, 2. 159. dvadaktife, to kick out behind, Lat. recalcitro, Antyll. ap. Oribas. p. 121 :—trans. to kick at, spurn, Clem. Al. 890. dv-GAGAdLo, to raise a war-cry, shout the battle-shout, dvndddagor [oi orpariarat| Xen. An. 4. 3,19; orpards 8 dvndddage Eur, Phoen. 1395: generally, to cry aloud, éya 5 dyn. Id. Supp. 719. dvadapBave, fut. -Ajouar: (v. AapBaver):—to take up, take into one’s hands, 70 wadiov Hdt.1. 111; 7a Orda, 7d ré€a, etc., 6. 78., 9. 46: to take on board ship, 1. 166, Thuc. 7. 25, etc.: and generally, to dake with one, esp. of soldiers, supplies, etc., Hdt. 9. 51, Thuc. 5. 64., 8. 27, etc.; hence the part. dvadaBwr, like AaBwy, may be often rendered by our Prep. with, dvipas dvadaBov wyhoowa Xen. An. 7. 3, 36, cf. s _ , avakwxdw — dvaddXolwros, Ep. 24; ovyvas dvadefdpevos ypapas Dion. H. 1. 89; é* ypapparow dy, Tt Plut. 2. 582 A. ' E 5 dy-GAeuhos, ov, unanointed, Themist. 235 D, Archig. ap. Aét. dvadeubia, %, neglect of anointing, Symm, Ps. 108. 24, and prob. 1. for Gvaheupin in Hipp. 362. 6; cf. Lob. Phryn. 571. dvakelyo, to lick up, 70 alva Hat. 1. 74. dvadexréov, one must gather, collect, Byz. dvaXexros, ov, select, choice, yates av. 70 KGddAos Ep. Socr. 9. dv-GAnHOns, es, untrue, false, Polyb. Exc. Vat. p. 401, Diod., etc. Adv. —Ows, M. Anton, 2. 16. oN ay dvéAnppa, aros, 75, (avadapBivw) that which is used for repairing or supporting ; a sling for a wounded limb, etc., Hipp. Offic. 7485 in pl. walls for underpropping, Lat. substructiones, Dion. H. 3. 69, Diod. 20. 36; and so in sing., Diod. 17. 71, cf. C. 1. 1104, 2747, Inscrr. Delph, ne A Curt. II. a sundial, OC. I. 2681 (ubi v. Bockh), Vitruv. 9. 4. évaknrréov, verb. Adj. one must resume, Plat. Legg. 864 B: one must take up an enquiry, Id. Phil. 33 C. , évadntrhp, fpos, 6, a bucket for drawing water, Joseph. A. J. 8. 3, 7. dvahnmrucds, 7, dv, restorative, Galen. dvaknwrpts, (50s, 7, a suspensory bandage, Galen, ; Gvédnins, in late writers dvaAnpijis, ews, 7: (dvadapBava):—a taking up, &.g. suspension in a sling, Hipp. Art. 795. 2. a taking up of a child, to acknowledge it, Luc. Abdic. 5. 8. acquirement of know- ledge, etc., Tim. Locr. 100 C, Sext. Emp. 1. 73, Diod., etc. 4. assumption of an office, C. I. 2906. 5. pass. a being taken up, the Ascension, Ev. Luc. 9. 51, Eccl. II. a taking back, recovery, pvhpns Arist. de Mem. 2, 2: a means of regaining, Plut. Popl. 9. 2: Thue. 5. 7. b. to take up, for the purpose of examining or considering, Plat. Apol. 22 B, Meno 87 E, al. 2. to receive, prroppéves dv. Id. Ep. 329 D, etc.; of women, dv. riyv yorny to conceive, Id. 2. 495 E, cf. Arist. H. A. ro. 1, 6. 8. to take upon oneself, assume, Thy mpogeviay Thue. 6. 89; tiv dpxqy C. I. 2906. 4; éoGfjra Plut. Aristid. 21 ; mpd- ownov, oxjpya Luc. Nigr. 11, Somn. 13. 4. in Med. to undertake, engage in, dvahaBéoOa xivduvoy Hat. 3..69; and so prob. waxas dvada- Becba (cf. dvaBaddw Iv) Id. 5. 49 ;—s0, dv7l ris pidlas Tov méAcHOY dyahaBeiy Philipp. ap. Dem. 251. 15. 5. to take up, adopt, Aeschin. 8. 12, Arist. Fr. 66. 6. of money, to appropriate, confiscate, Plut. 2. 484 A. 7. to learn by rote, Plut. Ages. 20. II. to get back, regain, recover, Thy dpxnv Hat. 3. 73, Xen. Hell. 3. 5, 10; av. émornuny Plat. Meno 85 D; dpebévra AiBov ov Suvardy dvadaBeiv Arist, Eth. N. 3. 5, 14. 2. to recover, retrieve, make good, Ti\v airinv Hdt. 7. 237; duapriay Soph. Ph. 1249, Eur. Ion 426; ri dpxatayv dperqy Xen. Mem. 3. 5,14; Tadra av. nal perayeyveoxey Dem. 550.14; v. sub carappqOupéw. 8. to restore to health and strength, repair, Lat. reficere, naxédrnra, tpapa Hat. 5. 121., 8. 109 ; dy, modu ee THs ‘hari GOuptas Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 21 :—év. éaurdv to recover oneself, regain strength, revive, Thuc. 6. 26, etc., cf. Dem. 282. 2: to come to one’s senses, Isocr. 86 D; so also dvadaBety absol., Plat. Rep. 467 B, Dem. 282. 2, and Medic. 4. to take up again, re- sume, in narrative or argument, Toy Aéyov Hat. 5, 62, Plat. Rep. 544 B, al.; mpos éuavrdv mavra dy. Id. Tim. 26 A; moAAdus dv. Id. Phaedo 95 E; dvadafeiv dregidyra to repeat in detail, Id. Euthyd. 275 C ;—dv. 7H pvhyy to recollect, 1d. Polit. 294 D; so without 77 prvqyp, Plut. Lycurg. 21; but, dv. pynuny to recover memory, Arist. de Mem. 2, 2. III. to pull short up, of a horse, Xen. Eq. 3, 5: to check, Plat. Legg. 7o1 C, Polyb., etc.; so, dy. rds xuvas to call them back, Xen. Cyn. 7, Io. IV. to gain quite over, win over, Ar. Eq. 682, Dinarch. 93. 43; dv. rov dxpoarny Arist. Rhet. 1. 1, 10. dvahéparw, fut. -Aduyo: (v. Adpmw) :—to flame up, take fire, Xen. Cyr. 5. 1,16; to shine out, of the sun, Theophr. C. P. 4. 13, 6. pa metaph. zo break out anew, as war, Plut. Sull. 6, cf. 7. 2. to come to oneself again, revive, Id, Brut. 15, cf. 2. dvahapipis, ews, 7, a shining forth, 19 F. sive, stiixingres, mpos 70 Plat. 2. 528 E: of a mortified state of body, Hipp. Art. 831: painless, @varos Plut. Sol. 27. — ynola, 4, want of feeling, insensibility, Dem. 237.14, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 10, 12. ; F. dy. ebpeveis éxew Plut. 2. I. of persons, insensible 2. un- inful, avddynra (sc. mpdypara) a lot free from pain, Soph. Tr. tg * "2. cruel, 7480s Eur. Hipp. 1386 se Madvig dvad-ynrov). dvahSalvw, to make to up, flourish, Nonn. Jo. 15. 18 Ar. Vesp. 1045. 2 avaSijoKo, fo prow up, Ap. Rh.3.1363: to spring up afresh, Opp.C.2.307. impf. dAAeyov: fut. — To pick up, gather écréa.. és qpuddny 23. 2533 : 755; x BiBAwy dy. to collect materials from books, Epigr. Gr. 878 :— Med. to pick up for oneself, rods craripas Hat. 3. 130; [oxdAnnas] dy. ah} yAdrrp, of the woodpecker, Arist, H. A. 9. 9,1; dv. mvedpa to col- lect one’s breath, Anth. P. 12, 132. II. to reckon up, rov xpévov Plut. Lycurg. 1:—Pass., 8 cor rypiy otoet els rov Emevra xpévoy dvade- ybpevov being recounted, Xen. An. 2. 1, 17. IIT. in Med., like émaAcyopat, to read through, 79 wept yuxis ypaup’ dvadefdpevos Call. t a making good, making amends for a fault, Thuc, §. 65: a refreshing of soldiers after hard work, Polyb. 3. 87, 1, and Luc.:—recovery from illness, Hipp. Aph. 1250, Plat. Tim. 83 E; dv. mwoveiy to bring about recovery, Demetr. *Apeor. I. 9. 3. repair, restoration, comfort, Strab. 599, Eus. H.E. 6. 39, 5. 4. repetition, Gramm. dy-ahOns, és, not to be healed, EAxvSpiov Hipp. Art. 829, cf. Arctin. ap. Schol. Il. rz. 515"(Diintzer p. 22). 2. not healing, powerless to heal, padppaxa Bion. 7. 4. dv-GAOnrT0s, ov, =foreg., incurable, Nonn. D. 35. 296. dv-aAlykvos, ov, unlike, Hesych. dvaducpde, to winnow out, of grain, Plat. Tim. 52 E. dv-dAvos, ov, Dor. for dv-ftos. GvdAumos [GA], ov, Dor. for dvnduros, barefoot, Theocr. évadtonw Eur. I. T. 337, Ar. Thesm., Thuc. 7. 48, Plat.; also dva- Aéw Hipp. Aér. 288, Aesch. Theb. 813, Eur. Med. 325, Ar. Pl. 248, Fr. 15, Araros Kayz. 3, Thuc. 2. 24., 3. 81., 4. 48., 6. 12., 8. 45, Xen. Hier. 1, 11: impf. dvpAoxor Plat., Xen., dvddouy Ar. Fr. 15, Thue. 8. 45: fut. dv@Adow Eur., Plat.: aor. dvfdwoa and dvddwoa [a]: pf. dvn- Awa and dvddAwxa [a] :—Pass., fut. dvadwOAcopat Eur., Dem., dva- A@ooua Galen.: aor. dvnAdOnvy and dvadhOnv: pf. dvprmpar and dvdAwpar—The forms of the augm. tenses vary between dvad— and dynh— in the best Mss.; the Atticists reject the forms in dvyA-, no doubt because a is already long; but in an old Att. Inscr. (C. I. 147) is dvédooay (i.e. dynAwoay), and in another (158) dvnAd6n: the forms jvdhoca, jvddapat, ivadwOny occur only in comp. with xar-. (The form of this Verb seems to connect it with dAioxopa:. Yet the different quantity of the syll. aA, the act. form of the Verb, the trans. sense of the pf., and above all the difference of sense, indicate a difference of origin.) To use up, spend, Ar. Pl. 381; absol., Ib. 248: esp. in a bad sense, to Javish or squander money, Thuc. 1. 117., 7. 833 dv. eis Te to spend upon a thing, Ar. Fr. 15, Plat. Phaedo 78 A, Rep. 561 A, al. ; éni rt Ib. 369 E; mpés 7 Dem. 33. 26; iép twos Id. 247. 7; also c. dat., ‘Iooxpare dpytpiov dv. to spend money in paying him, Id. 937: 25 ‘—Pass., TdvnAwpéva the monies expended, Id. 264. 15 ; TovTO YP Hovoy ovdK ort Tavira’ dvadwOey AaBeiv Eur. Supp. 776. 2. metaph., dvddwoas Adéyov hast wasted words, Soph. Aj. 1049, ete. ; = ht kat mévoy Plat. Rep. 369 E; dv. owpara modéuw Thue. 2. 64; Tav mpoyévew ddé¢ay Plat, Menex. 247 B; dv. imvoy ént Brepdpors spending sleep upon her eyelids, i.e. indulging them with sleep, Pind. P. 9. 44, acc. to Bockh (but Dissen. joins ém BA. férovra). ‘8. simply to consume, ovria Hipp. Vet. Med. 12 :—Pass., to be expended, eis tiv mipediy in forming fat, Arist. G. A. 1. 19, 17, al. II. of persons, to kill, destroy, robs dvadwhévras Aesch. Ag. 570, cf. Soph. O. T. 1174, Fr. 763, Eur. El. 681, Thuc. 8. 65:—Med. to Kill oneself, Id. 3. 81: —Pass, to be consumed, to perish, Plat. Polit. 272 D. 2. of things, dvfpjhavrat have been disposed of, got rid of, Ib. 289 C. dv-dhtor0s, ov, unsalted : silly, Timo ap. Diog. L. 4. 67. dvadixpdopat, Dep.,=dvadeiyw, Philostr. 225 ; aor. dvexphoavro Joseph. A. J. 8. 15, 6. ae. %, want of ores: Seebleness, cowardice, dvadnelnor Sapév- - 6. 74., 17. 220:— in sii 4 A i with Theda ir. also in sing., ot pot dvadxins [old poet. form v-aAKns, és, =sq., Hipp. Aér. 290, Arist. Physiogn. 5, 4. Gv-adkts, ios, 6, 4: acc. —13a vt CRATES ois teh Od. 3. 375, Aesch. Ag.1224: (dA) :—without strength, impotent, feeble, of unwar- like men, drréAeyos kad dy. Il. 2. 201, cf. 9- 353 Kakoy Kal dvdrKida 8. 153-, 14. 126; of the suitors, Od, 4- 334., 17. 125; of Aegisthus, 3-310, cf. Aesch, Ag. 1224; of Aphrodité, Il, 5. 331; also, dv. Oupds 16. 656; pv(a 15. 62;—é mévr’ dvadms Soph, El. 301, cf. Hdt. 2. 102. dv-dA\akros, ov, unchangeable, Orph. Fr. 3. 8. dv-ahAnyépyros, ov, without allegory, Eust. 83. 23., 549. 29. dv-ahAolwros, ov, unchan di ist. Adv. -ws, Diog. L. 4: 16. Pe eee SANDE a8: 7, £5, Cael SB , ava\Ao“at — avauéve, dv-dhAopar, Dep, to leap or spring up, Ar. Ach. 669; ém dxOous Xen, Hipparch. 8, 3. a 0S, ov, changed, different, Eust. 1000. 31, etc. dy-ahpos, ov, not salted, Xen. Occ. 20, 12. dy-dApipos, ov, =foreg., Diosc. ap. Galen. dvahoy: » (dvddoyos) Adv. proportionably, Hesych, 4 Gvadoyelov, 76, =dvayvworhpioy, Hesych. ; but y. Poll. 10. 60. Gvahoyéw, to be analogous, omddyxvov ovk exer dvadoyobv Arist. Fr. 3155 dv. rois ras dtias Bacpois to keep up to the degrees of his rank, Inscr. Mit. in C. I. 2189, cf. 3486, Ath. 80 C, 81 A, etc. “dvadoynréov, verb. Adj. one must sum up, Arist. Rhet, Al. 37, 26 (legend. videtur dvadoyoréov or madiAdoynréov). dvahoynrixés, 4, dv, proportional, dub. in Diog. L. 1. 17. dvahoyla, %, equality of ratios (Adyot), proportion; as, a:b=c:d, or ; q Fiat. Tim. 31 C, 32 ©, ef. Arist. Eth. N. 5. 3, 8, Pol. 4. 12, 3, Poét. 21, II, etc.; xara iv av. proportionately, Pol. 3.13, 5; 7d war’ dy, igov Ib. 5. 1, 2. II. generally, analogy, Plat. Polit. 257 B, etc. Cf. sub moAAamAdotos. dvahoyifopat, Dep. to reckon up, sum up, 7a dporoynpéva Plat. Prot. 332 C, cf. Rep. 474 D; rd Bed Xen, Mem. 2. 1, 43 Ta yeyovéra Kai Ta mapévra mpos Td péAdovTa, dv. to calculate the present in comparison with the future, Plat. Theaet. 186 A; dy. 71 mpés Te Arist. Pol. 6. 6, 1; é« tovraw dv. to make calculations from . . , Id, Cael. 2. 1 Cres 2. to calculate, consider, tt Thuc. 5. 7, Lys. 144. Io. 3. mostly foll. by a Conjunction, dvad. ws .. 87... , to recollect that, Thuc, 8, 83, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 23, etc. dvadoyikés, 7, dv, (dvddoyos) proportional, analogous, Plut. 2.1145 A; ) -«?) TExvy Sext. Emp. M. 1. 199. Adv. -«@s, Greg. Nyss. avadbyiopa, aros, 76, a result of reasoning, 7a vi Tovrav dy. Plat. Theaet. 186 C. dvahoyiopos, 6, fresh calculation, reconsideration, Thuc, 3. 36, cf. 8. '4:—a course or line of reasoning, Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 19; &v TO pds airdv dv. Menand. =rpar. 1. 2. kara roy dvadoyopéy according to proportionate calculation, ap. Dem. 262. 5; 8¢ dvadoyiopod Sext. Emp. P. 1. 147. dvahoyiorréoy, v. sub dvadoynréor. avadoyorixés, 4, dv, judging by analogy, analogical, Sext. Emp. M. II. 250; 1) —«i) réxvy Ib. 1. 214. II. teaching analogy, ypap- parol Ib, 2. 59. Adv. —K@s, Ib. 3. 40. avddoyos, ov, according to a due dbyos or ratio (v. dvadoyia), analo- gous, proportionate, conformable, Plat. Tim. 69 B, cf. Tim. Locr. 103 D: —the neut. dvddoyov is freq. used by Arist. in an adverbial sense, in pro- portion, analogously, Eth. N. 3. 8, 3, etc.:—often it might be an Adj., 70 dvddoyov Aéyw, Srav . . Post. 21. 11; mapa. 7d av. Eth. N, 5+ 3, 12, al,, etc.; but often this cannot be so, é* Tod dvddoyov Rhet. 2. 23, 17., 3. 2,9, al.; werapopal ai dvddoyor (sc. odcar) Ib. 3.6, 73 7A TovTas dvddoyov H. A. 1.1, 11, etc.; dv. of oioBdpor (as a predicate) Eth. N. 2. 1, 6, cf. Rhet. 1. 7, 20, al. ;—so that it is plain that dyddoyor is merely equiv. to dvd Adyoy, as it is written in Plat. Tim. 37 A; cf. Adyos B, III: —the regul. Ady. dvaAdéyws in Sext. Emp. P. 1. 88, etc. avadoyouvras, Adv. pres. part., =dvaddyas, c. dat., C. I. 2766. dv-Gos, ov, (GAs) without salt, not salt, Arist. Probl. 21. 5. GvGA6w, an old form of dvadicxw, q: V. dv-adtos, ov, (4A9w) not to be Jilled, insatiate, Lat. inexplebilis, Bboxew dy yaorép dvadrov Od. 17. 228., 18. 364; so also Cratin, ap. Suid. dv-adros, ov, (GAs) not salted, Hipp. 480, Timocl. "Ixap. 2. dvaAilw, to sob aloud, Luc. Somn. 4, Q. Sm. 14. 281 (vulg. dvwAut-). Gvadtors, ews, 4, (dvadtw) a loosing, releasing, kax@yv from evils, Soph. El. 142. 2. a dissolving, Arist. Mund. 4, 11, Plut., etc.:— the resolution of a whole into its parts, analysis, opp. to yéveous, adv- Gears, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3, 12. 3. in the Logic of Arist., the reduc- tion of the imperfect figures into the perfect one, An. Pr. I. 45, 9. 4, the solution of a problem, etc., Plut. Romul. 12. II. (from Pass.) retrogression, Plut. 2. 76 E: retirement, departure, Joseph. A. J. 19. 4, 1; used of death (cf. dvadvw 11), 2 Ep. Tim. 4. 6. dvahirnp, jpos, 6, a deliverer, Aesch. Cho. 159. dvadirns [0], ov, 5, a deliverer, esp. from a magic spell, Magnes Avé. 2, cf. Lob. Aglaoph. 644 :—Dind. proposes to restore the Dor. post. form oréveyv ddduras (for diras) in Aesch. Theb. 146. dvadiricés, 7, dv, analytical :—rd. dvadvurind, Aristotle’s treatises on Logic, wherein reasoning is resolved into its simplest forms, cf. Eth. N. 3-5, An. Pr. 1. 32. Adv. —«@s, Id. An. Post. 1, 22, 12. dvaéduros, ov, dissoluble, Plotin. 457 A. dvahtw, Ep. dAAvw ; évAvw Epigr. Gr. 1028. 55: fut. dvadiow: (v. Avw, for the tenses and prosody: Hom. has dAAvovoa, dAAvecxe with vb). To unloose, undo, of Penelopé’s web, vixras 5° ddAveckev Od. 2. 105; dAAvovaar ..dyadv iaréy Ib. 109, etc.; ava Te mpupvyoca ddoat Id. 9. 178, etc. 2. to unloose, set free, release, éue 8 ex Seopav dvéucay Id. 12. 200 (never in Il); Twa xaradinns Ael. V. H. 5. 18. II. after Hom., ¢o undo in various senses: 1. to unloose, (éynyv Call. Del. 237, in Med., cf. Arist. H. A. 5. 19, II. _ 2. dy. opbaapdy, porary, i.e. to restore to a dead man the use of his eyes and voice, Pind. N. 1o. fin. 3. ¢o dissolve matter into its elements, és avira radra Tim. Locr. 102 D: #o dissolve snow, etc., Plut.2. 898A. _b. to resolve into its elements, analyse, and so examine, Pseudo-Phocyl. 96 :—to investigate analytically, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3, 11. 4. in the Logic of Arist., to reduce a syllogism, Id. An. Pr. 1. 32, 2, al.; cf. dva- Avots I. 3. 5. to do away, abolish, cancel, Dem. 584. 16, cf. 187. 25, Plut., etc.: but mostly in Med., ¢o cancel faults, navta ratra Xen. tt 103 6. zo stop, put an end to, 7. to solve a problem, etc., Hell. 7. 5, 18; duaprias Dem. 18%, 24. as frost stops hunting, Xen. Cyn. 5, 34. Plut. 2. 792 D, Wytt. Ib. 133 B. 8. to break a spell, Menand& Hpy. 4, cf. Alb. Hesych. 1. p. 330. III. intr. to loose from the moorings, weigh anchor, and so, to depart, go away, Polyb. 3. 69, 14, Babr. 42. 8, Or, Sib. 8. 55, etc. i—metaph., of death, és deods dvédvca Epigr. Gr. 340. 7; and so absol. to ‘die (cf. dvdéAvats 11), Ep. Phil. 1. 2 P Epigr. Gr. 713. . to return, Ey. Luc. 12. 36; éf Gdov Lxx (Sap. 2. x av-aAbaByros, ov, not knowing one’s a b c, Philyll. Aly.2, cf. Ath.176E, dvédwpa, aros, 74, dvfdwpa in late Inscrr., C. I, 2347 ¢. O1,, 3137. 58: (dvaddw) :—expenditure, expense, cost, Joss, Aesch. Supp. 476; opp. to Ajupa, Lys. 905. 1, Plat. Le §- 920 C; in pl. expenses, Thuc. 7. 28, etc.; ovotay, Hs ai rpdcodo Avovar Tavadd@para Diphil. "Eun. 1. 5; v. sub dvadionw 1; é« Trav idley dvahopdrov nadonAifey at their own private costs, Decret. ap. Dem. 265. 22: metaph., oxacdv Ye TavérAopa THs yAdoons 7é5¢ Eur. Supp. 547. 2. an exhalation, Plut. 2. 384 A. dvddwous, %), outlay, expenditure, Theogn. 903, Thuc, 6. 31. II. destruction, Just. M. Apol. 1. 20, avawréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be spent, Plat. Legg. 847 E. avadwrijs, od, 6, a spender, waster, Plat. Rep, 552 B, C. dvadwrikés, f, dv, expensive, h5oval, émOupyta: Plat. Rep. 558 D, 559 C. dvéhoros [aA], ov, (ava privat., dAlcxopat) not to be taken, invincible, impregnable, of strong places or forts, Hdt. 1. 84., 8. 51; but in Thuc. 4. 70, simply, not taken, still holding out. 2. of persons, proof against all argument, irrefutable, Plat. Theaet. 179 C; dy. bwd ypypua- Tay incorruptible, Xen. Ages. 8, 8. 8. of things, unattainable, Dem. 1412, 23. Gvarwdde, zo be relieved again, have a respite from suffering, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac, 2. 11, dvapatpde, to rage through, ds 8 dvapaipde Bae’ dyxea Oeamdats mip Il. 20. 490. dvapdAdoow, to soften again, Hipp. 672. 2. avapavOdven, to inguire closély, Hat, 9. Tor. Pore nan Dep. to make an oracle of none effect, Dio.C. 37. 25, . B. 26, dv-apdtevros, ov, impassable for wagons, Hdt, 2, 108. dvapappatpw, to move quickly, of a smith’s bellows, Ap. Rh. 3. 1300; Ruhnk, suggested dvapopp¥povor, Merkel dvapaipdovet, dvapaprycta, %, faultlessness, innocence, App. Pun, 52. pig dt stes ov, without missing or failing, unfailing, unerring, Xen, Cyr. 8. 7, 22. 2. in moral sense, free from fault or error, faultless, blameless, Hipp. Fract. 763; opp. to ofds re dyaprdvey, Plat. Rep. 339 B; dv. wodcreta a faultless form of government, Arist. Pol. 3. 1,85 —dy. mpés tva or Til, having done no wrong to a person, having given him no offence, Hdt.1.117., 5.39; dv. rwvés guiltless of a thing, 1. 155; 70 dv.=dvapaprnota, Xen, Ages. 6, 7, Plat.; mpds 7d dv. to preserve from error, Arist. Eth. 8, 1, 2:—Adv. -Tws, without fail, unerringly, Xen. Mem. 2. 8, 5; inoffensively, Dem, 1407. 18. II. of things, not done by fault, done unavoidably, ovpppopa Antipho 122. 18, dvapapuKdopar, v. dvapnp-. dvapiicdopat, Dep. to chew over again, ruminate, Ar. Vesp. 783. Gvapdoow, Att.-rrw: fut. fo: (v. udoow). To rub or wipe off, épyov, 8 of Kepadp dvaydges a deed (as if a stain), which thou wilt wipe off with or on thine own head, i.e. become responsible for it, Lat, capite luere, Od. 19. 92; s0, radra éuf epadf dvapdgas pépw Hat. 1. 155: so also in Med., Paus. 10. 33, 2; dvapdrreoda TS mpootsmm Tod aivaros to have [some of] the blood wiped on one's face, Plut, Anton. 77. II. Med. to knead one’s bread, A. B. 391, cf. ¢upaaoo- pat. 2. to receive an impression, Tim. Locr. 94 A. 3. to express, tov corrjpov Bidv Clem. Al, 156; cf. Arr. Epict. 2. 23, 3.—Cf. Fa ais: dvapacrevw, to inquire into, Lat. anguirere, Hesych. dvapacxtdtorip, pos, 6, (uacxdAn) a shoulder-strap, an article of female dress, Philippid. ’Adwv. 1. d-vapiiros [va], ov, wanting water, Epigr. ap. Plut, 2. 870 E, dub. Gvapdxopar (v. waxopa): Dep.:—to renew the fight, to retrieve a defeat, Hdt. 5. 121., 8. 109, Thuc. 7. 61. II. metaph., dv. roy Adyor to fight the argument over again, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 286 C, cf. Phaedo 89 C, 2. to make good a loss, dv. rd dpapraydpeva Theophr. C. P. 3. 2, 5; mepiméresay Polyb. 1. 55,5; pvows Thy pOopdy dy, nature makes up, repairs the waste, Arist. G. A. 3. 4, 6. &v-GuBaros, ov, of a horse, that one cannot mount, unbroken, Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 46. Teancheen to con over, mapdyyeApua Sext. Emp, M. 11. 122. Saxe ov, unmilked, Schol, Theocr. 1. 6; cf. dvijpeAxros. Gvapédmw, to begin to sing, c. acc. cogn., dotSdy Theocr. 17. 113. II. trans. ¢o praise in song, Anacreont. 36. 1. dvapepey; , Ady. part. pf. pass. promiscuously, Gramm. dvapeveréov, verb, Adj. one must await, twd Ach, Tat, 5.11. dvapévo, poét. dppévo: (v. weve) :—to wait for, await, abide, dvé- Hewa ..7@ Stay Od. 19. 342; viera, rov HAtov Hadt. 7. 42, 543 téhos dixns Aesch. Eum. 243; dnpa vippas dupéver Soph. Tr. 527; freq. in Eur., and Att. Prose :—dy. td to wait for him, Hdt. 9. 57; but also to await an enemy, Pind, P.6. 31 :—c. acc. et inf., dy. Twa moely to await one’s doing, Hdt. 8.15; dy. 7e yiveq@at a thing happening, Id. 5. 35, cf. Thuc. 4. 120, 135 :—foll. by relat. clauses, dv. és re.. » ews av.., Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 44, Plat. Lys, 209 A; mot xphy dvapeivar; i. e. és tiva xpévor; Ar, Lys. 526:—absol. fo wait, stay, ‘Eppijs . ober dppéver Soph. El. 1397, cf. 1389, Ar. Ran. 175; ¢. part., mew@y dy, Id, Vesp. 7775 2. to await, endure, ti Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 30, Symp. 4, 3. to put off, delay, Id. Cyr. 1. 6, 10, Dem. 411. 5. 104 “dvapeplfa, to divide; and dvapepropés, d, division, Gramm. ‘dvd-pecos, ov, in the midst, in the heart of a country, Lat. mediterra- eus, TéAES Gvapeco Hdt. 2. 108. “dvaépeoros, ov, filled full, rwés of a thing, Eupol. Arty. 16; €x@pas mpos Tov dijpov dvapecros Dem. 779. 25. dvaperrbo, fut. dow, to fill up, Jill full, Ar, Ran. 1084, in Pass. ava) 0, Adv. between, intermediate, Arist. Phys. 7. 2, 2, cf. 7. “dvaperpéw, fut. now, to méasure back again, to re-measure (i. ¢. return) the same road one came by, opp’. . dvaperphoatue XapvBdw Od, 12. 428; dy. cavrov dmayv, measure yourself off! Ar. Av. 1020; tévo.t mévous av., i.e. to undergo a succession of labours, C. I. 987 :—Pass., dv. xixhw to return to the same point, Plat. Tim. 39 B. 2. to re- capitulate, Eur. Or. 14, in Med. II. to measure over again, 7d vdwp Hipp. Aér. 285. 2. to measure carefully, take the measure of, Hdt. 2. 109 ; dv. 7d Brow Arist. Phys. 4.12, 8; tui 7 one thing by another, Plat. Rep. 531 A :—more freq. in Med., dy. yy Ar. Nub. 205 ; dveperpnoduny ppévas tas ods took the measure of .., Eur: lon 1271; yvapns wovnpois kavéow dvaperpovpevos 7d o&ppor Id. El. 52. 3: dvaperpeiobar Sdxpy eis twa to measure out to him (pay him) the tribute of a tear, Id. I. T. 346. dvapérpyois, ews, 2), measurement, Tis yijs Strabo 11. 2. an ad- measurement, estimate, T.vos mpds Tt of one thing by another, Plut. Solon 27. _, dvapndéw, to examine with a probe, h. Hom. Merc. 41, Ruhnk. dvapnpukdopat or dvapdp-, Dep. to chew the cud, Alex. Mynd. ap. Ath. 390 F, Luc. Gall. 8. ‘dvapnpvopat, Dep. to wind up, draw back, as a thread, Plut. 2. 978 D. Gvaputya, poét. duprya, Adv.,=dvayit, promiscuously, Soph. Tr. 839, C.1.1448; rwvi with.., Ap. Rh. 1. 573, Anth. P. 7. 12; also, ruvds Ib. 22. dvaptySa, =dvayig, Soph. Tr. 519; dvaplySnv, Nic. Th. 912. ‘dvaptyn, 4, @ mixture, Schol. Aesch. Theb. 330. : dvaplyvip. and tw: poét. dpytyvupt, Bacchyl. 26: poét. aor. part. dypigas Il. 24. 529: cf. dvapioyw. To mix up, mix together, dvd 5é Kpt Aevxdv émgav Od. 4. 41; mdvra 7a Kpéa Hat. 4. 26, and Att.; kdpot.. pavaplyvucba (i.e. pi) dvap-) téxas rds ods Eur. Supp. 591. II. often in Pass. to be mixed with others, mavres dvape- peyuévo Soph. El. 715; rotor woAAd eOvea dvapepixarat Hat. 1, 146; Kadpou maioly dvapepeypévar Eur. Bacch. 37; mavres dAAnAots Arist. Pol. 6. 4,19; &v pécots Tois “EAAnow, cf. Plat. Phil. 48 A, Xen. An. 4. 8, 8:—also in Med., papayva 3 dpypepiterar (restored by Dind, for pe- Aawva 8 ad peutgerar), Aesch, Pers. 1051. 2. to join company, cs Bt dveutyOnuev Dem. 1259. 7: to have intercourse, Plut. Num. 20. dva-picrés, 7, dv, mixed up, Alex. Trall. p. 415. ‘ dv-dyurros, ov, unmixt, Origen. c. Marc. 3. p. 78 Wetst. dvapicrés, dv, mixed, Alex, Trall. . » dvaplAd , ov, undisputed, Hesych., Suid. ; reaeaiey Hed fut. dvapyvhow, post. dupynew: (v. pipvnokw). To remind one of a thing, c. dupl. acc., radrd pv’ dvépvnoas Od. 3. 211, cf, Hat. 6. 140, Soph. O. T. 1133, Thuc. 6. 6; but also c. gen. rei, dv, Twa twos Eur. Ale. 1045, and Plat. 2. c. acc. pers. et inf. fo remind one to do, Pind. P. 4. 96; so, dvapvfjcal ria iva.., Dem. 230. 26. —- 8. c. acc. rei only, ¢o recall to memory, make mention of, Antipho 120, 26, Dem. 299. 8. II. in Pass. to remember, recall to mind, twés Hdt. 2. 151, Thue. 2. 54, etc.; more rarely rt, Ar. Ran. 661, Plat. Phaedo 72 E, Xen. An. 7. 1, 26; mept 7 Plat. Rep. 329 A:— foll. by a relat., dvapsprvjoxecOa ofa éendoxere Hat. 5. 109; dv. Orr. ., etc., Thuc. 2. 89, etc.: absol., Hat. 3. 51, Ar. Eccl. 552. Cf. dvdprqots, 1,2. ar af post. for dvapéva, c. acc., Il. 11. 1713 absol., 16. 363. - dvapwipilo, to sing languishingly, Prot. ap. Ath. 176 B. ‘& , Adv. promiscuously, pell-mell, Hdt. 1. 103, Thuc. 3. 107. . vias , «ws, , a mingling, Theophr. C, P. 4.15, 4: intercourse, Plut. Num. 17. : ‘ 4 Gvaptoyw, poét. and Ion. for dvaplyvupu, dvémorye 5é city pdppaka Od: 10. 235; d&pployw Emped. 47 Sturz.:—Med. fo have intercourse with, Twi Hat. 1. 199. < ‘ * dvapro9apvéw, fo serve again for pay, Com. Anon. 302*, Plut. Nic. 2, etc. dvapic0dopar, Pass. to be let anew, Tab, Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 111. dvappa, aros, 76, (avaarw) anything kindled, a burning mass, the sun being described by the Stoics as dv. voepdv ée Oadarrys Plut. 2. 890 A, Diog. L. 7.145: words attributed to Heraclit. in Stob. Ecl. 1. 524. dv-dpipatos, ov, (dupa) without knots, Xen. Cyn. 2, 4. Y dvapvyors, ews, 4, (dvapipvjonw) a calling to mind, recollection, Plat. Phaedo 72 E, 92 D, Phil. 34 C, al., Arist. de Mem., where it is distin- ished from pyfun, memory, Vv. pvqpn I. 2:—dvapvqges Ovary recol- tion of vows to pay sacrifices, Lys. 194. 22. ‘ dvapvyoréov, verb. Adj. one must remember, Eust. dvap: h, Ov, able to recal to mind readily, opp. to pynpovirds i Ls be memory), Arist. de Mem. 1, I., 2, 24. vapvnords, dv, that which one can recollect, Plat. Meno 87 B. anipaday, dvépoXov, aor. 2 with no pres. in use (cf. BAdoxw), to go through, dvd bt Kédabos éuore modu Eur. Hec, 928. * &vapodwve, strengthd. for woAvvw, Pherecr. Incert. 4, cf. Plut. 2. 580 F. ie vapov’y patient abiding, endurance, lam.V. Pyth.,Schol. Eur, Or.1 101, pip, to roar loudly, boil up, mao’ dvapoppvpecne, of Cha- rybdis, Od. 12. 238; v. dvapappaipa. “dvapophow, to form anew, renovate, Eccl. A Philostr, 869. hye forma nat - dvapdpouors, ews, 4, a forming anew, Cyrill. & Aeww, fo raise by a late, mvaAas to force oper the gates, Eur. Med. 1317, ubi v. Pors. (1314). 2. to transform. ¢is $ B :—metaph, to revive, recover, éx véaov Aoinwdous dvapepiCw — avarjyouct. Gy-aptréxovos, ov, without upper garment, of awoman, Meineke Euphor. Pp. 23. a ov, unerring, unfailing, Knpes dv. Soph. O. T. 472, where (as the metre requires) dvarAdxnrot is now read. 2. a man, without error or crime, Aesch. Ag. 344, Soph. Tr. 120. dy-Gprrvt, vxos, 6, 7), without head-band or fillet, Call. Cer. 124. Gvapdpiflw, to anoint again, of the baptismal chrism, Eccl. : also the Subst. —pupurpés, 6. ‘ dvapuxOifopar, Dep. to moan loudly, Aesch. Pr. 743; cf. puxOitw. dvaptw, fo open the eyes, opp. to cuppim, A. B. 391, Eust.:—Subst. dvapuots, , ] ’ avavylis — dvarravXa. dvavyis, ews, %, a recovery, revival, Eccl. ‘dvavOéw, to blossom again, continue blossoming, Theophr. C. P. 3. 24, 3. dv-avOns, és, without bloom, Theophr. C. P. 3.19, 1: past its bloom, Plat. Symp. 196 A. dv-dvios, ov, without pain: act. not giving pain, Hesych., E. M.:— Adv. -ws, E. M. Cf. dvnvios. dvavicoopat, Dep., =dvavéouat, Opp. H. 5. 410. dvavopnn, , a redistribution, Eur. Temen. 20. ‘dvavooéw, to be sick again, to relapse, Joseph. B. J. 5. 6, 1. dv-avra, Adv. up-hill, opp. to xéravra (q. v.), Il. 23. 116, dv-avriyavoros, ov, without a rival, without a struggle, Thuc. 4.92; dvavr. evvo.a uncontested, unalloyed good-will, Id. 2. 45 :—Adv. -Tas, Plut. 2. 1128 B. II. irresistible, Id. Phoc. 14, etc. av-avramébdoros, ov, without apodosis: 7d dvavranddorov a hypothe- tical proposition ting the quent clause, as in Ar, Pl. 468, etc., v. Greg. Cor. p. 47. dvavrns, €s, (ava, dvrdw) up-hill, steep, opp. to katdvrns, ywptov Hat. 2. 29; media Hipp. Aér. 292; d5ds, dvaBaors Plat. Rep. 364 D, 515 E; mpos dvayres éXatvey, opp. to kata mpavods (down-hill), Xen. Eq. 3, 7, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 247 B; mpds 70 dvavres ray modcreay to the highest point of our constitutions, Id. Rep. 568 C; mpds dynAd «al dvavrn Id. Legg. 732 C. Gv-avriBXerros, ov, what one dares not face, Plut. 2. 67 B. dy-avriferos, oy, not to be contradicted, Olympiod., Simplic. Adv. —Tws, Epiphan. dv-avritexros, ov, incontestable, Cic. ad Q. Fr. 2. 10, Luc. Eun. 1 a Adv. —raws, Strabo 622. dv-avrippytos, ov, =foreg., not to be opposed, Polyb. 6. 7, 7., 28. 11, 4: undeniable, Ado Sext. Emp. M. 8.160. Adv. -raws, Polyb. 23.8, 11. dy-avrititros, ov, giving no resistance, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 411. dvavtipwvysia, 7, a not answering, Cic. Att. 15. 13, 2. dv-avtipavytos, ov, unanswered, Cic. Att. 6.1, 23. dv-avthéw, fo draw up or out, worapods dv. koxAias Strabo 147: to pour one upon another, ént péOn GdAnv péOnv Clem. Al, 182 :—metaph. to exhaust, go patiently through, Lat. exantlare, révous Dion. H. 8. 51. dvat [a], dvaxros (cf.”Avaxes), 6: rarely fem. dvag for dvacca, Pind, P. 12. 6, Aesch. Fr. 379, cf. Herm. h. Hom. Cer. 58: (properly Favag, v. dvdoaw). A lord, master (v. sub fin.), being applied, I. to the gods, esp. to Apollo, dyouor 5¢ S@pa “Avaxri Il. 1. 390, al.; 6 Tv@.0s avaf Aesch. Ag. 509; dvag “AmodAov Ib. 513, Eum. 85, etc.; dvagt “Ar. Soph.O, T. 80; dvag without “AroAAov, Hdt. 1. 159., 4. 150, al. ; to Zeus, Hom. only in voc., Zed dva Il. 3. 351., 16. 233; Zeds dvaf Aesch. Pers. 762 ; avag dvaxrov . . Zed Id. Supp. 524; pa Tov Ala Tov “Avaxra Dem. 937.12; to Poseidon, Aesch. Theb. 130; @ déonor dvaf, to various gods, Ar. Nub. 264, Vesp. 875; a@vag Seomora Id. Pl. 748; and esp. to the Dioscuri, cf. “Avaxes, “Avaxot; and to all the gods, mav- Tow dvdkrow . . kowoBwpiay Aesch. Supp. 222 ;—often in Inscrr.—The irteg. vocat. dva (q. v.) is never addressed save to gods; vag is freq. in Trag. and Com, II. to the Homeric heroes; but Agamemnon as general-in-chief is especially dvag dvdpa@v (so Euphetes in Il. 15. 532, while Orsilochos is called dvaf dvdpecour in Il. 5. 546, cf. Eur. Phoen. 17) :—also as a title given to all men of rank or note, as to Teiresias, Od. 11. 144, cf. Soph. O. T. 284; to the sons or brothers of kings (ot vieis 70d Bacihéws kal of ddeApol Kadodvra dvaxres Arist. Fr. 483), and generally to a chief, leader, Aesch. Pers. 5, 587, Ag. 42, etc.; cf. Musgr. Soph. O. T. 85, 911 :—Baotdq dvaxrt lord king, Od. 20. 194, v. Pors. Or. 342 :—applied to the Emperors, @eot dvaxres Epigr. Gr. 618. 2., 892. 4, al. III. the master of the house, Lat. herus, dominus, oixoto dvaf Od. I. 397; dugl dvaxra Kives 10, 216; esp. as deno- ting the relation of master to slave, often in Od.; dvaf, Oeovs yap deonéras Kadeiv xpewv Eur. Hipp. 88; in Od. 9. 440, of the Cyclops, as owner of his flocks. IV. in Att., metaph., corns, vay avakres lords of the oar, of ships, Aesch. Pers. 378, 383; mvAns dvag, of a porter, Soph. in Miller Mélanges, p. 32; dv. SmAwv Eur. I. A. 1260; yevday Id. Andr, 447; tmnvns Plat. Com. MpeoB. 3: cf. dvacca 3, dvdoow 11,—Poét. word ; equiv. to the later Seandr7s (v. Eur. Hipp. |. c.), but somewhat diff. from BactAeds, which properly denotes the political chief of the Tribe; v. Grote Hist. of Gr. 2. 84. dvatatvw, to tear open, dv. Avmny, like Lat. vulnus refricare, Babr. 12. 23, Themist. :—hence in Pass., of evils, to break open anew, Polyb. 27. 6, 6; eis kdxwowv av. Plut. 2. 610 C. “dvatéw, to hew smooth, polish, MOov dvegecpévou Joseph. A. J. 13.6, 6. avatnpatve, fut. dv@: aor. dvégnpava, Ep. subj. dyénpdyp :—to dry up, dis 8 br’ dmwpivds Bopéns . . ddanyy al’ ayénpdry Il. 21. 3473 TA br0- Ciyia apidpeva dvegnpnve [rv Aiuvqv] Hat. 7. 09 :—Pass., Hipp. Aér. 285, etc. 2. metaph. to consume, exhaust, otxov dy. 65é6vres Call. Cer. 114: II. to dry again, after bathing, in Pass., Hipp.Acut. 395. “dvatipavets, ews, }, a drying up, drying, Theophr. H. P. 3. I, 2. avatnpavtixés, 7, dv, fit for drying, Plut. 2. 624 D. avatnpaota, 4), =dvagjpavors, Theophr. Fr. 12. 12. t avatia, 3, (dvdcow) a command, behest, charge, Pind. N. 8. 18, in pl. 2.= Baotreia, Aesch. Fr. 9. dy-at(a, 4, (dgia) worthlessness, dvagiav éxev to be worthless, Zeno ap. Diog: L. 105; cf. Lob. Phryn. 106. dvatt-Sahpa, 7, =%) dvd-youca b@pa, of Demeter, Hesych. dv-at.ooyos, ov, inconsiderable, cited from Diod. : : dvatvord Geta, 77, unworthy treatment, or rather, just indignation thereat, Joseph. A. J. 15. 2, 7. Gvatvomabew, (radeiv) to be indignant at unworthy treatment, Strabo 361, Dion. -H: 4. 11. ge 105 dvatié-moros, ov, unworthy of credit, Phot. dv-dtvos, ov, also often in Att. a, or: I. of persons, unworthy, not deemed or held worthy, c. gen., dv. opéwv abray, éwvrod Hat. 1.73, 114; dvdgiov ood too good for thee, Soph. Ph. 1009; 7oAA@ xal dv. éyod Plat. Apol. 38 E, etc. :—also c. inf., dy. yap naciv éore Svotvxeiv © undeserving in the eyes of all to suffer, Soph. O. C. 1446; vixay Plat. Prot. 356 A:—Ady., dvagias épOdpnoay éavroy Hat. 7. 10, 5. 2. absol. unworthy, worthless, good for nothing, despicable, Id. 7. 9, Soph. Ph. 439, etc.; dmepel ris Emoimos dvagia oixovope Id. El. 189 :— Adv. -iws, Id, Aj. 1432, al. 3. undeserving of evil, Id. Ant. 694, Eur. Heracl, 526, Thuc. 3. 59. II. of things, unworthy, undeserved, dvagia wadeiy Eur. I. A. 852, al., Plat. Theaet. 184 A; av. madeiy rev imnpypévov Lys. 164. 7. 2. worthless, 7d dv. dxepdés Plat. Hipparch. 231 E. dvatvos, ov, (dvag) kingly, royal, Schol. Il. 23. 630. dvatt-péppryk, vyyos, 6, %, ruled by the lyre, dvafipdppeyyes Upvoe (cf. dvaBoAy 11), Pind. O. 2. 1. avativéw, (fuvds) = dvaxowdm, which is v. I. for it in Xen. Hell. 1. I, 30. dvagupt5es, (Suv, ai, the trousers worn by eastern nations, Hat. 5. 49-5 7- 61, Xen. An. 1. 5,8; by the Scythians, Hdt. 1. 71; by the Sacae, 3. 87, etc.: acc. to Bahr Hdt. 1. 71, not the loose trousers (@¥Aaxot), but a tighter kind, like the Gallic braccae or trews, cf. Hipp. Aér. 293, fin. The sing. occurs in Luc. de Hist. Conscr. 19, and Tzetz. (Eust. derives it from dvacvpoya:; but the word is Persian, v. Bahr 1. c.) Gvagvw [0], to scrape up or off, ra ev rH yp Ovra [onpeia] dvagicar Antipho 134. 35 :—Pass., dvatvopévns rhs yhs being scraped up by fishermen dredging, Arist. H. A. 6. 15, 5, cf. 8. 20, 7; dvagvoGévres having the surface scraped off, Plut. Poplic. 15. ‘ dva-olyw, fut. fw, post. for dvotye, Il. 24. 455. dvarradevw, to educate afresh, Soph. Fr. 434, Ar. Eq. 1099. dvatratorixés, 7, dv, anapaestic, Dion. H. de Comp. 25. dvatraveros, ov, (dvanaiw) struck back, rebounding : hence, as Subst., an anapaest (i.e. a dactyl reversed, d. repercussus or antidactylus), Gramm. 2. an anapaestic verse, Arist. Poét. 12, 8, Dion. H. 1. 25, etc.: in pl. of the Comic parabasis, Ar. Eq. 504, Pax 735, al.; on dvdmacorot odpmrueror, v. Meineke Com. Fragm. 2. p. 283; dvama:orév. Tt something in anapaestic metre, Aeschin. 22. 2'7:—hence, dvamaiora, 74, anapaestic verses, satire, ridicule, Alciphro 3. 43, Plut. Pericl. 33. dvatratotpis, fos, 7), a smiter, i.e. a smith’s hammer, Hesych. dvatratw, to strike again, strike back, Eust. 587. 18 :—metaph., pO uot éuperpol re xal dvanatovtes, = dvdnatorot, Philostr. 601. dvatrdhatots, ews, 7), a renewal of the contest, Theod. Stud. dvatraAaiw, fo retrieve by contest, ra opddpara Joseph. B, J. 4. 1, 6. Il. dv. rds irocxéoes, to retract, Schol. Od. 8. 567. dvamddn [ma], , a dance which imitated the five contests of the wév- taddov, Ath. 631 B. dvamtiAdw, Adv. back again, iévar Plat. Polit. 269 D, cf. Phaedr. 264 A, al.; éml 7d mépas 4 av. Arist. Eth. N..1. 4, 53 dv. orpapyvac Id. Cael. 2. 2, 7, etc. II. over again, = €umadw, Plat. Theaet. 192 D; dvdnady at Id. Rep. 451 B. III. contrariwise, reversely, in reverse order, Hipp. Coac. 170, Plat. Tim. 82 C, al.; dv. éxew Arist. Cael, 1. 6, 9, al.; dv. 7eOévau Id. An. Pr. 1. 17, 12, etc.; dv. éoriv jpiv i} Tois GAAos with us it is not as with the rest, Theophr. H. P. 8. 3, 5. dvarradwSpopéw, in Hipp. Fract. 754, of a bandage, to be brought back again to the same spot. av-ardAAakros, ov, irremovable, Synes. 183 A. dvamrdhAw, post. dpmrddAw: Ep. aor. part. dumeradayv. To swing to and fro, aumenaddv mpote Bodrrxdontov éyxos having poised and drawn back the spear, so as to throw it with greater force, Il. 3. 355, etc.; dumdAAev Oda, i.e. to dance, Ar. Ran. 1358; dvémndev émt Ofpa.. pawddas urged them on, excited them, Eur. Bacch. 1190:—Med., at... ai€épa dpmdddcobe agitate it as you fly, Id. Or. 322:—Pass. fo dart, spring or bound up, ws 8 br bd gppikds.. dvarddderat lyOds, . . ds wrAnyels dvérado Il. 23. 692 ;—which passage proves that the sync. aor. dvémaAro (also found in Il. 8. 85., 20. 424, Pind. O. 13. 102) must be referred to this Verb, and not to dvepdAAopat (cf. the forms éeraAro, évémadro, karémadro); yet Ap. Rh. seems to have brought it from the latter Verb, for he uses the part. dvemdApevos (2. 825); those who, like Heyne, refer it to dvepaAAopa, write it avenGAro (cf. ér@Aro): v. Spitzn. Exc. xvi ad Il. :—Mosch. 2. 109 has the aor. med. dverfAaro (ubi olim dvemiAvaro) ; aor. pass. part. dva- madels, Strabo 379. II. dvamdAday, 6, an earthquake with an up- ward movement, Arist. Mund. 4, 31. dvariihos, contr. dpmados, ov, 6,=dvamados: but, kar’ dunadoy by auction, Inscr. Thess. in Ussing 2. 15. avarahots, ews, 7, a flinging up, Arist. Mund. 4, 31. av-amrdvrntos, ov, where one meets no one, Cic. Att. 9. I, 3. dva-mapQévevors, 7), restoration of virginity, Schol. Aesch. Cho. 71. avamiiptdtw, to change sides like the Parians, to rat, proverb, in Ephor. (Fr. 107) ap. Steph. B. s. v. Tapos. dyv-arr ‘0s, ov, incomplete, Diog. L. 7. 63. : avatras, aca, av,=dras, Anth. P. 7. 343 (where Finck dua maons). dvatraccw, fut. dow, to scatter or shed upon, xapw rivi Pind. O. Io (11). 115. dvatrdréw, to go up, go back, A. B. 397: to walk up and down, Malal. dv-amravSnros, ov, indefatigable, Clem. Al. 492. . dvaravAa, 7s, }, (dvamavw) repose, rest, invov kavamavday Tyayer Soph. Ph. 637; sar’ dvanavAas dinpiabat to be divided into reliefs, of workmen, Thue. 2. 75. 2. c. gen. rei, rest from a thing, kax@v Soph. El. 873, cf. Ph. 878; mévav Thuc, 2. 38; ris omovdns Plat. 106 Phil. 30 E. II. a resting-place, Eur. Hipp. 1137: . an inn, Lat. deversorium, Ar. Ran. 11 ee Legg. oe Cc; fies kara tiv d5év Ib. 625 B; eis dvamavAds éx waxdv (where there is a play upon the first sense) Ar, Ran. 185, cf. 195. dvaraupa, pott. dum-, aros, 76, a repose, rest, Hes. Th. 55; xandv Gpnavya pepipvav Theogn. 343. 2. a resting-place, Anth. Plan. 228; of a tomb, C. I. 4623. ' dvatravctpos, ov, of or for rest, Eust. 1260. 53, etc. Gvatravots, poét. dum, ews, , repose, rest, Mimnerm., 12. 2, Pind. N. 7. 76, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12, Xen.: esp. relaxation, recreation, Plat. Tim. 59 C, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 47. 2. c. gen. rei, rest from a thing, kaxoy Thue. 4. 20; wodéuov Xen. Hier. 2, 11. dvamravoréov, verb, Adj. one must pause, Greg. Naz. dvamraverriptos or —raurtptos, Ion, dpm-, ov, of or for resting, O@xot dum. seats to rest on, Hdt. 1. 181. II. as Subst. dvamavarnpioy, 76, a time of rest, of Ocot Ty vinta bddéaow, kadAdorov dv. Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 3: on the form, v. Lob. Soph. Aj. 704, p. 321. 2. a place of rest, Luc. Amor, 18. 3. the sound of trumpet for bed-time, opp. to 70 dvaxdnridv, Poll. 4. 86. Gvarravw, poét. and Ion. dpir-: (v. tatw). To make to cease, to stop or hinder from a thing, xetp@vos .., bs pa Te épyav dvOpmmous dvéravoev Il, 17. 550; dv, Td Tod mAdvou to give him rest from wandering, Soph. O. C. 1113; Tods Aeroupyodyras av. (sc. Tov dvada- parwv) to relieve them from .. , Dem. 1046. 21, cf. 1049. 2. 2. c. ace. only, to stop, put an end to, Bony Soph. Tr. 1262: to kill, Plut. 2. 110 E:—more commonly, ¢o rest, make to halt, dv. orparevpa Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 43 “ata pépos rods vavras ay, Id, Hell. 6. 2, 29; ‘TOV timmy dv. Aesch,, Fr. 192; o@pa Eur. Hipp. 1353; €tSwAov dy. ént Gyagay to lay it in a reposing posture, Ael. V. H. 12. 64, cf. N. A. 7. 29. 8. rarely intr. in sense of Med. to take rest, dvanavoyres év TO pepe Thuc. 4. 11; hovxiav exe nat dvémavey Xen. Hell. 5. 1, al. II. in Med. and Pass. to leave off or desist from a thing, amd vavpaxias dvameravpévoe Thuc. 7. 73; dvamen. rv elapopay to be relieved from .. , Isocr. 163 B; dvamavov kaxdyv take rest from. ., Cratin. Incert. 111. 2. absol. to take one’s rest, sleep, Lat. pernoctare, Hdt. 1. 12., 2. 95, al., Eur. Hipp. 212, Ar. Pl. 695, Lysias 130. 40, etc.; é¢ paxpas dy. ddd after a long journey, Plat. Criti. 106 A. b. of land, to lie fallow, Pind. N. 6. 20. ce. of the dead, fo rest from one's labours, kexpaxds dunaterat Theocr. 1. 17; dum. odv girly fuvds dddx@ C. 1. 1973. 5; cf. Call. Ep. 14. d. of soldiers, a stop, halt, rest, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 3, etc. e. to regain strength, Ib. 0; AEs _dvatrapAdfw, to boil or bubble up, Hesych. dvatreiOa, fut. melow:—to bring over, convince, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 52, al,:—Pass., Thuc. 1. 84. 2. in general simply ¢o persuade, move to do a thing, c. acc. pers. et inf, Hdt. 1. 124, 156, al., and Att.; foll. by a conj., dv. ds . . Id. 1. 123; also, dv. Ady@ Skws .., 1.375 ¢. dupl. acc., dv. rid 7 to persuade one of a thing, Ar. Nub. 77. 3. to seduce, mislead, rd Hat. 3. 148., 5. 66, Xen., etc. ; more fully, dv. xphuact, dupos, to bribe, Ar. Pax 622, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 35 xXpvotoy bi- Sods dvameiceas Snws .., Ar. Eq. 473:—Pass., dvaremeopévos, bribed, Id. Vesp. 101; cf. melOw I. 3. ° dvamewde, to be hungry again, Lync. ap. Ath. 109 E. avdmeipa, 4, a trial or proof made of a thing, Polyb. 26. 7, 8. in pl. exercises of soldiers, Id. 10. 20, 6. : dvarretpdopat, Dep., (v. metpdw) :—to try or attempt again, generally to make a trial, essay, Polyb. 26. 7,9: dvamepac0a vaiv to make trial of anew ship, prove her, Dem, 1229. 19. II. as a military and naval term, fo renew or continue their exercises, Hdt. 6. 12, Thuc. 7. , 12, 51. J PS post. dpa, (v. melpw):—to pierce through, jix on a spit, omdéyxva 8 dp’ dpmelpavres Il. 2. 426; iv dvameipa tas xixdas Ar. Ach. 1007; xpijs.. Tov ddeAdv dpmemappévoy (so Elmsl. for éum—) fixed on the spit, Ib. 796; émt rdv dBedicxov Arist. Mirab. 63. II. to impale, ént gbAov dv. Twa Hat. 4. 103: Pass., dwobavety dvarapels Id, 4.943 #..7dv 168° dvawap® Macho ap. Ath. 349 Cc. dvarreverhptos, a, ov, persuasive, xatvwats Ar. Nub. 875. dvamrepmdfopar, Dep. to count again, count over, sum over, Plat. Lys. 222 E: to think over, ponder over, Id. Legg. 724 B, Ath., etc. :—late writers commonly use the Act. in same sense, Lyc. 9, Anth, P. 11. 382, Heliod., etc. dvatréptra, poet. II. épm-: (v. méumw):—to send up, kéra0ev Aesch, Cho. 382, cf. Ar. Thesm. 585 ; SEs xpouvovs dv. sends forth .., Pind. P. 1. 48; x0dv ipa Puan’ dy. Ib. 9. 82; mavrota pipara Plat. Tim. 85 C; of anything strong-scented, Philostr. Heroic. p. 313 Boiss. :—Med, to send up from oneself, Xen. An, I. 1, 5. 2. to send up to higher ground, from the coast inland, esp. into Central Asia, dv. ds Baowéa Thuc. 2. 67, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 34, cf Isocr. 179 B (cf. dvaBaivw 11. 3, dvdfaats) ; to the metropolis, Polyb. 1. 7, 12, etc. 8, to trace up one’s pedigree, yévos els twa Diod. 4. 83. II, ¢o send back, Pind. I. 7 (6). 16. 2. to refer, Eus. Mart. Pal. 2.3. évarenrapévos, 7, ov, part. pf. pass. of dvamerdyvuju, Il.:—Ady. -vas, icitly, Plotin, 489 B. pe estar Pas aah Ay. part. pf. of dvaninrm, despondingly, Poll. 3. 123. avamioce, Att. —tTe, to cook again, Arist. H. A. 6. 10, 16. dvarreréwvipt. or Vw, Xen. An. 7. 1, 17 (cf. dvanirynus) ; dvarerdco Luc. Calumn. 21: fut.-rerdow, Att.—mwer® :—post.dpm-. To spread out, unfold, ava. 3 istia AevKd wéraccay, Il. 1. 480, etc.; dv. Bbarpuxov Eur. Hipp. 202; duaéracoy xdpiv én’ daoos shed grace over the eyes, Sapph. 62; pdos dunerdoas having shed light abroad, Eur. I. A. 34:— 4 . ? eat avaTavya — avarAacts. dvamerdoat ras midas to throw wide the gates, Hdt. 3. 146:—Pass., dvanenrapéva: cavides, Opa Il. 12. 122, Pind. N. 9. 4, cf. KArouds; also, BAépapa dvameravyvyra Xen. Mem. I. 4, 6; dddong dvamirva~ pévn a fox lying flat on its back to await the eagle’s swoop, Pind. I. 4. 80 (3. 79) :—the part. pf. pass. dvarenrapévos, 7, ov, is often a mere Adj. open, év meAdyei dv. vavpaxfoas Hat. 8. 60, 1; dv. oupara Xen, Mem, 2. 1, 22; olxia mpds peonuBplay dv. Lying open to the south, Id. Occ. 9, 4; dv. mpds 70 iis riv eisodoy Exovga, of a house, Plat. Rep. 514A; diara dy. in the open air, Plut. Per. 34; metaph., dv. mappyaia open, barefaced impudence, Plat. Phaedr. 240 E. dvatréreia, 7), expansion, Galen, 7. p. 5, Alex. Aphr. I. go. dvatreris, és, expanded, wide open, dpOadpot Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 1. 6; and read by Herm. in Aesch. Supp. 782, in form dpaerjs. dvarréropat, post, dpmérapar C. I. 6270: fut. -wrqcopar: aor. dver- Topny or dverrdyuny, in Trag. also dvémrny: (v. méropat). To fly up, fly away, iy .. dvanrijobe és tov obpavdv Hat. 4. 132, cf. 5. 55; chdrorra dvanrépevo. Antipho ap. Ath. 397 D; dymraca 5 woet xovis Aesch. Supp. 782; aidepia 3 dvérra Eur. Med. 440; dv’ bypdv dumrainy aidépa Id. Ion 796; dvaréropat 52) mpds “Odvpymoy Ar. Ay. 1372, cf. 35, Lys. 774; el .. mrqvds yevdpevos Gvdmroro Plat. Phaedo 109 E; «is roy obpavdy dvarrjoopa Id, Legg. go5 A, cf. Aeschin, 83. fin, :—metaph., durrapeva ppodda mavyra Keira Eur. Andr. 1219. 2. metaph. also, to be on the wing, weptxapi)s 3 dvewrdpav Soph. Aj. 693; dvénray péBy Id. Ant. 1307; cf. dvarrepdw I, 2, werewpiw I, Gvatrevots, ews, 7}, (dvamvvOdvoua) an inquiry, Charito 3. 4. dvatrepAacpévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. of dvapAdw, q. v. dvamnyalw, fut. dow, (myn) to make to gush up, Epiphan. naavers, to transfix, fix on a spit, KayS dvannyviact Ar. Eccl. 843. 2. to impale or crucify, rd émi rod EvAov Alex. Tapavr. 4 ; 70 o@pa id rpidv cravpdyv Plut. Artox. 17. dvarrnSdw, post. dym—: fut. -joopar Luc. Asin. 53: (v. midw) :—to leap up, start up, esp. in haste or fear, « Adxou dymndnoe Il. 11. 3795 é Tov Opévov Hat. 3.155; dvenhincay mavres én’ epyov jumped up from bed, Ar. Ay. 490, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 2; dv. mpds roy mammov to jump up on his knees, Ib. 1. 3, 9 :—to start up in a disorderly way, to speak, dv. év Su Cratin. Incert. 124, cf. Ar. Eccl. 428, Aeschin. Io. 31. 78. 29. 2. of water, to spring up, Arist. H. A. 8. 11, 2, al, II. to leap or spring back, from fear, Ar, Ran, 566; dvem- dyoev emt riv ‘Eoriay, for protection, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 52. dvamndnpa, 7d, a start up, an outburst, aiparos Eust. 680. 23. dvamnSnors, ews, 4, a leaping up, éx edivns Hipp. 303. 15. 2. dy, rijs xapbias a sudden throbbing of the heart, opp. to opvgis, Arist. de Resp. 20, 7. dvamnvifopat, Dep. to unwind, reel off, e.g. the threads of a silkworm’s cocoon, Arist. H, A. 5. 19, 11., 6. 14, 3. dvatmpta, 7), Jameness, mutilation, Cratin. WAodr. 9, Arist. Rhet. 2. 8, Io, al.; of the crocodile’s tongue, Id. P. A. 2. 17, 10. dvamnpéopat, Pass. to be maimed, Plat. Polit. 310 E, Arist. Probl, 32. 6. dvdamnpos, oy, maimed, mutilated, crippled, Hermipp. Kepkam. 1, Lys. 169. 26, Plat. Crito 53 A, etc.; yux? dv. mpds ddfOecav Id. Rep. 535 D; dvarnpa Ove Id. Alc. 2. 149 A; often in Arist. Adv. —pws, Zonar. GvaTribuw, to spring up, swell, grow, Theophr, C. P. 6. 4, I. of ground, to send forth water, Plut. Aemil. 14. dvamiete, fut. éow, to press back, Hipp. Art. 807. dvamlecpa, 76, a kind of trap-door on the stage, Poll. 4. 127, 132. dvamvcopds, od, 6, repression: pressure, mpos térov Hero Spir. 182 A. GvamlyarAdnpt, 3 sing. —mprdG Arist. Probl. 38. 8: fut, dvamAhow: (v- mipmAn). To fill up, Lat. explere, mi@ov Epigr. ap. Luc. Dips. 6 :— but mostly 2. metaph. to accomplish what is destined, as always in Hom., mérpoy dvamAnoavres having filled up the full measure of misery, Il. 11. 263; al xe Oavijs nal potpay dvardhops Bibro.o 4. 170; so, dvamAfjoat olroy, kad, dd-yea, xhdea, Hom.; so in Hat, 5. 4., 6. 12., 9. 87, Pind., etc, II. c. gen. rei, to fill full of a thing, nat fovruxév o “TrépBodos dinGv dvardhoe Ar. Ach. 847, cf. Nub. 1023, Plat. Phil. 42 A, Dem. 466. 1, etc. 2. often with a notion of defiling, infecting, ds mhetorous dvamdfjoat alzidv Plat. Apol. 32D; so in plop like Lat. tal (Liv. 4. 30), to be infected with disease, Thuc. 2. 51; dv. rhs TovTov [Tov awparos] dicews Plat. 3 cf. Ruhnk. Tim. s. v. dvdmews. pee) Passo Re Wei) dvaripmpnpt, to blow, swell up, Nic. Th. 179, in Pass.; cf. dvamphOw. Poin {ft : on Dy in like a sponge, Hipp. Vet. Med. 18:— ‘0 absorb again, Lat. resorbere, of suppurations whi head, 1d. ry Bos, of 817, PP’ ich do not come to a dvamumpacKkw, to sell again, mpabelans C. I. 2058 A. 53. dvamimrrw, poét. dpa: fut. mecodpa : (v. witrw) :—to fall back, Aesch. Ag. 1599, Eur. Cycl. 410: to lay oneself back, like rowers, Cratin. Incert, 8, Xen. Oec. 8, 8; dv, twria Plat. Phaedr. 254 B, cf. E. 2. to fall back, give ground, Thuc. 1. 70: hence to flag, lose heart, Lat. concidere animo, Dem. 411. 3; Tais orovdais (vulg. orovd-) dvamenra- névat, Lat. refrixisse studiis, Dion. H, 5. 53. 3. of a plan, ¢o be given up, dvanenrane rd Tis edd0v Dem. 567. 12. 4. dv. aw oixav to be banished from one’s house, Potta ap. Athenas, pro Christo 22. 5. to recline at table, like dvdesuat, Alex. Incert, 26, Com, ap. Mein. 4. p. 650, Luc. Asin. 23, N, T. avamircde, to cover over again with pitch, Geop. 6. 8, 3, dvarirvnpt, pott. for dvarerdvvupt, Pind. O, 6, 45. dvamaxnros, ov, = dvapumdaxnros, q. v. avarhiions, ews, 7, (dvamAdoow) a remodelling, Hipp. Offic, 748: an adjustment, lb, 746: hence, 2. Poll. 7, 12: Pass. in aor, 1 part., dva- new formation, caprav in Eccl. regeneration, ay oe ? , ‘ avaTA\acpna — avaTroAew. avatacpa, aros, 76, that which is remodelled, a model, ra dv. Tav cwparwy Diod, 2. 56. IL. a representation, imagination, Jiction, Strabo 530, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 354. avast 6s, 6,=dvdmdacts, dv, patalav edniduv the building of castles in the air, Plut. 2. 113 D, cf. Sext. Emp. M. 7. 223. dvaTrAdoow, Att.-rrw: fut. -rAdow [a]: (v. trAdoow) :—to form anew, restore, THs Aidods .. réyadp dy. Ar. Nub. 9953 to restore a broken nose, Hipp. 845 E:—Med., dvamAdcaa@ar oixiny to rebuild one’s house, Hdt. 8. 109. 2. to mould into a new shape, remodel, Lat. refingo, 7a pédn Tod matdds Plat, Alc, 1. 121 D; metaph., rois Ynpicuacw dv. [Adegavipoy] Demad. 179. 41; dv. radras [rds éraipas] Alex. “Icoor. SE 3. metaph., dv, diurAdow rhs GAnOeias nad to invent, imagine them, Philem. Incert. 71, cf. Polyb. 3. 94, 2; and so in Med., Anth. P. 9. 710. II. to plaster up, id rots dvvge xnpdy dva- memAacpévos Ar. Vesp. 108. avatrAactos, ov, that may be moulded, plastic, Galen. dvamrAarivopat, Pass. to be spread wide, Plut. ap. Eus. P. E. 84 D. avamAelw, Ep. for dvamrdéw, Nic. Th. 308. dvatrAéxw, fut. fw, to enwreath, entwine, Sppowt xépas Pind. O. 2.1353 dy, rds rpixas Poll. 2. 35: absol. in Med. to braid one’s hair, Luc. Navig. 3 2. metaph., dy, puO pdr, like dpaivey, Anth. P. 11. 64, cf. Christod. Ecphr. 113. 3. dvanemdeypévor closely engaged, Plut. Brut. 17. avatAecos, a, ov, Att. masc. and neut. dvdqAews, wy, but fem. dvamAéa Plat. Phaedo 83 D:—pl., nom. masc. and fem, dvdmAew Plat. Theaet. 196 E, Eubul, Sep. 1. 8, neut. dvdmdea Arist. de An, 2. 11, 6; acc. masc. dvdmAews Plat. Rep. 516 E: quite full of a thing, mrepa@y Aé- youat dvdmheov civar roy hépa Hat. 4. 31; dvdmdews Yxpuiov Ar. Eccl. 1072; oxérous dy. of dpPaApoé Plat. Rep. 516 E, etc. II, in- Jected (vy. dvanipmAnu I. 2), Tod chparos dvamdéa [1h Yuxh] with the body, Plat. Phaedo 83 D; aird 7d maddy pi) dv. capxay Id. Symp. 211 E; dy, éopev Tov ph nabapds draréyeoOau Id. Theaet. 196 E. dvamAevats, ews, 7, only metaph., a decay and crumbling away of the bone, Hipp. 157 E; cf. dvawAéw 111. dvamAéw, Ion. —tAdw, Ep. —mAelw (q. v.): fut. -Aevoopat: (vy. Téw). To sail upwards, to go up stream, orewomdy dvend€opev we sailed up the strait, Od. 12. 234, cf. Hdt. 2. 97., 4. 89 :—Pass., dvamAci- Tat x Oararrns 6 worapds Polyb. 2. 16, 10. 2. to put out to sea, és Tpoiny vhecow dvamAevoecOa Il. 11. 22, cf. Andoc. 10. 28, Dem. 299. 2. 8. to float up, rise to the surface, vavdryov dy. Arist. Probl. 233.5, I. 4. to overflow, Jacobs Ael. N. A. Io. 19. II. to sail the same way back again, sail back, Hdt. 1. 78, Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 36:—also of fish, to swim back, Hdt. 2. 93. 2. metaph. of food, to return from the stomach, for rumination, Ael, N..A. 2. . III. dddvres dvamdéovar the teeth fall out, Hipp. 1125 G, Nic. Th. 308; cf. dvdmAevors. 5 avatrhews, v. sub dvdmeos. dvarA70w, poet. for dvamivmAnm, in pres. and impf. (for évamAfow, dvérAnoa belong to dvamiprAnpu, Coraés Heliod. 2. p. 123, Bast Ep. Cr. p- 138), Q. Sm. 11. 312. 2. intr. to be full, Id. 13. 22. dvaTrAnppipéw, to overflow, Philostr. 809. dvatAnpptpa, to make overflow, dverAnupipe Pddacoay Q. Sm. 14.635. avamAnpow, to fill up a void, Plat. Tim. 81 B, cf. 78 D :—Pass. to be Jilled up, Arist. Cael. 3. 8, 1. 2. to make up, supply, et re é£édAuTov, dy. Plat. Symp. 188 E; tiv évdeay Arist. Pol. 6. 4,4; Tods .. dudp- ous dvamAnpot } Tod Aé-yer miOavdrns compensates them, Id. Fr. 108 :— Med., dé par’ dy. to fill their houses full, Eur. Hel. 906. 8. to fill up the numbers of a body, tiv Bovany, ras rages, etc., Plut., cf. Xen, Vect. 4,24; dv. Thy ovynyopiay to fill the place of advocate (left vacant by another), Plut. Crass. 3. 4. to pay in full, in Med., ws dve- TAnpwoaro Thy mpoika Dem. 817. 26. II. Pass. to be restored to its former size or state, dverdnpwOn 6 Hrwos, after an eclipse, Thuc. 2. 28 ; dvamAnpovupévns ris picews being in process of restoration, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 8, 2, cf. H. A. 5. 16, 6. dvatAnpwpa, aros, 76, a supplement, Arist. Mirab. 44. dvamAnpwparixés, h, ov, fit for filling up, expletive, Gramm. avarAnpwors, ews, 7), a filling up, means of filling up, Tis évdelas Arist. Eth. N. 3. 11, 3. 2. a satisfying, rijs émOuplas Id, Pol. 2. 7, 19: satisfaction of the wants and appetites, Id. Eth. N. 10, 3, 6. 3. restoration, Tis Kara tiv pow abrapxeias 1d. Pol. 1. 9, 6, cf. Plut. Demetr. 45. II. (from Pass.) a becoming full, ov flowing, of the Nile, Thales ap. Ath. 2. 87. dvamhnpwréov, Verb. Adj. one must fill up, supply, Plut, Cim. 2. dvarAnorikds, 7, dv, (dvariprAnm) fit for filling up, expletive, Arist. PeAas-35 2. II. infectious, Id. Probl. 25. 12. dvatrAokn, 7), (dvamAéxw) a braiding, xatrns Philostr. 240. TT, in Music, a combination of notes ascending in the scale, opp. to Kara- mAokn, Ptolem. Harm. 2. 12. évdtrAoos, contr. —tous, 6, (dvamAéw) a sailing up-stream, Hat. 2. 4 and 8; 6 dy, &« rijs Oaddrrns, of a canal from the sea to an inland har- bour, Plat. Criti. 115 D, cf. 117 E. 2. a putting out to sea, Polyb. I. 53, 13, ete. II. a sailing back, return, Theophr. H. P. 4. 7) 3. év-amAée, to unfold, open, rapaov dvatAwaoas Mosch, 2.60; Tas dipas Babr. 74. 3. avamdiors, ews, %, a washing or rinsing out, Arist. Insomn. 2, II. évamAwors, ews, 7, (dnAdw) an unfolding ; explanation, Erotian. dvathwrdte, to float up, rise to the surface, of eructation, Clem. Al. 187. dvatrAdw, Ion. for dvamAéa. évatvelw, poét. dymv-, Ep. for dvamvéw, Ap. Rh. 2. 737. dvdrveupa, poét. dpav-, aros, 76, a resting-place, Pind. N. 1. I. dvamvevors, ews, 7, (dvanvéw) recovery of breath, respite from, ddAtyy | 107 dé 7’ dvdmvevars moh€yo.o Il. 11. 80T., 16. 43. II. a drawing breath, inspiration, Plat. Tim, 92B; opp. to éemvevots, Arist. H.A.I.11, 7. avamvevorikés, 4, dv, of or for respiration, 5 dv. rémos the lungs, Arist. de Sens. 5, 31, Theophr. Sudor. 38; 7a pi) dy. [(Ga] Arist. de Spir. 2, 93; dv. dvvapus the power of breathing, M. Ant. 6. 15. dv-dtrvevoros, ov, poet. for dmvevoros, without drawing breath, breath- Jess, Hes. Th. 797, where Herm, (Opusc. 6. 16) Gy’ drvevoros, but cf. dmvev- oros I. IL. pass. capable of being breathed, 5 dnp Arist.Top. 5.5, 10. dvamvéw, Ep. (in Ap. Rh.) dpmvelw 2. 737, etc.: fut. -mvedoopar: aor. ~énvevaa: besides the common tenses (v. 7¥éw), we have three Homeric forms (as if from dymvdw), imper. aor. 2. dumvie (Gumvie in Q.Sm.), aor, I pass. dumvivOn, and aor. 2 with form of plqpf. dumviro. To breathe again, take breath, or} wat dpmvve Il, 22. 222, etc.: more commonly c, gen. to enjoy a respite, recover from, dvérvevoay kakéTnTos Il. 11. 382; ds xe. , dvanveiawor mévowo 15. 2353 THs vdcou Soph. Aj. 2743 so, dv. ée ris vaunyins Hdt. 8.12; é xapdrow C. I. 5408 ;— but, dvémvevoa é« oéGev by thy help I recovered, Soph. O, T. 1220:— c. part., dv. rerpdpevor Il. 16. 43; és Telxos GAévres 21. 534 :—absol. to revive, Xen. An. 4. I, 22, Dem. 293. 18; (in the same sense Hom. uses the pass, forms dymvuro Il. a2. 475, etc.; dumvivOn 5. 697. 14. 430). 2. mupeia dvanve? revive, burn up again, Theophr. H. P. 5. 9, 6. II, to draw breath, breathe, Pind. N. 8. 32, ete.; dv. navra kat tenve? Emped. 249 Sturz, cf. Plat. Phaedo 112 B, ete.; dv. muxvad Hipp. 671. 11. 2. dy. én ica to live for the same ends, Pind. Wages III. 40 breathe forth, send forth, c. acc. cogn., kanvov dynvevoa Pind. O. 8. 47; dvénvevoey aldva Eur. Fr. 798; mupds édas dunvetovres Ap. Rh. 3. 231; dv. ddxivOov to breathe hyacinth, Pherecr. rig 2; and absol. to exhale an odour, Theophr. Odor. 69; impers., 45d dvanved tOv gurdv Philostr. 663: metaph., dv. xpnopovs Id. 509. 2. of the vapour, dir? dv. pvyxoto Ap. Rh. 2.737. EY: Causal, dy, roy immoy (as we say) to breathe the horse, Heliod. 8. 14. dvarvon, post. dumv-, }, (dvanvéw) recovery of breath, revival, Pind. P. 3. 102, Plat. Phaedr. 251 E; pdxOov dumvod rest from toils, Pind. O. 8.95; dumvodv éoracay they recovered breath, took fresh courage, Id. P. Plat. Tim. 70 C; AapBavew Id. Phaedr. 251 E; dvamvony exec .. eiveiv has breath enough to say, Menand. Incert. 7. 6. II. a drawing breath, inspiration, breathing, At. Nub. 627, Plat., etc.; opp. to éemvon (expiratio), Plat. Tim. 78 E, 79 E, ef. Arist. de Resp. 21, 1; but it also means the act of breathing generally, including both eiamvon and éxmvon, Ib. 2, 3;—dpmvods éxew =dvanvéay, to breathe, live, Soph. Aj. 416; tiv dv. dwodafeiy tivos to strangle, Plut, Rom. 27; iwd tiv dy. in a breath, Polyb. 10. 47, 9. III. evaporation, Plat. Tim. 85 A: an exhalation, Theophr. H. P. 6. 2, 4. IV. a breathing organ, of the nose and mouth, Diod. 2.12, Luc. Nigrin, 32; hence, an air-hole, vent, Plut. Aemil. 14. dvamvoua, %),=foreg., Tim. Locr. ro1 D, Arist. Probl. 33. 8. ; dv-améBAnTOos, ov, not to be thrown away or lost, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 238. dv-amréypios, ov, not registered in the custom-house books, contra- band, Poll. 9. 31, cf. Bockh P. E. 2. 55; av. wéradAa unregistered mines, Hyperid. Euxen. 43; v. sub dypagos. dv-amrd5euxtos, ov, not proved, undemonstrated, Lycurg. 166, 18, Arist. Eth. N. 6. 11, 6. II. not requiring demonstration, of first prin- ciples, indemonstrable, Arist. An. Pr. 2. 1, 7. 2.5, 3, al. Adv. —rTaws, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 173; cf. duecos. dy-amrddextos, ov, not to be iri Schol, oe hen as 527. av-atr087} , ov, (amodnuéw) untravelled, Philo 2. 11. avamobifen, fut. tow . (rots) :—to make to step back, to call back and question, cross ine, éweipwray te Kal dvam. roy knpuxa Hat. 5. 92, 6; modAduis dverdiiCov Tov ypayparéa Aeschin. 81. 26. 2. oddaph GAA dvenddice Ewivrdy in no other passage did he correct him- self, retract what he before said, Hdt. 2. 116. II. intr. 4o step back, Pythag. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 300, Lxx (Sirac, 46. 4), Luc, Necyom. 73 eis rodmiow Hdn. 5.6; xvedov dy. to recur in a cycle, Hippodam. ap. Stob. 534. 43: cf. dvamoddm. dvamdd.ots, ews, }, a going back, Triclin, Soph, El. 142. ‘ évarrobicpos, 6, a going back, els povdda, opp. to mporodiopos éx povddos, Moderat. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1.18. II. acalling back, recall, LXXx. dvatrodtors, od, 6, one who drives back, Eust. 717. 16. F dv-amré5oros, ov, not given back, not returned, av. débats 4 duped Arist. Top. 4.4,11; iptov av. Bévra not to be repaid, C. I. (add.) 4278 &, cf. 43000. II. 7 dvandborov, = dvavranddorov, Schiif. Greg. p.48,958. dvarrodéw, = dvarodifw I, dy. én Thy povdda Plut. 2. 876 F. dv-aréSpacros, ov, unavoidable, not to be escaped, Arist. Mund, 7, 5, Plut. 2. 166 E. 2. act. unable to run away, A. B. 392. dvatrovéw, to make up, prepare a medicine, Hipp..577. 28. It. to make fresh, vamp up, 7a iparia Schol. Ar. Pl. 1064. dvarroinros, ov, made up, wrought up, x twos Ammon. 128. dvatroucthdw, fo variegate, Schol. Pind, O. 10, 113 Bickh. : dy-darowvos, ov, without ransom, Hom., but only once in neut. dvamo.- vov as Ady., Il. 1. 99. Cf. vfprowos. dv-arékptros, ov, unanswered, dv. dmooréAdew twa Polyb. 4. 34, 13 dv. dmwedOciv 23. 10, 13 :—Adv., dvamoxpirws elmév Antipho 122. 34- 2. act. not answering, Polyb. 8. 23, 6. dv-atréAaverros, ov, not to be enjoyed, Plut. 2, 829 D, 1104 E. 2. act. not enjoying, Hesych. évatrohepéw, fo renew the war, Strabo 833, C. I. 4040. Iv. 8; and dvatroAépnors, ews, 7), Strabo 511. . : avarohéw, post. dum, properly Zo turn up the ground again (rpis | aporpv rh ‘yav Hesych, s. v. dpamoaciv), cf. mod€w, dvawodicw: hence 4. 354; cf. Eur. I. T. g2, etc.; dv. diidvat, mapéxev Eur. Andr. 1138, _ 108 avaroAnots — dvapiaTyros. to go over again, to repeat, reconsider, Lat. volvere or versare [animo], Tavra tpis Terpax 7 Gumodeiv Pind. N. 7. 153; dts Tadd BovAa Kad tpls dvamoreiv p’ én Soph. Ph. 1238; bray... addis ravrny dvamodhon [4rqpnv] Plat. Phil. 34 B:—1 aor. pass. Joseph. A. J. 13. 5, 8 avaréAnots, ews, %}, repetition, Plotin. 393 B. GvamoAnréov, verb. Adj. one must recall to mind, M. Anton. 4. 32. dvaroAifw, = dvarodéw, of a field, Pind. P. 6. 2. dv-amohéynros, ov, inexcusable, Polyb. 12. 21, 10, etc. Gy-améXiitos, ov, not able to get loose, Arist. H. A. 8. 13, 15,15. Adv. —tws, Galen. Gvatropmh, 4, (dvanéumw) a sending up, e.g. to the metropolis, Polyb. 30. 9, Io. 2. dv. Onoavpay a digging up of treasures, Luc. Alex. 5. II. reference, reduction, émt yévos Sext. Emp. M. g. 274. dvamépmu.os, ov, sent back, Luc. Luct. 10, Dio C. 62. 2. 2. of trials, referred to another court, Luc. Eunuch, 12; rois xuptois Diod. 14. 96. vatropmos, 6, one that sends up or back, epith. of Hades, as sending up a shade of Darius, Aesch. Pers. 650. TOS, ov, unwashen, Ar. Eq. 357. IL. =sq., Cyrill. dv-amdmhivros, ov, (wAvv@) not to be ah Bee out, Eust. One 6: 89. ava evopat, Pass. to go up or forth, Dio C. 75. 9. dav-arr ‘0S, ov, inextinguishable, cited from Joseph. c. Apion. dv-aréaracros, ov, inseparable, Eccl. Ady. —Tws, Simplic. 2 av-arécritos, ov, unable to escape from, Savarov Epigr. Gr.526. 2. absol., deandrns dv. from whom there is no escape, Plut. 2. 166 E. dv-améorperros, ov, not to be turned away, Symm, V. T. dyv-amértevkros, ov, never failing of one's object, Arr. Epict. 1. 4, 11, etc.. dv-amérpnros, ov, not to be cut off or severed, Arr. Epict. 1. 1, 24. div-a, os, ov, not to be rubbed off, indelible, Cyrill. a ’ , ov, not scarred over, Galen, dvatropaive, to shew forth, dub. 1. Ael. N. A. 13. 6. dvampatis, ews, 7), the exaction of a debt or penalty, 5avefay Dion. H. 6. 1; Tov dpyupiou C. I. 1845. To. dvampacts, ews, 9, retail dealing, Poll. 7. ¥2. dvampdcow, Att. -mpdrre, contr. dpmp-: fut. —mpdgw:—to exact, Jevy, as money or debts, Thuc. 8. anf Lys. 146. 10; dv. 76 Te Kepa- Aaov Kat Tov réxov C. I. 1845. 58; dv. idayxeaw to exact the fulfil- ment of a promise, Thuc. 2. 95, cf. Ar. Av. 1621 :—Med. to exact for oneself, dixas Dion. H. 6.19: to gather, collect, réxous Plut. 2. 295 D. avarpecBevw, fo send up ambassadors (to. Rome), Joseph. A. J. 18. 2, 4. dvarrp7Ow, to blow up or forth, to let burst forth, daxpy’ avampnaas with tears bursting forth, ll. 9. 433, Od. 2. 81; v. sub mpnOw. I. 2. dvanpiots, ews, 7, a sawing off, Hipp. Epist. 1288. 34. Gvatraveros, ov, =dmrraio7os, Suid.; but v. Lob, Path. 1. 195. avamréov, verb. Adj. one must attach, rov Aéyov dé revos Strabo 54. dvamrepéw, fut. daw, properly to raise its feathers, of a bird: hence metaph. fo raise, set up, OpOtous é0cipas dverrépwxa Eur. Hel. 639. 2. metaph. to set on the wing, put on the tiptoe of expectation, excite vehe- mently, dvanrepwoas abriv otxeat Hdt. 2.115, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 255 C; pov tl. . dyyedp’ dverrépwxe Aavaldwv médwv; Eur. Or. 876; pdBos py dvamrepot Id. Supp. 89; dv. Teva xpynorois Adyos Ar. Av. 1449, cf. mrepim :—Pass. to be in a state of eager expectation or excitement, dve- mrepis6ns Aesch. Cho. 292 ; dv. yuxny Cratin. Incert. 166 ; dverrépw- pat kAdoy Ar. Av. 433; averrepwmpévay Tov Aaxedaipoviov Xen. Hell. 3.4,23 dverrepmpévos Oeacba Id. Symp. 9,5; dvamrepwbels ind Two, ws.., being irritated by the remark of some, that .., Id. Hell. 3. 1, 14:—cf. dvaméropat 2, werewpt(w Il. II. to furnish with new wings, make light and active again, Ar. Lys. 669 :—Pass. to get new wings, Plat. Phaedr. 249 D. avamrepvyilw, to raise the wings and fly away, Ael. H. A. 4. 30. dvarreptocopat, Pass. to be furnished with wings, Schol. Ar. Eq. “SRT. II. metaph., like dvawrepdopa:, Eust. Opusc. 243. 1. vaetrrns, ov, 6, (avdmrw 11) a stirrer up, agitator, Greg. Naz. dvarrnous, ews, , upward flight, Philes de Anim. dvatrroéw, post. , to scare exceedingly, Mosch. 2.23, Opp.,etc.:— Pass. to be scared, Plut. Pelop. 16; to be in great excitement, kd. 2.261 A, etc. dvamros, ov, (dv-, dropat) not to be touched, impalpable, Arist. de An. 2. 11, Ig. II. dvamros, ov, (avamrw) fastened on, papos Eust. 7 . 15. 2. kindled, Nonn. Jo. 18. v. ¥8. ul ov, that may be opened, Arist. P. A. 4. 7, 3- _dvdarrvbis, ews, 4, an unfolding, opening, Tod aréparos Arist. P. A. B01; 13: 2. an unfolding, explanation, like dvdmAwots, Id. Rhet. Al. 26, 5, cf. Plut. 2. 382 D. , avatrriicts, ews, 4, (4varriw) expectoration, Galen. avarriooa, fut. —rrvgw: aor. pass. dverrtxOnv Hipp. 57. 16, but -enriyny 558.27: (v.mrvoow). To unfold the rolls on which books were written, and so, ‘like Lat. evolvere, to unrol, open for reading, ay. 7) BiBdlov Hat. 1. 125, ef. 48; deArav dvamrdccoyu yijpuy Eur. Fr. 370:—also, dv. mUAas, Kiros, to undo, open, Bur. I. T. 1286, Ion 39; xAapvba Plut. Demetr. 42; even xefAos, Opp. H. 3. 2473 dvamrigas xépas with arms outspread, Eur. Hipp. 1190:—Pass. to be unfolded, opened, Arist. P. A. 3. 3, 11, al. 2. to unfold, disclose, reveal, Lat. explicare, way dv. md@os Aesch. Pers. 254, 294; mév7' dvamriace xpévos Soph. Fr. 284; dv. mpds pas Id. El. 639, cf. Eur. H. F. 1256; ppéva mpés ra Id, Tro. 657; xijp Mosch. 4. 51. II. as military term, Thy pddayya advan. to fold back the phalanx, i.e. deepen it by countermarching from front to rear, the French replier, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 33 but conversely, 7d xépas dvamr. to open out the wing, i.e, extend the line by countermarching from rear to front, the Fr. déployer, Lat. explicare (Virg. G. 2. 280), Xen. An. 1.10, g (ubi v. Kriiger), Plut. Pelop. 23. piel ee H, =dvamrugis, id ., aidépos dummuxai oh wide expanse of y heaven, Eur. Ion 1445; but in Soph. Fr. 655, vuxrds re myyas ovpavod 7’ dvamruxas the sources of night and the opening out of heaven, i.e. the West and East; jAlov dvarrvyat the sun’s unclouded orb, Eur. Hipp. 601:. in Electr. 868 dymvoat is the prob. reading. —Cf. wruxq, mepurruxg. évarriixos, ov, =dvanruetos, Arist. H. A. 4. 4, 4. * Gvamrvw, fut, vow: (v. mdm) :—to spit up or out, aiua Hipp. Aph. 1253; oiador Polyb. 12. 13, 11: absol, to spit and sputter, névros és > lovdas dvémrice Emped. 357 (al. dwenr—-); pudaca xnkis .. erupe kavérrie Soph. Ant. 1009; énpd 8 dvamrver [0] Nic. Al. 211. : dy-Garra, fut. Yo :—to bind or make fast on or to, Hom. (only in Od.), é« 8 abrod [iarod] welpar’ dvqrrov they made Jfast the ropes to the mast, Od, 12. 179, cf. 51, 162; mpupvyor avayar 9. 1373 © dat., yal Ap. Rh. 2. 177; dy. ri mpés 7t Eur. H. F. 1011; te eis re Arist. Metaph. 12. 4, 3:—Med., & 7009 dvapopecba mpupvarny KéAwv to him will we moor our bark, i.e, he shall be our protector, Eur. Med. 770, etc. ; Bcoior KAdos dvayacba to form a close connexion with.., Id. Tro. 845; xdperas eis Twa dv. to confer favours on.., Id. Phoen. 569 ;— but also to fasten to oneself, take in tow, carry off, vatv Diod. 13. 19, Plut. Camill. 8; 7d. xpéros Philo. 1. 474 :—Pass. to be fastened or fasten oneself on to, cling to, c. gen., e. g. TeTAaW Eur. H. F.629 ; dui reve Ib. 1038; dvApOat ru to have 4 thing fastened on one, like Horace’s suspenst loculos, Ib. 549 ; émotodjy éx rév daxrdAaw dy. Dinarch. 94.41. 2. to hang up in a temple, offer up, like dvariOnye, ToKAG 8 avApav dydéApara Od. 3. 274, cf. Arist. Fr. 532, Lye. 853, Tryph. 256. 3. metaph. fo fasten upon, attach to, p@pov dvawat Od, 2.86; alpa dy. rivt a charge of bloodshed, Eur. Andr. 1197, cf. Pseudo-Phocyl. 65, etc.; Khde GvArral ru Ap. Rh. 2.245: to ascribe or refer to, rods Adyous «is dpiOyors dy. Arist. Metaph. 12. 4, 3; apxnv, airiay dy, eis Twa Plut. Lycurg. 6, ete.; xapw dv. twi to ascribe a favour to him, Id, Anton. 40; but, viv xdpuv rivds dy. eis Twa to refer one’s gratitude to another, Id. Brut. 6, II. to light up, light, kindle, Abxva Hat. 2. 1333 mip Eur. Or. 1137; pas Plat. Tim. 39 B; also, rupt dv. 5dyovs Eur. Or. 1594:—metaph., védos olyaryis ws Tax’ dvdyer Id. Med, 107; dva- peevros rod Shpou v. 1. Aeschin, 51. 42. 2. intr. to be lighted up, Arist. Mirab, 115. dvdarrwors, ews, 4, (dvaninrw) a falling back; metaph. a sinking of courage, Eust. 1400. 8. dvarruvOdvopat, fut. -revcopar Dem.:—to inguire closely into, tas marpas abrav dveridero Hat. 6. 128; dvervvOdvero Tov ToLjoavTa Id. 8. 90; dvanv0dpeba rovade, tives more, Kal Wé0er Epodov Ar. Av. 403. 2. to learn by inquiry, dvamvvOavdpevos ebpioxw Hdt. 5. 575 dy. radra mparrépeva Xen. An. 5.7, 1; dv. wept Twos Plat. Hipp. Mi. 363 B; dy. ri twos to ask of a person, learn from him, Ar. Pax 693. dvatriipéw, to set on fire, Arist. Mund. 4, 19; avauptfw, Jo. Chrys. avarrupoetw, to make fiery or glaring, Baphy Poll. 1. 49. dvdaruoros, ov, inquired into, well-known, notorious, Od. 11. 274, Hdt. 6. 64, 66, etc. Gvanirife, to spit up, spout up, Hero Spir. p. 181: hence évamutiap.és, 6, Id. Autom. p. 247. dvatrwhéw, to sell again, Poll. 7. 12; cf. dum@Anua. avarrapate, (m@pa) to lift up the cover, Hero Spir. p. 150. avérwnis, v. sub dumwris: Adj. dvamwriKds, 4, dv, Eust. 1719. 44- avap-: when dvd is compd. with words beginning with p, the p is usually doubled, as in dvappat(w, etc., though in Poets and Ion. Greek it is sometimes single, as in sq. dvapaGifopat, Ion. and post. for évappatCopat. ava, dopat, Dep. to recall a curse, Callisth. ap. Suid., Poll. 5. 130. dv-apBiAos, ov, without shoes, unshod, Eur. 534. 7- dvapyipla, 7), a not having received money, Byz. dv-dpyipos, ov, without silver: without money, Lys. Fr. 19, Plat. Legg. 679 B. II. of things, unbought by silver, Paul, Sil.:—Adv. —pws, =< 2. incorruptible by money, Poll. 6. 191. dv-dpdeuros, ov, unwatered, dry, Cyrill. dvap0pia, %}, want of vigour, Arist. Probl. 10. 36, I. dv-ap8pos, ov, without joints, not articulated, Plat. Tim. 75 A, Arist. H. A. 7. 3, 6, al. 2. without strength, nerveless, Soph. Tr. 1103, Eur. Or. 228. 3. without visible joints, like fat men, Hipp. Aér- 292. II. of sound, inarticulate, ddai Diod. 3. 17; dAadaypds Plut. Mar. 63; govy Id. 2. 613 E; p0éypara C. I. 4741 :—Adv. —pos, confusedly, Plut. 2. 611 B. IIL. without the article, Gramm. dv-tipOéopar, Med. to reckon up, enumerate, Dem. 346. 20. II. to reconsider, Plat. Ax. 372 A.—The Act. is cited from Dio C. dv-ipiOpnros, ov, not to be counted, countless, Pind. O. 7. 45, Hdt. 1. 126., 7. 190, 211, al., and Att.: of time, immeasurable, Soph. Aj. 646. 2. unregarded, Eur. lon 837, Hel. 1679. dvaptOpros, ov, = dvdpatos ;—at least Hesych. has dvapiOpu0v~ éxOpdv, opp-to evaplOmia* pira, cuvhOn:—cf.evnpiO jos, and v. Bentl. Call. Fr. 127. dv-dprOp.os [i], post. avippos, ov, without number, countless, number- less, Sappho 72, Trag. (cf. yéAacpa) ; mAHO0s dvdpcOpor Aesch. Pers. 40: Cc. gen., dvdpiOyos We Ophvev without count or measure in lamenta- tions, Soph. El. 232; pnvav dvnpOpos (as Herm. for prAwv) without count of months, Id. Aj. 60453 dv médus dvdpiOpyos bdAAvTat by [the loss of] countless hosts of them.., Id. O. T. 179; but, xpévov. . HeEpay dyvipiOpov simply for #pépas dynpiOpous, Id. Tr. 246.—On the form, vy. Lob. Phryn. 711. [4vapt@nos occurs in Aesch. Pers. 40 (lyt.) ; dvapY@yos in Eur. Bacch. 1 335 (iamb:). Soph. has dvapiOyos in lyr., O. T. 167, 179, and prob. in El. 232. Aesch. and Soph. also use ayv- plO pos inlyr.: Theoer. has dvGpeOpos in arsi, 15.45, but dvaipiOpos 16.90.] avaporew, to take no breakfast, Hipp. Acut. 388. avaplornros, ov, not having breakfasted, Eupol. Barr. 2, Ar. Fr. 391, etc. > 7 , avapirtia — avapTaw. dvapioria, 7}, warm of breakfast, Hipp. 371. 38, in pl.; and so prob. in 379- 17, where dvapiornots is read. avapioros, ov, =dvapiarntos, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12, Xen. An. 1. 10, 19, ete, ; v. sub dxparioros. ee [£], ov, 6, =vnpetrns, Ibyc. 34, Epich. 23 Ahr.; cf, vnpirorpdos. dvapixaopar, v. dvappixdopat, &y-apkros, ov, (dpxw) not governed or subject, Thuc. 5.99: not submit- ting to be governed, Bios Aesch. Eum. 596 (where Wieseler metri grat. dvapxeros, on analogy of daevxeros), Soph. Fr. 28. dv-Gppevos, ov, (dpa) unequipped, Anth. P. 11. 29. dy-appddios, ov, unfit, Zosim. Adv. -iws, A. B. 363. dy-appos, ov, not fitting, dyxor Sext. Emp. M. to. 318, etc. dvappoortw, to be dvappooros, not to fit or suit, rwi or mpés tT Plat. Rep. 462 A, Soph. 253 A: of musical instruments, ¢o be out of tune, not in harmony, Heind. Plat. Gorg. 482 B. dvappooria, %, discord, of musical sounds, opp. to dppovia, Plat. Phaedo 93 C, E, al. dv-Gppooros, ov, unsuitable, incongruous, disproportionate, Hat. 3. 80, Xen., etc. :—of sound, owt of tune, unharmonised, Id. Phaedo93 C, Symp. 206 C, Tim. 80 A; 7d dv., opp. to 70 eddppoorov, Theaet. 178 D :—Adv. —ros, Plat. Rep. 590 B. II. of persons, impertinent, absurd, Lat. ineptus, Ar. Nub, 908. 2. unjitted, unprepared, mpds rt Thuc. 7. 67. pene 38 v. sub dvapp-. avapmay5nv, Adv. snatching up violently, Ap. Rh. 4. 579, 1232. dvapTiy, }, re-capture, arpdreup’ dOpotcas eis éuds dvapmaryds Eur. Hel. 50. dvaprdfw: fut. dow (infr. 11), and dfw, more often in med. form —doopat, v. infr, 11: aor. —jpraca and aga, in Hom. as suits the metre: (v. dprdtw). To snatch up, ava 8 fprace MladdAds *AOjvn (sc. 7d €yxos) Il. 22. 276; so Pind. P. 4. 60, and Att.; dv. 7d Orda Xen, An. 7-1, 15: of the sun causing the earth’s moisture to evaporate, Hipp. Aér. 285. II. to snatch away, carry off, bre wv . . dvaprace PoiBos ll. 9. 564; Hf pw. .Oelw dvapmdgas Avkins tv mio dhpw 16. 4373 pw dvaprdégaca OveAXa Od. 4. 515, cf. 5. 419; of slave-dealers, GAG pv’ dvipragay Tapio carried me off, kidnapped me, 15. 4273 so in Diod., etc.; dvqpmacéy more. . Képadoy és Beods “Ews Eur. Hipp. 454; dy. rois évvéty, of an eagle, Ar. Vesp. 17, cf. Epicr. Av7tA. 1. 10: —Pass., ppovdos dvapracdels Soph. El. 848: in Prose also, to be carried off by force, dragged before a magistrate, carried off to prison, Lat. rapi in jus, de pe dvnprdc8a Dem. 554. 1, cf. 136. I1., 550. 203 Vv. Buttm. Dem. Mid. in Ind. 2. in good sense, to rescue, Plut. Pyrrh. 16. III. to take by storm, to plunder, ravage, od .. dvapraces Sépous; Eur. Ion 1303; so of persons, dvapragdépevos rods baxéas to take them by storm or at once, Hat. 8. 28., 9. 59 :—Pass., dvnpmacra néXs Eur. Phoen. 1079, Hel. 751, Dem. 123. 10, Aeschin. 72.30. IV. to carry off, steal, moAAOds Kal TOAAA Xphyara Exopey avnprakdrtes Xen. An. I. 3, 14; tpla rédavra dynpraxact Dem, 822. 27 :—also of regraters, to buy up unfairly, dvapw. otrov Lys. 165. 30. avapratavpos, f. 1. for dpndgavdpos, q. v. dvaptracrés, dy, also 7, dv Eur. Hec. 206: (dvapné(w):—snatched up, carried off, dv. yvyvecOat to be carried off, Eur. |. c., Plat. Phaedr. 229 C. 2. carried up the country, i.e. into Central Asia, dy. ylyvecOa mpds Bacthéa Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 33: Vv. dvéoragros. II. of things, dv, moveiv Tov Bioy to give up his substance as plunder, Polyb. g. 26, 7, cf. Hda. 7. 3. dvappaitw, to recover from a bad illness, Poll. 3. 108, Hesych. dvappaive, to send gushing forth, mérpa xpovydy dy. Arist. Mirab. 114. dvappdmr, fut. yw, to patch on or to, Galen. 6. p. 21. 23. avappiy, 7, a sewing up, Paul. Aeg.; Adj., dvappadikos, 7, dv, fit Sor sewing, Id. Svappaubt to begin singing, Luc. Jup. Trag. 14. dvappéyxw, to snore aloud, Eumath. p. 74. dvappétra, to fly up, of scales, Theol. Arithm. p. 29. dvappéw, fut. -pevooua, to flow back or up hill, Plat. Tim. 78 D. é&vapphyvipe or tw: fut. —pitw: (v. piryvupe):—to break up, wh of tmepe yaiay dvappygee Mocedawy Il. 20.63; dv. atAaxas Hat. 2. 14; dy. rapov to dig a grave, Eur. Tro. 1153. 2. to break through, break open, retxos dvappnéas Il. 7. 461; okay pvxovs Eur. Hec. 1040; irévopoy Polyb. 5. 71,93 Secpwrnpia Plut., etc. :—Pass., vas dvappiy- vurac TH mapegetpeciay has it broken through, Thuc. 7. 34- 3. to tear open a carcase, of lions, Il. 18. 582; of hounds, Xen. Cyn. 7,93 of Ajax, dixa dveppyyvu was cleaving them asunder, Soph. Aj. 236. IT. to make to break forth, Xéyov Pind. Fr. 172; én Ar. Eq. 626; vetkos Theocr. 22. 172; dv. wéAw to make it break out, excite greatly, Plut. Flamin. 10, Mar. 353 cf. pfryvups:—Pass. to burst forth, break, of sores, Hipp. Fract. 759; of floods, Arist. Meteor. 2. 8, 35; of volcanos, Id. Mirab. 154; metaph. of persons, dvappiyvucbae mpos épyny, eis ToApar Plut. Brut. 18, Cic. 19: so also, III. intr. ¢o break or burst forth, débana ph. . dvapphée xara Soph. O. T. 1075: esp. in pf. part, dvepparyws, of the mouth of carnivorous animals, with a wide opening, orépa éxew dveppoyds Arist. H. A. 2. 7, 1,P.A. 4.13, 223 also of the animals themselves, 7d xapyapddovra mavra dvepporyéra Ib. 3. t, 12, cf. 13: cf. Afyvupe C.—A pres. dvapphrre in Diod. 17. 58. dvappnOfjvat, aor. inf. pass. of dveumeiy, q. Vv. avappypa, aos, 7d,.a proclamation, Lat. edictum, A. B. 23. “i dvdppntts, ews, 4, (dvapphyvupe) a breaking up, breakage, veoy Plut. Anton. 66, in pl.: tay aiparwy 4 dv. hemorrhage, Hipp. gt D. dvappyots, ews, , a public proclamation, % dv. ToD arepavou Aeschin. 58. 20, Dem, 244. 21; cf. dvaryopedm, dvetmoy. — dvdppivov, 7d, a pungent herb, xasturtium, Arist. Probl. 20. 22. 109 dvapptrife, to re-kindle, 7d Oepydy Arist. Fr. 224, cf. Dion. H. 1. 593 metaph., ardouw Id. 7. 15:—to fan, Antiph. Srpar. 2. 16. dvappiar, also - pes which form of the pres. is found in Od. 13. 78, Hdt. 7. 50, Thuc. 4. 95, etc.: (v. pimrw). To throw up, dv. dra ™5@ to throw up the sea with the oar, i.e, row with might and main, Od. 7. 328; also without 773@, of 8 GAa (vulg. dua) waves dvé pupay 10. 130; of a boar ¢ossing a dog, Xen. Cyn. 10, 9; dv. rhv ae of the bison, Arist. H. A. 9.45, 5; dv. inép tiv xepadhy Plut. Aemil. 20. II. dy. xivévvoy, a phrase from the game of dice, to stand the hazard of a thing, run a risk, Hdt. 7. 50, Thuc. 4. 85, 95, v. Elmsl, Heracl. 149; wept or brép twos Plut, Nic, 11,Dem. 20; Bd peas paxns Tov mept Ths marpidos KéBov dy. Plut. Brut. 40; but «(vSuvoy came to be omitted, as és Gav 1d bmapxov~ dvappinray to throw for one's all, stake one’s all, Thuc. 5. 103; and in late Prose another acc. was added, dy. waxny to hazard or risk a battle, Plut. Caes. 40, etc.; also, 7d may mpos éva xivduvoy dy. Id. Arat. 5 :—Pass., dveppipOw KvBos, jacta sit alea, Menand. ’App. 1, cf. Ar. Fr. 545, Plut. Caes. 32:—v. pirra 6, mapappinra 1, pupoxiviuvos. III. to set in motion, stir up, ordow Dion. H, to. 17. dvapptxdopat, impf. dveppixepny Ar. Pax 70, Aristaen. 1. 20: fut. ~hoopuat Poll. 5.82: aor. dveppixnoduny Dio C. 43. 21:—in Suid. and E. M. the augm. tenses are written dvnpp-, which would indeed be the regular form, since the simple is dpptxaopac, Hipponax 97, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 14; v. Dind. Schol. Ar. 1. c.:—it is sometimes spelt with a single p, A. B. 19, and Mss. of Arist. l.c. To clamber up with the hands and feet, scramble up, dvapp. @amep of miOnxor én’ dxpa 7a bévdpa Hellenic. 178; dy. eis odpaydy |. c.; so also in late Prose, as Philostr. 853, Ael. N. A. 7.24., 10. 29, Aristaen. 1. 3, Liban., etc. ; rarely c. acc., Tovs dvaBacpods Tots yévacw dy. Dio C. 1. c.; tov Totxov Aristaen. I. 20:—the word ridiculed as obsolete by Luc. Lexiph. 8. (The deriv. is quite uncertain.) dvapplynors [7], ews, %, a clambering up, ént rods otous Arist. Fr. 73. dvappufis, ews, 9, a throwing up, merpOr, of a volcano, Plut, 2. 398 E, cf. Ib. 951 C. dvappobidtw, to dash up, of the sea, Eupol. Incert. 32. avdppo.a, 1), backflow, reflux, Arist. Mirab. 130, 4, Plut., etc. :—also dvappon, Eust. 992. 57. dvapporBSéw, post. dvaporBSéw, to swallow back, suck down again, XdpuBiis dvappuBber pédray HSwp Od. 12. 104; pls 8 dvaporBbee Ib. 105, cf, 236, Soph. Fr. 390. dvappoiBSnors, ews, 4, a gulping down again, Strabo 75. ‘ avappoiléw, to rush up, rush back, Plut. 2. 979 D. II. to Aurtle high in air, of arrows, Nonn. D. 29. 289. avappotia, 7, motion upwards, Hipp. 47. 13. dvdppotos, ov, tilted up, like one side of a balance, Hipp. Mochl. 860. II. recoiling, Galen, 8, p. 602, 623. dvéppous, ov, 6, an upward flow, opp. to Kkardppovs, Tod aiparos Hipp. 881 H:—els dy. against stream, metaph, in Eust. Opusc. 276. 43, cf. 100. 14. DS apneibinns or becannaitbee, Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 2, Plut. 2. 894 B, Luc. dvappddyots, ews, 7), =dvappolBdnots, Eumath. p. 170. dvappoxQéw, fo retire with a roar, of waves, Orph. Arg. 706. dvappu@pilw, to reduce to order, Philostr. 74. dvappijpa, 76, a sacrifice, Schol. Plat. Tim. 21 B; dvapupa, A. B. 417. dvappiots, ews, 7, a rescuing, Phot. 2. name of the second day of the festival ’Amarodvpia, Ar. Pax 890, ubi v. Schol., cf. A.B. 417. dvapptw, (pvw, épiw) to draw the victim’s head ‘back so as to cut the throat, like Homer’s aveptw, to sacrifice, Eupol. Incert. 136. a Med. to draw back, rescue, puxiv av. rabav from .., Hipp. Epist. 1288. 51; dv. §rray to repair a defeat, Dion. H. 5. 46 :—Pass., dveppic@naav Malal. p. 461. ‘ dvappowupt, aor. dvéppaca, to strengthen afresh, Plut. 2.694 D, etc. : —Pass. to regain strength, dvappwodévres Thuc. 7. 46, Plut., etc. 2. intr. in aor. act., voonoas dvéppwoe Plut. Pomp. 57, cf. 2. 182 B. dvappdopat, Dep. fo rusk back, dvappwcac@at dnioow Orph. Arg. 1263. 2. part. act. dvappwov, driving back, Ib. 1209. dvappwors, ews, }, recovery, vicov Hesych. s.v. dvagrarhpia. dvapovos, ov, also a, ov Soph. Tr. 642: (dpw, dpatos):—not fitting, incongruous; hence, I. of persons, hostile, unpropitious, impla- cable, Svopevées kat dvdporo Il. 24. 365, Od. 14. 85; bo’ dvdporoe dvdpes €5njoavr’ ém xépoov Od. 10, 459., II. 401, etc.; also in Trag., 00" dvaparos (vulg. #AGes), of Apollo, Aesch. Ag. 511; dvdapocot enemies, Soph. Tr. 853; so, dv. eavaxd, opp. to Oeia podaa Ib. 642. IT. of events, untoward, strange, monstrous, av. mpiyypwara merovOévat Hat. 1. 114, cf. 9. 37; obdey dy. mpiryya ovvevelxOn 3. I0., 5. 89, 90; Seuwdv Te Kal dv. émoéero [7d mpiyypa] 9. 110.—Ep. and lon. word, used two or three times in Trag. dy-aptdw, to hang to or upon, Aaipov dv. weddOpw Ap. Rh. 3. 789: to hang up, éavrdy Plut. 2.841 A; 7d Cv Ib. 314 A:—but mostly, 2. metaph. to attach to, make dependent upon, Shuw .. whre way dvapri- ons xpdros Eur. Fr. 628; dv. éavrdy eis Sfpov Dem. 1480. 5; és Ocods dy. tt to leave it depending upon them, Eur. Phoen, 705. 3. to heep in suspense, Alciphro 1. 22. II. Pass. to be hung up, wapadely- para dvnprnpuévous as examples, Plat. Gorg. 525 C. 2. metaph. to hang or depend upon, é« Twos Plat. Ion 533 E; éAmiow & ednldav dynprnpévous clinging to one hope after another, Dem. 346. 27:— dynprjcba els . . to be referred or referable to.., 7a dua THHATA « « els Gedy dvnprnpéva Tipwpdy Plat. Legg. 729 E; 7a GAda wévra eis Thy exe dv. Id. Meno 88 E; &rw mavra els éaurdy dviprnta: who has ¢ cverything dependent on himself, Id, Menex, 247 E; dvnprnpévoe rais 110 bpeow mpbs tiva hanging on one with their eyes, Plut. Oth, 3; rats émbupias eis tt Id. 2. 989 D; dvnprnuévor rats yuxais in sepbins or excitement, Diod. Exc. 2. pp. 593, 628. III. Med., also with pf. pass., =Act., Dion. H. 11. 46:—hence, to attach to oneself, make depen- dent upon one, rw Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 1; also to subdue, Ib. 1. 1, 5. Gvapréopat, Ion. Verb, only used in pf. pass. (cf. dpréopar), to be ready, prepared to do, c. inf., pore ev xpnora épya mode Hat. 1. wee Tid kak@s 6.88 ; dvaprnuat én’ abrods orpa- dvapryois, ews, 1}, a suspension, Theophr. Fr. 7. 10. Gvaprios, ov, uneven, odd, opp. to dprios, Plat. Phaedo 104 E, al. 2, at odds with one, hostile, Plut. 2. 1030 A. Gvaprtiros, ov, unprepared, unseasoned, of food, Diogenian, 2.12; dy. Bios Ath. 511 D. » hpos, 6, a bucket, Hesych. Gvaptre [i], to draw as from a well, Plut. 2. 942 E:—metaph., dv. OpidpBous Cratin. Avdacx. 1, ubi v. Meineke, dy-apxdilw, to make old again, Anth. P. 7. 707. dvdpxeros, v. sub dvapxros. dvapxia, 4, (dvapxos) lack of a leader, dvapxins tovens since there was 70 , Hdt. 9. 23; ods épeir’ dv. Aesch.Supp.go6. = II. the state of a people without lawful government, lawlessness, anarchy, 5npd0pous dvapyxia Aesch, Ag. 883, cf. Thuc. 6.72; dv. at dvopla, dy. xai dowria Plat. Rep. 575 A, 560E; dv. nat dragia Arist. Pol. 5. 3, 5; dy, BovAwy Kat -yuvauedy their independence, Ib. 6. 4, 20. III. at Athens this name was given to the year of the thirty tyrants (B. 0. 404), during which there was no archon, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, I, cf. Wolf. Dem. Proleg. ad Lept. p. cxxviii. dvapxos, ov, (dpxt) without head or chief, Il. 2. 703; vavTindv o7, tevp’ dy. Eur. I. A. gt 4, cf. Hec. 607; dv. (Ga, opp. to Ta bp’ Hyepiva évra, Arist. H. A. 1. 1, 25 :—rd dv. =dvapxia, Aesch. Eum. 696. 2. éros dv. a year without any regular magistrates, Inscr. Teia in C. I. 3064. II. act. holding no office or magistracy, prob. }. Arr. Epict. 4. 6, 3. 2. without beginning, Parmenid.-83, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 312, Clem. Al. 638, etc., cf. Suicer. dvactiAetw, to shake up, stir up, Luc. Astr. 29, etc. Gvacdtipov, 74, a mine that is re-opened and worked, after having been closed, Bockh C. I. 162. 1. 289. , to quench, damp, Spyas, susp. in Plut. 2. 917 D. dvaceipdlw, to draw back with a rein, Ap. Rh. 1. 391: metaph. ¢o hold in check, pAdya Ar. Fr. 470; Thy opegw Anth, P. 9. 687 :—verb. Adj. -aeréov, Byz. 2. to draw off the right road, Eur. Hipp. 237, i v. Valck. a i vacepacpds, ov, 6, a drawing back of the reins, Nicet. Ann. dvacerot-pahdos, ov, phallum agitans, v. Bgk. Hippon. 99. avaceopa, aros, 76, (avaceiw) a shaking up and down, esp. for the purpose of threatening, dv. dwAwy Dion. H. 14.15. Also dvacevop.ds, 6, threatening gestures, Id, 6. 62; and évaceors, , Byz. dvacelw, post. dvaccetw: Ion. impf. dvagceiacxe, h, Hom. Ap. 403: (v. oelw), To shake back, eros itr te képas Eur, Bacch. 240: to swing to and fro, brandish, atyida Hes, Sc. 344; dv. rds xeipas to move the hands up and down as a signal, Thue. 4. 38; dv. powiida Lys. 107. 40, cf. pownis 4;—dv. Bony, in Ar. Ach. 347, seems to be a Com, phrase for iordva: B., with reference to éxcéoaara: and ceords just above. 2. to brandish at one, threaten with, eicayyediav Dem. 784. 223; cf. mpooavaceiw. 8. to shake out, whéopey dvaceicavres nayTa having shaken out every reef, Poll. 1.107; dy. 7a toria Ib. 103; mdaoas rds hvias Ib. 214; Tv xAauvda Philostr. 772. II. to stir up, 70 7AHO0s Dion. H.8,81, Diod. 13. 91, N.T., v. Wess. Diod. 1.615. dvacevopat, (v. cevw), Pass., only found in syncop. aor., alya . . dvéc- avro the blood sprang forth, spouted up, ll. 11. 458. dvaonKkb, to make up what is wanting by adding weight, to compensate for, like dvrionnda, Lat. rependere, riv peraBodny Hipp. Acut. 388, cf. Ar. Fr. 583; ai yevéoess dv. rds pOopas Arist. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 696 (where in Mund, 5, 13 the Mss. give éwavagréAAovot). vw, to breathe with difficulty, Q. Sm. 4. 244. & par, Dep. to wear the hair bristling up, Hesych. dvactAAo-Kopdw, =foreg., dub. 1. Plut. Crass. 24. © dvaotAAos or —oiAos, 6, bristling hair on the forehead as the Parthians wore it, 7@ dvaciAAw Kopay Plut. Crass, 24; restored by Sylburg in two passages of Arist. Physiogn., viz. in 5,8 for ofoy dy dotdor, and in 6, 43 “heictyaivey 11, Dep., =dvaoipudw, Poll vopat, Dep., =dvactydm, Poll. 2. 73. - dvé-ctpos, vee Lat. resimus, with a nose, snub-nosed, Ar. Eccl. 940. 2. generally, turned up at end, dbévres dv., of the elephant’s tusks, Arist. H. A. 2. 5; dv. mAota Id. Probl. 23. 5, 4. a dvacipow, to turn up the nose, snuff, esp. of male animals following the females, Lat. nasum supinari, Hen: § 4 dvackaipw, —cxalpecne, to hop or skip up, Q. Sm. 8. 321. avacKdAevw, to hoe up again, scrape up, Hesych., Zenob. Prov. 1. 8 IL. to uncover, disclose, Eust. Opusc. 268. 20, etc.: cf. sq. warkdAAw, to dig up, Eust. Opusc. 44.17, etc. :—in Plat. Com. ap. Poll, 2.83, dvaondAAerat is prob. an error for dvacxadeverat, v. Meineke Com. Fragm. 2. p. 666. évackxatre, to dig up, Arist. Mirab. 73, in Pass. 2. to extirpate, of plants, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 5: to rase to the ground, of buildings, Polyb. 16.1,6." . 3. to dig up ground, Plut. Thes. 36, cf. Pomp. 62. dvackagh, 7, a digging up, Strabo 421. dévackeSdvvupe or , to scatter abroad, Plut. Pyrrh. 22. -dvaokenréoy, verb. Adj., one must consider, Theophr. C, P. 6. 13, 2. etc, g ° avapréomat — dvacca. &vackémropat, Dep., late form of dvackoréw, Plut. 2. 438 D. ‘ emeedra, opr. ai narackeva(w, to pack up the baggage (ra oxevn), Lat. vasa colligere, convasare, and so to carry away, Xen, An. 6. 2,8, etc.; dv. Twas é« Oadarrns to clear them off the face of the sea, Philostr. 505 :—often in Med. ¢o break up one’s camp, march away, Thue. I. 18 A Kareckeva cero Kat dveox. Xen. Cyt. 8. 5,2, etc, =. fo disfurnish, dismantle a place, Thue. 4. 116: and in Med. to dismantle one’s house or city, Id. 1. 18. 3. to waste, ravage, destroy, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 25, in Pass.; dv. as ovvOhxas to break them, Poly. 9. 31, 6. 4. Pass., technically, to be bankrupt, break, Tis Tpawé(ns avackevacbeians Dem. 895. 5; dvacKevd(ovrat ai rpawear the banks are broken, Dem. 1205. 2; of dveckevacnevn: Tav Tpave(irev broken bankers, Id. 1204. 26; and so metaph., dveoxevdopeda Eur. El. 602. 5. of logicians, like dvatpée, to destroy or demolish the opponent’s arguments, Arist. An, Pr. I. 26, 3, al. ; xaracwevafew 7) dv. Id. Rhet. 2. 24, 4. II. to build again, rebuild, remodel, Strab. 738; also in Med., Plut. 2.578 F. dvackevacréov, verb. Adj. one must demolish, Gramm. avacxevacrixés, 7, dv, serving to destroy, destructive, in logic, dv. rérot Arist. Top. 7. 2 :—Adv. -nis, destructively, by way of refutation, Id. An. Pr.1. 46,13. 2. c. gen. destructive of, dAAjAww Sext. Emp. M. 8. 196. évacKeun, %, opp. to karacxevh, a pulling down: suppression of desites, Arr, Epict. 4. 1, 175. 2. a refuting of arguments, Sext. Emp. M. 6. 4, cf. Quintil. 2. 4, 18. dvacknycta, %, want of practice or exercise, Poll. 1, 159, Clem. Al. 460. dv-doKnros, ov, (doxéw) unpractised, unexercised, Xen, Cyr. 8. 8, 24, Polyb., etc. Adv. -rws, Plut, 2.112 D. dvacktSvapt, =dvacxedavvvyt, Philo 1. 262. avackw5SaAevw or —tAetw, late form of Att. dvacywdvAcdo. évackipréa, fut. how, to leap up, skip, Diod. 19. 55; a part. pf. pass. dveoiprnpévos is cited from Eupol. (Incert. 28). Gvacxodon(lw: aor, -ecxodémoa Hdt. :—Pass. with fut. med. —oxo- Aomodpar (in pass, sense) Id. 3. 132., 4. 43, but pass. —oxoromobjcopat Luc, Prom. 7: aor, -eoxodoniaOny and pf. —esxoAémopat Id. To fix on a pole or stake, impale, Hdt. 1. 128., 3. 159, al.; in 9. 78 it is used convertibly with dvacravpéw, as in Philo 1. 237, 687, Luc, Peregr. 11, dvackoAétiots, ews, %, an impaling, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 7, Eust. dvackodomopés, J, and -cxohémopa, 7é,=foreg., Malal. dvackohvrrw, =drocko\vmTw, Hesych. avackoréw, c. fut. -cxéyouat, aor. dveokepapny : (v. dvackérropat): —to look at narrowly, examine well, mavt’ dvackéme kadw@s Ar. Thesm. 666, cf, Thuc. 1, 132, etc.: also in Med., dvacxomovpévors Ar. Eccl. 827. II. to look back at, reckon up, like dvadoyi{ecOat, Xen. Vect. 5, 11. dvacKorn, 7, consideration, Timon ap. Sext. Emp. M. 1. 53. dvackutde, to be at heat again, A. B. 12. avacpuye, to consume as by a slow fire, Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 1. 1. dvacoBéw, fo scare and make to start up, generally, to rouse, dypay Plat. Lys. 206 A:—Pass., dvacecoBnpévos thy Kéunv with hair on end through fright, Luc. Tim. 54; xépn dvacecoBnpevy Id. Jup. Trag. 30. GvacoBn, 7), a disturbance, tumult, Athan. dvarmipdoow, fut. dfw, to tear up, Eur. Bacch. 1104. dvéoricts, €ws, #), a drawing up, contraction, Hipp. Art. 815: a ¢ear- ing up, Tis yas Theophr. C. P. 5. 4, 7. avacTracrnpios, ov, fitted for drawing up: 7d dv. a machine for rais- ing a portcullis, Ap. Civ. 4. 78. avarnacrés, dv, not dvacTmacros, ov, E. M. 269. 3:—drawn up, Ar. Vesp. 382: but mostly, dragged up the country, of tribes compelled to emigrate into Central Asia, dvacnacrovs moveiv Tovs Tatovas és rv *Aoiny Hat. 5.12; totrous ef Alytrrou dy. éroincay mapa BactAéa. 1d. 4. 204, cf. 6. 9, 32; rods dv. naroutfev Id. 3. 93; cf. Valck. ad 7, 80: later, generally, emigrating, Polyb. 2. 53, 5. 2. of a door or gate, drawn back, opened (v. Schol.), Soph, Ant. 1186. II. as Subst., oi dvaonagrot (sc. iudyres), latchets, v. sub dvayaryevs. dvaomdw, pott. dvom-—: (v. onda). To draw or pull up, dtervov Solon 32. 3, cf. Hdt. 4. 154., 5.16; BUBAov éx tov éEdXéwy Id. 2. 92 ;— so in Med., é xpods €yxos dveomdcar’ he drew his spear forth again, Il. 13. 574. b. to draw a ship up on land, like dvéAxw, Pind. P. 4. 48, Hdt. 7. 188, Thuc. 4. 9. 2. to draw or suck up greedily, aipa Aesch. Eum. 647; dv. rordv, rpopny, etc., Arist. H. A. 1. 16, 9, P. A. 2.17,15; but, ddwp dv. to draw water, Thuc. 4. 97 :—Med., dv. irypd- tra to absorb, Hipp. Vet. Med. 17. 3. to draw back, rhv xetpa Ar. Pl. 691. 4. to tear up, pull down, ra. d-ydApara éx Tov BAbpov Hadt. 5.86; viv cxjvyy Id. 7. 119; 7d cravpwya Thuc. 6. 100; TUpBous Eur, Med. 1381, cf. Bacch. 949; dév8pa Arist. H.A. 2.1, 6, al.; ras cavidas Ths “yepupas Polyb. 2. 5, 5; mvdidas Id. 5. 39, 4, etc. 5. metaph., dvaonay Adyous, in Soph. Aj. 302, to draw forth words, to utter proud, offensive words, cf. Ar. Ran. 903 ;—the phrase may be explained from Plat. Theaet. 180 A (Gomep é« papérpas fmyarioma . . dvacmavres), and Menand. ‘Pam. 7 (dev .. rotrous dverndixacwy obrot Tos Ad-YOUS;); cf. also dmoamdw, 6. rds dppis dvacnay to draw up the eyebrows, and so put on a grave important air, rds dppis dvecmaxws domep Tt dewdy ayyeAGy Ar. Ach. 1069, cf. Alex. Amey. 2, Dem. 442. 115 80, Breve vary kat Ta pérwn’ dvéoracey Ar, Eq. 631; péxpt vepéwy THY éppiv dy. Philem. Incert. 81, cf. Xen, Symp. 3, 10, and v. Tofo- moréo, II. to draw back, éavréy Hipp. 262. 35. ait. to carry away from home, Luc, Tox. 28; ef, avaonacrés. dvaomoyyifa, to sponge clean, sponge well, rd €\xos Hipp.872 H, Galen. Gvacoa, 7), fem. of dvag, a queen, lady, mistress, addressed to goddesses, Od, 3. 380., 6.175; esp. in Att. to Athena, Aesch. Eum, 228, 235, 443, 2, to a mortal, Od. 6,149, Trag.—The word becomes common s avaccatos — in Poetry from Pind. downwds. ; but rare in Prose, as Isocr. 203 D, Arist. Cypr. Rep. ; ¢, dat., Ap. Rh. 3. 862. 3. generally, like dvag tv, dvacoa mpéyous Kai Bovdevparos authoress of this deed, Eur. Fr. 704; épyiay Ar. Ran. 385. II. as Adj. royal, dv. Bovdn, of the Roman Senate, Epigr. Gr. 1046. 35. av-4coGros, Dor. for dvnconros, Theocr. dvacoelacke, v. dvaceia, dvaccvros, ov, (dvaceiw) rushing back, driven back, Hipp. 645. 9. dvacow, impf. jvaccov Hom., Ep. dvacoor Il. 1. 252: fut. dvdgw Il, 20. 180: Ep. aor. dvaga Hes. Th. 837:—rare in Med. and Pass., v. infr.: (like dvag, it had the digamma, Favdoow, in Hom.), Poét. Verb, mostly used in pres., to be lord, master, owner, to rule, sway, as well of earthly lords as of tutelary deities; in Hom. mostly c. dat., “Apyei, v7j~ coo, Swpact, erhpacw olor dy. to be lord, hold sway in Argos, etc. ; but also c. gen., Tevédoo, “Apyelwy, medioio dvdccev to be lord of Tenedos, etc., Il, 15 38, etc.; ©, gen. and dat. at once, éAmépyevoy Tpd- €or dvdgew .. Tiuis THs Tpidpou to be master of Priam’s sovereignty over the Trojans, Il. 20. 180, cf. Od. 24. 30; (so, ys dvdoce Bap- Bapoot Eur. I, T. 31); mavrov piv xparéew eédew, mdvrecor & dvacoay, maot 5& onyaivey Il. 1. 288: also with a Prep., per’ d0avd- Toot dvacoey to be first among the immortals, Il. 4. 61, cf. 23. 4713 év Bovdeiy 16. 572; ev baling Od. 7.62; wapd tov ’Ayépovra Soph. El. 184; bd yaias Ib. 841; with neut. Adj., Zed mavr’ dvdoooy Id. O. T. 904;—in Hom. often with ig: added, Tevédoid re Tp dvdooes rulest over T. with might, Il. 1. 38; ie dv. SHpact, erhpact, etc., Od. II. 275, etc.: absol., rav dvaccdvrev the kings, Soph. Ph. 6:—Med. once in Hom., rpis dvafac0at yévea dvipav to be king for three genera- tions, i.e. fo be thrice king, and each time through one generation, Od. 3- 245 :—Pass. to be ruled, dvaccovra 8 éyol ait@ 4. 177.—Com- mon also in Pind. and Trag., who use the same constructions, TI. in Trag. sometimes metaph. of things, x@mns dvdoce Eur. Tel. 20; éxwv dvdccovo’ Hel. 1040; orparnyias I. T. 17; so, kovpov mdqparos dvdcowv lord of the light leap (where some Edd. give dvaccwy, without explaining the constr. of rnSjyaros), Aesch. Pers. 96; & ray vurrimédAwy épddav dvdoceis, of Persephoné, Eur. lon 1049 :—Pass., wap’ Sry oxipr- Tpov dvdacera is held as lord, Soph. Ph. 140, cf. Arist. Rhet. 3. 2, 10: —v. dvag IV, dvacca 3, deondrns I. av-goow, Att. for dvaiccw, dvarridév, Adv. (dviornm) standing up, Il. 9. 671., 23. 469. dvacrihdw, to make trickle forth, Opp. C. 4. 324. avaorahtiKés, 7), dv, fitted for checking, bans Acl. V. H. 7. 3. dvarridvle, strengthd. for cradvgw, doradvw, Anacr. 41. 4. dvaoras, f.1. for maords in Ap. Rh. 1. 789. dvacracia, late form for dvagraais, Or. Sib. 4. 69, Byz. dvarrdotpos, ov, pertaining to the resurrection, Eccl. dvdoriots, ews, Ion. tos, 7, I. act. (dvicrny:) a making to stand or rise up, raising up again, the dead, dvdpds 8 éweaddy aly’ dvacrdon Kbvis.., ovis €or’ dy. Aesch. Eum. 648, cf. Pors. Phoen. 581. 2. a making to rise and leave their place, removal, as of sup- pliants, dv. é« rod lepod Thuc. 1.133; dv. rijs Iwvias the removal of all the Greeks from Ionia [for safety], Hdt. 9. 106, cf. Thuc. 2.14: but mostly in bad sense, an overthrow, destruction, ruin, GAwow “IXlov 7° dvdoraow Aesch. Ag. 589; médewv dy. Id. Pers, 107, Eur. ; Tis warpidos Dem. Io. 17. 3. a setting up, erection, Tecx@v Dem. 478. 24; Tpo- maiov Plut. 2.873 A; elxévos Inscr. Cnid. in Newton p. 760. II. (dvicrapat) a standing or rising up, esp. in token of respect, Ast Plat. Rep. 4. 4; to answer a challenge, of Menelaus, Arist. Fr. 151. 2. a rising and moving off, removal, Thuc. 7. 75; av. é« Tov fepov Id. 1. 133- 3. a rising up, é¢ tmvov Soph. Ph. 276. b. a rising again after a fall, Ev. Luc. 2. 34. c. a rising from the dead, Tuvddpew Luc. Salt. 45 :—in N. T. and Eccl. the Resurrection. Gvaorarnp, 6, a destroyer, Aesch. Theb. 1015, Cho. 303. avaorarnpia, 74, a sacrifice on one’s recovery, Hesych. dvacrrarys, ov, 6,=dvacrarnp, Aesch. Ag. 1227. avaoriros, ov, (dvicrapyat) made to rise up and depart, driven from one’s house and home, dvacrarovs moweiv Twas, avaorarot yiyvecbat, Hat. 1. 76,177., 7-118, Decret. ap. Dem. 289. 22, cf. Soph. O.C. 429, Tr. 39; cf. dvacnacrdés, 2. of cities, ruined, laid waste, Hdt. 1. 155, 178, Andoc, 14. 35, ete.; dv. Sopt xupa Soph. Tr. 240; dépous rWévae dy. Id. Ant. 673; dv. moeiy ra xwpia Thuc. 8, 24. 3. c. gen. driven from, deprived of a thing, Plut. 2. 613 D. II. engaged in revolt or sedition, Plat. Soph. 252 A. III. as Subst., dvaoraros, 6, a hind of light bread at Athens, Ath. 114 A, cf. Valck. Adon. 398 B. dvacritéw, to unsettle, upset, Tiv olkovpévny Act. Ap. 17. 6, cf. 21. 38 ;. of the mind, Ep. Gal. 5. 12 :—Pass., dvacraTw0vat Harpocr. dvacratwots, 7), an unsettling, Eust.81.41. 2. destruction, Poll.3.g1- dvacraupifo, =sq., Ctes. in Phot. Bibl. 44. Io. ree dvacraupéw, fo impale, Hat. 3. 125., 6. 30, al.; identical with dva- okoront{a, g. 78 :—Pass., Thuc. 1. 110, Plat. Gorg. 473 C. If. in the Rom. times, to affix to a cross, crucify (v. oravpos 11), Polyb. 1. 11, 6, al., Plut, Fab. 6, al. 2. to crucify afresh, Ep. Hebr. 6. 6. dvacratipwors, ews, 7, an impaling, Xen. Ephes. 4, 2. dvarriixtw, (ardxus) to shoot up with ears, Ap. Rh. 3.1054, etc.:—the fut. dvacraxvicopat, (as if from —vdopar), occurs in Or, Sib. 3. 382, etc. dvacre(Bo, strengthd. for ore(Bw, Anth. P. 7. 544- dvacreidos, 5, v. dvdatAdos. dv-dorevos, ov, unmannerly, Lat. inurbanus, Ath. 585 8. ee dvéoretpos, ov, (aTeipa) with a high prow, vais Polyb. 16. 3, 8. dvarrel yw, to sald iececgera 1.422: to ascend, eodwvny Ib. 4.65. , to send up, raise, dnemds Christod, Ecphr. 63 :—Med. fo $ ° avarr pede. 111 gird or tuck up one’s clothes, veBpidas dveareihavro Eur. Bach. 696; dvearédheo8’ dvw 7a xeravia Ar. Eccl. 268; absol., dvacret(AacGas Ar- temid. 4. 44 :—Pass., dveoraApévw 7@ xiT@ with one’s frock girt up, Plut. 2.178 C: cf. dvacdpo. II. to draw back, e. g. the flesh in a surgical operation, Hipp. V. C. 907, cf. Arist. H. A. 9. 50, 6 :—Pass. to be turned up, of the foot, Hipp. Mochl. 855. 2. to keep back, re- pulse, mostly used of checking the assault of light troops, Eur. I. T. 1378, Thue. 6. 70, Xen. An. 5. 4, 23; of dveyor dv. rd védn Arist. Probl. 26. 29; pdBos dv. Twa Ael.N, A. 5. 54:—Med. to restrain or suppress one’s inclinations, to dissemble, Polyb. 9. 22, 9 :—Pass. to go back, retire, keep back, Thuc. 3. 98; c. gen., dv. rov . . to be restrained from .., Ael. N. A. 8. Io. 3. to remove, make away with, yijv Diod. 17. 82. CLE. in Med. to renounce, refuse, dvagréAdeada tpophy Ac]. N. A. 11. 14. dvaorevalw, =dvacrévw, Hdt. 1. 86., 6. 80; c. ace. cogn., Todd dv. &x0é50ma such hateful words didst thou groan forth, Soph. Aj. 930. II. c. acc. pers. to groan for, lament, Aesch. Cho. 335, Eur. H. F. 118, Xen. Symp. 1, 15. évacreviixifo, to groan oft and loudly, wail aloud, ll. 10. 9. dvaorevdxe, c. acc. pers. to groan aloud over, bemoan, bewail aloud, c. acc., Il, 23, 211; so in Med., 18. 315, 355. dvacrévw, to groan aloud, Aesch. Ag. 546, 1286, Soph. like dvaorevdxw, c. acc., Archil. 8. 8, Eur. I. T. 551. av-dorrepos, ov, post. for dvacrpos, Arat. 228. dvaorépw, fut. yw, to crown, wreath, rov adv xpara Eur. Fr. 243; dv. orepdvoict Ib. 362. 48:—Pass., dvéoreppar napa piddos I have my head wreathed with leaves, Id. Hipp. 806. II. dapvas KAavas dvaarépecOa to have them put round the head, Epigr. Gr. 786. dvaornAtretw, to post up, proclaim by placards, Eccl. avi Aéw, to set up as or on a monument, Lyc. 883, Plut. 2. 1033 E. & Awors, ews, , a setting up of a monument, Ptolem. ap. Phot. 190. avaornpa, aros, 76, (dvicrapa) height, tallness, as of a mountain, plant, etc., Theophr. H. P. 9. 9, 5; dvaor. BactArnéy the royal majesty, Diod. 19. 92. 2. an erection, building, Epict. ap. Stob. 316. 40:— in Or. Sib, 8. 268 occurs a late poét. form dvdordpa. dvaornpifo, fut. fw, to set up firmly, Anth. P. 7. 321. dvaorynoelw, Desiderat. of dvicrnut, Agath. 76 B. II. dvacrouxerdw, to resolve matter into its elements, Philo 1. 501. II. in Pass. to be renovated, regenerated, Origen., etc. dvacroxeiwors, ews, 7), dissolution, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 79. II. renewal, regeneration, Eccl. avacroAn, 7, (avacréAAw) a putting back, rs xdépns Plut. Pomp. 2; cf, Winckelm. 5. 5, 11. 2. the baring of a wound by putting back the flesh, Medic. 3. repression, wad@v Clem, Al. 507. dvacrop.6, to furnish with a mouth, dv. Tdppov to clear out a trench, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5,15; dv. Tas NetAov dumpuyas Polyb. 5. 62, 4, cf. Sext. Emp. M. 5. 59; av. 7d fjpwov to open it, C. I. 916:—Med., pdpvyos dvaorépov TO xeiAos open your gullet wide, Eur. Cycl. 357 :—Pass., Tpavd? pév éoTiv, GAN dvecrouwpévn with mouth wide-opened, loud talking (cf. ordpwots), Callias Incert. 3. 2. Pass. also to be opened, dilated, dv. of mépo Arist. H. A. 7.1, 9, G. A. 3.1, 24; borépa dy. H. A. fo. 2, 6. 3. of one sea opening into another, cata oTevo- népous adxévas dvecroumpévos Arist. Mund, 3, 8; 6 “ApaBios Kédmos dveorépwra eis Tov ..’Qxeavdy Diod. 3. 38, cf. Philo 2. 475, Heliod. I. 29, and v. cvoropdopat. II. metaph. to sharpen or whet the appetite, radra Trav ASvoparew dvacropot r¢cOnrhpia Diphil.A7oA. 2. dvacropwors, ews, %, an opening, outlet, discharge, Plut. 2. 590 F, ef. Foés. Oec. Hipp. II. a bringing to a point: metaph. a whetting of the appetite, Ath. 132 F: hence also of the stimulating effect of manures, Theophr. C, P. 3.17, 6. dvacropwripios, ov, proper for opening, Tis borépas Hipp. 587. 22. dvacropwrikés, 7, dv, fit for sharpening, of the appetite, Diosc. 1. 4. dvacrovaxéw, fut. 4ow,=dvacrévw, Orph. Arg. 1294: so, dvagrova- xtfo, Q. Sm. 2. 634; v. Spitzn. Exc. iii. ad Il. dv-aorpanre, to lighten, Philo 2. 204. : évacrparetw, to enlist again, App. Civ. 3. 66:—Med. fo serve again, of soldiers, Dio C. 41. 35. dvaotpiroredela, as, 7, a decamping, Polyb. 6. 40, I. dvaorpairomedetw, to decamp, Polyb. 1. 24, 4, etc.:—Med., Joseph. A. J. 14. 15, 14. évaorpeppa, 7d, in Xen. Cyn. 4, 4, f. 1. for dvéBreppa. & , verb. Adj. one must invert, rt Isocr. 109 B. 2. from Pass. one must attend to, dwell on a thing, mept 7: Clem. Al. 819. dvactpédw, post. dvorpépw: fut. yw: pf. dvécrpopa Theognet. Pacp. 1. 8. To turn upside down, piyrws . . dippous dvaTpévecay might upset them, Il. 23. 436; 6 Ocds mav7’ dv. méAw Eur. Supp. 3315 dy. yévos Ar. Av. 1240; dv. Kapdiav to upset the stomach, i.e. cause sickness, Thuc, 2. 49: fo reverse, Aesch. Pers. 333, Eur. l.c,, etc., Ar. Pl. 779:—Pass., fut., dvaorpapjoerar 7d mpdypara Isocr. 95 A; pf., dveorpapOa ris wodcrelas Id. 129 E; dpos dvecrpappévoy ev TH (nrhoe turned up by digging, Hat. 6. 47, cf. Xen. Occ. 16, 11. it. to turn back, bring back, Twa &€ “Aiov Soph. Ph. 449, cf. Eur. Hipp. 1228; dy, dixny rit Id, Bacch. 793; Sup’ dv. eter to roll it about, Id. Hel. 1557: ¢o raily soldiers, Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 21, 2. intr. ¢o turn back, round or about, return, retire, Hdt. 1. 80, and freq. in Att. ; esp. in part., dvaorpépas drjAavvey Xen. An, I. 4, §, etc. —dvaarpépoy, 76, Vv. dvakukdukds, III. in Gramm. to write with anastrophé, as mépe for mepi, Schol. Ven, Il. 9. " ' 8. Pas v: supr, I. “ ir to be or dwell in a place, like Lat. versari, GAG Tuy’ GAAny yaiav dvaorpépopat to go toa place and dwell there, Od. 13. 326, cf, Call, Lay. Pall, 76; (so, dvacrpépew dda év yf 112 Eur. Hipp. 1176); dvaorpépeodat év”Apye: Id. Tro. 993; év havepd, ev #éow to live in public, Xen. Hell. 6. Bec Plat. Rep 338 re Aw tad Thue. 8. 94; ev ebppootvas Xen. Ages. 9, 4; év Tois 7Oect Plat. Legg. 865 E:—so, dv. év ¢uppaxla to continue in an alliance, Xen. Hell. i3, 2; dy. ev yeupyig to be engaged in . ., 1d. Occ. 5,13; em xuvpyecias Polyb. 32. 15, 19 :—generally, to conduct If, behave, ds deondrns Xen. An, 2. 5,14; Opacéas, dxapiorws dv. eis twa Polyb. 1. 9, 7., 25. I, 10. 2. to revolve, like the sun in the heavens, Xen. Mem. 4:3; 8. III. of soldiers, ¢o face about, rally, Id. An. I. 10, 12, etc. 2. to be reversed or inverted, éuot rodr’ dvéorparrat Id. Hier. 4, 5, ef. Cyr, &. 8,13, Arist. Mechan. 20, 5. Polit. 271 A, Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 20. dy-acrpoh, , ov, ignorant of astrology, Strabo 76. av-aorpos, ov, without stars, Theophr. ap. Schol. Arist., Eratosth. dvarrpopdbny, Adv. (dvacrpépm) reversely, Hesych. dvactpoh, 3}, (dvaorpépw) a turning upside down, upsetting, Eur. Fr. 303; potpav els dv. di5wo =dvacrpeper, Id. Andr. 1007: disorder, confusion, Posidipp. Xop. 22. 2. a turning back, return, Soph. Ant. 226; mwodAds dv. movodpevos, of a huhter, making many cas¢s backward, Xen. Cyn. 6, 25: a wheeling round, as of a horse, Id. Mag. Eq. 3, 14 (Dind. orpopais); esp. of soldiers in battle, whether to flee or rally, Id. Cyr. 5. 4, 8; pneére Sodvar abrots dvacrpophy Id. Hell. 4. 3, 6, cf. Ages. 2,3; of a ship, Thuc. 2. 89; é dy. wheeling about, Polyb. 4. 54,4; xar’ dvaorpopny reversely, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 430. 3. in Gramm., anastropké, a throwing back of the accent to the former syllable, as in prepositions after their case, dao for dad, etc. 4. in Rhet. writers, repetition of a word which closes one sentence at the be- ginning of another, Walz Rhett. 8. 552. II. (from Pass.) a turning about in a place, dwelling in a place, Plat. 2. 216A; dy. énornoayto they staid or abode, Inscr. Megar. in Keil iv. b. 7, cf. C. I. 1193. 2. the place where one tarries, an abode, haunt, Satpdvev dvactpopy Aesch, Eum. 23. 3. a mode of life, Polyb. 4. 82, 1, Diog. L. 9. 64, cf. Ep. Gal. 1. 13, Eph. 4. 22, al. 4. delay, like d:arpiBH, Polyb. 1. 66, 3: time for doing a thing, Id. 3. 93, 3- 5. @ return, way back, Arist, H. A. 9. 48, 5, cf. Probl. 26. 5. dvaorpégus, Adv. reversely, vice versa, Sext. Emp. M. 22. dvaerpwmh, 4, word coined by Plat., Crat. 409 C, to explain dorparh (87 7a Gra dvacrpéper). ‘dyarrtpwdpdw, Frequentat. of dvacrptpa, régov tvapa mavrn dvacrpw- pay turning it constantly, Od. 21. 394:—Med. to wander about, Soph. Fr, 682 (in which sense Arat. 1069 has the Act. intr.) ; dv. éy dpOdvoice zo live in the midst of plenty, Menand. (Eur. ?) Incert. 1. 7. dvaoripeAife, strengthd. for erupedt(w, Nonn. D. 1, 181. dvarrigw [1],=crvyva(w, to look sad or gloomy, Soph. Fr. 371 (Satyric). 2. in Comic writers, =ordw, quoted in aor. dvagripa by Poll. 2. 176, Hesych., Suid. dvacv ts, €ws, %, a change in the otvragis or war-tax levied on property, Poll. 6. 179, Suid.; v. Béckh P. E. 2. 280. rt , fut. fw, fo change the war-tax, Hyperid. ap. Harp. avdouppa, aros, 76, the effect of dvactpecba: hence, tapévov av. a clandestine birth, Eubul. Incert. 29. dvacuproXts, ews, 7), a lewd woman, Hippon. 99. “dvacvpw [0], (v. cUpw), to pull up another’s clothes, Diog. L. 2. 116: to expose to view, tiv dxpaciay Clearch. ap. Ath. 548 B :—Med. to pull up one’s clothes, expose one’s person, Hdt. 2.60, Theophr. Char. 11, Diod. 1. 85, etc.; dvacupduevar Tods xiTwvicxous Plut. 2. 248 B; part. pf. pass. as Adj., dyopaids 71s kat dvaceouppévos obscene, Theophr. Char. 6; xapwdia ay. Synes. 213 C. 2. in Pass. also, of Alexander’s hair, to be drawn back (cf. dvacroAn 1), Ael. V. H. 12. 14. II. Med. ¢o snatch up, plunder, ravage, Plut. 2. 330 D. dvacd o, to struggle violently, Hesych., Tim. Lex. dvarpdAda, intr. to rise from a fall or illness, to recover, cupmTmparos dvacphaAat Plat. Ax. 364.C; é« vdcou Babr. 75. 9; véoou xai révay 78. 3. avargnviw, to pin or fasten with wedges, Apollod. in Math. Vett. p. 24. avarglyye, to bind tight up, immov xakw@ Nonn. D. 42. 51. Sieeedio, —Oeiv, inf. of the poét. aor. 2 of dvéxa. dvaoxeots, ews, 9, (dvéxopuat) a taking on oneself, endurance, Tdv 5e- vay Plut. Num. 13. 2. dy. HAtov the rising of the sun, Arist. Mund. 3, 10; cf. dvaroAn, dvoxn. dvacxeriés, 7, dv, enduring’, patient, Plut. 2, 31 A. dvacyeros, Ep. avoxerés, b, (dvéxopat) to be borne, sufferable, en- durable, Theogn. 119, Soph. Ph. 987: but mostly with negat., ob yap & dvoxera epya terevxyarat Od. 2. 63; meceiv .. mrm@par’ obK ay. Aesch. Pr. 919; Opéyupar’ ovx dv. Id. Theb. 182:—oi« dvacyxerév [éor], c. acc. et inf., Hdt. 1. 207, cf. 3. 81., 8. ih Gav yap Kakds kAvodcay ob« dvacxerdv Soph, Tr, 721, cf.O. C. 1652 ; ob« dvacxerov moretaak 7 Hat. 7. 163. avacy ile, fut. icw, to rip up, Tod Aayoo Tiy yaorépa Hat. 1.123, 124,cf. 3-353 Tas xvovoas Arist. Eth. N.7.5,2 3 Sépua dvdxeaor Theocr, 25.277. dvacyivSiAevw, in later Greek dvacnivbvActw, =dvacKoroni(w, Plat. Rep. 362 A; cf. Piers. Moer. 360, Ruhnk. Tim. 32. dvacalo, fut. dow: (v. ch fw). To recover what is lost, rescue, dnd évov Soph, O. T. 1351; dv. pidov ddAdowbévra Arist. Eth. N. 9. 3, 3 — more oft. in Med., dvagw(ecOai riva pdBov to recover one from fear, Soph. El, 1133; dvacwodpevds por dds... Sdpov Hdt. 3. 140:—but Hdt. commonly uses the Med, in the proper sense, dv. tiv dpxiy to re- cover it for oneself, 1. 82, 106, etc.; in 3. 65 he joins Act. and Med., pi) dvacwoapévorct Be Thy dpxiy pyd emyepnoac dvacwew :—Pass. to be restored to safety, Plat. Phil. 32 E: to return safe, eis Karavny 3. to return, Plat. Lys. 160.13; dvacwOfvat és rds warpibas, of exiles, Xen. Hell. 4. Bnd, ’ , . , avacTporoyntos — avatiOnus. 28; &« pvyijs Polyb. 18.10, 2. 2. to preserve in mind, remember, Hdt. 6. 65. dvacwpevw, to heap up, Polyb. 8. 35, 5- évacwopss, 5, a saving, preservation, Aquil. V. T. dvariviw, post. dyr-, =dvarelvw, Call. Jov, 30. dvarapdoow, Att. -T1u, fut. fw, to stir up the mud, Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 2 :—Pass., ovpa dvarerapaypeva troubled, thick urine, Hipp. Aph. 1252, ef. Epid. 1. 976. II. to stir up, excite greatly, rouse to Srenzy, Soph. Tr. 218 : /o confound, Plat. Phaedo 88 C:—Pass., dvarerapayypevos mopevec@at to march in disorder, Xen. An, I. 7, 20. dvariots, ws, 7}, (dvareivw) extension, eis tos Polyb. 5. 44, 3, etc. 2. a stretching out, Hipp. Art. 788: a@ putting forth the hands against any one, violence, Polyb. 4. 4, 7, ete. 3. intensity, inflexibility, 700 ppovhuaros Plut.Mar.6. _ 4. endurance of hunger, fasting, Plut. 2. 62A, ubiy.Wyttenb. 5. dy. ris Bofjs a straining, Schol. Or. 149. dvardccopat, Att. -rropat, Med. to go regularly through again, rehearse, Plut. 2. 968 C. évariirixds, 4, dv, (dvaracis 2) threatening, Polyb. 5. 43, 5. Adv. —K@s, Id. 4. 4, 7- dvarel, v. dvati. dvareive, post. avr-: (v. relvw) :—to stretch up, lift or hold up, xetpa dy, to lift up the hand and swear, Pind. O. 7. 120; also in prayer, Id. I. 6 (5). 60; ebfdpueod’. . dvareivovres TH xetp’ Ar. Av. 623; as token of assent in voting, Xen. An. 5. 6, 33, etc. 2. to stretch forth, so as to threaten, ri)v wdxaipay dvarerapevos with his sword stretched out, Xen. Cyr. 4. 1, 2; so in Med., od5& MoAvdedxeos Bia xeipas dvreivait’ dy évaytiov air@ Simon. 16; ovdtv dy bpiv exe dvareivacbar poBepiv to hold out any alarming threat, Dem. 389. 1, cf. Polyb. 5. 55, 1. 3. to hold up, propose as a prize, Pind. N. 8. 43, in Pass. 4. to lift up, exalt, nidds twos Ib. 58; dvareivacba apxny to strain or augment its force, Plut. Cleom. Io. 5. to lift up, napa Pind. N. 1. 65; éaurév Ael. N. A. 3. 21; dv. Tas dppis =dvacmdw 6, Luc. Tim. 54 :— Pass. to strain upwards, as the soul, freq. in later Platonists, Ruhnk. Tim., etc. 6. to strain, and metaph. ¢o excite, Tia Plut. 2.60 C :—Pass. of sound, to be strained to a high pitch, Arist. Probl. 19. 37. II. to stretch or spread out, expand, e. g. a line of battle, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1,6; 7a Képara Ib. 23; derds émi Sépatos dvarerapévos a spread eagle, Ib. 4; dy. ioria mpos (vydv Pind. N. 5.93 :—Pass. to be distended, Tim. Locr. 102 A. III. to hold out, persevere, esp. in abstinence, Arr. Epict. 2. 17, 9. IV. intr. to reach up, stretch up, wébida és yévu dvarei- vovra Hat. 7.67; dy. eis tos Polyb. 9. 21, 10. 2. to extend, stretch out, obpos .. dy. és ry Otrny Hat. 7. 176, cf, 8. 107, Arist. H. A. 4. I, 20. dvaretxife, to rebuild, relyn Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 18: to re-wall, Cyril. dvareixtopss, 6, a rebuilding of the walls, Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 9. dvaréhiw, poit. dvr: aor. dvéreida: pf. dvaréradxey Polyb. 9. 15, Io: (v. TEAM). To make to rise up, roiow 8 [sc. trmas] dpBpooiny avereihe vepeoba Il. 5.777; Alyumros . . Anuntpds avaTéh\Aw oTaXvy Aesch. Fr. 304; USwp dvaréAdew to make water gush forth, Pind. 1. 6 (5). 111; so in Pass., PASE dvaredAopévn a flame mounting up, Ib. 4 (3). 110, 2. to bring forth, give birth to, bring to light, Atévucov dyéreihas Ib. 7 (6). 5; lovAovs Ap. Rh, 2. 44: of events, pupt’ da aioxpav dvaréddovTa Soph, Ph. 1139. II. intr. ¢o rise, esp. of the sun and moon, Hdt. 2. 142., 4. 40, Soph. O. C. 1246, Ar. Nub. 754, like dvéxw B. 1; mpds 4@ re kat HAtov dvaréAdovra Hat. 1. 204; also of constellations, Ap. Rh. 3. 959., 2. 1007, cf. dvaroAn ; (though émr&rw is more usual in this sense), 2. of a river, to take its rise, éx ravrns [rhs Aipyns] Hdt. 4. 52, cf. Ael. N. A. 14. 16, etc. 3. to grow, of hair, rapids dvréAAovea Opit Aesch. Theb. 535; of teeth, Arist. H. A. 2. 4 4. of a mountain, fo oe Rh. 1. 501, etc, 5. to rise up, dvéretke cwrhp Epigr. dvaréuve, fut. ~reps, to cut up, cut open, vexpdy Hat. 2. 87, cf. Luc. Prom, 21. II. to cut off, xAjpara Aeschin. 77. 26. dvarerapéves, Adv. part. pf. pass. of dvarelvw, stretched or strained to the utmost, Schol. Ar. Ran, 1 315. dvarjKe, fut. fw, to melt : metaph, 4o relax, 70 o@pa HSovais Plut. 2. 136 D :—Pass. to mel? away, thaw, Polyb. 2. 16, 9. dvarntis, ews, }, a melting, thawing, Polyb. o. dvari [7], Adv. of dvaros, wi Se weil , . Ss, without harm, with impunity, Aesch. Eum. 39, Soph. Ant. 485, Eur. Med. 1357, Plat. Legg. 871; also written dvarei, C.1. 104; less correctly acc. to Blomf. Gloss, ad Pr. V. 216. GvarlOnpr, fut. Oyu: Aeol. aor. dvéOexa C. I. 1766, cf. 3524. Os 54, al, To lay upon, in Hom, only once, édeyxeiny dvabqce pot, like p@pov dvdmrew, Il. 22. 100; dy, &x@os to lay on as a burden, Ar. Eq. 1056; xtvbuvous idiw@ras dv. Hyperid, Euxen. 24: but in good sense, dy, «086s Tut Pind. O. 5. 17, ef. Lys. 110. 7. 2. in Prose, to refer, attribute, ascribe a thing to a person, péyadd of yphyara dy. Hdt. 2. 135; ob yap dy of mupapida dvédecay mojoacGar would not have at- tributed to him the erection of the pyramid, Ib. 134; PolBy rnve dvabqjow mag Eur, El. 1296; el ph, dray .. eb mpagnre, énot avabn- gere will give me the credit of it, Thuc, 2. 64; ob T@ cvpBovAw Thy Tod KaropOody . . dvéOne divayy Dem. 322, 21; dv. rw Thy aitiay Twds Isocr. 10 B, Aeschin, 29. 25. b. dy. rt mavra mpaypara to lay them upon him, entrust them to him, Ar. Nub, 1453, Thuc. 8.82; rv duuvav eis Tov xpdvor dy. to leave it .., Plut. 2. 817 Cc. II. fo set up as a votive gift, dedicate, consecrate, tii 7 Hes. Op. 656, Hdt. 2. 159., 7. 54, Ar. Pl. 1089, etc. ; “Phvecav dvéOnxe 7) “AnddAAwt Thuc. I. 13: hence the votive gift itself was dvdOnua, as dvd0nua dvariWévan Hat. 1. 53+ 2.182: they commonly said dv. 71 & AeAgods, not év AeAwois, Id. I. 92., 2, 135, 182, Plat. Phaedr. 235 D, etc.; but éy AeAdois Arist. Fr. avarikTw 377 :—Pass., dvareOijvat Ar. Eq. 849 ; but dvdxetpac is more freq. as the Pass. 2. simply to set up, erect, Bupdv, ved, etc., Polyb. 5. 93, 10, Plut., ete. 8. metaph., dy. 7: Avpg (as in Horace commissi calores . . fidibus), Pind. P. 8. 41; also, dv. rds dods rots dxpodpact to give them up to.., Polyb. 24. 5, 9. 4. to set up and leave in a place, dy, Twa emt Kpnpvov Ar. Pl. 69; dv. (Gvra (on a cross), Polyb. 1. 86, 6. III. to put back, remove (cf. dvaberéov), ri yap map’ pap huépa réprev exer, mpoodeioa edvabeioa Tod ye KaTOaveiv ; by adding or putting off somewhat of the necessity of death (so Herm.), Soph. Aj. 479; so, prob., in Pind. O, 7. 110, pvacdévrs Gp médov péddey O€per was about ¢o annul the lot for him when he mentioned it, v. Donalds. ad 1. (61); v. infr. Med. 1. B. Med. to put upon for oneself, dvabécbar 7a oxedn ent ta bmo- (bya Xen. An, 2. 2,4; Tots dpors dv. 71 to put on one’s shoulders, Plut, 2. 983 B; but often much like Act., dv. riva 颒 trmoy Id. Artox. 11, etc. 2. to impart, communicate something of one’s own, tw tt Act. Ap. 25. 4, Ep. Gal. 2. 2, Plut. 2. 772 D. 3. to remit or leave a thing to another, Plat. Hipparch. 229 E, 230 A, al.; dy. wept rwos eis ovyeAnrov to refer the consideration of it to the Senate, Polyb. 22. 27, II. II. to place differently, change about, e.g. the men on a draught-board, dvd mavra ri@eoOac Orac. ap. Hat. 8. 77, v. Luc. Pseudol. 29. 2. metaph. to take back a move, retract one’s opinion, Xen. Mem. I. 2, 44; and freq. in Plat., as dvaridecOat & Tu Soxee Plat. Gorg. 462 A, cf, Prot. 354 E, Charm. 164.D; ov« ‘dvarl@eyar pi ob TodTo «iva to retract and say this is not so, Id. Phaedo 87A; obd« dy, pr ob xah@s Aé-yecOai Id. Meno 89 D; v. supr., Act. III. dvarixrw, to bring forth again, Ael, N. A. 1.17. Gvatipdw, to raise in price, Hdt. 9. 33; dv. éavrdéy Dio C, 38. 5; cf. émripdw, and vy. Poll. 3. 125. dvativaypés, 5, a shaking violently, Lxx. dvativacow, fut. fw, to shake up and down, brandish, @vpoov Eur. Bacch. 80: also of the wind shaking about a sail, Id. Or. 341. dvatitpda, fut. dvarphow, to bore through, bore, Diosc. 1. 7,9, Trypho ap. Ath. 182 E, in Pass, dvatAnpa, aos, 76, sufferance, Suid. dvatAfjvat, inf. of dvérAny, aor. with no pres. in use: fut. dvarAn- copat, To bear up against, endure, end dvérrn Od. 14. 47; ditdos iy dvérAnpev 3.104; pdppax’ dvérdn, i.e. resisted the strength of, the magic drink, 10. 327; moAv@pynvov aidva . . dvarAGca Aesch. Ag. 716; marépa .. ot dvérdare Soph. O. C. 239, etc.; odd’ dvardds Ar. Pax 1035; Thy eiyappévny Plat. Theaet. 169 C; rad mpoohxovra md6n Id. Gorg. 525 A; c. part., dvérAnv poyéouea C. I. 6275. dv-arpifopar, Pass. to evaporate, Democrit. ap. Ath. (?) 87D. dvarouxéw, (roixos) to roll from side to side, esp. of sailors in a storm: metaph., Arr. Epict. 3. 12,7; the Gramm. prefer d:aroryéw, Lob. Phryn. 161. dvaroxiopés, 5, compound interest, Ernesti Clav. Cic. s. v. anatocismus. Gvaroh}, post. dvr: (dvaréAdw) :—a rising, rise, esp. of the sun, often in pl., dvroAal jeAlovo Od. 12. 4; amd dvarodas dAlov péxpt d¥cews Inscr. Argiv. in C. I. 1123, al.; also of the stars (cf. dvaréAAw II), dvroAds éyd dorpww gata Aesch. Pr. 457, cf. Eur. Phoen. 504 :— also in sing., d¥cews Te kal dvaroAfs jAlou Kat TOY GAdwy dorpoy Plat. Polit. 269 A, cf. Legg. 807 E. 2. the quarter of sunrise, East, Lat. Oriens, dd WAlou dvarohéwy Hat. 4. 8; #Atov mpds dvrodAds Aesch. Pr. 707; later without #Alov, mpds dvarodds C. I. 4040. IV. 14, Polyb. 2. 14, 4, etc. 3. also the time of rising, wept Opiwvos dvarodAny Arist. Meteor, 2..5, 2; dad TAeudos dy. Id, H. A. 8. 15, 3. 4. in pl. also the head of a river, Polyb. 2. 17, 4. Il. a growing, as of the teeth, Arist. H. A. 2.4; of the white at the root of the nails, Poll. 2. 146. dvaroAuds, 7, dv, eastern, C. I. 4450, 4573, Plut. 2. 888 A. évardhvos, post. dvr-, 7, ov, =foreg., dpoupa Nonn, D. 25. 98. dvaroApdw, to regain one’s courage, take courage, only in late writers, as Plut. Lucull. 31, etc.; cf. Pors. Med. 325. dvaropy, }, (Gvaréuvw) a cutting up, dissection, Arist. H. A. 3.1, 7, etc.; he wrote a treatise entitled ai dvaropal,v. Indicem p. 104. II. in a logical sense, dv, xal d:arpécers Arist. An. Post. 2. 14, I. dvaropicés, 7, dv, skilled in anatomy, Galen. Adv.-K@s, Id, avdrovos, ov, (avarelvw) stretching upwards, Vitruv. 10. 15. dvatopéw, =dvatirpdw, Planud. pat Gy-Gros, ov, unharmed, Aoflov nérw Aesch. Ag. 1211; kakdv dvaros harmed by no ills, Soph. O. C. 786, where the Laur. Ms. dvacros: cf. dvati. II. act. not harming, harmless, Aesch. Supp. 359, 359, 410. évatperréov, verb. Adj. one must overthrow, refute, Luc. Hermot. 49. dvatperricés, 4, dv, turning upside down, upsetting, emrqdevpa -. Tidews omep veds dy. Plat. Rep. 389 D; of dv. didAoyor Plato s refuta- tive dialogues, as Euthydemus and Gorgias, Thrasyll. ap. Diog. L. 3. 57. Gvatpérw, poit. dvrp—: fut. -rpéyw: pf. -rérpopa, Soph. infr. cit., Andoc. 17. 13, later perh. also rérpapa:—aor. 2 med. éverpdmero in pass. sense, Il. 6.64, Plat. Crat, 395 D, Theocr. 8. go: (v. tpémw). To turn up or over, overturn, upset, like dvaorpépm, the Act. first in Archil. 51.3; but in Hom., dverpdero=inrios Erecev, Il. 6. 64; dvarerpappévos Ar. Ran. 543; often of ships, Plat. Legg. g06E, Arist. Rhet. 2. 23, 11, etc.; dy dvarpanf yap mAotoy Alex, “BAA. I. 3. 2. 40 overthrow, ruin, Lat. evertere, like dwéAAupt, opp. to otf, mpéppiCov dvarpéyat Twa Hat. 1. 32, cf.'8. 62; pi .. daipov ..dvrpéyp rodt ddBov Aesch, Pers. 164; Aaxmdtnrov dvrp. xapav Soph. Ant. 1275; wAovrov Andoc. 17.13; méAw Ar. Vesp.671; wodirelay, olxiay, etc., Plat. Legg. 709 A, Rep. 471 B; 1a ray “EAAjvew Dem, 275. 15 :—Pass., ipuge mow pavarpanivat Aesch. Theb. 1076; 6 Bios dvarerpappévos dy ein Plat. Gorg. 481 C, ete. 3. rhv tpawe(av dvatp. to upset the table, Dem. J ” — avavXos. 113 493. 7, cf. 743. 1, and v. rpdme{a 1: metaph. fo ruin one, Andoc. 17. 10, Plut., etc. 4. to upset in argument, refute, Ar. Nub. gor. 5. in Pass., to be upset, disheartened, dverpdmero opéva Avma Theocr. 8. 90; also, tats Yuxais dv. Polyb. 22, 8, 8. II. ¢o stir up, awaken, arouse, dvarérpopas 8 7 al ton Soph. Tr. 1008; in Pass. of the sea in a storm, Arist. H. A. 8. 15, 9, ete. Gvarpéhw, fut. -Opepw: (v. rpépw) :—to bring up, nurse up, cherish, educate, Aesch. Eum. 522; dv.10 ppévnua to raise the spirit, Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 34, cf. Jac. Anth. P. p. 85: so in Med., dvarpépeoOat vidy to have him educated, Hdn. 1. 2; dv. Aeiudv Kdddcea’ Nic. ap. Ath. 684 B:— Pass. to grow wp, Arist. H. A. 8. 30, Zi dvarpapivat év.., Plut., ete.; 7H “EAAGS: gow Ael.N. A,11. 25 ; dvérpades in Anth, P, 5. 157 must be= dverpapns. 2. to feed up, opp. to icxvaivw, Hipp. Art. 799,817, Ar. Ran. 944:—Pass., dvarpépeo@at éx vécov, convalescere, Id. Vet. Med. 1 3 évarpéxw : fut. -Opéfopuat, also -Spapodpat, post, 3 sing. -Spdperac Anth. P. 9. 575 : (v. tpéxw). To run back, 6 piv adOis dvédpape Il. 16, 813, cf. 11. 3545. dvd 7 Spay’ dmicow 5. 599: to retire, ebb, of the sea, Plut. 2. 915 A: to return, recur, els or él 1 Polyb. 2. 67, 6., 5. 40, 4, Plut., etc. : 40 return to one’s former position, Diod. 20. 59. < to go back, in narrative, dv. trois ypévois Polyb. 1. 12, 6, etc, 3. c. acc. to retrace, Lat. repetere, xddos dvédpapov tury Pind. O. 8. 72; to undo, Menand, Incett. 355; dv. ri ris picews eAdrrwow to make amends for, Plut. 2. 2 C. II. to jump up and run, start up, of men, dvadpapdy ce Hat. 3.36; &« ris Kolrns, x Tod Opévov Id: 7.15, 212; mpds rd peréwpa Thuc. 3. 89, cf. Xen, Hell. 4. 4,4. . - 2. of things, eyxépados d8 . . dvéSpape ef wretAfjs the brains spurted-up from- the wound, Il. 17. 297; “opdivyyes . . dvé5papov whelks started up under the blow, 23. 717 :—to run or spread over, 7d mdOos dv. ém Thv xXetpa Plut. 2. 978 C; dy. pevOos Call. Lav. Pall. 27. 3. to run up, shoot up, of plants, 6 8 dvédpapev épvet Taos Il, 18. 56, cf. Hdt?8. 55: hence of cities and peoples, to shoot up, rise quickly, dvd 7 éd5papov ee. evOnvicay Hat. 1. 66, cf. 7.156; dv. els dgiwpa Plut. Poplic. 21; dy. rots Blots, tais éAmtot Diod. 5. 12, etc.; dv. % mwoAvréAeia increases, Plut. Mar, 34. 4. Alcon B dvadédpope mérpy the rock ran sheer up, Od. 5.412. dvarpelis, ews, }, a turning upside down, Arist. Meteor. 2. 8, 35. dvarpnors, ews, 7), (dvarirpdw) a boring, trepanning, Plut. Cato Ma. 9. 2. a hole bored, Id. 2. 341 A. avarpyros, ov, bored through, Synes. 189 C. dvatptaivéw, (rplawa) to shake as with a trident, Amphis Acbup. 1. 8; cf. ovvrpraivew, & oaro-Abytorros, ov, reckoned at 300 a head, C. I. 3599, ubi v. Béckh. dvarplBw [7], fut. Yu, to rub well, chafe, rov Spor Hipp. Art. 785; so in Med., Hipp. 375 :—Pass., sensu obse., Ar. Ach.1149. 2. to rub clean, «divas Xen, Cyn. 6,26. 8. in Med., @alg Hap cvpplgas dv. to rub — them down, Arist. Probl. 5. 6. 4. in Pass. to be worn away, Hdt. 3.113. avarpllw, to chirp aloud, Q. Sm. 13. 107 (al. =rpt¢w). dvarpurros, ov, rubbed up: dv. tuariov a cloth with rough, raised pile, like plush or velvet, Diosc. 3. 40. dvarpixdopat, Pass. to have one’s hair grow again, Suid. : avarptxos, ov, (Opif) with hair bristling backwards, cited from Porphyr, dvarpupis, ews, %, a rubbing, chafing, friction, Hipp. Art. 785. dvarpotrevs, éws, 5, an overturner, destroyer, Tod otkov Antipho 116. 28; ris vedrnros Plut. 2.5 B. dvarpomh, 4, an upset, rod mAolou Arist. Metaph. 4. 2, 5. 2. dva- Tporrat Swparav, oixev their overthrow, Aesch. Eum. 355, Plat. Prot. 325 C. dvarpomdfe, to turn back, A. B. 312. ’ avatpody, 7), education, Dion. H. de Rhet. 5. 3, Plut. 2. 608 C, ete, dvatpoxdla, late form of dvarpéxw, Philo Byz. de vit Mir. 1. dvarpoxacpss, 5, a running backwards, prob. 1, in Antyll. ap. Oribas, p. 182 for -topds, cf. p. 113. dvarpttyd, to glean grapes off, rods dumeddvas Philo 2. 390. dvatpite, v. sub dvarpi(w. dv-arrikds, dv, alien to the Attic dialect, Steph. B., etc. dvaridioow, Att. -rrw, fo unroll, BiBXia Luc. Indoct. 16:—metaph., dy, rods Adyous mpds éavrév Luc. Nigr. 73 7a yevépeva Clem. Rom. 31. dvariméw, to impress again, Luc, Alex. 21: to represent, Philostr. 694: —Med. to form an image of a thing, imagine it, Plut. 2. 329 B, 331D: hence Subst., avartiaopa, 76, an image formed, representation, Diog. L. 7. 61; and dvarimwots, ews, %, a re-presenting, Hesych.; and Adj, dvatimwricds, 9, dv, re-presenting, Simplic. dvatupBalw, fut. dow, to stir up, confound, disorder, Ar. Eq. 310. Aceutyaresi ov, unshipwrecked, Cyrill, év-avynros, ov, rayless, sunless, “Acdns Aesch, Pr. 1028. dvavdqs, és, speechless, Epicr. Incert. 1. 20. II. =sq., Hesych. dy-av8nros, Dor. -@ros, ov, not to be spoken, unutterable, ineffable, and so, like dppyros, Lat. infandus, dvavddrw péve Aesch. Theb. 8955 dparov dvaviaroy Adyov Eur. Ion 784. 2. unspoken, impossible, ovdev dvaviarov paricatp’ dv Soph. Aj. 713. II. speechless, Id, Tr. 964 (Laur. Ms. dvavios). avav5la, 7, speechlessness, Hipp. 122 D, 174 B. A dv-avdos, ov, speechless, Od. 5. 456.,10. 378, Hes. Th. 797, etc.: silent, Aesch, Theb, 82, etc. :—properly, unable to articulate, whereas dpavos is voiceless, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1098, but cf. Aesch. Pers. 578: simply, without speaking, Soph. O. C. 1274, 1404 :—Adv. -dws, Hipp. Prorrh.74C. 2. preventing speech, silencing, xadwav dy. pévos Aesch. Ag. 238. II, like dvavbnros, Lat. infandus, épyov dvavbov Soph. Aj. 947. avavAel, Adv. (vadAov) without passage-money, Suid. 3 &v-avhos, ov, without the flute, dy, a pr p P if p by flutes, i.e. joyless, melancholy, Eur. Phoen. 791 ; iat i Plut. 2. 406 t14 A: neut. pl. as Ady. dvava dpyeic@ar Babr. 9. 9; Ovew Plut. 2. 277 ; 2. unmusical, uédn Body dvavda (as Bgk. for dvavda) Soph. Fr. 631. II. unskilled in flute-playing, Luc. Halc. 7. G-vavAbxnT0s, ov, not brought to haven, Lyc. 745. d-vaupaxntos, ov, without seafight, dd CAt ie a ALLS ad 1, II. tovhold back by the hair, and generally, to hold-back, dy. vatv dpéyou Luc. Lexiph. 15, cf. Trag. 305. avaxatriopa, 74, a drawing back, restraint, dub. 1. in Plut. a. 611 F: oe dvaxatriots, Schol. Hermog.; and avaxautiopés, Jo. Lyd. de ens. 2. 15., 3. 52. : dvaxtiAacpos, 6, relaxation, easing, Plut. 2. go9 D. avaxahaotixés, 7, dv, relaxing, pappaxa cited from Diosc. dvaxGAd, torelax, Thales (?)ap.Stob. Ecl. 1. 760, Polyb.6. 23,11, in Pass. avaxahketw, to forge anew; generally, to renew, revive, Eccl. dvaxdpagis, ews, 7), a scraping up, ruffling, ris Nenidos Plut. 2.979 C: —also, dvaxap&yn, 4, Apollod. Poliorc. dvaxtipdcow, Att. rr, do scrape up, Plut.2.913E; dip dvaxapdocer idv air causes the roughness of rust, Ib. 396 A. dvaxdoKw, only used in pres. and impf., Ar. Av. 502, ap. Ath. 86 F (BaBva.), Luc. V. H. 2.1; poét. d&yxaoxe, Pherecr. Incert. 22:—the other tenses are formed from the late pres. dvaxalyw, fut. —xavodpyat Hipp. 264. 51., 678. 34: aor. 2 dvéxtivoy: pf. dvaxéxnva :—to open the mouth, gape wide, dvaxavév Ar, Eq. 641; ordépa dvaxexnvés Hipp. 579. 40, cf. 36. dvaxauvow, = dvadve, Suid. , dvaxetpiLopat, Dep. to hold back, hinder, Dio C. 38. 13. dvaxeAtooopat, Dep. to cough up, Schol. Nic. Al, 81, and prob, 1. in Galen. and Erotian. Lex. Hipp. ° dvaxéw, fut. —xe, to pour forth, O4kagoay Opp. H. 2. 33 :—Pass. to be poured out, spread over a wide space, Arist. Probl. 26.34, Mund. 3, 8. IL. =dvaxévvvys, Orph. Arg. 568 (in tmesi), cf. 724. ; dvaxAawvbw, to clothe with a mantle, Nonn, D. 11. 232. dvaxAvatve, to make warm again, Arist. Probl, 8.18, 2 :—Pass., Ib. 22,7. dvaxvoalvopat, Pass. to get the first down (xvéos), Ar. Ach. 791. dvaxo, , (dvaxéw) an eruption, Airyns Longin. 35. 4. dvaxopetw, to begin a choral dance, Ar. Thesm. 994; and c. ace. cogn., dv, Olacov, dpya, oTepavopopiay Eur. Phoen. 1756, Bacch. 482, al. 2. to celebrate in the chorus, Baxxwoy Ib. 1153. 3. obk dv pe... dvexdpev’ Epwtot would not scare me away by a band of Furies, Id. Or, 582. II, intr. to dance for joy, Id. Ion 1079. évax6w, older form for dvaydvviju, Luc. Lexiph. 2. dvaxpdopat, Dep. to use up, make away with, Thuc. ap. A. B. 399, v., Amold, ad 3. 81. dvaxpépmropat, Dep. fo cough up, Diog. L. 2. 75, Suid. dvaxpepifis, ews, , a coughing up, Hipp. Prorth. 67, etc. , avaxpovifopa, Pass. to be an anachronism, Schol, Eur. Hipp. 231. Phoen. 854. dvaxpovcpés, 6, an anachronism, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 846, Valck. Phoen. 861. 2. an exchange of the quantity of two syllables, Eust. 1704. 8. dvaxpavvipt, to colour anew, discolour, Plut, 2.930F :—Pass., Theophr.. Sudor. 12. avaxpwors, ews, 4, a discolouring ; a taint, infection, Plut. 2. 53 Cc. dvaxtpa, aros, 74, an expanse, dv. aidépov Nicom. Movo. p. 6, dv-axupwros [0], ov, without chaff or husks, Ar. Fr. 152. ‘ avaxiors, ews, %, (dvaxéw) effusion, xonjs Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. r.. 15. 2. } Tis dowrias dy. excess of profligacy, 1 Ep. Petr. 4./ 4. II. an estuary, Strabo 140. dvaxtréov, verb. Adj. one must pour out, Clem, Al, 292. dvéxwpa, 75, a mound, dam, Harpocr. s. v. dvinpa, Scholl. dvaxwpartifw, to throw up a mound, Eust. 652. 29. dvaxwpitiopes, 6, the throwing up a mound, Schol. Aesch. Pers. 646,. etc. Also, —dw, and —-wors, 7, Byz. dvaxwvevw, fo cast or melt over again, Strabo 1, 399: hence dvaya- vevors, 7, Eccl. . : dvaxavipr, fut. —ywow, to heap up into a mound, xévw Anth, P, 7. 5373. in Pass., prob. l. Thue. 2. 102, for dv xex@a0ar; dv, dddv to raise a road by throwing down rubbish, Dem. 1279. 20; Tapous Luc. Tox. 43. dvaxwpéw, to go back, médwde dy dvaxwphoovar Il. 10, 210, cf. Od. 17. 461. 2. in Il., mostly, fo retire or withdraw from battle, dAAG o yay’ dvaxwphoavra Kedevo és'rAnddy iévar Il. 17. 30; Tépp’ ava- xopelra 11.189, cf. 4. 305-. 20. 335, etc.:—also in Prose, bmiow dy. Hat. 4. 183., 5. 94; etc.; els Todmiow Lys. 140. 6; és TovmaBey Ar-Pl. 1208 ; dvaxexwphxecay they had retired or returned, Thuc, 8,15; dv. opvyp Plat. Symp. 221 A. 3. to retire from, c. gen, loci, dvexdé-. pnoav peyapoo Od. 22. 270; and, in Prose, with all Preps. denoting motion fo or from, és ri axpémodAw Hat. 3. 143; ém’ otxov Thue. 1. 30; ind 70 retxos Xen., etc.; dv. t4d Twos és Témov were forced by them to retire to. ., Hdt. 5. 61. II. to come back or revert to the right- ful owner, % Baordnin avexcpec és Tov watéa Id. 7. 45 so, ) mown dy. els Spas Antipho 115. 13; cf. dvaBaive 11, 2. III, to draw back, refrain, abstain, é« twos Plat. Phaedo 83 A; dv, é« Tay mpaypa- tov to retire from public life, from the world, Polyb. 29. 10, 5; ef. Cic. Att. 9. 4:—absol. to withdraw, retire, At. Av. 524, Plat. Symp. 175 A; dvaxexwpnxvia xwpa a retired spot, Lat. locus in secessu, Theophr. H.. P. 9. 7, 43 dv. dd Oaddoons inland, Polyb. 2. 11, 16; dvakexwpnids pnya, dvopza obsolete, Dion. H. de Rhet. 7. ; avaxapypa, aros, 76, a retiring, receding, Arist. Mund. 4, 33. ; dvaxapyors, ews, Ion. cos, }, a drawing back, retiring, retreating, Hdt. 9. 22, and often in Thuc.; dy. morefoPat Diod. 1. To :—of the sea, Arist. Mund. 6, 32. II. a means or place of retreat, refuge, Lat. recessus, Thuc. I. 90, Dem. 354. II. ¥ dvaxwpnréov, verb, Adj. one must withdraw, retreat, Plat. Crito 51 B. dvaxwpyThs, ov, 6, one who has retired from the world, an qnchoret, Eccl., v. Suicer. . dvaxwpntikds, 4, dv, disposed to retire; 7d dv. Arr. Epict. 2, 1, 10. t -> 1 UNIV] mpaypatay to shake off the yoke of business, Plut. Anton, 21, v. Schiif, ’ dvaxwptte, to make to go back or retire, Xen. Cyr. 7. ¥ 4h An. 5. 2, 103, 116 dyxapigavres (Dor.) Tov Spov having drawn it back, Tab, Heracl, in C. I. 5774. 56, cf. 59. avaipa , to touch up, work up, A. B.'9. dvapiddoow, to tear up, open, Lyc. 343. dvaipdw, fut. how, to wipe up, like dvaonoyyifw, Ctesias Ind, 28;-v. ap. Clem. Al. 566 :—Med., aor. -t}eac0a, Plut. Thes. 22. dvanraddw, to ine olosely, Epiphan. 1. 937. dvandadyors, ews, 7, close examination, Eust. 254. 31, etc. dvainpilo, to put to the vote again, Thuc. 6..14:—Med. to vote anew, Pherecr. AovAod. 6. vais, ews, }, (dvarrw) a lighting up, kindling, Dion. H. 2. 66:—of the rising of stars, dv.-xal -Béors Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 92. dvaipuxrip, jpos, }, a refresher, évav from labours, Eur.-Fr. 135. dvaipuctixés, 4, dv, fit for cooling, refreshing, Galen. avdiputis, ews, }, a-cooling, €dxeos Hipp. Fract. 767: -a refreshing, relief, Strabo 459. dvaipixn, }, @ cooling, Plat. Legg. 919 A. 2. reliéf, recovery, respite, Plat. Symp. 176A; xakx@v-from misery, Eur. Supp. 615; mévov Id. Ion 1604. 38. respiration, Plat. Tim. 84°D, Ath. 24 E. dvaipixw [5], fut. -yvgw, to cool, to, revive by fresh air, to refresh, dnras ’Oxeavds avinay, avapixew. dvOpmrous Od. 4. 568; dvépuxov gidrov Frop were reviving their spirit, Il. 13. 84, v. infr.; €Anos dva- Yoxovra 5. 795, cf. Hipp. Fract. 767; Su@as dv. Hes. Op. 606; dv. Baow to cool the feet in -water, “Eur. I, A. 421 :—Pass. ¢o' be revived, refreshed, dvéyuxGev pidov Frop Il. 10. 575; of the body, Plat. Tim. 78 E, cf. 70D; dor’ dvepdxns [0] Amips. Movy 1. 2. vais.dy. to Jet the ships rest and get dry, relieve them, Hat. 7, 59, Xen. Hell. 1. 5, 10; so, dv. Tov idpGra to let it dry off, Plut. Sull.:29; dv. Tas adAalas to dry them, Id. Themist. 30. 3. -metaph. c. gen., dv. révev Twa to give him rélief from toil, Eur. Hel. 1094. II. the Act. is also used intr. to become cool, recover oneself, revive, Diphil.-4A. 1, Anth. P. 12. 132, Opp. H. 5. 623; edpev . . Spdpav dvaydxoucay [riv €Aapov] Babr. 95. 57- dvbalo, poét, for dvadalw. . dvSdve [a]: impf. fvdavov, Ep. évdavor, in Ion. Prose é4vSavoy Hat. 9. 5 and 109, (in 7. 172., 8. 29 the Mss. give fjvéavov) :—fut. dd}ow Hat. §- 39 :—pf. dénxa Hippon. 90; but also €a6a Ap. Rh. 1. 867 (written €a8a in Theocr. 27. 22) ; -part..éadds (v. infr.) :—aor.€a5ov Hat. 4. 201., 6. 106; Ep., evidor (i. e. €Fador), Il. 14. 340, Od. 16. 28; but Hom. also has ddov [a] Il. 13. 748; 3 sing. subj. dy Hdt. 1.133; opt. dor Od. 20. 327; inf. ddeiy Il. 3. 173, Soph. Ant. 89. (From 4/2FAA; cf. Skt. svad, svad-dmi (gusto, placeo), svad-us (dulcis), Lat. sua-vis (i.e. suadvis), suad-eo; Goth. sut-is, O, Norse set-r (or rather s@ér), A.S. swét-e; O.H.G. suoz-i (siiss). From the same Root preb. come féopza:, H5Us, 750s, . H8ovh, dopevos, and perh. éSavds.) To please, delight, gratify, mostly Ion. and pott., used like #8opat, except as to construction ; mostly c. dat. pers, Hom., Hdt., Pind., etc.; also c. dupl. dat., Aya- péuvonr Hvbave Oup@ Il. 1. 24, cf. Odex16. 28; ef opwiv xpadin abo 20. 327; Unvedonely fvbave pvOot please her with words, 16. 398 :—in dddvra.8 ein pe rois-dyabois dpiAciv, the dat. belongs both to the part. and to the inf., Pind. P. 2. fin. j—absol., Totat be waow éadéra pddov gee Il,.9. 173, Od. 18. 422. 2. if dvBdve-can govern the acc. (like dpéaxw 111), we may accept the reading of several Mss. in Eur. Or. 1607, ob ydp p’ dvddvover, and dydavovea piv puyp moXiras in Med. 12; we certainly find vdoy 8 épndv obzs ade in Theocr. 27.22; butin Theogn. 26, for od’ 6 Zeds tow mavras avodver, mavreco” is the prob. reading. II. in Hat. dvddver, like Lat. placet, expresses the opinion of a body of people, ot opu jvdave Taira 7. 172, Cf. 9. 5 5 rotor 7d dpelvw édvdave 9. 19; c. inf., Tolar piv Eade Bonéew ‘AOn- vaiowst 6. 106, -cf. 4. 145, 153, 201:—Hom. has it impers. in this sense, éxel vb ror ebadey obras [sc. movetv] Il. 17. 647, cf. Od. 2. 114. Ti. oo eon! Regn hn craggy tog O98 St dn, vben0, dvSeopds, Opa, , » poet. for avad—, bey, 76, any raised beaks “by the side oi river or ditch, a dyke, Mosch. 5. 102 :—mestly in pl., dvéqpa, 74, Lyc.:629, etc.; rerphoOa kadamep dvihpos kat dxerois Plut. 2. 650 C; cf. Luc. Lexiph. 2; av6. Oaddoons Opp. H. 4. 319. 2. a raised border, flower-bed, like mpacid, Theophr. C.-P. 3.15, 4 (H. P. 7. 15, 2 is corrupt) Theocr. 5.93, Anth. P. 12. 197, Nic. Th. 576. Also in A. B. 394, dvSeipases, ai. | avBixrns, ov, 6, for dvadinrns (dvadixeiv), the catch of a mousetrap, also pérrpov, Call. Fr. 233. ; 3 &vBtxa, Adv. (dvd, diya) asunder, in twain, 8 [kepady] dvdixa mace xedoOn Il. 16. 412; dvdixa wavra Sdoacba 18. 511; opp. to dupiydny, Nic. Th. gr. eek peter ny a P. 5.5. 2. as Prep. c. gen., like-dudis, xwpis, Ap. Rh. 2. 927. ’ aS sondSqv, Ady. (avadoxt) alternately, Hesych. ; cf. GpBorainy. avSoxela, }, =dvadoxh I, év dvboxelg Zarrixoi in the hands of Zoticus, of a balance over from the preceding -year, C. I. 5640. 11. 19, al., 5641. 50 :—dvBoxt-dpxns, ov, 0, an officer in charge of this balance, Ib. 8545. Cf. én s sapkythle, fut. #ow Diod. S.: pf. hvdparya0nxa Id.: aor. ~yoa Polyb.: (dvhp, dryads) :—later form of dviparyadiCopat, Polyb. 1. 45, 3, al., C. I. 2222.14:—Pass., jvSparyadnpeva, opp. to jpaprnpeva, Plut. Fab. 20, dvbpit 76, a brave honest deed, Plut. Sert. 10, C.-I. 5879. 9. pee veers “gs -{y, 9, bravery, manly virtue, Hdt. 1. 99, 136, 2. at Athens, bravery and honesty, the character of a brave honest man, Ar. Pl, 191, Phryn. Com. "Equadr. 2, Thuc. 2. 425 dvbpa- yablas tvexa orepavotabat Hyperid. Lyc. 135 cf. dvdparyabiGopar. dvbpiya0ifopar: aor. dvdpayadicacda App. Civ. 5. 101: Dep:—to al. act bravely, honestly, et 71s dmpaypootvy dybpayabi aay ae: P. 6. 272. SCRE ee pov, 76, (dvdéa) = dv60s, Sappho 87, Simon. Iamb. 66, Pind. N 116, Cratin. Ma9. 1, Ar. Ach. 992; dvbeua xpvood, i.e. the ee gold, Pind. O. 2. 130; so, dvdep’ épetxddxov h, Hom 5. 93 dvOemov xpuatov Lxx (Eccl. 12. 6); v. dvOos 11, 2 rane of a hous prob. =dv@euis 2, Theophr, H. P, 7. 14, 2, 3 in pl. the p of fs Ath. 629 E; cf. dv@eua, Wapedia a oe 2 A ont, Ear or edited from flowers, dv0. ydvos pertooys, jSamerer’s, 0, (*épym) working in flowers, 4 dv0., i. e. the bee, the interior curvature of the ear, the exterior being II. name of a dance, in Ath. a avOepn0%s, ofcca, ody, contr, from dvOeudes, dvepnedyras Anacr, 62, avOeusdns — avOoxparéw. AvOepadys, «s, (€f50s) flowery, blooming, jp Aesch. Pr. 455; Tp@Aos Eur. Bacch, 462; Aepev Ar. Ran. 449. - dvOepwrds, 7, dv, (as if from dvOendw) adorned with flowers or with Sflower-patterns, kadumrhp Inscr. in Béckh’s Urkund. 407, sq. GvOetis, ews, 7, (dvréxopat) a clinging to, dAApAwwv Ep. Plat. 323 B. dvOeo, Ep. imper. aor. 2 med. of dvari@nus. Gvbepedv, avos, 5, the chin or part on which the beard grew (from dv0éw), Lat. mentum, degcreph 8 ap’ bm’ dvOcpedvos édodoa, in token of supplication, Il. 1. 501 ; mapa velarov dvOepedva, i. ec. just under the chin, 5. 293; so Hipp. 280. 1, Nic. Th. 444. 2. later, the neck, throat, Euphor. 51, in pl. 3. the mouth, Nonn. D. 3.247. (V. sub Gos; and cf. Od. 11. 320.) avOepicn [Ut], ,=dvOépicos, dvdépt, Anth. P. 12. 121. GvOépikos, 6, the stalk of asphodel, Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 2, cf. Hel- lanic. 93 (in Miiller Hist. Fr.); and so prob, é¢ dy@epixay in Hadt. 4. 190, which others refer to dvOépif. 2. the flower of asphodel, Diosc. 2. 199. 8. the plant itself, asphodel, Cratin. Incert. 135, Eupol. A7y. 1. II. dv@épé 1, Schol. Arat. 1060. avOepixaSns, es, like a stalk of corn, kavdds Theophr. H.P. 9. ro, T. GvOépit, Ticos, 6, (dvO0s) = dOyp, the beard of an ear of corn, the ear itself, Lat. spica, Il. 20. 227, Hes. Fr. 156 Gottl., Opp. II.= dyOépios 1. ¥ (q.v.), the stalk of asphodel, Theocr. 1. 52. avOepiokos, J,=dvOépixos, dub. in A. B. 403, Longus 1. 10. dvOeps-xerdos, ov, with blooming lips, Tzetz. Posth. 506, for avOnpé- xetAos, which occurs in Tzetz. also. avOecay, Ep. 3 pl. aor. 2 act. of dvarlOnu. avOecvoupyés, dv, creating flowers, Orph. ap. Procl. wWOect-rétaros, ov, fluttering round flowers, pédXea Antiph. Tpit. 1. avbeat-xpws, wros, J, %, variegated, blooming, Matro ap. Ath. 135 E. *AvOeornptia, wy, Ta, the Feast of Flowers, i.e. the three days’ festival of Dionysus at Athens, in the month Anthesterion, Harpocr., v. Buttm. Exc. 1. ad Dem. Mid., and cf. Acovicra. *AvOeornpiav, Gos, 5, the month Anthesterion, eighth of the Attic year, answering to the end of February and the beginning of March, in which the Anthesteria were celebrated, C. 1. 71 6. 39, etc. “ avOeoridw, fut. dow [a], (dvri, éoridw) to entertain in return or mu- tually, Plut. Anton. 32, Luc. Amor. 9. *AvOerpépra, 7d, a festival in honour of Persephoné, who was carried off while gathering flowers, Poll. 1. 37. avberpédpos, ov, (4v00s, pépw) bearing flowers, flowery, suihag Eur. Bacch. 703; Aclyaxes dvOeopdpor (restored from Mss. for dvOnpdpos), Id. I. A. 1544. II. dvOecpdpor, ai, women celebrating the An- thesphoria, Poll. 4. 78; cf. dvOopdpos It. GvOero, Ep. 3 sing. aor. 2 med. of dvari@nu. dvOéw, fut. jow, etc.: (dvO0s):—to blossom, bloom, of the youthful beard, mpiv .. i170 xporapooy iovdAovs dvOjoa Od. 11. 320, (the only place in Hom.), cf. Orph. L. 252; of persons, mp@rov 8 dvOjcavras ind Kpordpoow tovdoy with the young down just shewing, C. I. 1499. 3, cf. Anth, Plan. 384. 2. of flowers and plants, first in Hes. Op. 580; ordxus Soph. Fr. 698; xumdpicoot Theocr. 27. 44; c. dat., Gvéecw h. Hom. Ap. 139; Addos Pind. I. 4. 31: metaph., dvOodv 7é- Aayos Alyatoy vexpois Aesch. Ag. 659; dppds Hvoet Lacon. in Ar, Lys. 1257. II. metaph., 1. to bloom, be brilliant, shine with colour, etc., #vOet powitiot . .% orparia Xen. Cyr. 6. 4, I. 2. to be in bloom, blooming, 7Bas kaprov #Bjcayra Pind. P.9. 193; dvOod- cay dxpiv exwv Isocr.84C; év dpa, ép’ dpa dvOeiv to be in the bloom of youth, Plat. Rep. 475 A, Plut. Pericl. 16; 7d od Arye dpas, od F Gpxe dvOety Plat. Alc, 1.131 E, cf. ib. C. 8. to flourish in wealth and prosperity, Aaot Hes. Op. 225; dvOevons Tis Acins, Eperpins Hat. 4. 1., 6.127, cf. Thuc. 1. 19, etc.; dABos opixpdy dvOnoas xpévoy Eur. El. 944; 70 dvOodv rijs Suvapews the flower of the force, Plut. Cor. 39 :—c. dat., dv. dvipdor to flourish, abound in men, Hat. 4. 1. b. of persons, to flourish, be popular, ovrws HvOnoev éxeivos Ar. Eq. 530, cf. Nub. 897, 962; mpamtdecot, d6fn dv0. Pind. O. 11 (10). 10, etc. ; "Ex- Topos jvOe Sépv Eur. Hec. 1210; opddpa ye HvOnoev em rais édmiowy, of Philip, Dem, 21. 3; dv0. mpds Sdgav, mpds xdpw Plut. Sert. 18, ete. 4. to be at the height or pitch, dvOet maOos Twi Aesch. Cho. 1009; of a disease, #v@nxev Soph. Tr. 1089, cf. Hipp. Epid. 1. 963; cxopparoy dvOovvrev when they were in vogue, Plut. Anton. 32; cf. OadAw. 5. c. gen., like Bpvw, to swarm with, pOepov jvOncer Paus. 9. 33,6; cf. Walz Rhett. 1. 495. III. trans. to make to blossom, only in late writers, Lob. Soph. Aj. p. 93- GvOemv or dvOdv, Svos, 5, a flower-bed or garden, Gloss. Gv0n, %, like dvOnots, the full bloom of a flower or plant, Plat. Phaedr. 230 B: a special Att. form, Piers. Moer. p. 4, Thom. M. p. 127. 2. a blossom or bloom, Nic. Th. 625, etc., Ael. N. A. 12. 4. dvOnSuv, dvos, }, (dv0éw) the flowery one, i.e. the bee, Acl. N. A. 15. I. II. a kind of medlar, Theophr. H.P. 3. 12,5. Hence, av0n- So-voeSis, és, as epith. of another kind, Ib. (For the form, cf. adyndav, dnbiv, kndnddv.) avOnAn, 4, (avOndAds for dvOnpds) the downy plume of the reed, Lat. panicula, Theophr. H, P. 4. 10, 4, Diosc. I. 114. avOndvov, 74, Dim. of dvO@HAn, Diosc. 3. 173., 4. 122. & os, ov, later form for dvrnAcos. bs dvOnpa, 74, prob. only found in compds., as éfavOnpa ; v. Hesych. GvOnpa, 74, post. for dvdOnua, an offering, Epigr. Gr. 948. 1. avOqpwv, ov, gen. ovos,=dyvOnpis, kurivo.o . . Kapmdy Nic. Al. 623. GvOnpo-ypiiéw, fo write in a florid style, Cic. Att. 2. 6, Eust. 9gt- 8. ‘ouxtAos, ov, brocaded with flowers, flowered, Philo 1. 666 * GvOnpbs, &, dv, (dv0éw) flowery, blooming, éap Chacrem, ap. Ath, 608 $ 127 E; Aepdy, ddmeBov Ar. Av. 1093, Ran. 351; mpdcoyus, diddects Diod. 5. 3, and 19 :—7d dv@npd flowery meads, Plut. 2.770 B; but also flower- ing plants, Ib. 765 D. II. metaph. fresh, young, xAdn Eur. Cycl. 541: of music, etc., fresh, new, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 38, cf. Plut. Pericl. 15; of persons, Plut. Pomp. 69; iAapds «at dv@. 2. 50 B; v. dvOos I, fin. 2. ras pavias dvOnpdv pévos rage bursting (as it were) into Slower, i.e. at its height, Soph, Ant. 960. 3. bright-coloured, bright, like dvOiwés, dvOnpds eiudrav aTodf Eur. I. A. 73; Tod xadKoo 70 av0, its brightness, brilliancy, Plut. 2. 395 B, cf. 79 D; of colours, 7d dv, réiv Xpwparav Luc, Nigr. 13, and often in Plut. 4. brilliant, splendid, deenvapioy Diphil. Medrad, 1 ; a5 Philo 1. 679. 5. of style, flowery, florid, Plut. 2.648 B: so in Adv., dvOnpdrepov Aéyew Isocr. 294 E. Sihapbrass nos, %, bloom, freshness, Nicet. Ann. 276. dvOqous, ews, },=dv0n, Theophr. C. P. 4. 10, 1, Plut. 2. 647 F. avi pat, Pass, to be beaten in turn, give way or yield in turn, rl Thuc. 4.19, cf. Dio C. 49. 44. évonotxéte, to be quiet in turn, App. Civ. 2. 93. avOnriKés, 7, dv, (cvOéw) blossoming, Theophr, H. P. 1. 14,133 and so Clem. Al, 338 (ubi dv@eu7-). avOnhépos, ov, v. dvOcapdpos, dvGopdpos Ir. avOlas, 6, a sea-fish, Labrus or Serranus anthias (Adams), Anan, Fr. 2, Epich. 29 Ahr., Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 6, al. avOepde, fo consecrate in return, Epicur. ap. Plut. 2. 1117 C. av0lfw, fut. iow, (dos) to strew or deck with flowers, Eur. Ion 890; kepadriy pd5os Philostr. 786: metaph., dv0. tv Aw Dion, H. de Isocr. 13 :—Med. to gather, cull flowers, App. Civ. 4. 105. 2. to colour, dye, stain, [woppupa] av. r}v xeipa Arist. H. A. 5. 15, 8 :—Pass., jvOopévor pappdxosr Hdt. 1. 98; ov yap ce pi). . yao’ .. BS jvbro- Hévoy thus disguised, Soph. El. 43; xpéa mupds dxpais jvOicpéva meat browned at the fire, Epicr. "Em. 1, cf. Philem. Szpar. 1. avOuds, 7, dv, of or like flowers, ra. dvOxd = avn, Theophr. H.P.6.6, 2.. &vOpos, ov, =sq., Orph. Lith. 18. 94. avOwvés, 7, dv, (dvO0s) of or like flowers, blooming, fresh, like dvOnpés : in Od. 9. 84 the esculent lotus is called dv@voy ¢fdap, where prob. vegetable as opp. to animal food is all that is meant; dv. kucewv, av0. éAaov a drink, oil flavoured with flowers, Hipp. 538. 273 tpympariov Sotad, ap. Ath. 293C; dv@. edwdia Plut, 2. 645 E. II. flowered, bright-coloured, Lat. floridus, of women’s dress, éo0jres, ¢roAn Plut. 2. 278 A, 304 D, Ath. 528E; rd dvOwa (sc. indria), gay-coloured dresses. worn by the érafpa: at Athens, Phylarch. 45 ; cf. dv@opopéw 11. 2. also of dresses worn at the Anthesteria by the Satyrs; rv quAocodpiay dvé.va évébucer he clothed philosophy in motley, of Bion, who delivered his precepts in sarcastic verses, like those used in the satyric drama, Diog. L. 4. 52, cf. Strab. 15.—Cf. Welcker, praef. Theogn. Ixxvii, sq., and v. dv@os II. dv@tov, 75, Dim. of dvOos, a floweret, Diosc. 4. 153. II. in Orphic phraseology, dv@:ov (proparox.), 76, the spring, Clem. Al. 676. av0-urmdpxns, 5, deputy-master of the horse, lo, Lyd. de Magistr. 1. 38. avOurmdcta, 1), a sham-fight of horse, Xen. Eq. Mag. 1, 20, etc. avOurmetw, to ride against, dAAHAas, of cavalry, Xen. Eq. 8, 12. avOiopa, aros, 7d, (av0itw) a party-coloured dress, Clem. Al. 258. avOlornpr, fut. dvricrqcw:—to set against, Ar. Ran, 1389, Thue. 4. 115; esp. in battle, rad run Plat. Legg. 834 A; dvd. Tpomatoy to set up a trophy in opposition, Thuc. 1. 54, 105 ; dvr. Tis Tiy GAkhy to overweigh him (v. 6A«#f 111), Lxx (Sirac. 8. 2). 2. to match with, Lat. componere, and so to compare, Plut. Thes. 1. il. Hom. uses only Pass., with intr. aor. 2 dvréorny: aor. I pass. dyrearabny in Hdt. 5. 72: pf. dv0éornea N, T.; ‘Att. contr. part. dvOeords Thuc. 6. 70: fut. dvriarhoopar Hat. 8. 75, Soph. O. C. 645: aor. 1 dvreornoduny Ar, Ran. 1389: to stand against, esp. in battle, to withstand, “Hpp 3 dvréorn ..” Aprepus Il. 20. 70, cf. 72, Hdt. 6. 117, al. ; ods dyG.ora~ pévous Tots Sperépois BovAjpact Dem. 242. 9; also, mpds Thy avayxny ov8 “Apns dv0. Soph. Fr. 234, cf. Thuc. 1. 93, Xen. Symp. 5, 1: rarely c. gen., Béos..c0 ppevav dv@lorara Aesch. Pers. 703 (Wakef. sug- gests dv@dmrera), cf. Q. Sm. I. 520. 2. of things, to turn out unfavourably to one, évriotdvros ait@ rod mpdyparos Thuc. 5. 4, cf. 38; dv 7a map’ bua ray dxovdvroy dyricTH Dem. 450. 15. - 3. absol. to make a stand, GAN @ dp’ dv@icravro Il. 16, 305: to resist, Fight still, Hat. 5. 72, etc. ; drép twos Soph. Aj. 1231, Ant. 518. FA , és, bright-coloured, éoOhs Sext. Emp. P. 1. 148; médida Luce. envi 41. s a ass oe avOoBapla, 7, bright colouring, Plut. ap. Stob. 380. 51.» - dv00-Bados ti, i a dyer in right colours, Plut. 2. 830 E, Manetho 2. 326: —Badevs, ews, 6, a dyer, Basil.: —Bagicds, 4, dv, of or for dyeing, Jo. Damasc. : avOoBodtw, fo bestrew with flowers, xalrny Anth. P.. 5. 147.—Pass. to have flowers showered upon one, as a mark of honour, Plut. Pomp. 57, Caes. 30. II. to put forth flowers, Geop. Lo. 2, 10. av0oBoAnors, ews, %, a putting forth of flowers, Geop. 10. 59, 3- & Aos, ov, garlanded with flowers, Oplg Anth. P. 9. 270. av00-Booxés, dy, nourishing, growing flowers, Soph. Fr. 29. dv00-ypahéw, = dvOnpoypapéw, Philo 1. 33. avdo-blavros, ov, living on flowers, wédcooa Anth, P. 5. 163- dv0-oSpov, 74, the scent of flowers, Theophr. (?) avOo8éKos, ov, (5éxopuat) holding flowers, radapos Mosch. 2. 34. av0o-Kdpnvos, ov, crowned with flowers, Opp. C. 4. 235- avOoKopéw, to produce flowers, -yij Bordvas dv. Anth. P. 7. 321. dv@0-Kép0s, ov, decked with flowers, flowery, hetpives Anth, P. to, 6. 2. party-coloured, otavot Opp. C. 2. 190. dv0o-xpitéew, to govern flowers, Luc, Pseudol. 24. ese SL a 128 dv06-Kpoxos, ov, (xpéxw) worked with flowers, or bright saffron-coloured (*poxdbes goes before), Eur. Hec. 471. } dvOodKh, 7%, (4vOéAnw) a pulling in the contrary direction, corrective, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 4: @ counterpoise, Dio C. 35.53 rod BAdmroyros dv@, Plut. 2. 20 C: a resistance, Id. Luc. 11. : avOoAkds, dv, =dvripporos), Iambl. Protr. p. 356 Kiessl. avOoAoyéw, fo gather flowers, Plut. 2. 917 E; c. acc., Hipp. Epist, 1278 :—Med., of bees, to gather honey from flowers, Arist. H. A. 9. 42, I :—Pass., Geop. 11. 26, 2. avOoAsynpa, aros, 75, a posy, collection of flowers, florilegium, Eust. Opuse. 55. 4, ete. avOodoyia, 4, a flower-gathering, Luc. Pisc. 6. "AvOoAoylas were col- ' lections of small Greek poems (esp. epigrams) by several authors, which the editor picked out and made up (as it were) into a posy or nosegay. The first was made by Meleager (Anth. P. 4. 1); next came Philippus of Thessalonica; then Agathias; we have also those of Constantinus Cephalas (formerly called the Vatican, but now the Palatine), and of Maximus Planudes. avOodAsyrov, 74,=foreg., Clem, Al. 14: cf. Suid. s. v. Avoyenavds, Gv0o-Abyos, ov, flower-gathering, Anth, P. 12.249; c. gen. culling the flower of, kdddeus Ibid. 95. &v06AoWp, o7os, 5, a horned animal, prob. the antelope, Eust. (?) dv0-optAéw, to associate, deal with one another, Hipp. 1283. 35. dv@-dp010s, ov, similar, corresponding, Poéta ap. Schol. Soph. O. C. 1375, cf. Herm. Opusc. 7. 201 sqq. &vd-opodoyéopar, Med. to make a mutual agreement or covenant, mpés twa Dem, 894. 26, Polyb. 5. 56, 4; tut Id. 10. 45, Io. II. to confess freely and openly, ras dperds Tivos Diod.1.'70; xéptv Plut. Aemil. 11; duaprias Joseph. A, J.8. 10, 3: absol., Polyb. 30.8, 7; mpdés Tt Id. 15. 27, 9. 2. to return thanks to God, Lxx (Ps. 78. 13), Ev. Luc. 2. 38. dvOopoAsyyors, ews, 7), mutual agreement, Polyb. 32. 10, 12. 2. a confession, admission, testimony, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 184., 8. 453+ avOopnodoyla, 4, =foreg., Gloss. :—also -yqThs; 0d, 6, a confessor, Eccl. dvOovopéw, to feed on flowers, Aesch, Supp. 44, Pors. Gv86-vopos, ov, having its flowers fed on by bees, Aesch. Supp. 539. dv0-orrhife, fut. iow, to arm against, inmedor 8 inmps Foay dv@wmdc- pévoe Eur. Supp. 666 ; dvOcumrArorae mpds 7a moAgmia AoA Xen. Occ. 8, 12 :—Med. to arm oneself, Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 7. dvOémAicts, ews, 7}, a counter-arming, hostile armament, Schol, Thuc. I. 141, Nicet. Ann. 159 C. J dvOorAtrys [7], ov, 6, one armed in like manner, Lyc. 64. &v06-mvous, ov, breathing of flowers, Byz. Gv0o-rovés, dv, producing flowers, Jo. Damasc. dv0-opilw, fut. jaw, to make a counter-definition, Schol. Dem. dvOopiopes, 6, @ counter-definition :—and Adj., dvdopioriKés, h, ov, Tzetz. in An, Ox. 4. 15. dv0-oppéw, fat. naw, to lie at anchor opposite, rit Thuc. 7.19; av. dAAfAais, of two hostile squadrons before fighting, 2.86; dvd. mpds Twa ere Plain. Dor. dvr-, 6, an ite limit, Tab. Heracl. pp. 185, 190. dv@os, cos, 7d: gen. pl. dvOéwv, used for dvOav in Att. (to distinguish it from dv’ dv, and from the pres. part. act. dv@@v), Soph. El. 896, Hermipp. ’A9. yor. 3 and 4, Eubul, Sep. 3, Aristag. Mayp.1; but dvéav Pherecr. AovA, 7. (Prob. from 4/A@ with N inserted; cf. dv0tw, dv6n, etc., dvOepedy, avOémg with aOhp, GOapn, and perh. with ’AOjrn, *Adnva; cf. Skt. andhas (herba) ; also perh. Lat. ador, adoreus. See also dyjvobe.) A blossom, flower, wérovrat én’ dvOeow elapwvotory Il, 2. 89; baxwbivy dvOe eomis Od. 6. 231; Apver dvOet Aeveg Il. 17. 56; répev’ dvbea moins Od. 9. 449; én’ avOcow ifey Ar. Eq. 403; dévdpa ai dvOn wat xaprovs Plat. Phaedo 110D ; 1 eat’ dv dtacra Id. Symp. 196A; dvdea teOpimmav the chaplets of flowers which graced them, Pind. O. 2. 91, cf. 7. 147. 2. the bloom or flowering time, xov- ptov dvOos, dpiov dvOos, Ruhnk. h, Hom, Cer. 108. 3, generally, anything thrown out upon the surface, mpoownov Hipp. Coac, 185, v. sub SavOew: froth or scum, oivov, Lat. flos vini, the crust on old wines, Schneid. Colum. p. 627, 638; xadcod dvOos, v. sub xadrkds. II. metaph. the bloom or flower of life, #Bns dvOos Il. 13. 484; 8ns dvOecr Solon 21; Gpas dvOos Xen. Symp. 8, 14; Kadoy dvO0s éxav Theogn. 9945 xpoas delves dvOos the bloom of complexion, Aesch. Pr. 23; 7d Tov odparos a. its youthful bloom, Plat. Symp. 183 E; érav [7a mpécwma] 7d a. mpodirp Id. Rep. 601 B: —also, the flower of an army and the like, dv@os ‘Apyeiav Aesch. Ag. 197; dvOos MWepotdos atas Id, Pers. 59, cf 252, 925, Eur. H. F. 878; 6 7 wep Hv abrav dyO0s dwokwAre Thuc. 4. 133, cf. Hemst. Luc. 1.171; dvOca byvav vewrépwy the choice flowers of new songs, Pind. O. 9.743 7d adv. . dvOos, mavréxvov mupds aédas thy pride or honour, Aesch. Pr. 7:—7a dv0n flowers or choice passages, elegant extracts, Anth. Plan. 274, Cic. Att. 16. 11, I. 2. like dun, the height or highest pitch of anything, bad as well as good, dnfiOupov épwros avd. Aesch, Ag. 744; defAnrov pavias dv@os Soph. Tr. 1000; cf. dvOnpds I, fin, III. brightness, brilliancy, as of gold, Theogn. 452: hence in pl. bright dyes, gay colours, Meineke Hermipp. "AOnvy 43 inariov naaw dvGeow menoxtApévoy Plat. ip 3 557 C:—esp. of purple, in sing., Ib. 429 D, Arist. H. A. 5.15,6; dAds dvGea Anth. P. 6. 206 ; cf. Welcker ad Philostr. Imag. pp. 11, 14, and v. dvO.vos m1. &v@os, 5, a bird, perhaps the yellow wagtail, Arist. H.A. 8. 3, 5.,9.1, 21. &vPoopia, #, odour, dpwpdrav Jo. Chrys. Hom. 4 in 1 Thess, as, ov, 6, (doph) redolent of flowers, almost always of wine, olvos dv@. with a fine bouquet, Ar. Pl. 807 (ubi v. Interpp.), Ran, 1150, Pherecr. Mer. 1. 30; also dv0. (sub. ofvos) Xen, Hell. 6. 2,6, Luc, saturn. | ay00xpoxos — avOperevos. 22 :—in Luc. Lexiph. 2, dvd. AeipOves, as a pedantic phrase.—The Schol. Ar. lc. has also the form évddcptos, ov. é dvboowvn, %, a flowering, bloom, luxuriant growth, rexéwv Anth. P. 5. e; iAain Ib. 11. 365. , v00-rpddos, ov, = dvboBookes, Hesych. ; GvOohopéw, to gather honey from flowers, of bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 32. II. to bear, produce flowers, Anth. P. ro. 16. 2. like GvOiva popeiv, to wear the flowered robe, play the courtesan, Clem. Al. 195. Gv0o-hépos, ov, bearing flowers, flowery, ddaos Ar, Ran. 442, Anth. P, 12. 256; opp. to xapmpos, Theophr. C. P. I. 5s 5- 2. dvGopdpos, %, a flower-bearer, a sort of attendant priestess, C. I. 2161 b, 2162; so, dvOnpépos ris *Appodirys Inscr. Aphrod. ib. 2821, 2822, &v80-uts, és, party-coloured, mrépvé Anth. P. 9. 562. ducing flowers, Epigr. Gr. 103. alia. #, @ florid, glowing colour, Manass. Chron. 129. 6v06-xGpos, ov, full of the juice of flowers, Eust. Opusc. 311. 42. évOpiixeta, 4, a making of charcoal, Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 7. GvOptixeds, ews, 5, a charcoal-maker, Themist. 245 A, App. Civ. 4. 40: —also, —Keurijs, od, J, Andoc. Fr. p. 97 Blass., Ael. N. A, 1. 8. avOptixeurés, 4, dv, charred, opp. to proyiords, Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 31. avOptixetw, to make charcoal, Theophr. H. P. 9. 3, 1, cf. Poll. 7.1403 7a dvOpaxevdpeva charcoal, Antig. Car. 151. 2. to burn to a cinder, dy@p. Tia mupi Ar. Lys. 340. dvOpaxnpés, 4, dv, belonging to charcoal, Alex. Srovd. 1. \ &vOpance, ds, Ep. -4, 7s, }, @ heap of charcoal, hot embers, dy- Opaxiy oropéca Il. 9. 213; twodeivac Hipp. 581. 33; dvOpanias dmo a broil hot from the embers, Eur. Cycl. 358, cf. Anth. P. 6. 105 ; én dvOpadas darijou Cratin. °03. 5; cov THs avOpaas dodavet warms himself at your fire, Ar. Eq. 780: metaph. of lovers, 710évat Tuva ént dvOpaxif or dvOpaxiqy Anth, P. 12. 17, 166, ef. 5, 211. 2. black sooty ashes, Ib. 11. 66. GvOpiixias, ov, 6, a man black as a collier, Luc. Icarom. 13. E GvOpaxiSes, ai, small fish for frying, Philyll. Ida. 1; cf. émavOpaxtées. GvOpaxtfw, fut. fow, to make charcoal of, to roast or toast, Ar. Pax 1136. II. intr. to be like a carbuncle (dvOpag 11. 2), Eccl. avOpduwwos, 7, ov, of the nature of, or made of, a carbuncle, LXX. GvOpdxrov, 74, Dim. of avOpaf, Theophr. Lap. 33. II. a coal- pan, Alex. Anyy. 1. GvOpaxirns [7], ov, 5, anthracite, name of a gem, Plin. 36. 38. fem, —trts, 50s, a kind of coal, Id. 37. 27. GvOpiixo-ypaidla, 4}, a rough sketch as with charcoal, Eccl, WOpixo-edqs, és, like, or of the colour of, coal, Philo. 1. 383. avOpaxées, eooa, ev, made of coal or charcoal, Nonn, Jo. 18. 117. GvOpixo-O4Kn, 7), a coal-cellar, Gloss, GvOpiixoxavorns, ov, 4, (xalw) = dvOpaxeds, Schol. Ar. Ach. 325. avOpaxdopat, Pass. (dvOpat) to be burnt to cinders or ashes, kepavwv@ Znvos twOpakwpévos Aesch, Pr. 372, cf. Eur. Cycl. 612, Theophr. Lap. 12. For the Act., v. dwav@paxdw, katavOpaxdw. GvOpixo-meAns, ov, 6, a coal-merchant, Philyll. TIA. §. avOpiixoupyla, 7, (épyov) a furnace, Nicet. Eugen. 2. 120. GvOpaKxadys, ¢s,=dvOpacoeéhs, Hipp. 595. 38, Arist. Sens. 2, 7. avOpaKxwpa, 74, a heap of charcoal, a coal-fire, Diosc. Parab. 1. 48. GvOpixay, Bvos, b,=dvOpaxd, Arcad. 12. GvOpdkwors, ews, 4, a malignant ulcer, commonly in the eye, Paul. Acg. 3. 22. Gvopas, dios, 6, (Root unknown) charcoal, Sotad. "EyxAet. 1.12; mostly in pl. av@paxes Ar. Ach. 34, 332, Nub. 98; a. Mapyqjoo made in the woods of Parnes, Id. Ach. 348; émrapévais né-yyacow emt Tv dvOpaKav Id. Fr. 49; GvOpaxas hypévovs Thuc. 4, 100, etc.; their vapour pro- duced stupor, Arist. de Sens. 5, 25. 2. stone-coal, Theophr. Lap. 16. II. a precious stone of dark-red colour, including the éar- buncle, ruby, and garnet (Adams), Arist, Meteor. 4. 9, 30, LXX. 2. hence, like Lat. carbunculus, a carbuncle, malignant pustule (acc. to some, smali-pox), Hipp. Epid. 3. 1082, Galen.; also, avOpdkawors, Galen. III. cinnabar, Vitruv. dvOpn dav, dos, 4, a hornet, Diod. 17. 753 cf. menppnddv, TevOpndar. avOpnyn, 7, @ hornet, wasp, Ar. Nub. 947; in Arist. the name seems to be given to several diff. species, H. A. 9. 42, 1, al. avOpyviov, 76, a wasp's nest, Ar. Vesp. 1080, 1107 ;—Philostr. Jun. (Imag. 884) calls Sophocles Movodiy dvéphnoy. avOpnvumdys, es, honeycombed, dvOp. rat moAdmopos Plut. 2. 916 E. avOpnvo-edis, és, like an avOphyn, Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 3. Gypuckov, 74, an umbelliferous plant, anthriscus, Cratin. Mad. 13 written €v@pvoxoy in Pherecr. Merada. 2; ef. Schneid. Theophr. H. P. 7. 7:—Iin Hesych., dvOploxvoy, 74; in Poll. 6. 106, dvOploxos, 4. avOpwn-ardrys, ov, 6, a deceiver of men, Manas, avOpwr-dpeckos, ov, 6, a man-pleaser, Ep. Eph. 6.6, Col. 3. 22 :—the Subst. dvOpwmapéckera, Justin, M.; and Verb -apeckéw, Ignat. avOpwaprov, 74, Dim. of dv@pwmos, a manikin, Ar. Pl, 416, Arr. Epict. II. pro- II. I. 3, 5+ avOpwrén, contr. —1ij (sub. 5opd), }, a man's skin, like dAwment, XeovTh}, etc., Hdt. 5. 25 (in some Mss. wrongly dv@pamnin), Poll. 2. 5. avpdreos, a, ov, Ion. —‘los, 7, ov (os, ov, Luc. Asin. 46) :—of or belonging to man, human, dvOpamyin povh Hat. 2. 55; % avOp. pias Id. 3. 65, al.; dvOpdmea mhyara such as man is subject to, Aesch. Pers. 706; dv8. Ydyos reproach of men, Id. Ag. 937; réxvn dvOp. Thuc. 2. 47 3—dvOpamhia mpiypara human affairs, man’s estate, humanity, Hat. 1. 32; 74 dvOpdrea Aesch. Fr. 1553 dmayra rdvOp. Soph. Aj. 132, Antiph. Incert. 68, etc.:—rd dv0p. may be rendered either mankind or human nature, wépune 7d a. dpxev rod cleovros Thuc. 4. 61, cf. 5. ° , ° ds avOpwrevopat — avOpdorw. 105. 2-human, suited to man, within man's powers, } dvOp. edSar~ povin Hat. 1.5; ddvvarov nai od« dvOp. not for man to attempt, Plat. Prot. 344 C; dca ye révOpwrea in all human probability, 1d. Crito. 46 E; «ard 76 dv@p. Thuc. 1. 22. 3. human, as opp. to mythical, 4 dvOp. Aeyopévn yeven Hat. 3. 122. II. Adv. -ws, by human means, in all human probability, Thuc. 5. 103; dvOp. ppacew to speak as befits a man, Ar. Ran. 1058. V. dvOpdmuvos, fin. Gvopwmevopar, Dep. to act as a human being, as opp. both to gods and beasts, Arist. Eth. N. 10. 8,6; Yux7 dvOpanrevopevn a human soul, Stob. Ecl. 1. L074. dvOpwrijios, 7, ov, v. sub dvOpémetos. évOpwmuiw, to ape humanity, Tzetz. GvOpwriLw, fut. iow, to act like a man, play the man, be humane, Archyt. ap. Diog. L. 3. 22; opp. to evvdw, Luc. Demon. 21 :—so in Med., Ar. Fr. 100. II. Pass. to become man,Eccl,:—and so in Act., Anth. P. 1.105, avOpwmudés, 4, dv, of or for a man, human, Plat. Soph. 268.D (Heind. dyOpwmvoy), and oft. in Arist., % dvOp. dperf Eth. N. 1.13, 14, cf. 10. 8, 1: dvOpmmndy [éore], c. inf., it is like a man, suited to man’s nature, Ib. 8.16, 4, al.: 7d dvOpwmnd human affairs, Ib. 3.3,6. Adv. -Kas, Luc. Zeux. 4, Plut. 2. 999 B. V. duOpdémuvos, fin. avOpamvos, 7, ov, also os, ov, Plat. Legg. 737 B: of, from or belong- ing to man, human, 6 was dyvOp. Blos Hat. 7. 46; Gray 7d dvOp. all mankind, Id. 1.86; 70 dv@p. yévos Antipho 125. 22, Plat. Phaedo 82 B; dvOp, xivdvvot, opp. to Geir, Andoc. 18.14; cf. Lys. 105. 7, Xen. Mem. 5- 4,19; dvOp. rexpynpia, opp. to omens, Antipho 139.1; 7d dvOp, mpaypyara human affairs, man’s estate, the lot of man, Plat. Parm. 134E, etc.; sa, TdvOpmmva Id. Theaet. 170 B. 2. Auman, suited to man, dvOpamivy 56¢a fallible, kuman understanding, Id. Soph. 229 A; od« dvOp. dyabia a more than mortal ignorance, Id. Legg. 737 B, etc. ; dvOpamtvn wal perpla oxqyis Dem. 527.14; 0d xpi) avOpwmva poveiv dvOpw- mov évra Arist. Eth. N. 10. 7, 8; dvOp. vods Menand. “YmoB. 3, etc. II. Adv., dv@pwmivws duapravey to commit human, i.e. venial, errors, Thuc. 3.40; dav0 wmivarepov more like a man, Plat. Crat. 392 B, Dem. 311.19; dvOpwmivas éxdoyiCecOat, i. e. with fellow-feeling, Andoc. 8. 27; humanely, gently, Dem. 643. 11; dvOp. xp) Tas TUXas pépew with moderation, Menand. Incert. 281; edtvxlay Diod. 1. 60.— Of the three forms, dv@péetos is used exclusively in Trag. and in earlier Att. Prose; dv@pdmwos prevails in Comedy and in Prose from Plat. downwards (though he uses dv@pdrretos no less frequently) ; évOpwmxés is freq. in Arist. avOpamov, 7é,=sq., Eur. Cycl. 185, Xen. Mem. 2. 3, 16; a paltry fellow, Id. Cyr. 5. 1, 14, cf. Mem. 2. 3, 16, Dem. 307. 23; @ wretched man, Ar, Pax 263. dvOpwticKos, 6, Dim. of avOpwmos, a manikin, Lat. h Cycl. 316, Plat. Rep. 495 C; ididhras dvOp. kwpoddy Ar. Pax 751. av@pwmopés, 6, (dvOpwmifw) humanity, Aristipp. ap. Diog. L. 2. Jo. II. a taking man’s nature, Epiphan. dvOpwmoBopéw, to eat men, be a cannibal, and Subst., dvOpwmoPopla, 7), cannibalism, Eccl. dvOpwroBépos, ov, man-eating, Philo 2. 472, Eus. H.E. 7.8, 2. dvOpwms-Bpwros, ov, eaten by a man, Justin. M. avOpwro-yevis, és, and —yéwyros, ov, born of a man, Eccl. dv8pwré-yAwooos, Att. -rros, ov, speaking man's language, speaking articulately, of the parrot, Arist. H. A. 8. 12, 13. GvOpwiro-yvaidetov, 7d, a place for fulling men, comic name for a bath, ap. Clem, Al. 281. dvpwmoyovew, (yor) to beget, produce men, Philo 2. 494. avOpwroyovia, as, 7, a begetting of men; the origin of men, Joseph. c. Apion, 1. 8, Eus, P. E. 719 B. avOpwrro-ypadhos [a], 5, a painter of men, in Plin. N. H. 35. 37- dvOpwrro-Saipv, ovos, 6, #, like fpas, a man-god, i.e. a deified man, Eur. Rhes. 971. partes) sian ov, bitten by a man, Diosc. 1. 178. avOpwro-Sibaxros, ov, taught of man, Cyrill. avOpwrro-abns, és, like a man, in human shape, TYmos Hat. 2. 86; Ocdv dvOp. obdéva. yevéoGat Ib. 142; Oot Arist. Metaph. 2. 2, 22; of apes, Id. H. A. 2. 1, 53. Adv. -88s, Diog. L. to, 139. avOpwrro-Oebs, 5, the Man-God, God Incarnate, late Eccl. GvOpwroOnpia, %, (Onpa) a hunting of men, Plat. Soph. 223 B. avOpwr6-Gdpos, ov, bold as a man, opp. to Ovporéwy, Plut. 2. 988 D. avipwro-Diioia,#),a human sacrifice, Plut. 2. 417C,al.; in pl.,Strabo 198. avapwrro-Biréw, to offer human sacrifices, Philo 2. 28. avOpwrrokopirds, 7, dv, (Kouéw) belonging to the care or government of men: 4, -Kh (sc. réxv7) politics, Themist. 186 D :—dvOpwio-xépos, oy, occurs in Walz Rhett. 3. 607. avOpwroKrovéw, v. 1. for dvOpwmocparyéw, Eur. Hec. 260, ef. Phylarch. 63 :—Subst., dvOpwmoxrovia, }, Clem. Al. 36, Heliod. to. 7. avOpwrokrévos, ov, (Kxreivw) murdering men, a homicide, Eur. I. T. 389. II. proparox., dvOpamd«rovos Bopé a feeding on slaughtered men, Id. Cycl. 127. ¥ Z avOpwroharpela, 4, man-worship, and —AaTpéw, to worship man, Cyril. ; dv@pwro-Adtpys, 6, a man-worshipper, Athanas., etc. GvOpwr-ddcOpos, ov, plague of men, murderous, Eust. Opusc, 239. 51, Suid. :—also, -odérys, ov, 6, Byz. av0pwrd-Arxvos, ov, fond of men, puta Hermes Stob. Ecl. I. 1074. évOpwrodoyéw, to speak after the manner of man, Philo 1. 282. GvOpwrro-héyos, ov, speaking of man, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 8, 31. &vOpwro-pdyerpos, 6, one who cooks human flesh, Luc. Asin. 6. GvOpwrrd-pipos, ov, imitating men, Pseudo-Plut. Fluv. 1157 A. : évOpwropopdia, 4, human form, Dionys. Areop.: -popdéw, to put it on, wear it, Theod, Stud. Eur. } avOpdokw, post. for dvabpioxw, 129 avOpwmd-popdos, ov, of kuman form, Strabo 805, Philo 1. 15, cf. Dind, Aesch. Fr. 21, Ady. —as, Theod. Stud. Hence —popqravot and —pop- tra, of, heretics who believed in a God of human form, Eccl. dvOpwrro-pophow, fo clothe in human shape, Geovs Justin. M. dvOpwird-vexpos, 6, a corpse, Eccl. avOpwrovopixés, 7, dv, (véua) feeding men: } -Kh (sc. Téxvn) the mode of supporting men, Plat. Polit. 266-E. vOpwird-voos, cv, contr. -vous, ov, with human understanding, in= telligent, miOnot Acl. N. A. 16.10; Sup. -voderazos Strab. 699. : avOpwréopat, Pass. to have the concept or idea of a man, opp. to his real existence, Plut. 2.1120 C. Cf. érmdéopat. avOpwromdQea, 7, humanity, Alciphro 2. 1. GvOpumoTi0éw, to have man's feelings, dvOpamos dv dvOp. Philo 1. 134. avopwro-raOys, és, with man's feelings, Clem; Al. 719. Adv. -0as, Hermog: in Walz Rhett. 3. 376, and Eccl. dvOpwro-tAactiKés, 7, dv, moulding, forming man, Theod. Prodr. avOpwiro-rovéw, to make, form man or men, Greg. Naz. avOpwronotia, 7, a making of man or men, Luc. Prom. 5. ¥7. avOpwo-mrovs, dv, making men, of a portrait-sculptor, opp. to Oeomoids, Luc. Philops. 48, 20. dvOpwiro-moAlrys, ov, 5, a dweller in man, Cyrill, dvOpwro-mpemns, és, befitting men, Eccl. Adv. —7Qs, Eccl. &vopwroppatorns, ov, 6, (Aaiw) a man-destroyer, Drawcansir, a comedy of Strattis; v. Meineke Com. Gr. 1. 224. dvOpwros, 6; Att. crasis dvOpwmos, Ion. &vOpwros, for 6 dvOp-. (Prob. from dujp, dvipés and di, man-faced, Pott, Curt., etc.) Man, both as a generic term and of individuals, from Hom. downwds. ; as opp. to gods, d@avarow Te Oedv, xapai épyopévew 7 dvOptmoy Il. 5. 442, ete. ; mpos holo i éorepiov dvOpumav the men of the East or of the West, Od. 8. 28; he gives the name even to those who had died and been removed to the Isles of the Blest, Od. 4. 565 :—xéumos ob kar’ dvOperroy Aesch. Theb. 425, cf. Soph. Aj. 761. 2. Plat. uses it both with and with- out the Art. to denote man generically, 5 dvOp. Oelas pérecxe polpas Prot. 322 A; orm . . evdatpovécraros yiyverat dvOp. Rep, 619 B, al. ; 6 dvOponros the ideal man, humanity, dmgdeoas rov avOp., ob émAhpacas Thy énayyedlay Arr. Epict. 2.9, 3. 3. in pl. mankind, dvOpmrayv, . . dvipay 75e yuvakay Il. 9. 1343 & TO paxp@ . . dvOpkrav xpiry Soph. Ph. 305. b. joined with a Sup. to increase its force, dev TaTos Tov év avOpuros amavrav Dem, 1246.13; 6 dpioros év dvOpdrrois éprv€ the best quail ix the world, Plat. Lys. 211 E; so, 7a é¢ dvOphmwy mpaypara a world of trouble, Id. Theaet. 170 E; ypagds ras é¢ avOph~ mov eypadero Lysias 436. 34; al e dvd mAnyat Aeschin. ‘e 12; and often without a Prep., wddrora, fora dvOpémwy most or last of all, Hdt. 1. 60, Plat. Legg. 629 A, Prot. 361 E; dpiord -y’ dvOp., bp0d- tara dvOp., Id, Theaet. 148 B, 195 B, etc. 4, joined with another Subst., like dvqp, dvOp. d8irns Il. 16. 263; moAlras dv@p. Dem. 609. fin. ; with names of nations, 3éAcs, Mepérwy avOpérwy h. Hom. Ap. 42; but in Att. dv@pwmos often gives:to its accompanying Subst, a contemptuous sense, dvOp. imoypappareds, yéns, cvxopavrns, Lys. 186. 6, Aeschin. ca 3352.35; cf. Valck, Oratt. p. 336, Heind. Plat. Phaedo 87 H; Mev ov, Kajos Twos dvOpwmov Dem. 5°71. 17;—so homo histrio, Cic. de Orat. 2. 46. 5. in the same way dv@pwros, or 5 dyOpwmos was used alone, the man, the fellow, Plat. Prot. 314 E, Phaedo117 E; ds doretos 6 with slight irony, Ib. 116 D, al.; also with a sense of pity, Dem. 543. 26. 6. in the vocat. it often had a contemptuous sense, as when ad- dressed to slaves, dvOpae or & “vOparre, sirrah! you sir! Hdt. 8. 125., 9. 39, and freq. in Plat., but rare in Trag., as Soph. Aj. 791, 1145. 1s in direct sense, a slave, dv dvOp. 7 Philem. Egor. 1; avOp. éuds Galen.; and in Byz., as feudal phrase, a vassal,—cf. our word homage. II. as fem. (as homo also is fem.), a woman, first in Hdt. 1. 60, ef. Isocr. 381 B, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 5, 2;—contemptuously, of female slaves, Antipho 113. 16, etc.; with a sense of pity, Dem. 402. 25 :—in Lacon., dvépwrw, }, Hesych., v. Lob, Aglaoph. 733.—Opp. to dvqp, as Lat. homo to vir, v. sub dynp. évOpwrocpiiyéw, (oparrw) to slay men, Eur. Hec, 260. évOpwrd-cxnpos, ov, in human form, Athanas. — avOpwrérys, 770s, 7), humanity, the abstract notion of man, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 273, Clem. Al. 106; # dvOp. rod Xplorov C, I. 8964. dvOpwrro-rékos, ov, producing man, i.e. offspring of human nature, Eccl. avOpwrro-rpddos, ov, nourishing men, Hesych. dvOpwro-urécratos, ov, of human personality, Eccl. évOpwroupyia, %, -oupyds, dv, (*épyw) =dvOparorata, -notds, Eccl. évOpwrodayéw, to eat men or man’s flesh, Hat. 4.106, Arist, H.A.8. 5,24 évOpwrodayla, %, an eating of men, Arist. Pol. 8. 4, 3; in pl., Plut. Luculls 11. avOpwrohiiyicds, Adv. like cannibals, Eust. 634. 59. ' AC Seah [a], ov, man-eating, Antiph, Bout, 1. 12, Arist. H. A. 2.1,53 ade ie ona Strabo oe Seal avOpwrodpiivis, és, (palvoya) in kuman form, Philostorg. recieved ov, (pOelpe) destroying men, to explain BporoAoryés, Schol. Il. 5. 31. feipsandhivee, ov, (préyw) burning men, Eust. Opusc. 188. 19. avOpwrro-pévrns, ov, 5, a man-destroyer, Manass. Chron. 3605. dvOpwro-pépos, ov, bearing men, opp. to ovropépos, Eccl. avOpwmodins, és, (pu) of man’s nature, ode avOpanopuéas evdmucay rods Oeovs Hdt. 1. 131; Kévravpo Diod. 4. 69 :—in. Dionys. Ar., also —pvikés, 4, dv. av0pwrb-piros, ov, born of man, Melet. in An. Ox. 4. 15. évOpwr0-xorporpodetov (or —rpédrov), 75, a sty for men to wallow in, a sink of dehauchery, Tzetz. K 130 dvO-uBpite, fut. iow, to abuse one another, in 620 (in Pass.), Plut, Pericl. 26, ete. seperti oy _ v0-vAaKréw, fut. yaw, to bark or bay at, Ael, H. A. 4. 19 :—in Timario in Notices des Mss., 9. 236, dvOvddgavros, as if from dvb-vAdoow. GvovAMov, 74, Dim. of av@os, a flowret, M. Anton. 4. 20; cf, émta- , II. =sq., in Plin, N.H, 26.8. GvOudNs, f50s, }, a plant, acc. to some, cressa Cretica, eee [a], #0 —— to trial or indict in turn, rejoin, reply, Apollon. de Pron. 67 C. ee ig to listen to in turn, twés Walz Rhett. 1. 314. avOuTah ayn, dv0-vrahAdoow, Diosc, 3. 153. Thue, 3.70. 2. %, an interchange, Dem. Phal. 60. aro » —TTw, to interchange, invert, Dem, Phal. 59 :—Med. to receive in exchange, tt dvri twos Philo 2. 440. GvOuravréw, to go to meet, pds twa Longin. 18. avOuTdpxe, to have an opposite existence, Stoic. ap. Plut. 2.960 B. avoumireia, %, the proconsulate, Hdn. 7. 5, C.1. (add.) 3841 f. GvOurrairetw, to be proconsul, Plut. Comp. Dem. c. Cic. 3, Hdn. 7. 5. Gvbunaricés, 7, dv, proconsular, ttovala Dio C. 58. 73 in Byz. also dvOurariavés, 4, dv. 2. dv0. dexadapxia the body of Military Tribunes which took the place of the Consulate, Plut. 2. 277 E. : avOiriros, ov, a pr l, Lat. pro le, Polyb, 21.8, 11, al., freq. in Inscrr. II. as Adj. proconsular, éfovota Dion. H. 9. 16; dpx7 Ib. 11. 62. avOurretKw, fut. fw, to yield in turn, rwi Plut. Cor. 18, etc. GvOiregis, ews, 7%, @ mutual yielding, Plut. Solon 4. GvOumexkaiw, to kindle in opposition, wp mvpi Walz Rhett. 1. 497. avOumeEdyw, to lead away, remove in turn, Byz. & , to surpass in turn, Joseph, A. J. 16. 7, 2. avOuepppovéw, to be haughty in return, August. ap. Sueton. vit. Horat., with v. lL. iwepnpavéw, - avOumépxopat, to insinuate oneself into, creep upon in turn, Twa Walz eo Ki = wOumnperéw, to serve in turn, rit Arist. Eth. N. 5. 5, 7., 9. 10, 2. GvOumuxvéopat, Dep. to promise in return, Schol AP sg a dvOuToBaddw, to bring objections against, Aeschin. 83. fin. avOuTroKh lw, to crouch before, rwi Philes de An. 35. 7. avOurrokérrw, to steal in turn, Eumath. p. 193. GvOumoxpivopat, Ion. dvrum-, Med. to answer in return, Hat. 6. 86, 3, II. to put on or pretend in turn, dpynv Luc. Dom. 30. Kpove, to rejoin, reply, Manass. Chron. 2900. GvOuTroKptnrw, to hide in turn, Manass. Chron. Sor. GvOuToXelw, to leave on the other side, as a counterbalance, Philo. 2. 505, in Pass, dvOuropipvycKe, to remind one of, r Eccl. dvOurépvupt, tomake acounter-affidavit, Dem. 1174.8.,1336.13,in Med. avOuTovooréw, to go back again, return, Byz. GvOuromretw, to suspect mutually :—Pass., dvOumomreverat . . wAéov few he is met by the suspicion that .., Thuc. 3. 43. GvOuTopicrw, fut. vfw, to make counter-mines, Polyaen. 6. 17. avOuroorpédw, to turn right round, Poll. 3. 107, etc. eats, ews, 7}, a mutual promise, Nicet. Eugen. 3. 228. GvOuToreivopat, Dep. to maintain by way of rejoinder, Schol. Dem. , to reply to the imoripnots (q. v.), Poll. 8. 150. avOutotpéxw, fo gain an advantage over in turn, twa Theod. Prodr. avOuroupyéw, to return a kindness, dvrun, Ti ToOTo 7) dv bendy Hat. 3. 133; xapuv Soph. Fr. 313; alcxpd ri Eur. Hipp. 999. ie a nat ews, , the returning of a kindness, ch. avOutrodaive, to reveal in turn, C. 1. 4958. avOutropépw, to suggest an objection (cf. dvOvTopopa), Dion. H. de Dem. 54, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 440. II. to take away in turn, Plut. 2. 76 D :—Pass., Ib. 939 A. avOuropopd, 7, an objection suggested by the speaker, in order to answer it, Dion. H. de Dem. 54, Ulpian.; cf. Quintil. 9. 3, 87. avOutroxapycts, ews, %,-a retiring in turn, eis 7d évrds Plut, 2. 903 D. avOudatpects, ews, 7, an alternate withdrawal, Eccl. GvOudatpéo, to take away again or in turn, Dio C. 48. 33, in Pass. avOudiorapat, Pass., with aor. dvOuméorny, to undertake for another, dvOurocriva (sc. xopyyos yevéaOat) to undertake to serve as choragus instead of another, Dem. 536. 21. GvOa5ns, €s, (GvOos, ef50s) like flowers, flowery, Theophr. H. P. 1. 13, 1. G&vOwpatlopar, Dep, ¢o vie with another in ornaments, cited from Greg. Naz. ie. Ion. avin, Acol. évia, 4, grief, sorrow, distress, trouble, Od. 15. 394, Hes. Th. 611, Sappho 1. 3, Theogn. 6, etc.; ind rijs dvias dve- @od000" % Kapdia Pherecr. Mupy, 8; eis dviav épxerat ri is like to be a@ mischief to him, Soph. Aj. 1138, cf. dAvmos; also in Prose, Plat. Gorg. 77D, Prot. 355 A, al. ;—also in pl., dvéatcc Sappho |.c.; dvr’ dnd v Theogn. 344; éuol Aumdv dvias Soph. Aj. 973, cf. 1005, Ph. 1115, Plat. Gorg. 353 E. 2. actively, Savrds avin the hilljoy of our feast, Od. 17. 446; dmpnxros dvin inevitable bane, of Scylla, 12. 223; avin kal odds bmvos an annoyance, 15.394. [In Hom. and Soph. (who alone of the Trag. uses the word) alwaysi. From Theogn, and Sappho downwards, the Poets made the « long or short, as the verse required ; though the Homeric quantity prevailed in Ep., Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. p. 276, Pors. Phoen. 1334. avila, Dor. for jvia, a rein, Pind. dvidfo, only used in and impf. (except, aor. jvitioa Anth. P. 11. 254): Ion. impf. dvthbeoxov, Ap. Rh, :—Ep. Verb, to grieve, distress, like dvide, c. acc. pers., 8s Kev TodToy didn Od. 19. 3233 GAN Gre 5h Pp dviafoy ..’Axacovs (Eust, “Axacol) Il, 23. 721, y. Spitzn. avOuB pio — avepdw. intr. fo be grieved ot distressed, feel grief, Oops aid Gov grieving at heart, Od. 22. 87; dad’ ire in p dviage was grieving, growing weary, 4.160; Kredrecow irepguddws dager he grieves for his goods, ll. 18, 300; én? mardi Arat. 196. [z metri grat. in Hom. and other Ep.] dvaxxés, apparently the name of a tune, Eubul, Kam, 6. dvi aros, 74, a grief, sorrow, Byz. 4 3 & par, Dep. :—to cure again, repair, 7d mapedv Tpapa dnedyrat (which in sense at least is an Ion. fut.), Hdt. 7. 236. [V. sub idopat.] dy-taipitw, Dor. for dvepi(w, to dedicate, C. I. 5773- ; &vipés, d, dv, Ion. and Ep. avenpos, h, ov: (avid) i— grievous, troublesome, annoying, of persons, maxX ov dvinpév Od, 17. 220; €x@pots Gvapot Ar. Pl. 561, cf. Lysias 173. 19:—of animals, oxérkca Kal ay. Hat. 3. 108 :—Adv., dviapils Aéyetv Soph. Ant. 316. 2. mostly of things, painful, grievous, mrwxevely TAVTON COT” dvinpérarov Tyrt. 7. 4, cf. Theogn. 124; mod’ dvenpd wadav Theogn. 276, cf. 4723 Opp. to 450, Eur. Med. 1095, cf. Plat. Prot. 355 E; Tovs dviapots -yeyevnuevots Dem. 323. 3:—Comp. dvapérepos Lys. 118. 28, cf. Tyrt. and Theogn. Il. c.: irr. Comp. dvinpéorepos Od. 2. 190 (cf. dxparos). II. pass. grieved, distressed, Xen. Cyt. 1. 4, 14 :—Ady. —ps wretchedly, ¢nyv Id. Mem, 1.6, 4. [In Hom. and Soph. always &vi—; dvinpos in Tyrt. and Theogn. ll. c.; in Eur, also and Com. poets dvt@pos,—so that « was short in familiar language; cf. dvide.] © 3 Gy-laros, Ion. -(ntos, ov, incurable, Hipp. Aph. 1262; €Axos, rpadpa Plat. Legg. 877 A, 878C: also in moral sense, mpdypara Ib. 660C; ay. wat dvfieeata xaxd Aeschin. 75. 42; dvedevdepia ay. éorwy Arist. Eth. N. 4. 1, 37. 2. of persons, incurable, incorrigible, Plat. Rep. 410 A, Gorg. 526 B; dy. Sid poyOnpiay Arist. Eth, N. 9. 3, 3; al.: so Adv., dviaras exe to be incurable, Plat. Phaedo 113 E, Dem. 332. 21; of ay, waxot Arist. Eth. N. 5. 9, 17. II. act., dv. peravoia unavailing repentance, Antipho 120. 29. dy-tdrpevros, ov,=foreg., Suid. s. v. Bpva. dviatpevo, to heal again, Tzetz. Hist. 6. 665. ‘ &v-tarpoddynrtos, ov, (Adyos) uninstructed in medical science, Vitruv. I. I, 13. dy-larpos, 6, no-physician, a quack, Arist. Phys. 1. 8, 3. aviaxos, f. 1. for aiiaxos in Hom. and Q. Sm. Gv-14 Xo, fut. -aynow, to cry aloud, Ap. Rh. 2. 270, etc. 2. c. ace. to praise loudly, Anth, Plan. 296. II. to exclaim in reply, Nonn. Jo. 10. go. Gvidw, Soph, etc.: 3 sing. impf. qvia Soph. Aj. 273, Plat. Gorg. 502 A: fut. dvidow [@] Xen. An. 3. 3, 19, Ep. dvejow Hom.: aor. jviaoa Andoc, 1. 50, etc.; Dor. dvid@oa Theocr. 2. 23: pf. jvidxa Heliod. 7. 22 :—Pass., dviapat Od., Att., Ion. 3 pl. opt. avidaro Hat. 4. 130: 3 pl. impf., #viavro Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 10: fut. dvidoopat, Ar. Fr. 445 4, Xen. Mem. 1. 1,8; (dvaOfoopa only in Galen.) ; Ep. 2 sing. dviqoear Theogn. 991: aor, vd6nv Xen. Hell. 6, 4, 20; Ion. -48yv Hom.: pf. jwvinuat Mosch, 4. 3.—The aor. med, dvidcacGat is prob. f, 1. for dvia- geoOa: (dvia). [7 always in Hom. and Soph.; common in Theogn. and late Poets; short in Ar. l.c., etc.,—so that « was prob. short in familiar language, cf. dviapés.] | Commoner form of the Ep. dvid{w, to &rieve, distress, c. acc, pers., dvijoe., vias Axai@v Od, 2. 115, cf. 20. 178; pyde pidovs dvia Theogn. 1032; otAous dviav Soph. Aj. 266, cf. Andoc. 7. 38, etc.:—c. acc. rei, dvd pot Ta Gra Plat. Gorg. 485 B:— c. dupl. acc., 5 Spay a” dd ras ppévas Soph, Ant. 319; c. acc. pers. et neut. Adj., ri rar’ dvds pe; Ib. 550; mavp dvidoas, rOAX’ ebppavas (sc. byas) Ar. Pax 764:—Pass. to be grieved, distressed, c. dat. pers. vel rei, dviGrat mapedvri he is vexed by one’s presence, Od. 15. 3353 av, dpuparyig I. 133; ov co.. maddvTe Kaxa@s dviwpeOa Theogn. 655; maoxov dviqceat Id. got; dv. iwoppvqoKov Lysias 133- 353 danavavra avidobar Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 44; mepl twos Ar. Lys. 593: ¢. neut. Adj., rot7’ dvi@par mada: I have long been vexed at this, Soph. Ph. 906, 912; TOAAG wey adrods dviapévous, TOAAA Be dvidvras Tods olxéras Xen. Occ. 3, 2:—absol., 088 av .. dvi@ro Theogn, 1205 ; esp. in aor, part. aor. pass. dyinBels, melancholy, Od. 3. 117, Il. 2. 291. avypos, d, dv, =dyapds, Nic. Th. 8, Opp. H. 3. 188, Anth. P. 7. 561, Epigr. Gr. 562. aviBelv, inf. aor., to look up, dub. in Aesch. Cho. 808, (Herm, dvé6qv, Dind. dvadiv apocop. for dvadivat). dv-(8.0s, ov, with nothing of one’s own, = dxThpov, Basil. dy-iBirt, Adv. (i8iw) without sweat or toil, Plat. Legg. 718 E. dv-i5{w, to perspire so that the sweat stands on the surface, Plat. Tim. 74 C Bekk. ; vulg. dudpaca, ; dvidpos, ov, v. s, dvidpas, aviBpdw, to get into a sweat, Hipp. Coac. 120. dv-L8piros, ov, v. sub dl8puros, aviipte, fut. vow, to set up, e. g. a statue, Dio C. 37. 34. avibpws, ov, without perspiration, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 16., 2. 73 and so dv5pos should be corrected in Hipp. 399. 21. aviSpwors, ews, 4, a sweating, Hipp. 1236 B. Gvidpwrt, Adv. (i3péw) without sweat, Hipp. Prorth. 72, Xen. Cyr. 2. I, 29: metaph. without toil or trouble, Il. 15. 228: lazily, slowly, Xen. Cc . 2. 2, 30, Oec. 21, 3. vidpwros, ov, (i5piw) without having sweated or exercised oneself, dy, yevopevor elotovey Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 29. dv-tépetos, ov,= & fepeta pi) Overar A. B. 405. dviepos, ov, unholy, unhallowed, Aesch. Ag. 220, 770, Supp. 7573 dvicpos Otrav meddvav unhallowed because of the unoffered sacrifices, Eur. Hipp. 147 ;—all lyr. passages, II. unconsecrated, Plat. Rep. 461 B, iz.| 9 dviepéw, to dedicate, devote, Arist. Occ. 2.23 Twit 7s Plut, Cor. 3: ° . ~ anépwois — ancaror. “used in case of persons invoking the wrath of the gods upon themselves or others in case of breach of faith, Newton Inscr. 81, sqq. dviépwos, ews, 7%, consecration, iepod Dion. H. 5.35. avepwort, Adv. = dvépws, Heraclit. ap. Eus. P. E. 67 A, Clem. Al. 19 (vals. dvépws). dvinpt, qs (in Il. 5. 880, dweis as if from dvéw), nor: impf. daviny, 2 and 3 sing. es, e«, Hom. and Att., Ion. 3 sing. dvieoxe Hes. Th. 157; also jviec Hipp. 1222; 1 sing. dview Luc. Catapl. 4, v. Buttm. Ausf. Gr. § 108, Anm. 1: fut. dvjow: pf. dveika: aor. 1 dvijxa, Ion. dvénxa: —Hom. also has a 3 sing. fut. dvéoer, Od. 18. 265, 3 pl. aor. dvecay Il. 21. 537, opt. dvécarpe 14. 209, part. dvécayres 13. 657 (sometimes referred to dv-é(w) :—aor. 2, 3 pl. dvetoay Thuc. 5. 32, imp. aves Aesch, Cho. 489, Eur., subj. dvjs Aesch. Eum. 183, Ep. 3 sing. subj. dvjp Ul. 2. 34; opt. dvein; inf. dvetvac; part. dvévres:—Pass., dvieuac: pf. dvetuac Hdt. 2.65, Aesch. Theb. 413, 3 pl. pf. avéavrat (like dpéavrat from d@inyt) restored by Steph. in Hdt. 2. 165 (for dvéovrac), inf. dvéaaGa (sic) Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 153, v. Dind. de Dial. Hat. p. Xxxvii: aor. part. dve@eis Plat. Rep. 410 E; fut. dveOhoouar Thuc. 8. 63. [avt- Ep., dvi- Att.: but even Hom. has dviet, dviepevos, and we find dvtjow in Plat. Com. Supp. 2.] To send up or forth, Zepipowo .. dnras Nxeavds dvinaw Od. 4. 568; of Charybdis, rpls pev yap 7 dvinow.., tpis 8 dvapo.Bder 12. 105; appdv dv. to spew up, vomit, Aesch, Eum. 183; orayévas [aiparos] dy. Soph. O. T. 1277; of the earth, capmdv dv. to make cor or fruit spring up, h. Hom. Cer. 333; xvwbada Aesch. Supp. 266; also of the gods, dv. dporoy -yijs Soph. O. T. 270, Plat., etc.; so of females, to produce, Soph. O. T. 1405; so in Pass., omaprav an’ dvbpoy pifwp’ dvetras Aesch. Theb. 413; then in various relations, dv. xpjua ovds Soph. Fr. 357; xphvnv Eur. Bacch. 766; rip cat pAdya Thuc. 2.77; mvedp dvels éx mvevpdvav Eur, Or. 277, cf. dveréov :—to send up from the graye or nether world, Aesch. Pers, 650, Soph. Ant. r1or, Ar. Ran. 1462, Plat., etc. :—Pass., é« yijs narwbev dvierat 6 mhodros Plat. Crat. 403 A; of fruit, Theophr. CP igs 168 2. to let come up, give access to, Twa Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 11; els 7d mediov Ib. 7. 2, 12. II. to send back, ei név pf dvéoer @eds Od. 18. 265 (where the Scholl. refer it to next sense) ; és dippov 3 dvécavtes having put him back. ., Il. 13. 657; mUAas dvecav they put back the gates, i.e. opened them, 21. 537; dv. Odperpa Eur. Bacch. 448; dy. ohuavrpa to open the seal, Id. I. A. 325 :—Pass., méAat dvetpévat Dion. H. 10. 14; cf. dvaxAlvw 11. III. to let go, from Hom. downwards a very common sense, éué 52 -yAueds tmvos avijxer, i.e. left me, Il. 2. 71, Od., etc., cf. Plat. Prot. 310 D: more rarely c. gen. rei, decpav dvier loosed them from bonds, Od. 8. 359; so, é« oréyns ay. Soph. Ant. 1101: to let go unpunished, dvdpa .. Avpawdpevoy Xen. Hell, 2. 4, 11, cf. Lys. 138. 40: of a-state of mind, éué 8 08d ds Ovpdy dvi .. d50vn Il. 15.24; so, Hs pu 6 olvos dvijxe Hat. 1. 213, ef. Soph. El. 229, etc.; dy. irmoy to let him go (by slackening the rein), Ib. 721; immous eis taxos dv. Xen. Eq. Mag. 3, 2; TO Snuw Tas Hvias ay. Plut. Pericl. 11. 2. dy. tii to let loose at one, slip at, dv. rds Ktvas, Lat. canes immittere, Xen. Cyn. 7, 7; hence, appova rodrov davévres (cf. éravinut) Il. 5. 761, cf. 880; c. acc. et inf., Avoundea papyalvew dvénnerv Ib. 882 :—then generally, to se¢ on or urge to do a thing, c. inf., Modo’ dp doddy avqxev dedéuevae Od. 8. 73, cf. 17. 425, Il. 2. 276., 5. 422., 14. 209 :—often c. acc. pers. only, ¢o let loose, excite, as ob5€ Ke Tyr€épaxov .. WS dveins Od. 2, 185; péyas 5é ce Oupds dvfxer Il. 7. 25; Toiow pev @pagupndea Siov dvijxev urged Thrasymedes to their aid, 17. 705:—so in Pass., Gas kivduvos aveirac aopias Ar. Nub. 955. 3. dv. rivd. pds tT to let go for any purpose, Tov AEdy . . dveivat mpds épya re wat Ovolas Hdt. 2. 129; és maryviny éwvrdv dy. Ib. 173; els tdyny dvels Eur. Fr. 964 (v. 1. dgels); 7d c@pa ént padioupyiav Xen. Cyr. 7. § 75; dv. twa pavias to set free from madness, Eur. Or, 227; édy 8 dvfs, tBpicrov xpijua Kxaeddacrov [yevn] if you deave her free, Plat. Com. Meio. 2. 4. to let, allow, c. acc, et inf, dvetvac avrods & 7x BovAovrat moreiv Plat. Lach. 179 A; dy. tplxas avgecbar Hdt. 2. 36., 4. 175; or with inf. omitted, dy, mevOqpn Kopav to let it hang loose, Eur. Phoen. 323; dv. orodiéa Ib. 1491; xépay Plut. Lysand. 1 :—also c. dat. pers. et inf., dvels avr® Onpav having given him leave to hunt, Xen. Cyr. 4.6,3. 5. Med. to loosen, undo, c. acc., eéAmov avienevn baring her breast, Il. 22. 80; afyas dvépyevor stripping or flaying goats, Od. 2. 300; so, dvetro Aayévas Eur. El. 826. 6. to let go free, leave untilled, of ground dedicated to a god, réuevos dvijxey Gwav Thuc. 4. 116; dpyov 70 xwpiov ro Oe@ dy. Plut. Popl. 8; cf. Isocr. 302 C; or generally, rv xupay dv. pnddBoroy Isocr. 302 C; dpotpas domdpous dy. Theophr. H. P. 8. 11, g:—but this sense mostly in Pass. to devote oneself, give oneself up, és TO édevOepov Hdt. 7. 103; esp. of animals dedicated to a god, which are let range at large (cf. averés), dvetrat 7d Onpia Valck. Hat. 2. 65; so of a person devoted to the gods, voy 3 ovros dvetrat orvyepG daipove Soph. Aj. 1214; Also of places, etc., 5évbpea dv. Peotae Call. Cer. 47; dAcos dvetpévoy a consecrated grove, Plat. Legg. 761 C; hence, metaph., dve:pévos eis 7: devoted to a thing, wholly engaged in it, e.g. és rov médeuoy Hat. 2. 167; dvéwvrat és 70 HaXt pov (ve sub init.) they are devoted to military service, Id. 2. 165; és TO mépdos Ay dvepévov given up to.., Eur. Heracl. 3:—hence part. pf. pass. dvet- pévos as Adj. going free, left to one's own will and Fagen at large, Soph. Ant. 579, El. 516; dv. 7 xpiua mpecBurdy eu, kat dvopidar- rov Eur. Andr, 728; wémdor dverpévor let hang loose, Ib. 598; 70 dvetpévoy els or mpés Tt unrestrained propensity to.., Plut. Num. 16, Lycurg. 10; Fa a yédws unrestrained laughter, Wytt. Ep. Cr. 159. 5; cf. dvepéevas. 7. like Lat. remittere, to slacken, relax, opp. to émreivw or évrelvw, of a bow or stringed instrument, ¢o unstring, ast 131 Hdt. 3. 22, cf. Plat. Rep. 442 A, Xen, Mem. 3. 10, 7, etc.; metaph., opyiis dAtyor rdv KéAdon’ ay. Ar. Vesp. 574, cf. Pherecr. Xeip. 1. 4:— hence, b. to remit, neglect, give up, Lat. praetermittere, omittere, arépvew dpaypovs Soph. O. C, 1608; pudAaxds dvfjxa Eur. Supp. 1042; gudakhy, doxnow, etc., Thuc, 4. 27, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 70, etc.; dv. Odvarév ri to remit sentence of death to one, let one live, Eur. Andr. 5323 €xOpas, Koddoes mii Plut. 2. 536 A; dv. 7d xpéa, Tas Kara- dixas Plut. Solon 15, Dio C, 64. 8, cf. 72. 2; dves Adyov speak more mildly, Eur. Hel. 442; so, dv. twds éx@pav Thuc. 3. 10; dv. dpxny, médepor, etc., Id. 1. 76., 7. 18, etc. :—Pass. to be treated remissly, ave- Ohoera: Ta mpdypara Thue. 8. 63; 5 vépos dvetrar has become effete, ' powerless, Eur. Or. 941 ; Tots ynpacxovew dvierat } ovvrovia is relaxed, let down, Arist. G. A. 5. 7, 16, cf. Plat. Rep. 410 E:—often in part. pf. dveipévos, as an Adj., €v 7@ dvetuév ris yvdpns when their minds are not strung up for action, Thuc. 5. 9; dvepmévn potca easy-going, facile, opp. to évrovos, Pratin. 8; dvetuévy rH d:airg relaxed, uncon- strained, of the Athenians, Thuc. 1. 6; diarra Alay dy., of the Ephors, Arist. Pol. 2. 9, 24; dv. HSovai dissolute, Plat. Rep. 573 A; dv. wat Alay dv. Ib. 549 D; dv. xeikea parched, Theocr. 22. 63; Comp. dve- vevarepos, Iambl. V. P. 54 :—but, 8. the sense of relaxation occurs also as an intr. usage of the Act., zo slacken, abate, of the wind, éweddy mvedp’ dv@ Soph. Ph. 639, cf. Hdt. 2. 113., 4. 152; éds dvp 70 wijya Soph. Ph. 764, cf. Hdt. 1. 94; éupdoa ove dvie, of a viper, having fastened on him she does not let go, Id. 3. 109: esp. in phrase, obey dvévat not fo give way at all, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 46, cf. Cyr. I. 4, 22; ai tipat dveixact prices have fallen, Dem, 1290. 22, cf. Arist. Rhet. 2. 13,13; ovdqpia dv, &v Trois wadaxois lose their edge, Theophr. BLP eos he b. c. part. to give up or cease doing, for ovK dvie [6 deds] Hat. 4. 28, cf. 125., 2. 121, 2, Eur, I. T, 18, etc, _¢. ¢. gen, to cease from a thing, pwpias Id. Med. 456; tis dpyfs Ar. Ran. 700, Dem. 572. 2; gtAoveias Thuc. 5. 32. 9. to dilute, dissolve, Galen., cf. Lob. Phryn. 27 (Phryn. says that d:éjme is more correct in this sense) ; divypaivopévav kal dvieuevaw Theophr. Vent. 58. dvinpés, 7, dv, Ion. for dvapés. dvixa [t], Dor. for jrixa, dv-{xaivos [Tt], ov, insufficient, incapable, Babr. 92. fin., Heliod. 2.30. 2. dissatisfied with every thing, Arr. Epict. 4.1, 106, Adv. -vws, Cyrill. dvikdivérns, 770s, %), insufficiency, inability, Eccl. aviket or dvuxt, Ady. (virn) without victory, Dio C. 61. 21. dv-ixérevtos, ov, without prayer, not entreating, Eur. 1. A. 1003. é-vienros [7], Dor. -aros, ov, unconquered, uerable, Hes, Th. 489, Tyrtae. 7. 1, Theogn. 491, Pind. P. 4. 161, Soph. Ant. 781, Ph. 78, Eur., etc. Adv. —rws, Hesych. dvucpdafopar, Pass, to be quite dried up, Diosc. 4. 65 :—hence Verb. Adj. -aeréos, a, ov, cited from Diosc. dv-ikpos, ov, (ixuds) without moisture, Arist, Probl. 12. 3, 5, Plut. 2. 951 B. Adv. —pws, Athanas. av-thacros [i], ov, unappeased, merciless, Plut. 2. 170 C. dv-tews [7], wy, Att. for dviAaos (not in use), unmerciful, Hdn, Epim. 2573 cf. dvéAcos. avikiw, =dveiAAw, A. B. 19, Olympiod. avidAwpa, aros, 7é,=dvaBreupa, Poll. 2. 54. aviAvomdopat, Dep. to wind one’s way or struggle upwards, Hesych. ; wrongly written dveA—. dv-ipacros, ov, unscourged, Nonn. Jo. 19. 3. dvip.dw, used by the best writers only in pres. and impf., fo draw up, raise water, by means of leather straps ({udyes), dmd Tpoxiduds Legs 3 H. P. 4, 3, 5; then, generally, o draw out or up, GAAAovs Sépace avi- pov Xen. An. 4. 2, 8, cf. Eq. 7, 2: to draw up fish, Cyrill.:—Pass., aor, aviphOnv Theopomp. ap. Diog. L. 1. 116: pf. dviynpat Luc. Pisc. 50 :— often used by later writers in Med., dmp@par, Arist. Plant. 2. 6, 9, Luc. Alex..14, Geop,: fut. -jeopat Longus I, 12: aor. -noduny Plut. 2. 773 E, Luc, V. H. 2. 42, etc. II. seemingly intr. (sub. éavrdv), to get up, Xen. Eq. 7, 1: aor. dviginoa Plut. Phoc. 18, Hierocl, in Stob. 491. 26. avipnots, ews, 9, a drawing up, Hesych., Suid. &vios, ov, (dvia) =dviapds, Aesch, Pers. 256, 1055, 1061. dy-lovdos, ov, without down, beardless, Christod. Ecphr. 136, 291. dviéxos, Dor. for #vdxos, Pind. : avurmeto, to ride on high: but in Eur. Ion 41 Musgr. restored Gy ixmevovtos HAlov KUKAy. dy-ummos, ov, without horse, not serving on horseback, imméra: kat dvimmot Hat. 1. 215, Soph. O. C. 899: without a horse to ride on, Ar. Nub. 125: unable to ride, Plut. 2. 100 A. 2. of countries, unsuited for horses, dv. kat dvapdgevros Hdt. 2. 108, Dion. H. 2. 13. dvimrapat, Dep.=dvanéropat, q. Vv. avurrré-rrovs, 6, 3, gen. réd0s, with unwashen feet, Il. 16. 235; epith. of the SeAAof, Dodonaean priests of Zeus, who appear to have been ascetics, Heyne Il. t.7. 288; applied to parasites by Eubul. Incert. 16; to the Great Bear,as metuens aequore tingi, by Nonn.D, 40. 285, cf.Od. 5.273- dvurros, ov, (vitw) unwashen, xepor 8 dviaro.st (v.1.—aror) Aut AciBewv .. dCopuat Il. 6. 266, cf. Hes. Op. 723; dy. moat, i.e. unprepared, Luc. Pseudol. 4. 2. not to be washed out, aiwa Aesch. Ag. 1459. dvs, =dvev, Megarean in Ar. Ach. 798, 8343 also in late Poets, Lyc. 350, Nic. Al. 419, C. I. 5172. 7. aviodlw, to equalise, Hipp. 368. 2, Arist. Incess. An. 7, 11, Cael. 2.12, 14, al. :—Pass., Ib. 2.14, 15. - dviodxus, Adv. an unequal number of times, Nicom. Arithm. 131. dvio-dpOpos, ov, ee an odd number, Xen. or in Stob. 612. 2. avicacpos, 6, (dvica(w) equalisation, Eust. 42. 6. avioGrov, 74, : decoction of aniseed, Alex. Trall. 8. x 2 132 avio-erlmeSos, ov, of unequal surfaces, Iambl. in Nicom. Arithm. dvicitns, ov, 6, fem. Pris, i5os, 4, flavoured with aniseed, Geop. 8. 4. dvico~ , oY, having unequal angles, Jambl. in Nicom. 131. dvicb-Spopos, ov, of unequal course, cited from Philo. ‘ rade Bay és, of uneven form, Porphyr. V. Pyth. 50. dvioo-Kpiitéw, to be too wedk for a thing, Sext. Emp. M. 10. 82. dvioé-perpos, ov, of unequal measure with, rwvi Avetae, Caus, M, Diut. 2.2. Gvico-piens, €s, of unequal length, Galen. dvioov, 74, v. s. dvnBov. Gvico-max 7s, és, of unequal thickness, Galen. dvico-mAGr hs, és, of unequal breadth, Euclid. 608 ed. Greg. dvioé-meupos, ov, with unequal sides, Tim. Locr. 98 A. Gvirbp-potros, ov, unequally balanced, cited from Plut. avioros, ov, worse 7, ov, v. Lob. Par. 469: (ios). Unequal, uneven, Hipp. Fract. 776, Plat. Tim? 36D, etc.: 70 dy. inequality, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 1, 8, etc. :—av. wohureia, of an oligarchy, Aeschin. 1. 24 :—so of per- sons, of dvicor Arist. Pol. 3.9, 2; dv. xaTd-tt Ib. 3. 13, 13; but also not content with equality or justice, unjust, Id.\Eth. N. 5.1, 8 and II. II. unequally divided, unfair :—Ady., Hipp. Art. 827; dv. €xew mpés riva to act unfairly towards, Dem. 752.17; dv. vevenjoOa tds dpxas Arist. Pol, 3.12, 2. a s, és, of unequal strength, Galen. 5.379. dvico-cxedys, és, with uneven legs, Schol. Dion. P. 175. dvico-raxns, és, unequally rapid, Philo 2. 637. Adv. —@s, Proél. avioérys, 770s, 1), inequality, Plat. Phaedo 74 B, al., Arist. Pol. 5.-1, 7, al. dvico-ripés, ov, of unequal value, cited from Greg. Naz. dvico-rorxéw, (rot xos) to be out of trim, lean over to one side, metaph. from a ship, Simplic. in Epiet. Ench. 31. . dvioé-rovos, ov, unequal in tone, Ptol. ap. 'Porph. Comm, 259. avico-uipis, és, of unequal,height, Apoll. Poliorc, 15. dvico-puns, és, of unlike nature, Cyril. dviod-xpovws, Adv., in unequal time, Byz. dy-icba, (dvd, tadw):to make equal, equalise, balance, Plat. Polit. 289 B; rods dobeveis dv. Tois loxupois puts them on a par with.., Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 65:—Pass. to be equal in a thing, mAnOei dviowOjvar Hadt.°7. 103. B. (dv.os) to make unequal, late Byz. aviornpt, A. Causal ‘in-pres. dviornt (later dviera@ Sext. Emp. M. gay impf. dviorny: fut. dvaothow, post. dvaTnow: aor. I, dvéotnoa, Ep. dvernoa: also in aor. 1 med. dveornodpny (v. infr. I. , It. 6). I. to make to stand up, raise up, yépovra 5% xecpds torn he raised the old man up by his hand, Il. a4. 515, cf. Od. 14. 319; th ad..&€ kipas dvicrare; Soph. Aj. 788; dv. Twa €e THs pH Ae Plat. Prot. 317 E; dp0dv dv. twa Xen. Mem.1..4,11. 2. to raise from sleep, wake up, Il.10. 32., 24. 551, 689, etc. ; els éxedn- clay dy. Twa Ar. Eccl. 740; dv. Twa &pdimvoy Eupol. Incert. 8: metaph., dy. -vécov Soph. Tr. 979. 3. -to-raise from the dead, ob5é pry dy- orhoes Il. 24. 551, cf. Aesch. ryt 90 Soph. El. 139; from misery or misfortune, Id. O.-C. 276, cf. Ph. 666; from slavery, Aeschin. 6. 28. 4, after Hom., also-of things, ¢o set up, build, arqAnv Hat. 2. 102; mipyoy Xen. Cyr. 7. 5,12, etc.; tpowaia Plat. Tim, 25 C3 dvdpi- dvra és AcAgous ap. Dem. 164. 21; so, dv. Tid xpucody, xaAxody (in earlier writers fordvar without the Prep.) to set up a golden, brasen statue of him, Plut. 2. 170 E, Brut. 1 :—so in-aor. 1 med., aorhcacbat modu to build oneself a city, Hdt. 1. 165; dveorioavro 5& Bapovs they set them up altars, Call. Dian, 199. b. to build up again, restore, zelxn Dem. 477. 23; metaph., Oedv ripds Eur. H. F.852, = 5. to put up for sale, Hat. 1. 196. II. to rouse to action, stir up, GdX 0c vov Aiavra.. dvarnoov ‘Il. 10. 176, cf. 179., 15. 64, etc.: c. dat. pers. to raise up against another, rovrw 5€ mpdpov GAAov dvacrhoovow Il. 7. 116 (v. inf. B. 1. 4):—to rouse to arms, raise troops, Thuc. 2. 68, 963 dv. rédepov éni twa Plut. Cor. 21 —dvaorhoas Hye orpardy he called up his troops and marched them, “Thuc. 4. 93, cf. 112, ete, III. to make people rise, break up an assembly by force, IL 1.191; but, &cxAnotavy Gvaorica to adjourn it, Xen, Hell. 2. 4, 2. 2. to make people — transplant (v. inft. B. II. 2), doy dvaorhoas dye Od. 6. 7; dvioracay rods dhpous Hat..9. 73; Alywiras e€ Alyivyns Thuc. 2. 275 even, yatay avaorqoey Ap. Rh. 1. 1349; olxous Plut, Poplic. 21; also, dv. Twa. &e Tis épyacias Dem. 270. 14, cf. 313.18; v.-infr. B. If. 2. ‘3. to make suppliants rise and leave sanctuary, Hdt. 5. 71, Thuc. I. 137, etc. :—also, dy. orparé- medov é xd&pas to make an army decamp, Polyb. 29.11, 10; Ta mpay- para dviornot ria Plut. Alc. 31. A, dy, tnt 7d Bijpa to-make to ascend the tribune, Plut. 2. 784 C, = Camill. 32. 5. whe ergy e, spring it, Xen. An. 1. 5, 3, cf. Cyr. 2. 4, 20, Cyn. 6, vey or ee “2 ae cacbai anode call him ds one’s witness, ‘Plat. Legg.937 A. IV. pf. dvéoraca trans, in Lxx (1 Regg. 15.12). B. intr. in pres. and impf. dviorapa, —pyy, in‘fut. dvaorHcopat, in aor. 2 dvéorny, pf. dvéornra, Att. plapf. dveariuen ; also in aor. pass. dveordOny (v. inft, 1, 2):—to stand up, rise, esp. to speak, Toin 8 dvécrn Il. 1. 68, 101, etc.; & péoooo 19. 775 in Att. c, part. fut., ay. Adtov, karnyophowy, etc.; soc, inf., dvéorn pavrevecBbac Od. 20. 380; in part. dvaords eve Eur, Or, 885; mapawéces éroovyro . . dmord- pevoe Thuc. 8. 76: also to rise from one’s seat as a mark of respect, Lat. assurgere, Oot 3 dpa mavres dvégray Il. 1. 533. 2. to rise from bed, ¢& eivijs dvaraoa Il. 14. 336,.cf. Aesch. Eum. 124; ebv7bev Od. 20.124; épOpov dv. Hes. Op. 575; dyé Ar. Vesp. 217; dy. €x «Alvns, after sickness, Andoc. 9. 20:—absol. to rise from sleep, Hat. 1. 31. 8. to rise from the dead, ll. 21. 56, of. 15. 287, Hat. 3. 62, Aesch. Ag. 569; mapa rav mredbver Ar. Eccl. 1073. 4, to rise from . an illness, recover, é¢ 7s vovgou Hat. 1. 22, cf, Plat, Lach. 195 C; absol., Pa > ’ ° r avucemiredos —— avoyncia. Thue. 2. 49. 5. to.rise as a champion, Il. 23. 709; Oavarov xcipa mipryos dvéara (Oedipus), Soph. O. T. 1201: hence c, dat. to stand up [to fight against ..,] "Ayatov.., 05 Hot dvéorn ll. 23. 635 3 BN tks Tot ... ddAos. dvacTh Od. 18. 334; Tupava Cotpoy maow ds dvéarn Geois (olim dvréorn) Aesch. Pr. 354; V. Supt. A. IL. 6. to rise up, rear itself, mbpyou:Eur. Phoen. 824, cf. Polyb. 16. I, 5: of statues, etc., to be set up,,Plut. 2, 91 A, 198 F: metaph. wh 7 €f abrav dvaorhy xaxdy Pind, P. 4. 276; méAeyos Dion. H. 3..23. 7. to be set up, Bagireds as king, v.1, Hdt. 3. 66. 8. of a.river,.to rise, opéow Plut. Pomp. 34. II. io rise to go, set out, go away, «is”Apyos Eur. Heracl. 59, ef. Thuc, 1. 87.,.7. 49, 50; dvioraro els oixnud 7 ds Aovodpevos Plat. Phaedo 116 A, nbi vy. Heind. 2..to be compelled to migrate (supr. A. 111..2), é¢ "Apyys dvaordvres ind, Occcaday Thue. 1. 12, cf. 8: —generally, to be removed,.dnd Bapod Aeschin. .9..22 :—of a country, to be depopulated, xéopa dvecrnnvia Hat. 5. 29; mods ..mao’ dvéarnnev Bopi Eur. Hec. 494; #ovxdcaca 7 ‘EAAds Kal aikért dnorapéevy no longer subject to migration, Thuc.1.12; tiv dopddcay . , repieidere dvaoradeicav Dem, 367. 20. 8. of .a law-court, to rise, Dem. 585. 4. of game, fo be put up, Xen, Cyr. 2. 4,.20; -V. supr. A. III. 5, and cf, dvacraros. dyurtoptwo, to make inquiry into, ask about, dpynots abe évearw ay av- torapets Soph. O. T. 578: c. acc. pers. et rei,.to ask a person about a thing, mevoe: yap ovder dy dvoropeis éné Aesch. Pr. 963, cf. Soph. O. T. 991, Ph. 253; so, oe .. dviorop® Eur. Supp. 110; dv. teva mepi twos Id. Hipp. 92 :—to investigate, 7: Theophr. C. P. 1. 5, 5. avuicropycta, %, ignorance of history, Cic. Att. 1..7. vr pa ov, ignorant of history, uninformed, mepi twos Polyb, 12. 3, 2:—Ady., dmarophrws éxev tivds Plut. Demetr. 1, IL. not mentioned in history, unrecorded, Id. 2.731 C, 733 B, Agatharch, in Phot. Bibl. 453. 37. P dv-totwp, opos, 6, %, late form for dtorwp, Tzetz. Hist. 3..272. avurxave, like dvicxyw, post, for dvéxw, Orph. Arg. 445. dy-loxios, ov, without hips or haunches, of birds, Arist. H. A.2..1, 28. dy-LoXUpos,ov,not strong,without strength,Strab.89,Schol. Theocr,14.15. éviorxuporys, 770s, 7), want of strength, Gloss. Gv-texus, v, gen. vos, without strength, LXXx (Isai. 40. 30). dvioxw, v. sub dvéxw. Gvicwv, wvos, 6,=éniotios (7), acc. to Ath. 447 A. dy-towors [Tt], ews, 7), equalisation, Thuc..8, 87, Plat. Legg. 740 E. dvuréov, verb. Adj. of dive, one must return, bev eéBnuev Dion. H. de Lys. 13. avitile, to howl loud,.Q.Sm. 13. 177. dv-xOus, v, gen. vos, without fish, with few fish init, Mpwn Strabo 746. Gvixvevots, ews, %}, a tracing out, investigation, Eust. 1437.10. dy-lyveutos, ov, not tracked, Luc. Amor. 35. dvixvetw, (dvd, ixvedw) to trace back, as.a hound, Il, 22. 192, cf. Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 13: generally, :¢o trace out, search out, Plut. Caes. 695 ia dy. Lyc. 824 :—dviyvéw in.C. [..2372. W-AXVOS, Ov, without track or trace, Greg. Naz. dy-tipados, ov, (inrouat) unhurt, Stesich. 74. dv-twros [7], av,.(idw) not liable to rust, Arist. Mirab, 48. 2, Fr. 248. dvvetrat, Ep. for dvaveirat, from dvavéopar, dwédedos, Ep. for dvépedos. dvwvyco-cdis, és, like avvnoov, Hesych, dwqcov, & ov, 74, v. sub avnbor. ‘AwiBaikds, n, ov, of or for Hannibal, Polyb. 2. 71,.9,-Diod. 2. 5. AwiBile, to side with Hannibal, Plut, Marcell, 10. Gwicov, 76, v. sub dvnfor, Gvvwvevioat, Pass. to have as an allowance (annona , avy. Kab? éxdo: hpépav dprovs up’ C. I. 5128. 20. . , 4 avvavn, 7), the Lat. annona, C. I. 4447, 5128. 16, al. dv-65euros, ov, impassable, xedpa Hedyl. ap. Strabo 683. avodnytw, to guide back, Babt. 95.55. avodia, UA (dvobos, ov) a road that.is no road, 65dv 7) xupierepoy étreiv dvodiay Philo 2. 156, cf. 257; mostly in dat. dvodia, dvodias, through places with no roads, Polyb. 5. 13, 6., 4. 57, 8, Diod. 19. 5. dv-o8pos, ov, without smell, having no smell, Hipp, Prorrh, 151, Arist. Probl. 3. 13. dvébovros, ov, =dyddous, GvoSévruros, ov. dy-o50s, ov, having no way or road, impassable, é80).dv, Eur. I. T. Pherecr. Kop. 9, Kpam. 13—In Byz. also ‘889; opp. to etodos, Xen, An. 4. 8, 10. dvodos, %), (avd, 65¢s) a way up, e.g. to the Acropolis at Athens, Hdt. 8.533 my dy. oixodounaaca C. I. 1948: metaph., 7 els Tov wonrdy Témov Ths poxiis av. Plat. Rep.517B. bia journey inland, esp. into Central Asia, like dvéBaows, rpiav pnvdv dy, (to Susa), Hdt. 5. 503 dy, mapa Baocidéa Ib. 51, Xen. An. 2. 1, 1. 2.4 rising, Tod irypow Arist, Meteor. 2. 2, 9: the rising “of a star, xarnAvoln 7 dvodés Te Arat. §36: the slope of a hill, Polyb. 5. 24, 4. II. the first day of the Thesmophoria, when the women went up to the temple, Dind. Schol. Ar. 3. p. 427. , dv-d80us, ovros, 6, 4), without teeth, toothless, Arist,.P.A. 3-14, 9, Fr.278. dvobvpapat, Dep. to break into wailing, Xen. Cyr. 5. 1, 6, Plut. 2.123 C. dv-68uprtos, ov, not mourning, Poéta ap. M. Anton. 7.51. &v-of0s, ov, with no, or very few, branches, Theophr, H.P. 1.8, I, etc.? Comp. -érepos, Ib. 3. 13, 3 :—also dofos, ov, Ib. 1. 5, 4, ete, dvonna, aros, 76, a foolish act, Stob. Ecl, 2, 194. G-vonpov, ov, without understanding, Od. 2. 270, 278., 17. 273. dvonota, %, want of understanding, Suid. ; y. dvonria. I comprehensibility, Dionys, Ar. oa ° avoynraivw — avorA Pia. ‘dvonraive, to be senseless, Plat. Phil. 12 D, Henioch. Incert. 1. 3; dv- rev, Schol. Ar. Nub. 1484; dvonréw, dub. in Epiphan. vontia, %, Att. for dvonaia, Ar. Fr. 585, v. Phryn. 206, A. B. 406. G-vénros, ov, not thought on, unheard of, dppacr’ 48° dvénra h, Hom. Merc. 80. 2. not within the province of thought, vonpara évra dvénra civat Plat. Parm. 132 C; 7@ Ovnr@-kal: dy. unintelligent, 1d. Phaedo 80 B. II. act. not understanding, unintelligent, senseless, silly, Lat. amens, ineptus, Hat. 1. 87., 8. 24; @ dvénro oh. fools! Ar. Lys. 572; dvdnre Id. Vesp, 252; opp. to mpovoyrinds, Xen, Mem. 1. 3, 9; oft. in Plat. ; 7d dv.,=of vodv éxovres, Plat. Tim. 30 B; 70 dyv.. [ris Yuxijs] Id. Rep. 605 B, etc. :—of animals, 7d 7@v mpoBdrav ios eiindes kat dy, Arist. H. A. Q- 3, 2, cf. 37, 21. 2. so of-acts, thoughts, etc.; dv, yvGpat Soph. Aj. 162; d0gae Plat. Phil. 12D; edxepia Hipp. Art. 802; dy. xa xevéy Ar. Ran. 531; olvov.. cad ray dAdow dvoqrov and all other folliés, Id: Nub. 447. III. Adv. -rws, Id. Lys. 518, Plat., etc. ;- —rws SiaxetoOa Lysias. 117. 24: also dvonrel, An. Ox. 2. 313 :—Sup. —drara Dio C. 44. 35; -ordarws, Cyril. G-videurtos, ov, unadulterated, Arist. Mirab. 158. Ady. ~rws, Eccl. d-vo0os; ov, = foreg., pure, genuine, unadulterated, pidocopia Philo ap. Euseb. P, E. 388 D. Ady. —Ows, Philo 2. 216. vow, Ep. avotn, 9, Theogn. 453 :—the character of an dvoos, want of understanding, folly, dvoln in folly, Hdt. 6: 6g; im’ dvotas Aesch. Pr. 1079, Philem. Incert. 34 6; veérnre wal dvotq Plat. Legg. 716 A; dv. Adyou Soph. Ant. 603-3: ri dy. eb pépew Eur. Hipp: 398; dvoia moAAR XpijaGa to be-a great fool, Antipho 122. 31; moAA?) avowd [eer]: moAe- pica Thue. 2; 61; ‘dvocay dpdroxdvewv to be thought a fool, Dem. 16. 24; dvo dvolas yévn, 7d pev paviay, 7d 8 dpuadiay Plat. Tim. 86B; but opp. to pavia, Id, Rep. 382 C, E, etc. :—pl. follies, Isocr:160 A. [In old Att. sometimes paroxyt. dvoid, as in d-yvold, diavold, mapavola:—on Aegeh. Theb. 402; v. Dind. in-Lex.: Aesch., cf. Soph. Fr. 517; Eur. Andr, 520.] Gvouyevs, éws, 6, an opener; Damasc. in Wolf. Anecd. 3. 260. 4 dvouyy, js, 4, the act of opening, xepav Jo. Chr.- Gvovypa, aros, 76, an opening; a door, Lxx (3 Regg. 14. 6 Alex.), Schol. Ar., etc. II. extent, dimensions (?), C. I. 3546. 12.—Also, Gvorypés, 6, Byz. dvotyvipt Lys. 12.10; dvolyw Pind. P. 5. 119, Hdt. 3. 37; 117, and Att.; Ep. dvaoly Il. 24. 455; later dvovyviw Dem. Phal. 122, Paus. 8. 41, 4:—impf. dvé@yor Il, 16. 221, al., Hdt. 1: 187, Att. ;-also dv@yov Il. 14, 168; rarely #voryov, Xen. Hell. t.1, 2 and 6, 21; Ion. and Ep. dvaotyecxor (v. infr.) ; late dvedyvvov App. Civ. 4. 81, etc, :—fut. dvoigw Ar. Pax 179 :—aor. dvéyga Id. Vesp. 768, Thuc. 2. 2; part. dvegfas C. I. (add.) 4300 d; also: qvoga Xen. Hell. 1. 5, 13 and in late Prose ; Ion. dvoiga Hat. 1. 68 (vulg. dv@ga), 4. 143., 9. 118; poét. dy@fa Theocr. 14. 15:—pf. dvépyxa Dem. 42. 30., 1048. 13, Menand. @err. 3; dvéwya: Aristaen: 2. 22; plqpf. dvégryet Pherecr, Kpam. 6 (v. infr.) :— Pass. dvotyvupat, Eur. Ion 923, Ar. Eqy 1326: late fut. dvorxOqropa, Lxx, Epict., etc»; dvovyjoopar Lxx; dvedgopac Xen- Hell. 5. 1, 14: —pf. dvéwypar Eur, Thuc., ete.; dv@yyae.Theocr. 14. 47; later, ivovypar (5t~) restored by Littré in Hipp. Epid: 1229, cf. Joseph. c. Ap. 2.9; plqpf. dve@ero Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 14; (the pf. 2 dvémya is used in pass. sense in Hipp. 269. 17., 502: 10, Plut., etc.; but in good Att. never, save in: Dinarch, ap. An. Ox. 1. 52):—aor. dveqxOyv- Eur. Ion 1563, subj. dvotx69 Dem. 44. 37, opt. dvotxGeiny Plat. Phaedo 59 D, dvorxGels Thuc. 4.130, Plat.; later, #votyOnv Paus- 2.35, 4, LXX; and aor. 2 #volynv Luc. Amor. 14, etc.—In late Gr., very irreg. forms occur, jwéyéa Lxx (Gen. 8. 6), Joseph.; #véwypar Apocal. 10; 8, Heliod. 9. 93 jvegexXOnv LXX (Gen. 7711) ; also, aor..1 inf. dywigar Q. Sm. 12. 331; dvwixOnv Nonn. D. 7. 317. To open, of doors, etc., dvaol-yerxov peyadny KAnida they tried to put back the bolt so as to open [the door], Il. 24. 455, cf. 14. 168; mvAas dvoigar Aesch. Ag. 604 ; @vpav Ar. Vesp. 768; also without Ovpav, érecd) air dvéfe tis Plat. Prot. 310 B, cf. 314 D, E; xndod & dnd map’ dvégiye todk off the cover and opened it, Il. 16. 221; pwpiapdr ériOhpara Kar avéwyev 24. 228 ;- so, dv. aopév, Tapoy, Onxas Hdt. 1. 68, 187, etc.; xBwrdy Lys. 121.5; dv: onpaytpa, onpeta, b:aOqxas to open-seals, etc., Xen. Lac. 6, 4, Dem. 1048. 13, etc.; and (metaph.) xa@apdv dvoigayr: xdfjda ppevav Eur. Med. 660; dv. oivoy to tap it, Theocr. 14. 15; “yiipuv dvoigas, for aréua, Tryph. 4773 dy, piAjpara to kiss with open mouths, Ach, Tat. 56. 5. 2. metaph. to lay open, unfold, disclose, bvopa Aesch. Supp. 321; épy dvaid7 Soph. O. C, 515, cf. Eur. I. A. 326; drvxiav Menand. Incert. 128. 3. as nautical term, absol., to get into the open sea, get clear of land, Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 2., 5, 13:, 6, 21, and so-in modern Greek ;—but, ddAds “éAevdov dy., Pind. P. 5. 118, is to open or first shew the way over the sea. 4. zo open, declare, Aesch. Supp. 321. IL. Pass. to be open, stand open, lie open, Smoabe ris dvovyopévns Ovpyns Hat. 1. 9; dvewypévny Kara- AapBdvewy ry Ovpay Plat. Symp. 174.D; éws dvorxOeln 7d Seoparnpiov Id. Phaedo 59 D; Sxaorhpra dvotyerat Id. Rep. 405 A; mapéfer tapmépe dvepypéva Ar. Av. 15233; A€wy ra evrds dvorxOels cut open, Arist. HLA. 2. 1, 3; KbAwo 8 GAAhAwY dvovydpevot opening one into another,»Plut. Crass. 4: metaph., Onvaupds ds dvolyvurat xaxay Eur. Ion 923. 2. so also pf. 2 act. dvéqrya in late Greek (v. sub init.), for which in correct Att. dvéqrypar is used, as in Eur. Hipp. 56, Dem. 764. 22, cf. Lob. Phryn. 157, sq.; the use of dvégyey for dvégerat, though ridiculed by Luc. (Soloec. 8), is yet adopted by him in other places, Navig. 4, Gall. 6. Gvoibaive, to blow up, inflate, Plotin. 449 D; aor. med. dvadivat Q. Sm. 14. 470:—Pass. to swell up, of the muscles, Christod. Ecphr. 234. II. intr., =dvoi5ew, Nic. ap. Ath. 126 C, avolSavats, ews, 7), =dvoldnots, Plotin. 449 D. Sage dvoSéw, Ep. -elw (Nic. Th. 855): fut. qo: aor. dv@inoa Eur., Plat. :—to swell up, Lat. intumesco, Hipp. Acut. 385; of a wave, sna’ 133 Hipp. 1210; of wind, Plat. Tim. 84 E;, of figs ripening, Nic. 1. c.; 7d Kéduppa dvmdnkds swelled out, inflated, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 22, cf. G. A. 1..20, 15. 2: metaph., dvds dvordée, Hdt. 7. 39, cf. Philostr. 313. (so in Med., @vupdy dvodjoavro they swelled with rage, Q. Sm. 9- 345) 3. dvocdovans.rhs vécou Philostr. 142. avolSnars, ews,.%), a swelling, intumescence, TOv paoray Arist. HLA. 6. 20, 7, al.; @adacons Id. Mund. 6, 21. dvoSioKw, to. make to swell, atrov Theophr. C, P. 4. 13, 7:—Pass.,= dvodéw, Hipp. Acut. 385. dv-olketos, ov, also a, ov, Clem. Al. 506, etc.:—mnot friendly, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 67: ill agreeing with, twos Polyb. 6. 10, I., 24. 5, 13, Diod. 12, 21; uv Polyb. 5. 96, 8. II. unfitting, euriare, Diod. 3. 56, Plut, 2, 102A. Adv., dvoucetws exe mpds Tt Synes, 200 C. fetid en nros, %, unfriendliness, cited from Synes, dvoxelwros, ov, not to be adapted, alien, GAAnAos. M, Anton. 12. 30. dy-olenros, ov, dub. for doixnros, Lob. Phryn. 731. Gvourifw, fut. Att, 1@:—to remove up the country, dv. tiv Sndprny, i.e. to break it up as a city, Arist. Rhet. AL 2, 23; dv. twds és Thy Tlepotéa Paus. 1. 25, 4; metaph., dy. riva pOdvou to remove him out of envy’s way, cited from Philostr. :—Pass. and Med. to shift one’s dwelling up the country, to migrate inland, abrot § dvwxicavr’ énas dvararo Ar. Pax.207, cf. Strabo 406, App. Pun. 84;-and of cities, fo be built inland or away from the coast, ‘Thuc. 1. 7 :—generally, to migrate, dip’ dvouxobels Ar. Av. 1351; dvorkicacOa els “OAvyov Thuc, 1. 58, cf. 8. 31. II. ¢o re-settle, colonise afresh, Paus, 2. 1, 2, Strabo 621:— Pass. to be re-peopled, Plut. Lucull, 29. dvolkucts, ews, , a shifting people upward and inland, App. Pun. 84. dvouktopés, 6,=foreg., Strabo 496. II. a rebuilding, restora- tion, méAewv Hdn, mers dv-oxodeanoryT0s, ov, without a lord of the house, astrol. term, Salmas. Climact. 301. GvorkoBopéw, fut. how, to build up, 7a xelAea. ToD .moTapyod . . dvorKo~ déunee wAivOorer Hat. 1. 186. 2. to.wall. up, Aadpas kawvais wAiv- Gaow, dy, Ar. Pax 100, cf, Lycurg, 166. 8; mUAas Diod, 11. 21 (in this sense drrotk— is a freq. v. 1.). IL. to build again, rebuild, wok wat reixn Thue, 1. 89, cf. ap. Lycurg. 158. 7, Xen..Hell. 4. 4, 19, etc. ; dy. xwpay to occupy again with.buildings, Diod. 15. 66 :—Pass., metaph., to be exalted, LXX (Mal. 3. 15). dvoixoSoph, 7),.and —pyors, ews, a. rebuilding, restoration, Byz. dv-o.nodopnros, ov, not built up, Or. Sib. 5. 409. dvouxodopia, 4, a building up, Schol. Thuc. 8. 90. dv-o1kovopntos, ov, not set in.orden, unarranged, Macho ap. Ath. 341 B, Longin. 33. 5 :—Subst. -vopyota, %, mismanagement, disorder, Byz. dy-ouKos, ov, houseless, homeless, dv. moéew Td Hat. 3.1453 cf. doucos. dvourrel, or-—tl,. Adv.,= dvotxtws, Hdn. Epim, 257. ; dvoucréov, verb. Adj. of dvoi-yw, one must open, Eur, Ion 1387. dv-ouxrippov, ov, pitiless, merciless, Soph. Fr. 587, Anth. P. 7. 303. dv-olktisros, ov, unmourned, ovvopa Arist. in Anth, P. append. g. 74. II. act. pitiless: so Adv. -rws, Antipho 114. Io. avoucrés, 7,,6v; (dvoiyw) opened, Babr. 59. 11, Luc. V. H. 1, 24. dyv-oucros, ov, pitiless, ruthless, Eur. Tro. 782, Ar. Thesm. 1022 :—Ady, -Tws, without pity, without being pitied, Soph. O. T. 180, Eur. Tro. 751. dvoipwlw, fut. fouat, to wail.aloud, Aesch. Pers..465, Thue. 3. 113. dy-o(pmkros, ov, d, unl ted, Aesch. Cho. 433, 511 :— Ady. dvoipwxrt. [7], without need to wail, with impunity, Soph. Aj. 1227. avowvta, 4, =dowia, Euseb. Laus Const. 17: so, dvowos, ov, =dowos, Hdn, Epim. 216. dvorkis, ews, 4, (dvolyvujn) an opening, muddv. Thuc. 4. 67, 68, etc.— So in Byz. dvotéia, ra. dvouois, ews, 7), (dvapépm, dvotow) a bringing back, Suid, dvoirréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of dvapépm, to be referred, Eur. ap. Plut. 2. 431A.. Il. dvowwréov, one must carry back or report, Soph. Ant. 272, Eur. H. F. 1221 :—one must refer, re mpés Tt Plut. Phoc. 5; éni te Theophr. C. P.»4..11y 8. dvourrés, Ion. dvatoros, 7, 6v, (dvapépw, dvolow) brought back, dv. és twa referred to some one for decision, Hdt. 6. 66. dvoorpéw, to goad to madness, Eur. Bacch. 979. dv-ovotpos, ov, without mad: or-excit t, Greg. Naz. dvolow, v. sub dvapépw. dvouro, v. sub dvw, 2 dvoxwxetw, fut. ow, (dvoxwyxy, qe v.) to hold back, stay, hinder, dy. tas véas, to keep them riding at anchor, Hat. 6. 116, etc.: metaph, of a chariot, to hold it in, keep it back, Soph. El. 732; also, dv. mddgpov Dion. H. 9. 16,, 2. dv. rov révov Tay btAww to keep up the tension of the ropes, keep. them taut, Hdt. 7. 36. II. also intr. (sub. éavrév),ito keep back, -keep still, Id..9, 13, cf. Diod. 11. 18.—A dub, form in —€ is found in Hipp. Art. 803. dvoxwxf, %), formed by redupl. from dvoxy (cf. duwxa pf. of Exo), a@ stay, cessation, kav Thuc. 4. 117; dv. vous a pause in the spread- ing of the ulcer, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 9, cf. I. 7. 2. esp. a ces- sation: of arms, truce, 5¢ dvorwxis yiyvecbat Tut to be at truce with one, Thuc. 1.40; dy. yiyverat tux mpds twa one party has a truce with another, Id. 5. 32. Il. a hindrance, TpiB} Kat dv. Ta ‘EAAnvev Id. 8. 87. (The corrupt forms dvaxw x7, dvarwxevo must be corrected, except in late writers, v. donwxXh, KATOKWXT, TUVO~ “oxy. That the forms in o are required by analogy was seen by some old Gramm., and is now generally acknowledged, Valck. Ammon. p. 24, Dind, Steph. Thes. s. v. dtakaxh, xa 3 even in Cyrill. 533 A, dvoxwyxhv is now restored from two Mss.—Sce, however, KayXeva,) dvoABia, %, the state of an dvodBos, misery. [i in Hes, Op. 317-] 134 GvoABilw, to deem happy, bless, Eccl. err dvéABtos, ov, =sq., Hdt. 1. 32, Eur. Fr. 175. 7 YO dv-oABos, ov, post. Adj. unblest, wretched, luckless, Apap Orac. : Hdt. 1. 85; yaia, dupa Eur. Hel. 247, L. A. 354; Gyo euav avons BovAeuparay, for gud. . Bovdedpara, Soph. Ant. 1265:—of persons, Theogn, 288 (in Comp.), Aesch. Eum. 551, Soph. Aj. 1156, etc. 2. without means, poor, Arat. 1073. ; ; dy-dhePpos, ov, not ruined, having escaped ruin, Il. 13. 761: cf. Att. dvwadeOpos. ; Gy-oAtywpos, ov, not careless, and Ady. pws: both in late Eccl, A ne twhel GvodvoPdve, aor. -dAraOov, to slip or glide back, to return, es twa Call.sFr. 96, et ibi Bentl. Gvohkh, 9, (dvéAnw) a hauling up, M@ow Thuc. 4. 112; dy. Kat “xa0orKH Aen. Tact. 10. GvoAoAtfw, fut. vgw, to cry aloud, shout aloud, dvwhddvta xapas imo Aesch. Ag. 587, cf. Simon. in Anth, P. 13, 28, Soph. Tr. 205, Eur. Med. 1173, etc.; cf. dAoAUgw, dAoAvY. 2. c. acc, to bewail loudly, Soph. El. 750; but c. acc. cognato, Bony dy. Eur. Tro. 1000. II. in a causal sense, to excite by Bacchic cries, mpuras 5¢ O7Bas . . dvwddavga Id, Bacch. 24. GvoAodipopar [iv], Dep.,=dvodtpopat, to break into loud wailing, Thuc. 8. 81, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 14; ¢. part., dy. rob@y .. , Plat. Prot. 327 D. AvoAupmas, 7, an Olympiad omitted in the list, Paus. 6. 22, 3, cf. Diod. 15. 78. dvopat, v. sub dvw. GvopaAilw, to restore to equality, egualise, only known from pf. inf. dvopartcGat, Arist, Rhet. 3. 11, 5; ef. sq. dvopdAwors, ews, 7), restoration of equality, equalisation, Arist. Pol. 2. 12, 12.—The sense shews that this is compd. of dvd, duaddq, and not derived from the Adj. dv@pados (unequal). GvopBpéw, to gush out with water, my Philo 2. 91: c. acc. to pour forth as water, LXx (Sirac. 18. 29, al.). dvopBpyes, ecoa, ev, rainy, Nic. Al. 288:—and Subst. dvopBpyors, €ws, ), Byz.: —yrixds, 7, dv, pouring out as water, rwés Epiphan. dvopBpta, 7%, want of rain, drought, Arist. H. A. 8. 28, 12. dv-opBpos, ov, wanting rain, without rain, of countries, Hdt. 2. 22., 4. 185. 2. dv. foai streams not fed by showers, Eur. Bacch. 406. dvopéw, to be dvopos, to act lawlessly, wepi 7: Hat. 1. 144. dvépnpa, aros, 75, a transgression of the law, Diod.17. 5, C. 1. 8940. Gvopia, Ion. -{n, 9, lawlessness, Lawless conduct, opp. to dieaocdyn, Hat. 1. 96, 97; dv. véuow xpare? Eur. I. A. 1095 ; dy. dpdvew Antipho 125. 443 dy. dpdtoxdvew Eur. Ion 443; dv7t avrovoptas. . eis dvoulas eurimrewy Isocr. 129 C, cf. Plut. 2.755 B; (av év naop dvapxia Kal dy. Plat. Rep. 575 A. r dv-opiAnros [i], ov, having no communion with others, unsociable, Plat. Legg. 951 A, Plut. 2. 50, etc. 2. c. gen., dv. un- educated, Ep. Plat. 332 ©, cf. Luc. Mere, Cond. 14. ' dv-dptxAos, ov, without mist, ahp Arist. Mund. 4, 4. Gv-dpparos, ov, eyeless, sightless, Soph. Ph. 857. dv-opoyevis, és, of different kind, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 229. Gv-opoeSis, és, differing in species, lambl. Myst. 19. dv-opdfndos, ov, having a different bent, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 56. d-vojo s, ov, unregulated, lawless, disorderly, Plat. Legg. 785 A, 781 A, Arist. Pol. 2.9, 5. 2. not prescribed by law, Dion. H. 7. 41. dy-oporoBapys, és, 0 weight, Arist. Cael. 1. 6, 8. dv-oporoyevis, és, of different kind, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. ro. 32, Arr. Epict. 1. 20, 2:—Adv. -vas, in a different gender, Schol. Soph. Gv-oporoedis, és, of unlike kind, heterogeneous, pidlat Arist. Eth. N. 9. I, 1:—Hence Subst., -elSeua, %, Apoll. de Pron. 389. J Gvopouo-pepys, és, consisting of unlike parts, not homogeneous, Arist. bp. Fa a Oe tee dv-op ov, with unlike inflexions, Eust, 1228.62. Adv. —rws, Ib. 631. 27. . & , ov, Plat. Phileb. 14 A, etc., also a, ov Isocr. 279 D, etc. :—un- like, dissimilar, Pind. N. 8. 48, freq. in Plat.; & dvopolaw % mds is composed of dissimilar elements, Arist. Pol. 3. 4,6; av. Tue unlike it, Plat. Gorg. 513 B, al.; for Aesch. Supp. 54, V- Hos. Ady. —ws, Thuc. 1. 84, Plat, Rep. 388 C, al.; dy. éxew Xen. An. 7. 7, 49- dy-opordarpodos, ov, isting of l H st. Q. 3. Gy-oporocx pov, ov, of unlike form, Galen., Alex. Aphr. ty ica tes qos, %, unlikeness, dissimilarity, Plat. Parm. 159 E, al. ; c. gen., Ib, 161 B :—in pl., Id, Polit. 294 B, Arist. Poét. 2. 5. 2 a me , OV, of lik, ef, . Ath : V-0.0L6Xpovos, ov, of dissimilar time or quantity, Eust. 13. 7. eel to make unlike or dissimilar, Plat. Rep.546 B, Parm. 148 B:— Pass. (c. fut. med., Porph. Abst. 1. 37) ¢o be or become so, Plat. Theaet. 166 B, al. ‘ « dvoporddns, €s, (250s) unlike, Procl. Inst. Theol. 203. avepatien: an 9, a eran unlike, dissimilarity, Plat. Theaet. 166 B. dvopodoyéopat, fut. joopar: pf. dvapodrdynpar: Dep.:—to agree _ upon a thing, come to an understanding, wept twos Plat. Rep. 442 E; mpos &dAfAovs Ib, 348 B; mpds 7 with a view to.., Id. Theaet. 164 C; zwi with a person, Plut. 2. 1070D; absol. to admit, Muson. ap. Stob. 596. 18. 2. to recapitulate, sum up one’s conclusions, 7a elpnyéva Plat. Symp. 200 E. 3. to pay money by note of hand or order, C. 1.147. 34; whence the Subst. dvopoAoynpa, 76, a promissary note, Ib. 221. II. the Act. occurs in no good author (even Plut. Pericl. 39. 2, 1070 D, are very dub.) ; but Dem. 254. 11 uses the pf. in pass. sense, dvwpoddynpat .. 7a. dpora mparrey I am allowed by all to be doing what is best, cf. 315. 14.,.1389. 24 ; so aor. part. -yn0els, Philo 2. 520: cf. dvopodoryoupevos. - % a — avop6ow. Gvopohoynréov, verb. Adj. one must admit, Tovro mept adray Plat. C. ‘ ae cs ng on again, under a renewed bill for both the oe td . to A. B. 211. principal debt and the unpaid interest, acc. to IT. (évops- dvopohoyta, 7, (dvopodoyéopat) agreement, Hesych, Aoyos) + ha Strabo 98, Plut. Comp. Nic. c. Crass. I. dy-opddoyos, ov, not agreeing, cited from Sext. Emp. Adv. -yas, Porph. Abst. 2. 40. ov, not agreeing, inconsistent, iva ph dv. 6 Gy-opodoyoutpevos, 7, 4 Aébyos Plat. Gong, 495A; dy. rots mpoerpnpevors Arist. An, Pr. 1. 34,4. 2. not admitted, not granted, %{ dvopodoyoupevav ouvaryey Id, Rhet. 2. 22, 15, cf. 2. 23, 23——An Adj., compd, of dv— negat., and époAo7you- pevos s—for a Verb dvopodoyéouat, to disagree with, is contrary to ana- logy. Adv. -vws, Galen. VvoHLos, ov, without law, lawless, impious, tpame(a Hat. 1. 162; often in Trag. both of persons and things, e. g. Aesch. Ag. 151, Soph. O. : 142, Tr. 1096, Eur. Bacch, 995, Or. 1455; Hovapxia Plat, Polit. 302 F: 7a. dvoua lawless acts, Hat. 1, 8:—Adv. —pws, Eur. Med. 1000, Antipho 125. 25, Thuc. 4. 92; Comp. -wrepov, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 285 A. 2. in Ep. Rom. 2. 12, merely =xwpls vépou. II. (vépos 1) un- musical, vépos av. Aesch, Ag. 1142. dvopo-rayis [ii], és, (rdoow) of a different order, Damasc. ap. Wolf. Anecd, 3. 236. dvop.6-diXos, ov, of different tribe or kind, Manass. dy-ovelBteros, ov, irreproackable, cited from Nicol. Dam. 5 dy-évqros, Dor. Gros, ov, unprofitable, mepiood Kavovnra owpara Soph. Aj. 758; & moda Aédtas .. xavévyr’ éwn Ib. 1272; dy. “yapos Eur. Or. 1502, cf. Hel. 886; dv. yiyvec@ar Dem. 121. 16, Plut. ; av. éogi ri 71 Arist. Eth. N. 1. 3,7, cf. Pol. 7.16, 3 :—the neut. pl. dvdynra is freq. in Eur. as Adv. in vain, as Hec. 766, Alc. 413, etc., so in Plat. Rep. 486 C. II. act. c. gen., dv. rev dyabav making no profit froma thing, Dem. 275. 5., 442. 26. : Gy-ov6pacros, ov, faulty form for dvwyduaoros, Hdn. Epimer. 203, Irenae., Suid. Gv-bEuvros, ov, not to be written with the acute accent, Eust. 930. 57. G-voos, ov, contr. dvous, ovy, without understanding, silly, Kpadin Il. 21. 441; Wvx7 Plat. Tim. 44 A, etc.; of persons, Soph. Ant. 99; avous Te kal yépov dua Ib. 281; dvovs épdvevoa in my blindness, Id. O. C. 547 (as Pors. for dAAous); mAodros av. wealth without wit, Anth. P. 9. 43:—Comp. dvovarepos, Aesch. Pr.987,Soph.Fr. 514; cf. Lob. Phryn. 143. worrata, only in Od. 1. 320, dps 8 ds dvonaia dvénraro, where it is variously written and explained: 1. acc, to Hdn, ap. Eust. it is an Adv. (compd. of dvd, *érropar), she flew away unseen, unnoticed ; or, acc, to Eust., =dvw, dvoxpepés, up into the air,in which sense Emped. used the word, kapradipyos dvéraov; cf.’Avémaa, the name of the pass above Thermo- pylae (Hdt. 7. 216). 2. acc to Aristarch., dvémaca or mavéraia, a kind of eagle, cf. Od. 3. 371. 8. acc. to Gramm. in An, Ox. 1. 83, dy’ Onata (=dvd dmny) up by the hole in the roof, up the smoke-vent. avémw, Adv. backwards (cf. xarémy), Hesych. ; further back, ina book, etc., Eust. 1031. 46. , dvomhos, ov, without the Swdov or large shield, of the Persians, who bore only yéppa, Hat. 9. 62: generally, unarmed, Plat. Euthyd. 299 B; 70 dvorAov, opp. to 7d émAcrixdy, of citizens not entrusted with arms, Arist. Pol. 4. 3, 1:—of ships, not rigged, etc., Polyb. 2.12, 3. On the form, v. domAos. ~ av-oTrT0s, ov, unseen, Suid. dv-6paros, ov, Plat. Tim. 51 A, Polycharm. ap. Ath. 333 F, for the more usual ddpatos. dvopydfw, to knead up, work up, putin condition, Galen. to toss, dandle, ma:dia Hesych. Gv-6pyiivos, ov, without instruments, Plut. Pericl. 16; kivnots dv. move- ment without limbs for the purpose, of serpents, Id. 2. 381 A. &vépynros, ov, Hellenic for dvopyos, Moer. p. 12. dvopyta, 7,=dpuunota, Hesych., Snid. dy-opylacros, ov, not celebrated with orgies, tepa Ar. Lys. 898, cf. Clem. Al, 19, 2. of a person, in whose honour no orgies are held, Plat. Epin. 985 D. Il. uninitiated, dudnros nat dvopy. Tav iep@v Themist. 166 C. dv-opyos, ov, not wrathful, Cratin. Incert, 43: cf. dvépynros. Gvopéa, 7), more common in Ion, form qwopen, Pind, dvopéya, to hand up, of the elephant’s use of his trunk, Arist. H. A. 2.1, 6. dvopexréw, to have no appetite, Antyll, in Matthaei Med. 74. Gv-opexros, ov, without appetite for, dwohavcews Arist. de Virt. 4, 53 mept tds dmohavoes Ib. 2,1; absol., Plut, 2. 460 A:—Adv., dvopexras éxew Alex. Trall. 6. 2, p. 102. II. pass. not desired, of food, Plut. 2. 664 A. avopegia, 7), want of appetite, Tim, Locr.102 E, Aretae, Cur. M. Ac. 2. 3. Fate i [4], a, ov, (dvjp) =dv5petos, Soph. Fr. 384:—éavopéa, Dor. for vopen. avophdlw, to call out, shout aloud, Andoc. 5. 5. up, 7a dra Philo 2, 188. dvop0o-mepuriitntiKés, 7, dv, walking upright, late Eccl. dvopQos, ov, upright, erect, Hipp. 295.8; dv. eis 71 up to the level of .., Inscr. ap. Miiller Munim. Athen. p. 56. dvop06w, fut. wow: aor, dvapOwoa Eur, Alc. 1138, Isocr. 95 A, etc, (cf. Karop@éw): plgpf. with double augm. 7jvwpOdxev Liban., y. Lob. Phryn. 154: the double augm. is common in the compd. éravop0dw, cf. ovverravop0dw. To set up again, restore, rebuild, rov vndv Hat. 1.19; 7 reixos 7. 208; 70 orpardmedoy Thuc, 6. 88, etc.; 73 c@pa Tivos i. II. to prick ¢ Eur. Bacch. 364:—Med., dvopOotc0a ra rirrovra r&v oikodopnudTav I) , ’ , avopOuo1s — avraywoucrns. to have them rebuilt, Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 18. 2. to restore to health or well-being, wid Soph. O. T. 46, 51, Plat. Legg. 919 D. 3. to set _— again, set right, correct, rd Eur. Supp. 1228; 7d ddAérpia xaxd Plat. Rep, 346 E. dvépOwors, ews, 7}, =enavdpOwors, Polyb. 15. 20, 5, acc. to the Mss. dvopSwris, od, 6, one who raises up again, sets up, Byz. &v-opxos, ov, bound by no oath, Poll. 1. 39. Gvoppdopat, Pass. to start up, iry eagerly to do a thing, c. acc. cog- nato, ardédov Opp. H. 3. 105.—Hesych. has the Act. in neut. signf. dvoppyrixds, Adv. impetuously, Schol. Opp. H. 5. 210. dvéppyros, ov, (dvoppdopar) i: , Erotian. II. (dy- negat.) sluggish, Basil. dvoppife, fut. few, to take [ships] from their moorings, és 7) méXaryos tas vais Dio C. 48. 48 :—Med. to put to sea, Id. 42. 7. dv-oppos, ov, without harbour, ap. Suid.: metaph., tyévaoy dy. elo- mAeiy to sail into a marriage that was no haven for thee, Soph. O. T. 423. dvépvipu, fut. -dpow, to rouse, stir up, avd piv pdppryy’,, dvd 8° add dpaouev Pind. N. 9. 16; 7d Ap. Rh. 4. 1352 :—Pass., dy 8’ dpa Tudel- dys Gpro (Ep. aor.) up he started, ll. 23. 812, Od. 8. 3; ava & apvur’ "Ingo Ap. Rh. 1. 349. dvopotw, post. Verb, used by Hom. only in aor. 1 (Xen. Eq. 3, 7., 8, 5 has the pres. inf. and part.) :—to start up, leap up, absol., Il. g. 193, Od. 3.149, etc.; €« 88 Opdvwy dvdpovoay 22. 23; é& tmvo.0 Bsa kpatv@s dy. Il. 10. 162, etc.; és dippoy F dv. 11. 273, 399; so, HéAcos 8 dyépovoev . . obpavdy és . . Helios went swiftly up the sky, Od. 3.1; rotor 5 Néarap Hdvem)s dv. Il. 1. 248; dvopodoats (Dor. part.) Pind. O.7. 68. av-dpopos, ov, roofless, mérpa Eur. Bacch. 38. Cf. dvapopos. dv-oppomvytos [0], ov, without tail, xdpxivos Arist. H. A. 4. 2, 8; mrfjots dv. without help from the tail, of insects, Ib. 4. 7, 8. dvopraAtfe, fut. iow, to clap the wings and crow, like a cock, Ar. Eq. 1344; cf. mrepvocopat. avéputis, ews, , a digging up, excavation, Eust. Opusc. 104. 46. dvoptcow, Att. -rro: fut. fw: pf. pass. dvopdpvyyat Menand. “Tp. 31 :—1to dig up what has been buried, rd d07éa Hat. 2. 41, Lycurg. 164. 7; bdplas Ar. Av. 602; Twa Id. Pax 372, Plut. Ages. 20; xpuodv Luc. Charid. 11. 2. dv. rapov to dig up, break open, destroy it, Hdt. 1. 68, Isocr. 351 E. dvopxéopat, Dep. to leap up and dance, Eur. Supp. 719. dyv-opxos, ov, without testicles, Hipp. 358. 24. IL. without kernels, golvixes Arist. Fr. 250. d-véantos, ov, without sickness, Soph. Fr. 838. dvoota, 4, (dvocos) freedom from sickness, Poll. 3. 107. dv-6ov0s, ov, more rarely a, ov Eur. Tro. 1315 (so perh. Aeschin. 49. 17), and later:—unholy, profane, Lat. profanus, opp. to ddikos, as Soros to Bixatos (Vv. Soros I. 1), of persons, Aesch. Theb. 611, Soph. O. T. 353, etc.; dv. 6 Oeopions Plat. Euthyphro 7 A; dé:os eal dv. Id. Gorg. 505 B. 2. of things, épyov, pépos, ordua, yapor, etc., Hdt. 2.114., 3. 63, Soph. O.C. 981, etc.; abdav dvdar’ ob5e fnra por 1d. O. T. 1289; dvéo.a macxew Antipho 120.6; pare dceBés, phyre Gvdotov Xen. Cyr. 8. 7, 22; ob pdévoy dvopoy, ddAd Kat dvdc.oy Id. Lac. 8, 5; dyvdotos véxus a corpse with all the rites unpaid, Shakspere’s ‘ unhousel’d, dis- appointed, unaneled,’ Soph. Ant. 1071; dv. 71 yiyverat énod mapéytos the holy rites are profaned, Antipho 139. 16. II. Adv. —iws, in unholy wise, Soph. Ph. 257; xarw ys dv. oix@y without funeral rites, Eur.E1.677. dvoaoTns, 770s, %), a profaneness, Plat. Euthyphro 5 D; dy. xat 5avd- ™s Tov wemparypevew Isocr. 257 D. dvocvoupyéw, fo act profanely, Plat. Legg. go5 B. dvocvovpynpa, aros, 7d, a profane act, Philo 2. 313. dvocioupyta, 7, profaneness, Ep. Plat. 335 B, Plut. Arat. 54. dvootoupyés, dv, (*€pyw) acting profanely, Ep. Plat. 352 C, Arist. Eth. N. 9. 4, 7, Philo 2. 313. dv-ogpos, ov, =dvodpos, without smell, Hipp. Acut. 394, Arist. H. A. 10. I, 16, etc.; ixvn dvocpa of footsteps that leave no scent, Poll. 5. 12: —but docpos (q. v.) was preferred. a-vogos, Ion. and Ep. dvoucos, ov, without sickness, healthy, sound, of persons, doxeBées nal dy, Od. 14.255; dv. xal ertipace Pind. Fr. 107, cf. Plat. Tim. 33 A; danpos, dv. Hdt. 1. 32 ; AGorov be 70 Civ Gvocov Soph. Fr. 326; dynpws xat dy. Plat. Tim. 33 A:—Adv., dvéows did-yery Hipp. Epid. 1. 939. 2. c. gen., dvooos kaxav untouched by ill, Eur. I A, 982; dy. mpds Td GAAa appworhpara or TaY GAkwv dppwornparay Arist. H. A. 8, 22, 2., 24, I. 3. of a season, free from sickness, éros dy, és tds dAdas doGevetas Thuc. 2. 49 ; €ts, Adyos dy. Plut. Cic. 8, etc. ; mdoxewv Tt Arist. H. A. 10, 3, 12. II. of things, not causing disease, harmless, Eur. Ion 1201. % ? dv-dore0s, ov, boneless, of the polypus, Hes. Op. 522; dv. 7) xapdia Arist. P. A. 3.4, 21; 7d mept ri xordlay Ib. 2.9, 83 pui) weA€av Opp. H.1. 639. a-v , ov, unreturning, Orph. Arg. 1268. II. whence none return, x&pos évépaw Anth. P. 7. 467, cf. Opp. H. 3. 586, etc. G-voor pos, ov, not returning, kelvoy dy. €Onev cut off his return, Od. 4. 182. 2. not to be retraced, xédev9os Eur. H. F. 431. II. not nutritious, of corn, Theophr. C. P. 3. 21, I. d-vooros, ov, unreturning, without return, navras ddecay Kat COneav dvéarous Od, 24. 528 ; es éyévoyro dy. Arist. Fr. 140; Sup., #8 dvoororarn never, never to return, Anth. P. 7. 482. II. =foreg. u, in Comp., Theophr. C. P, 4. 13, 2. d-viedioros, ov, not stolen, safe, Jo. Chrys. dy-dopavros, ov, that cannot be smelt, Arist. de An. 2.9, 7. a-vérieros, ov, unmoistened, Diosc. 1. praef. d-voros, ov, without the south wind, Hesych. pet: 135 dv-oviros, ov, (obs) without ear: without handle, Theocr. Ep. 4. 3. d-vouvSérnros, ov, unwarned, Isocr. 15 C. 2. that will not be warned, Dem. 1477. 14, Menand. Monost. 49. dvous, ovy, contr. for dvoos. &v-otovos, ov, without material substance, Eccl. dvovgos, ov, Ion. for dvogos. : dv-otrairos, ov, (ovrdw) unwounded by stroke of sword, BAnTos Kat dy. Il, 4. 540, cf. Aesch. Fr. 125. ; Gvourntt [7], Adv. without inflicting a wound, ob8' dpa ot ris dvourntt YE mapéorn Il. 22.371. II. without receiving a wound, Q. Sm. 3. 445. avi , ov, =dvovraros, Nic. Th. 719. dv-opPadplaros, ov, free from ophthalmia, Diosc. Parab, 1. 35. dv-6p8aApos, ov, without eyes, Tzetz. Hist. 3. 219. Gvobpudtopat, Dep. to arch one's eye-brows; metaph. to be supercilious, A.B. 25: cf. dvaomdm, roforoéw. voxetionar, (dvox7) Dep. to make a truce, Nicet. Ann. 350 A, 365 D. dvoxevs, éws, 5, (dvéxw) an up-holder, dvoyjes Aretae, Caus. M. Ac. 2. Il; dxfes Ib. Diut. 2. 11. dv-6xeuT0s, ov, without sexual intercourse, Arist. H. A. 5.15, 1, al. dvoxéw, to raise up, cited from Olympiod. dvox7, 4, (dvéxm) a holding back, stopping, esp. of hostilities: hence, mostly in pl., like Lat. induciae, an armistice, truce, Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 17; dvoxds moveioOax Decret. ap. Dem. 282. 20; &ddvat Dion. H. 8. 68; dyew Plut. Alex. 55; omelcac@at Id.; ai mpds TMepdtxxay dy. Aeschin. 32.17; ai éfaere’s dy. Dion. H. 3. 59:—but dvoxwy% (q. v.) is reputed the more Att. form. II. (dvéxopar) long-suffering, forbearance, Ep. Rom. 2. 4., 3. 26. 2. dvoyny dvamavAns bdéva permission to rest, Hdn. 3.6, 21. III. = dvaroag, Poll. 4.157, Hesych.; v. dvicxa, dvoxAéw, =dvoyAifw, Sext. Emp. M. to. 83. avoxAnota, %,=doxAngia, dub. in Diog. L. 2. 87. dvoxAnrixés, 7, év, heaving upwards :—Adv.—K@s, Sext.Emp.M. 10.83. avoxAlLe, to heave up out of the way, Ap. Rh. 1. 1167, Opp. H. 5. 128. dy-oxXos, ov, not annoying or troublesome, Arist. P. A. 3. 2, 14. dvoxpdte, fut. dow, to hoist, lift up, Anth. P. 9. 204. dvéxUpos, ov, v. sub dvwxupos. dvoipla, 7, want of fish (dor) to eat with bread, épepov dewHs riv av. Antiph. MAovc. 1.8; dvopiay dropépew Plut. 2. 237 F. dvopos, ov, (SWov) wanting in fish, etc., Plut. 2, 123 B. dvrrep, = éavrep, iymep, v. sub éav:—dvmore, = ele, Schol. Eur. Or. 1580. dvomde, post. for dvaordw, dvora, dvords, dvoripevat, avorioes, dvoeriowv, dveriryy, poet. forms, eas dviornm. : dv etav, poét. for dvacrpépear. Pract ars dvorxeo, post. forms, v. sub dvéxa. dvoxerés, v. sub dvdcyxeros. dvra, (like dvrny from dvri, cf. xpvBinv, xptBSa):—Ep. Adv. over against, face to face, Lat. coram, Hom. ; mostly in the phrases, dvra paxec0a to fight man to man, Il. 19. 163; avra ideiv to look before- one, Il. 13. 184, etc., cf. Eur, Alc. 877 ; Ocois dvra éguet he was like the gods to look at, Il. 24. 630; eiderar dvra medidvh Nic. Th. 238; dvra TirvoxesGat to aim straight at them, Od. 22. 266, cf. Pind. N. 6. 46;* dvra mpés twos C, I. 2892. 4. II. as Prep. with gen., like dvrt, over against, “H).bos dvra Il, 2. 626 ; dvra mapedav oxouevn Kphdepva .. before her cheeks, Od. 1. 334; dvr’ d@OaApotiv 4.115; (in 6. 141 . orf & dvra cxopévn may be taken elliptically in the same sense, or dyra may be joined with o77, she stopped and stood facing him); also of persons, dvra oéGev before thee, to thy face, Od. 4. 160, cf. 22. 2325 so in Il. 21. 331, with a notion of comparison, confronted with thee, like dvrdgios ; Epret dvra 7@ ovddpmw 7d Kah@s xOaplodev rivals it, Alcman. Il. 2. in hostile sense, against, Aws dvra modepi{ew Il. 8. 428; Ards dra... &yxos detpar Ib. 424; ef wé pev Gvra ortns 17. 29; Aiavros orhpeva avra Tb. 166; etc.; and to dyra belong several passages in which the last syll. is elided (év7’), and which are often re- ferred to dvrt, v. dvri A. I. dvriydvanréw, to be indignant in turn, Euseb. P. E. 257 C. : dvrityimdw, to love in turn or return, Clem. Al. 102 :—Pass., Philo. 2. 8, Themist. 55 D. dvriyelpw, to rival as a collector, beggar, Celsus ap. Orig. 303 Spencer. dvriyopdlw, to buy with money received in payment for something else, mwAciy Tt kal dvr. otrov Xen, An. I. 5, 53 7a dvrayopacdévra Dem. 930. 23. . dvr&yopetw, to speak against, reply, dvrayépevoey Pind. P. 4. 278. II. to gainsay, contradict, rwi Ar. Ran. 1072. dvr&ypevopat, Pass. to be caught or taken in return, Athanas, avriyovia, %, adversity, in pl., C. I. 6282. ‘ . Gvriyovilopar: fut. Att. Tovpa: : I. as Dep. to struggle against, prove a match for, Twi, esp. in war, Hdt. §. 109, Thuc. 6, 72, Xen., etc. ; dy. rais mapackevais tivds Dem, 1078. 11. 2. generally, to struggle or to dispute with, rivi Thuc. 3. 38; mept twos Andoc. 29. 12; of rayorCopevol re the parties in a lawsuit, Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 27. 3 absol. to rival one another, mept twos Arist. Rhet. 1. 9, 6. Pass. 10 be set against, rwi Xen. Occ. 10, 12. avriyovicpa, aos, 76, a struggle with another, Clem. Al. 839 :—also ; negate “ope be J, Arist. Rh 5, 10 dvra: , to oppose, be a rival, Arist. Rhet, 3. 15, 10. avriyovuoris, od, ce opponent, competitor, rival, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 8., 3: 3 36, Alex. Incert, 2; tut wds Xen. Hier. 4,6; etc.; dvr. Epwros a rival in love, Eur. Tro. 1006, cf. Plat. Rep. 554 E, al.; dvr. ris mratdelas opponents of their system of education, Arist. Pol. 8. 4,73 dvr. II. as avororilw, to break out into wailing, Aesch. Ag. 1074, Eur. Hel, 371. @ exer Twa Tais émBordais Polyb. 2. 45, 5- 136 dvriydvurros, ov, in Poll. 3. £41, is interpreted, contending as an ad- versary :—but dvraywviorws, Id. 1. 157, is f. 1, for dvavr-, v. Dind. dvrablkéw, ¢o injure in return, retaliate upon, &AdAous Plat. Theaet. "23 A, cf. Crito 49 B, sq. ’ wrddw: fut. —doouat:—io sing in answer, esp. of the partridge, to answer when another calls, dvr. ds paxotpevos Arist. H. A. 9. 8, 8, cf. Mirab. 151. 2, Ael. N. A. 4. 16; dvr. Movcats Luc, Pisc, 6; Tots pbey- youevos Plut. 2.794 C: to cry out at one, Lat. occino, éyw 5’, jv Todro Spas, dvrdcopa Ar. Eccl. 887 :—Pass., orpoph dvrqoOjvat Poll. 4. 112. dvracdpw, =dvraipw, but only in Med,, dvracipecOar xeipds Tw to raise one’s hands against one, make war upon him, Hdt. 3. tt 7. 101; or without vii, 6. 44:, 7.2123 also, wéAeuor BactAdi avr, 8. 140, I. dvrdeus, Dor. for dvrqets. dvra0Xos, ov, contending against, rivalling, rwés Anth. P. 12. 68. dvraSéopar, Med, to respect in return, aidoupévas dvr. Xen. Cyr.8.1, 28. dvratos, a, ov, (dvra) set over against, right opposite, Lat. adversus, dyraia mAnyh a wound in front, right in the breast, Soph. El. 196, Eur. Andr. 844; dvraiay érawey (sc. tAnyhv) Soph. Ant. 1308, 2. opposed to, hostile, hateful, Lat. adversarius, nv@badav dvr. Bporotow Aesch, Cho. 588 ; roud Eur. I. A. 1324, cf. Soph. Fr. 74, 310, 406; 7av- taia Oediv their hostile purposes, Aesch. Pers. 604. II. besought with prayers, epith. of Hecaté, etc., Ap. Rh. 1.1141, cf. Orph, H.40.1; dvrala- --leéotos Aesch, (Fr. 219) ap. Hesych.; dvraios Zevs Schol. Il. 22. 113. dvratpw, fut, -dp®, aor. -fpa:—to raise against, xeipds Tw Anth, P. 7.1395 Thuc. 3. 32., 1.53% méAepudv tu Polyb. 15. 7,8; dvr. mpos *Epwra paxnv Anth, P. 12. 147 :—Med., vy. sub dvractpw. EE intr, fo rise up against, withstand, Lat. contra assurgere, avralpew Tut Plat. Euthyd. 272 A, Dem..25.25; mpds 7 or ria, Dem. 66, 24, Plut. Pyrrh. 15, Dion, H. 6. 48: so.in Med., tux Luc. Hermot. 33, etc. 2. of a cliff, to rise opposite to or in the same parallel with, rots Kara Mepény rémots Strabo 68, cf. 77; mpds Thy AcBiny Plut. Aemil. 6. évravrxivopat, Pass, fo be ashamed before another, cited from Ach. Tat. dvravtéw, to demand in return, Thuc.4.19: Twa ri twos App. Civ. 3. 35. Gvravridopat, Dep. ¢o retort.on, Dio C, Excerpt. pp. 72. 75., 452+ 17. dvrairvos, ov, blamable in turn, Clem. Al. 932. dvraixpakwrevwo, to make captive in turn, Eccl. dvravwpéopat, Pass. to rise aloft in turn, Plotin. 670 A. dvraxatos, 6, a sort of sturgeon, Hdt. 4. 53, Lync. Kévr. 1.9, Ael. N.A. 14. 23. 2. as Adj., raptxos dvraxaioy caviar, Antiph. Mapde. 3. wrikohouBéw, to atiend in turn, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2. 1046 E, cf. Diog. L. 7. 125. évrixodovbia, 7, an accompanying, Clem. Al. 436 :—also, dvraioAov- ats, ews, 7, Synes, 49 D. wriKkovtilw, to hurl against in return, AiGov Dio C. 59. 28. avrixovw, fut. -otcouat, to hear in turn, m1 dvtt twos Soph. O. T. 544; @ 7 elmas dvr. Eur. Heracl. 1014; «dpod viv dyrdxovoov Id, Supp. 569: absol. to listen in return, dvt. év péper Aesch, Eum. 198: also in Prose, Xen, An. 2. 5, 16. avtraKkpodopar, Dep., =o hear in turn, Ar. Lys. 527. * dvrahaddlw, to return a shout, of opposing armies, Plut. Pyrth. 32, etc. ; of Echo, Aesch, Pers, 390. avraddtiyn, 3, an exchanging, exchange, barter, Lat. permutatio, Gloss. dyré\Aaypa, aros, 76, that which is given or taken in exchange, pihov Jor a friend, Eur. Or. 1157, cf. Lxx (Job. 28. 15, al.); THs yuxis Ev. Matth. 16. 26. SMEG pel ar avrahAayparikds, 7, dv, of or traffic, Gramm. po tee ov, exchanged for another, Menand. ‘Ad.10, Kav. 3, Xp. 4. évrah\axréov, verb, Adj. one must give in exchange, t.vds for a thing, Dem, 410, 20, Sceillarves, ov, taken as equivalent, mpés rt Porph. Abst.1. 51. avrahAdoow, Att. —rrw: (vy. aw) :—to exchange-one thing with another, Sdepva 8 dvraddAdaooere Tois Thode pédcoe Eur. Tro. 3513 riy dfiwow rév dvopdrav dvr. they changed the signification of the names, Thuc. 3. 82, cf. Plut. 2. 56 B; rt twos Poll. 3. 113: If. more commonly in Med., to take in exchange, dvdpa Aesch. Cho. 133 ; dyradddooecbai ri twos to take one thing in exchange for another, Eur. Hel. 1088, Dem. 68. 6, etc.; 7? dvrt ruvos Id. 203.12; dvradAagcecbal 7 7H dvavolg to interchange in thought, Plat. Theaet. 189 C; Odvarov dvrahvdgerat shall receive death in exchange, i.e. as a punishment, Eur. Phoen. 1633 :—so in Pass., dvrmAAaypevos Tod Exatépay rpdmov having made an interchange of each other’s custom, i. ¢. having each adopted the way of the other, Thuc. 4. 14. gree: avriipe(Bopat, Med. to exchange one thing with another, deApiax O7pes dvr. vopov Archil. 69. 7. II. c. acc. pers. to repay, requite, punish, dvrapetBeobal twa kaxois Archil. 59; xaxatot wovats Aesch. Pr. 223; wax@s xaxoior Id. Theb. 1049; afeos épyos avi Twos Ar. Thesm. 722. III. to answer again, dvrapelBeobat roiade Hat. 9. 793 avr. 71 pds Twa Soph. O. C. 814; Twa ovdéy Tb, 1273 ; also c. dat. rei, duds... roiled’ dvrapelBopas Adyous Eur. Andr. 154. 2 dvrdpeuis, ews, , an exchanging, Hesych.; in Jo. Chrys, also avra- Pini, dy, v. sub dvrnporBés, dvrépiva, 75, 4, a defending against, Theod. Prodr.; v. Lob. Phryn. 23, dyripuvopat [0], Med. to defend oneself against another, resist, Thuc. 4. IL. to requite, ra xaxots Soph. Ant. 643; of dvrapuvdpevor dvray 5) ? 2 y avrayaucros — dvramodiowus. dvravéye, to lead up against, dvr. véas to put ships to sea against, Hdt. 6. 14, Thuc. 7..37; but also dvr. vavot with ships, Ib. 52; more freq. absol. in same sense,—whether in Act., as 8. 38, Xen. Hell. 2.1, 23; or in Med., as Thuc. 4. 13, Xen. Hell. 1. 1, § :—Pass., vavaly dvrava- xOcis Diod, 13. 71 :—generally, to attack, dvravfyero mpos 70 petpaxoy Plat. Eryx. 388 E. 2. to bring up or out instead, Anth. P. 9. 285. évravatpeots, ews, 7), subtraction, Arist. Top. 8. 3, 5. IL. mutual or alternate removal, Eust. 1397. 44. a , to take away from the opposite sides of an account, do away with, to cancel, Dem. 304. 19 :—Pass. to be cancelled, Arist. Metaph. 6. 15, 7- 2. to kill in return, Philo 2. 321, in Pass. GvravakAdors, ews, 1), reflexion of light, Plut. 2. 901 D; also of sound, echo, Ib. 502 D. II. the use of a word in an altered sense, Lat. contraria significatio, Quintil. 9. 3, 68, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 746. dvravakhacpés, 6, a reflexive sense, of words, Apoll. de Pron. 70 B. avravakhactikés, 7, dv, of or for reflexion, dv. dvtwvupia a reflexive pronoun, Gramm. :—also -kAaoros, ov, Priscian, dyravakhde, to reflect, pas Plut. 2.696 A:—Pass., Ib. 903 A; dyrava- KAGrat Gris Sext. Emp. M. 5.82; dp@adpol dAAnAos avravakAdpever reflected one in another, Achill. Tat. 1. 9. 2. of sound, to be reflected or echoed, LXX (Sap. 17. 19). 8. in Gramm., ox7pa dyravakh@pevoy, reflexive, Apoll. de Constr. p. 175 ; cf. foreg. dvravakAtvopat, Pass. to lean or lie back, go to rest opposite, Nicet. Eugen. 7. 333. Gyravakomn, 7, a recoiling, kvpdtwy Arist. Mund. 4, 33- Gvravakénrw, fut. yw, to throw back again, A. B. 34. dvravaxpalw, to cry out in turn, or reply, App. Mithr. 26. Gvravadionw, fut. -GAwow, to destroy in return, Eur. Or. 1165. Gvravapéve, to wait instead of taking active measures, c. inf., Thuc. 3.12. Gvravarraviopar, Med, zo rest in turn, Polyaen. 1. 14. dyravatrépmw, to send back in return, Byz. Gvravamlprdnpr, to fill in return, Xen. Hell. 2.4, 12. dyravatrAéko, to plait in rivalry with, rwl Anth. P. 4. 2. évravamAnpde, to fill in turn, supply as a substitute, Apoll. de Constr. P- 14; dvr. mpds Tov edtophraroy del Tods dwopwrdrous to put in the poorest so as to balance the richest, Dem. 182. 22 :—évtavamAjpwots, €ws, 7), a filling up again, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10..48. dyravamrw, to kindle in turn or in opposition, Walz Rhett. 1. 495. dvtavdoriots, ews, %, the erection of a wall or the like over against another, Eust. Opusc. 291. 80. évravaotpépw, fo turn back again, Clem. Al. 160. avravatpexa, to run back again, close again, of the skin, Paul. Aeg. p. 197. dvravahépe, fut. -avoicw, to bring or carry back again, avr. Thy nist, ‘Lat. idem aequare, Wytt. Plut. 2. 20 C. II. absol. to make com- pensation, HG rt Themist. 99 C. dvravaxwpéw, to give ground in turn, Aristid, 1. 529. dvravBpos, ov, (dvfp) instead of a man, as a substitute, dvrt rwos Luc. D, Mort. 16. 2, etc. Gvrdveus, (el ibo) to rise so as to balance, wi Thuc. 2. 75. Gvtavelpyw, to resist, repulse, td Philes de Eleph. 241. dvravehke, to draw back again, Nicet. Eugen. 6. 397. dvravépxopar, Dep. to return again, Theod. Prodr. dvravéxe, to hold up in turn ot in reply, rupaovs Polyzen, 6, 19, ete. dvravicéw, to make equal, adjust, compensate, Synes. 126 B. avray mt, to set up against or in rivalry, 71 Plut. 2. 40 E, Dio C. 42. 48; ri tive Plut. 348 D. II. Pass., with aor. 2 act., fo rise up against, Ti és xéeipas Soph. Tr. 441, cf, Plut. Sull. 7; ¢o rise one against another, Id. 2. 723 B. avravioxo, = dvravéxa, Basil. dvravicwpa, a7os, 74, an equivalent, Joseph, A. J. 18. 9, 7. avravicwots, . , s J , avTarddoua — avtexbew. el pi) dvramod.Soin 7a Erepa Tots Erépors Plat. Phaedo 72 A, cf. B; od« drrobidwot 7d Spotov there is no similar correspondent, Arist. Meteor. I. 11, 4, cf. Incess. An. 7,6; Se? riv peraopay thy éf dvaddyou dvramokddvat to be convertible, Id. Rhet. 3. 4, 4. 3. to give back words, answer, tivi Plat. Phaedr. 236 C. IIL. to deliver in turn, 7d otvOnpua Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 58, in Pass.: to explain in turn, Plat. Tim. 87 C. Iv. to give back a sound, Plut. Sull. 19, Timol. 27. dvraméSopua, 74, a repayment, requital, whether of good or evil, Lxx (Sirac. 12. 2., 14. 6, al.), Ep. Rom. 12. 19, cf. Ps. 62. 22. AvraméSoais, ews, }, a giving back in turn, opp. to dmodoxh, Thuc. 4. 81: a rendering, requiting, repayment, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 5, 7., 8. 13, 10, al.; xaptros Menand. Monost. 330, Diod. 20. 100; in bad sense, Lxx (Isai. 61. 2., 63. 4, al.) ; ylyverat dvr. x twos Polyb. 5. 30,6:—reward, Lxx (Ps. 18. 11), Ep, Col. 3. 24. IL. a turning back, opposite direction or course, dvr, moetaar Polyb. 4. 43, 5, etc. 2. a responsive sound, Arist. Audib. 50. III. an alternation, e. g. of action and reaction, mepidSwv Hipp. Aph. 1243. 2. in Rhet.,; the correspond- ence or opposition of clauses in a periodic sentence, cf. Quintil. 8. 3, 78 sq. avraoboréov, verb, Adj. one must repay, riv dgiav Gv mabey Arist. Eth. N. 8. 13, 93 Tiwhv 8. 14, 3; xdpiv 9. 2,1; TAs evepyeoias Ib. 3; 70 dpetAnua Ib. 5. II. dvr. ef tevi one must make it correspond to.., Plat, Phil. 40 D. dvramodérns, ov, 5, a requiter, repayer, Ep. Barnab. dvratroborikés, 7, dv, in Gramm., belonging to or marking dvrané- Soots ; or, of pronouns, correlative :—Adv. -«@s, Schol. Ap. Rh, 1. 5. dvraoSvopar, Med, with aor. and pf. act., fo strip, prepare for a contest with, Twi Philostr, 842. dvramo8vioKw, to die in turn, Antipho 130. 26. avramowa, a faulty form for dyrimawa, Dind. Soph. Ph. 316. dvraroxpivopat [7], Med, to answer again, Ev. Luc. 14. 6: to argue against, rwi Ep. Rom. g. 20. II. to correspond with, dAAnAats Nicom. Ar. 77. dvramékpiots, ews, 7}, a reply, Nicet. Eugen. 1. 266. dvramokretve, to kill in return, Hdt. 7.136, Aesch. Cho. 121, etc. avramoAapBaver, fut. -Ajpouat, to receive or accept in return, Plat. Tim. 27 B, Dem, 471. 2. GvraméhAtpi, to destroy in return, Eur. Ion 1328, Plat. Crito 51 A. II. Pass, and Med., with pf. 2 act., to perish in turn, adres dvramaAdpny Eur. Hel. 106, cf... T. 715; itp dvdpds éxdorov déna pe se that ten should be put to death in revenge for each man, t. 3. 14. dvratrohoyéopar, Dep. to speak for the defence or in reply, Isae. 52. 23, cf, Dio C. 50. 2. avramotrailw, to lose what one has won at play, Com. Anon. Fr. 259. dvramétraXots, ews, %, a rebounding, revulsion, Cass. Probl. 26 :—also the verb -1dAA@, in Byz. dvratotéwire, to send away in turn, cited from Matth. Anecd, dvratromépSw, Lat. oppedere, mpos ras Bpoyras Ar. Nub. 293. dvt-arropéw, to raise questions in turn, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 231. avratooréhAw, to send away in turn or in exchange, Polyb. 22. 26, 22: to send back, Nicet. Eugen. 5. 325, in Pass.: to refer one back again, éni 7 Sext. Emp. M. 8. 86. dvratroctoly, , a sending inreturn, mutual despatch, mpéaBewv Nicet. Ann, 257 B. dvramootpébw, to turn back again, Tzetz. Hist. 5. 903. avratoorpopy, 7), a turning away from one another, of places which face opposite ways, Strabo 257. dvramotappeta, to part off by trenches, cited from App. dvratroretxilo, to wall off, fortify on the other side, Dio C. 43. 7. avratrotivw, to requite, repay, Anth. P. 9. 223 :—also dvramorivvupt or -¥w, Byz. dvtamogaive, to shew on the other hand, Thuc. 3. 38, 67 :—Med. to assert a'contrary opinion, Clem. Al, 891. avratrodpépw, to carry off in turn: to throw back, Poll. 9. 107. dvramoxy, %, the debtor’s acknowledgment of his debt (?). avrarropat, Ion. for dvOdmropat. dvramwiéw, to repel in turn, Arist. Probl. 24. 9, 3:—Pass., Id. Somn. Sys: dvrarGOnots, ews, 4, mutual repulsion, Anaxag. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1, 526. dvrarwots, ews, ),=foreg., Plut. 2. 890 D. dvrtipOpéw, to compare ber for ber, count against one another, Paus. 10. 20, 2 :—verb. Adj. —yréov, Poll. 2. 93. dvrapkéw, to hold out against, rois mapotow Thuc. 7.155 mpds we Plut. Cleom. 30. II. absol. to hold out, persist, Ar. Eq. 540, Isocr. 132 C, 389 D; c. part., Tpépovoa .. dvrnpxecev Dio C. 68. 25. , dvrapxticés, 4, dv, (dpxros) opposite the north, antarctic, modos Arist. Mund. 2, 5, Plut. 2. 888 C. dvrapois, ews, 4, a rising against one, insurrection, Symm. ViT., Byz. :—also, dvrapoia, }, Byz. :—dvraprns, ov, 6, a rebel, Jo. Chr. :— and Adj. dvraprucds, 7, dv, Byz. avtapxe, to act as vice-president, Tod dyavos C. I. 353. 8, cf. 2222. 17. avracméfopat, fut. doopar, Dep. to welcome, greet in turn, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 3: to receive kindly, Ib. 5.5, 42:—hence, avragracpés, 6, a mutual greeting, Theod. Stud. avractpinre, to lighten against, dorparais Dio C. 59. 28. dyvracXopevos, 7, ov, y. sub avTa, dvravydfw, fut. dow, =dvravyéw, mpds Avov Heliod. 1. 2. trans. to expose to the light, illuminate, ji Biov cvr. Philo 2. 260. avravyicta, %, reflexion of light, Gloss. :—so, avravyeta,7),Philolaos in II. Stob. Ecl. 1. 530, Xen. Cyn. 5, 18; 77s xedvos from the snow, Diod. 17. 82. $ 137 avravyéw, to reflect light, Arist. Probl. 23. 6, 1, Chaerem. ap. Ath. 608 B ; mpos “OAvpov Emped. ap. Plut. 2. 400 B; pdo-yavoy dvravyel pévoy Slashes back murder, Eur. Or. 1519: to gleam, glitter, Eubul, Kuf. 1. avravy'js, és, reflecting light, sparkling, xépa: Ar, Thesm. 902; xiwv Diod. 17. 82. dvravddw, fut. jaw, fo speak against, answer, rw Soph. El. 1478. dvravhéw, to play on the flute against, rwi Agath, Hist. 257. 3. avravtw, to increase in turn, Byz. avravw, fut. ow, to sound in turn, answer, of dvrdice (0) Bpovras pbéypa Pind. P. 4. 350, cf. Opp. C. 2. 78. & go, to take away in return, Antipho 125. 46, in Med, AE. to subtract from both sides, and dvtadatpects, ews, 1), subtraction from both sides, Nicom. Arithm, 86. dvraheoride, v. sub dvreperridw. dvradinpr, fut. -apjow, to let go in turn, ddxpu dy. to let the tear fall in turn, Eur. 1. A. 478. II. to send back, cpaipay Poll. 9, 107. dvrdw, poét. opt. dvrgn Soph. Tr. go2: Ion. impf. #vTeov Hom.: fut. dvrqow: pf. qvTnka: (dvra, dyri); I. c. dat. pers. to come op- posite to, meet face to face, meet with, % ot emer’ jyrno’ Il. 6. 3993 Hvreov GAAnAotow 7. 423; so also in Trag., dvéuous dvr. Aesch, Supp. 373 tarpt Soph. Tr. go2, etc.: cf. dvtia{w IT. II. =dvridm, c. gen., 1. c. gen. pers, éo meet in battle, nev mavrwy ayrncopev Od. 16. 254, cf. Il. 16. 423: also, without any hostile sense, omépya Hey dvrao’ ’EpexOeadav by lineage she reached, went up to the Erechtheidae, Soph. Ant, 982. 2. c: gen. rei, to meet with, take part in, partake in or of, paxns, dairns Il. 7. 158, Od. 3. 44; karddcgov Sras HvTnoas dnans how thou hast sped in getting sight of him (opp. to pera marpds dxouny in preceding line), Od. 17. 44, cf. 3. 93-973 so, dvr. fevlev Hdt. 2.119; dAwovos Pind. O. 10 (11). 493 avT. Twos éé tivos to meet with such and such treatment from another, Hdt. 1. 1143; ow (so Elmsl. for op@v) .. dp@pyar wh wor’ dvricat caxdv Soph, O. C. 1445. III. rarely c. acc. (cf. dvria(w 1), "Apyetov avrqoas arédov Aesch, Supp. 323; where the Mss. dvarqoas (whence Paley dvorhons may'st raise up, support) :—Eur. I. A. 150, jv viv mopmats dvrnoys viv, is probably an interpolation.—The simple Verb never in Com. or Att. Prose; but cf. dwavrdw. avreyypadw, fo insert one name instead of another, Dem.-'792. 3. dvreyyvdw, to pledge or bind in return, Theod. Prodr. dvreyetpw, zo raise or build instead, Dio C. 69. 12: to build in opposi- tion, Ti reve App. Pun. 114. avréyepots, ews, 7), a raising up instead, Theod. Prodr. dvreykadéw, fut. €ow, to accuse in turn, recriminate, Dem. 1012. 17; ivi Isocr. 360 D. dvréyketpat, Pass, to be urgent on the other side, Eunap. p. 39 Boiss. dvréykAnpa, aros, Td, a counter-accusation, Walz Rhett. 4. 647, al. dvreykAnpaticés, 7, dv,.of or for a counter-accusation, Walz Rhett. 4. 673. Adv. -«@s, Schol. Ap. Rh. avreykvKAta, (sc. ypdupara), 74, circular letters rescinding ot contra- dieting former ones, Evagr. H. E. 3. 7. dvreyxapdcow, fo engrave instead, Manass. Chron. 4338. avreyxetpi£o, 0 entrust to another instead, tut dias Dio C. 60. 24. dvreucdto, fut. dcouat Plat. Meno 80 C: aor. —yeaca Ar. Vesp. 1311, subj. ~exxdow Plat. ib. :—to compare in return, Twa Tun Ar, Vesp. 13115 absol., Plat. 1. c. Hence -Kacta, %, Schol. Ven. Il. 8. 560. avrexéviopa, 76, an image, likeness, tivds Byz. dvretvw, post. for dvareiva, dvretrov, aor. 2 without any pres. in use: (cf, dvrep®, dvriAéya, dv- rayopedw), to speak against or in answer, gainsay, mostly c. dat., obdev dy. tue Aesch, Pr. 51, Soph. O. C. 999, etc.; dvr. rut deopévy Thuc, 1. 136. 2. absol. to speak in answer, mpés twa or tt Id. 3. 61, Xen, Hell. 3. 3, 3, Plat. Theag. 131 A; dvr. bmép tivos to speak in one’s de- fence, Ar. Thesm. 545 :—c. acc. cogn., dvr. éros to uéter a word of con= tradiction, Eur. 1. A, 13913; S00 Adyw wept TOV airay dvremeiy to speak on both sides of a question, Isocr. 208 A. 3. c. ace, rei, dvr. tuk tt to set one thing against another, Plat. Apol. 28 B. 4. xakds dvr. twa. to speak ill of him in turn, to.answer him with reproaches, Soph. Ant. 1053; cf. € elmeiy twa, etc. (eivov 1. 4). dvrelpopar, perhaps only in aor. —epduny, Att. —npdpny (as if from —€popat):—to askin turn, Hdt,1.129., 3. 23, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2,22; in part., Plut. 2. 739 B; rods dvrepopévous Tay modiray C. 1. 2671. 34. avrevody, to introduce instead, substitute, Dem. 121. 6 (in Pass.), Plat. Ax. 369 E, Menand, MAox. 1. 16. IL. to bring in to office in turn, dAAnAous Plut. Caes. 14. dvrecdywyn, 7, a thetorical figure, Lat. compensatio, by which a gene- ral assertion is met by a contradictory case, Walz Rhett. 8. 457. avrevoaxrtéov, verb. Adj. one must introduce instead, substitute, Byz. dvrew, «, to throw upon in turn, ovppopty tit Nicet. Eug. 6. . IL. intr. to make an inroad in reprisal, Dio C. 48. 21. dvreoSpopy, 7), an entrance in turn, succession, Cyril. dvreodive, to enter instead, eis 7. Eust. 1111. 45. dvreioeypt, fo enter in turn or in return, cited from Synes. af dvrevoépxopat, Dep. fo come into in turn or instead, cited from Aristid. dvre éw, to call in in turn, Cyrill. avreobidlo, to bring in, introduce in turn, A. B. 883. dvraomparre, to exact in return, Phot. ap. Wolf Anecd, 2. 121. avrerdépw, fut. -ofcw, to contribute in return, Ar. Lys. 654; cf. elopopa. II. vépor dvr. to substitute a new law for an old one, Dem. 486. 24; Kawa datydma Dio C. 52. 36. avreodhopa, 7}, an introduction instead, a substitution, Byz. dvrek0éw, to rush out on the other side, Art. An. 1. 21. 138 dvrexOA {Bo [7], to press out in turn, Hipp. 411. 45. dvrexkAenro, to steal away in return, Ar. Ach. 527. dvrekkopite, fo carry out or away in return, Hesych. avrexkéTTw, to knock out in return, dpOadydy Dem. 744.13; et Tis Tov dpOarpov e€éxopé riv0s, dvrexxonfvat Arist. M. Mor. 1. 34, 15. dvrexméumw, to send out or away in return, Xen. Hell. 4, 8, 25. GvrexmAéw, to sail out against, ri Thuc. 4-13; absol., Plut. Lys. 10. avrecmAqoow, fut. fe, to frighten in return, Acl. N, A, 12. 15. Gvrextrvéw, to breathe out in turn, Galen. avrexpéw, to flow out in turn, Galen. dvréxriiots, ews, 7, Hesych., prob. v. |. for dvréxriois. oe (sc. arpardv), to draw out troops in opposition, App. Civ. 4. 108. avrectelve, to stretch out in opposition, dv. abrév Tit to match oneself with another, Ar. Ran. 1042; vi Twit Philostr. 517. dvrextiOnpr, fo set forth or state instead, Plut. Arat. 1. set one thing against another, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 251. avrextivw [7], to repay, Philo 2. 78. avréxtiots, ews, 7), retribution, Philo 2. 510, Schol. Pind. P. 1. 112. dvréxtirtos, ov, (exrive) punished in turn, Schol. Il, 24. 213. dvrextpébw, to maintain in return; in Pass., dvrexrpépecOat ind Tay éxydvor Arist. H. A. 9. 13, 2. 2. to train as a rival, Bérpuv Borpvi Lynceus ap. Ath. 654 A. avrextpéexe, to sally out against, Xen. Hell. 4. 3,17, Ages. 2, 10. Gvrexhépw, to bring out against, oppose, ri Tit Plut. 2. 72 E. dvrexuw, to beget, generate in turn, Eccl. dvrehatréopat, Pass. to be worsted in turn, Dio C. 44. 27. dvreAatva, intr, to sail against, rpenpet with a trireme, Plut. Nic. 24. dvreuypés, 6, Ion. for dvOeA-, q. v. ‘ wréAdoyos, 6, compensation, Jurisc.: also —Aoyuopds, 6, Gloss.: —doyiCopat, to compensate, Jurisc. dvreAtrifw, to hope instead or in turn, tt Thuc. 1. 70. dvrepBatve, to fit into each other, of ee (yeryyAvpor), Galen. II. to 2. 737; he likewise uses the Substs. dvr: sand dvrepBoAy, 7. avrepBdddw, to put in instead, ri rr Theophr. H. P. 9. 8, 7. 2. intr. ¢o make an inroad in turn, Xen, Hell. 3. 5, 4, Polyb. 5. 96, 3: to attack in turn, Plut. Philop. 18. avrépBaors, 7, v. sub dvreuBaiva. dvrepBiBatw, to put on board instead, Thuc. 7.13, cf. Dem. 50. 24. dvreuBodw, to shout at a person in answer, A. B. 85, Eust. 855. 21 :— also —Bon, 7, an answering cry, Walz Rhett. 3. 580. dvrepBoAn, 7, a mutual inroad, Eccl. 2. v. sub dyrepBaiver dvrepBpipdopar, Dep. to threaten in turn, Tivi Nicet. Ann. 169 C. dvreptaile, to mock at in return, Twt Schol. Ar. Pax 1112. dvrepriyvupat, aor. —everdynv, Pass, to stick right in, rwi Ar. Ach, 230. avreprrimAnpr, fut. —rAjow, to fill in turn, dvrevérAnoay tiv dddv Xen: Hell. 2. 4,12: to fill in return, by way of compensation, ri Twos Id. An. 4. 5, 28 :—Pass. to be filled full of, Twds Plat. Legg. 705 B. avreprimpnps, fut. mow, to set on fire in return, dvreveripmpacay 7a ipa Hdt. 5. 102. dvrepmrAékopat, Pass. to be entwined together, Diosc. 1. 14, Poll. 1. 184: —to return one’s embraces ot salutation, Joseph. A. J. 16. 2, 5. avrepmrAoKh, 7, a mutual entwining, embrace, M. Anton. 7. 50. dvreudatvw, fut. —pivd, to oppose by a counter-statement, dvr. rats dmopaceotv Polyb. 18. 11, 12 :—also, in Hesych., dvrephavite. ee dvréudiiots, ews, 1), a difference of appearance, Strabo 10g: opposition, antithesis, Sext. Emp, M. I. 57. > dvrepdvonors [i], ews, , a blowing against, dvr. dvéyow contrariety of winds, Theod. Prodr. Rhod. p. 282. dvreuhiredw, to implant on the other side, Eust. Opusc. 160. 6. dvrepaviov, 76, antimony, late, v. Ducang. i dvrevavriwors, ews, ), a thetorical figure, by which a positive statement is made in a negative form, as ov @hdxiora for péytora, Walz Rhett.8. 481. dvrevSeixvupar, Med. to give contrary indications, of symptoms, Galen. dvrévBerkis, ews, %, an adverse indication, obstacle, Theod. Stud. GvrevblSapr, fut. dow, to give way in turn, of sawyers, 6 per Erxet, 68 dyrevédwxe Ar. Vesp. 694, restored by Dobree for dvravédane. dvrevuopat, Pass. to put on instead, Plut. 2.139 C. avrevéSpa, as, %, a counter-ambuscade, Polyb.1.57,3- dvrevedpevw, fo lay a buscad “Hipp. Ep.1282, DioC, 41.51. wrevepyéw, to operate against, Barnab. Ep. 2. ? Meowteiper, 76, a pee aes Schol. Ap. Rh, 1. 1355 :—hence dv- revexupdtopat, Dep. to take a counter-pledge, Schol. Eur. Ion 1406. avrévOeats, ews, 7), an insertion instead, Eust. 1679. 12. dvrevouxiLw, to introduce as inhabitants instead, Tzetz.:—Pass., ai puxat dyvois wadw dvr. chpaow Joseph. B. J. 3. 8, 5. GvrevriOnpt, do insert in turn or instead, Nicom, Ar. 149. dvrevtpétrw, to turn in an opposite direction, Theod, Prodr., in Pass. avrevaimios, ov, face to face, Manass, Chron. 3725, etc. dvretdyw, to export in turn or instead, Xen. Vect. 3, 2. II. to lead out against, 7a orparéneda Polyb. 2. 18, 6, cf. Diod. 13. 66 :— absol. to march out against, twit Polyb. 3. 66, 11. ; dvretaipw, to elevate, magnify in rivalry, Adyous Epya Philostr. 511. évreavtéw, to demand in return, Plut. Alex. II, ; dvreaviorapar, Pass., with aor. 2 act., to rise up against, mpds Tt Heliod. 7. 19. : dvretirardw, to deceive in return, Dio C. 58. 18. avre-arrorréAAw, to send away in turn, Byz. : avréappa, aros, 76, (avrefatpw) an opposite elevation, Theol. Ar, 25. dvréeyu, (fut, bo) to go out against, Xen, Hell. 4. 5, 10, etc. . avrexOXiBo — avremipédrrdw. dvreképyopar, = dy7éteru, Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 12, etc. on ie fut. gay one by the standard of another, Aeschin, 6. 2, Arr. Epict. 2.18, 21; Tt mpés tt Plut. Caes. 3:—Pass. to be mea- sured or compared, nap or mpés Tt Plut, Timol. 36., 2. 65 B:—Med. to measure one's strength against another, tiv Luc, D. Mort. 12. 2: esp. to dispute with him at law, like dvriducéw, Ib. 29. 1, Merc. Cond. 11: metaph., dv. 77 vdow Id. Abdic. 16. dvrekériions, 7), a trying one against another, Walz Rhett. 9. 496. &vreferacréos, a, ov, fo be compared, cited from Max. Tyr.: dvrege- Tacrixés, 7, dv, comparing, Aphthon. in Walz Rhett. 1. 97. dvrebnyéopar, to state in turn, Origen. GvreEnynots, ews, 1), a counter-explanation, Ath. 634 E. dvrefurevio, fo ride out against, Plut. Pomp. 7. dyretiodfe, to make equal, compare, Schol. Od. 11. 308. dvretiorapar, Pass. c. aor. 2 act., to yield to an attack, Plut. 2. 946 D. avreEoppdw, to march or sail out against, Dio C. 48. 47. 63. 24. Oppyots, ews, 7), a sailing against, Thuc. 2. 91: a mode of at- Plut. Pomp. 69. avréEwous, 4, a mutual thrusting out, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 93. GvremrayyéAAw, to promise in turn, Theod. Prodr. dvremdyw, to lead against: absol. (sub. orpardv or the like), to ad- vance against, advance to meet an enemy, Thue. 4.124, Polyb. 12. 18,11, etc. II. to inflict in return, mowny tive Aristaen. 2.9. dvretdSo, to use charms against, dvrddwv kat dvren. Plotin. 437 B. dvremawvéw, fut. dow, to praise in return, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 49 as, Pass., dvr. T1vi to be extolled in comparison with, Luc. pro Imag. 19. dyretmavdyopat, Pass, to put to sea against, mpés twa Thue. 4. 25. dyretravépxopat, Dep. fo return, come back again, Timario in Notices des Mss, 9. 170. dyrerapvopnat, Dep. to draw in turn, Eus. Laud, Const. 14. avrémapxos, 6, subpraefectus, Gloss. dvreravydlw, to beam with light in turn, Manass. Chron. 5959. Gvreravidve, to increase in turn, Theod, Prodr. p. 178, Eust. Gvreradinpt, to let go, let slip against, rt Luc, Zeux. 9. Gvretreyelpw, to stir up against; in Pass., Manass. Chron. 3743. Gvréteypr, (ely) to rush upon, meet an advancing enemy, Thuc. 4. 33, 96, etc.; Tivi Id. 7. 6. Gyremetrov, aor. 2, without pres, in use (cf. dyrefmov), to answer, Nicet. Eug. 8. 70. Gvremevrdyopat, Pass. to be carried in or enter instead, Tim. Locr. To2 A; els 7d dpathpara, Plut. 2. 903 E. dvretreloodos, 7), an entrance in return, avr. mapéxew Plut. 2. 903 D. dvremevoépopar, Pass. to come in instead, Plut. 2. 903 E. avreméxraots, 7), a stretching against or in opposite direction, Hesych, dvretreAavve, aor. -fAaca, to rush to meet, attack one, App. Pun. 26. évremepPalve, to board a ship against: to oppose, Theod. Prodr. p. 262. dvremefayelpw, to collect in opposition, Theod. Prodr. p. 210, in Pass. dvremefdyo, intr. 2o go out against, Thuc. 8, 104, Luc. Bacch. 3:— also in Med., Dio C. 50. 31. dvreméEeust, (ele) to march out to meet an enemy, mpés twa Thue. 7. 37; absol., Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 30, etc. dvremetehavve, =foreg., Thuc. 4. 72; cf, Aadvw I. 2. dvrewebepxopar, =dyreréferu, Thuc. 4.131, Aristid. 1. 149. avrenétEobos, 7), a sally in turn, Dio C. 47. 37. évremepelSopar, Med. fo strive against, Lat. obnitor, Gloss. dvremépxopat, o march against, rwi Dio C. 36. 34. dvremepwrdw, —ryors, 7), restipulor, restipulatio, Gloss. dvremnx ce, to clamour against one, Luc. Catapl. 19. dvremBovAeutos, ov, plotting, or used in plots, against one, pnxavh Math. Vett. p. 9. avremBovheta, to form counter-designs, Thuc. 1. 33., 3. 12, etc. dvremypadw, to write something instead, kadd dveAdy doeBh avremt- ypape Dem. 615. fin. :—Med., dvremypaperbar emt 7d vixnua to put their own names instead of the other party to the victory, i.e. claim it, Polyb. 18. 17, 2. dvremBelxvupt, to exhibit in turn, Plat. Theaet. 162 B; c. part. to contrast, dvr. éavrdy moodvrd tt Xen, Ages, 1, 12 :—Med. to exhibit oneself in competition, Plut. 2. 674 B; also c. acc. rei, avr. Tt KaAOY TIME to exhibit some fine quality against another. Id, Anton. 233 also, re mpds tt Id. Alex, 21. dvremibetiyvupat, Pass. fo be attached on the other side, Irenae. I. 17. dvremlBeots, ews, 7), a mutual attack, contention, Philo 1. 7. dvrembipéa, to desire a thing in rivalry with, rwés Andoc. 32. 42:— Pass., €mBupdv fuveivar kal dvremOvyeioOa rhs guvovalas and to have one’s company desired in turn, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 28. dvremucihéw, fut. éow, to accuse in return, avr. bt. . , App. Civ. 5. 59. dvrenucnptioow, to advertise for sale in return, Poll. 4. 93. avremuddw, to break or bow down in turn, Byz. dvremucAvlo, 10 inundate, overwhelm in turn, Nicet. Eug. 9. 34. dvremnouptw, to help in return, rvi Xen. Hell. 4. 6, 3. dvremupatve, to bring to pass in turn: v. émupaive. ay i }, alternate mastery, vetxous nat gidas Stob. Ecl. I. 416. dvremupiiréw, to get the upper hand in turn, Strabo Dio C. 44. 27. dvremAapBavopar, Med. to lay hold on the other det i ae dvremA€yopat, Dep. to choose in turn or instead, Eust. Opusc. 248. 51. dvrempeAgopar or —péAopar, Dep. to attend or give heed in turn, v.1. Xen. Cyr. 5. 1, 185 rwés to one, Id. An. 3. 1, 16, ‘ nes es to drive, ride, sail out against, Plut. Philop, 18, etc. ; dvrempédAw, v.s, dvripéAdor. ° , ° U aVTET MET PEW — AVTHALOS. avremperpéw, 20 measure to in return, Poll. 5. 142. dvremivotw, to devise in turn, Ael. N. A. 6. 23, Joseph. A. J. 10. 8, 1. dvremumAéw, to sail against in turn, Poll. 1, 124. v.1. Thuc, 1. 50. dvremppéw, to admit moisture instead, Hipp. 418. 54. dvremippypa, 7d, Poll. 4. 112; v. sub émippnua. avremppon, %, flux and reflux, Eust. Opusc. 128. 81. dvremippobéw, Zo resound, of a sea-beaten rock, Manass. Chron. 4016. dvremokémnyros, ov, resisting episcopal authority, Eust. Opusc. 262. 35, joined with dvemoxérnros, ’ dvreiakomos, 6, an anti-bishop, rival claimant of a see, Greg. Naz. dvremokotéw, to darken again or in turn, Manass. Chron. 3078. dvremoxartw, to mock in return, Twa Polyb. 17. 7, 5. avremiomaw, =dv0éAnw, Hesych. dvremuorréhw, to write an answer, Luc. Sat. 19, Paus. 4. 22, 6, etc. dvremorévw, to groan in turn or in reply, Nicet. Eug. 1. 51. avremoroAn, %, a letter in reply, Epiphan. dvremortpiret, to take the field against, Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 33: the verb. Adj. -evréov, in Nicet. Eug. 5. 338. dvremotpépw, fo turn against, retort, Plut. 2. 810 E. dvremotpopy, }, a turning back upon, xetpds ént rdv @povPlut. 2.gor D. dvremrdoow, to order in turn, twt moveiv 7 Thuc. 1. 135; Tivt Tt Plat. Tim. 20 B. dvremutelvw, to turn in a contrary direction, Plut. 2. 933 C. dvremurerxifopuar, Dep. with pf. pass. to occupy ground with a fort in turn, Thuc. 1. 142: cf. émrexicw. dvremitiOnpt, properly to day on in turn or exchange, wAnyhv Clem. Al. 932 :—Pass., Dio C. 58. 7. 2. dvr. Emorodhy mpds Twa to give a letter in answer, Thuc. 1. 129, Isae. ap. Harpocr.; cf. émi- One. II. Med. to make a counter-attack, to throw oneself upon, Diod. Excerpt. 533. 61. dvremtip.aw, to blame in turn, Eccl. dvremtpexw, = dvrepodedor, Suid. avreritpotos, a deputy governor, C.I. (add.) 4536 f. dvremupépw, to lay, inflict in turn upon, ri tw Philo 1. 407: to send back, echo, pnyara Planud. 2. Pass. to rush upon in turn, Tim. Locr. 102 A. avremixetpéw, to undertake in turn, Strabo. II. to attack in turn, Twi Plut. Themist. 31. IIL. to make attempts to prove the contrary, Arist. Top. 8.8, 2; 7a dvrem xetpovpeva controversial efforts to prove or disprove, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 191; cf. émxelpnya. dvtemxeipyots, ews, , a counter-attack, Dion. H. 9. 14. dvremiywpiatw, of words, to be interchangeable, Basil. dvremodpethw, to owe in turn, or as a set-off, Byz. dvréptipat, aor. —ypdc@nv: Dep.=sq., Tt Tivos Luc. Musc. Enc. Io. dvrepivifw, 4o contribute one’s share in turn; Pass. to be repaid, dupa- ow dddorpios Anth. P. 9. 12. dvrepacrijs, of, 6, a rival in love, rwds Ar. Eq. 733: a rival, Plat. Rep. 521 B, Arist. Rhet. 2. 10, 6:—fem. dvrepdotpia, Gloss. dvrepdw, to love in return, Tov dvrepivtav inépw memdnypévos Aesch. Ag. 544; épav dvrepdra: Xen. Symp. 8, 3, cf. Bion 8. 1; dvrepay twvés Luc. D. Marin. 1. 5; dvrepaadat id Twos Plut. Dio 16. II. to rival in love, tii Plut. 2. 972 D; avr. tivi Twos to rival one in love for .., Eur. Rhes. 184: absol., 7d dvrepay jealous love, Plut. Lycurg. 18. dvrepyoNGBéw, to compete with, re ina thing, Posidipp. “Ava. I. GvrepeVifw, to provoke in turn, rd mpds paxny Eust. 848. 17. dvrepelSw, to set firmly against, xeipt xeipa dvrepetcas clasping hand in hand, Pind. P. 4.65; dvrépetde Trois "EpexOeldais Sépv Eur. Supp. 702; dvr. {ha [7@ tUpyy] to set wooden stays or props against it, Xen. Hell. 5. 2,5; dvr. Baow to plant it firm, Soph. Ph. 1403. II. intr. to stand firm, resist pressure, offer resistance, opp. to dmeixw, Xen. Cyr. 8. 8, 16, cf. Cyn. 10, 16, Plat. Tim. 45 C, Arist., etc.; 0évap: dvr. Hipp. Fract. 761 ; 70 @Oovpevov dvr. Oey wOeirar offers resistance in the di- rection from which the pressure comes, Arist. Mechan. 34, 1, etc. dvrépevots, ews, ), a thrusting against, resistance, Hipp. Art. 817: esp. the fulcrum or resistance used in setting a bone, Ib. 780; in stepping, Arist. Incess. An. 3, 2; Adumey dvrepeice: Tod aidépos by its resistance, Plut. Lysand. 12 :—repulsion, Id. 2. 396 A. dvrépacpa, 76, a prop, Hesych. s.v. orjvat. avrepeorixds, 7, dv, of or for resistance, tis Metop. ap. Stob. 10. avrepécow, Att. -tTrw, to row against, prob. 1. Dio C. 48. 48. avrepifw, to strive against, contend, mpés Tt Polyb. 40. 5, 8; Tavpos Philostr. 722 :—poét. also dvreptSatvw, Nonn. Jo. 7. 43. avrépopat, v. sub dvrelpopa. : dvrepvopat, Dep. to make equal in weight with, to value equally with, c. gen., xpucod Te xal dpytpou dvreptcacba: Theogn. 77; cf. dvrionkdo and éptw. dvrep&, fut. without any pres. in use; pf. dvrelpnea Soph. Ant. 473 (cf. dvreirov) :—to speak against, gainsay, Ib.; rebvavat 5 obxér’ avr. Geots Aesch, Ag. 5393 Tt pos rwva Ar. Nub. 1079; mpés rt Ach, 701:— Pass., ob5év dvreipnoerat no denial shall be given, Soph. Tr. 1184. dvrépws, wros, 6, return-love, love-for-love, Plat. Phaedr. 255 D Bekk., Ach. Tat. 1. 9. II. Anterés, personified as a god who avenged slighted love, Paus. 1. 30, 1, etc.; the Deus ultor of Ovid. Met. 14. 750, cf, Cic. N. D, 3. 23 :—but also (as it seems) a god who struggled against *Epws, Paus. 6. 23, 5.—For representations of Anterds in works of art, v. Miiller Archiiol. d. Kunst, § 391. 8. — dvrepwrdw, fo question in turn, épwrhpevos dyrepuray Plat. Euthyd. 295 B, cf. Plut. Cor. 18. Hence avrepwrnréov, verb. Adj. one must interrogate in turn, Twa Tt Clem, Al. 919:—and, —rnpatik@s, Adv. by way of mutual question, by questioning in turn, cited from Theod, Stud, 139 dvrecGiw, to eat in turn, GAAHAovs Psell. in Seebod. Misc. 2. 4, 603. avrerrpappévos, Adv. part. pf. pass.; v. dvrioTpépw IV. 3. dvrevdoxuréw, to rival in distinction, Jo. Lyd. de Mens. 1. 24. dvrevepyerée, to return a kindness, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 43 dvr, rods & movnoavras Arist. Rhet. Al. 2, 1 Ey dvrevepyérmpa, 76, a kindness returned, Hesych. dvrevepyérns, ov, 6, one who returns kindnesses, Schol. Ap. Rh. avrevepyerixés, 4, dv, disposed to return kindnesses, Arist. Eth. N. 4.3, 24. vreverixés, 7, dv, praying in turn ot return, Theod, Prodr. 94. Pat ng to bless in return, Eust. Opusc. 152. 4. dvrevvotw, to wish well in return, rw Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 49. avrevvoua, #,"mutual good-will, Byz. avrevmdcx@ and dvrevrotéw are by recent Edd. written divisim dy7’ ed m. (v. Plat. Gorg. 520 E, Xen. An. 5. 5, 21, Dem. 494. 22), on the ground that ¢# never enters into direct composition with Verbs, v. ed fin.; but Bekk. retains dvrevmoeiy in Arist. Eth. N. 10. 8, 1 3, Rhet. 1. 13, 12. dvrevbnptw, to praise in turn, Synes. 175 D. avrevppatve, to gratify in turn, Greg. Nyss. 3. 642. dvretbpacpa, 74, the opposite of ‘joy, quoted from Agatho by Suid. oooe apiornréov, verb. Adj. one must give thanks in turn, Porphyr. stin. 2. 37. dvrevxopat, Dep. to pray against, or on the other side, Philodem. dvrehathéw, to spread out in turn, xeipds Tit Nicet. Eug. 7. 288. dvrebédxe, to attract in turn, Eumath. 3- 7, in Med. dvreheotidw, fut. dow, (épéarios) to entertain in return, acc. to the 1. vulg. in Plat. Tim. 17 B, retained by Bekk.; but Béckh follows Procl. and Schol. in reading dvrapeoridw to pay off the debt of hospitality: the other form however occurs in Philostr. 573, Ael. N. A. 9. 45., 15. 7. avrehevptonw, to find out against, Joseph, A. J. 10. 8, 1. dvrepiornpt, 40 appoint against one, orparnydy Tit Aristid, 1. 302. avrehodevw, to go forth to meet, Suid. GvrepodidLopar, Pass. to be furnished by way of provisions; metaph. in Joseph. A. J. 15.9, I. avrepotAilw, to arm against or in turn, Byz. avrehoppdw, to rusk against, attack, Heliod. 8. 16. avrehoppéw, to anchor over against the enemy, Poll. 1. 122. Gvrehéppnors, ews, 7%, a rushing against, attack, Philo 2. 31. ivcebonvee «hivny to sleep on it instead, Theod. Prodr. 138. dvréxw or dvrloxw: fut. dvOétw: aor.dvréax ov :—to hold against, c.ace. et gen., xeipa dvr. xpards to hold one’s hand against one’s head, so as to shade the eyes, Soph. O. C. 1651; c. dat., dppact 3 dvricyos rhvd" aiyhay may’st thou keep this sunlight upon his eyes (for it can hardly mean keep it off his eyes), Id. Ph. 830; dvr. rods xaAuwovs Hdn. 5. 6. II. c. dat. to hold out against, withstand, ‘Aprayy Hdt.1.175, cf. 8. 68 ; rots dieaiows Soph. Fr. 99; 7H Tadarmwpia Thuc. 2.49; mpds Twa Id. 6.22; mpés rt Hdn. 3.6, fin., etc.:—c. acc. to endure, dvréxopev kapdrous Anth, P. 9. 299; but in Thuc. 8, 63 dvr. 7d rod woAéyov rather belongs to the next signf., to hold out as regards the war; so woAAd dvr. Ib. 86. 2. to hold out, endure, i)” A€wros .. ért mhelarov xpdvov ToALopKoupéery dvrea XE Hdt. 2. 157, cf. 5. 115, Thuc. 2, 70; mnére dvréxwor TO wévy dreara- pévor Plat. Tim. 81D; modAdmes yeyvopuévny Thy Yuxiy avréxew to last through several states of existence, Id. Phaedo 88 A. 3. absol. ¢o hold out, to stand one’s ground, Hdt. 8. 16, Aesch. Pers. 413, etc. 3 n@s Svopopos dvr.; Soph. Ph. 175; véonua dvricye tov alava mavra Hipp. Fract. 759; és 7 av aldy ayréxp Eur. Ale. 3373 Bpaxdv xpévov Dem, 21. 1; dvr. émt modu, ént mAgov Thuc, I. 7, 65; dvr. éAmiow in hope, Diod. 2. 26; Xen. Hell. 2. 2, 16 has dvr. mept tivos: peculiarly, dvr. ph iwaxodoa I hold out against .., refuse, Plut. 2. 708 A. b. of the rivers drunk by the Persian army, to hold out, suffice, Hdt. 7. 196, cf. Aesch. Pers, 413; (in full dvr. péeOpov Hat. 7.58; dvr. USwp rapéxav Id. 7, 108) ; so, dvréxet 6 otros Thuc. 1. 65. 4. to extend, reach, baov % émorhpun avr. Id. 6. 69. III. Med. to hold before one against something, c. acc, et gen., dvricxecbe rpaélas lav hold out the tables against the arrows, Od. 22. 74. 2. c. gen. only, to hold on by, cling to, éxelvov rijs xepés Hdt. 2. 121, 5; wémdow Eur. Tro. 745, cf. Ion 1404; rév Oupdy Ar. Lys. 161 :—metaph., dvr. Tov bxbav to cling to the banks, keep close to them, Hat. 9. 56; dvr. ‘HpaxAéous to cleave to Hercules, i. e. worship him above all, Pind. N. 1. 50; dvr. rijs dperijs, Lat. adhaerere virtuti, Hdt. 1. 134; dvr. Tov mwodépou Id. 7. 533 Tod Képdous Soph. Fr, 325; ris Oaddoons Thue. I. 133 owrnpias Lys. 914.6; ris GAnOelas Plat. Phil. 58 E, cf. Rep. 600 D, al.; rav mrapadedopévew piOav Arist, Poét. 9,8; THs €AevOepias Decret. ap. Dem. 290. 10. 8. absol., abrds dvréxou Soph. Ph. 893; ef. Ar. Ach. 1121, Plat. Rep. 574 B. 4. c. dupl. gen. pers, et rei, dvOéferal cov Tay TaTpdov xpnudrwv will lay claim to the property from you, dispute it with you, Ar. Av. 1658. 5. to resist, Plat. Rep. 574 B, Arist. H. A. 7. 3, 1; povedoa rods dvrexopévous Diod. 4. 49. dvrn, 4, (dvrouat 11) prayer,—a word preserved by Hesych., dyrpot (Cod, dvrjce)’ Acravelas, dvrioect, restored by Herm. for Acrats, metri grat. in Soph. El. 139. dvrnyopéw, to speak against, Theod. Stud. avrninv, Adv. in supplication, Hesych. avrnets, Dor, -dets, evoa, ev, (dvTa) hostile, Pind. P. 9. 165. dvrnAws, ov, (dvi, iAsos) opposite the sun: i.e. looking east, eastern, Soph. Aj. 805; cf. mpécethos :—daipyoves dvriAtoc statues of gods which stood in the sun before the house-door, Aesch. Ag. 519, Eur. Fr. 542. II. like the sun, formed like dy7{@eos, Id. Ion 1550. Iii. dvTnhia=taphdia, parhelia, Suid., cf. Menand, XaA«. 1, A. B. 411; so dvénrLor, Plut. 2. 894 F. 2. screens, or parasols, Eust. 1281. 3: ; also blinkers on horses’ bridles, Poll, 10. 54, Eust. 1562. 40.—The Ion, 140 form dvrnAtos is always used in Trag.; Atos first in Theo; . Com. Incert. 23, Philo 1. 658, Plut., hee his Hpruos). ar : avrnp. , dv, Ep. for dvraporBos, corresponding, Call. Del. 52. dveny, ( ivri): Ep, Adv. against, over against, ob pev &yarye pevgopar.., GAG par’ dvrny orjoopat I will confront him, Il. 18. 307, cf. 11. 590; SpowOhpevar avtnv to match himself openly against me, 1. 187, Od. 3-120; so, wetpnOnpevar dvrny 8, 213; more rarely with Verbs of avrnuorBos — avriBacrs. 70 wdmov dvr); Anth. P. 7.7153 but the Gramm, hold that it never suffers anastrophé. ane : 2 GC. uw Compos., it signifies, 1. over against, opposite, as ayTi- Batya, dyrtropos. 2. against, in opposition to, as dyTiréyo, dvTi- motion, dvrnv épxecba straight forwards, opp. to maduw. rpé 8. 399; also, dvrny BadAopévaw in front, 12.152; odd tis éxAn dvrny eiotdéev to look him in the face, 19. 15, cf. 24. 223 > dvrnv Aoéooopat will bathe before all, openly, Od. 6. 221, cf. 8. 158; d-yamatéper dyrny to greet in the face of all, ll. 24. 464; vetkecé TF avrn*10. 158; os wv eipent dvrny 15. 247 :—0e@ evadiyos dvrny like a in. presence, Od. 2. 5., 4. 3105; xeAcdive eléAn Gvrnv 22. 240., Cf. dvra. II. as Prep, c. gen., only in late Ep., as Opp. C. 3. 210, Nic. Th. 474. dvrivep, opos, 5, 7, (avnp) instead of a man, orobds dvr, dust for men, Aesch. Ag. 442.—In Il. as nom. pr. dvrnperéw, to row against, or on the opposite side to another, E. M. 112. 40. dvrnpérys, ov, 6, (épérns) properly, oxe who rows against another, cf. A. B, 411: generally an opponent, adversary, Aesch, Theb. 283, 595; dyt. dopds Tit Ib. 993. dvrvpys, es: (dvri, —hpns ; v. sub—hpns) :—poét. Adj, set over against, opposite, AaBetv Twa. dvrhpn to meet face to face in battle, Eur. Phoen. 754, cf. 1367; dvripes orépvwy mAnyas, of blows. on the breast in sign of grief, Soph. El. 89 :—c. gen., Sowwixas dvr..xwpa, over against, facing it, Eur, Tro. 221; c. dat., dvr. ivi. opposite to a thing, Id. I. A. 224; dvr. eect presenting itself before the eyes, Soph. Fr. 839. dvrnpis, (Sos, 7, (either from dyrqpys, or from dvr, épeldw; the latter being assumed by Hero Bel. 130, where is. the Dim. dvrnpel5iov) :—a prop, stay, support, Eur. Fr. 918, cf. Polyb. 8. 6, 6; dpxiay Xen. Cyn. 10, 7; in Thue. 7. 36 dyvrnplbes are stay-beams fixed inside a ship’s bow, and projecting beyond it, so as to support and strengthen the émrides; cf, iroreivw I, I. IL. =6vpis, a window, Suid. :—and in Eur, Rhes. 785 it must mean nostrils, if it be the right reading. _ ftom, Eur. ll. c.] dyryots, ews, 9, v. sub dvrn: Vv, Vv. sub Karavrnorw. dvrnxéw, Dor. -axéw :—#o sound or sing in answer, maava Oe Eur. Alc. 423; duraxno’ dv. itpvov dpaévey yévvg would have sung a song in answer to.., Id. Med. 426.; mpds.7t Polyb. 22. 11, 12. II. absol., of a musical string, ¢o sound responsively, Arist. Probl. 19. 24, Luc. V. H. 1. 38, Plut. Caes. 5, cf. Mar. 19, dvrqxnpe, 76, an echo, Schol. Philostr. dvrqxyots, ews, %, a re-echoing, Plut. 2. 589 D. dvrt, Prep. governing gen. :—orig. sense over against. (From 4/ANT, come also, dvra, dvrnv, dvrtos. (as dmos from dé), avrn, dvips, dyropa, avrde; cf. Skt. anti (opposite, facing) ; Lat. ante, anterior ;— Goth, and as a Prep., O. Norse and A. S. and- as a Prefix, as in and-svar and and-swaru (answer); Germ, ant- in ant-worten, etc.) A. Usage, I. of Place: opposite, over against, formerly quoted from several places, of Hom., as Il. 21. 481 dv7t éueZo (where now dyri’ pelo, i.e, dvtia); Tpwov dy6 Exarov (i.e. dvra) 8, 233; so, dy7’ Aiav7os (i.e. dvra) 15. 415, cf. Od. 4.115, Hes, Op. 725. 2. answer- ing to, of the accompaniment to a song, Dem. Phal.; v. Chappell Hist. of Mus. p. 53- IL. instead, in the place of,"Exropos dvrt mepacbat Il. 24. 2543 dvrt ydpuoo tapoy Od. 20. 307; so later, modus. dv7t pirov karaorivat Hdt. 1.87; dvri puépns vdé éyévero Id. 7.37, v. Valck. 6. 32; dyrt pwrdy amodés Aesch. Ag. 4343 Ei méAepov av’ elphyns peradapBdvew Thuc. 1. 120, cf. 4. 20., 7. 753 Baowhedew dyri rwvos Xen. An. 1.1, 4;—also, dv7t dpxecOar in’ ddAow Hat. 1. 210, cf, 6. 32., 7. 170 (where the usual constr. would be dv7? rod dpxeaGat, as some Edd. give it without authority, cf. Thuc. 7.28, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 19, etc.):—in some instances used elliptically, # roApnaar’ dvr’ €uod Sodval ri, i.e. dvr} rod €yot dodvat, Soph. Ph. 369, cf. O. C. 448. 2. in Hom. often to denote equivalence, Lat. pro, instar, dvri vu ToAAGy Aady éoriv dvip he is as good as many men (cf. dyrdgtos), Il. 9,116; dvr? waovyvnrou feivos, . ré- Tukrat a guest is as much as a brother, Od. 8. 546; dvri roi ety’ ixérao I am as a suppliant, Il. 21. 75, cf. 8. 163, Od. 8. 405; so later, rovré apt dvr Aourpod éori serves as a bath, Hdt. 4. 75; imapxew dytt Trav vor to be as hostages for ..,, Thuc. 2.5; dovdeve dvri dpyupavhroy just like bought slaves, Dem. 212, 20. 3. to denote Exchange, at the price of, in return for, cot 5t Oeot ravd dvrt xapw .. dover Il, 23. 650; dv7t xpnudrov mapadaBelv for money paid, Hdt. 3. 59; dueiBev mt dyri Tivos Pind. P. 4. 30, cf. Eur. Or. 646, 651; dvrt molas evepyecias Lysias 106. 38, etc.; 7i 3 éo7ly dv@ ob ..; Soph. Ant. 237; dvedos dvd’ Srov Id. O. C. 967:—hence, dv6’ dy, wherefore, Aesch. Pr. 31, and often in Soph., cf, Thuc. 6. 83; but dv@" dy also for dvrt rovrov br.., because, Soph. Ant. 1068, Ar. Pl. 434; dv7t rod; wherefore? why? Soph. O, T. 1021. 4. for the sake of, Soph. El. 537; also with Verbs of entreaty, like mpds c. gen., dv7i maidav ixerevopev ce Id. O. C. 1326. 5. to mark comparison, éy dv6’ évds, one set against the other, compared with it, Plat. Rep. 331 B, Legg. 705 B; dvr’ dvdv dviat grief for grief, i.e. grief upon gricf, Theogn. 344; dvr’ d-yabay dyaboia: Bpvos Aesch. Supp. 966, cf. Interpp. ad Evang. Joh. 1.16; cf. apos 0, Il. 4:—in preference to, apvedv BovrAeTa dvr’ dyaod Theogn.’ 188: even after Comparatives, mAéov dy7i aod, pel(aw dvz7i rijs warpas Soph. Tr. 577, Ant. 182; so, (esp. after a negative) dAAos dvr’ énod Aesch. Pr. 467, Soph. Aj. 444, Ar. Nub. 653 ; Sdfay dyz? rot Civ tyya- annus Plut, Alex. 42: cf. mpd A, III, mapa 0. I, 5. d. B. Position: dvi rarely follows its case, as in Il. 23. 650, Aesch. Ag. 1277, Soph. Ph. 1100 (ex emend. Dind., 700 mA€ovos Saipovos €/Aov @ Bios. 3. one against another, mutually, as dvriegido pat. 4. in return, as dvriBondko. 5, instead, as dvriBao.revs, dvOina- Tos. 6. equal to, like, as dyrideos, dvrimais, dvridovAos. 7A ae, Oat, I). | corresponding, ter, dvripoppos, avtiruTos. Gyria, y. sub dyzios. ‘ A ‘ dvmdtw, impf. dyriafoy Hat. 1,166 (but dx-qyriafoy 4. 121), jvriatoy Xen., etc.: fut. dvridaw, Trag., Dor. -dgw (v. infr.): aor. jvriaca Hat. 4. 80., 9. 6; but these two tenses belong also to dvtutw:. (dvti). ; To meet face to face, I. c. acc, pers. 20 encounter, whether, as friend or foe, toy. émévra Hat. 4. 118, cf. 141, 4.80, Aesch. Ag. 1557, etc. ; dvr. [rd] és rémov Hat. 1. 166, cf. 9.6, Soph. O. T. 192; warép' dyriacaca mpos .. wépOpevpa Aesch. Ag. 1557-3 absol., xdpos .. Bapds dyridcac Pind. N, to. 36; pdAa mpds KdAapov dvridger song shall answer to the pipe, Id. O. 10 (11). 100. 2. to approach as suppliants, avr. twa dwpoor Hdt. 1. 105: hence simply to entreat, supplicate, “Apea dvridw@ Soph. O.T.191; Kal o° dvrid(w mpds.. Ards Id. Aj. 492, cf. Eur. Alc. 400, Andr. 572, etc.;, often with the ace, omitted, GAN ay tiagw Soph. El. 1009, cf. Ph. 809; Bae nal dyriacov yovdrav entreat [her] by her knees, Eur, Supp. 272 :—in this sense, it resembles mpooTpétm, tkérns, etc. IL. =dyridw 1, dvrdw, c. dat, pers., Stay Oeot.. Tvydvrecot pdyay dvrik(wow in fight, Pind. N. 1, 102.—This Verb is never used in correct Att. Prose, though Xen. has the compd. irayTid fo. dvridveipii, #, (dvzi, dvijp) like Buridverpt, xudidverptt, fem, form. of a masc, in —dvwp or —jvwp (for the pa shews that it cannot come from a nom, in —os, cf, dwrepa, cwreipa, Spaorepa, etc.): in ll. always as epith. of the Amazons, a match for men, like tcavdpos, 3. 189., 6. 186, ete. ; so of Athena, Coluth. 170. II. in Pind. O. 12. 23, oTdous dyridveipa faction wherein man is set against man. Gvrids, ddos, 4, a tonsil, mostly in pl.=wapicOu.a, Hipp. 464. 28., 471. 13:—esp. when swollen, Galen. 6. 247; cf. eaTdppoos. dvt-1axéw, fo cry or call against, Theocr. Ep. 4. 11, Ap. Rh. 2. $28. dvr-1dxw, =foreg., Orph. Arg. 826 ; duoiBHdnv avriaxev Ap. Rh. 4. 76. Gvridw: Hom. uses the pres. only in the Ep, forms dyv7idw, inf. dyriday, 3 pl. imper. dyriowvrav, part. duridav, dwoa, dwvres ;, but dyriée), which is pres. in Il. 1. 31., 23. 643, serves as fut. in 13.752, Od. 1. 25., 24. 56; cf. Buttm. Lexil. s. v.:—fut., dvridow [@] Od. 22. 28, Theogn.; aor. jyritica, Hom.; (these two tenses in form belong to dyrid{w; but such instances as belong in sense to dvtidw are given here) :—Med., once in Hom, (v. infr.), Ap. Rh. 1. 470., 2. 24: (avri, ayTios) : Epic Verb: I. to go for the purpose of meeting or receiving : 1. c. gen. rei, to go in quest of, when an aim or purpose is implied, tohéyo.o pevoiva dvriday Il. 13. 215; Opa mévoro .. dyrid- anrov 12. 356; otmér’ déOrav ddAAwv dyriaoes Od, 22. 28,al.; metaph. of an arrow, fo hit, GAAG kev 4) orépvaw 4 vndvos, dvridoeer Il. 13. 290: —often of the gods, to come (as it were) ¢o mee¢ an offering, and so, in past tenses, to have received, accepted it, dvridav tadpav Te Kal dpyeay éxardpuBns Od, 1. 25; dpvdy xvions aiyay te Tedelow . . dvridoas, Il. I. 67: generally, to partake of, enjoy, at yap... dvhaws dvridceey Od. 21. 402; 80, Epyav dvtidoes. yaherav Theogn, 1308; ote Tov Tapou dyriaoas Soph. El. 869; absol., dvridcas having obtained [his wishes], Pind. I. 6 (5). 21 :—once in Med., dvridaaOe, Oeol, yanoull. 24.62. 2. more rarely c, gen. pers. to match, or measure oneself with, huets 8 lpiv Toto ot dv aédev dyridoamey Il. 7. 2 31; Soy dvridgew Theogn. 552. b. rarely in sense of coming to aid, ob madds teOvndros dv- Tiuwca Od, 24, 56. II. c. dat. pers. to. meet with, encounter, as by chance, Hd? dyrutceias exelvy Od, 18. 147; bvaThuev dé Te matdes eup péver dyribwar Il, 6. 127., 21. 151; ef. dvridw I. III. absol. in aor. part., dAAG tw’ typ? dtew Sépeva Gedy avriacavra having haply met you, Il. 10. 551, cf. Od. 6. 193., 13. 312+ 17- 442 IV. ¢. ace, rei, only in éudy A€xos dvridwoa, euphem, for sharing it, only a i 5 31 :—it has been Proposed to get rid of this sense by construing ng a motxopevny Kal éudy A€xos, évtibwoav willingly, readily; but , v. Buttm. ubi supr. V. to approach as a suppliant, supplicate, like dyria(w 1. 2, only in late Ep., c. gen. pers., Ap. Rh. 1. 703. dvrBdbnyv [a], Adv. going against, opposite, dvr. aOeiv Plut. 2. 381 A. dv Babi, to go against, the contrary way, Phot. ae fut. —Bnoopat, to go against, withstand, resist, c. dat., - §- 40, Aesch, Pr. 234, Decret. ap, Dem. 290. 6, etc.; mAeupatow dyriBaca having set her foot against .., Eur. Bacch, 1126. 2. absol., Hdt. 3. 72+ 8. 3, Eur, I, A.'1016, etc.; Biacbels moAAA KavTt- Bas reluctant, Soph. El. 575; «i .. Hi) Tept cod pdxopar pdvos dyri~ BeBnuds Ar. Eq. 767; dvr. pds 7 Plat, Legg. 634 A. II. avriBas eAay to pull stoutly against the oar, going well back, Ar. Ran. 202. avnBarrw, fut. —BGA@, (the acc. pers. being understood), to throw against or in turn, to return the shots, Thuc. 7. 25; BéAos Polyb. 6. 22, 43;—C. dat., dvr. dwovrios Plut, Nic. 25 ; dvr, 7 xwpixw to practise by striking against the sack, in the gymnasium, Luc. Lexiph. 5. II. to put one against the other, compare, collate, Strabo 609, 790; Adyous avr. mpus adAnAous to exchange words in conversation, Ev. Luc. 24. 17+ cf, 2 Macc. 11. 13. ; évniBipys, és, (Bapis) of equal weight, Schol, Il. 8. 2 cL . Upa., (or rather —yua), aros, 76, a counterpoise, Byz. @ €Us, €ws, 6, a vice-king, Lat. interrex, Dion, H. 9. 69. dvriBiothetw, to reign as a rival-king, tot Joseph. B. Jian 9, i. GvriPious, ews, resistance, Plut. Caes, 38, etc. ; mpés Tt Id. 2. 584. E. II. a second or companion base of a column, Vitruy, 10. 15. avriBarra ar avridieEerue. a @, to support by leaning against, to prop, Eust. 1933. 37. & ns [a], ov, 6, the bolt of a door, Schol. Ar. Vesp. 201. avry s, 2, dv, contrary, opposite, Plut. Phoc. 2, Galen. dvr Brdlopat, Dep. to use force against, Anth. P.12,183, cf.Philo 2.423. avriBias, f. 1. in Anth. P. 10. 8; vy. évavriBuos. dvriBiBpdoke, fut. —Bpd&copat, to eat in turn, Ath. 343 C. dvriBinv, Adv., much like dvra, dyrnr, against, face to face, tputénevat | BaciAni dyr:Binv Il. 1. 278; “Exrope dvr. weipnOfvac 21. 226, cf. 5. 220. So also dvriBior, v. sq. I. ~ dvriBtos, a, ov, also-os, ov: (Bia) :—opposing force to force: as Adj. in Hom. only in the phrase, dvriBios énéeoor with wrangling words, Il. 1. 304, Od. 18. 415, ete.; 50, dvr. -busAos hostile, Tryph. 624. 2. as Adv. dvriB.ov, =dvriBiny, dvr. paxécacbar Il. 3. 20; Meveddy dv- TiBtov . . modeuiCew Ib. 435; et wey ayriBuov .. weipyOeins 11. 386. avr BAdare, to harm in return, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 11, 2, Philo 2. 371. avr Brerréw, =sq., c. dat., Byz. dvriBAérre, fut. Bra Dem. 799. 24 (but with v. 1. BAéPeoGe, and the simple BAéYovrar occurs just above),:—to look straight at, look in the face, c, dat. pers., TD Eu@ warpl od8 dvTiBrérev Svvaya Xen, Hell. 5. 4, 273 els or mpds Tov 7rrov Id, Mem. 4. 7, 7, Theophr. Fr. 1. 18 :— c. ace., dvriBdérew éxeivoy od Suvjcopar Menand. Incert. 59: patt., dvriBdérovea . .-ai alyes facing one another, Ar. H..A. 9. 3, 5.—Verb. Adj., dvruBXewréov, jot mpds te Luc. Dem. Enc. 17. eee ews, 7), a looking in the face, a look, Xen. Hier. 1, 35, Plut. 2. 681 B. dvriPodw, fut. 7oopa, to return a cry, of echo, Bion 1. 38: to call aloud in answer, Joseph. B. J. 3. 5, 4. ; avriBonPew, to help in turn, twit 559 E, Xen. dvriBouos, ov, (Bods) worth an ox, Soph. Fr. 353. dvriBokéw: impf. jv7:BéAovy Ar. Eq. 667, Lysias 94. 11, ete.: fut. dyriBodjaw Od., Lysias 141. 18: aor. in Hom, évreBdAnoa (which is contrary to analogy, since the word is not a compd., but derived from éy7:Baddw, Buttm. Lexil. dvpvoGev 13); with double augm. yvTeBdAnoa Ar. Fr. Ier. To meet by chance, esp. in battle, c. dat. pers. or absol., often in Hom. 2. rarely c. dat. rei, to be present at, pdvw avdpav dyreBédnoas Od. 11. 416; rapy dvdpadr dvr. 24. 87: cf. GBoréw, 3. c. gen. rei, to partake of, have one’s share of, waxns Kavoretpns ayri- Bodjjoat Il. 4. 342; ob pév rev emnrvos dvriBodnoas Od. 21. 306; od 5€ nev Tapov ayTiBodnoas 4. 547; yapnou avr. Hes. Op. 782, cf. Pind. O. 13. 43; even, mumwvov viov avr. Timon ap. Sext. Emp. P. 1. 224. 4. rarely of the thing, ¢o fall to one’s lot, c. gen. pers., oTU- yepos yapos dyriBodnoe . . éueOev Od. 18. 272. 5. c. acc. pers. to meet as a suppliant, entreat, supplicate, often in Com., Ar. Nub. I10, Pl. 444; c.acc.et inf., Ar. Eq. 667, Ach. 147, Dem. 575.18 :—absol., rept Tav dvriBodotvrayv those who supplicate, Ar. Vesp. 559; often in paren- thesis, ein’, dvriBod@ Id, Eq. 109, cf. Pl. 103; (often also dv7iBoA® ce Plat. Com. Evp, 1, a. 1.3; also in Lys. 94. 11 and 25, Xen. Ath. 1, 18): —Pass., to be supplicated, dvriBodnOeis Ar. Vesp. 560. II. Causal, to cause to meet, Td rive Epigr. Gr. 579. dvrBodn, 7, a confronting, comparing, collation, dvtvypapay Strabo 790: opposition, Hesych. av7BdArnots, ews, 7,=dv7iBoAla, Plat. Apol. 37 A, Symp. 183 A. avrBoNia, 7, an entreaty, prayer, Eupol. Incert. 16, Thuc. 7. 75. dvriBodtov, 75, =dvriypapov, Byz.; avriBodov, 74, in Schol. Dem. évriPopBéo, to return-a humming sound,Ach. Tat. 3.2, cf. Eust. 1885.19. avrBovAetopat, Med. fo give contrary advice, Polyaen. 1. 30, 3. avriBovAopat, Dep. to have a contrary will, dislike, resist, Eccl, avtiBpiSiuve, to delay in turn, Schol. Thuc. dviBptOw [Bpi], to press down in the opposite scale, Philo 2. 170. avn Bpovrdw, fut. how, to rival in thundering, twit Luc. Timon 2; Bpovrais dvr. Dio C. 59. 28. dvriBptxdopat, Dep. to roar, bellow against, revi Eust. Opusc. 357. 78. dvriyapew, to marry in turn, Eust. 1796. 53. dvrtyéyova, pf. in pres. sense, ¢o return a cry, Anth. P. 9. 177. rita nie Ion. form, ¢o rival in pedigree, Hdt. 2. 143. avriyewdw, to generate in rivalry, Lync. ap. Ath. 285 F ; or in return, Philo 1. 89. dyvrtyepalpw, to honour in turn, App. Civ. 2. 140. avriynpotpodpéw, to support in old age in turn, Lesbon, 171. 37- dvriyvapovéw, fut. iow, to be of a different opinion, ivi Dio C. 46. 44: dvr. Tt pn ob eivat to think that a thing is otherwise, Xen. Cyr. 4.3, 8. *Avriyovos, 6, name of several Macedonian kings:—hence *Avrvyo- vevos, a, ov, of Antigonus, Polyaen. 4. 2 1; "Avrtyovea, 7a, name of a festival in his honour, Polyb. 28. 16, 3: also,’ Avrryovés, 4, ov, Plut. Arat. 54:—fem. "Avtvyovis, ios, a kind of cup named from him, Polemo ap. Ath. 497 F, Plut. Aem. 33 :—’Avttyovitw, to be on Antigonus’ side, of his party, Polyaen. 4. 6, 13. avriypappa, 76, =dyriypapoy, Luc. Hermot. 40. : avriypiiets, éws, 6, a check-clerk or copying-clerk (v. évtiypados), Lat. contrarotulator (controller), a public officer, Aeschin. 57. 23, cf. Inserr. Att. in ‘C. 1, 100, 184, 187, 190, al., Arist. Fr. 399, Polyb. 6. 56, 13, Béckh P. E. 1. 247, Dict. of Antiqq. p.578:—dy7. TOV eloeveyKiv~ Tov one who keeps a check upon their accounts, Dem, 615. 14. II. in Byz., as equivalent to the Lat. Dictator. : ; avrtypadh, %, reply in writing, such as Caesar's Anticato in reply to Cicero’s Cato, Plut. Caes. 3, Id. 2. 1059 B. IT, as law-term, the answer put in by the defendant, his plea, Dem. 1115. 21 (where a specimen is found); sometimes of the plaintiff's plea, an indictment, Plat. Apol. 27 C, Hyperid, Euxen. 20, 40:—in a suit of inheritance (a- & Thue. 6. 18. 7. 58, Plat. Rep. 141 dixacia kdhpov), dvrvypadh was used indifferently of both parties, ef. Att. Process 628 sq.,651, Dict. of Antiqg. :—in Ar. Nub. 471, generally, counter-pleas, pleas, cf. Poll. 8. 58. III. a transcribing, Dion. H. 4. 62. 2.=dvrlypapoy, Plut. 2. 577 E. IV. a rescript, imperial decree, C. . 4474, Byz. avrlypidos, ov, copied, in duplicate, orfAat, abAxaL, etc., Dem. 468. 9.5 T104. 23. II. as Subst., dvriypaov, 76, a transcript, copy, counterpart, duplicate, Andoc, 10. 31, Lys. 896 Reisk., Dem., etc.; dvriypapa napadicews xpnydraw copies of accounts, Arist, Pol. 5. 8, 19; elxdvos dvr. the copy of a picture, Luc. Zeux. 3. ' dvrypdde [a], fut. Yw, fo write against or in answer, write back, Thuc. 1. 129 (in Pass.), Plut. Lucull. 21, etc.; dvr. 7H -ypapp to vie in description with painting, Longus. II. Med., with pf. pass. (Aeschin, 22. 11, Dem. 1115. 16), as law-term, fo put in as an Gy7t~ pan, to plead against, re mepi Tivos Isae, 85. 19, cf. Dem. 1175. 26; also, dvr. wt or Tw, c. inf., to plead against another that such is the case, Lys. 166. 45, Dem. 1092. 10 :—also, ¢o bring a counter-accusation, Poll. 8. 58, cf. Aeschin. 17. I., 22. II. 2. to keep a counter-reckon- ing of money paid or received (cf. dvrvypageds), Arist. Fr. 399. avriypaiis, ews, 4, the putting in of an dyrvypaph, Lys. 167. 22 (Bekk. ; al. -p#). dvrBdkve, fut. -Snfouat: the aor. dvrédaxa in Luc. Ocyp. 27 is very dub. :—to bite in turn, Hdt. 4.168, Ael.N. A. 4.19, Muson.ap. Stob. 170. 27. dvriBdurtAos, 5, the thumb, Aquila V.T. II. in Scriptt. Metr., a dactyl reversed, an anapaest. avrBaiveorréov, verb. Adj. one must lend in return, tS Baveicavte Arist. Eth. N. 9. 2, §:—the Verb dvriBavelfw, Jo. Chrys. ; dvriBimiivaw,to spend in turn upon, rods Sanavwpévous Liban. Epist. 763. dvriSeunvos, ov, taking another's place at dinner, Luc. Gall. 9. dvridetvdopat, Dep. to give the right hand in turn, to return one’s salute, rwd Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 19, Luc. Laps. 13. dvriSéopat, fut. Seycouar, Dep. to entreat in return, Plat. Lach. 186 D: dvriBépkopat, Dep. =dv7iBAemm, c, acc., Eur. H. F. 163; c. dat., v. 1. Luc. Icarom. 14. avriBépw, zo beat in turn, Eccl. dvriBecpeta, to bind in turn, Byz. dvriBéxopat, Dep. zo receive in return, accept, Aesch. Cho, 916; edwxa kavredegaunv Eur. I. A. 1222. dvriSnddw, to declare on the other hand, Byz. avriSnpiiywyéw, to rival as a demagogue, Plut. C. Gracch. 8. avriSnpnyopta, to harangue in opposition to, Twi Eust. 1029. 1:—the Subst. —yopta, 7), in Phot. Bibl. pp. 28, 9. dvrSnproupyéw, to make or work in rivalry with, twit Clem. Al. 262 :— Med., apés 7 Ath. 469 B. dvriSiaBaive, to cross over in turn, Xen. Ages. 1, 8. B&éddw, to attack in return, rov bsaBaddovra Arist. Rhet.3.15, 7. fevyvupt, to match one against another, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 15, dvribval avri8ua in Pass. dvriStalpeots, ews, , in Logic, division by opposition, Plotin. 782, Diog. L. 7. 61. desthcaolen to divide logically, BapBapous mpds"EAAnvas Strabo 662: —Pass. to be opposed as the members of a logical division, Arist. Categ. 15, 3, Top. 5. 6, Io, al. vribtdKkovos [a], ov, serving in return, Tots GdAots Strabo 783. dvriBtaxocpéw, fo arrange or array in opposition, App. Civ. 2. 75. dvriBiahéyopat, fo reply to, answer in discussion, Clem. Al. 203: in Pass., Chrysipp. in Diog. L. 7. 202. dvriBiahAdooopat, Med. to exchange prisoners, twd Twos Dion. Hs ‘II. to vary a narrative, etc., Id, 1. 84. ov, diametrically opposite, rwds Byz. dvriBtavurrepeto, fo bi! opposite to, Twi App, Civ. 4. 130. avriBtaTrA exw, foretort, dvriiiatdéxeads .. ,Aeschin. 57.41, cf. A.B. 406. dvriBtaeradticés, %, dv, distinctive, Apoll. Pron. 48 B. Adv. -«és, Ib. dvribtarréAXa, to distinguish, discriminate, Strabo 457 ; Tt dad Tivos Longin. Fr. 3. 5:—Med., dvr. mpés Teva Dion. H. de Thue. 32. Il. to contrast, oppose, Ti Tut Sext. Emp. P. 1. g. agape %, opposition, distinction, Clem. Al. 545, and Gramm, dvriBiardooopat, Med. to oppose, compare, twit mept Twos Sext. Emp. M. 7. 1593 Tt Tee Synes. 249 B. dvriBtarelvopat, Med. to contend in oppcsition, Byz. dvriitarlOnpr, Zo retaliate upon a person, Diod. Excerpt. 602. 70; kakas mabévra dv7t5. Eust. 546. 28 :—Med. fo offer resistance, mpés tt Longin. 17.1; Tods dyribariWeuévous opponents, 2 Ep. Tim. 2. 25. avTid w, of, poets who are rivals in dramatic or lyric contests, Schol. Pind. N. 4. 60, v. Casaub. Ar. Eq. 525, ef. sq. évri8t8doKw, to teach in turn or on the other side, App. Civ. 5. 19, Anth. P, 6. 236. II. of dramatic or lyric poets, 4o contend for the prize, Ar. Vesp, 1410. ; dvri5(Sapr, fut. Show, to give in return, repay, Twi Te Hdt. 1. 70., 3. 135, Aesch. Cho. 94, etc.; mévov, ob xdpw, dvrididwouw éxew Soph. O.C. 232, ef. Aesch. Cho. 498, Bum. 264; véxuy vexpav dpoBoy avr. Soph. Ant. 1067; dvr. xapw Eur, H. F. 1337, Thuc. 1. 41.5 3- 633 ripwplay Id. 2.53; AapBdvew dyredidov Xen, Cyr. 8. 6, 23 :—Pass., édeos mpdés twa Bixatos dvridibocba: Thuc. 3. 40. 2. to give Sor - or instead of, ri Twos Eur. Alc. 340, I. T. 28; ve dvri twos Ar, Pax 1251. II. at Athens, dvr. [rv obciay] to offer to change fortunes with one (cf. dyridoais), Lys. 169. 4, Dem. 496. 21; 40 accept of such an offer, Id. 840. 28; so, dvr. rpinpapxiay Id. 539. fin. III. to give as an antidote, Damocr. ap. Galen. 14. 99. ‘ avriBébeupt, to go through, recount in turn, dvdpara Aeschin, 22. 17, Excerpt. 4. dvribidperpos, 142 dvriBueké » Dep. to go through in opposition, dvr. Ady Plat. Manat) Been cee oe ee dvribiqynots, ews, }, a counter-narration, Rhetor. dvribiiornp, fut. kaoriow, =dyridiacréAAw, Hesych., Suid. avribtkdfopar, Dep., in pl. to implead one another, Lys. ap. Poll. 8. 5,24. & %, litigation, Aquila Prov. 20. 3. dvrBixéw, fut. now: impf. AvTidicouy Lys. 104. 16, but Avredixour (acc. to the best Ms.) Dem. 1006. 2., 1013. 23: aor. qvridixnoa Dem. ap. Poll. 8. 23. To be an dvribdixos, dispute, go to law, rept Twos Xen. Mem. 4. 4,8; of dvridicobvres Exdrepor the parties to a suit, Plat. Legg 948 D; absol. of the defendant, dvridiue@v Ar. Nub. 776; dvr. mpds te or mpés Twa, to urge one’s suit against .., Dem. 840. fin., 1030. fin., Isae. 84. 21: to join issue, ivridixouy H phy .., c. acc. et inf., Lys. l.c.: to oppose, rebut, 5iaBodats Dem. 1032. 4. wridlknots, ews, 7),=sq., Gloss. dvriBixta, 9, litigation, contention, mpds Twa imép Twos Plut. 2. 483 B. Gvri8ixos, ov, (Sin) an opponent or adversary in a suit, Aeschin, 50. 22; properly the defendant, Antipho 111. 413; but also the plaintiff, Lys. 109. 25; dvr. mpés twa Antipho 112. 7; of dvridico: the parties to a suit, Plat. Phaedr. 273 C, al. :—generally, an opponent, adversary, Aesch, Ag. 41. dvriiucratwp, 6, the Latin Pro-dictator, J. Lyd. de Magistr. 1. 38. avriBtopite, to define in turn, give a counter-definition, Galen. dvribiopicow, Att. irre, to countermine, Strabo 576. dvrBiokwors, }, a doubling of the sun's disk, J. Lyd. de Ostent. 4. dvriBoypatife, to maintain opposite principles, tii, cited from Luc. and Greg. Nyss. dvriSopa, aros, 7d, a return, recompense, Sipov Eust. Opusc. 312 fin. dvriSoph, 7, (5é€um) an opposed or substituted building, Aen. Tact. 23. dvriBotdlw, to be of a contrary opinion, Plat. Theaet. 170 D. dvriBotéw, =foreg., pds ra or Tivi Polyb. 2. 56, 1., 16. 14, 45 Tan mepl twos Diod. 2.29; dvrtdoget Strab. 110 (as Madv. for dy 71, dofer 8). avridotos, ov, (5éfa) of a different opinion or sect, Luc. Hermot, 17 ; paxn popas dyr. Id. Paras. 29. avriSopos, ov, (Sopa) clothed with something instead of a skin, xapvov xAwpis dvridopoy Aemidos Anth. P. 6. 22. dyridocts, ews, %, (dvridldaps) a giving in return, an e. e, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 5, 8, Call. Fr. 221; gopriwy Diod, 2. 54; aly, ‘wy 12. 63; xax@v App. Civ. 1. 3; % eis Thy omy dyr. Acl. N. A. 5.9 — repayment, requital, UBpews Luc. Alex. 50:—dvtiboaiv twos in return for .., Epigr. Gr. 822. II. at Athens, a form by which a citizen charged with a Aeroupyia or elopopad might call upon any other citizen, whom he thought richer than himself, either to exchange ties, or to submit to the charge himself, Lys. 98.9, etc.; eadeio0ai twa. eis dvr. Tpinpapxtas Xen. Oec. 7, 3; karaordas xopyyds ef dv7idécews Dem, 565.8; moetoOa dvr. tur Dem. 50. 20; av7. én’ eve mapecxedacay 840. 27; cf. Isocr. wept "Avtidécews, Dem. in Phaenipp., Wolf Lept. p. cxxiii, Backh P, E, 2. 368, and v. dv7i5iSae II. dyriBoricas, Adv. by way of recompense, Eust. Opusc. 193. 55+ dvriSoros, ov, (dyTidibaju) given in lieu of, mupés Anth. R. 9. 165. II. given as a remedy for, xaxdv pappaxov dvr. Ib. 10. 118. 2. as Subst., dvridoros (sc. déats), , an antidote, remedy, Anth. P. 12. 13, Clem. Al. 461: in other places the gender is uncertain, Plut. 2. 42 D, 54 E, ete. dvriBovdetw, fo serve in turn, Tots Texodar yap SiaTnvos Sotis pavTi- BovAever (for wi) dvr.) Téxvo Eur. Supp. 362. avriSoudos, ov, instead of a slave, neut, pl. as Adv., Tadpav yovas 5ods dyridovda Aesch. Fr. 194. II. of persons, being as a slave, treated as a slave, Id. Cho. 135. avriSoumos, ov, re-echoing, Aesch. Pers, 121 ; Body dvridoumd rit Ib.1040. to lay hold of, xapdias Themist. 357 ri m7 dvriSpdooopa, Att. —rro dvriSpdw, fut. -Spdow [a], to act against, to r v dyréSpwv Soph. O. C. 271, cf. Eur. Andr. 438, Antipho 126.12; dv6’ dv menovOds igiowy 748’ dvribpav Soph. O. C..9535; mpds Tas mages dy. Ib. 959. II. c. acc. pers. to repay, requite, avr. Twa Kands Ib. 1191, cf. Plat. Crito 49 D; yervaia yap maddvres duds dvridpay tAowev Eur. Supp. 1179. , to run in a contrary direction, dub. in Luc. Astrol. 12. dvriBvcxepatves, fut. div, to be angry in turn, M. Anton. 6. 26. avriSvcwmw, to entreat in turn, twa moreiv Tt Eus. V. Const. 4. 33. dvriBwped, 4, a return-gift, recompense, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 2,15. GvriBwptopat, Dep. to present in return, dvr. Td TUL one with a thing, Hat. 2. 30, Plat., etc.; also, revi 7+ a thing to one, Geol bé gor today dporBas ataro Eur. Hel. 159, cf. Plat. Euthyphro 14 E; Maniterhierne Eth. N. 8. 8, 6. Bene per : & to annex, e.g. a word in corresponding clause of a sentence, Dion. H. ad Amm. 2, p. 800. ? : avrifndos, 6, %, a rival, adversary, LXX (Levit. 18. 18, Sirac, 26. 6). évrifnddw, to be emulous of, rival, Byz.:—alsoin Med.,7s0/ Clem. Al. 319. dvrifntéo, to seek one who is seeking us, Xen. Occ. 8, 23. dvrifopar, Ion. for dvdiCopat, to sit before or opposite. - dvriftyos, ov, put in the opposite scale: hence balancing, corresp Arist. P. A. 3. 4, 15, Plut. 2. 723 C. évritixyou, to counterbalance, correspond, mpés Tt Eust. 60. 29. avrifwypéw, fo save alive in turn, Babr. 107. 16;—in Byz. —bwypeto. avr0dArw dAAHAous, to warm one another, Joseph. B. J. 4. 4, 6. avridtrew, to bury opposite: Pass. aor. dvrera@ny Anth, P. append. 147. avriBeta, 7, (dvrideos 11) worship of, false gods, Eccl. dyr(Oeos, 7, ov, equal to the gods, godlike, like icd0¢eos (cf. Sext. Emp. adds rail a a: avrwieképyomat — ayTiKxar ddrAayua. etc. ; also of whole nations, Il. 12. 408, Od, 6. 2413 of women only in Od. 11.117 :—no moral quality is implied, as it is applied even to Poly- phemos, and the suitors, Od. 1. 70.14. 185 cf duupov. _ o. contrary to God, impious, Nonn. Jo. 5. 166. 2. as Subst., dv7ri@eos, 6, a hostile deity, Heliod. 4. 7. dvrWepiimev, to dake care of in return, yovéas Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 49. & patve, to warm in return, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 115. dvrWécrov, 74, synonym for f4v8e (q. v.) in Diose. 4.138. oe Gvrideats, ews, 7, opposition, Plat. Soph. 257 E, 258 B; dvrideow éxetv mpds Tt to be opposed to.. , Arist. H. A. 2.11, 3 resistance, Anth. P. 12. 200. 2. in Logic, opposition of propositions, Arist. Interpr. Io. 3; Top. 2. 8, Metaph. 9. 3,1, al.; cf. dvrtwetpat. 3. in Rhe- toric, antithesis, Isoct. 233 B, Arist. Rhet. 3. 9, 9. 4. in Gramm. the change or transposition of a letter, E. M. 172. 9. 156. te GvriWeréov, verb. Adj. one must oppose, 7 mpds Tt Arist. Pol. 3. 15, 10, dvriberixés, 4, dv, setting in opposition, contrasting, Twa@yv Sext. Emp. P.1.8: antithetical, Eust. 1325. 19. II. contrasted, correspondent, of metres, in which the first line of the antistrophé corresponds with the last of the strophé, and vice versa, Hephaestion p. 117. dvriPeros, ov, (dvrirl@nus) opposed, antithetic, avr. elma ovdév Timocl. “Hp.1; gow exe dvr. mpds tt Plut. 2.672 B; dperais cata avr. Sext. Emp. M. 9. 156. 2. dvrierov, 76, an antithesis, Ar. Fr, 300 B, Arist. Rhet. Al. 27, 1. dyriOéw, fut. —Pevooua, to run against another, compete in a race, Hdt. 5. 22. II. to run contrary ways, Anth. P. 9. 822. dvrOqye, to whet against another, ddévras éxi twa Luc. Paras. 51. GyrOXiBw, to press against, counteract, dAAMAous Archyt. in Stob. Ecl. Pp- 742 Gaisf. :—Pass., dvr.0AiBerat 70 OAiBov pressure produces counter- pressure, Arist. G. A. 4. 3, 18. dyriOvqoKw, to die in turn or for another, E. M. 114. 14. Gvriowkos, ov, (Aaxos) seated opposite, Greg. Naz. Arcan. 6.44. dvrpnvéw, to wail in return, Twi An, Ox. 3. 180. dvriOpotw, to cry out against, Emped. 372; Karsten dupbopdvros, dvtOpovos, ov, seated opposite, Greg. Naz. Arcan. 4. 25. dvrlOpoos, ov, echoing, resounding, Coluth. 118, Anth. Plan. 153. dvrWuperpos [i], ov, instead of a door, Ai@os Nonn, Jo. 11. 140. GvriOiipos, ov, (Gvpa) opposite the door, nar’ dvridupoy xAtolns opposite the door of the house, Od. 16.159, as the Schol.; or it may be a neut. Subst., dvri@upoy, the part facing the door, the. vestibule, as it is in Bare war dvriGipwv Soph. El. 1433, ubi v. Herm.: in Luc. Symp. 8, the side of a room facing the door; vads dvr. Id. Dom. 26. ‘ GvriPiw, to sacrifice in turn, Philox. 10, in Pass. GyricaBaipéw, fo pull down or destroy in turn, Dio C. 46. 34. Gvrixabevdu, fut. evdjow, to sleep again or instead, Anth. P. 11. 366. dvrixdOnpat, Ion. dvrucdr-, properly pf. of dvrixadi¢opar, but used as pres., to be set over against, rwi Archyt. ap. Stob. 269. 11. 2. mostly of armies or fleets, to lie over against, so as to watch each other, hpepae ot dvricarnpévacr eyeysvecay dnt Hat. g. 39, cf. 41, Thuc. 5. 6, Xen., etc.: metaph., Adyos dvr. ru Sext. Emp. M. 1.145. dvrixaOifopat, Ion, dvticar-, fut. -edodua, aor. —eCdpnv -—Med.: to sit or lie over against, of armies or fleets watching one another, Hdt. 4. 3+ 5. 1, Thuc. 1. 30., 4. 124. II. the Act. is found in Lxx 4 Regg. 17. 26), to place or settle instead of another. vrikabiomnpt, Ion. dvrixar-: fut, -xaracrnow:—to lay down or establish instead, substitute, ddda Hat. 9. 93; pa) éAdoow dvtikaraoTh- oat maduv to replace an equal quantity of good, Thuc. 2. 13 ; dAAous dvr. set up others in their stead, Arist. Mirab. 94. 2. to set against, oppose, Twa mpds twa Thuc. 4.93; Twa Ti Plat. Rep. 591 A. 3. to set up or bring back again, dvr. én 7d Oappeiv Thuc. 2. 65 ; Tods Oopv- BnOevras Dion. H. 6. 11. II. Pass., with aor. 2 and pf. act.; also aor. pass. kareoTdOyy (Xen, An. 3. 1, 38) :—zo be put in another's place, reign in his stead, Hdt. 2. 37, Xen. |. c. 2. to stand against, resist, absol., Thuc. I. 71., 3.47, etc. ; rut Xen. Hipparch. 7, 5. dvrixatvos, ov, equal td new, Hesych. ; avrikalw, Att. —Kdo, to set on Jire in turn, Plat. Tim. 65 E. dvructixoupyéw, to damage in turn, rid Plat, Crito 49 C, 54 C. Gyrixtixdw, =foreg., Joseph. B. J. 3. 6, 30:—hence avTikdkwots, «ws, }, injury returned, mutual damage, Eust. Opusc. Too. 87, etc. avTiKiihéw, to invite in turn, Xen. Symp. 1,15, in fut. pass.—cAnOhoopat. dvrucadwmifopat, 0 adorn oneself in rivalry with, rw Plut. 2. 406 D. dvrucdparro, to bend, direct in turn, Byz. dvrixdvovilw, to decide or act against the canons, in Eccl. law, Byz. dvrixdpdtov, 70, in Poll. 2.165, the depression in the stomach next its cardiac extremity: but Ruf. Ephes. (Part. Corp. H., pp. 28, 50, Clinch) makes it the depression in the throat above the clavicle, = opayh, Aaveavin. dvrikaptepéw, to hold out against, mpds 71 Dio C. 39. 41. dvruKa’ Ao, fo put down ot pay in turn, Liban. 4. 800. dvrucardyw, to bring in instead :—Pass., dvtikataxOjpév Tit to come into the place of another, Tim. Locr. tor D. avrucatabtiven, of a star, Zo set in the opposite quarter,'Theo Astrol.p.178. dvricaradvopar, to stoop down in turn or in opposition, Ach. Tat. 6. 18. dvruxarabvijc Kw, aor, 2 —€Bavov:—to die or be slain in turn, dé Tovs eravoyras dyriKarbaveiv (the word Sixny, which follows, being prob. con- structed with dévras orthe like ina line that has been lost), Aesch. Cho, 144. dvriucataxalve and —Krelve, v. sub dvrikarabyvqaKe. dvrikatahapBaven, to take possession of in turn, Tim. Locr. 102 D. avrucarahéyw, to enroll instead, soldiers, senators, etc., Dio C 54. 14. dvruxataAelma, to leave in one's stead, Plat, Rep. 540 B ee dvricaradhiyh, 7), exchange, twds mpds 7 Plut, 2. 49 D. M. 7.6): Homeric epith. of heroes, as distinguished for strength, beauty, + dvrucaréAAaypa, 74, reguital, Joseph. A. J. 15, 9, 2. >. , J , aytikarahAaKTéov — avriKxopaCo. avrikarahAaxréoy, verb, Adj. one must exchange, Arr. Epict. 4. 3. dvricardhAakis, ews, %, the proceeds of trade, Diog. L. 7. 99. dvrik , Att.—rropat: Med. :—¢o exchange one thing for another, 1. to give one thing for another, 7: dvri twos Lycurg. 159. 2; 71 bmép twWos Isocr. 109 C; ri tivos Dem. 273.25. 2. to receive one thing in exchange for another, rt dyri twos Isocr. 138 B. 3. to set off or balance one against another, evepyectas kpioews Dinarch. 92. 1; dvr. 7 mpds Ti wept ra Oeia gudogopiay make some compensation . . , Arist. P. A. 1. 5, 33; dvr. ddixodvra, ei BAaBepdv, GAAA KaAdv to strike a balance in case of injury. ., Id. Rhet. 3.15, 2. 4. to interchange, Id. Eth. N. 8. 5, 2, Aeschin. 66. fin. II. Pass., dvrixarad- Aayijvai tun to be reconciled, Polyb. 15. 20, 5. III. the Act.= Med., Athanas. dvrikatapebidw, to scoff at, make a mock of, twos Cyrill. dvrixatapiw, to shut one’s eyes in turn, Poll. g. 113. avrikatamréumw, to send down in return, Basil. avrixatathioow, fut. fw, to frighten in turn, App. Civ. 3. 9t. dvrixatappéw, to flow down in turn, Olympiod. dvruxarackevdtw, to establish instead ot in turn, Dion. H. 1. 5. dvrikardoriots, ews, 7), a being confronted with one another, Polyb. 4. 47. 4: opposition, Joseph. A. J.16. 2, 5; é¢ dvrixaraordcews C, I. 2222.8. aromeSevw, to encamp opposite, Dion. H. 8. 84. avrikardoxects, ews, , a holding in by force, rod mvedparos Arist, Probl. 3. I, 3. avrikaratiots, ews, %, a stretching against, stretching by pulling op- + posite ways, Hipp. Art. 834. dvrixatatacow, to set in another's place, r1va dvrt twos Clem. Al. 351. avrixatatetva, to stretch by pulling against another, Hipp. Fract. 761, Art. 781: metaph., av dytimararelvavres Aéyapery aire Adyov rapa Aédyor if we speak setting’ speech directly in contrast with speech against him, Plat. Rep. 348 A, cf. Plut. 2. 669 F. dvrixaratpéxw, with aor. —€5pdpov, to overrun in turn, Dio C. Go. 9- avrucaradppovéw, to despise in turn, Twés Dio C. 54. 33. dvrixaraxwpiopos, of, 6, replacement, Antyll. Oribas. p. 98. dvrixarnyopéw, to accuse in turn, recriminate upon, twos Lys. 106. 41, Aeschin. 25. 25 :—in Pass., Dio C. 36. 23. II. Pass,, in Logic, to be reciprocally predicable, to be convertible, like dvriorpépev, Arist. An. Post. I. 3, 7.,1.13,13; dvr. rod mpdyparos Id. Top. 1.5, 4 sq., al. dvruxatnyopia, %, a counter-charge, Quintil. 3. 10, 4. dvrixdrypat, dvricarifopar, dvrixatiornpt, Ion. for dvrindd-. Soincereiganan, fut.ocxjoopat, Dep. toperishin turn,WalzRhett. 1.465. dvrikdrav, wvos, 6, Anticato, name of a book written by Caesar in reply to the Cato of Cicero, Plut. Caes. 54, App. Civ. 2. 99. dvrikepar, used as Pass. of dvriTi@nut, to be set over against, to corre- spond with, riud dyabotow dvr. is held out to them as a fitting reward, Pind. I. 7 (6). 36. II. to be opposite to, of places, twos Hipp. Aér. 282; rit Strabo 120: of things, to be opposite or opposed, mpos GAAnAa Plat. Soph, 258B; dvr. xard didperpoy in a circle, Arist. Cael. 1. 8,11, al. 2. in the Logic of Arist., to be opposed, of propositions, Categ. 10, Metaph. 4.10, 1, al.; 7a dvrixeipeva opposites, An. Pr. 2. 15, al.: dvrixeipévas in the way of opposition, AéyeoOat Arist. Rhet. 3. 10, 5; propositions are opposed either contradictorily (dvriparixds), or con- trarily (évavtiws), de Interpr. 7, cf. P. A. 2. 8, 6, al. 8. in Rhet., dyrixeipévn A€fis antithetical, Rhet. 3. 9,7; dvriceipévars elmety Ib. 2. 24, 2, cf. 3. Io, 5. III. to resist, be adverse, dvrinetoopat Tots dyrixetpévors got LXX (Ex. 23. 22, cf. Isai. 66. 6, al.). dvtucéAevbos, ov, on the opposite side of the way, rotxos Nonn. D.8. 191. dvrixeetio, to bid, command in turn, Thuc. 1, 128:—Pass. to be bidden to do a thing in turn, Id. 1. 139. dvrixevrpov, 76, something acting as a goad, Aesch. Eum. 136, 466. avrixepSalvw, to gain, receive in turn, Nicet. Eug. 3. 363. dvrucnSevw, to mind, tend instead of another, twds Eur. Ion 734 :— also dvrixqSopar, Poll. 5. 142. dvrixipue, 6, a deputy herald, C. 1. 353. Til. 9. @ picaw, to proclaim in answer to, obdiv dvrexhpufer Adyous Eur. Supp. 673; rhv dAndwiy yraow Eus. H. E. 3. 32. dvruxivew, to move in opposition, Arist. Memor. 2, 29 :—Pass., dvd-yen 70 Kwoov dvriKivetoOat must suffer a counter-movement, Id. Phys. 8. 5,19, cf. G. A. 4. 3, 18, Cael. 1. 5,12. II. in Pass. also to make counter-movements, move against the enemy, Polyb. 2. 66, 3. dvrixlvyots, 4, counter-movement, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 400. dvrucAdlw, to sound by striking against, kpavyh ..mérpaow dyré- wrayt’ is echoed by them, Eur. Andr. 1145. 2. c. acc. cogn., dvr. ddAHAats péAos Tin to sing against one another, Id. Bacch. 1057. Rite Att. -KAdw, to weep in return, Hat. 3.14 (v. 1. dvéxAaor), ust. 37. 14. pre Pere bend back, Psell. :—Pass,, Greg. Naz. dvrlkAets, «dos, 7, a false key, Clem. Al. 897, Poll. 1o. 22 :—also —kdeOpov, 74, Gloss. dvruchnpdopat, Med. fo have allotted to one in return, 7 Eust. Opusc. 273. QI. sonehon [i], to turn or bend again, Musae. 108. & , to scratch in turn, GdAndous avr. ‘claw me, claw thee,’ Apostol. Adag. 17. 20 Leutsch. pife [or-ralw), to strike on the shin, Sext. Emp. M. I. 217. Siminveueay, 76, the part of the leg opposite the kvijun (rhs kvhuns 7d mpéodev Arist. H. A. 1. 15, 5), the shin, Hippon. 40, Hipp. Fract. 764, Ar. Ach, 219, Eq. 907. Gyrixotdov, 76, the hollow of the instep, Polemo Physiogn. 2. 27. GyricoAdfopar, Pass, to be punished in return, Luc, Tyrannic. 12. e 143 dvrucoduixeto, to flatter in turn, Plut. Ale. 24. avrixopito, to bring back as an answer, Aé-yov Plut. Lys. 26. Gvrikopmdte, fut. dow, to boast in opposition, rwvi Plut. Anton, 62. avrixovrée, to support with a pole or stick, EUAw dvr. TO chpart Hipp. Mochl. 852; dyri-xoréovar or —Koraivovar ap. Erot. p. go is altered by Foés. into —xovréovet.—But that the form in —dw is the true one appears from the Subst. dvrixévrwots, ews, 4), the support of a stick to a lame man, Hipp. Art. 819, 824. avrixomh, #}, a beating back, resistance, Plut. 2. 77 A, 649 B; in pl., Strabo 222. dvrucomrucés, 4, dv, resisting, repellent, Sext. Emp, M. to. 137. avrucétrrw, to beat back, resist, oppose, 1. in a physical sense, c. acc., bray vépea . . dvrinémrn mvevpa évaytiov Hipp. Aér. 285 ; absol., bray mvedpa dvruéary vérwy Arist. H. A. 8, 13, 13, cf. P. A. 1. 1, 36, Theophr. C. P. 1. 12,9; dvr. dAAHAous, also of winds, Id, Vent. 53- 2. of persons, 6 5¢ Onpapévns dvréxomre A€yov .. Xen. Hell. 2. 3,15. 3. impers., jv 71 dv rudy if there be any hindrance, Ib.2.3,31. dvrucopOiiw, to make to swell in turn, riv O4daccay Nicet. Eug. 9. 29. dvrtkopticcopat, Med. to take arms against, twi Anth. P. 7. 668, Ath. 702 B, dvrikocpéw, to arrange or adorn in turn, Plut. 2. 813 C, etc. :—the Subst. -koopyors, #, in Suid. dvriKcoopyTys, 0d, 6, a deputy xoopnrns (signf. I. 2), C. 1. 272, 276, 281, 284 :—hence, dvrukoopnretw, fo discharge this office, Ib. 376. avrixowps, ews, 7), (drm) opposition, dvépev Theophr. Vent. 55. dvrucpate, fut. -xexpdgopuat, to shout in return, Byz. dvrixpiiréw, to hold, have instead of something else, Anth, P. 11. 298. avrucpivw, to judge in turn, rd Aristid. 2. 410: to compare, match, ri ru Ael.:—Med. to contend against, Lxx (Job. Q- 32., II. 3). dvrixptows, ews, ),=indxpiots, Anaxil. Incert. 11 (v. Poll. 4. 113). dvrixpovots, ews, , a striking against, hindrance, sudden stop, Arist., Rhet. 3. 9, 6, Plut. 2.721 B: the sense is dub. in Aeschin, 24. 10, perhaps @ repartee. dvrixpotw, fut. cw, to strike or clash against, come into collision, 1, in a physical sense, dA‘ya .. rd dvrixpotovra avrois Arist. Cael. 4. 6, 2; absol., Id, P. A. 1. 1, 45, al.; dvr. Plat. Legg. 857 B; domls domid: Liban. 4.542. 2. ina general sense, adrois .. rodro dvrexexpovuer had been a hindrance to them, had counteracted them, Thuc. 6. 46; dvr. Tais ovpBovadias Plut. Ages. 7; dvr. mpds tt Id. Cato Ma. 24:—absol. to prove a hindrance, offer resistance, avréxpovaé te Kat yéyover oloy ove é5e Dem. 294. 20; édv dvrixpoton Tis Arist. Rhet. 2. 2,9; dvréxpovoy ai yuvaixes Pol. 2. 9, 11. dvtikpv, Adv.,=dyrny, over against, right opposite, cots dvrucpd pa~ xeoOar Il. 5. 130; ©. gen., “Exropos dvrixpv Il. 8. 301. i= avtixpus, straight on, right on, dvrinpd ddpy xddxeov eenépnaey Od. 10. 162; dvrixpd pepadws Il. 13. 137 ;—but mostly followed by a Prep., dvrinpd 8 dy’ d8dvras 5. 743 dvtucpd 5 pov 4. 481, cf. Od. 22. 16; dvrixpd xara pécoor right in the middle, Il. 16. 285 ; so once in Xen., dvrixpd & abray Cyr. 7. 1, 30:—in a similar sense Hom. uses Katavrixpv, q. Vv. 2. outright, utterly, quite, dvrimpd 8 dadpnpe Il. 7. 362; dvrexpd 8 dwapage 16, 116, cf. 17. 49, Od. 10. 162, ete.: —with dvricpd paxdpecow éixro, Ap. Rh. 4. 1612, we may compare SpowwOjpevar dvrny, etc.—V. dvrimpus sub fin. [Hom. has @ in arsi, 3 in thesi; but Ar. Eccl. 87 has earayrixpv, with the quantity of dyrtxpus.] dvrixpis, Adv.,=én’ eiclas, straight on, right on, dvticpus iby wape- xadécero éx Sefids he came straight up and.., Plat. Euthyd. 273 B, ef: Ar. Lys. 1069, Thuc. 2. 4; also, els 70 dvr. wopedecOar Plat. Symp. 223 B. 2. outright, openly, without disguise, bmws dvr. 748 aivéow Aesch, Cho. 192; 6 xpynopos dvr. Aéyee Ar. Eq. 128; edxovral ye mAov- reiv dvr. Id. Pl. 1343 avr. pn xpiiva wreiv Thuc. 6. 49; ovdtv # dvr, dovAciay downright slavery, Id. 1.122; } dvr. éAcvOepia Id. 8. 64; od« dvr. not at all, od d:oicovr’ dvr, Tey ‘Hpaxdaday Ar. Pl. 384. 3. some- times of Time, straighiway, cvAAaBévtes dyovowy dvr. as dmoxrevowvTes Lys. 137. 10, ef. Plat. Ax. 367 A. II. later, =dyrinpv, opposite, ay, eivat to oppose, Arist. Eth. E. 7. 10, 20; dvr. émévax against, Dion. H, 3. 243 “araorivat Plut. Solon 27; év 7p dvr. muadi& C. I. (add.) 4224, etc.; v. Lob. Phryn. 444.—The distinction between dvzixpv, dyrixpus, as above given on the authority of the best authors, was noted by the Gramm., who explained dyrixp¥ by é¢ évayrias, dytixpus by pavepiis, SiappHdnv, cf. A. B. 408. Hom. used only dyzixpd, and that in both senses. In correct Att, dvripus is almost exclusively used and always in the secondary sense, katayrtxp¥ being used for dyrixpv. In Trag., neither dyrixpv or karavzixpv occur, and dyrixpus only in Aesch. l.c. avruxtetve, to slay in return, Eccl. x5 & » €WS, 2), acquisition of one thing for another, Plut. 2. 481 E. reer > ov, (etelva) in requital for ss dyrixrévots mowaiat . . marpés Aesch, Eum. 464 :—the Subst., -«rovia, 4, occurs in Eccl. dvrucriréw, to ring, clash against, rue Anth. Plan. 221. dvrixrimos, ov, resounding, re-echoing, v.1, Nonn. Jo. 20. 70. dvrucdSatvw, to praise in turn, Themist. 57 D. dvrixipatvopat, Pass. /o boil with conflicting waves, to dash hither and thither, Plut. 2. 897 B:—the Act. dvr. éavrdv, in same sense, Oribas. Matth. 244:—also dvrixuparéw, Byz. dvri-nipos, 6, as equiv. for Lat. vice-dominus, Ducang.:—and dvtixd- pla, 7, =éfovsia, in Suid, oe avruxtpe [0], aor. dvréxupoa :—to hit upon something, meet, Twi Pind. O. 12. 16, Soph. O.-C. 99, etc.; absol., Id. Ph. 545. dvrixwAtw, to hinder by resisting, Hipp. 412. 36:—the verb. Adj., -vrtéov occurs in Galen. avrucwopdte, to celebrate by a festival in turn, Schol, Pind, 144 dvrixwp@déw, fo ridicule in turn, Plut, Flamin. 9. dvru Adrns, 6, =dyrnpérns, Schol. Aesch. Theb. 283. dv7tAGBevs, dws, 6, part of the handle of a shield, Hesych. dvr AGBH, 1, (dvTiAapBdave) a thing to hold by, a handle, Lat. ansa, Srws dv... pi) Exor dvriAaBhy % xeip Thuc. 7.65; of a shield, obre mépraxas oir dyriAaBas éxe Strabo 154. 2. metaph., woAAds .. éxet bropias nat dyriAaBas gives many handles against one, points of attack, Plat. Phaedo 84 C; so, dvr. d:5évac Dion. H, de Rhet. 8. 15 ; mapéxecOa Luc. Tim. 29; cf. AaBH. & yxéve, fut. -Ajfoua: pf.—e/Anxa Dem, 1009. 4 :—as law-term, dvr. diatay to have a new arbitration granted, i.e. to get the old one set aside, Dem. 542.12; dvr. Tv pi odcay (sc. diarav) to get it set aside as false or groundless, Id. 543. 14; avr. Bs ag (sc. Tv Suen) to get it set aside by default, Id. 889. 23; dvr. mapaypagas Id. 976. 24 :— cf. Att. Process 756. GvrAdLopat, —vpar, poet. for dvrrkapBdvopua, to take hold of, hold by, c. gen., Eur, I. A. 1227: to take a share of, partake in, mévow Id. Or. 452, etc. 2. c. acc. to receive in turn, to be repaid, dvrihdQura. . Toad ay Troxedor 6H Eur. Supp. 363. Cf. AdCopa. avridaxtifeo, to kick against, rwi Ar. Pax 613; vid Plut. 2. 10 C. dvriAdikwvile, to in Laconian fashion, Eust. 1642. 51. dyTtAGdéw, to speak against one, Symm. V.T. dvriAapBdvw, fut. —Anpopuat, to receive instead of, xpvood Sipara mAnpy Tas HBas dvr. Eur. H. F. 646 (lyr.); mostly without a gen., ed dpav eb maddy dvridaBelv to receive in turn, Theogn. 108; Kav..7 ouppov.., ouppov’ dvriAnperar Eur. Andr. 741; Hdoviy dévras.. xaxiay .. dvr. Thuc. 3. 58; €pavoy Arist. Pol. 7. 14, 53; dvr. GAAnv [xdpay] to seize in return, get instead, Thuc. I. 143; dvr. GdAovs tivas Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, ¥as II. mostly in Med., with pf. pass. -elAnupar Lys. 180. 44 :—like dvréxopar, c. gen., to lay hold of, campod weicparos dyre- AaBod Theogn. 1362; dxpod rod orvpaxos dvr. Plat. Lach. 184 A, cf. Prot. 317 D, al.; 7H dpiorepG dvr. Tod TpriBdvos Ib. 335 B; otAlas xwpas dvr. to gain or reach it, Thuc. 7. 77; (on Ar. Thesm. 242 v. Dind. ad 1.) :—hence in various relations, 2. to help, take part with, assist, obx dvtidnpeo@’ ; Eur. Tro. 464; THs cwrnplas, Tis Aevdepias Thuc. 2. 61, 62, etc. ; of persons, dvr. ‘EAARvowv to take their part, Diod. II. 13; dvr. rv dodevoivray Act. Ap. 20. 35, etc. ;—in Thuc. 7. 70, the constr. is prob. wept rijs és Tiv marpida cwrnpias—vor, ei more Kat avis, .. dvriAaBéoOa [adris] now or never to give it a helping hand. 38. to lay claim to, seize on, Tov dapadods Thuc, 3. 22; Tov Opévov Ar. Ran. 777, 787. 4. to take part or share in a thing, take in hand, Lat. capessere, Thuc. 2. 8; Trav mpayparwy Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 6, Dem. 15. 5, etc.; Tod modéuov Isocr. 136 E; ris Oaddrrys Polyb. 1. 39, 14; THs “Adpodirns Alex. Tap, 3.15; THs waidelas Plat. Rep. 534 ; dvr. rod Aé-you to seize on the conversation (to the interruption of the rest), Ib. 336 B. 5. to take hold of for the purpose of finding fault, to reprehend, attack, jay Plat. Soph. 239 D, cf. Gorg. 506 A, etc. ; dv7i- AaBdpeba let us attack the question, Id. Theaet. 169 D ; dvriA. ds dbv- varov .. to object that .., Id. Soph. 251 B, cf. Rep. 497 D. 6. to take fast hold of, i.e. to captivate, 6 s dvriAapBaverai pou Id. Phaedo 88 D, cf. Parm. 130 E, Luc, Nigr. 19. 7. of plants, to take hold, take root, strike, like Lat. comprehendere, Theophr. H. P. 4. 1, 5. 8. to grasp with the mind, perceive, apprehend, Plat. Ax. 370 A; noted as an obsol. word for ouvinut by Luc. Soloec. 7 :—so of the senses, dvr. xara Thy axony, dopphoe Sext. Emp. P. 1. 50, 64. III. in Med. also, ‘to hold against, hold back, trmov Xen. Eq. 10, 15; so, dvriAnnréov Tov inmov 7G xadw@ Ib. 8, 8; cf. Arist. M. Mor. 1. 14, 2, Audib. 41. dvriAdpae, to light up in turn, of 8 dvrédappay (sc. of pidaxes) Aesch. Ag. 294. II. intr. to reflect light, shine, Xen. Cyn. 5, 18; ampos Thy ceAnyny Plut. Arat.21, 2. ¢0 shine opposite to orin the face A 6 Hdtos dvr. revi Plut. Mar. en ce age re Id2. 4 C, 420 F, vrtAapipis, ews, 4, reflexion of light, Plut. 2.930 D, 931 B. Reanten ae, Gialess Att. Prose (cf. dvraryopeta):—fut. dvrcAéto Eur. Hipp. 993, Ar. Ran. 998, Xen.; but the common fut. is dvrep@ :— aor. dvréAega Soph. O. T. 409, Ar. Nub. 1040 (but the aor. gros used is dyrefmov): so the pf. is dvreipyea, the fut. pass. dvrecpy- copa. To speak against, gainsay, contradict, rwi Thuc. 5. 30, Plat., Xen., etc.; wept twos Thuc. 8. 53; tut mepl twos Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 8; inép twos Ib. 3. 5, 12; mpds tt Ar, Nub. 888:—often foll. by a depen- dent clause, dvr. ws .. to declare in opposition or answer that .., Hat. 8. a Ar. Eq. 980, Thuc. 8. 24, Xen., etc. 5 ob roiTd 7 dvTtAéyouaty, ds .. Arist. Pol. 3.16, 11; also, dvr. imép Tivos ds .., Thue. 8. 453 soc. inf., dvr. mohoev radra, hy..to reply that they will.., if.., Id.1. 28; dvr. ph moeitv to speak against doing, Id. 3. 41, Xen. An. 2. 3, 25; dvr. pi) ov dgodcbai Twa Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 20. 2. c. ace, rei, io’ dvridégat (v. supr.) Soph. O. T. 409: dvr. rivi 7 to allege some- thing against .., Thuc. 5. 30; dvr. Adyov Lys. 113. 19; md0ov dvr, rev to tell one tale in reply to another, Ar. Lys. 806; so Med., dvriAéyeaOat m1 mpos Twa mepl Tivos Dem. 818, 13 :—Pass. to be disputed, questioned, avTikopodéw — avTipedAdw. dvrikngis, ews, %, a motion for a new arbitration, Dem. 1006. 14; vy. sub dvTiAayxavw. : dvrAnmréov, verb. Adj. one must take part in a matter, Ar. Pax 485 ; Tay mpaypdray abrois dvr. Dem. 9, 13, cf 13. 15. oN ee dyTiAapBaye 11. ; dvrAntriés, 7, dv, able to apprehend, Adéywy Tim. Locr. 100 C; divas dvr. rAnyis dépos Plut, 2. 98 B: assisting a, creeper to cling, yAcaxpérns. Theophr. C. P. 1. 6, 4: sustaining, supporting, rwds Eust, Opusc. 160. 14 :—Adv. -x@s, Justin. M. 2. pass. to be perceived by the senses, Twi Cass. Probl. 35. II. able to check, Def. Plat. 416, dvrihyipis, ews, 7, (dv7AapBdvw) a receiving in turn or exchange, Thuc. 1.120: a counter-claim, Xen, Hell. 3. 5, 5. II. (from Med.) a laying hold of in turn, reciprocation, Democr. ap. Arist. Fr: 202 ; of plants, a taking root, Theophr. C. P. 3. 6, 6: the clinging of a vine by its tendrils, Ib. 2. 18, 2. 2.=dyriAaBh, a hold, support, Xen. Eq. 5, 7; of a bandage, Hipp. Offic. 743; dv7iAnyuv BonOetas éxew Diod. I. 30; dyz. diddvar Tivi to give one a handle, Plut. 2, 966 E. 3. defence, help, succour, 1 Ep. Cor. 12. 28. 4. a claim to a thing, Xen. Hell. 3. 5. 5. 5. an attacking, objection, Plat. Phaedo 87 A, Soph. 241 B, Hipp. Ma. 287 A :—a demurrer, Rhet. 6. grasping with the mind, apprehension, Tim. Locr. 100 B, Diod. 3. 15; moorqTwv Plut. 2. 625 B. III. (from Pass.) a being seized, seizure, attack, as by sickness, Thuc. 2. 49. dvriXtritvetw, to entreat in return, Plut. 2. 1117 C. dvriAdBrov, +6, a part of the ear, opp. to tpoddBior, Poll. 2. 86. GvrtAocyéw, fut. yaw, =avTiA€yw, to deny, Soph. Ant. 377. dyriAéyw 3, Ar. Nub. 322:—in Med., Antipho ap. Poll. 2. 120. GvtiAoyla, 7, contradiction, controversy, disputation, Lat. disceptatio, dvr. xpnopav contradiction of the oracles, Hdt. 8. 77; #uéas..€s dvr. mapéfouev will offer ourselves to argue the point, 1d. g. 87 ; éddeoy dyti- Aoyins Kuphoew expected to be allowed to argue it, Ib. 88; Lys. Fr. 45.1, Plat., etc.; és dvr. wi Thuc. 1.73; dvt. al Aotdopia Dem. 1018. 8; dyriAoyiay xe it involves contradiction, Arist. Rhet. 3. 17, 16, cf. 13, 3; in pl. opposing arguments, answering speeches, Ar. Ran. 775, Thuc. 4. 59:—dyvr. mpds twa Xen, Hell. 6. 3, 20; és dvr. édAOciv Thue. I. 31; dyrAoyiay év air@ exe to have grounds for defence in itself, Id. 2. 87. GvriAoyifopar, Dep. to count up or calculate on the other hand, Antipho 117. 13; dvr. 6.,, Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 24. dvriAoyikés, 4, dv, given to contradiction, contradictory, disputatious, Ar. Nub. 1173, Isocr. 319 B, Plat. Theaet. 197 A, al. :—#) -x«7 (sc. Téxv), the art of contradiction or of arguing from contradictories, Id. Rep. 453 E, Phaedr. 261 D; so, 7d -xdy Id, Soph. 225 B:—of —Kot persons skilled im this art, Id. Lys. 216A; and of the arguments, of wept Tods Aoyous dyriAoyixods diarpivayes Id. Phaedo go B, cf. 101 E, Adv.-Kas, in the manner of such disputants, Id. Theaet. 164 C. GvriAoyiopés, 6, a countercharge, Philostr. 549. avriAoyos, ov, contradictory, reverse, réxat Eur, Hel, 1142. GvriAoSopéw, to rail at or abuse in turn, Plut, 2. 88 E, 1 Petr. 2. 22: —Med., c. acc. rei, Luc. Cony. 40. dvridogos, ov, slanting, oblique, Byz. dvrAtréw, to vex in return, Plut. Demetr. 22, Luc. D. Meretr. 3. 3. dvrAtmnars, €ws,%, avexing inreturn, Arist.de An. 1.1, 16, Plut. 2,442 B. dvridipos, ov, (Avpa) responsiue to the lyre, Soph, Tr. 643¢ avtTtAvtpov, ov, TO, a ransom, 1 Ep. Tim, 2. 6. 2. in Orph, L. 587, an antidote, remedy. vrtkutpéw, fo ransom in return :—verb, Adj. évriAutpmwréov, Arist. Eth. N. 9. 2, 4. GvrAwBdopat, Dep. to maltreat in return, Eust. 757.59. & tivo Pass. to ri i vripatvopat, ‘age ot bluster against one, Luc. D. Meretr. 12. 2; Twi Anth, Plan. 30. dvryavOdven, to learn in turn or instead, Ar. Vesp. 1453. dvripavris, ews, 6, a rival-prophet, Schol. Lyc. dvripaprtipta, to appear as witness against, Ar. Fr. 382: to contradict solemnly, Twit or mpos 7 Plut. Alc. 21,, 2. 471 C; rivds Ib. 418 A. a TLS, 7), counter-eviden a aioe ig 4 v7] lence, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 244; in pl, évripapripopar [1], Dep. to protest on the other hand, Luc. Symp. 47. dvripiixéw, to resist by force of arms, Diod, Excerpt. 502. 69. 2. as law-term, to resist, demur, A. B. 184. dvyripdxnors [4], ews, 4, a conflict, struggle, én’ ddAnAots Dion. H. 8. 58 :—a Eratosth, ap. Schol. Ven. Il, 19, 233. 2.= vray, dvrpaxnris, od, 6, an antagonist, Or. Sib. 14. 165. dvripdxopar, fut. —wiixjooua, Dep. to fight against one, Thuc. 4. 68. dvripixos, ov, fighting against, rwi App. Hisp. 9; cf. Ath, 154 F. eee wo, to vie in pride or boasting with, rwi Eust. 676. 5. dvr DeAKw, to drag different ways, distract, Anth, Plan, 1 36, 139, in Pass. ; y Fic 7h Anth. P. 10, 74, dvreOlornpr, fut. —yeraarpcw :—to move Jrom one side to the other, Xen. Hell. 6.5, 37; of a place, id rivos dvriAeyspevov te imed, Ib. 3. 2, 30. 8. absol. to speak one bos sce the other, speak in op- position, Hat. 9. 42, Eur., Ar., etc.; 6 dv7iAeyaw the opponent, Plat. Prot. 335 A; of dvriAéyovres Thue, 8. 53. wridexréov, verb. Adj. one must gainsay, Eur. Heracl. 975. dyvrihewros, ov, questionable, to be disputed, bpos obx dvr. Thuc. 4. 92. Gvritebis, ews, 7), an answer, Hipp. 24. 44. 2. dialogue, dv7i- Adgers rev troKpiray, opp. to povpdiat, Philostr. 244. a alyw, to chatter against, Perictyoné ap. Stob. 458. 3. dvriAéwv, 6, lion-like, formed like dyri8eos, Ar. Eq. 1044; where how- ever it is, in fact, a proper name. $ as restored by Bekk. for the Ms, to revolutionise, yypiopara kat vépov Ar, 'Thesm, 362. II, Pass., with aor. 2 and pf. act. to pass one into the other, to be interchangeable, dvr. GdAHAOS 76 Te H5up Kal 5 dnp Arist. Phys. 4. 2, 5, cf. 4. 4,13 Meteor, 2.8, 275 cf. dvrimepitarnus 1. 2: to bass to the other side, Luc. ee Enc, 37. , Aa . . avritoos, ov, contr. -Eovs, ovy:—Ion. word, opposed to, adverse, é\md- el T. 446; 90ca dvriada [7p 7éAe]) habits roms to.., Thuc. v7 146 2. 61; dvr. 7wi a match for him, Id. 1, 11; ipevatwr ydos dvrimados Eur. Alc. 922:—1d dyrimadoy rijs vaupaxtas the equal balance, unde- cided state of the action, Thuc. 7. 71, cf. 34,38; dvrimada xaracrhoa to bring ¢o a state of balance, Id, 4, 117; els dvt. katacrivat to be in such state, ld. 7. 13 :—Ady. -Aws, Id. 8. 87; also neut. pl., vavpayh- oavres dytinaka Id, 7. 34. II. ina pecul. sense, tov dydv ay. him who fights for me, my champion, Aesch. Theb. 417. avrurivoupyevopat, Dep. to deal craftily with or against, rwt Eccl. RimiwaoatdXe, fut. -BaA@, to hold side by side, so as to compare or contrast, rt mpds tt or apd 7 Plat. Apol. 41 B, Hipp. Mi. 369 C, Isocr. 111 B; ri ru Arist. Fr. 82; Ploy rivos wat twos Plut. Ti. Gracch, 1:-— Pass., c. dat., App. Civ. 2.15. II. 40 contribute instead; Xen. Lac. 5, 3. he ap shat verb, Adj. one must compare, An. Ox. 3. 216 (where ~rév). avrurapaBoAy, 7, close comparison or contrast, Arist. Rhet. 3. 13, 3-5 3-19, 5- avrurapayyeAla, %), competition for a public office, Plat. Arat. 35. -dvrurapayyéAAw, fut. eA, to give orders, command in turn or also, Xen. Hell. 4. 2, 19. II. to compete for a public office, Plut. Mar. 29, Caes. 7; ivi with one, Id. Cato Mi. 49. Cf. maparyyéddw. wriTapaypahy, %, a counter-rapaypadnh, a replication, Gloss. dvtiumapaypadw, 4o add or insert on the other side, Ptol.:—Med., as law-term, ¢o reply to a mapaypapn, Gloss. dvruraptye, to adduce, allege on the other side, Plut. 2. 719 C: but mostly, II. intr. ¢o lead the army against, advance to meet the enemy, Xen, Cyr. 1. 6, 43. 2. to march parallel with, twit Polyb. 1.77, 2, etc. dvrurapiywyy, %, an advancing against, Polyb. 9. 3, Io, al. in pl. enmities, mpds twa Id. Lo. 37, 2, al. | dyrimapabelkvups, 20 compare, contrast, td T11 Greg. Nyss. avrirapadiswpt, to deliver upin turn, thy dpyny rim Joseph. A. J.15.3, 1. Gvrurapdbeots, ews, 4), comparison, contrast, Joseph. c. Ap. 2. 33, Eccl. Gvrimapdleros, ov, put or to be put in comparison with, Epiphan. dvrimapabéc, to outflank, Xen. An, 4. 8,17. II. to run parallel toa thing, Plotin. 6. 5, 11. dvriumapafewpéw, to examine by contrasting, Greg. Nyss. avtirapatvéw, to advise contrariwise, c. inf., Dio C, 65. 11. dvrumapakdAéw, fut. éow, to summon in turn or contrariwise, mt Gdn- Oeorépay ye owrnpiay Thuc.6. 86, cf. Xen, Cyr. 2.2, 24, Plat. Gorg.526 E. avrumapaKerpat, Pass, to lie just opposite, rive Polyb. 3. 37, 7- 2. in Gramm., to correspond with, rw Apollon, de Ady. 625. dvrv eAetopat, Dep. to exhort in turn or contrariwise, Tots mpeo- Burépos ph) karacxvvOjva Thuc. 6, 13, cf. Xen. Cyr. 3. 3,42 and 59. avrirapdkAnots, «ws, 7, exhortation on both sides, Polyb. 11. 12, 2. dvrurapakapBdve, to compare by contrasting, Galen. dvrimapaddrée, to annoy in turn, Thuc. 4. 80. dvrumaparrépropat, Pass., dvr. 7H wvnup to be cheered on one’s way to death by the remembrance, Plut. 2. 1099 D. dvruraparnyvupt, to fix near or opposite, Apollon. de Constr. 37. , avrirapatéw, to sail along on the other side, Thuc. 2. 83. dvrumapatropevopat, Pass., = dvrimdpetpt, Polyb. 5.7, 11. dvrumapackevdfopat, Med. to prepare oneself in turn, arm on both sides, Thuc. 1. 80, etc.; dvr. dAANAOLs ws és paxny Id. 7. 3. II. later, in Act. fo prepare against, set on, Twa Tin Dio C. 38. 14. dvrurapackevn, 4, hostile preparation, Thuc. 1. 141. ‘dvrumapdoradots, ews, 7), as a figure of speech, a counter-objection, a replication, objection, Apsin. 55 Bike :—Adj. -oramxés, 4, dv, Byz.; Ady. —@s, Eust. 704. 36. aviv romedevw, to encamp opposite, Dion. H. 8. 25. dvriumaparatis, ews, 7, hostile array, Gyrimapardges Kata Tiv aryopav Dion. H.6.22; dvr. THs yvmpns stubborn determination to resist, Joseph. A. J. 18. 8, 4. bs: copat, Att.—rropat, Med. and Pass. to stand in array against, ri Thuc. 6, 98; dvremapareraypévous mpds Thy TobTav daér- yetay Aeschin. 90. 16:—absol. to stand in hostile array, Thuc. 1. 63, Xen.; dd rod dvrimaparaxGévros in hostile array, Thuc. 5.9; in a Com. metaph., 4 Snjuovpyds dvremapareraypévn Kpedde’ dx7g Menand. Wevd. 1. 12. II. the Act. is used=Med. in Polyb. 9. 26, 4. dvrumaparetva, to stretch side by side so as to compare or contrast, GAdov Adyor mpds adroy dvr. Plat. Phaedr. 267 Cc. ; , évrimaparlOnpt, to contrast and compare, Tas dAdas vixras Tavry dyT. Plat. Apol. 40D, cf. Menand. Migoy. 1; of the Hexapla, Eus. H.E.6.16, 4. dvrurapatpém, to turn in the contrary way, Cyrill. dvriumapaxwpéw, to give way in turn, Basil.:—Subst. —xopyors, %, mutual concession, Eust. 445. 11. - dvrimdpepe (ely ibo), to march so as to meet, of armies on opposite sides of a river or entrenchments, Xen. An. 4. 3, 17, Hell. 5. 4, 38. dvrurapexStiopat, Pass. to slip out, emerge in turn, Synes. 17 B. ‘dvrumapéxricts, ews, 7), equal extension, Chrysipp. in Stob, Ecl, 1. 376, Philo 1. 433. : dvrumapexretva, = dyrimapareivay, Chrysipp. in Stob. Ecl. 1. 376. dvrurapeédyw, to lead on against the enemy, Sivapuy, Tov troy Plut. Lucull. 27, Pyrrh. 16. 2. (sub, orparév) to march against, like dvrimapéyw, Philipp. ap. Dem. 239. 6: metaph. to contend in contro- versy, Tivt with one, Sext. Emp. M. 7.166. b. to march parallel with, tivi Plut. Aemil. 30. II. to compare, éavrdv mpés Twa Id, 2.470 B. dvrimapetiywyy, 4, a means of attack in controversy, mpds Twa Sext. Live M. fA 150. Be a Pe VTUTOp' L, =ayTimaperpe, it. 2.195C. _ >a Dep. =foreg. Dio C. 47. 46. zt, > . ' avTim@avoupyevopat — GVTLTEPlLTT AM. Gvrumapeferatw, 0 confront with, Dion. H, 3. 11:—Subst., -mapefé- tacts, 7), Eust. Opusc. 255. 40. dvrumapépxopar, Dep. do pass by on the opposite side, Ev. Luc. to. 31: c. ace, loci, Anth. P. 12. 8. II. to come up and help, as against an enemy, Lxx (Sap. 16. 10). ‘ dvrurapéxe, to furnish or supply in turn, Thuc. 6. 21; also in Med., Xen. Hier. 7, 12, Anth. P. 9g. 12. 2. to cause in return, rods dvrimapé- fovras mpaypara Dem. 555. 12. dvrumapnyopéw, to persuade, comfort in turn, Plut. 2. 118 A. avrumapyke, to stretch along parallel to, rots eipnuévors, c. dat., Arist. Mund. 3, 10, cf. Strab. 128 :—to outflank, 7 orparevpart Paus. 8, 10, 6. dvrutrapSeveva, to lead a virgin life in turn, Eumath. p. 333. dvrumapummevw, to bring their cavalry against, Arr. An. 5. 16. dvrurapiorapat, Pass. to correspond, Ptol. dvrurapodevw, fo meet on a march, GAAhAos App. Pun. 107. avturappyodfopat, Dep. to speak freely in turn, Plat. 2. 72 E. ne att to write a parody against, Tit Strabo 394. dvrurapwvipéopar, Pass. fo be opposite in name or expression, Nicom. Arithm. 77; the Act. in same sense, Iambl. :—Subst., -mapwvupta, 7, Tambl.; and Adj., -rapavupos, ov, Nicom. Arithm. r1o. avriuTacyxe, fut.-meloopat; aor.-€émadov :—to suffer in turn, kaxd (or ka- KOs) dyr. to suffer evil for evil, Antipho 126. 16; Ti dv Spdcaay abrovs, 6 Tt ovn dy peiCov dvrimaborev; Thuc. 6.35; Spav avremdaxm xpyora I receive good for good done, Soph. Ph. 584; .dv7’ eb weicera: Plat. Gorg. 520 E (v. sub dvreumacxa) ; Kaddv 70 ed Troeiy pt) iva dvrimdOy Arist. Eth. N. 8.13, 8;—also, dvr. dvri rivos Thuc. 3.61: absol. to suffer for one’s acts, Xen. An. 2.5,17. 2. 70 dvtimerrov06s, reciprocity, Arist. Eth. N.5.5, 1, sq.; but of persons, etvovay év dvrimernovOdor piAtay evar good-will in cases of reciprocity, Ib. 8. 2, 3. 3. to stand in the same relation, mpés tt Id. Mechan. 3, 2. II. to counteract, twi Diosc. 3. 70, 74. III. to be of opposite nature to, rwi.Theophr. Lap. 14, Polyb. 34. 9, 5. IV. dyvrimenovOéra reflexive verbs, Diog. L. 7. 64. dvrunirayéw, to rattle so as to drown another sound, dw Thuc. 3. 22. dyrumetOw, to persuade or try to persuade to the contrary, Jo. Chrys. avrumevotixés, 7, dv, availing to persuade to the contrary, Bachm. An. 2, 291. dvrumehapyéw, to cherish in turn, and dvrumeAdpynors, or (in Schol. Soph.) -ywous, ews, 7, and -yla, 7, love in return, esp. the mutual love of parents and children, Aristaen. 1. 25, Glycas Ann. p. 41 B, Suid., etc.; vy. Jacobs Ael, N. A. 2. p. 114. Cf. oropyn. dvruméume, to send back an answer, Hdt. 2.114., 3. 68, etc. :—Pass., Id. 6. 4. 2. to send back sound, echo, Arr. An. 6. 3, 3. 3. to send in requital or repayment, olxovpia Soph. Tr. 542; Tit Onptoy Philem. Neaip. Xs. IL. to send against, arparidv tux Thue. 6. 99. IIt. to send in the place of another, orparnyovs éxt Tas vais Id. 8. 54. dvrlaeprpus, 7}, a sending back of sound, an echo, Arr. An. 6. 3, 3. dvrumevOns, és, causing grief in turn, Aesch. Eum. 782. dvrumetov0ds, vy. sub dv7imagxw:—Adv. —Odrws, Archimed, Aequilibr. I. 7; and Subst., ~mwemévOnots, 4, Nicom. Arithm. p. 75. dvrumépa, Ady. for dvrimépay, Polyb. 1.17, 4, etc. dvrumepaive, to pierce in turn, sensu obscoeno, Anth, P. 12. 238. dvrumepardopat, Pass. to be carried, pass over again, Sozom. dvrurépatos, a, ov, lying over against, avrimépar’ évéyovro the lands lying over against, Il. 2. 635 :—in late Ep. also a fem. dvtimépaid, Ap. Rh, 2. 351, Dion. P. 962; so, in Tzetz., dvrumepattis, 7). avrumepay, Ion. —nv, Adv., =dv7imépas, Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 9. II. Adj., “Agida 7’ dvrimépny re Asia and the opposite coast, Mosch. 2. 9. dvrumépas, Adv. over against, on the other side, c. gen., Thue. 2. 66, etc. ; absol., dvr. @pdin Id. 1. 100, cf. 4. 92. dytumepdw, =dvrimepardopua, Byz. dvrumépn fev, Adv. from the opposite side, Ap. Rh, 1. 613; ¢. gen., Id. 2. 1031, Anth, P. 9. 551. dvrumepidyw, to bring round against, rov 58 [axopniov] 7d Kévrpov énatpovra avrimepidyey Arist. Mirab. 1 39; so of the corvus employed on the Roman ships, Polyb. 1. 22, 8. avrumeptiiywy, 7, opposite motion, Ptol. dyrumeptBadAw, to put round in the other direction, e.g. a bandage, Hipp. Fract. 759. 2. to embrace mutually, Ach, Tat. 5. 8 :—Pass. to be environed, Oavar Lxx (Sirac. 23. 12). dvrumeptiept, fo come round as in a cycle, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2. 2. dvrumeptéhkw, to draw round to the other side, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 189. dvrumeptépxopat, Dep. fo change into a thing, Theod. Prodr, avrumepinx€w, to echo around, Plut. 2. 502 D. avrureptiornpt, fut.-orfow, to oppose by surrounding, compress, Arist. Meteor. 4. 5, 5, cf. 1. 10, 5 :—Pass., with intr. tenses of Act., fo be com- pressed, Ib. 1. 12, 12, al. 2. in Pass. also to be replaced by another substance, Ib. 4. 4, 5; dvr. GAAHAos Id. Resp. 5, 2; cf. dvripeBlornut IL II. to bring all round, péBous dvr. rut Polyb. 4. 50, I. dvrumepthapBaves, to embrace in turn, Xen. Symp. 9, 4. ical to fall right upon, mérpais Clem. Al. 183 (Dind. epe- meow). dvrumeputAéw, to sail round on the other side, Strabo 5, Gvrumepurovéopar, Dep. fo express reciprocal action, of certain verbs; Apollon, de Constr. 299 :—Adj., -ytuxds, 4, dv, Gramm. avrimeplomacpa, 7d, as military term, a diversion, dvr. moveiv Tivi Polyb. 3. 106, 6. avrureptotracpés, 5,=foreg., Diod. 14. 49. dvrumepioméw, to draw off in turn, to draw off or divert, Diod. 3. 37 :—Pass. to be drawn off or diverted, Arist. P. A, 3-7, 153. esp. as miley term, Polyb, 2. 24, 8, etc. ‘ : avrimepioracis —_ avrimporperyct Se -dvrvireploriiots, ews, %}, a surrounding so as to compress, Arist. Sonin. 3, 18 and 30, Probl. 2. 16., 33. 5. 2. reciprocal replacement, of two substances, Arist. Phys. 4. 8, 6., 8. 10, 12 (v. Simplic, ad l.), Meteor. I. 12, 10; cf. Plat. Tim. 59 A, 79 B. avrumepiotpody, %}, a turning round to the other side, Plut. 2. gor C. -Gvtumeputépvw, to circumcise anew or in opposition, Epiphan, 2. 172. dvruepiépw, to bring round, convert into the opposite, Phot. dvrieptxwpéw, to move round in turn or in opposition, Plut. Ages. 39. dvrurepuptxw [0], ¢o cool or chill in turn, Plut. 2. 691 F. dvrumepwbéw, to push or press back any surrounding body, and Subst., avrureptwors, ews, 7), both in Plut. 2. 1005 D. avrurécoopar, Att. —rropat, Pass., of food, to be quite digested, Arist. Probl. 5. 30, 1. dvrimetpos, ov, equal to stone, stone-like, rocky, Soph. O. C. 192; cf. dvriBeos, etc. II. in Theocr. Syrinx (acc. to Schol.) exchanged Jor a stone, of Zeus in his infancy. dvrlamné, NYS; %, (mhyvupe) a kind of cradle for infants, moved on wheels, xorAqs év Gvrinnyos etTtpdxy KiKhy Eur. lon 19; kvros EAucroy dyrinnyos Ib. 40; made of osier, tAexrdv «dos Ib. 37; cf. 1338, 1391: v. Adpvag. (Said to be a Lesbian word for a chest or ark, Eust. 1056.56.) dvrimnpdopat, Pass. to be maimed in return, Philo 2. 332. avruritre, fut. —recodpat, to fall against, meet with an obstacle, Arist. Probl. 16. 13, 1., 26. 4 ;—to fall upon an enemy, tuvi or mpds Tiva. Polyb. 3- 19, 5+. 4. 44, 9- 2. to resist, dvriminroy a resisting body, Arist. Probl. 32. 133 dvr. tuvt Act. Ap. 7. 51. 8. of circumstances, to be adverse, tii Polyb. 16. 2, 1, etc.; absol., Id. 16. 28, 2 II. to fall in a contrary direction, ai oxat Strabo 76. dvrumipdokw, = dvrarodidwp, Hesych. ‘ dvrimAdocopat, Pass. to be remoulded, Clem.'Al. 221. avtimhacros, ov, =icdrAacros, Soph. Fr. 268. avrurAékw, to knot, tie up, intertwine, Galen. avrimdeupos, ov, with its side opposite, parallel, Soph. Fr. 19. dvrumhéw, fut. -7Aevoopat, to sail against an enemy, Thuc. I. 50, 54; dvr, dvépoisw Pseudo-Phocyl. 113. avrumdykrys, 6, one who returns blow for blow, Basil. 2. 208 B. avrurAnkrive, to struggle with, mpés Twa Tzetz. Lyc. avrimAn, Hos, 6, , beaten by the opposing waves, dxrat Soph. Ant. 592. avrimAntts, ews, 7, repercussion, Justin. M. dvrimAnpéw, to fill in turn or against, dvrimd. Tas vats to man them " against the enemy, Thue. 7. 69, etc. :—Med., dvr. piAotnstay mpés Twa to fill one’s cup in his honour, pledge him, Aristid. 2. 115. zr. to fill up by new members, avr. rages Ex moAtrav Xen, Cyr. 2.2, 26: to replenish after exhaustion, Theophr. C. P. 1. 13, 3- avrimdjoow, to strike in turn, ddAHAovs Arist. Plant. 2. 4, 10 :—Pass., Id. Eth. N. 5.5, 4, M- Mor. 1. 34, 14. dvrimlowa, 7, a sailing with contrary winds, dub. |. in Polyb. 6, 10, 7. —Adj. dvrimdoos, ov, sailing the contrary way, Byz. dvrimvevats, ews, 7), an opposite current of air, Oribas. Matth. 244. avrurvéw, fut. -rvedcoua, of winds, to blow against, mpds Te Arist. Probl. 26. 7:—impers., dvrimve? there is a contrary wind, 1d. Meteor. 3.1, 4. 2. to be adverse or contrary, Plut. Cic. 32, Luc. Nav. 7; metaph. of fortune, Polyb. 26. 5, 9, Poéta ap. Stob. 562. 19; c. dat., Luc. Tox. 7; cf. odpitw. dvrinvowa, 7), a conflicting wind, 7S Bopég Theophr. Vent. 28. 2. a contrary wind, Arist. Plant. 2. 4, 10, Hdn. 5. 4, Philo 1. 352:—so dvturvon, %, Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 820. dvtimvoos, ov, contr. —trvous, ovy, caused by adverse winds, dvrinvéous .. drdoas (Dind., metri grat., dvr. atpas contrary winds), Aesch. Ag. 149; ordots dvr. Id. Pr. 1088. Adv. -vdws, Tzetz. Lyc. dvrimodes, of, v. sub dvrious. dvruro0éw, to long for in turn, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 28, in Pass.; the Act. in Eccl. dvrirovéw, opp. to dvrimdaxw, to do in return, radra Plat. Crito 50 E; dvr & roeiv Id. Gorg. 520 E; of pi) dvremoodvres eb Arist. Rhet. 2. 2, 17 (v. sub dyrevndcxw) ; Kaxas wacxew oddev 5 dvr. but do not retaliate, Xen. An, 3. 3,12; dvr. rid Tt Ib. 3. 3, 73 avr. 70 avo Arist. Eth. N. 5. 11, §:—Pass. to have done to one in turn, LXx (Levit. 24. 19). II. Med. (aor. pass. in Luc, D, Mort. 29. 2), c. gen. to exert oneself about a thing, seek after it, dvr. rv omovdatwy Isocr. 1 B: - to lay claim to, Lat. sibi arrogare, ris méAews Thuc. 4. 122; dpers Asocr. 117 D; ris réxvns, TOY vienrnpiov Plat. Meno go D, Phil. 23 A; Tod mparevey Dem. 145.8; THs Oaddrrys Antiph, HAova. 1. 11; of Awpiets dvrimoodvra THs Tpaywdias Arist. Poét. 3, 5 :—also c. inf., Gyr. éniotac@ai tt to lay claim to knowing .., Plat. Meno gt C, cf. Hipp. Mi. 363A. 2. to contend with one fora thing, dvr. Twi Tis ap- xfs Xen. An. 2.1, 11., 2. 3, 23; more rarely rev? wepi Tivos, Ib. 5. 2,113 twos mpés Twa Arr. Epict.1.29,9. 8. absol. ¢o act as a rival, Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 14. 4. to maintain possession of a place, Polyb. 2. 9, 5. dvrimotnots, ews, }, a laying claim to, twvds Dion. H. 11. 30. II. the study, practice of a thing, Sext. Emp. M. 6. 27. dvrurrointéov, verb. Adj. one must aim at, study, twés Clem. Al. 231. dvrurointikds, f, dv, aiming at, seeking after,rwésEccl. Adv.—Kas, Eccl. dvrurowpatve, to play the rival shepherd, Greg. Naz. ; dvrimowa, td, requital, retribution, dvrinow’ ds rigs pnTpopovous dvas (as restored by Schiitz) where dvrimowa rigs, =dvririvgs, may'st atone for, Aesch. Eum. 268; dytinowd twos mpacoey, AapBavew to exact retribution for .., Id. Pers. 476; Soph. El. 592; dyrimow eynov mabeiv to suffer retribution for me, Soph. Ph. 316.—In the Mss. some- times written dyrdmowa, q.v. Later in sing., but cf. dyrimovor. 147 112 E, Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 24; c. acc., LXx (Isai. 41. 12):~Pass. to be warred against, Dio C. 38. 40. dvrurroAépios, ov, warring against, of dvrvmoA€é uot enemies, much like oi mok€émiot, Thuc. 3. 90; in Hdt. 4. 1 34, 140, the books vary between dyrimbAcuor and —ywor; but in 7. 236., 8. 68, 2 dvriméAepot occurs without v. |., and is the only form cited by Hesych. dvrumokife, to build or rear up in turn, Joseph. B. J. 5- 2,4. dvturoAvopKéw, to besiege in turn, rémov Thuc. 7. 28; twa Plut. Mar- cell. 7 :—Pass., Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 19. dvritroAts, ews, %, a rival city, rive Strabo 169, Diod. 11. 81. avrumoAtrela, %, an opposite policy, party-spirit, rwi mpés tiva Polyb. 20. 5, 5. II. in pl. opposite parties, Id. 11. 25, 5. Gvrumohirevopar, Dep. to be a political opponent, Arist. Pol. 2. 12, 5; oi dvrimodcrevdpevor the opposite party, Dinarch. 102. 30: dvr. Tit to oppose his policy, Plut. Them. 19, Pericl. 8. dvrumovéopat, Dep. to exert oneself in opposition, App. Civ. 5. 33+ avrimovov, 74, return for labour, wages, Iambl. V. P. 22 (v. 1. -mowwov). dyvturopetv, aor. with no pres, in use, o give instead, Anth. Plan. 341. Gvrumopeviopar, Pass. to march to meet another, Xen, Hell. 7-35 5+ dvrurop0éw, (mépOw) to ravage in return, Eur. Tro. 359, cf. Lye. 1398. dvriopOpL0s, ov, over the straits, els dvr. yelrova ywpav Aesch. Pers, 67, cf. Supp. 544; dyvrimopOpya wedia plains on opposite sides of the straits, Eur. Ion 1585 ; THeAomias xOords év dvremépOpors in the parts opposite Peloponnesus, Id. Fr. 519, cf. Arist. Mund, 3, 3; c. dat., Strabo 379. avrt-tropvé-Bookos, 4, title of a comedy by Dioxippus, Ath. roo E, Com. Gr. 4, 541. avritopos, ov, like dvrtmopO pos, on the opposite coast, és dvr. xOdva, i.e. Europe, as separated by a strait from Asia, Aesch. Pers. 66, cf. Supp. 544, Eur. Med. 210; so, “Apreyuv Xadxidos dvrimopoy, i.e. her temple at Aulis over against Chalcis in Euboea, Id. I. A. 1494.;—all lyr. passages: —in Xen., An, 4. 2,18, roy dvr. Adpoy TO waorG, simply, over against, opposite to. avrirorife, to give to drink in return, Twa 7 Eccl. avritous, 6, 7}, touv, 76, with the feet opposite, ards dyrtrous, of one at the Antipodes, Plat. Tim. 63 A; so, dvr. €orat mopevdpevos Exacros airds abr® Arist. Cael. 4. 1, 4; of dvr. the Antipodes, Strabo 15, Cic. Acad. Pr. 2. 39, Plut. 2. 869 C. Cf. dvrixOwy 2, meplouxos 1. dvrumpaxtixds, 7, dv, counteracting, M, Anton. 2. 1. dvtumpdkrtwp, opos, 6, an adversary, Byz. : avrimpatis, ews, %, counteraction, resistance, Polyb. 6. 17, 8, Dion. H. II. 53, Plut. Popl, 11. “ avriunpdoow, Att.-rtrw, Ion.-mphoow: fut. fa :—to act against, seek to counteract, Twi Xen, Ath. 2. 17, Alex. Incert. 10, 8; mpds 7 Arist, Pol. 6. 5, 3, etc. ; c. acc. et inf., Dem. 886. 2. 2. absol. to act in opposition, 6 dvrimphaowv, =dvricracwrns, Hat. 1.92; dvr. 71 to oppose in any way, Xen. Hell. 2. 3,14; édv dvrimparry 7 wh ovpmparry Arist. Rhet. 2. 2, 9 :—so in Med., Xen. Hier. 2, 17, Dion. H. 7. 51. ‘ dvrumperBevopat, Med. to send counter-ambassadors, Thue, 6. 75, Luc. Peregr, 16; c. dat., Paus. 7. 9, 5. ' dvrunpecBeuris, 00, 6, an ambassador’s substitute, Gloss. avrimplapat, Dep. to buy in return, Byz. ¢ dvrumpoatpeats, ews, , mutual preference, mpos 4dAfAous Arist. Eth. E. 7. 2, 12. Lcoaitere. fut. —B&Aodpat, Med. to propose instead of another, Tov €repoy Plat. Legg. 755 D:—the Act. occurs in Galen, avrimpoBodn, 7s, 1), a proposing instead of another, Plat. Legg. 755 D, 756A. 2. a counter-proposition or plea, Rhett. dvtumpoeidov, aor. 2(cf.*eldw) to look on face to face, dAAHAovs Philo 2.544. dvrimpoeypt, (elt ibo) to come forward against or to meet, Twi Thuc. 6. 66 absol., App. Pun. 107. dvrumpobupéopat, Dep. to be hostilely disposed, Aen. Tact. 11. dvrimpoua, Adv. for next to nothing, cheap, Xen. Ages. 1, 18, cf. Poll. 7. 10:—Lob, Paral. 280 takes it as an Adj., dvrimpotkos, ov. dvrumpotocxopat, Dep. to hold out before one, present, as weapons, The- mist. 357 B :—Hesych. has the Act. dvrumpoxiAéopat, Med. to retort a legal challenge (mpéxdnaws), Dem. 979-9: to challenge in turn, c. acc. et inf., Dion. H. 4. p. 2324 Reisk. : —hence —KAnors, ews, 9, a retorting of a mpéxAnots, Hesych. i dvrumpoxataAnmréov, verb. Adj. one must anticipate in turn, Arist. Rhet. Al. 9, 12. ; avrumpotive, to drink in turn, alua dAAHAos Joseph. B. J. 5. 10, 4. II. to present in return (cf. mpotive I. 2), dotdds Dionys. Eleg. 1. 4 Bgk. avrimpocdyopetw, to salute again, Plut. Crass. 3, in aor. -evoa :—but the Att. aor. is dvrimpooetmoy, Theophr. Char. 15 ; pass. dvrempooeppnony — Xen. Mem: 3. 13; I. dvrimpocapdopar, Med. to heap in turn, dvr. Ti yiv to scrape up new soil upon, Xen. Oec. 17, 13. [V. dudw.] dvrumpoceys, (fu ib) to go against, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3,24,V.1, Thuc. 6, 66. avrimpoceitoy, v. sub dvtipogayopeta. dvrurpoceAatva, intr. to march against, Dio C. 46. 37. dvrumpocépxopat, Dep., =dvtimpdcenu, Tur Dio C. 60. 6. dvrimpooéxw, to attend to in turn, tii Nicet. Eug. 6. 93- dvrimpookahéopat, Med. to summon in turn, Dem. 1153. 3- avrurpookivéw, to fall down and worship in turn, Plut. 2. 1117 C. dvriumpooAaAéw, to address in turn, Byz. dvrumpooriPypt, to add on the other hand, Byz. avrumpoodépa, to bring near in turn, Adxvov Tit Xen. Symp. 5, 9- avrurpoodOéyyopat, Dep. to accost in return, Philo 1. 36. dvrvmohepnéw, to wage war against, Thuc, 3. 393 ¢. dat., Plat, Criti. 4, dvtimporpevyais, ews, 7, a reply, retort, Byz. CG 148 dvTimporx pew — avtistpatevopat. dytumpooxwpée, to approach in turn, rw Byz. avrimpécwros, ov, with the face towards, facing, rots moheplors Xen, Cyr. 7. 1, 25: face to face, dvrimpéowmor paxdspevot Id. Hell. 6. 5, 26. Ady. -mws, Arist. Mirab. 72 :—the Verb —wéa, to face, rvl Byz, dvrimpordors, ews, 9}, a counter-proposition, Tvetz. in An. ‘Ox. 4. 74. dvrumporetve, to hold out in turn, ri befidv Xen. Hell. 4. 1, 31; ixernpias Dion. H. 8. 19. 2.=sq., Dio C. 48. 11, in Med. _dvrumporiOnpr, to propose in turn, Dio C. 65. 1. Gvrumpohépw, to produce, allege on the other hand, Greg. Nyss. avrimpepos, ov, (mpaipa) with the prow towards, avr. rotor BapBapowt yevopevor Hdt. 8.11; rods éomdous tais vavoly dvrimpdpors Ace Thuc. 4.8; [rats vavot] pi) dvrempapors xpha0ae not to charge prow to prow, Id. 7. 36; 7d dvrinpwpov Evyxpotcat Ib.; dvr. EuBddAdAcoOat Ib. 34; T&v modeulow dvr. epoppotyTwy Id. 8.75; dvr. KaTacTHoa Tas Tpinpes Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 28; 7d -o7pdrevpa dvr. domep rprhpy mpoohye Ib. 7. 5, 23. , , 2. like dvrimpéawros, face to face, rad dvrinpypa . . Brénev rapeor’ Soph. Tr. 223; kar’ dvrimpwpa vavordOpov in front of them, Eur. Rhes. 136; dpyijs dvrimppou xvAwvSoupévns Plut. ap. Stob. 175. 49: head-foremost, mirrew Or. Sib. 8. 190. avritreptooopar, Med. to flap thewings in rivalry, Eust. Opusc. 320. 43. dvritropa, aros, 76, a stumble against, LXX: an accident, Medic. ; dvrinrwcts, ews, }, a falling against, resistance, Hipp. 22. 48. II. in Gramm., an interchange of cases, Schol, Eur. Or. 140. dvrimrwtikds, 7, dv, of or belonging to dvrimrwois (11), Walz Rhett. 8. 660 :—Adv., —Kis, with such interchange, Eust. 29. 39. avrimiyos, ov, rump to rump, Arist. H. A. 5. 2, 8., 5.8, 43 cf. mvynddv. avrumucrevo, to wrestle against, twvi Schol. Soph. Tr. 441. dvrimidos, ov, (mvAn) with the gates opposite, dMAHAnot Hat. 2. 148. dvruruv9dvopat, Dep. to ask or inguire in turn, Eccl. dvrimupyos, ov, like a tower or fort, Eur. Bacch. 1097; formed like dvrideos, etc. II. as Subst., dy7., 6, a repository, dvr. vAwor Liban. 1. p. 358. To. dvrurupyéa, to build a tower over against, c. acc. cogn., mow THYD extpyacav reared up this rival city, i.e. the Areopagus as a rival to ‘the Acropolis, Aesch. Eum. 688. dvruruprevw, to return signals (mupool), Polyb. 8. 30, 3- dvrippiimife, to smite again in return, Jo. Chr. Gvtippémw, to counterpoise, balance, Aesch. Ag. 5743 vivt Hipp. Art. 782: metaph. to vacillate, Philo 2.170, etc.: cf. dvripporos, avrippéw, to flow or (of wind) blow contrariwise, Poll. 1. 111. Gvrippiyvupt, fo break opposite ways, Plut. 2. 1005 B, dvrippyots, ews, 7, a counter-statement, gainsaying, altercation, mpds vwa Polyb. 2. 7,7; contradiction, disproof, Diod. 1. 38. avtippyréov, verb. Adj. one must speak against, Plat. Polit. 297 B. dvrippytikés, 7, dv, controversial, Sext.Emp.P.1.21. Adv.—Kas, Byz. dvrippytropevao, to speak against, dispute with, rwi Max. Tyr. 9g. 3. dvrippwov, 76,4 plant, snap-dragon, Theophr. H.P. 9.19, 2, Diosc. 4.133. avrippowa, %, (dvrippéw) a back-current, Theophr. Vent. 53. dyrippotria, 4, even adjustment, symmetry, Hipp. Art. 813. dvripporros, oy, like isdpporos, terpoising, compensating for, Twds Dem. 12.6; dyewv..Avmys dvr. dx8os to balance the counterpoising weight of sorrow, Soph. El. 119 ; Qeavot. . dvr. balancing her, weighing as much as.., Antiph. ‘AA, 1. 24:—Ady., dvrippémws mparreay tivi so as to balance his power, Xen. Hell. 5.1, 36; also neut. pl. as Adv., yuxas & dvrippora Oévres in the balance, Epigr. Gr. 21. 2. like dvridvyos, equivalent to, c, dat., Xen, Occ. 3, 15; mpés Tt Def, Plat. 412 A. avrippous, ovy, (Sw) flowing directly opposite to, NeiAy Strabo 492. €Bop.ar, Dep. to revere in turn, Plut. 2. 1117 C. vivopat, Med, to meet pride with pride, Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 1} II. the Act. in Eust. 1563. 40, ¢o extol in return. vrlonkos, ov, compensating, equivalent, Eust. 1075. 8. avrionkde, to terbalance, compensate for (cf. dvaonkcw), c, dat. Tei, ws Totcde (sc. xaxois) dis dvrione@oa Aesch. Pers. 437; ¢. gen., Oca Tis POcipe ce, dvricnkdoas Ths rapo.8’ ebmpagias some god ruins thee, making compensation for, balancing, thy former happiness, Eur. Hec. 573 ¢. acc., Tiwais dyrionkwow xapw I will compensate the favour by honours, Luc, Trag. 243; fo support by way of compensation, twa Hipp. Acut. 389. Io, cf. Art. 782 G. II. to balance, ras mAdaTiyyas * Clem, Al. 151. dyrirjxwpa, aos, 7, an equipoise, comp tion, Eust. 546. 24. Kaos, ews,-Ion. 10s, %, eguipoise, compensation, avr. yiverat Hat. 4. 50; Dor. -cdxwors, Inscr. Boeot. 3. 4 (Keil). dvrionpatve, fo give a counter-sign, Joseph. A.J. 19. 1, 10. cs to give hostile signs, Twi Paus. 10. 23, 3. dvriohmw, to make to putrefy in turn, Galen. "Avro deveror, of, the followers of Antisthenes, Arist. Metaph. 7. 3, 7. *AvrioPeviopés, 5, a way of life according to the teaching of Anti- sthenes, Julian. 187 C. dvrictypa, 76, sigma reversed, as a critical mark, Diog. L. 3. 66, and Gramm. avricwTde, fut. -oopar, to be silent in turn, Ar. Lys. 528. dvrioxatwpéo, fo lay snares for, rivd Tzetz. Hist. 3. 256. évricxevdtopat, Med. to furnish for oneself in opposition, Tov olkov Xen. Ages. 8, 6. évrloxwos, ov, throwing a shadow the opposite way, Julian. 147 C; (Spor . . dvr. "Hods Nonn. D. 7. 311. avrioxAnpwvopat, Pass. to be hardened in opposition, Byz. avrurkoréw, fo obstruct, T@ Sealy Sext. Emp. M. 2. 78. Hence Subst., dvrioxéryots, 7%}, an obstruction, Gloss. dvrioxamre, fut. youat, to mock in return, Plut. Timol. 15 :—Pass. to take a gibe in return for one's own, #5ews Dio Cc. 66. 11. dvr-lodopat, Pass. fo oppose on equal terms, Thue. 3. 11. II. the Act. to equalise occurs in Eccl. ? : dvricopifopat, Dep. to use intrigues in turn, mpds Tt Arist. Pol. 4. 13, 5- dvricorpurrevio, =foreg., Numen. ap. Eus. P. E. 736 A:—from avti- codiorhs, of, 5, dne who seeks to refute by sophistry or trick, Luc. Alex, 43, etc. :—dvriodpeupa, 74, one trick against another, Justin. M. vriomdots, ews, }, (avriandw) a drawing back, esp. of the humours of the body, Hipp. 47. 17., 361. 27, ete. avrionacpa, aros, 74, in war, a distraction, diversion, like dvrimepi- oracya, Polyb. 2. 18, 3, Diod. 20. 86. II. a quarrel, Joseph. dvnomacpés, 5, a convulsion, Ar. Lys.967. II. the counter-move- ment (ebb and flow), of the sea, Crates Gramm. ap. Stob. App. 78 Gaisf. évrietacréov, verb. Adj. one must draw off by another outlet, Galen. dynomacrikés, 7, dv, able to draw back, retractile, tiv borépav moeiv dvr. Arist, H. A. 10. 7, 6:—Adv. -«@s, Oribas. 2. p. 32 Da- temb, II. in metre, antispastic, v. sq. évrtomacros, ov, (dvrismdw) drawn in the contrary direction, vepédat mvevpaow dvr. Orph. H. 20.5; of machinery, Athenio Mech. 5. 2. spasmodic, convulsive, ddaypos doTéw avr. Soph. Tr. 770. Mi dytigraaros (sc. mous), 6, in Prosody, an antispast, a foot made up of an iambus and trochee, u--v, e.g. ’AAéfavdpos; so, dvricmacra pédy Phryn. Trag. ap. Ath. 635 C; dvrionaora alone, Soph. Fr. 361. dvromdw, fut. dow [a], to draw the contrary way, hold back, avr. Spp@pevoy Aesch. Pr. 337; Tos pev relvew Tovs 8 dvr. Ar. Pax 493, cf. Luc. Catapl. 4; opp. to omdw, Arist. H. A. 5. 8, 4, al.:—Pass. to suffer a check, 1d, Rhet. 3.9, 6. 2. to draw to itself, Xen. Cyn. 5, 1; els airé Arist. Probl. 21. 20 :—Med. ‘o draw over to one’s own side, Polyb. 23. 10, 14. II, intr. =dvréxopa, to cling to, c. gen., Ap. Rh. 2. 598. dvriomevdu, to oppose eagerly, contend against, mpds Twa Antipho 112. 16; émiOvpjpact Dio C. 59. 13. Gyruomdb.ov, 74, (sro5ds) a substitute for [mineral] ashes, vegetable ashes, Oribas. 2. 720, Galen, ; dvriemoBov in Diosc. 5. 86. dvriomovbdle, =dyrioreviw, tii Dio C. 40. 55. avrirmovdla, 7), opposite exertion, Oenom. ap. Eus. P. E. 217 A. dvriordbny [a], Adv. opposing hand to hand, in battle, Byz. avriorGbiaios, a, ov, a furlong long, i.e. enormous, Schol. Od. dvriotabpdw, =dyrionkda, Basil., Greg. Naz.:—so in Med., Eust.1875.8. « éyriord8pyors, j,=dyriajxwois, Jo. Chrys., Gramm. évriorabpifo, =dyrionKde, Incert. V. T. dvriorabpos, ov, (ard0un) counterpoising, balancing, Twt Plat. Soph. 229 C; xpuady dvr. rijs kepadijs ox ééEavro Diod. 5. 29:—metaph., in compensation for, dvr. Tod Onpds ExOvew riv xdpnv Soph. El. 571. dvrioriota, 4, =dvricracis, Nicet. Ann. 179 C. dvrordordto, to form a party against, rwvi Xen. An. 4. 1, 27; of dvre- oranaovres=ol dyricraciara, 1d, Cyr. 7. 4, 33 dvr. mpos mavra to offer opposition to .., Dio C. 37. 54. dvrrraiciacris, ov, 6, =dvriatacwrns, Dio C. 73. 4. avrirraéotos, ov, of equal weight, Max. Tyr. 39. 1; metaph., Id. 4. I. & S, €WS, 1), an opposite party, crdois Kat dvr. Kal paxn Plat. Rep. 560 A. II. a standing against, opposition, tvxns Plut. Aemil. 36; & dvr. dyavi{ecda: in pitched battle, Hdn. 5. 4,6; ton dvr. equipoise, Arist. Mund. 5, qe III. a counter-plea, set-off, Rhet. er. €s, seditious, rebellious, Clem. Al. 430. VrLoTioWTNS, ov, b, one of the Si i Weg Sen, ey ee ts AS opposite faction or party, Hdt, 1. 92., Gyriotitiw, = dvbicrapat, to’ resist, oppose, esp. as a political partisan, Hat. 3. §2; zi Plat. Gorg. 513 C; ae Tm Pht 2, a, B. ‘ avriorarypa, Aros, 74, @ resistance, obstacle, Nicet. Ann. 345 A. avriordrns [a], ov, 6, an opponent, adversary, Aesch. Theb. 518, Plut. 2. 1084 B. P II. a support, stay, Hero Belop. 131 sqq- avrirririkés, UB by, disposed for resisting, Hermog. Ady. -«q@s, Greg. Nyss.—So dvdoritos, ov, Greg. Naz. A Fe to set in contrast, twi 71 Jo, Chrys.:—Pass, to differ from, avriorépyo, to love in return, Byz. dvrlorepvov, 74, the part of the spine opposite the breast, Poll. 2. 177- dyrorepavée, to crown in turn, Eumath. 8. 10 : dvric: Ako, =dv0icrapa, Hesych, a¥-1 avrLornptypa, aros, 74, a prop or support, Hi : me- taph. @ support, oe Lxx Ga Rene, bec ee Art. 785, 793: me GVTLOTHPLYLOS, 0, a pushing against; y. sub ornpryuds II. 2. dvrornpite, fut. tw, to support, Arist. Probl, 3 34 5 r II. to press against, Hipp. Art. 813, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 137 a dvriotihBw, to shine by reflexion or in rivalry, Greg Naz dvriororxelwors, ews, }, =cvriaroxla 11, Schol. Il. 12. 29. no to stand Opposite in rows or pairs, xopot dvriaToLxoovTes A Sire: An, 5. 4,12; dvr. run to stand vis-a-vis to a partner in a dance, td. symp. 2, 20. ITI. of letters, v. cvarotxos. dvrurroxxta, }, a standing opposite in pairs, rev moddyv Arist. Probl. 10. 30; mpayparoy Plut. 2. 474 B. II. of letters, v. avororxos. tet rag ov, ranged opposite in rows or pairs, Arist. Incess. An. 6, 48, 6 and 7 2. standing over against, ond dytiororxos Gs (Ald. one dvr. dy just like a shadow), Eur. Andr, 745; dvricraya Aéyov Tovroist corresponding with, Dion, H. de Rhet. 9 7 A it of letters, vy. avorotxos. ce Se : Gvtloropos, oy, prob. f. 1. for duloropos in Arr. Tact avrioroxacriKds, 4, dv, conjecturing in turn, Schol. Dem. dvriokvAcvors, ews, ), a mutual spoiling, plunder, Nicet. Ann. 347 An ; dvrotpirevopat, Dep, to take the field, make war against, ro Xen. . ° , * , avristparn yew — avritiOnur. Gyr. 8. 8, 26:—so also in Act., Diod. Excerpt. 499. 22; metaph., Aristaen. 2. 1. : avriotpaitnyéw, to act against as general or (generally) to make war against, rwx Dion. H. 11. 37, Clem. Al. 581. II. to be Propraetor, Plut. Sertor. 12. avrotparyynpa, aros, 7d, a hostile maneuvre or stratagem, Math, Vett. 326 :—also —yyors, 7, Onesand. 32. dvriotparnyos, 6, the enemy's general, Thuc. 7. 86, Dion. H. 6. 5. II. the lieutenant of the orparnyds at Rome, the Propraetor or Legatus Praetoris, Polyb. 15. 4, 1, and oft. in C.I.; also =dv@vmaros, the Pro-consul, Polyb. 28. 3, 1, cf. 28. 5, 6. dvrotparirys, ov, 6, a soldier of the enemy, Joseph. A. J. 13.14, 2 (v. 1. -cractmrns), Liban. 4. 522. dvrurtpitomedeia, 7), =sq., Polyb. 3. ror, 8. dvrvotpiitoméSevcts, ews, 7), an encamping opposite, the position of two armies in sight of one another, Dio C. 78. 26. dvrotpiromedetw, to encamp over against, rit Isocr. 130 D, Polyb. I. 74, 13, ete. II. more commonly in Med., rut Hdt. 1. 76, Thuc., Xen.; absol., Thuc. 1. 30; so pf. pass., Id. 4. 124. dvrirtpemréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. convertible, logical term in Arist. An. Pr. I. 45, 10, al. avriotpenros, ov, that can be turned about : 1a. dvriorp. machines that move on a pivot or swivel, Diod. 20. gI. dvrirtpépw, fut. yw: pf. -Eotpopa:—to turn to the opposite side: —Pass. to turn and look round, Aristaen. I. 4. 2. intr. to wheel about, face about, Xen. Ages. 1, 16. II. to retort an argument, tods Adyous Arist. Top. 8.14, 1; absol., 5 dvriarpépov a retort, Gell. Se 2x III. in Arist. two terms are said to be converted or convertible, dvriarpépew (intr.) or dvriorpépecOat (pass.), when they can be transposed, or one can be put in the place of another, kin 12, 6, al.; 7d yévn Kara ray cidy KaTryopeira, Ta 52 e€ldn KaTa Tov yevav ob dvriorpéper are not conversely predicable of genera, Ib. 5, Il :—impers., dvriatpéper a conversion of the terms may be made, Id. Gen. et Corr. 2. 11, 5, cf. de An. 2,11, 8, Probl. 5. 25., 30. 4. 2. this word is used most freq. in the doctrine of syllogism, where the reduc- tion of the 2nd and 3rd figures to the ist is effected by the conversion of one of the premisses, v. An. Pr, 1. 2, sq.; the word being used either of the terms, dvriorpepe 7O B 7@ A the term B is convertible with A, Ib. 2, 22, 1, al.; 7d I’ mpds 70 A dv. Ib. 2; dvr. 7d xadddov TH Kara Hépos Ib. 1. 11, 3, etc.; or of the propositions, Ib. 1. 2, al.; dvr. «aOdAov to be simply convertible, Ib. 1. 3,1; dvr. émt peépous, xara pépos Ib. 1. 20, 3, al. 3. generally, to be suited conversely for one or another purpose, 6 rémos dvrictpéper mpds 7d dvackeva ey H Td KaracKevd ev Id. Top. 2. 2, 4; dvr. mpds dud Ib. 2. 6,1, al. IV. Pass. to be mutually opposed, dvrecrpaypéva mpds GAAnda Id. H. A. 2. 1, 9, cf. Polyb. 6. 32, 6. 2. in Logic, converted, of propositions, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 28, 7-1 2-5,43 avr. TH waxvy 6 ebpws its converse, Id.G. A. 5. 4,73 4 avr. mpdaGears Id, Phys. 3. 6, 13. 3. Adv., dvrecrpappevws, conversely, Ib. 3.6, 7,.P. A. 4. 9, 6, al. ;—in Logic, conversely, by conversion, Id. Interpr. 13, 31. dvtiarpooy, 7, a turning about: I. in choruses and dances, the antistrophé or returning of the chorus, exactly answering to a pre- vious orpopy, except that they now moved from left to right instead of from right to left: hence the name given to the verses answering to the orpopy, as in Pind., and Trag., cf. Dion. H. de Comp. 19, al.; v. dyriarpopind. II. in Rhet. the figure of retortion, Dion. H. III. conversion, kara ri dvr. ths dvadovyias Arist. Phys. 8. 10, 7:—in Logic, the conversion of the terms of a proposition, Id. An. Pr. I. 3, 3; dv. b€xec0ar to admit of conversion, be convertible, Ib. 1. 45, 43 V. dvTioTpepw II. IV. in Gramm., an inverted construc- tion, as éxape Tevxav, Anpeis Exwv, for erevge apav, exeis Anpav: also a reverse position of the letters in a word, v. E.M. 424.8 avriotpopikd, Gv, 7a, the lyrical parts of Greek dramas, consisting of strophés and antistrophés, Gramm. dvriotpodos, ov, iurned so as to face one another, set over against, and so correlative, codrdinate, counterpart, Plat. Theaet. 158 C, etc. ; Twi to a thing, Id. Gorg. 464 B, Rep. 605 A, Arist. Rhet. 1. 1, 1, Pol. 4. 6, 11, etc.; but also rwds, as if dvr. were a Subst., the correlative or counterpart of .., Plat. Rep. 530 D, Gorg. 465 D, Isocr. 94 D, ete. ; dyr. mpds Tt Luc, Merc. Cond. 31 :—dvr... domep Arist. Pol. 4. 5, 2-— Adv, —pws, codrdinately, rivi Plat. Rep. 539 D. II. that can be retorted, Dion. H. de Rhet. 9. 5. III. é& dvriorpdpov by an in- verted construction, Rhett. Iv. dvriarpopos, = dvriatpopn, Dion, H. de Comp. 19, Schol. Ar, Pl. 253: also, 7d dvr. Arist. Probl. 19. 15. dytiabyKAnTos, 7}, a counter-senate, name given by Marius to his body- guard, Plut. Mar. 35, Sull. 8. dvriovykptvw [t], 2o compare one with another, Charito p. 98. dvrovliyla, 7), a bination of opp , Eccl. dvricvAAoyifopar, Dep. to answer by syllogism, Arist. Rhet. 2. 25, 2- dvritupBovAevw, to give contrary advice, Stob. Ecl. 2.40. dvricuppiixéopat, Pass. to be helped in return, bad twos Longin. 17. t. ‘, to write a Symposium in rivalry of Plato, Luc, ninth VTL Up Lexiph. 1. a ‘ re . dvricuppovéw, f. 1. for dvripavéw in Plut. 2. 334 B. avricuvaye, to gather eo meomtne of schismaties, Eccl. dvricuvadelw, to blot out, obscure in turn, Vol. Herc. 1.18 A. dvriruvavtdw, to meet face to face, Anth. P.12.227. avrurtvatis, ews, 7, a rival, i.e. schismatical, congregation, Eccl. avricuvdanre, intr. to meet on opposite sides, Galen, ;—in Byz. it also occurs in Pass. 149 dvriotvSpopos, ov, rushing, dashing together, Byz. dvrictvOeros, ov, corresponding, Philes de Anim. 29. 97. dvrcuvtdcow, to compose against or in reply, Epiphan. avrodpatpite, to play at ball against, of dvriapaipl(ovres the parties in a match at ball, Xen. Lac. 9, 5. avrirpatrw, to slaughter in turn, Dio C. 45. 47, in aor. 2 pass. avnodiy, 6, a wedge placed so as to meet another, Math. Vett. 67. dvriadpiyye, (acc. to Littré in Hipp. Art. 781) @vOev wat evOev dvr, to bind tight one against another. dvrioppayiopa, 74, a sealed copy, C. 1. 2222. 12. dvrioxnparife, fo meet one figure by another, Dion. H. de Rhet. 8. 143 also Subst, -topés, 4, the use of such figures in turn, Ib. dvr-aoxipifopat, Med. to be stiff in maintaining a contrary opinion, Thuc. 3.44; mpdés 7 Plut. 2. 535 E. avrloxupos, ov, strong to resist, Hesych. avr-taxve, fut. vow [0], fo repel by force, Dio C. 48.11, C. I. 2077. dvr-icxw, collat. form of dvréxw (q. v.), Hipp. Fract. 759, Soph. Ph, 830, Thuc. 1. 7; but dvr-icyew is often f. 1. for aor. dvri-oxeiv. avricalw, to preserve in turn, ap. Suid. ; dvriowpos, ov, (¢@pa) to serve as a substitute, Byz. dvritaypa, aros, 7d, an opposing force, Diod. 11. 67, Plut. Cleom. 23. dvrurakréoy, verb. Adj. of dvrirdoow, one must array against, Te mpds tt Plut. 2.127 F. 2. (from Pass.) one must make resistance, pés twa Arist. Top. 5. 4, 17. dvrirakrixés, 7, dv, fit for resistance, mpds 71 Plut. 2. 759 E. 2. in Eccl. heretical :—Adv, —k@s, Eccl. :—also Subst. dvruranrtys, ov, 6, a heretic, Clem. Al. 526. dvruridavretw, =dyrionedw, Anth. Plan, 221, Liban. 4. 798. dvtitaXavros, ov, =icorddavros, Hesych. avririhdvrwcts, ews, 4), equilibrium, Walz Rhett. 1. 466. dvrurapias, 6, the Roman Proguaestor, Dio C. 41. 43. ; dvriragis, ews, , (dvriréaow) a setting in array against, } operépa dvr. Trav Tpjpov their ships ranged for battle, Thuc. 7.17; dvr. movi oa mpds Twa, =dytiraooecOat, Id. 5. 8. 2. generally, opposition, Plut. 2. 663 B, etc. avturipdrre, to stir up in opposition, Max. Tyr. 14. 7. dvrirtiows, ews, 4, (dvriretvw) a stretching the contrary way, e.g. in the setting of a dislocated limb, Hipp. Art. 836. 2. opposition, resistance, magay dvriraow dyrireivew Plat. Legg. 781 C. dvritdcow, Att. -rartw: fut. -rdfw:—to set opposite to, range in battle against, 70 dpiorov dvr. Méponot Hdt. 5.110; tiv’ dvrirages T@5e; Aesch. Theb. 408, etc.; dvr. Tov vépuov mpds Thy dvatdaay to set the law in opposition to your impudence, Aeschin, 56. 8, cf. Isocr. 201 B, etc.:—so in Med., mpds 7d tumetpérepov abrav 7d ToAunpdrepoy avti- tagaode Thuc. 2.87; trav “EAAnver dperiy 7h Béptou Suvape davrird- fac0a Id. 3. 56. II. in Med. also to set oneself against, meet face to face, meet in battle, dvtirdgopa xrev@v oe Eur. Phoen. 622, cf, Thue. 4. 55, etc.; wept Trav mpwreiaw dvtiragacba jpiv Dem. 36. 6:— so in Pass. to be drawn out in array against, Tut Hdt. 4.134, Xen. Hell. 3.1,6; mpés twa Hat. 7. 103, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 18, etc.; xaTa Twas Id. Hell. 4. 2, 18; so, 7d dytirerdxOa yvwpn GdAAnAos Thue. 3. 83. 2. generally, to oppose, resist, Polyb. 32. 18, 8, ete.—For Eur. Supp. 1144, v. dvritivw sub fin. dvrvradpetw, to dig a trench in opposition, Philo Belop. 93 C. dvruteive, fut. —rev@, (Plat. Rep. 604 A) :—to stretch or strain back, eis rotmadev ta omapria Arist. Probl. 8. 9, 5; Tas jvlas Plut. 2. 13 D. 2. to stretch out or offer in return, repay, tt dvrl Twos Eur. Med. 891. II. intr. to act or strive against, counteract, resist, émBovdlg Pind. N. 4. 60; mvt Hdt. 7. 161, Plat., etc.; dvz. mavri Adyw Plat. Phaedo g1 C; mpdés 71 Id, Phaedr. 256 A, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 6, 2:—absol., Hdt.7. 219, Soph. Ant. 714, etc.; ov dvrérevoy, GAN’ eixov Hadt. 8. 3; bmeixer eal ove avr. Plat. Legg. 727 D; dvriretvovres bvo pulling one against the other, Hipp. Fract.'762; cf. dvrizaots. 2. of countries and places, to lie over against, Twi Plat. Themist. 8. avriteixiopa, 74, a counter-fortification, Thuc, 2. 77, Ath. 602 D. dvrurépvw, fut. -rep@, to cut against, i.e. as a remedy or antidote, pappaka ..dvrirepudw Bporoio: Eur. Alc. 972: cf. dvriropos, évrépvor. dvriréptra, fut. Yw,.to delight in return, Plut. 2. 334 A, in Pass. dvrureraypéves, Ady. pf. pass. in an opposite way, Twi Plotin. 5. 3, 15« dvrirevxos, (gend. uncertain), a cast of the dice, Eubul. Kuf. 2. dvruretixw, to make in opposition, dvrvrérukro Antimach. 24. dvritexvato, to use art in turn, Dion. H. de Rhet. 9. 5. dvrirexvaopar, Dep. to contrive in opposition, counter-plan, rade Hat. 5. 70; Tut Max. Tyr. 32. 9; absol., Plut. Sert. 18. dyturexvéw, to be a rival in art, Schol. Ar. Vesp. 1402. dvruréxvyots, ews, 7), t ing, lation, Thuc. 7. 70: in Byz. also avrurexvia, 7. dvtitexvos, oy, rival in an art or craft, Ar. Ran, 816, Plat. Rep. 493 A: ove éxeivy obbe rots morhuacw adrod Id. Phaedo 60 D, cf. Legg. 817 B; c. gen., TAS waryyavelas abrod Luc. Alex. 43. dvrurnpéw, to preserve, maintain in turn, Arr. Epict. 2. 20, 14. dvruriOqpt, fut. S400, to set against or so as to oppose, Gadagcalace divas dvriévra pévos orddas Simon. 6. b. to set against so as to contrast or compare, Twird txelvy dvriOjom Hat. 1. 207, cf. 8. 66; Sto yap dyrides Svoiy Eur. Or. 551; also c. gen., Tv AOnvalav tx ToAAOD Eumetpiay Tis operépas ef dAlyou pedérns Thuc. 2. 85, cf. 3. 56; with a Prep., dvr. 71 mpés Tt Dem. 571. 13 :—Pass. to be contrasted, rive or mpés Tt Plat. Soph. 257 E. 2. dvr. twit tiva to match one against the other in battle (like guvinus in Hom.), Lat. committere, $ tgous toot . . dvriOeis Eur. Phoen. 750, cf, Ar. Eq. 353:—Pass. to be ‘ — 150 avtiryLaw— avrippacis. matched =e against rage Hdt. 4. 50., 8. 83. 3. to retort, rejoin, avTibes mappynoia, bras .., Eur. El. 1049; avrideto’ 4, Id. Tro. 917; dvr. b7c.., Thuc. 6. 18, a é intr. to Mie seat Arr, Epict. 3. 24, 24, etc. II. to place or deposit in return, aytt- Gévras év vaois 7) xadxdv 7). . Eur. Hipp. 620, cf. Xen. Mem. 3. 14, 1: to give in return or as a ony see! Pind. O. 3. 543 dvr. rt Twos one thing for another, rijv év04d AvAw dvriWeioa ris exef Eur. I. T. 358. “a , fut. ow, to honour in return, rwa Xen. Hell. 3. 1, 13; Twa ri Id. Cyr. 5. 2, 11, etc, :—fut. med. in pass. sense, Id. Oec. 9, It. II. Med. as law-term, to Jjix a ti timate of damages, ©. gen. pretii, Plat. Apol. 36 B, Dem. 743. 21: cf. Tipdw ITI. 2, SroTipde. avriripnpa, 7d, and dvrutipyots, ews, 7, as Att. law-term, much the same as drorlunots, Hesych. Gvrutipwpéopar, Dep. fo avenge oneself on, rw Eur. I. T. 357, Thue. 3, 82; absol. to revenge oneself, take vengeance, Ar. Pax 134, 609 :— a fut. pass. occurs in Schol. Lyc. :—and verb. Adj.,.—réov, in Galen. : ey ig ov, =dyriros (q. v.), Eust. 1346. 3. vTiTipmpypa, aros, 7d, and —rywpla, #, vengeance, revenge, Schol. Lyc.; so —risdpyors, ews, 7, Origen. z vritive, fut. —riow, to pay or suffer punishment for a thing, 7: Theogn. 7383 absol., Soph. Aj. 1086 :—generally, to repay, xdpirds rive Eust. 142. 15. II. Med. to exact or inflict in turn, dyaryhs dyriti- cacba pévov to exact death as a punishment for bringing, Aesch. Ag. 1263; méow dixny (v.1. dip) TovS dvyTiTicacba KaKay to exact a penalty from him for these evil deeds (cf. dworive), Eur. Med. 261, ubi v. Elmsl, (256). 2. to avenge, punish, odv péovov Eur. Supp. 1144 (where Canter restored dvtiticopa: for dvrtrdooopat).—Cf. riw 1. [On the quantity, v. rivw.] dvrurt ‘wo, to d in turn, Heliod. 7. 27, in Pass. dvriroApdw, to dare to stand against another, Thuc. 2.89; mpds ToA- Hnpovs Id, 7. 21. dvrirohpos, ov, (réApa), boldly attacking, Aesch. Eum. 553. Gvrlropos, ov, (dvriréuvw) cut as a remedy for an evil :—dvriropoy, 76, a remedy, antidote, h. Hom. Cer. 229; avritopa dévvay antidotes for sorrows, Pind. P. 4. 394. dvrurovéopar or —dopat, Pass. to have a different accent from, rit Eust. 1025. 4. Tovos, ov, (dvtireivw) strained against, resisting, Plat. Tim. 62 C: like aAlvrovos, of a bow, Anth, Plan. 211. 4. 2. as Subst., dvri- Tova, Td, cords to manage an engine used in sieges, Plut. Marcell. 15, cf. Philo Belop. 99 D. dvruroketw, to shoot arrows in turn, Xen. An. 3. 3, 15 :—and Subst. -rotérys, ov, 6, a hostile archer, African. Cest. in Math. Vett. p. 301. dvruropéw, to bore right through, c. gen., ddpv xpods dvrerdpyoer Il. 5. 337: also c. acc., wuxwov Sépov dvtiropnoas having broken it open, Il. 10. 267, cf. Herm, h. Hom. Merc. 86, 178 :—hence dvtirépyots, 7, a piercing, Eust. 672. 30. ‘ ros, ov, (poét. for dvdruros, which only occurs in Hesych.), like madlyriros, requited, revenged, dvtira épya the work of revenge, Od. 17. 51, 60; dvrira épya adds revenge for her son, Il. 24. 213; cf. Solon 12, 31. - dvritpityos, 5, the eminence of the external ear (cf. rpdyos v), Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 2, Poll. 2. 85. dvritpiiy@déw, to bewail in turn, Theod, Prodr. dvntpaupatife, to wound in return, Eust. Opusc. 233. 26. let Seigged [@], Pass. to be exasperated in turn, mpés riva Eust. 497. 9. avrirpédhw, to sustain or maintain in turn, Xex dvrirpéxw, to run in rivalry or against, Jo “ avrurptBw [Tt], to rub in return, Plotin. 6." ©. in Pass. avruruyxdve, aor. -érixov, to meet with in urn, Twds Simon, 184, Theogn. 1334; dvr. émxoupias dxé rivos Thuc. 6. 87; dvr. paxas to fall into quarrel, Pind. N. 7.62; dvr. xotpddos to hit upon a rock, Opp. H. 4. 480; mAcioroy dvr. débdov C. I. 1212. 2. dvruritréw, to strike against, resist, repel, esp. of a hard body, ru Arist. Meteor. 3.1, 4; mpdés 7 Ach. Tat. 2.38: absol., Hipp. 665.6; 70 eixov Kat ph dytirvTodyv Plat. Crat.420 D :—also in Med., Hipp. 638. 51. av MS, és, resisting, repellent, like dvrirumos, Hdn. 6. 7. 2. metaph, hard, mévos Philo 2. 162. avririmla, 4), the resistance of a hard body, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 39, Aretae. IL. repercussion, . 8: 3, 38. Caus. M.-Diut. 1. 14; in pl., Plut. 2. 599 D. Hermes ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 400. -dvritimos, ov, rarely 7, ov, v. inf. 1. 2: (runt) :—repelled by a hard body, rémos dvr. blow against blow, blow and counter-blow, of the hammer and anvil, Orac. ap. Hdt. 1. 67, cf. 68:—of sound, echoed, echoing, ordévos Soph. Ph. 695, 1460, cf. Anth. Plan. 194; «ard 7d dvr. by repercussion, of an echo, Luc. Dom. 3 :—of light, reflected, dxrives Tryph. 519, cf. Anth. P. 9. 822. 2. corresponding, as the Stamp to the die, dya dvr. ray dAnOway figuring or representing the true, Ep. Hebr. 9. 24, cf. Ep. Petr. 3. 21, Nonn. Jo. 12. 122; dvr. rots Saxptors xdpira C. I. 6210; dvr. wiynya an exact counterfeit, Or. Sib. I. 33., 8. 270. b. as Subst., dvriruros, 6, or dvrirumoy, 74, an image, “Aupovos kepaod xdAxeov dvr. C. I. 4535: metaph. an impression on the mind, Plotin. 2. 9, 6. II. act. repelling, 23 a hard body does ; hence, 1. elastic, springy, xupiov Hipp. Art. 308; dvri- tunwrarov eidos, distinguished from oxdnpév, Plat. ‘lim. 62 C; but also, 2. in the opposite sense, repellent, rigid, unelastic, Anth. P. 9. 7373 dvrirundrepa dvra, of a horse's fetiocks, Xen. Eq. 1, 43 and $0, dvririna & én) ya rece (with the fem. term., as corrected by Pors. for dvriruna, which is against the metre), Soph, Ant. 134; of év dyre- | \ é walking on hard, unelastic ground, Arist. Probl. 5. rg BE wietiph. reba stubborn, obstinate, dvO parrot Plat. Theaet. 156 A; pdyn dvr. Xen. Ages. 6, a: harsh-sounding, dppoviat Dion. H. de Comp. 22; tpaxeta wat dvr. # ovtvyia Ib.; dvr. dxotoa Acl. N. A. 12. 15 :—Adv. -mws harshly, Eccl. 3. opposed to, 700s 5éAvov mloreos avrirumoy the reverse of .., Theogn. 1244; dvr. Ards the adversary of Zeus, Aesch. Theb. 521: adverse, of events, Xen. Hell. 6. 3, 11 :—simply, dvr. rit opposite, over against, Polyb. 6. 31, 8. GvruruTée, fo express as by a figure, xpwpace. . xapiw Anth. P. 1. 36. évruréare, to beat in turn, Ar. Nub. 14243 Tumrdpevoy dvrirdarew Plat. Crito 51 A. y . j Pe avririmaois, ews, }, an image impressed, impression, Oribas. Maii 36. Gvrutiipavvéw, to play the tyrant in turn, Jo. Lyd. de Magistr. 2. 1. dvrira0dlw, fo ridicule in turn, Conon Narr. 49. dvrihalvw, to shine upon or opposite one, Theophr. Sens. 26. dvriddvera, %, a reflexion, elsewhere Eats, Heliod. Lariss. Optic. 8. dvriddppiixov, 75, an antidote, Arist. Mirab. 86, Cebes 26, Ath. 85 A. dvridiors, ews, }, (dvripniu) in Logic, contradiction of propositions, Arist. Interpr.6, 3, An. Post.1.2,6, Metaph. 3. 7, 8.,9.4,8, al. II.a contradictory proposition, Id. Interpr. 7, 13, An. Pr. 1. 15, 15, al. dvrupdokw, to contradict, ra dvtupdoxovra contradictories, Schol. Arist. p. 44. 37 Brandis. 2. to answer, Nicet. Eug. 6. 170, etc. dvriupiitixos, 7, dv, in Logic, contradictory, Arist. Interpr. 7, 6, al. Ady. ~#és Ib. 7, 6 and 13, al.; cf. dvrixerpat. dvrueptfo, like lcopapi(a, to set oneself against, measure oneself with, ob mus aolye . . divar’ dvtipepiCew Il. 21. 357, cf. Hes. Th. 609; pévos mit dvr. Il. 21. 488; od OcmoroKdrd dytipeptces; Ar. Eq. 813, ef. 818; also, dvr. wapd tia Pind. P. 9. 88. Cf. avtipépopan. avridepvos, ov, (pepvt}) instead of a dower, dvr. pOopa Aesch. Ag. 406. Gvripépa, fut. dvroiow, to set against, Plat. Eryx. 395 B; dvr. moAepov émi tu Anth. P. 7. 438:—used by Hom. only in Med. or Pass. to set oneself against, fight against other, paxp avrepepovro Il. '5. 701; ap- yahéos yap ’Odrdpumos dvripépecOar hard to oppose, 5. 589, cf. Od. 16. 238; also c. acc. cognato, pévos dvrip. Tut to match oneself with another in strength, Il. 21. 482: cf. dvripepttw. II. in Pass. also to be borne in a contrary direction to, r@ obpav@ Arist. Cael. 2. 10, 2, ef, Phys. 2. 8, 8. dvrupevyo, to flee or go into exile in turn, dvri Twos Eur, El. 1ogt. avrignpt, fut.—pjow, to speak against, to contradict, Plat. Gorg. 501 C ; dyr. Twi to contradict a thing, Arist. Insomn. 3, 14; mpés Tt Ib. 2, 18. dvripGéyyopat, Dep. to return a sound, echo, Pind, O. 6, 105, Eur. Hipp. 1216: to repeat, echo, 7d dxovabér Arist. G. A. 5. 2, 3. il. to speak against, contradict, Luc. Salt. 23. dvripbeypa, aros, 76, an echo, Schol. Soph. El. 109. dvripboyyos, ov, of answering sound, concordant, Pind. Fr. 91: imita- tive, Anth, P. 7. Igt. II. of opposite sound, contradictory, Byz. dvriditréw, fut. 40, to love in return, Plat. Lys. 212 C sq., Xen. Mem. 2.6, 28, Theocr. 12. 16, Arist. :—Pass., Arist, Eth, N. 8. 8, 3, al. , to hiss in return, Anth. P. 5. 285. . dvriptAnors, €ws, 7, return of affection, Arist. Eth. N. 8. 2, 3. dvriptAla, %, mutual affection, Arist. Eth. Eud. 7. 2, 12. dvriptdoSokéw, to vie in ambition, mpds Twa Polyb. I. 40, IT. dvruptAovekéo, to strive jealously against, mpds Tt or tive Polyb. 3. 103, EXE Loy 6, etc.: absol., Joseph. A. J. 2. 9, I. avripihocopén, to hold contrary tenets, rit Luc. Bis. Acc. 21. avripidoripéopar, Pass. to be moved by jealousy against, mpés Tt Dion. H. 6. 96, Plut. Pericl. 14; tui Max. Tyr. 14. 7; plapf. avremepeAcri- pyro, Dio C. 59- 19 i—Subst. -qors, %, rivalry, jealousy, Eccl. dvrupiAodpovéopiar, Dep. to receive kindly in turn, Plut. Sert. 20. dvruphéyo, to light up again or to meet one, avr@ Gdrov bpOadpov dvréprete Mnva Pind. O. 3. 36 :—also, avripAoyife, Theod. Prodr. dvribdvapéw, to talk nonsense against, Trois pAvapovow avr. Galen, 8. pp. 80, 501. dvripoBéw, to frighten in turn, Ael,N. A. 12. 15. Gvripovevw, to murder in return, Schol. Eur, Or. 415, Epiphan. dvridovos, ov, in return for slaughter, in revenge for blood, mowds dye vous aras=mowas arnpds dv7t pédvov, Aesch. Eum. 982; décov0" dyripévous Bixas Soph. El. 248; dyripovoy kopéoar orépa Soph. Ph. 1156. II. 64varor dvr. deaths by mutual slaughter, Aesch. Theb. 893.—Trag. word, but only in lyric passages. dvtTipopycis, ews, 7), a wearing instead, Eust. Opusc. 279. 87. dvrubopikas, as Adv., =dvrippacrinas, Schol, Thue. 3-15. avndoprife, to ake in a return cargo, Dem. 931. 1 (acc. to the best Mss.) ; but the Med. is more usual in same sense, Ib.x 3+, 935. 20. II. in Med. also, 4o import in exchange for exports, Xen. Vect. 3,23 apyvpioy Arist. Mirab. 135. 2. Pass., xphuara .. dvripopriabévra goods received in exchange for the cargo, ap. Dem. 926. 11., 931.1. avridopros, 6, a return-freight, Argum. Ar. Ach, j avridpaypa, 76, a counter-fence, bulwark, mpés 71 Plut. 2. 58 D. dvrippalo, fut. dow, to express by antithesis or negation, Galen. 1 3. Pp. 143, Walz Rhett. 8. 755. avrippaktikes, 7, dv, obstructive, Eccl, _Gvripagis, ews, 4, (dvrippdoow), a barricading, -yjs dvri¢p. the interposition of the earth, so as to cause a lunar eclipse, Arist. An. Post. 2. 2, 3, cf. Meteor. 2.8, 27; so, HAvov éeAebrey aednvns avruppager Id. Fr. 203: cf. dvrippaoow 2. _dvrippaors, ews, 4, (dvrippd{w) in Rhet. and Gramm., antiphrasis, i. e. the use of words of good sense in place of those of a contrary sense, Evpevides for Epwvves, mévros ebfevos for dgewos, Ath. go B, Walz Rhett. 8. 722: y. Lob. Act. Soc. Gr. 2. p. 293, sqq- ais ) , a avTippacaw — avTopos. dvrippacow, Att. -pparre, fo barricade, block up, Xen. Symp. 5, 6; dytimeppaypévos Aapmrhp a screened lamp, lantern, Philist. 15. It. ce. dat. to stand in the way of, bar its way, TO dépe Arist. de Juv. 5, 6, cf. Probl. 21. 20; esp. of the earth intercepting the sun’s light (as in a lunar eclipse), bcos dvtippdrre % yh Gore yn) dpacba ind rod wAtov such bodies as the earth by its interposition prevents from being seen.., Id, Meteor. 1. 8, 5; Exacroy dvripparra abrhy (abrp ?), sc. Thy aednvny, Id. Cael. 2. 13, 7:—absol., yn dvr. Id. An, Post. 1. 31, 2, cf. 2. 2, 33 ) @aAarra dvr, Id. Meteor. 2.8, 38; xwdver rd ddddrpiov Kat dvr, Id. de An. 3. 4, 3 2. v. dvrippagis :—Pass. to be placed as an obstacle, dvrippaxdévros Twos wept Thy avanvony Plat. Tim. 66 E. dvrippacricas, Adv. by way of dvrippacis, Gramm. avrippicow, to bristle up against, Arist. H. A. 9. 44, 7. dvribpoupos, 6, riv tony éxwv dpovpdy, Hesych. dvruppudocopat, Dep. to neigh at one another; metaph. to rival in and t , Greg. Naz. 1. 524 B. -dvrigpwv, ov, gen. ovos, (ppyv) disaffected towards, Nicet. Ann. 96 B. dvrupidan, 1, a watching against one another, mpds GAAHAovs Thuc. 2.84; cf. Dio C. 77. 2. dvripvAak [it], 6, one posted to watch another, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 28. dvripihdcow, Att. —rtw, to watch in turn, Plat. Legg. 705 E:—Med. to be on one’s guard in turn, rwd Xen. An, 2. 5, 3, cf. Plut. Demetr. 36. dvripvopat, Pass. to be of contrary nature, dvriputvat Eust. Opusc. 6. 293; so, dvrimepuxévat, Hesych. dvripiodw, to blow in the contrary direction, Antyll. in Matthaei Med. 249 :—Subst. —pvonpa, 76, Greg. Nyss. avrupitevw, to plant in turn, Pseudo-Phocyl. 73. dvripwvéw, to sound in answer, reply, rejoin, absol., Aesch. Eum. 303, Soph. Ant. 271, etc.; esp. to answer in a loud voice, Plut. Mar. 19, etc.; dvr. rut Sext. Emp. M. 7. 327. 2. c. acc. cogn., dvr. éros to ulter a word in reply, Soph. Aj. 773; moAAd dvr. Id. El. 1501; dvr. “Epwra, of a lute, fo sound love strains in reply, Anacreont. 23 (1). 9- 3. c. acc. pers. to reply to, answer, ph he avriupdve undév Soph, Ph. 1065. 4. to answer by letter, ru Polyb. 8. 18, 11; Pass. to be received in answer, é “Pwpns Id. 15. 18, 6. II. to answer for another, be responsible, Jo. Chrys.: hence —vqots, ews, 7, and —vyrAs, ov, 6, as Byz. law terms. dvtigwvos, ov, (pwvy) sounding in answer, concordant, as in the octave, dfvrnra Bapirnr ~vupwvoy nal dyr, Plat. Legg. 812 D; dvr, rats mpérepov pnOcior Ib. 717 B: absol., wéAn, dppoviat Philo 2. 485. 2. responsive to, c. gen, orevaypatoy Eur. Supp. 800; dvripava trav yevnoopéevey Plut. 2. 412 B. II. as Subst., dvri- pavov, 7b, a concord in the octave, 7d dvr. ctypoviv éort bid macdv Arist. Probl. 19. 39, 1, cf. 19. 16, al. 2. in Eccl. an antiphon, anthem :—hence, avriupwvixds, antiphon-wise, in alternate strains, Byz. dvrupwricpds, 6, (pwri{w) reflexion of light, Plut. 2.625 D; mpds Thy oednyny Id. Nic, 21. avrixaipw, to rejoice in turn or answer, Nixa dyrixapetoa One Soph. Ant. 149; for the form, v. sub xafpw. dvrixaAerraive, to be embittered against, Dion. H. Excerpt. p. 2335 Reisk., Plut. 2. 468 B. avrixahketo, to forge, manufacture in turn or instead, Eccl. :—Med.,° Polyaen. 8. 7, 2. dvrixapdcow, to engrave, write in answer, Byz. dvrixtiptfopar, Dep. to shew kindness in turn, rwt Hdt. 7. 114, Xen. Cyr. 4. I, 20, etc. :—dvrixuipts, eros, }, acknowledgment of a favour, Walz Rhett. 1. 447, etc. dvrixacpdopat, Dep. to yawn in answer to, Tots xacpopévors Arist. Probl. 7. I, I., 7. 6, I. dvrlyetp (sc. SaxrvAos, which is supplied in Sext, Emp. M. 1. 137), 6, the thumb, as being opposite to the fingers, Plut. 2. 761 C, Poll. 2. 145; ef. Arist. H. A. 2. 11, 3. 5 dvrixepotovéw, to vote against, absol. in Thuc. 6. 13, 24; dvr. pi mapéxew At. Eccl. 423; dvr. ds ..Dem. 1346. 25 ; Tove Max. Tyr. 17. 5. avrixetpotovia, 7, a contrary vote, Poll. 2. 150. dvri,Qwv (sc. yi), ovos, 4}, an opposite or counter Earth, in the Pythagor. system of the Universe, Arist. Cael. 2. 13, 2, Metaph. 1. 5, 3, Philolaos ap. Plut. 2. 895 E; ef. Clem. Al. 732, Stob. Ecl. 1. 488, Grote’s Plat. 1. 13. 2. the southern hemisphere, Cic. Tusc. 1. 28 :—in pl. the people of the southern hemisphere, Plin. N. H. 6. 24, Mela 1. 1. dvrixopSos, ov, sounding in answer, concordant: metaph. in reply, tvt Plut. 2, 663 F. avrixopetw, to dance in harmony, Nonn. D. 22. 44, Synes. H. 4. 159- dvrixopyyéw, to be a rival choragus, Andoc. 34. 303 avr. tii to rival him in the choragia, Dem. 534. 25. II. to furnish in return, Joseph. B. J. 2. 20, 8, in Pass. dvrixépnyos, 6, a rival choragus, Andoc. 31. 36, Dem. 533. 14; cf. Wolf Dem. Lept. p. xci. avrixéptov, 74, a chorus that sings alternately with another, the song of such chorus, Poll. 4. 107. A avrixpde, (xpiw B) fo be sufficient, like droxpdw, only used in aor. I, 5 worapds ob dvréxpnae TH oTpariy mvdspevos Hat. 7. 127, cf. 187. avrixpyots, ews, }, reciprocal usage, Byz. law-term. avrixpyocpoboréw, to deliver oracles in turn, Eumath. 468. dvrixpioros, 5, Antichrist, 1 Ep. Jo. 2. 18, 22, etc.; cf. Suicer. Ss. V. Hence the Adjs. -xptortavés, —xptoruxés, and the Verb—xpvrréw, Eccl. ayrixpoviopés, 6, the use of one tense for another, Hdn, in An, Ox. 3. 274, Schol. Eur. Or. 48 :—also —xpovia, %, Ib. 82. dvtixpoos, ov, of varied colour, Greg. Naz. - dvrixpalw, fo colour, tinge in turn, Liban. 4. 1071. 151 dvrupdddo, to play a stringed instrument in accompaniment of song, dvr. théyous pdppeyya Ar. Av. 217. avriipaApos, ov, responsive, harmonious, @dds Eur. I. T. 179. avrupatw, =dv0arropat, Schol. Eur. Hec, 275. dvrupéyw, to blame in turn, Schol. Aesch. Eum. 416. dvruolfopat, Dep. to vote against, mpds 71 Plut. Lys. 27. évriimdos, ov, voting against, T@ Oe Plat. Alc. 2. 150 B. Svrlianon, ov, (YuxH) given for life, Luc. Lexiph. 10; dvr. dvat tivos Ignat. Ephes, 21, Smyrn. Io, al, one’s own life for another's, Dio C. 59. 8. avrupixe [0], to cool, chill in turn, Alex, Aphr. Probl, 1, 113. dvrupwpllo, to feed with dainty morsels in rivalry, Argum. Ar, Ach. dvrhéw, fut. fow: (dvrAos):—to bale Gut bilge-water, bale the ship, Theogn. 673, Alcae. 19, cf. Elmsl. Eur. Heracl. 169. 2. generally, to draw water, dvrAée kat éxxée Hdt. 6. 119; ofov é« xpnvyns er éxerods dvr. to draw as from a well, and pour into. ., Plat. Tim. 79 A; so, dvrA, es .. Xen, Occ. 7,40; 5a xevns Toit Bovdopévois meiv Phe- recr. MeraaAA, I. 31: proverb. of labour in vain, 70u@ dyrAciy to draw water in a sieve, Arist. Oec. 1. 6, I. II. metaph. ¢o drain dry, i.e, 1. to use the utmost, make the most of, Tav Eumpaxrov avTAE Haxavdy Pind. P. 3. 110: but more commonly, 2. of toil, suffering, etc., fo exhaust, come to the end of, like Lat. tlare or exh labores, Thv mapotoay dvrAhow téxnv Aesch. Pr. 375; TANuCYws ivThou «and Id.Cho.748; Aumpoy dvrAjee: Blov Eur. Hipp. 898; déea dvrAnoas érn Id. Tro. 433 :—cf. davrkéw, éfavrréo. 3. marpgay Krjow dyrieiv to drain, i, e. squander, Soph. El. 1291. dvrAnpa, aros, 76, a bucket for drawing water, Plut. 2. 974 E, Schol, Ar. Ran. 1332, Ev. Jo. 4. 11. 2. affusion of water, water poured on a diseased part, Medic. dvrAnots, ews, }, a drawing up or emptying, Ael. V. H. 1. 24. avtAnrip, fpos, 6, one who draws water, Poll. 10. 31; Anv@v Manetho 4. 257 :—a vessel for drawing wine, Ath. 424 A. é&vtAnrhpos, a, ov, of or for drawing up: 70 dvrd, (sc. dyyetov), a bucket, Dio C. dvtAqrhs, 09, 6, =dyrAnrnp, Schol, Ar. Ran, 1332. avrAla, },=dvTAos, i.e., 1. the hold of a ship, Soph. Ph, 482 ; Thy dvrdav puddgw Ar. Eq. 4343 detrvoy ..é dvrAlas frovra, i. e. the coarse food used by seamen, Dionys. Com. @eop. I. 41. 2. bilge- water, filth, Ar. Pax 17. dvrAt-avrAnrip, 6, a bucket, Menand, ’Avari8. 1; v. Meineke. avrAlov, 76, a bucket, Ar. Fr. 82, Epilyc. Kwpaa. 5. ‘ dvrhos, 6, in Poll. 1. 92 also dvrAoy, 76: (for the Root, v. *rAdq) :— in Hom, the hold of a ship, where the bilge-water settles, Lat. sentina, Od. 12. 411.,15.479: then, 2. the bilge-water in the hold, méAus . . dy Tov ove 25€£aT0 let in no water, metaph. for ‘let no enemy come in,’ Aesch. Theb. 796; dvrAov elpyew vads to pump out water from a ship, Lat. sentinam exhaurire Eur. Tro. 686; els dvrAov éuBaivew nédda, metaph, for getting into a difficulty, Id, Heracl. 168, ubi v. Elmsl. 3. generally, sea-water, the sea, Pind. O. 9, 79, Eur. Hec. 1025; év dvrAm 7iévat to throw into the sea, i.e. cause to disappear, Pind. P,8.14. II. a bucket, Manetho 6. 424. III. a heap of corn, thrashed but not yet cleansed, Nic. Th. 114, 546, Q. Sm. I. 352. & , to hurt in return, Schol. Theocr. 3. 13. dvroSupopat [0], Dep. ¢o lament in return, App. Civ. I. Io. dvroucéw, to inhabit on the other side, 4 dvroxoupévn=dytix0ar, Porph, ap. Schol. Od. 3. 296. : dvroxodopéw, to build or fortify against, Polyb. 1. 42, 12 :—metaph, dvr. Tit Star pb YN. H. 4. 9:—verb. Adj. —1réov, Philo Belop, g2 B. avroucodopia, 77, | Widing against, Polyb. 1. 48,1. dvr-ouros, ov, living). same latitude in the te hemisphere, Plut. 2. 898 B: cf. wep& vos III. dvrourelpw, to pity in return, Twa Eur. Ion 312. avrourtifw, =foreg., Thuc. 3. 40. dvrotopat, Dep. with aor. pass. dvr@iOnv, to be of contrary opinion, Plat. Theaet. 178 C. dvroAh, }, post. for dvaroAy. évroXtn, 7), collat. poét. form of dvroAq, dvaroAg, Anth. Plan. 61, Epigr. Gr. 441, al.:—dvroAinOe, Adv., for dvarodinde, from the East, Opp. C. 2.123, Manetho 2. 49, etc.:—dvroAlnvbe, towards the East, Dion, P. 260. 2. as Adj., Eastern, év dvroXin . . dpoipy Nonn. D. 25. 98. avroAukés, 7, dv, Eastern, Paul. Sil. Ambo 241. dvropat, Dep. only used in pres, and impf.: (dvri, dvra) :—poét. Verb (used by Hom. only in Il.),=dvrdw, to meet, Il. 2. 595, al.; esp. in battle, c. dat., dAAjAoow dyredd’ ev TorAcum 15. 698, cf. 16. 7885 dpyipy dvropévn. . ewérpamer’ aixyn Il. 2373 so, xadenp ivT. Oev- popty Call, Ep. 31:—absol., dimAdos jvrero Owpng the breastplate doubled (by the overlying belt) opposed or stopped (the dart), Il. 4. 133+ 20. 415 :—absol. to be present, attend, Pind. P. 2.130. iL. c. acc, pers.,=dyTia(@ I. 2, to approach with prayers, entreat, 7 ae.. dvropat Acds Eur. Alc. 1098; mpds ae yeverdbos . . dvropat Id. Supp. 279; mpés a’ 8 re cor pidov &x cebev dvTopat Soph. O. C. 250; avr. ‘Epyav Ar. Thesm. 977; also, dvr. ixép twos to beg in another's behalf, Soph. O. C. 243: absol., €XGerov, dvréped Ar. Thesm, 1155- évropparko,.=dvropbakpéw, to look in the face, tive Eccl. dvrépvupr, fat. -opot.a: :—to swear in turn, swear on the other part, in a treaty, c. fat. inf., Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 6, Ages. I, 10. II. as Att. law-term, to make an affidavit, both of the accuser and the defendant (cf. dvrwpoota), Antipho 112. 22, Isae. 74. 31, etc.; also in Med., Isae. 2. 19. | °av-ropos, 6, dialectic form of dvéropos, a stake or pale, and collectively 2. dvr. drobavely giving wre (24 . 152 a paling, boundary-fence, often in the Tabulae Heracl., C. I. 5774, 57753 also a road adjoining suck a fence, 5774. 15.. 5775. 12, al.; v. Franz p. 706. dvroveadifw, to upbraid in return, twi Eust. 1042. 46. évrovivnpt, fut. -ovnow, to serve mutually, Liban. 1, 240. Riverine, to name instead, call by a new name, c. dupl. acc., Thuc. 6. 5. II. to use dvrovopaciat or rhetorical figures, Ar. Thesm. 55. 2. to use the pronoun, Eust. 103. 23: dvr. Tid Apollon. Constr. 192. ‘dvrovopacta, 7, antonomasia, i.e. the use of an epithet, patronymic, or appellative for a proper name, and vice versa, Walz Rhett. 8. 723, Vita Hom. 24. II. in Gramm., the pronoun, or the use of it, Lat. pronominatio, Bast. Greg. p. 399. dvromrevw, to fix one’s eyes upon, Tt Byz. dvropylfopar, Pass. to be angry in turn, M. Anton. 6. dvropeyw, to stretch out, present in turn, Themist. 153 A. dvr-opos, 5, dialectic form of dv6-opos, an opposite bound JSence, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 60, al. dvrépuéts, €ws, 7), a countermining, Philo in Math. Vett. 100. avropicow, to dig a counter-mine, Hdt. 4. 2c0: metaph., dvr. dp0aa- Hous Paus. 3. 14, 10. dvropxéopat, Dep. to imitate one’s dancing, Arist. H. A. 8. 12, 12. dvrodetAw, to owe a good turn, to be indebted, Thuc. 2. 40. dvropbaApéw, to look in the face, meet face to face, dvr. ard mpbzo- toy Polyb. 18. 29, 12: hence to defy, withstand, run and mpés twa Id. I. 17, 3., 2. 24, I, etc.; dvr. 7G dvéuw of a ship, Act. Ap. 27. 15:— hence, dvropOdApnos, %, a looking in the face, gazing at a thing, Eust.:—and avrop@ahpilw, =-éw, Byz. dvté0adpos, ov, looking in the face, Hesych. dvroxéopar, Pass. to drive or ride against, Mosch. 2. 119. dvroxevs, éws, 6, =dyriAaBevs, Hesych. dvroxn, 4, a holding against, holding fast, Oribas. Maii 34. dvroxiipbw, to fortify in turn or against, Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 23. dvrpatos, a, ov, haunting caves or grots, Eur. ap. Steph. Byz. s.v. dyrpoy, cf. Meineke Com. Gr. 2. p. 434. dvrpérw, post. for dvarpérw. dyrpids, ddos, 4, pecul. fem. of dvrpatos, Ndypat dvr. grot-Nymphs, Anth. P. 6, 224. dvrpo-Slairos, ov, living in caves, Orph. H. 31. 3. en , és, dike or full of caves, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10, 105, Plut. 2. 896 E. Gyrpode, Ady. formed like oixodev, from a cave, Pind, P. 4. 181. dvrpov, 74, Lat. antrum, poét. word, a cave, grot, cavern, hole, Od. (not in Il.), mostly as a haunt of the nymphs and woodland gods, like oréos, 9. 216, 218, etc.; also in Hes. Th. 483, Pind., and Trag., etc.; of a lion, Aesch. Eum. 193; of a serpent, Eur. Phoen. 232. dvrpodins, és, (pia) born in caves, dvOia Opp. H. 3. 212. dvtpoxapys, és, (xalpw) cave-haunting, epith. of nymphs and Pan, Orph. H. ro and 50. dvrpuSns, es, full of caves, mérpa Xen. An. 4. 3, 11; Témos Arist. Probl. 23. 5, I. dvtiywros, dv, formed like an dvrvt, Hesych. dvrvé, vyos, %, like trus, the edge or rim of anything round or curved ; and so, I. used by Hom. (only in II.), 1. the rim of the round shield, Il, 6. 118., 14. 412., 18. 479, etc. 2. the rail round the front of the chariot, & dvrvyos jvia reivas having made the reins fast to the chariot-rail, 5. 262, 322; sometimes it was double, doa? St repldpopor dvrvyés clot 5.728; Kal dvrvyes ai wept Sippov 11. 535; in pl. also, Soph. Aj. 1030, Plat. Theaet. 207 A; in sing., wapmre: 8e. . jvias dn’ dyrvyos Eur. Hipp. 1188, II. post-Hom., a in pl. the chariot itself, Soph. El. 746, Eur, Phoen. 1193 ;—sing., xa7’ dytvya Nuerds drabdoi Theocr. 2. 166. 2. the frame of the lyre, Valck. Hipp. 1131. 8. the orbit of a planet, h. Hom. 7. 8: hence, dvr. obpavin Anth. P. 9. 806., 11. 292 :—the orb, circle of the world, Nonn. D. 38. 108; dvr. *yiropos .. ceAavas the disk of the half moon, Mosch. 2. 88. 4. in Nonnus, the rounded parts of the body, dvrvyes pacrav, unpdy the breasts, hips, D. 12. 393-, 15- 228.—Poét. word, used by Plat. Theaet. 207 A, Luc. D. Deor. 25. 2,-in signf. I. 2. dvruToxkplvopat, dvrumoupyéw, Ion. for dv@um—. dvt-@5n, 7), responsive singing, dvr. nal dvr.arpopn Schol. Ar. Vesp. 1086. dvr-w5és, dv, singing in answer, responsive, XW Adyav dvr@bds Ar. Thesm, 1059; dvr. reve xéAados Anth. P. 7.196; pédAos dvr. 7)xeiv, of birds, Ael. N. A. 4. 16. dvrwbéw, to push against or back, Hipp. Fract. 776 :—Pass., 7d &Oodv GyraPetra: Arist. G. A. 4. 3, 18, cf. Mech. 31, 1:—Med., to push one against another, Theopomp. Hist. 125. II. 40 oppose, Philo 1.14. vrabnots, ews, %, a thrusting against one, Nicet. Ann. 27 A: also avrwbiopds, ov, 6, Ib. 102 B. Gvr-wpos, ov, shoulder to shoulder: dvrwpot, ol, dwellers in the same hemisphere, opp. to dvrimobes, Cleomed. 4. dvropoota, 7, (dvrépyup) an oath or affidavit made on beginning the dvdxpiots, by the prosecutor ‘on the one hand giving a summary of the charges he undertook to prove, by the defendant in reply stating that he had a good defence against those charges, v. Harpocr. s. v.: Poll. 8. 55 states that the prosecutor’s affidavit was tpowpogia, but this word does not occur in our authorities; the duwpocta (q.v.) seems to have been a special kind of dyrwyocta: examples of the. prosecutor's affidavit are found in Plat. Apol. 19 B, 24 B, Lysias 167. 38, Isae. 50. 16 sq., cf. 75. 31; of the defendant's in Id. 38. 28, cf. Antipho 112. 22. ya GAexTpos. avrovediCw — avvr0dyT os. 3. 2. to bid against, érel ovdels dvrewvetro Andoc. 17. 29; dvr. GAAHAas Lys. 165. 5; 6 dvtwvotpevos a rival bidder, Dem. 307. 6. dvravipéw, to have an opposite name, Theol. Arithm, 41. évravipta, 4, a pronoun, Dion. H. de Comp. 2, Plut. 2. roog C; y. Apollon. rep? dvravupias. : dyrwvipirss, 7, dv, pronominal, Dion. H. Ep. ad Ammae. 2.12. Adv. -Kas, like a pronoun, Apollon. Constr. 156. dvrwréo, =dvropbadpém, Heliod. 1. 21, Clem, Al. 971. dvrwmis, és, =dvrands, Manetho 4.336:—dvt@mtos, ov, Ap.Rh. 4.729. dvrGmus, Sos, pecul. fem. from sq., Nonn. D. 6, 76. dvrwmés, dv, (dip) with the eyes opposite, facing, dvtwmd Brépapa Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 585; 79s ews dvrwnd the front parts of the face, Luc, Imagg. 6: opposite, Auth. P. 10, 14 :—also dike, Opp. H. 5. 7. dvrwptopat, Dep. to roar against or at, Schol. Luc. Paras. 51. dvrwots, ews, }, a pushing against or back, Arist. de Resp. 20, 7. dvtwrts, {50s, 7}, (dvri, ovs) a covering for the ear, Clem. Al. 198. dvrmpeA ew, fo assist or benefit in turn, twa Xen. Mem. 2. 10, 3:—Pass. to derive profit in turn, Ib. 2. 8, 3, Cyr. 1. 6, II. dvuBprori, Ady. of sq. 11, Anacr. 62. Gy-UBpioros, ov, not insulted, Pseudo-Phocyl. 145; TeAeuTn Plut. Pelop. 9. II. act. without insulting, not outrageous, decorous, madiat Id, Sert. 26; ox@ppa Id. 2. 46 C; 70 dv. rod Biovg2 E. Adv. —ws, Democr. ap. Stob. p. 72. 34. dyuytatve, to restore to health, Medic. dv-tylacros, ov, =dvadOns, incurable, Hesych. dy-vypaive, to moisten, Hipp. 560, Theovhr. C. P. 2. 6,1: metaph. fo melt, soften, Plut, 2. 156 D:—Pass., Ib. 566 A. dvuypacpos, 6, a moistening, Archigen. ap, Orib. in Matthaei Med. 159. dy-USiiTos, ov, without water, Manetho 1.144. GvuSpevouar, Dep. to draw up from a well, rov «dSov Pherecr. Kop. 11. dy-WSpevtos, ov, unwatered, Theophr. H. P. 7. 4, 6. avuSpta, 7), want of water, drought, Hipp. Aér. 288, Thuc. 3. 88, Plat. Gy-vSpos, ov, (tdwp) wanting water, waterless, of arid countries, Hes. Fr. 35 Marcksch., Hat. 4. 185; yf Hipp. Aér. 280: esp. without spring- water, of the Delta of Egypt, Hdt. 2. 7, cf. 149., 3.53 1) avubdpos (sc. 77) Id. 3. 4 and 9, Arist. Fr. 99; of seasons, Hipp. Aph. 1247; in Eur. Tro, 1085, of a corpse, deprived of funeral lustrations;—in lon 89 opupyns & dyvdpov is the prob. 1. Gvixrepos, ov, without night or darkness, pas Eccl. dviAaKros, ov, without barking, Suid. vidos, ov, (VAN) without wood, Theophr. C. P. 1. 5, 2 (v.1. dios). dy-tpévaros, ov, without the nuptial song, unwedded, Soph. Ant. 876, 917, Eur. Hec. 416, etc.; poipa dv. Soph. O. C. 1222: neut. pl. as Adv., Id. El. 962, Eur. Phoen, 347. Adv. -ws, Schol. Eur. 1. c. *dvup., v. sub dvdw. dvupvéw, to praise in song, c. acc., Eur. El. I1g0. G-vipeutos, ov, unwedded, Soph. El. 165; warpos €xovres av. youd born of an ill marriage, Id. Ant. 980, v. Schol. Adv. -rws, Eccl. avupois, és, =sq., dv. unrnp virgin-mother, Greg, Naz. d-vuphos, ov, not bridal, unwedded, dv. tpoph Soph. El. 1183 ; vdppn dyupos a bride that is no bride, unhappy bride, Eur. Hec. 612; cf. II. without bride or mistress, pédaOpa Id. Hel. 1125. eee ov, blameless, Heliod. 9. 11, Poll.8.68. Ady. —tws, Philo 1. 200. av-UmapKros, ov, non-existent, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 135, Plut., etc. dy-tmaptla, 7), non-existence, nonentity, Sext. Emp. P. 1, 21, etc. dv-Umiitos, ov, without consul, évvavtds Byz. dy-Urektos, ov, unyielding, hard, Greg. Nyss., Suid. dyv-umeEatpérws, Adv. without exception, M. Anton, 8. 41. av-umefdhuKros, ov, inevitable, Nicet. Ann. 29 C, etc. dy-uTépBiitos, ov, not passed or overcome, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 153, Diog. L. 7.93. Adv. -rws, Nicom. Geras, 2. 23, Galen. dv-vmépBAntos, ov, not to be surpassed or outdone, Xen, Cyr. 8.7, 15, Dem, 23.11, Lycurg. 161. 37; dvOpwmos dy, eis movnpiav Autiph. Neorr. 1. Ady, —rws, Arist. Rhet. 1. 11, 13. dv-utrepypavos, ov, not arrogant, Eccl. Adv. —vas, Eccl. dvurrepGecta, %, immediateness, haste, Jo. Chrys.:—and dvuTrepCeréw, to do immediately, to be hasty, Aquila V. T. dv-uTrépGeros, ov, immediate, Diosc. praef. Ther, :—Adv. -Tws, forth- with, without delay, C. 1. 523. 7, Diosc, Ther. 33. II. insuperable, Democr, Stob. 451. 55. dv-uTrépoxos, ov, not overcoming, not superior, Eust. 832. 3- dv-uTerraApévws, Adv. without shrinking or flinching, Eccl. dy-uredPivos, ov, not liable to the evOtvn, not accountable, irresponsible, Hipp. 27.15, Ar. Vesp. 587, Plat. Legg. 761 E, 875 B, Arist. Pol. 4. 4, 24, al.; cf. dvev@uvos. Adv. -vws, Diod. 1. 70, dy-virhkoos, ov, not obeying, Tis Plat. Tim. 73 A, gt B. dv-umnidis, es, E. M. 61. 6, or -vmHAtdhos, ov, A.B. 21, not anointed with pitch. ; av-imnvos, ov, beardless, Eust. 1353. 47. dyv-vimmpérntos, ov, without attendance, Eurypham., ap. Stob. 556. 44. avutvos, ov, sleepless, Byz. dv-uméBAnTOs, ov, not subject or liable, rw Justin. M. avuTrodecta, —Seréw, eros, late forms of dvumodngia, —inréw, —dyTOS, only found in Plut., Luc., etc.; v. Lob. Phryn. 445. dy-vTodhpatos, ov, =dvurddnros, A. B. 82. dy-urodqota, 7, a going barefoot, Plat. Legg. 633 C, Xen. Lac. 2, 3. dvurroSntéw, to go barefoot, Arist. Fr. 64, Luc. Cyn. 1, &v-um68q70s, ov, unshod, barefoot, as the philosophers and Spartans éopar, Dep. to buy instead, Xen, Oec. 20, 26, Menand. Zi. Epich, in A. B, 1. 82, Lys. 903, 5, Plat. Prot. 321 C, Phaedr. 229 A, . , » avuTroduKos — avo. Symp. 173 B, al.; dv. dp®pov wepimareiv Aristopho Mv0. 1.8; cf, Becker Charicles 2. p. 364 sq.:—also with old shoes, ill-shod, Ernesti Ar. Nub. 103. dv-umddikos, ov, not liable to action, Plut. Cato Mi. 11; dv. macas dixas at Capias Inscr. Delph. in C. I. 1699, 1701, -2, -4, -6, al. dy-umd0eros, ov, not hypothetical, unconditioned, absolute, dpx7 Plat. Rep. 510 B; 70 dvvum. Ib. 511 B, al. Il. without foundation, Plut. 2. 358 F :—so Adv. —rws, Ib. 399 B. dv-brovoros, ov, insupportable, Timae. ap. Ath. 519 F, Dion. H. 7-15. Adv. —rws, Poll. 3. 130. Hence Subst. —oerérq, 7), Gloss. dv-uméxptros, ov, without dissimulation, Lxx (Sap. 5.19), Ep. Rom. 12. 9, al.:—Adv. -rws, M. Anton. 8. 3 :—Subst. -Kpioia, 7, sincerity, Eust. Opuse. go, 26. II. as a gramm. term, v. évuméxptros. GvuTréAoyos, ov, without being liable to give account, C. I. 2693 e. Fegan «, a, ov, not to be sustained, Stob. Ecl. 2.196: also—rés, , ov, Ib. év-vropovygia, %; want of endurance, intolerance of a thing, Eccl. :— Adj. —ytucés, 7, dv, not enduring, intolerant of a thing, Eccl. Gv-vTopdévytos, ov, unbearable, Arist. Mirab. 130. 2, Diod. 3. 29, etc. Ady, —rws, Hesych, s. v. darexros. dv-uTrovénros, ov, unsuspected, mpés Tt in a thing, Dem. 1404. 22 :— Adv. —rws, Polyb. 1. 84, 9. 2. unexpected, Id. 2. 57, 6. II. act. unsuspecting, Tivos Id. 4. 10, 7 :—Adv. —rws, unsuspiciously, Id. 5. 39, 2- dy-uTomros, ov, without suspicion, i.e., 1. pass. unsuspected, Thue. 3. 43 (in Comp.), Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 11 :—Adv. —ras, unsuspectedly, Thue. 1, 146, Menand. Incert. 120. 2. act. unsuspecting, Tivos Polyb. 8. 92, 2:—Ady. —rws éxew Arist. Top. 8. 1, 14. 153 dpia, dpira ; eg st form being rare, as Il. 4. 56, Eur. Hec. 1167, Ar. Ran. 606: impf. #vvoy Hdt. 9. 66, Att.:—fut. dvicw [avd-], Soph. Aj. 607, Ar. Ran. 649 :—aor. fron Od. 24. 71, Aesch. Pers. 726, etc. ; post, jvvooa (Dor. dy—) Pind. P. 12. 20, Ap. Rh. 4.413, Ep. dvueca [a] Hes. Th. 954:—pf. jvixa Plat. Polit. 264 B:—Pass., pf. qvucpae Polyb. 8, 31,1, etc. (Si-yvvcpar Xen.) : aor. qvdoOny Id, 32. 7, 17: fut. dvucOjgopat Ael. V. H. 1. 21:—Med., dvvopat Pind. P. 2. go, Bion. ; | aviropat Xen. An, 7. 7,24: impf. jvurduny Aesch. Ag. 1159: fut. dvd- copa: (v. infr.): aor. jvvodpnv Trag., dvicac@ar Xen.—In Poets we have also some forms as if from a pres. dvupe, viz.,—impf. act. dvijpes, Dor. for jvupev, Theocr. 7, 10: pass. pres. dvurac Opp. H. 3. 427, Nic.: impf. pass. #vUro Od. 5. 243; Dor. dviro Theocr. 2. 92 :—but Meineke would restore dvopey, dverat, dvero, from the pres. dvw, q. v. [w in all parts of the Verb; so that dvica: in Tryph. 126, dviodpevor in Anth. P. 10. 12 should be written with double ¢; dviwy in Nonn. D. 21. 16 is faulty.} To effect, achieve, accomplish, complete, Lat. conficere, AvuTo 8 Epyov Od, 5. 243, cf. Aesch, Pers. 726, etc. ; Oavaror dvvcat Soph. Tr. 886; dparydy Id, Ph. 1145; Toumwos ds dy dpOdv qvucas Id, Ant. 1178, cf. O. C. 454 :—absol., ovdev vue he did no good, Hdt. 9. 66; ef re €uedAev dvirev whatever was likely to forward the work, Thuc. 2.75 ; opixpoy dvdreyv Plat. Soph, 230 A, al.; qacov dvi- tev Thuc, 2.76; odd qvve rovras he did no good by these measures, Dem. 548.18; dy. eis re to conduce towards . . Plat. Ax. 369 D; ¢. acc. et inf., “AmdAAov . . éxeivoy fvuce povéa yevéoOar brought it to pass that .., Soph. O. T. 720.—Med. to accomplish for one's own advantage, dyéoceabat rade épya (where it is often taken in pass. sense, will be dv-uTémTwrtos, ov, (brominrw) not coming under the cogni: senses, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 345, etc. dv-uTogrrdAtws, Adv., =dvurocrdAws, Schol. Arist. p. 35. 13 Brandis. dv-uTréariitos, ov, not to be withstood, irresistible, dvvapus Plat, Legg. 686 B; dvdyen Xen, Lac. 10, 7; ppdvnua, modus Id. Cyr. 5. 2, 33, Mem. 4. 4,15; ToApnuara Dem, 1268 fin.:—Ady. -7as, Aristob. ap. Eus. P. E. 377 D. II. without sure foundation, } Tis dpxjs brd9ects Polyb. 1. 5, 33 dv. eivar rds Tav bAwv apxas Diog. L. 9. 99; see the joke in Ath. 98 C. 2. without sediment, obpa Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 1. 13, cf. Cur. 1. 13. av-uTéarodos, ov, using no concealment, frank, fearless, pntwp Poll. 4. 21; 7) dv. rs dpyhs Joseph. A. J.16.-3,1. Adv. -Aws, Poll. 4. 24, Alciphro 3. 39, etc. dv-unéetpemros, ov, unreturning, Suid. s. v. dvooros. av-uéarpodos, ov, from which none return, Orph. H. 56. diseases, without relapse, Hipp. 1175 A. dvurroraxtéw, to be unruly, insubordinate, Schol. Od. 19.179. av-umétakros, ov, of things, not made subject, tu Ep. Hebr. 2. 8: unrestrained, free, Philo 1. 473. 2. not to be classified under heads, perplexed, Polyb. 3. 36, 4. II. unruly, refractory, of persons, 1 Ep. Tim. 1. 9, Tit. 1. 6 and 10, cf. Arr. Epict. 2, 10, 1. dv-vtroratia, %, insubordination, Eccl. dy-utrotipntos [7], ov, not rated or assessed, Lat.non census, Joseph. A. J. 15.7, 10. IL. unpunished, like dvemcripytos |b. 16.9, 1, inAdv.-Tws. av-uTétAnros, ov, not to be borne, Schol. Eur. Phoen. 93. dv-vrovlos, ov, without disguise, Philo 2.435. Adv.—Aws, Jo. Chrys. dvUrrous, 6, 7}, only in a Gl. of Hesych, (dvimodes* Taxvmodes, ard Tod Tois moolv dvvew), prob, founded on a mistaken reading of Soph. Aj. 837 Epwis ravdrobas. dv-uTropdpyros, ov, insufferable, E. M. 115. 18 :—also —opos, ov, Byz. Gv-drrr10s, ov, not passive, Diog. L. 7.64; v. dpOds V. aviior-epy6s, dv, finishing work, industrious, Theocr, 28. 14 [ametri grat. ]. dviowpos [i], ov, (dviw) =dyvorieds, dvurixds, efficacious, effectual, mpés tt Plat. Legg. 716 D; eis 72 Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 22 :—Comp. —wrepos Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 10:—Sup. -wraros Plat. 1c. Adv. —pws, Plat. Theaet. 144.B; Sup. -wrara Id. Rep. 518 D. dviiows, ews, , (dviw) accomplishment, dv. 5 ov éooerar adray Il. 2. 347; ob« dvvoiv tTiva dhopey we find no end, accomplish nothing, Od. 4. 5443 Xphpacw, dy dy, ylverat ovdeuia Theogn. 462; ob8' avvas Theocr. 25. 93. dvucpa, atos, 76, an accomplishment, end, Schol. Od. 5. 299. d-vierakros, ov, watchful, Byz. . avucréov or —éa, verb. Adj. one must accomplish, Suid. av-vorépyros, ov, unfailing, not deficient, Eccl. dvuotiKds, 7, Ov, fit for business, rapid, Arist. Physiogn. 6,44; Comp. -wrepos Polyb. 8. 5, 3: cf. dvurixds. dyuorrés, dv, to be accomplished, practicable, ovx tor’ dvuarov révie oot karaxraveiy Eur. Heracl. 961; 7é yap pepémecow dy.; Opp. H. 2. 4:—neut., ds dvvordy [éort], like ds duvarév, ds dv. KadAdoTa, Diog. Apoll. Fr. 4; as dv. dvOpwrivy yvepn Hipp. 245. 513 ovyn ws av. as silently as possible, Xen. An. 1. 8, 11; 7 av. perpwwrary Id. Lac. 1, 3; 7d pera. 7d dpiorov . . dvucrdv Arist. Fr. 40. 2. of persons, able, ready, mpos Adyous Hipp. 22. 53. ae rag en nel AM Eq. Mag. 2, 6, Occ. 20, 22. 2. rapid, dvurikarépay moceiv thy wlvnow Arist. P. A, 4. 6, 1:—condemned by Lob. Paral. 431. Adv. -«@s, Longin. Fr. 8. 8. avirw or dvutw, Att. form of dviw. dvihatve,.to weave anew, av. 7d dvarpiBdpevov to renew the worn-out garment, Plat. Phaedo 87D. The Substs. avigavors, 77, Achmes Onir. 231; —vdbavrns, 6, Suid.; fem. —vpdvrpta, Eust. 1764. 60. dvutpéa, to raise up, exalt, LXXx (Ps. 112. 8, al.) -—Med., Anth. P. 7.748. avinpopa, aros, 7d, a raised place, Aesop., Eust. Opusc. 190. 55- Gvinpwors, ews, %, a raising up on high, Eccl. of the 2. of dvio, Att. dvirw or avitw (Pors. Phoen. 463, Elmsl. Bacch. 1098), cf. 4 plished), Od. 16. 373; so also in Att., Ar, Pl. 196, Plat. Phaedo 69 D; but the Med. is also used just like the Act., Hdt. 1. 91, Pind. P. 2. go. 2. to make an end of, destroy, prot oe Hvucev Od. 24.71; - and reversely, yvucar’ éxroniay pdAdya Soph. O. T. 166, cf. Nic. Al, 400: also to kill (for which Hom. uses é¢avtw), Pind. P. 12. 20. 3. to Jinish a journey, dacov Te mavnpepin yAapuph vais Hvucev (sc. 6500) as much as a ship gets over in a’ day, Od. 4. 357; so, moAAny KéAevOov jvuoev Aesch, Pers.745: also c. acc. loci, dppa taxtora vnis dvicee Oaddcons . . Vdwp Od. 15. 294, cf. Theogn. 511, Soph, Ant. 231. 4. in Att, often absol. (sub. 636v or xéAevov), like éfavdw or TeA€w, to make one’s way, mpos méduv Id. Tr. 657; émt derav Eur. Hipp. 743; also, O4Aapoy dvurety (i.e. els O4Aapov), to reach the bridal chamber, Soph. Ant. 805; dy. “Aiay Id. Aj. 607, Eur. Supp. 1142: metaph., dovAca (vyd dyvcat to end in slavery, Eur. Tro. 595 :—rarely with an inf. instead of the acc., arpards tvuce mepay succeeded in crossing, Aesch. Pers. 721; and with an Adj., efvac being omitted, to come to be, arrive at being, evdaipov advice kat pé-yas Soph. Ph. 720. 5. in Pass. of Time, ¢o come to an end, xpévos dvuro Theocr. 2. 92. 6. in Pass. also of persons, to grow up, jvurdpav tpopais (lyr.) Aesch. Ag. 1159. 7. to get, procure, yaorpt popBay Soph. Ph. 713, cf. Theocr. 5. 144; Twvds xpelas dvicat; i.e. rwds xpelas mpoonirvere, Wore Gviaat aitny; Soph. O. C. 1755 :—Med., xpelay ijvicacbe ye obtained it, Aesch. Pr. 700, cf. Cho. 858, Soph. Tr. 996, and v. éfaviw 6, II. with a partic., ov« aviw pOovéovea I gain nothing by grudging, Il. 4. 56. 2. in Com. writers, to do quickly, make haste, ob péedAAew . ., Gan’ dvirey Ar. Pl. 607, cf. Ran. 606, 649; aAd’ dvvcov, ob péddew éxphv Fr. 110; used often just like POdvq, dvve mparrav make haste about it, Pl. 413; a@vvcov tmodnoayevos make haste and get your shoes on, Vesp. 1168, cf. Av. 241; dvvoov wor’ éfeA@uy Pherecr. AovA. 5; but more freq. in part. dydcas, or dvdoas 7¢ with another Verb, dvory’, dvory dvicas make haste and open the door, Ar. Nub.181; dvd- Baw’ dvicas Vesp. 398; add’ dvicas Tpéxe Pl. 229; A€y’ dvioas Ib. 3493 ad 8 éyxeov meiv dvicas 7 Eq. 118; cf. Vesp. 202, 847, 1158, Pl. 648, 9743 BonOnodra mis dvicas Ach. 571; viv ody dvicavre ppovri- oopey Eq. 71; dkodovdncas enol dvicas tt Nub. 506, cf. 12533 amd- dwpev avicavre Pax 872. dv, inf. dvew Plat. Crat. 415 A, part. dvav, impf. jvor, etc. (v. infr.) : aor. Hveoa Epigr. Gr. 491., 1028. 35. Radic. form of dvie, avira, to accomplish, finish, io dbdv Od. 3. 496; ob7’ dv Te Oday ovr’ emt- onéviav dvows (as Dobree for vaois or AdBos), Aesch. Fr. 156; aad’ ovdty Fvov Eur. Andr. 1132; Tatra mpds dvdpés ear dvovros els owrnpiay (like dvvw 1. 3), Ar. Vesp. 369, ubi v. Dind.; ‘jvoyey dpvo- odpevoe Anth. P. 11. 64; dvos, dvi rod dvvos Phryn, in A. B. f II. Pass. to come to an end, be finished, mostly of the con- clusion of a period of time; uada ydp vdé dverat night is quickly draw- ing to a close, Il. 10. 251; éros dvépevov the waning year, Hdt. 7. 20, cf. 1. 189; juap dvdpevoy Ap. Rh. 2. 494 :—but also, dams .. épyov dvo.ro Il. 18. 4733 fvero 7d épyov Hadt. 8. 71; dvopévay Bnyarov Aesch. Cho. 799; dmorav Onpns . . €pryov avnrat Opp. H.5.442:—impers., Aerais dverat=Acral dvvovra, Pind. O. 8. 10; cf. dviwinit. [a Hom., except in Il. 18. 473: afterwards it is common, cf. Aesch. l. c., Opp. H. - 442. she boa Gvw, Koen. Greg. 455, Adv. (dvd): I. with Verbs implying Motion, up, upwards, avw wOecxe wort Adpov Od. 11. 5960; dv dvamdeiv up stream, Hdt, 2.155; «dvs 8° dva popetro Soph. El. 7143 Komopros dvw éxwper Thuc. 4. 343 7 dvw ddds the upward road, Plat. Rep. 621. C; so, dvw idvre going up the country (i.e. inland, v. infr. 11. 1, e), Hdt, 2. 8, cf. Eur. Med, 410, Dem. 433. 24, etc.; so also in the phrase dv xara, v. infr. 1.2; wéumev dvq, i.e. from the nether world, Aesch, Pers, 645, cf. Cho. 147; ovpryyes dva pvodor péday pévos Soph. Aj. 1412. II. with Verbs implying Rest, up, aloft, on high, Ib. 239, etc.; 7d dvq Plat. Phaedr. 248 A, etc. b. on earth, as opp. to the world below, vépfe «dm yhs ava Soph. oO. T. 416; eva évw Id. El. 1167; dvw BAémev Id, Ph. 1167; dvw ent ris yis Plat. 154 Phaedo 109 C ; of ava the living, opp. to of xdrw the dead, Soph. Ant. 1068, cf. Ph. 1348, etc.; 7d dvw mpéypara the world above, Luc. Charid. 1. ¢. in heaven, as opp. to earth, of dvw Oeol the gods above, Lat. superi, Soph. Ant. 1072; «npg ray dvw re kat kérw Aesch. Cho. 7124, d. generally of relative position, dvw xaOja0at to sit in the upper quarter of the city, i.e, the Pnyx, Dem. 285. 2; % dvw Bovdn, i.e, the Areopagus, Plut. Sol. 19; BaddAdyevor bmd Trav dv by those above on the higher ground, Thuc. 4. 48; 7a dvm Xen. An. 4. 3, 25; 70 dvw ris oixias Id. Eq. 1, 2; 6 dvw rémos the highland country, Plat. Rep. 435 E. e. geographically, on the upper side, i.e. on the north, northward, bacov MéoBos dvw . . eépryet Il. 24. 544; diva mpds Bopénv Hdt. 1. 72; otre rd dvw xwpia ote Ta Karw, ore Ta mpds THY AO obre Td mpds Thy éomépny Id. 1. 142 ;—so in the human body, v. kérw Il. d,e. f. inward from the coast, ra. dvw Aains, opp. to 7a Karem, Id. 1.95, 177, etc.; Tis AcBuns Ta dvw Id. 2. 24; 7) dve bdds the upper or inland road, Id. 7. 128, Xen. An. 3. 1,8; % dvw méAus, opp. to the Peirweus, Thuc. 2. 48; in full, of awd Oaddoons dvw Id. 2. 833 have Maxedovia Plut., etc.; 6 dvw Baotdeds the king of the upper country, i.e. of Persia, Hdt. 4. 18; v. sub dvdBaots. g. for its sense in the Tace-course and the human body, v. «arm 11. d and e. h. of Time, formerly, of old, eis 73 évw reckoning upwards or backwards, Plat. Theaet. 175 B; of dvw men of olden time, Id. Criti. 110 B; of dvw Tod ~yévous Id. Legg. 878 A; ai dvw pnrpds the mother’s Jineal ancestors, 1d. Rep. 461 C; so, 6 dvwrépw Id. Legg. 880 B; év rots dva xpdvois Dem. 328. 23. i. above, like Lat. supra, in referring to a passage, Plat. Gorg. 508 E, Rep. 603 D. k. of tones in the voice, of dvw révor Plut. Cic. 3. 1. metaph., dyw Batvew to walk proudly, Philostr. 15 ; dve ppoveiv Heliod. 7. 23. 2. dvw kat Karo, up and down, to and Jro, eipr’ dvw re at karo Eur. H.F. 953; dvo nat wéro pevyew Ar. Ach, 21; a. re kal «. xveay Id. Eq. 866. 3 Tepimareiy dvw Karw Id. Lys. 709. b. upside down, topsy-turvy, Lat. susque deque, Ta piv avw Kara Onow, Ta 58 Karw dvw Hdt. 3.3; wdv7dvw re kat Karw orpépov TiOnow Aesch. Eum. 650; tpérovoa rUpB’ dvw karo Id. Fr. 321, cf. Ar. Av. 3; dvw narw ovyxeiv Eur. Bacch. 349; and in Prose, dvw kat aru orpépev, peraorpépev, perarcapBdvey, etc., Plat.; moveiy Dem. 120. 19, cf. 544.1; dvw xal karw peraninrev, yiyvecdat, to be turned up- side down, Pind. O. 12. 7; but dvw xa karw peraBaddew or peraBdr- AeoOa to turn a thing all ways in one’s mind, and so to be quite at a loss, Plat., cf. Heind, Phaedo 96 A, Prot. 356 D. 3. dvw exe 7d. mvedpa to pant or gasp, (‘ sublimi anhelitu,’ Hor.), Menand. ‘Ad. 3, Sosicr. Mapaxar. 1, and v. s. dp@émvoia. B. as Prep. with gen., above, 4 dvw “Advos ’Aoln Hat. 1. 130; “Advos dvw Id. 1. 103; ai dvw pnrpds (v. supr. I. g); dvw Tod yovaros above the knee, Theophr. Char. 4; but most common in late writers, Schif. Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 825. 2. the gen. is partitive in al@épos avw éAciv, Soph. Ph. 1092, cf. Eur. Or. 15423 ys Hrovr’ dvw Id. H. F. 616; puxpoy mpoayayav dvw Trav mpayparev Aeschin. 32. 42. ; C. Comp. dvwrépw, absol. higher, dvaripa Oana’. .Zevs Aesch. Pr. 312; dvwrépw obdiv Trav mpyyudray mpoxonréyrwy not getting on any further, Hdt. 1. 190, etc. 2. c. gen., ob mpoonicay dvwrépw Zdpou beyond Samos, Id. 8. 130, 1325 avwrépw yiyveoBai tiwvos Xen. An. 4. 3, 253 dvwrépw rev paorav above them, Ib. 1. 4, 17; later, as in Polyb. 1. 7, 2, etc., also dvwrepov; in Eccl. —répws:—cf. dvw- TEpos. II. Sup. dvwrarw, és rovs dv. (sc. crdvras) Hdt. 7. 233; % dv. r@pn Xen. An. 7. 4, 11; dvweicav@’ Smws dv. Ar. Pax 207: 7 dv. donnots the highest, Arr. Epict. 3. 24, 84; 74 dv. yévy summa genera, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 138; v. dvywraros.—Cf. xarw throughout. Gv [a], subj. aor. 2 of dvinu. ; ; dvwya, old Ep. pf. with pres. sense, the forms being very irreg.: dvorya, —as, -€, without augm., Il. and Trag., Hdt. 3.81; 1 pl. avwyper h. Hom. Ap. 528: imper. dvarye Eur. Or. 119, but more often dvax6t Il. 23. 158, Aesch. Cho. 772, Eur.; 3 sing. dvaryérw Od. 2. 195, dvxOo Il. 11. 189; 2 pl. dvdryere Od. 23. 132, dvwx0e 22. 437, Eur. Rhes. 987 ; subj. dvéyp Hom., Hdt. 7. 104; inf. dvaryéuev Il. 13. 56 :—plapf. with impf. sense, 3 sing. #vdye 6.170, Soph.; and without aug avdvyet Il. 18.176; Ion. qvéyea Od. 9. 44., 17. 55 :—but the form dyéyer in Il. 6. 439-, 7- 74. 19. 102, Od. 5. 139, 357, Hes. Th. 549, Hdt. 7. 104 is necessarily present in sense, and therefore must be referred to a pres. dviyw (though in all these places dvaryev might be read) ; we have also 2 dual dvdyeroy, Il. 4. 287, and (later) 2 sing. dvdyes Q. Sm. 13. 238: —from this pres. again are formed the impf. qveyor Il. 9. 574, Od. 14. 237, or dvoryov Il. 5. 805, Od. 3. 35, etc.; mvarye h. Cer. 298, Hes. Op. 68; fut. dvwfa Od. 16. 404; aor. qvata Hes. Sc. 479, inf. dv@far Od. 10. 531; aor. subj. dvdtouer, Ep. for -wpev, Il. 15. 295 —in Il. 7. 394, the impf. #véyeov implies another pres. dvoryéo, unless (with Spitzn.) we read jvwyev. Poét. Verb (used twice by Hdt.), fo command, bid, order, Lat. jubeo, esp. of kings and masters, Il. 5. 899, etc. ; but also of equals and inferiors, to advise, desire, urge, 16, 8, Od. 2. 195, etc. :— the full construct. is c. acc. pers. et inf, cwmGv Aady dvdvyet bade the people keep silence, Il, 2. 280, cf. 4. 287, etc.; marnp o dvorye . . abday Aesch, Pr. 947, cf. 1037, etc.; dvaryer maoas ebxer8ar Soph. Tr. 1247; ovyav dvorya (se. ce) Id, El. 1458:—in Hom, also c. dat. pers., Od. 10. 531., 20. 139, 8q., cf. Ap. Rh. 1.693 :—«. ace. pers. only, Oupds dvaryé pe my spirit bids, fa a oe Bana ‘ wiersay érorpiver Kat dvwyet Il. 15.43; “éAopat kal dvarya Od. 3. 317, etc. i ae eh rdiowes 76, (dver, yata) anything raised from the ground; the upper floor of a house, used as a granary, Xen. An. 5. 4, 29, Antiph. Incert. 86:—also as a dining-room, Lat. coenaeulum, Ev. Marc. 14.15, Luc. 22,12. 2. a prison, Suid.— We also find in Mss. and Gramm. the forms a) , aV@ — GVOVULLG,. Gv@yev, v. sub dvol-yvupe. avwyn, 7), isa) c'ccioned, exhortation, Ap. Rh. 1, 1134, ete. vero, V. sub avarya. ‘ Gvadns, €s, (6(w, ddada) scentless, without smell, Plat. Tim. 50 E: formed like etw5ns. Gvw@dive [i], fo be in labour, bring forth, Nonn. D. 41. 167. Gy-@Bos, ov, not singing, Arist. H. A. 1. I, 29. @ . h, freedom from pain, Protag. ap. Plut. 2. 118 E, Gv-GBivos, ov, (d5vvn) free from pain, oldjpara Hipp. Progn. 38; of persons, Soph. Ph. 883; 70 dvw5uvoy =dvwbvvia, Plut. 2, 102 D :—Adyv., dvadives rixrecbat Hipp. 205 G; dvwdvywrara Id. Acut. 384. 3. 2. harmless, 7d ys) ppoveiv yap Kapr’ dv. kaxdv Soph. Aj. 555 (prob. a spurious line); dyaprnua 7} alcxos dv., definition of 7d yeAoior, Arist. Poét. 5, 2. II, act. allaying pain, Hipp. Aph. 1253; pdappaxov dy. an anodyne, Plut. 2.614 C:—the Epitaph of a physician in Anth. P. app. 57 combines both signfs., roAAods 5¢ cwoas pappdkos dvwdvvos, dvwbuvoy 76 c@ia viv éxe Oavwr. dywGev, and metri grat. dvw@e (Ar. Eccl. 698), Dor. dvw0a Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 87: (dvw) :—Adv. of Place, from above, from on high, Hat. 4. 105, Pind. Fr. 87, Trag., etc.; t5aros dvwbev yevopevov, i.e. rain, Thuc. 4. 75; BdadAew dvabev Id. 7. 84:—Oeds eorpey’ dvader .. warm Eur. Tro. 1243: from the interior of a country, Thuc. 1. 59, Xen. An. 7. 7, 2. 2. according to a common Greek idiom (v. Jelf Gr. Gr. § 647), often used much like dvw, above, on high, opp. to KaTabev or «ara, Aesch. Ag. 871, and often in Trag.; of the gods, Id. Supp. 597, Plat. Legg. 717 B; of men on earth, of dy, the living, Aesch. Cho. 834, Eur. Hel. 1014 ; but also those on deck (in a ship), Thuc. 7. 63; of birds of the air, Soph. El. 1058; % ay. bpvyia upper Phrygia, Dem. 671. 19. b. rarely c. gen., dv. rod orparomedov Hat. 1. 75 ; THs vews Plut. Themist. 12; in Aesch. Ag. 1579, ys prob. belongs to dn. oe of Time, from the beginning, av. dpyecOat, émyerpetv Plat. Phileb. 44 D, Legg. 781 D; éera(ew, Lat. ex alto repetere, Dem. 1082.7; in quotations, above, earlier, Athanas., Gramm. :—oi dy. ancestors, Plat. Tim. 18 D; KopivOca elpes dv. by descent, Theocr. 15. 91, cf. 22.164; movnpds dy. a born rogue, Dem. 1125. 23; év rots dv. xpdvars Id. 121.19:—7a av. first principles, Plat. Phaedo 101 D. 2. over again, anew, afresh, denuo, pidiay ay. roe?ra: Joseph. A. J. 1.18, 3, Artem. Onir. 1. 14, cf. Ey. Jo. 3. 3, Ep. Gal. 4.9; cf. Harp.s. vv. dvabéoda, dvarodi(dyeva, dvacvyragis. dvobéw, fut. dvicw :—to push up or forth, dvicavres tréov (sc. vavv) they pushed off from shore and sailed, Od. 15. 553,—like Lat. protrudere in altum ; dv. ri nédw els rods Todewiovs Thuc. 8. 93 :—Pass. to be thrust upwards, Arist. Probl. 23. 4, 3. 2. to push back, Hipp. Art. 839; Sorts oirov . . éoaxbévra dveeotn C. I. 3044. 51:—Med. fo repel, oe obrot éoay of Bacrréa . . dvwodpevor Hat. 7.139, cf. 8. 10g. varort [T], Adv. of sq., unlooked for, Od. 4. 92. dy-dtrros, ov, (olopar) unlooked for, unexpected, av. randy Il. 21. 393 dywlorav mohéev wep Ep. Hom. 5; BédXea Mosch. 2. 75 :—Adv. -Tws, Ap. Rh, 1. 680. véroros, ov, Ion. for dvoords, referred, dvalarov yevouévov és tiv Tlv9iny the matter having been referred to .., Hdt. 6. 66. 2. lifted up, raised, Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 1. 15. dv-heOpos, ov, (dAcOpos) indestructible, Parmen. Fr. 57; a0dvaros nat dyox, Anaximand. 1, Plat. Phaedo88B, 95 B, al. II. act.not deadly, harmless, Opes Paus.10.17,6; of symptoms, Aretae. Caus, M. Diut. 1. 5. dv-wAbgukros, ov, (dAopi¢w) =unbewailed, Hesych, dvaptidrte, to be uneven, Greg. Nyss. dv-opadrys, és, (Suadds) = dvdpanros, Arist. Probl. 19. 6,15; 9 pwr?) pera- Badr éni7d . . dvwpadréorepov Id. H.A.7.1,3. Adv.—A@s, Id. Phys. 8. 9, 5. dvopidta, 4, unevenness, Plat. Rep. 547 A, Aeschin. 29. 11, Arist. H. A. 1, 16, 11; of the voice, Id. G. A: 5.7, 25. II. of conditions, ete., dv. Tis xTHoEws Id. Pol. 2. 9, 135 Btov, rixns Diod. 18. 59., 20. 30. it. of persons, irregularity, Aeschin. 35: 7, Isocr. 16 A, Plut. Aemil. 17; dy. €xev to be anomalous, Strab, 742. IV. deviation from rule, anomaly, Gramm. V. indisposition, Heliod. 7. 19. évoptirtfo, dvopdhwors, v. sub dvou-. dv-Opados, ov, (dv— negat., épadds) uneven, irregular, xwpa Plat. Legg. 625 D: 7) ay. unevenness of ground, Thuc. 7, 71, Arist. Probl. 5. 40, 1, al,; and in Sup., Hipp. Aér. 289; of movements, Arist. Phys. 5. 4, 14, al.; of periods of time, Id. G. A. 4. 4, 37; of the voice, Ib. 5. 7, 25 :—Adv. -Aws «vetoba Id. Phys. 6. 7, 6, al. II. of con- ditions, fortune, and the like, ge} rv Bporetay ds dv. rixat Eur. Fr, 685 ; mdAus, modrreia Plat. Legg. 773 B, Menex. 2 38 E; vas Id, Tim. 58 A i—Adv. ~Aws, Hipp. Progn. 37, Plat. Tim. 52 E. III. of persons, inconsistent, capricious, ay. tts Arist, Post. 1 5, 6; dyAos, darpd- viov App. Civ. 3. 42, Pun. 59; m@nxos Phryn. Com. Moy. 2. Iv. in Gramm. of words which deviate from a general rule, anomalous, évapadorns, nros, %),=dvwparta, Plat. Tim, 57 E, 58 C, al. dvopdAwors, v. sub dvoudrwars, dv-wpos, ov, without shoulder, Suid. robe ie Adv. of sq., without oath, at duvuvras Kad av. Hat. 2. 118. dv-Gporos, ov, (Suvupe) unsworn, not bound by oath, % yA@oo” bumpox’, F BE ppiy dy. Eur. Hipp: 612, cf. Ar. Thesm, 275, Arist. Rhet. 3.15,85; av. paprupes Antipho 130. 40, cf.Dem.542.14; Bedv dvaporos Eur. Med. 737: —Adv.—ras, Aristid. 2, 387. II. not sworn to, eiphvn Dem. 404. fin. dvapdw, to carry on the shoulder, Nicet. Ann. 1 53 A (v. 1. dveudw). dvavis, Sos, #, v. sub dvwris, dvovipacros, ov, (dvoudtw) nameless, Hec. 714; dy. donq Ar. Av. 1715. dvovipet and -t, Adv., without name indescribable, ineffable, Eur. » A. B. 747, E. M. 764. 22. avabyeov, avayarov ordvéyatoy, 74, and dvayews, bi "Exropos we are not—all together —worth one Hector, ll. 8.234; mavrov Zeds afiov juap cdwxev, like Lat. instar omnium, 15.719 :—so, woAAOd Ggtos worth much, Xen. An. 4. 1, 28, Plat. Symp. 185 B, etc.; mAelovos ag. Id. Phaedr. 235 B, etc. ; mrelorov dg.ov, quantivis pretii, Thuc. 2. 65, Plat. Gorg. 464 D, etc. ; so also, rayrés and rod mavrds dftov Eur. Fr. 277, Plat. Soph. 216 C; mayrds dfvov c. inf., Ar. Av. 797; Adyou dgtos, = dftdAoyos, Hat. 1. 133, Thuc. I. 73, etc.;—opp. to these are ovdévos ag. Theogn. 456; 7) nayrds 7) 7d mdpamay ovdévos Plat. Phileb. 64 D; dAéyou Id. Gorg. 497 B, etc. ; opixpod Id. Rep. 504 D, etc.; Bpaxéos Id. Legg. 692 C; petovos, édarrovos, éAaxlorov dg. Xen. Vect. 4, 50; moAAamAaglov Tiphparos dfia ernoes Arist. Pol. 5.6, 17; also, eis dySonKovta pvav aga worth up to a sum of .., Dem. 816. 20. 2. c. dat. pers., cot & did éorw dporis 'tis worth a return to thee, i. e. will bring thee a retum, Od. 1. 318; moAéos dé of afidy éorw Il. 23. 562; moddod or mActarou df.ov elvai tin Xen., etc. 8. absol. worthy, goodly, dgva Sapa, etc.; dgvos dvos a goodly price, Od. 15. 429; bOev Ké Ta dgiov GAdpor it would bring thee a good price, 20. 383; pépovres 6 Tt Exacros df.ov eixe Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 2-—In Hom. therefore, as mostly in Att., the word had the sense of high value or worth; but b. in Att. it has also an exactly opposite sense, of a proper value or due price, cheap, as in Ar. Eq. 645, 672, 895; ds dfiwraroy mpiacOar Lysias 165.3. 4. in Att. also worthy, deserved, meet, fit, due, 5ixn Soph.El. 298, Xen. Occ. 12, 19; xapis Id. Hell. 1.6, 11; dfia Spdcas dfia mao xow fit suffering for 5. of persons, of éwbrot tot those of one’s own rank, his peers, Hdt. 1. 107. 6. sufficient boas C. rene Tov ToAEwou TA xphyara Dem. 185. 26. 7. aidods dtiav .. iv mpobupiay paddov 7) Opacous more like modesty than rash- ness, Arist. Cael. 2. 12, I. II. after Hom., esp. in moral relation, worthy, estimable, of persons and things, Hdt. 7. 224, etc.; oddev dfia nothing worth, Aesch. Cho. 445; dftay dm’ dfiov Id. Eum. 435. 2. worthy of, deserving, meet for, mostly c. gen. tei, dgcov puyfjs, agia ore- vayparov, yédoros, etc., Eur. Med. 1124, Or. 1326, etc. 3 eyeoplaiv ri dfihrepov #.., Xen. Ages. 10, 3:—but c. gen. pers., woeiv dia obre tpav otre marépwv Thuc. 2. 71; dgwov rod marpds Isocr. 207 B; so, dfia Tod Mapabavos d:avoeio@at Plut. Cim. 5. b. c. gen. rei et dat. pers., huiv 8 ’AxiAAeds dios Tipijs is worthy of honour at our hands, Pors. Hec. 309, Elmsl. Heracl. 316; moAAGy d-ya0dv dgcos buiv Ar. Ach, 633; so, dg. mdelorov Aakedapovios Thuc. 4. 81; Oavarov ri mdde Xen. Mem. 1. 1, 1, cf. 1. 2, 62; ep 8 od rovraw dyiv agios Dem. 584. 2, cf. Antipho 142. 26; later, riufjs df. mapa Twos Luc. Tox. 3. 3. c. inf., MpoBonvopos dvr? mepacba agcos worthy to be killed instead of him, Il. 14. 412, cf. Hdt.1. 14, Thuc. 1.76; tlea@ac 5 dgubraros Aesch. Ag. 531; dt. Opjvaw rvxeiv Soph. Aj. 924; décor SovAevery only fit to be slaves, Arist. Pol. 1.5, 10 :—and so, b. duds eiyu, like Stxatds eiye, I deserve to.., dfids elye wApyas AaBely Ar. Eccl. 324; dgids cipe dwodadoa Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 19 :—absol., the inf. being easily supplied, authorised to act, Andoc. 17. 19; so, dfcos yap, emphatically, Plat. Theaet. 143 E. 4. dfidy [éort] "tis meet, fit, due, dfiov elvat tpeis Evds dvrt mepacba Il. 1 Fy 446; af. pyfpny éxew Hdt. 1.14. —— b. c. dat. pers. et inf, 7H mode yap dfiov gvddaBeiy Tov dvdpa 'tis meet for the city, befits her well to... , Ar. Ach. 205 3 th cot Chy agcov ; Id. Nub. 1074, cf. Av. 548; dfidv ye naaw érododdgat Id. Eq. 616 ; and this construct. is freq. in Xen., dbs ob dgov etn Baothel ddetvar ed. that it was not meet for him.-., An. 2. 3, 36, cf. Sturz Lex. s. v. 10, Andoc. 1.6. ce. the inf. is sometimes omitted, dgfcov yap “EAAadx "tis meet in the eyes of Hellas [so to do], Ar. Ach. 8; and sometimes the dat., dfidv éo7 operae pretium est, it is worth while, hOvpnOijva, Dem.15. 7; yapely obx difvov Eur. Alc. 629. III. Adv. dgiws, c. gen., €udxovro afiws Ad-you Hat. 6. 112; ovre éwbrod af. Id. 3.125; ob« af. damyqows Id. 3.125; ris ddieias Thuc. 3. 39; in Aesch. Cho. 707, Dind. suggests dgias :—absol., Soph. O. T. 133, etc.; KoAdoere dfiws as they deserve Thuc. 3. 40. , ov, worthy of reverence, worshipful, Eust. Dion. P. p. 42. 22: also —oemros, ov, Manass. Chron. 4230. &£vb-cKxemros, ov, worth considering, Xen. Hell. 6. 1, 13. &fvo-cmovSacros, ov, worthy of zealous endeavours, Xen. Lac. 10, 3, Plut. 2. 5 C. dtvo-orparnyos, ov, worthy of being general, or worthy of a great commander, Xen. An. 3. 1, 24, in Comp.:—the forms a£to-orparnyt- «és and -orparfyntos are found in Mss. of Arr, and Dio C.; the latter being preferred by Bekk. and Dind. — - pen Fis ; Gfvo-réxpapros, ov, worthy of being brought in evidence, credible, agiorexpaprirepov tov Adyou 7d épyov deeds are stronger proof than hJ » , ee | agromirroavvy — akiona. &£io-ripnros [7], ov, highly prized, valuable, Philo 1. 461; also —tipos, ov, App. Civ. 3. 19, in Sup. :—and Subst. -ripmots, #, a valuing, appraisement, Schol. Aristid. G£vo-pavas, és, (pavfjva) seeming worthy, Eccl, GEvo-pidnros [i], ov, worth loving, Xen. Occ. 10, 3, Stob, Ecl. 2, 118. G£vs-xpews, ewy, gen. w: Ion. dgvoxpeos, ov, Hdt. (though the other form also is given in Mss.), and Hipp.: neut. pl, dgedxpea :—Comp. and Sup. dgioxpewrepos, -wraros, Polyb. 4. 3, 3-, 10. 27, 1: (xpéos) :— worthy of a thing’, and so, I, absol., like dgidAo-yos, note-worthy, considerable, notable, wédts Thuc. 1. 10; of a person, bmd dgidxpew Kat drodavéay jpuicea cupoph (cf. Virg. Aeneae magni dextra cadis), Hdt. 5. 111. 2. serviceable, trustworthy, sufficient, dgidxpeov mpopacw mporelve Id. 1.156; én ovddeuin aitin agidxpew Id. 3. 35; also of persons, ag. éyyunrat trustworthy, substantial, Ar. Eccl. 1065, Plat. Apol. 38 B; «is dg. tov Aéyovra dvolow Ib. 20 E. II. c. inf. able, sufficient to do.., Hdt. 4. 126, Thuc. 5. 13; Gfedxpew. . hyiv dvrirégacba: Dem. 36. 5; # ob afidxpews 5 Oeds .. TO placpa Adoat; Eur. Or. 598. III. c. gen. rei, worthy, deserving of, déwxpea danyjovos = dgiarnynra, Hat. 5.65; af. rnAccovrou mpayparos worthy of credit in .. Dem. 101. 28, cf. 381. 22.—Rare in Poets, as Eur. |. c. GEvée, fut. dow: pf. igiaxa Isocr. 376 A :—Med., v. infr. 11. 3:—Pass., fut. dgiwOjcopat Isocr. 190 B, but also dg¢dwoerar Soph. Ant. 637: aor. HEwOnv : pf. jglwpar: (agcos). To think or deem worthy, I. c, acc. et gen., whether in good sense, to think worthy of a reward, huas agiot Adyou Eur. Med. 962; éavrdv ray KaddioTrwy Xen. An. 3. 2, 73 or in bad, of a punishment, Hdt. 3.145; d€. Twa dtiptas Philipp. ap. Dem. 283. 25; «axod Plat. Apol. 38 A:—Pass., agvevpevos Ouyatpos THs ons Hdt. 9. 111; Aéxn.. Tupdvvey iéwpéva deemed worthy of kings, Eur. Hec. 366; dfvotic@a xax&v Antipho 122. 23; Tod avrod évéparos Plat. Phaedo 103 E, al. 2. c. acc. only, ¢o esteem, honour, Soph. Aj. 1114, Eur. Heracl. 918; dg. ria mpoopOéypactv to honour one with words, Aesch. Ag. 903:—Pass., KaAdois duevatos afrodabat Eur. Or, 1210; cf. Pors. et Herm, ad Hec. 319 (r¥pBov dgtovpevor épao0a) and Thuc. 5. 16. 8. to value at a certain price, émdans dy tipis dgiwon 7 Plat. Legg. 917 D. II. c. acc. pers. et inf. to think one worthy to do or be, aé roe Hgiwoe vatew Eur. Alc. 572; ove afia "ya pavroy icxdew péya Ar. Eq. 182; ri cavrdv dmorivew dgiois; Pherecr. Kpam. 7 :—Pass., Pind. N. 10. 73, Aesch. Pr. 240; biSdoxadros afiodcba: to be esteemed as a teacher, Plat. Theaet. 161 D. 2. to think fit, expect, require, demand that .. , Lat. postulare, af. Twa édAeiv Hat. 2. 162; dg. twa ddnO® Aéyev Antipho 118. 20; ovk af, [dpas] rd pr) dead ev dppwiia exe we expect that you do not.., Thuc. 2. 89; dg. 7 éuol yevéabar Andoc. 18. 36; dg. kal mapa- wadety Twa c. inf., Decret. ap. Dem. 283. 3. III. c. inf. only, df. xopifecOat, rvyxdvey to think one has a right to receive, expect to receive, Thuc, I. 42., 7.15; dgtois ddAo 71 4 droBaveiv ; Lys. 164. 32: with a negat., ob dé tmomrevecbat I think I do not deserve to be suspected, have a right not to be .., Thuc. 4. 86, cf. 1, 102., 3. 44:— Pass., doe dftoic0a Acrroupyeiv so as to be required to.., Dem. 833. 26; vid mpoddpurs rafcotpevor moidy one's duty, Menand.’ AdeA¢. 3. 2. to think Jit, expect, consent, resolve, etc., and so in various senses, agid Gavetv I consent to die, Soph. O. T. 944, etc.; aga mpdooew I dare, determine to do, Aesch. Pers. 335, etc. ; esp. to deign to do, ef ris dgcot Habetv Id. Ag. 1661, cf. Soph. O.T.1413; so, age@ AapBdvew I do not hesitate to receive, Plat. Hipp. Mi. 364 D, etc.; ofvae mayras.. pepe goby I think that all should be glad to bring, Dem. 547. 9 :— often with a negat., ob@ dg pyna@fivac I do not think them worth mentioning, Hdt. 2. 20; ob« Hfiwoay ovdt mpooBrAewat Aesch. Pr. 215 ; ovK agidoayres ++ TovTo maGeiy Thuc. 1. 102, cf. 136; me(OeaOar ov afcodvres refusing, Xen. Occ. 21, 4; rarely, dg. pi) moretv Thuc. 3. 66 :-— also in Med. (but not in Att. Prose), dgiodc@ar pércty to deign to care for, Aesch. Ag. 3703 poveds yap elvar Hfiwoaro thought fit to be, Id. Eum. 425 ; ob dfrevuevar dvaployecda That GAAHot not condescending to .. , Hdt. 1, 199 :—but also as a real Med., ove dgredpevos és Tov. « Opdvov ifeoGat not deeming oneself worthy to .. , Id. 7. 16. 3. to think, deem, hold, afvoivres GdixéeoOar Id. 6. 87, cf. Soph. O. C. 579 Eur. H. F. 1343; éxdrepor way glow thought themselves conquerors, claimed the victory, Thuc. 1. 54. IV. to make a claim, Thuc. 4. 58, Arist. Pol. 3. 17, 6; dgiwaw ag. Polyb. 39- I, 73—also, dfiodv Twa Tt to make a claim on a person, Xen. Mem. 3. II, 12. 2. ey pey obv obrwal mept ris rbxns dg hold this opinion .., Dem. 312. 6; ey piv obt afer, like ob $71, Id. 460, 28:—in philosophic language, to lay te hold, i (cf. dfimpa 1. 2), Arist. An. Pr. 1. 17, 5+» 24. 2,al.; év T@ rode dfiodyre in ini ; oft Jel Gr. G's ase : “ such a state of opinion, 'Thuc. 3. 43 ; aft-ipvytos, ov, worthy of hymns, Byz. &-Eihos, ov, without sword, Lyc. 50. Adv. duet, Hdn. Epim. 257. GEL-AeOpos, ov, worthy to perish, Procop. dtiwpa, aros, 76, (dguder) that of which one is thought worthy, an honour, yapov -- dfiwp eééfaro Eur. Ion 62; és af. Batve Ib. 605 ; Kowhs tpané(ns ag. €xew Id. Or. g; 7d THs réd|Ews ag. the dignity “of the city’s representative, Dem. 277. 4. 2. honour, reputation, high estimation or character, Lat. dignitas, Eur. Supp. 424, Thuc. 2. 34, 65 etc.; evar ev dfidpant tnd doray Id. 6. I5; 70 Tov arevépar yuvacnav ag. Dem. 1384. 3 :—c. gen. objecti, dg. éxew dperijs a repu- tation for virtue, Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 6 3. rank, position, agudparos apdveca Thue. 2. 27; yéver wat rots dddors agi@pacw Tsocr. 385 E:— of things, worth, quality, ob +® mA#Oe drrd TH akiwpare Thuc. 5. 8. II. that which is thought fit, a resolve, decision, intention, Purpose, daipcver Soph. O. C. 1452, cf. 1459; 7a TOV mpoydvay cf. p) , 2? aEvmparixds —aopynTos. Dem. 298. 4. 2. in Science, that which is assumed as the basis of demonstration, a self-evident principle, Arist. Metaph. 2. 2, 15, An. Post. I. 3, 7, al.:—in Mathematics, a self-evident theorem, an axiom, Ib. 1. Io, 4, Metaph. 3. 3, 1, al. 3. a request, petition, Plut. 2. 633 C. éfiwpizikes, 7, dv, of or for dignity, dignified, honourable, Polyb. 10. 18, 8, etc. ; of style, Dion. H. de Dem. 1093, etc.: high in rank, Plut. 2. 617 D. II. supplicatory, Polyb. 20. 9, 9. IIL. speaking in axioms, axiomatic, Diog. L. 4. 33. Gkwpdriov, 7d, Dim. a petty dignity, Arr. Epict. 2. 2, 10. d£vdvipos, ov, (Gvoya) worthy, Byz. Adv. —vws, Greg. Naz. diétws, Adv., v. sub dgios Iv. Gfiwors, gen. ews, Ion, tos, %, (dgtdw) a thinking worthy, ris dfioews eivena rips ef éned yijwar for your thinking it worthy, deeming it fit, to marry from my family, Hdt. 6. 130. 2. a being thought worthy, one’s reputation, character, 5: tiv mpoimdpxovoay ag. Thuc. 1. 138; Ti ag. pr dpavifew Id. 2. 61: actual worth of a thing, excellence, Schiif. Dion. Comp. p. 54. II. a demand or claim, on grounds of merit (as opp. to xpela, on grounds of necessity), Thuc. 1. 37; df. xaprros Ib. 41, cf. Polyb. 1. 67, 10, etc.; ds dad ris tmapyovons ag. Thuc. 6. 54. IIL. a thinking fit, an op , principle, im, THY ag. radrny eidAnpecay .., Id. 2. 88, cf. Aeschin. 85. 17. IV. dé. ray dvoparaw és Ta Epya the established meaning of words, Thuc. 3. 82. dtvwréov, verb. Adj. one must think worthy, twa Arist. Eth. N. 8. 8, 6. G-fdiivos, ov, without carved images, Luc. Syr. Dea 3. dtov-yharos, ov, whirling on the axle, avpvyyes Aesch. Supp. 181. &Eévov, 74, Dim. a little axle, Hero Spir. 183 C, Poll. 10. 31 :—also é£oviokos, 6, Hero Ib. 220 A. akdévios, a, ov, (afwv) belonging to the axle, Anth. P. 9. 117. dtoos, ov, =dfeoros, Hesych., v. Bentl. Call. Fr. 105. afos, 6, Cretan word for dypés, Steph. B., cf. Wessel. Hdt. 4.154. 3B. Maced. word for tAn, Hesych. a-Evykpérytos, ov, for dovyx-, not welded together by the hammer :— metaph., of rowers, not trained to pull together, Thuc. 8. 95: of style, not compact, rambling, Dion. H. de Dem. 19. GEv\evros and dfvAveros, ov, =adfvAos 1, Hesych. &£tALa, %, want of wood, Hes, ap. Schol. Ven. Il. 11.155, Strabo 725. G-ttXos, ov, with no timber cut from it, Lat. incaeduus, dgvdos HAn an unthinned, i.e. thick, wood, Il. 11. 155; ag’ Hs ovdels éfvAtoaro Schol. Ven. ad 1, :—others refer it to a intens., thick with trees, but wrongly,— for gdAov can only mean a log of wood, not a growing tree. II. without wood, Hdt. 4. 61, 185, Anth. P. 9. 89: also without a load of wood, Luc. Asin. 32. dtup-, dfuv-, v. sub dovp-, dovr-. &-fivos, ov, acc. to Gramm. very sociable, Valck. Adon. p. 226 C. Gktpys, és, and dfupos, ov, uncut, or act. not cutting, Hesych. atveraros, ov, v. sub dovoraros. &-Euoros, ov, not scraped, Antyll. in Matthaei Med. 53. unpolished, Schol. Soph. O. C. 102. Gkwv, ovos, 5, an axle, xdAneos Il. 16. 378; otdhpeos 5.7233 piyywos Ib. 838; and so Trag., etc. 2. the axis of a cone, Arist. Meteor. 3. 5, 2, Fr. 342. 3. the supposed axis of the heavens, Id. Mund. 2, 4, Arat. 22, Dion. H. 2.5; dgav vonrds Eust. 1389. 59. II. of afoves, the wooden tablets of the laws in Athens, made to turn upon an axis, Plut. Solon 25; cf. Herm. Pol. Ant. § 107, 1, and v. evpBets; sing. in Dem. 630. 12. III. in pl. also of part of a bridle-bit, Xen. Eq. 10, 9 and Io. IV. name of one of the vertebrae, Poll. 2. 132. (From 4/A8, a strengthd. form of AI’ (dyw), whence also duafa; cf. Skt. akshas; Lat. axis; O. H. G. ahksa (achse); Lith. aszis.) d-oyKos, ov, not bulky, attenuated, &s doykérarov Hipp. 229. 5. G-o5uos, ov, = dvodpos. doléw, to serve, wait on, Aesch, Fr. 50. dolia, Ion. -ty, 4, attendance, Epigr. Gr. 425. Golos, 5, =Oeparwy, aservant, attendant, esp. belonging toatemple, Aesch. Ag. 231; cf.doogéw, (Prob. for d-dd:0s (a copulat.) and so= dxoAovOds.) d-ofos, ov, =dvo(os, q. v. do.87], Att. contr. G54, }, q.v.: (delSw):—song,asinging,whether, 1. the art of song, abrdp dodiy Oeoreciny apédoyto Il. 2. 599; as dpa To. . Oeds Grace Odom a, Od. 8. 498, cf. 24. 197: 2. the act of singing, song, of & eis ipepdecoay a. rpepapevor 18. 304. 3. the thing sung, a song, orovdeccay &. of pev ap ephveor Il. 24. 721, ef. Od, 1. 352; so Hdt. 2. 79, and often in Pind.; whether of joy or sorrow, cf. Aesch. Eum. 954, with’ Soph. Ant. 882:—Avpas dotdn Eur. Med. 425. 4. the person sung of, iva jot Kat éocopévaaww 4, Od. 8. 580; and so in 24. 200 it is said of Clytaemnestra that she will be a orvyep?) dowd among men, cf, Theogn. 252: hence, 5. a legend, tale, story, Jac. Del. Ep. 9. 12. Cf. @6y. [In Hes. Th. 48 (unless Ajyovol 7 dordis be read), and in Pind. N. 11. 23, doiéy must be pro- nounced, if not written, @7.] Gobidw, post. for deliw, Od. 5. 61., 10. 227, Hermesian. 5. 13. dovdikds, 4, dv, musical, prob. coined by Schol. Hephaest. GotSipos, ov, sung of, famous in song. or story, Hdt. 2. 79, 135, Pind. P. 8, 85, etc.; from Pind. (Fr. 46) downwds. a favourite epith. of Athens, like Atwapai, Wytt. Ep. Cr. p. 1445 4. mépa a glorious draught, Pind. N. 3. 136; 4d. edvouinow famous for his justice, C. 1. 1080; 4. aity épac0a Epigr. Gr. 1069 :—only once in Hom., and in bad sense, noto- rious, infamous, ws. . dvOpwroio. TeAGped’ Gotd.por Il. 6. 358. dovs0-Bérns, ov, 6, a lyric poet, Anth. P. 7.50; cf. buvobérns, vopobérns. dodo-paxos [a], ov, fighting with verses, AoyoAéoxat Anth, P. 11. 140. GorBo-rddos, 6, one busied with song, a poet, like povaordaos, Anth, P. 7+ 594s 595+ II. 157 Gowdds, 6, (deiéw) a singer, minstrel, bard, Lat. vates, Il, 24. 721 and often in Od., as 3. 267, 270, al., Hes. Th. 95, Op. 26; dowdds dvqp Od. 3. 267; Oetos d. 4.17., 8, 87, al.; Tod dpiorou avOpwrev dood Hdt. I, 243; ToAAA Pevdovrat dordot Arist. Metaph. 1. 2, 13:—c. gen., ydov, xpnoper dovdds Eur, H. F. 110, Heracl. 403; mp@ros docdds of the cock, Theocr, 18. 56. 2. as fem. a songstress, of the nightingale, Hes. Op. 206; of the Sphinx, Soph. O. T. 36, Eur. Phoen. 1507; dodds Moioa Id. Rhes. 386, cf. Theocr. 15. 97. 3. an enchanter, Lat. incantator, Soph. Tr. 1001. II, as Adj. tuneful, musical, opus doSordra Eur. Hel. 1109, cf. Theocr. 12. 7, Call. Del. a52, C. 1. 2211, 2. pass. =doldipos, famous, woAAdv doidorépn Arcesil. ap. Diog. L. 4. 30. do8ocivn, 1), song, poetry, Greg. Naz. Govdo-réKos, ov, inspiring song, Anth. P. 9. 364. G-olknros, ov, uninhabited, doix. xat épijpos 4 Aubin Hdt. 2. 34, cf. 4. 31 (v.1. dy-), 5. 10; so in Plat. Legg, 778 B; 7a dolenra Arist. Meteor. 2.5,17. II. houseless, movety Tia dol«nroy to banish one from home, Dem. 1123. 2 (unless dowos should be read, cf. Luc, Somn. 17). G-oukos, ov, houseless, homeless, Hes. Op. 690, Eur. Hipp. 1029, Plat. Symp. 203 D, etc.; ém ¢évns xd&pas dokos Soph. Tr. 300; of certain animals, Arist, H. A. 1. 1, 27. ILI. doskos eicotnnors a homeless, i.e, miserable, home, Soph. Ph. 534. G-ounos, ov, =dppyros, acc. to Hesych. dowéw, to drink no wine, abstain from wine, Hipp. 490. 8. dowla, %, abstinence from wine, Strabo 706. d-owvos, ov, without wine, dowor xoal, such as were offered to the Erinyes, Aesch. Eum. 107 (whence they are themselves called dotvor, Soph. O. C. 100); but dolvois tupavets Ovpapacw, Ib. 860, means frantic not merely with drunken passion, but with deliberate and lastin; hatred ; ovpmdéovoy Theophr. ap. Plut. 2.679 A; vnpayini kal a. ephvy Plat. Phil. 61-C :—cf. ynpdatos. 2. of men, drinking no wine, sober, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 27; also of a place, having none, Ib. 26. 3. without use of wine, doworépa tpopy Arist. Pol. 7.17, 1; dowos wéOn Plat. 2. 716 A. dotos, Aeol. and Dor. for joios. d-ourros, ov, insufferable, Aesch. Supp. 881, as Herm. for diaros. doxvia, %, indefatigableness, révev Hipp. 1180; censured by Poll., 3. 120. &-oxvos, ov, without hesitation, resolute, untiring, restless, dvip Hes. Op. 493; pvAag Soph. Aj. 563; &. mpds peAAnrds Thuc. 1. 70; mpds te Plut. Pel. 3; doxvos BAGBn a pressing, present mischief, Soph. Tr. 841. Adv. -vws, diligently, Hipp. Art. 803, Plat. Legg. 649 B. GoAAHSyy, Adv. of sq., in a body, together, Opp. H. 1. 788 :—of two only, Mosch. 2. 49, cf. sq. GohAjs, és: (v. sub efAw):—all together, like dOpdos, in throngs, shoals or crowds, often in Hom., esp. of warlike hordes, always in pl., *Apyeiot 8 tmépeway doddA€es Il. 5. 498; BaddAov 8 ely édcotow doddéa they put [the joints] al/ together on the dressers, Od. 14. 432; tUpavvoy pey’ Enaiverres dodAd€es Alcae. 37 :—also in Att., xwpOpev 57 mavres dodr- Aéeis Soph. Ph. 1469:—of two only, together, Id. Tr. 513; cf. foreg. GoAX ile, fut. iow, to gather together, like GOpoifw, ddAAooay Kara dorv yepaias Il. 6. 287; dodAAtooaca yepatas Ib. 270:—Pass. to come together, assemble, mavres doddoOnoav ’Axatol Il. 19. 54; amply mep Gpudov dor- AcoOjpevart 5.588; vijgo doddAlCovrat Call. Del.18. 2. later of things, to gather together, heap up, dABov Anth. P. 9.649; Baxxoy Ib. 772. dopBpla, 7, for dvouBpia, cited from Arist. by Lob. Phryn. 729. G-dppatos, ov, =dvdupartos, Byz. d-omhos, ov, without shields (Oda), without their heavy armour on (cf. érdirns), Thuc. 4. 9, ete.: generally, unarmed, Plat. Prot. 321 C; 7a TupArd Tod cuparos Kal dowAa Kat Gyxetpa, i.e. the back, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 45; Appa dowd. a chariot without scythes, Ib. 6. 4, 16: of ships, unarmed, not equipped for war, Polyb. 2. 12, 3. Adv. -ws, Byz.—Cf. dvomdos, which seems to be a later and less correct form, v. Dind, Steph. Thes. s.v. domos, ov, (dW) speechless, Hesych. II. =sq., sightless, Id. domros, ov, (*Orropat) sightless, unseen, Antipho ap. Harp. dop or Gop, dopos, 74, cf. Lob. Paral. 204: (delpo):—properly a hanger or sword hung in a belt (cf. doprnp), a sword, often in Hom.: it must have been broad and stout, as Ulysses dug a trench with*his dop, Od. 11. 24; but in Od, 10. 294, compared with 321, it is synon. with ¢fpos. In 17. 222 we have a masc. acc. pl., od dopas, o¥52 AéBnras, to which Hesych, alludes in the Gloss. dopas* fig, dpoevxds; but Eust. and the Scholl. ad 1, mention that dopas here was taken by many as=dapas, women given as prizes, or=Tplrodas. 2. later, any weapon, dop Tpryhwxw the trident, Call. Del. 31: of the horn of the rhinoceros, Opp. C. 2. 553.—Cf. also &mAov, xpuodwp. _ [Hom, has & in dissyll. cases, as also Hes. Sc. 4573; in the trisyll. cases, & in arsi, & in thesi, e. g. Il. ro. 484, 489. In Hes. Sc. 221, and later Poets, a in arsi even in dop, which must then be written dop. Hes. Th. 283 has dop as monosyll., unless we read with Géttl. yév6’, 6 8 dop xptceor ..]. dopaota, 1, inability to see, blindness, LXX (Gen. 19. IT, al.). d-dpGros, ov, unseen, not.to be seen, invisible, Plat. Phaedo 85 E, etc. ; aéparos dy Alex: "Ymv. 1; rpadpy’ dop., pws Anth. Plan. 198; dop. rd #éAdov Isocr. 8 B; 7d ddparoy the unseen world, the unseen, ef obpavod ka} rod d. Plat. Soph. 246 A, cf. Theaet. 155 E, al.; ray d. drpamerov Bidrov obscure, C. 1. 2892. 2 :—Ady. —rws, Plut. 2. 891 A. II. act. without sight of, not seeing, Twds Polyb. 2. 21, 2., 3. 108, 6: absol., Luc. Hale. 3. 3 dopynota, }, a defect in the passion of anger, ‘lack of gall,’ Arist. Eth. N. 4.5, § —in good sense Plut., who wrote a treatise epi dopynoias. &-dpyntos, ov, incapable of anger, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 1o:—in good 2. ode-devoted, of the choriambus, Auson. Epist. 14. & sense, Plut. 2. 10 B, etc. Ady, -r@s, Arr. Epict. 3, 18, 6. 158 nen to be dépynros, Athanas. vw, =sq., Procl. Inst. Theol. c. 124. Goproréw, to be indeterminate, Arist. Probl. 18 : eee e obl. 18. 7, 4; mepl Twos Sext. Gopioria, %, indefiniteness, indeterminat Arist. Meteor. 2. : unsettledness, Id. Probl. 26, 13, 2. : na dopiotikés, 4, dv, indeterminate, like an aorist, Gaza, &-dpioros, ov, without boundaries, yj Thuc. 1. 139. II. un- 3-1, 6: uncertain, seis TehevrH Anth. P. 9. 499 :—Adv. —rws, Plat. l.c., vopa an indefinite noun, as odK-dvOpwros Id, Interpr. 2. Pass. to be indefinite, often in acer de Constr. » €8, (eldos) like an aorist, Apoll. de Constr. 68, etc. TOS, ov, without impulse, Philo 1. 278. dopvos, ov, (Spyis) without birds, Muvn Soph. Fr. 840; dopva tn heights xo birds can reach, Plut. 2. 327 C :—dopvos Aiuyn, lake Avernus, Arist. Mirab. 102. 1; called 6 ’Aopvos by Strabo 244: %) dopvos wérpa is a hill-fort on the Indus, Diod. 17. 85, Plut. 2. 181 C.—Dion. P. II51 has dopvis, 6, 7). dopos, 6, =dwpos, sleep, restored by Schiif. in Anth. P. 9. 270, éBdpuv’ dépous, for the Ms, reading ¢Bapuvdopos. Gopréw, lengthd. form of aioch only found in part. aor. 1 pass. doprndels eg suspended, Anth. P. 7. 696. doptn, 7, (defpw) in pl. the lower extremities of the windpipe, the same as Bpdyxta, Hipp. de locis 415 (where however Littré reads doprpéov, —TpHst). 2. later in sing. the artery (pAép Arist. calls it) which proceeds from the left ventricle of the heart, H. A. 1. 17, 14., 3+ 3, 7+ 3-5,1, al.; in pl. the arteries, Poll. 2. 205. II. a knapsack that hung from the shoulders, Menand. Migoy. 11, Diphil. "Ems. 1, Posidipp. Emor. 1; cf. Poll. 7. 79., 10.139 :—Hesych, writes it ddprys, ey A fipos, 5, (delpa) to han, h d-bel 0; » Npos, 6, (de a strap to anything to, a sword-belt, Od. 11. 609; in pl. sete Si a dst pads, dpnpés Il. 11. 31. 2. in Od., a knapsack-strap, orpdpos doprhp, v. sub orpd- pos. IL. doprijpes immo, =cepapdpo, Jo. Chrys. opto, Ion. for jopro, 3 sing. plqpf. pass. of deipw, cf. dwpro. doptpa, wv, 7a, the two lobes of the lungs, Hipp. 480. 10. Gopxys, es, without dpyxets, gelded, Dio C. 75. 14. or Gos, 74, a breeze, air, Hesych.; read by Herm. in Aesch. Supp. 782. - : }, want of perfume, opp. to evoopia, Theophr. C. P. 6. 16, 3. Gocpos, ov, (douH), having no smell, without smell, Hipp. Acut. 394, Arist. de Sens. 5, 4; opp. to evoopos, Theophr. C. P. 6. 16, 5. doocée, aor. inf. docajoa, to help, Twi Mosch. 4. 110; cf. doCéw, dooanrip, fpos, 6, an assistant, helper, aider, ll. 15. 254., 22. 3335 Od. 4. 165, Ap. Rh. 1. 471; cf. dogos. dovros, ov, (ovTdw) unwounded, unhurt, Il. 18. 536, Hes. Sc. 157. s, ov, =avdpOadpos, Byz. GoxAncia, 1), undisturbedness, rod awparos Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 127. “-6xAqTOS, ov, undisturbed, still, calm, Dion. H. 1. 8;—a favourite Epi- curean term, Luc, Paras. 11, Adv.—rws, Clem. Al. 496: Sup.—drara, Galen. d-oxAos, ov, not troublesome, Hipp. Art. 837, in Sup. Adv. -ws, Id. Fract. 773 Littré. : dof, oros, 6, 4, without sight, blind, Hesych. dmayyeAevs, ews, 6,=dnayyeAThp, Manetho 2. 263, amayyeAta, 7, a report, as of an ambassador, Dem. 342. 20, al,, Arist. Rhet. Al. 31, 2; dm. moceioOar Lycurg. 149. 29. 2. a narrative, recital, dv .. Bpaxeia } dm. apxel Thuc. 3. 67; so lyric poetry is said to be 8 dmayyedias abrod rod ronrod Plat. Rep. 394C; dramatic poetry is expressed by action, kal od &:’ dmaryyeAlas Arist. Poét. 6, 2, cf. 5, 7. II. diction, Dion. H. de Comp. p. 120. a@mayyeAAw, fut. —ayyeA@, Ion. éw Simon, 12, 20: aor. I —7yyetAa:— Pass. pf. —pyyeApar Plat. Charm, 153 C: aor. —yyyéA@nv Hat. 2. 121, 5, Eur. Hec. 672, later —yyyéAny Plut. Galb. 25 : 1. of a messenger, to bring tidings, report, announce, Twit 7 ll, 9. 626, etc, Hdt. 3. 25, and often in Att.; also, re mpds twa Aesch. Cho. 266, Xen. An. 6. 3, 22, etc.; dm. eis riv “EdAdéa, els 7d orpardmebov, etc., Ib. 2. 4, 4., 6.2, 253 7a map twos Ib. 2. 3,4; Tadra epi cov oixade Plat. Meno 71 C, cf. Hipp. 6. 53, Thuc. 4. 122; dm, #dovds, pdvoy Eur. I. T. 641, Andr. 1241 :— followed by a relat. clause, éxéAeve Tov dyyeAov dmayyé\Aaw br.., Hdt. 1.127, Xen. An. 2. 3,5; dm. ws .. Lys. 114. 38 :—absol., maduw da. to bring back tidings, report in answer, Od. 9. 95 :—Pass,, &¢ dv ., dr- nyyéAAeré pot as he was reported to me, Dem. 522. 25; c. part., arnyyeron .. 6 véxus éxnexAeupévos was reported to have been stolen away, Hdt. 2. 121, 5, cf. Polyb. 1. 15, 11. 2. of a speaker or writer, to report, relate, narrate, Hdt. 1. 210, Arist. Rhet. 3. 16, Io, Poét. 3, 1; dv 6 maddy ,. ov8 dy dmayyeiAa dtvaid’ Erépy Dem. 537. 27: to describe, Hipp. 84 G, Plut. Fab. 16. mayyeAots, ews, 7, =dmrayyedta A, B. 438. amayyeArnp, jipos, 6, a messenger, Anth. P. 6. 5. dmayyeAtiKds, 4, dv, reporting, narrative, Schol, Ar, Ach. 9. II. in Rhet. of or for expression, like épynvevrinds:—rd dmayy. power of expressing, Art, Epict. 2. 23, 2.—Adv. —«@s, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 197. miye, Ady. away! beget! Lat. apage! dm. és paxapiay Ar. Eq. 1151; Kdnay amd ris dopvos hands off! Id. Pax 1053; absol., Luc. Prom. 7, Amor, 38, etc.: rarely c. part., dwaye Td mdpos edruxjpar’ Gopyntéopar — arayw. avday Eur. Phoen. 1733; orc. gen., dn. rob véuov Synes. 161 B. Pro- perly imperat. of dméyw, so that ceavrdy must be supplied, if not ex- pressed, as it is in Ar, Ran. 853. The pl. also occurs in Dio C. 38. 46. dm-dyehos, ov, not yet received into the ayéAn, of boys under 17, Cretan word, Hesych. AiO ee ; amityis, és, (myryvupn) not Jirm or stiff, miedo amayees, of Persian caps, Hdt. 7. 61; prob. opp. to the «vpBacta ép0at wemnyviar mentioned, Ib. 64 ;—of water, dz. kal dovorarov, Plut. 2. 949 B:—of flesh, flabby, | Diog. L. 7.1, Poll. 1. 191; veoooot Philes An, Propr, 12. 33. d-m&y(Seuros, ov, not to be snared or caught, Nicet. Ann. 93.C. &mayivéo, Ion. for dmiyw, esp. of paying tribute, dm. pdpoy Hat, 3. 89, 94; cf. dmdyw 11, drayo’y7. tTaiylwros, ov, =drayys, Byz. Gmaykidu, to make crooked, Xeipa Ath. 667 C, Hero Autom, 271 D. dmayKovitopar, Dep. to push away with the elbows, dmnykavpévy mévra elbowing all aside, utterly unabashed, Philostr. 242; yA@rTa danyroanicpévn nai yupvh Id. 561. II, the Act. in Eust. 1221. 58, to bind one’s hands behind him. Gmayhitiifw, to deprive of ornament, twa twos Anth, P. 5. 220, ef. C. I. 2384, Poll. 1. 217. draypa, atos, 76, a fracture at a joint, Oribas. in Cocchi Chirurg. 86, where the pass. Verb dréyvupar also occurs. Gmayvife, Ion. for dpayvitw, Hipp. dmiyopevpa, aros, 74, a prohibition, interdict, Plut. 2. 1037 C. amayopevorpos, ov, prohibitory, Byz. dmiyépevois, ews, 1), a prohibition, Clem. Al, 223. 2. a negation, Th, M. 290. II. failure of strength, exhaustion, Luc. Gymn. 37, Plut, Ant. 45. Grtiyopevréov, verb. Adj. one must give up, Luc. Hermot. 47; epi twos Dio Chr. 1. 267 :—also —réos, a, ov, Adamant. Physiogn. 1. 17. Gmiyopevtixés, 7, dv, forbidding, prohibitory, Plut. 2. 1037 F. Adv. —#@s, Schol, Hom. to explain darndeyéws. Grii-yopetw, mostly in pres. and impf. only ; (dwep@ being used as fut. by correct writers, dmefmoy as aor., dmeipnea. as pf., and dmoppnOjoopuat, amep- phOny, dretpnpar as pass, fut., aor. and pf.) : aor. danyépevoa Plat. Theaet. 200 D (but drayopevps in Bodl. Ms.), Dem. 1021. 18., 1273. 2, and often in later writers: pf. dmnydpevea Arist. Physiogn. 3, 8, Plut. 2. 1096, etc.; and Arist. (v. infr.) has pf. pass. dmyyopevpevos: (v. d-yopetw). To forbid, ph roeiy m1 Hdt. 1. 183., 3. 51, Ar. Ach. 169, Plat., etc.; da. Twt ph moeiv Hdt. 4. 125, Plat.; dm. twa moveiy Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 143 also, €nouye danydpeves Srws pi). . dtoxpivoipnyv, Plat. Rep. 339 A; Tov vépou dmaryopevorros éav Tis . . Lysias 114. 39; dm. re Id. 116. 38; mept Gy 5 vépos dm, pi) mvGow Arist. Pol. 4.14,8; 7a danyopevpéva things Sorbidden, Ib. 7. 17, 9; and so later, cf. Sext. Emp. P. 1. 152. 2. to dissuade, ToAAA drayopedwy ovdty ivve Hat. g. 66, cf. 3. 124; dm. twi 7 Plut. Arat. 35. II. intr. to bid farewell to, c. dat., dmay. 7® TodEpw to give up, renounce war, Plat. Menex. 245 B: also c. part. to give up doing, ove Aéywv, ore dkovwy ana. Xen. Cyn. 1, 16: also to grow weary of, dm. Bewpevos Id, Eq. 11, 9:—absol. to give up, Plat. Rep. 368 C. 2. like dmeipynxa, ametrov, to fail, sink, as strength, etc., Ib. 568 C, Theaet. 200 D (answering to depodpev just above), and Xen.; dm. yhpa by old age, Id. Eq. Mag. 1, 2; da. ind wévoy to be exhausted by .., Id. An. 5.8, 3; Taxv dm. of tarmor Arist. Incess. An. 14, 33 dm. mpds orpareiay Plut. Cor. 13 :—also of things, 7a dmayopevovra, worn out and useless, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 33. Gmayopla, Dor. for dmnyopia. Gmaypevw, to carry off, take away, Hesych. Gmrayproopar, Pass. 40 become wild or savage, ph pw’ éemddynr’ .. dar- nypempévov Soph. Ph. 226, cf. Plat. Polit. 274 B; id rev orarhpay iv danypiapévn had been made saucy by riches, Epicr. ’Av7iA. 1. 16. arayplwors, ews, }, a growing wild, Theophr. C. P. 4. 5, 6. dmaypos, ov, (dypa) unlucky in the chase, Hesych, amayxovifw, to strangle, Anth. P.11. 111:— Pass, Hipp. 562. 32. II. to release from a noose, Luc. Lexiph. 11. dmayxéviots, ews, 7), strangulation, Byz. dardyxo, fut. —aygo, to strangle, throttle, 6 wiv Ade véBpov dmdyxov Od, 19. 230% yada dr. Ar. Pax 796, cf. Plut. Mar. 27, Luc. Lexiph, 11; b pdduora p’ amdyxe chokes me with anger, Ar. Vesp. 686:—Med. and Pass. to hang oneself, to be hanged, Archil. 61, Hdt. 2. 131, Hipp. Aph. 1246, Aesch. Supp. 465, Andoc. 16. 28; é dév3pav Thuc. 3. 815 Gore dmdyxec® was ready to choke, Ar. Nub. 988; dmayéaoba pryupevos Arr, Epict. 2. 20, 31. atrdyo, fut. aga, to lead away, carry off, dndryouar Boas kat idua pha Od. 18, 278; so in Trag., etc.; mpoodyew .., dmdyew to bring near.., hold far off, Arist. Probl. 31. 25 ; dm. dxAdy dm’ dp0aApar to remove it, Theophr. H. P. 7.6, 2; 70 iparioy rod tpaxnadov Plut, Anton, 12:— Med. to take away Jor or with oneself, Hat. 1. 196., 4.80, Trag.; or that which is one's own, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 37, etc. :—Pass., és og danyuevas brought to a point, tapering off, Hdt. 7. 64, cf. 2. 28, Arist. P. A. 2.16, : 2. to lead away, draw off troops, THs orparis To moddcv Hat. 1. 164, cf. 115, Thue. 1. 28, al.: so, dm. x&pous mpds rapov Eur. Tro. 1184; Oewpiay eis AfjAov Plat. Phaedo 58 B; dnarye Tov immov Ar. Nub. 32. b. elliptically, zo retire, withdraw, march away, Hdt. 5. 120, Xen. Hell. 1. I, 34, ak; cf, araye. II. to bring back, bring home, Il, 18. 326; danyaryey otwade Od. 16. 370, cf. Soph. Ph, 941, Xen. An. 1. 3, 14; dm. omicw Hat. 9. 117. III. to return what one owes, render, pay, (like dmodtdapu, dropépw), rov pdpoy Ar, Vesp. 707, cf. Xen. Oyr. 2. 4, 12, Thue. 5. 53, cf. dmaryoryn II, IV. to arrest and carry off, dméryere avrov map’ éué Hat. 2. 114, cf, 6.81; Serv Kamta-yew ¢ *plero Eur. Bacch. 439:— Pass., dwaxOévras map’ éwirdy Hat. 6. 3 , > ’ aTayoyy are arariCw. 119. 2. esp, as Att. law-term, fo bring before a magistrate and accuse (v, drayory? U1), Antipho 139. 27; doeBeias for impiety, Dem. Gol. 26; dm. ds Pecpobéras Id. 630, 16; dm. rots tvdexa Id. 736. 2, cf. Antipho 137. 35. 3. hence, as the result of such process, ¢o carry off to prison, Plat. Gorg. 486 A, Dem. 647. 2; eis 7d decpuwrhpioy Andoc, 31. 24, Dem. 940. 4; absol., ds yéns dmaxOjva Plat. Meno 80 B; draxGeis Lys. 172. 34. V. to lead away from the subject, esp. by sophistry, dad rod ovros émt robvarrioy Plat. Phaedr. 262 B; dm. Twa dnd rijs irobécews Dem. 416. 24; dm. 7d dpyCbpevov ris yvapns to divert ..,Thuc. 2.59}; dad Seva dm, rhyv yvepny Ib. 65. 2. to take away, separate, dm’ bpews . . 7a S0faCovra dm. Plat. Phil. 39 B, cf. Phaedo B. VI. simply ¢o carry, €v dpiorépg régov Id. Legg. 795 A. amriywyh, %, a leading away, rod orparedparos Xen, An. 7.6, 5: a dragging away, rape, yuvainav Luc. Phal. 1. 3. IL. payment, katectpeparo és pépov am. subjected them to payment of tribute, Hdt. 1. 6, 27., 2. 182; ef. dmd-yo UI, dmayivéw, III. as Att. law- term, 1, a summary process by which a person caught in the act (é9 abropwpw) might be arrested by any citizen and brought before the Magistrates (commonly before the Eleven, v. évdexa, of), Antipho 130. 20, Andoc. 12. 9, Lys. 137. 43, sq., Dem. 735. fin.; dmayoryis dfia Hyperid. Euxen. 22: in some cases such arrest was allowed on grounds of notorious guilt, v. adtéqwpos fin. 2. the written complaint which was handed in to the Magistrates, dmdyew riv dm. to lay such accusation, Lys. 138. 7; mapadéxecOa dz., of the Eleven, to admit it, Ib.—Cf. Dict. of Antiqq. IV. in the Logic of Arist., % eis 7d dddvarov da. reductio ad impossibile, An, Pr. 1, 7, 4;—but also a kind of argument described.in 2, 25. dmiyoyés, dv, leading away, diverting, kins Gorgias Hel. 10. dmrayavios, v. sub éraydnos. aradeiv, Ion. —éew, v. sub dpavddve. aribikéw, to withhold wrongfully, ucOdv dm. Twos LXX (Deut. 24. 14). Gadi, ai, [ara], found in most Mss, of Pind. P. 1. 161, and explained as=mpamides (cf. Aap); but there is good authority for éAmidas, which Bockh adopts. dmrgdw, fut. -doopa: Plat. Tim. 26 D :—to sing out of tune, be out of tune, 5An. TH Gppovig Id. Legg. 802 E, cf. Arist. Probl. 19. 21; absol., Plat. Hipp. Mi.374C. II. metaph. zo dissent, dn’ dAAMAwy Id. Legg. 662 B; mpds 7 Plut. Lycurg. 27; c. gen., €0@v Luc. Anach. 6. 2. to wander away, dd Tod épwrhparos Plat. Hipp. Ma. 292 C. Hence Ady. dmgSévrws, unbefittingly, Plotin. 3. 4, 5. Grieipw, aor. —hepa, post. form of dmalpw, to depart, Eur. Fr. 775. 62 :—so in Med., dractpépevov méAu0s Il, 21. 563. : Gmaétopar, post. for dmavgdvoyat, to grow out of, Simon. Iamb. 6. 85; plapf. drnégnvro Q. Sm. 14. 198. ma&epdopat, Pass. to become air, Byz. ariSivirile, to aim at immortality, Plat. Charm. 156 D, ubi y. Heind., ef, Arist. Eth. N. ro. 7, 8. II. trans. to deify, Diod. 2. 20; dar. tiv Wuxny to represent it as immortal, Schol. Arist. 576. 38 Brandis.:— Pass. to become immortal, earn immortality, yuxai dmabaviCépevat, opp. to p9apra awpara, Philo 1. 427: to become a God, Dio C. 45. 7. amrilavariors, 7), deification, Dio C. 60. 35: so 0p6s, J, Epiphan. andbea, 4, want of sensation, impassibility, of things, opp. to m46os, Arist. Phys. 4. 9, 11, Metaph. 8.1, 5. II. of persons, insensi- bility, apathy, Id. Eth. N. 2. 3, 5, de An. 3. 4,53; dm. xax@r insensibility to.., Theophr. H. P. 9. 15, 1; dm. wept 7 Arist. An. Post. 2. 13, 18, Rhet. 2. 6, 2. 2. among the Stoics, ca: dispassionateness, the state of their true copds, Horace’s nil admirari, cf. Heyne Epict. 12. 29; in pl., Sext. Emp. M. 10. 224. III. absence of suffering, 50 dndbeav without suffering pain, Arist. P. A. 4. 6, 6. *AmiOnvator, aw, of, degenerate Athenians, Theopomp. Hist. 332; cen- sured by Poll. 3. 58. G-ndOAs, és, without naos or sensation, not suffering or having suf- fered: | I. c. gen., dm. épyav aloxpav Theogn. 1177; saxév Hdt. 1. 32., 2. 119, Xen. An. 7. 7, 33, etc.; detxelns Hdt. 3. 160; Trav cecpav Tay Tod gwparos Plat. Phil. 33 E; vécwv Dem. 1399. 19, etc. ; but also without experience of, mévwv Hdt. 6.12; Kaddv peyddoy Id. I. 207. 2. absol., Aesch. Pers. 861, Thuc. 1. 26; apdés Twos Pind, P. 4-529; xdpw toot édw dx. be grateful for going unpunished, Hat. 9. 79: —generally, unaffected, imd twos Arist. Probl. 3. 8, Theophr. Ign. 42 ; mpos 7 Plut. Alcib. 13, etc.; c. dat. modi, Luc. Nav. 44. ax, without passion or feeling, insensible, apathetic, diff. from &yxparis, Arist. Top. 4. 5, 2, cf. Rhet. 2. 1, 4., 2. 5, 18:—Adv., dwaas éxew Plut. Solon 20; Sup. -éorara Longin. 41. 1. 2. of things, not liable to change, impassive, Arist. Metaph. 4.12, 4, al. ; dmaGets ai iSéar Id. Top. 6. 10, 2, cf. Metaph. 1. 9, 19; “Avagaydpas tiv voiy drab A€yat Id. Phys. 8. 5,10; 6 8& vots tows Oedrepéy rt Kal dmabés or Id. de An. 1. 4, 15, cf. 3. 5, 2: esp. in Stoic philosophy, odoia dodparos «at der, Plut. 2. 765A; cf. dwddea 2. III. act. exciting no feeling, making no impression, Arist. Pott. 14, 16; 7a dwa0 unexciting topics, Id. Fr. 125 ; ra dra0y intransitive verbs, Gramm. dat, poét. for dd, like dal, rapal, ial, Hes. Sc. 409, v. 1. Il. 11.664. Gar-aryeipdopat, Pass. to be changed into a poplar, Strabo 215. d-radiyeynros, ov, without teacher or guide, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 1, 36: uneducated, untaught, twos in a thing, Id. Pol. 8. 4, 6 (wv. 1. drarddryer yos). Adv. -rws, Cyrill. . Soueauae i, an ge ducation, opp. to ™ 5 4 Plat. Rep. 514 A, al. ; pera. dwaidevolas Thuc. 3. 42; 6 dmadevolay Arist. Rhet. 1. 2, 73 &¢ dm. rivés from want of instruction in a thing, Id. Metaph. 3. 3, 5, cf. 3. 4, 23 dm. mAovrou inexperience in money, Id. Rhet. 2. 16, 4. 2. ignorance, stupidity, boorishness, coarseness, Plat. Gorg. 527 E, al., @ taken away, xphuara Od. 2. 78, cf. Call. Fr, 159 Aeschin, 18. 36, ete. II. dradevaia dpyis from want of control over passion, Thuc, 3. 84, dmaSevréw, to be dmaidevros, A. B. 501. é-waiSeutos, ov, uneducated, nadedowper Tov dr. Eur, Cycl. 492, Plat., etc,; mBavdrepor of dmaldevra trav memadevpévay ev Trois bxAots Arist. Rhet. 2, 22, 3, cf. Eur. Hipp. 989 :—c. gen. rei, uninstructed in.., Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 55. 2. ignorant, stupid, boorish, rude, Eur. Cycl. 493, Plat. Gorg. 510 B, Philem., etc.; dm. Blos Alex. Incert. 17; dm, Haprupia clumsy evidence, Aeschin. 7. 12. II. Adv. -rws, Plat. Rep. 559 D; dm. éxew Eur. Ion 247. amaSevré-tpotos, ov, rude, uncivilised, prob. 1. Diod. Excerpt. 600. 42 (for dvan-). Gradia, 7, (dais) childlessness, Hdt. 6. 1 39> Antipho 121, 4, etc. Gar-aiSoubw, fo castrate or to circumcise, d-radorpi, Soph. O. T. 1024, Bn Poll. ;; 176. ros, ov, not taught by a madorpiBns, A. B. 410. dtr-avbirdw, to burn to Fi or ashes, v. 1, Theophr. rad p A 12383; GmaiWepdopat, Pass. to become ethereal, cited from Synes. Gar-alOopar, Pass. to take fire, Q. Sm. I. 693. - dn-abprdte, to expose to the air, to air, Hipp. 497- 15. 2. dr. Tas vepevas to clear away the clouds, Ar. Av. 1502. 3. intr. to clear up, grow fine, of weather, Liban. 1. 343: metaph., M. Anton, 2. 4- dar-aicoopat, Pass. to flare, stream, of a torch, Diod. 2. 53. The Act. in E. M. 233. 34, intr., of the eyes. Gmaucros, ov, (mai(w) unfit for jesting, Eccl. atrawéw, to dispraise, Eccl. dmatvopar, v. 1. for dvaivopat, Il. 7. 185. drat 1, Dep. to take away, withdraw, ti twos Od. 17. 322: to pluck off, Mosch, 2.66 :—Hom. also droaivupas, Il. 13. 262, Od. 12. 419. dr-avoddw, to perplex, confound, Eur. Ion 549; dm. Twa Tis GAndeias Babr. 95. 99.—Schol. Ar, has atravohéw. Gmrarodn, 7, (aiddos) a being defrauded, loss by fraud, réOvnkev . . xpn- parov drawAn Aesch, Fr. 185. II. Fraxd, personified in Ar. Nub. 1150. ; dmavéAnpa, aros, 7d,=foreg., Aesch. Cho. 1002, Soph. Fr. 841, Ar. Nub. 729 :—also daravdAqots, ews, 7, Hesych. GratpePéw, Ion, subj..aor. 1 pass., and dmapaipypévos, Ion. part. pf. pass. from daipéw, dm-atpw, (cf. dracipw): fut. dmip®: aor. 1 dmipa Eur.: pf. dafpra Thuc. 8. 100, Aeschin. 39. 6: Ion. impf. dmaipecxoy Hadt. To lift off, and so to carry off, take away, ra fvda Hdt. 1. 186: to remove, th twos Eur. Or. 1608 ; tid Sadprns Id. Hel. 1671: in I. T. 967, perhaps, to get rid of :—Pass., dmaiperat rpdme{a Achae. ap. Ath. 641 E. Ii. to lead or carry away a sea or land force, rds yjas dvd Sadapivos Hdt. 8.575 so, heAdOpay da. wéda Eur. El. 774; da. twa éx xOovds Id. Hel: 1520. 2. elliptically (sub. vats, orparéy, etc.), to sail away, march away, depart, dmaipew dnd Sadapivos Hat. 8. 60, freq. in Thuc., Xen., ete.: also c. gen., dmaipev xOovds to depart from the land, Eur. Cycl, 131; Swdprys dmijpas vt Kpnoiay xOdva Id. Tro. 944; ¢. acc. cogn., di. mpeaBelay to set out on an embassy, Dem. 392. = Cf, dard-yw. d-rats, draidos, 6, %, childless, Hat. 6. 38, Soph. Fr. 5; tas amadas ovcias, perhaps, childless estate, Id. Tr. g11 (if the verse be genuine) :— often c. gen., dm. Epaevos ydvov without male heirs, Hdt. 1. 109, cf. 5. 48; dm. épcevos kal O4reos ydvou Id. 3. 66; Tadrawav, réxvew drada Eur. Supp. 810; dm. dppévaw maidav Andoc, 15. 36, Xen. Cyr. 4. 6, 2; dppéve Te kat Onrady Plat. Legg. 925 C. II. Nuxrds raides Gmatdes children of Night, yet children none, Aesch. Eum, 1034, cf. 69. dr-atotos, ov, ili d, Lat. inauspicatus, Jawa Opp. H. 1. 372; hepa Luc, Pseudol. 12. Adv. —ws, Galen. an-aicow, Att. -doow: fut. fw:—to spring from a height, xpnpvod dratfas Il. 21. 234. II. to dart away, énéray piv anaity répev alya Emped. 348; tod 8 éyd wdvdy dajga Soph. Tr. 190; date mépgug burst, Id, Fr. 319; ppeves.. yvmpns arpgay Id. Aj. 448; anpgas restored for dwfgéas in Ar. Ran. 468. [dwa— Hom. in arsi, cf. dicow.] dtr-avrxivopa, Dep. to shrink back or refuse through shame, Plat. Gorg. 494 C; cf. dmodeArdw. ar-avrxuvréw, =foreg., Heliod.8.5 (with v.1. émayvasax— or dravaicx-). dm-avréw, fut. 70w:—to demand back, demand to have returned, esp. of things forcibly taken or rightfully belonging to one, Hdt. 1. 2, 3, Andoc. 22. 29; 70 puaddprov yap dy dracrfjs Diphil. Zoryp. 2. 34 :—dm. Twa Te to demand something of one, Hdt. 8. 122, Eur. Hel. 963, Ar. Av. 554; also, da. StAa Tod warpés Soph. Ph. 362; xapw dm. Twa Plat. Phaedr. 241 A, Dem.,etc.; 7t mapa Twos Arist.de An. 1.4, 63 also, dm. déeny ée Twos Aesch. Cho, 398; Adéyor dm. twa epi Tivos Plat. Rep. 599 B; imép twos Ib. 612 D; dm. indcxeay Arist. Eth. N.9. 1, 4; ¢. inf., am. Teva, morety Tt Eur. Supp. 385. II. Pass., of things, to be demanded in payment, etc., Hdt. 5. 35- 2. of persons, to have demanded of one, dmacteiaOat evep- yectay Xen, Apol. 17; dm. 7d réAos C. I, 1988. 8: to yield to a request, ovx dracrodpecba, answering to dmait® oxjmrpa, Eur. Phoen. 602. arattnpa, aros, 76, a demand, M. Anton. 5. 15. : amalryots, ews, }, a demanding back, Hat. 5. 85; “EAévys dm, name of a play by Soph.; dw. wovefoOae to make a formal demand, before legal proceedings, Dem. gol. 1:—a claim, right to demand a thing, Ties dé twos C, I. 1732 b. 25. ; . Garautntéov, verb. Adj. one must demand or require, Arist. Eth. N. 1.7, 20. 2. —réos, a, ov, to be demanded, required, Ib. 2. 2, 3- drairnrys, od, 6, a tax-gatherer, Greg. Nyss. dmarytixés, 7, dv, disposed for demanding, Eust. Opusc. 136. 49. draitife, fut. (ow, =dmarréw, to demand back, esp. of things forcibly 178, Nonn. D. 42. 382. 160 d-rralov, wvos, 5, %, without the paean, cheerless (as -maud araiwy — aravX\acow. of getting away, an escape, retreat, Hdt. 1..12., 7. 207, aks TOS, OV, Eur, ap. Hesych,), derds dmatwvas ..”Axépovros Soph. Fr. 469. Gravwpéopat, Pass. to hang down from, hover about, Hes, Sc. 234; dm. évOev kat evOev to hang without support at either end, as a fractured limb only supported by the bandage at the fracture, Hipp. Fract. 756, cf. Art. 829; dm. twos or Tit to hang from or to.., Arist. Plant. 1. 4, I., 1. 6, 8. II. later in Act. dmatwpéw, to let hang down, mho-~ kdpous Alciphro 3. 55; to suspend, Clem. Al. 262. Gravpypa, aros, 7d, a sort of sling, Hipp. 771 H:—dmaudpyors, €ws, 9, a hanging down, xpaomédav Clem. Al. 238. Graxpdlo, to go out of bloom, fade away, Stob. 536. 48. draxpn, %, a going out of bloom, decay, Longin. 9. 30. Gmaxovdonat, Pass. to be sharpened off, Joseph. A. J. 6.6. Gariixovrife: fut. Att.t@:—to shoot away like a javelin, shoot off,rds dmo- gudbas Arist. H.A.2.1,53:—to dart forth, papyapuvyny Nonn. D. 40.414. GmaxptBdopar, Pass. to be highly wrought or finished, mpds wdddos Plat. Legg. 810 B; Adyos darnxpiBwpévos Id. Tim. 29 C, Isocr. 43 A, cf. Plat. Phileb. 59 D; ma:deia Isocr. Antid. § 190; a padiaor’ Ganxp. the most perfect creatures, Arist. P. A. 3. 4,153 of persons, dmnxpiBo- pévos énl tun accurately versed in a thing, Isocr. 238 D; cf. danxpi- Bupévws. II. in Med. to finish off, make perfect, of sculpture, Anth, Plan. 172, 342; dq. rais ypaypais Luc. Imagg. 16. amaxraive, to be unequal to violent exercise, Hesych. TI. trans. to tire by violent exercise, as must be read in Plat. Legg. 672 C; cf. Ruhnk. Tim. v. d«raiver. dmaxréoyv, verb. Adj. one must lead away, twa Tivos Plut. 2. 9 F. dmaxrés, dv, that may be dragged to prison, Arr. Epict. 3. 24, 105 (as Schweigh. for dwéraxros). arenes, ov, not to be thrown in wrestling, unconquerable, Pind. » 4.154: V. sq. d-rddatorpos, ov, not trained in the palaestra, unskilled in wrestling, Anth. P, 12. 222; opp. to of peréxovres Tod yupvaciov, C. 1. 3086, cf. 3085. 2. generally, awkward, clumsy, Cic. Brut. 68, Quintil, 9. 4, Hesych. s. v. Kumpia madn. II. not customary on the pa- daestra, contrary to its rules, Anth. P. §. 214.—Jacobs ad Anth. p. lor would everywhere read dadAaoTos, afwtos, ov, not growing old or decaying; Hesych. dmédalke, 3 sing. aor. 2, opt. dmaAdAxor, (with no pres. in use, v. @dadxe and cf. dradéga):—to ward off, keep off something from one, ti twos Il. 22. 348, cf. Od. 4. 766; vdcous Pind. O, 8.112: Theocr. 28. 20 has inf. dwadaAnéyev. Gmddapvos, ov, post. for dmddapos, (cf. madapvaios from maddyn, vavupvos from vd&vupos):—properly, without hands, i.e. helpless, good Sor naught, dvhp am. Il. 5. 597, cf. Simon. 8. 11 :—Adv. -vws, A. B. 418: —Theod. Prodr. has a Sup. —éo7raros, as if from dra-Aapvts. II. in Lyr. and Eleg. Poets, like dunxavos, impracticable, reckless, lawless, of persons, Pind. O, 2.105; of acts, épdew épy dm. Solont4; dndAapva pvbet- 0a: Theogn. 481; dveAéoOar Id. 281; so, dw. 7 mace Eur. Cycl. 598. G-1ddapos, ov, (waAdun) like dwaAapyvos, helpless, Hes. Op. 20; Bios dm., of Tantalus, Pind. O. 1.95. [dam metri grat., Hes. 1. 2 amaAdopat, Pass. to go astray, wander, dm. dAAq Hes. Sc. 409. dmikacréw, (dAabros) to complain of grievous usage, Hesych. émahyéw, to feel no more pain ata thing, re Thuc. 2.61; dz. 7d 7évOos to put away sorrow, Plut. Cleom, 22; like droAopvpopat. II. generally to be apathetic, callous, am. tats éhmlow Polyb. 9. 40, 4; mpds €Amida Dio C, 48. 37: absol., Polyb. 1. 35, 5, etc. dmddynots, ews, }, a ceasing to feel pain, Heliod. 6. 5. . Gridelpw, fut. yo: pf. dadpdupa Dem. 1243. 29 :—to wipe off, ex- punge, esp. from a record or register, Id. 1115. 5; am. Tuva awd Spr Haros to give one his quittance, Id. 1338.8; dm. 7 to cancel it, Aeschin. 49. 36; dm. dad r&v mapaxatadnnay to embezzle part of the deposits, Dem. 1243. 17, cf. 29.—Hence verb, Adj. dwaheumréov, one must ex- punge, M. Anton. 11, 19 ;—and Adj. -wrikés, 4, ov, expunging, Eccl, : fea ews, 7, an expunging, Athanas. mahé€ar, amadéfacbar. vy. sub dradéfw. : amrideénors, %, a defence, rds against a thing, Clem. Al. 224, Suid. &mradeEnnixés, 7, dv, helping, defending, E. M. 56. 10. arid Peace ov, =dAetixaxos, Orph. H. 67. amide, fut. éjow, to ward off from, c. acc. rei et gen. pers., wat bé nev Gddov ed dmadregjoape Il. 24. 371; so c. dat. pers., Zeds .. poe dmradégat yapov may he avert it from me, Aesch. Supp. 1053. 2. reversely c. acc. pers, et gen. rei, like Lat. defendere aliquem ab aliqua re, ovd as rv" Ficdhey ‘dmadetnoey Kkaxdrnros Od. 17. 364. eI. Med. to defend oneself, mpos tadr’ dmadégacbat Soph. Aj. 166, cf. Fr. 286, Nic. Th. 829. V. dwdAadxe. méActvopat, Dep. to keep aloof from, v.1. Nic. Th. 395 (Schol.). amaAndetw, to speak the whole truth, mpis twa Xen. Occ. 3, 12, in Med. II. to verify, confirm, Suid. ; . &maAOatvopar, fut. Arona: Dep.:—to heal thoroughly, Ede dmad0y- ccobov (-eo8ax Aristarch.), Il. 8. 419; impf. in Q. Sm. 4. 404. Gmidla, 4, (dards) tenderness, softness, Geop. I. 8, 2. dmadXlas, ov, 6, a sucking pig, Diog. L. 8. 20. : 4 amahhiyh, }, (dradAdoow) deliverance, release, relief from a thing, riddance of it, rbvwv, mparav, fuppopas Aesch. Ag. I, 20, Pr. 754, Soph. Ant, 1338, etc.; so in pl., Aesch. Pr. 316, Eur. Heracl. 811; dz. mpayparav Antipho 145. 30; dm. rod woAéyou a putting an end to the war, Thuc. 7.2; Tod woAguov ov Hy wépas odd’ dx, Dom. 275. 29; of matters of business, dr. cvpBoralov Id. 893.13; generally, a cessation, tivos Arist. H.-A. 7. 2, 3. 2. absol. a divorce, Eur. Med. 236, 1375. II. a removal, Plat. Legg. 736 A. III, (from Pass.) a going away, $ a rédos Tis dmadAayiis the final departure, Id. 2.139 ; am. eyevero aq Awy separation of combatants, Thuc. 1. 51. 2. rou Biov departure from life, Hipp. 1234 A, Xen. Cyr. 5. 1,135 yuxms dd od&paros Plat. Phaedo 64C; hence dwadAayq alone, death, Theophr. H. P. 9. 8, 3, etc. G@madaxréov, verb. Adj. of dmadAdoow, one must release from, Twa twos Plut. Cor. 32. 2. one must remove, make away with, Tt éxTo~ dé Dion. H. 6. 51. II. (from Pass.) one must withdraw from, get rid of, rwvds Lys. 104. 4, Plat. Phaedo 66 D. maddaxrys, od, 6, a liberator from, Kakou Max. Tyr. 13. 5. G&madAaxridw, =dradAageiw, M. Anton. Io. 36. a&maddaxrixés, 4, dv, jit for delivering from, tkvos Diosc. 3. 83:—Adv., dmaddanrinas éxev, =dradAagelev, Dion. H. de Rhet. 11. 8. ay Jit for curing disease, Arist. Probl. 31. 23. d@mahdaketw, Desiderat. of dwadAdooopat, to wish to be delivered, to wish to go away from, get rid of, twos Thuc. 1. 95., 3. 84. GmddXakts, ews, 7), =aradAayh, Hdt. 9. 13, Hipp. 48. 11. d@radAdoow, Att. -rrw: fut. fw Isocr.g2E: pf. dmmdAdAdya Xen. Mem. 3.13, 6: aor. dwfAAaga Hat. and Att. Prose :—Pass., pf. dmjAAaypat Ar, Pax 1128, Isocr., Ion, dmdAAaypar Hat. 2. 144, 167: aor. darna- AdxOny, Ion. dmadd-, Id. 2.152, Trag.; in Att. dwnAAayny [a] as always in Prose ; also in Trag. (for the most part metri grat., cf. however Soph. Ant. 422, El. 782), Pors. Phoen. 986: fut. draAAax@joopnar Eur. Hipp. 356, Ar., in Prose dwadAayjoopa Thuc. 4. 28, etc.:—Med., fut. (in pass. sense) dwadAdfouar Hdt. 7. 122, Eur. Hel. 437, Thuc., etc.: aor. dmndAdgavro Eur. Heracl. 317, cf. Plut. Cato Mi. 64. A. Act. to set free, release, deliver from a thing, ma:diov Sucpoppins Hdt. 6.61; twa révev, mnporfs, kaxay, pdBov, etc., Aesch. Pr. 773, 471, etc.; Twa é« ydov Soph, El. 292; é« péBov Andoc. 8. 39; c. acc. only, ¢o set free, release, Soph. Ant. 597, etc.; xémos pw’ da. Id. Ph. 880: to release from a debt or obligation, grant a quittance to, Dem. 952. 16. 2. to put away from, remove from, Ti Twos, as Gar. yijs Tpo- comov, ppevav épwra Eur. Med. 27, Hipp. 774; opayys xetpa I. T. 994; xpuodv xepds Hec, 1222; dm. Twa twos to take away or remove from one, Ar. Eccl. 1046; twa amd rTivos Dio C. 43. 32. 8. c. acc. only, to put away, remove, 7 Eur. Hec. 1068, Plat., etc.; yvOos epy’ dm, kakd to do away ill by words, Id, Fr. 284. 26:—also to get rid of creditors, Andoc. 16. 16, Isae. 53. 36, Dem. 914. 4: to get rid of an opponent, by fair means or foul, Id. 711. 25., 712. 1; daw. Tods KaT7- yopous Lys. 181. 25 ; to dismiss, send away, rd Thuc. 1.90; to remove or displace from an office, Ib. 129: also to make away with, destroy, Theophr. H. P. 9. 15, 2; éavrdy Plut. Cato Mi. 70. b. to with- draw an accusation, Dem. 952. 11., 966. 3, v. Interprr. ad ll. :—to dis- charge a debt, Dio C. 59. 1, etc.; so in Pass., Id. 51. 17. II. intr. to get off free, escape, esp. with an Ady. added, pnidiws Hipp. Vet. Med. 11, cf. Xen. Cyr. 4,1, 5; 6 orddos otras dm. came off, ended, Hadt. §. 63, cf. Aesch. Ag. 1288, Eur. Med. 786; ob ds OeAe dmja- Aafey Hat. 1. 16; kxaxws dm, Plat. Rep. 491 D; xarayeAdoras am. Aeschin, 33. 17; so with a part. or adj., xalpov dm. Hat. 3. 69; dos dm. Ar. Pl. 271, Plat. Soph. 254 D, etc.:—c. gen. to depart from, Biov Eur. Hel. 302, cf. Plat. Ax. 367 C; so, mas annAdaxev &e THs 6500 ; Xen. Mem. 3.13,6; dpior’ dnadddrras émt rovrou row KbBou in respect of .., Diphil. Svvwp.1: v. infr. 11. 2. . B. Pass. and Med., to be set free or released from a thing, get rid of it, dnaddax0évras dovdroadvns Hat. 1.170; tupavvew Id. 5. 78; Tav mapedvTay Kandy Id. 2.120; mnpovfs Aesch. Pr. 471; pdBou Soph. El. 783 5 mpayparow Te kat paxdv Ar. Pax 293; orparias Ar. Ach. 251; KAtwvos Thuc. 4. 28; xaxdy rijade xOovds from the evils issuing from this land, Soph. O. C. 786, etc. 2. to get off, escape, mostly with some Adj. or Adv. added (as in Act. Il), dyvos da. kad@s Eur. Heracl. 346; d¢npuos dm. Ar. Pl. 271; and often in Plat. 3. absol. to be acquitted, Dem. 605. 1 7. 4. of a point under discussion, to be dis- missed as settled, rodro dmdaxrat .. ui) 7d pidov pidov elvat Plat. Lysis 220 B, cf. Phileb. 67 A. II. to remove, depart from, é« xwpns. be “yijs Hat. 1. 6 Pree Jag YS tat. I. O1., 2. 139, etc.; pavrinay puyav Aesch. Eum. 180; also, yijs dmarddoceabat 1éda Eur. Med, 729 (cf. Baivew méda, Baive A. Il. 4) dm. mapd twos Aeschin. 8. 20:—Zo depart, go away, és tiv éwirod Hdt. 1. 82, al.; én rijs éwbrod Id, 9. 11, cf. 5. 64; mpds xwpay Plat. Legg. 938 A; ém rémoy Polyb. 5.15, 6; absol., Hdt. 2.93, al. — hence in various relations, as, 2, dmaddaooeaOat Tod Biov to depart from life, Eur. Hel. 102, cf. Hipp. 356; Biov draddayiv dm. Plat. Rep. 496 E; also often without rod Biov, to depart, die, Eur. Heracl. 1000, ey 42, ~ ae 81C, etc.: of things, to cease, Arist. M. Mor. +6, 20. — 3. am. Aexous, to be divorced, Eur. Andr. 592; dm. yuri re ltelaoued kai d dvijp dd -yuvaixds Plat, Legg. SOS D. Lay FOU “OL SOREKOY, to leave school, Id. Gorg. 514 C, cf. Xen. Mem. I, 2, 24. _ 5. dm, ée maibay, like Lat. e pueris excedere, to become a man, Aeschin. 6. 16. 6. to be removed from, émnddarypévos edn dins many removes from folly, Hdt. 1. 60; fuppopGy Thuc. 1. 122; aicxeyns Id, 3- 63: c. inf., xpivar ixavas od annAAakro was not far from judging adequately, Thue. 1. 138. b. woAAdy dandAaypevos tivos far inferior to him, Hadt. 2. 144. 7. to depart from, leave off from, rév paxpiv dbyav Soph. El. 1335; cxappdrow Ar, Pl. 3163 amr. Anuparay to give up the pursuit of .., Dem. 37. 243 ovK dq- nrdakrar ypadixis is not averse from.., Luc, Salt. 35- b. absol, to have done, give over, cease, Soph. Ant. 422, Plat. Apol. 39 D; ws anpdAaypat when I gave up, Dem. 578, 14. ©. c. part., like dvucov mpagas, etc., elmdy dradAdyni speak and be done with it, Plat. Gorg. 491 C, cf. Theaet. 183 C; dradAdxOn7t mupwioas Eur. Cycl. 600; but also in part., like dvicas, with a Verb, otmoty dmaad- amraddOT pros — aravOew, AaxGels der; make haste and bégone, Soph. Ant. 244. 8. to depart from enmity, i.e. to be reconciled, so that it comes to be used much like d:adAdooopat or karadAdooopat, mpds GAAHAovs Plat. Legg. g15 C; absol., Ib. 768 C, Dem. 578. 14. 9. to recover from an ailment, Hipp. Vet. Med. 9, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 14. an-addérpwos, a, ov, given over to strangers, modrreiat Diod. 11. 76. Grakdorpréw, fut. wow: pf. dmpddorpiwxa Aeschin. 29. 20:—to estrange, alienate, Hipp. Art..824; dm. te dé twos to estrange from, Aeschin. l.c.; rev rivos Joseph. A. J. 4. 1, 1 :—Pass. to be alienated, Plat. Tim. 65 A; twos from one, Polyb. 1. 79,6; mpdés tia towards one, Isocr. Epist. 423 E, Diod. 18. 48; dmnAAorpimpévny pds purelay xwpay ill-suited for.., Id. 3. 73. 2. of property, ¢o alienate (cf. sq.), Arist. Rhet..1. 5, 7, C. I. 2058 B. dmaddorpiwors, 7, alienation, Aéyw dmaddorpiwaw déaw Kat mpaow Arist. Rhet. 1.5, 7, cf. C. I. 3281. dm&dodw, post. -oviw: fut. Aw :—to ibresh out, atros dandonpévos Dem. 1040. 22. 2. metaph. to bruise, crush, ll. 4. 522 (v. sub dypt); generally, to destroy, Nonn. D. g. 320. GrGN6-Bros, ov, living delicately, Byz. Gmid6-Oprt, rprxos, 4, %), soft-haired, Eur. Bacch. 1185. dmidoupy, 7, (dradrcipw) an effacing, expunging, Gloss. amaXo-Koupts, iSos, },=dmad? xoupis, or xapls, Epich, 50 Ahr. Gmid6-rats, dos, 5, a delicate child, Hesych. Gmido-rdpyos, ov, with soft cheeks, Eust. 691. 52. GmraiAo-wASKapos, ov, with soft curls, Philox, 2. 14. GraiA6-rvoos, ov, breathing softly, Byz. Grido-nrépuk, vyos, with soft wings, Byz. Grands, 7, dv, Acol. d-, soft to the touch, tender : in Hom. mostly of the human body, dwadiy tnd Setpny Il. 3. 371; mapedwy draddov 18.123; dmadoio & adyxévos HAGev dxwkh 17. 49, Od. 22.16; dm. mbes ll. 19, 92; Gm. 5€ op Hrop drnipa, i.e. the life of young animals, II. 115 (so, dwaAds AaBovioa having taken them young, Arist. H. A. 10. 6, 3); so, teoay avdiy é¢ amadady cropdror Hes. Sc. 279: of a person, delicate, ebpopporépa .. Tas dmadk® Tupivyws Sappho 78; rare in Trag., and only in lyrics, Aesch. Supp. 70 (cf. duadds); Bpépos dm. Eur. I. A. 1286; PAépapov réyyous’ am. El. 1339; but more freq. in Com., ciotpBpiov Cratin. Xefp. 2; xpéa Ar. Lys. 1063; SdervAor Alex. Any. 33 Seppodouaiats dmadoi Com. Anon. 241; so in Prose, da. yux7 Plat. Phaedr. 245 A; of fresh fruit, Hdt. 2. 92, cf. Xen. Oec. 19, 18; of tender meat, Xen, An. I. 5, 2; of a gentle fire, Philem. Spar. 1. 8, Diod. 3. 25. II. metaph. soft, gentle, dwaddv yeAdoat, like Hv yeAdoat, to laugh gently, Od. 14. 465; dm. diarra, soft, delicate, Plat. Phaedr. 239 C; 7@ at7@.. xpnodpeOa rexpnpiy epi epwra, drt dradds Id. Symp. 195 E:—even, dm. elowdous Atpévos, opp. to tpaxds, Cratin. Incert. 12. 6:—Adyv., dmaA@s daray to roast moderately, Sotad. *Eyka. 1.16, cf. Wess. Diod. 1. p. 192. 2. in bad sense, soft, weak, Gs dar. eat Aeveds Cratin. Hur. 3; Aevids, Efupnuévos .., da. Ar. Thesm. 192. (The Root is perhaps the same as that of dBpds, v. sub aBpds. Déderl. connects it with dds (sap). [@rtiAos; for Kaddpo .. ig? *GmadG, in Theocr. 28. 4, is corrupt.] Gnad6-capkos, with soft or tender flesh, Hipp. 426. 53., 588. 51. dmahs-oropos, ov, delicate to the mouth, Hesych. dmah-dorpakos, ov, soft-shelled, crustaceous, Greg. Nyss. amaho-ovyxptros, ov, delicately composed, Oribas. Mai. p. 9. 12. Gnidérys, 7Tos, , (amadds) softness, tenderness, Hipp. Vet. Med. 18, Plat. Symp. 195 D, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 22; 5¢ dwaddrnra Arist.Pol. 7.17, 2. Gmiido-rpeprs, és, well-fed, plump, clados ll. 21. 363; dm. Acpaves rich pastures, Anth. P. append. 50. 11. Gmaho-pdpos, ov, wearing soft raiment, E. M. Graidb-ppwv, ov, soft-hearted, Anth. P. 7. 403, Clem. Al. 108. &ma&A6-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, xpouy; with heterocl. gen, dmadé- Xpoos, dat. —ypoi, acc. —xpoa :—soft-skinned, h, Hom. Ven. 14, Hes. Op. 517, Theogn. 1341 Bgk., Eur. Hel. 373 (lyr.) :—also Gmadéxpas, xpo- tos, 6, 9, A.B. 18. amado-pixos, ov, of gentle mind, Byz. a&raduvris, od, 6, a worker of hides, currier, Zonar. araduve, fut. tvd, (dards) to soften, Tod immov 7d ardpa, Tas Tpixas Xen. Eq. 5,5: to make plump, opp. to icxvaivw, Hipp. Art. 816. 2. to make tender or delicate, rovs médas inodjpact Xen, Lac. 2. 1, ef. Eq. 4, 5 :—Pass. to be softened, metaph., Lxx (4 Regg. 22. 19, Ps. 54. 21). aradvcKopat, =dradevopat: dmadvgacbat v. |. for dmadégacbat, Nic, Th. 829. dmavopés, 6, a making plump, Hipp. Art. 817. Y amr-addirifw, fut. cw, to mix wine with barley-meal or groats, in the Persian fashion, Ath. 432 D; ém° dAgivov mivew in Epinic. ib.; v. Mein. Com, Gr. 4. 505. arddwors, ews, %, a softening, Athanas. aripahSive, to bring to naught, Anth. P. 9. 24, Greg. Naz. drapaupéw, to remove darkness, dccwv . . dwnpavpaoas opixdnv Orph. H. 6. 6. II. to make obscure, Epigr. Gr.1028. 21. drapde, fut. how, to cut off, dn’ oara vnrhéi XaAKO fivds 7’ dpjoavres Od. 21. 301, cf. Hes. Th. 181; drdunooy [roy mda) Soph. Ph. 749: so in Med., Theophr. Lap. 21; dd ordxuv dpnoacba Q. Sm,13. 242:— Pass., Nonn. D. 4.413. [ama- in Ep.; but in Soph. dina) : GrrapBAloxw, to make abortive, dm. kapmovs to produce abortive fruit, Plut. Arat. 32. II. intr. fo miscarry, aor. dnjjpBAwoe, Id. Pomp. 53. arapBrive, fut. tv@, to blunt or dull the edge of, 7a tidy Dio C. 40. 24: but mostly, 2. metaph., éAmida Pind. P. 1.160; of a person, TeOnypévoy Tol Ww obx dmapBruves Aéyy Aesch. Theb. 715; paos daca Opp. H. 4. 525 :—more freq. in Pass. to be blunted, lose its edge or force, 161 Ep. Hom. 12, Plat. Rep. 442 D; taxds dmquBdAvyrat Poéta ap. Ath.592A; yipioKovr cvyynpackovar ai ppéves kai és 7a mphypara ndvra dmap- Brdvovrat Hat. 3. 134; dmapBaAvvOncera: yvwpny Aesch. Pr. 866. orev, Vv. sub dpayaprava, 2 GmépelBopar, fut. pouwar: aor. danpeipOny Xen, An. 2. 5, 15: plapf. dndpemro Anth. P. 14. 3: Dep.:—to reply, answer, very freq. in Hom., but always with a second more definite Verb, as dwape:Bdpevos mpooéon or drapelBero pavnoty Te; so, Md dm. Xen. 1. c.; Twa Theocr. 8. 8. dmdpelpw, to deprive one of share in a thing, rd 7 Ap. Rh. 3. 186:— Pass. to be bereft, rwds of a thing, v.1. for dwop—, Hes, Th. 801, Op. 576; and v. 1. for droaivurat, Od, 17. 322. amaipéAyw, to suck out milk from the breast, Medic, Gmdpedopar, Pass. to be neglected utterly, danpednpévos Hat. 3.129, 132, Soph. Ph. 652. arépépyopat, Med., only used in pres, and impf., fo fake or carry off Sor oneself, Nic. Th. 861, Al. 306. drraipépdo, =drapelpw, Q. Sm. 4. 422, etc. Gtrappévos, Ion. part. pf. pass. of dpdmra. drapmloxw, to undress, lay bare, Philo 2. 74, etc. GrapmAdetv, inf. of aor. drjpmdaxoy (with no pres, in use), =dpa- Hapreiy, to fail utterly, Soph. Tr. 1139. (Others would read dmamA-; cf, Elmsl. Med. 115.) : Grrapive, fut. tv®, to keep off, ward off, with collat. notion of defence, tt tt something for (i.e. from) another, AirwAoiow dafpuver xaxdv heap Il. 9. 5973 Hiv ard Aorydy dpivew 1.67; later, i Tos Luc. Cyn. 13 (cf. dpi dd otxov dpivat Od. 2. 59) ; also c. acc. only, dm, 7a wand Hdt. 7.120; da. tov BapBapoy to repulse him, 9. 90; Tas putas Ar. Vesp. 597; Tovs éfwOev Plat. Rep. 415 E. II. Med. to keep off from oneself, to drive back, repel, dvip érapdvacbat Od. 16.72; so, dr, ras véas Hdt. 5.86; thy weviny Kal rhy Seomoatyny Id. 7. 102; also, dz, Tatra Ta Onpia awd dpOadrpéay Id. 3. 110. 2. absol. to defend or protect oneself, 6 8 ob dmapivero xepoiv Od. 11.579 ; mods F Gmapvval- veo6a by which we may protect ourselves, Il. 15. 738; so, Arist. de Long. Vitae 5,11. pei to take off a garment, to doff it, Plut. 2. 406D: Med., drapdiacac6a Ta meplanra Philo 1. 288; dwapdid(ou mevOuxty dpuop- giay C. I. 8795 :—metaph., yuu?) kal drnuqiacpern ddj0ea Philo 1. 263; dmapqidoa yuuriy thy yvxnv Themist. 249 D:—hence Subst. - dtrappiacpés, 6, Cornut. N. D. 30;—and -aots or -eors, 7, Dionys. Ar., Cyrill. iomaeeae to strip of garments, orépv’ danydtecpévar having them s¢ript bare, Xenarch, MWAour. 1.5. 2. to strip off, Totxous Plut. 2. 516 F. : amapdite, fut. Att.-1&, = dmapdid(er, to strip from one, ri twos Menand. Mio. 9 :—also dtrapoloKe, Philo 2. 319. dmavaytyvaoKw, to read amiss, Apollon. de Constr. 126: dmavéyve- - , 76, a fault in reading, faulty reading, Tb. 146, etc. dmavaykdle, fut. dow, to force away, 7 dé twos Hipp. Art. 780; opp. to mpocavarynatw, Ib. 792 :—freq. as f. 1. for éwav—, dmravaSevopar, Dep., =dvaicxvvrém, mentioned by Thom, M. as an Att. word; but only found in late writers, as Nicet. Ann. 142 D. dmravatvopar, Dep. to disown, reject, of 8 od ywyvdonovres drnvynvavro Il. 7.185; dwavhvacbat eod eivfiy Od. 10. 297; €d0ds 3 dnavdvaro vippay Pind. N. 5.60; part. dmavnvapevos, Aesch. Eum. 972: the pres. - in Hipp. 665. 26, Plut. 2. 132 C. drravarowpdw, to use quite up, like dmavadicxw, Hipp. (?) a&mavarocxuvréw, to have the effrontery to do or say, dm. Todro, ds. ., Plat. Apol, 31 C. II. to deny shamelessly, Dem. 850. 17. amavaXloxw, fut. -avaAwow, cf. Alciphro 3. 47: pf. dwavadwxa Thuc. 7.11: aor, pass. @Onv Id. 7. 30: plqpf. dwaynAwpny Diod. 12, 40:—to use quite up, utterly consume, ll. c.:—the form émavaAéw occurs in Tim. Locr. 101 D in part. pres. pass. : dmravdAwors [va], ews, %, a using quite up, consuming, Diod. 1. 41. admavaoricts, ews, }, migration, departure, Joseph. B. J. 1.15, 3. dmravacrarys, ov, 6, an emigrant, warpidav dv. Eumath. 273. dravacretw, =dnavicrapat, Nicet. Ann. 114 B. dravacropéw, =dvacropuéw, for which it is v.1., Dion, H. 3. 40. amavaréAXw, post, dmavr—, to make to rise, raise up from, Opp. C. 2. 97, 563 :—for Aesch. Ag. 26, v. émavaré\Aw. dmravaxwpéw, strengthd. for dvaxwpéw, Andr. Cret. p. 222, 228; c. gen., Theoph. Simoc. Epist. 79 ; and GavaxHpyors, ews, 4, Diod. 25. 2; —unless in all cases éray— should be restored. G-wavSéxevtos, ov, without an inn to rest at, 656s Democr. ap. Stob. 154. 38. Tapas Dep.- to stand manfully, mpés 7+ Callistr. Stat. 895. amavSpdopat, Pass, to b manly, come to maturity, Eur. lon §3, Luc. Amor, 26; danvdpwOncav ai pijrpa viro maturae factae sunt, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 6. dsréivepdopat, Pass. to be blown down, Hesych., where arnveudn should be restored (with Schneider) for —90n. . amdvev0e, and before consonants —@ev, strengthd. for dveuBe, Adv, afar off, far away, dm. kay Il. 1.35; pedyov reir’ dr. 9. 478, etc. il. as Prep. with gen. far from, away from, aloof from, Tav GAXov dar. Oetiv Il. 14. 189, cf. 20. 41; dm. Oediv without their knowledge, 1. 5495 $0, dm. Torna Od. 9. 36. 2. out from, issuing from, Tod § dm, cédas yéver Il. 19. 374. : 4 - maviéw, fut. now, to leave off blooming, fade, wither, Hipp. 234. 44:— mostly metaph., Ar. Eccl. 1121; dvavOet. . kat danvOnnéri Kat ohare kat yux even with a faded body and soul, Plat. Symp. 196A; so in Arist, Rhet. 3. 10, 2, old age is compared to straw, oar yap daxnvOn- ‘ 162 xéra; freq. also in Luc. to ripen, Alex. Anu. 6. dmdvOnors, ews, 7, a fading, withering; kar’ émdvOnow at the time when the blossom fades, Theophr. C. P. 5. 9, 13. Gmrav0itc, fut. iow, to pluck off flowers, Lat. decerpere: metaph., paralay yaooay dravbica to cull the flowers of idle talk, i.e. talk as boldly as they please, Aesch. Ag. 1662 ; “Apns guide’. . Ta AGora wévT’ dravOiCav (as Conington for mavra rdév@pd@maw) to cut off all the best, Id. Fr. 98 :— Med. to gather honey from flowers, Luc. Pisc. 6: metaph. to cull the best of a thing, Plut. 2. 30 C, Luc. Merc. Cond. 39, Philostr. 565: cf. AwriCopat. anéviopa, 75, a flower plucked or culled, Eust. 782.21; 7d reprvdy ris moppupas dm., rhetorical description of the emperor Constant. Porphyrog., Geop. Prooem, 11 :—dmavOiopds, 6, a plucking of flowers, Schol. Il. ;— in Galen. 2. 808, either a hardly visible line or a capillary vein. GmravOpiixife, to broil on the coals, roast, Body amnvOpamt’ Sdov Ar. Ran. 506, cf. Av. 1546, Philo 1. 665 :—dmav@pdkicpa, 7d, a broil, Hesych. s. v. xvavpara. GravOpaxts, (dos, , a small fish for broiling, also éravOpaxis (q. v.), Ath. 129 B. II. a cake baked on coals, v. 1. Diocl, Caryst. ap. Ath. 10 B, Hesych.; v. Sturz, Dial. Maced. p, 69. GrravOpakéw, to burn to a cinder, annvOpdkwoev Luc. D. Mort. 20. 4:— Pass., Id. D. Marin, 11. 1, Peregr. 1, etc. Gtrav8pwméouar, Dep. to shun like a misanthrope, rejected by Poll. 2. 5, but used by Hipp. Epist. 1275 in the form drav@poméovra, altered by Stephan. into -evovra: ; but the common form is acknowledged by Tzetz. Hist. 7. 880, 885 (ubi —odvrat). arravOpwnta, 7, dislike of men, Luc. Tim. 44. II. inhumanity, Sersieg Hipp. Coac. 194: dmavOpwrreta ap. Poll. 8. 14; but —Ca, 2. 5., 3. 64., 4. 14. ‘ dravOpwrifopat, Pass. to become a man, as opp. to a beast, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 1096. Gn-dvOpwos, ov, far from man, and so, I. desert, desolate, 7O8 dravOpumwy mayy, of Caucasus, Aesch. Pr. 20; dm. 4 yf Luc. Prom. It. IL. of men, and their deeds, inkuman, savage, Soph. Fr. 842 ; dravOpwra d.arempaypévoe Dion. H. 6, 81:—unsocial, misanthropic, tpémos Plat. Ep. 309 B; xpda ove dm. not unpleasing, Plut. 2. 54 E, Cato Mi. 5 :—Adv. -mws, Luc. Tim. 35. draviornp, fut. -orjow, to make rise up and depart, send away, Thy arpariny Hdt. 3. 156., 6. 133, Thuc. 2. 70. II. Pass., with aor. 2 and pf. act., and fut. med., to arise and go away, depart again, Hat. 9, er and THs wodtos Ib. 86; &« wéAews Thuc. 1. 61 ; Moridaias JSrom.., Ib. 139: esp. to leave one’s country, emigrate, lb. 2.—A late form -tord occurs in Eust. Opuse. 147. 11. a G-mévoupyos, ov, guileless, Plut. 2. 966 A :—Adv. -yws, Sext. Emp. M. 2. 77.—Also —yeutos, ov, E. M. 163. 6 :—Adv. -rws, Schol. Dem. G@mavramact, Ady. altogether, Solon 34. amavrix4, Adv. (das) everywhere, Eur. Fr. 217 :—amavrayébev, from all sides, Diod. 20. 57; ¢. gen., “ys Luc. D. Mort. 9 2:—amavrax6t, =dnavraxov, Luc. Prom. 12, Themist. 310 B:—4mavraxot, to every uarter, Isae. 76. 9:—&mavraxéoe,=dravraxoi, Plut. Cam. 41 :— mavraxod, everywhere, Eur. 1.T. 517, Alex. MeAx. 1, Menand., al. ; ar. “iis Dio C. 69. 13. a@ravraw: impf. dahyrwy Thue. 4. 127, Dor. 3 sing. andvrn Bion 4.7: fut. dwavrjow Arist. Rhet. Al. 19, 4, Polyb. 4. 26, 5, and later; but better #e0pat, Thuc. 4. 77., 7.2 and 8o, Xen., Lys., etc.: aor. danvrqca Eur. Phoen. 1392, Thuc. 2. 20: pf. dwhyrnea Ar. Lys. 420, Dem. :—the pres. med., used in act. sense by Polyb. 8. 8, 5, and Polyaen., is censured by Luc. Lexiph. 25; so also pf. amqvrnpat, Polyb. 2. 37, 6, Dion. H. 6. 88, etc.: v. Lob. Phryn. 288. Cf. cvvayraw, iravrdw. I. mostly of persons, to move from a place to meet a person, and generally fo meet, encounter, Twi Hdt. 8.9, Eur. Supp. 772, Thuc. 7. 1, etc.; dAAHAots ef évarrias dm. Plat. Legg. 893 E; dm. rais dpotas piceot to encounter, fall in with them, Dem. 1395. 5:—absol., 6 det dwavrav anyone that meets you, any chance person, like 6 émoyv, 6 ruxay, Plat. Rep. 563 C; of dmavrayres Dem. 958. 16, Alex. "Ema. 1, Ocop. I. b. often with a Prep., di. rut els rémov to come or go to a place fo meet him, meet him at a place, Hdt. 2. 75., 6.84; émt rérov Thuc. 4. 70, 89, etc. ; dr. tt Mapadayvdde Andoc. 14. 32:—also without a dat. pers., to present’ oneself at a place, eis Ki(ucov Xen. Hell. 1. 3, 13, etc.; da. évOade Ar. Lys. 13; depo médw dm. Plat. Theaet. 210 D, etc. (v. infr. 3). 2. often in hostile sense, fo meet in battle, dm. Sopi (the dat. pers. being omitted) Eur. Phoen, 1392; dm. “AOnvaios és Tapavra Thuc. 6. 34, cf. 2. 20., 3. 95, etc.; also, dm, mpds twa Isocr. 58 B, 59 A: generally to resist, oppose in anyway, vopobéry dm. Aéywv .. Plat. Legg. 684.D; da Adyar vovderinay ar. Ib. 740E; dm. tpaxéws mpds 7 Isocr. 8 D, Dem. 522. 23; dm. Tois elpnuévors to rejoin, reply, Isocr. 227 C. b. absol. to present oneself in arms, attend the muster, Eur. Bacch. 782; SmAos dr. Id. H. F. 542. 3. often as a law term, to meet in open court, 7T® karecapervy Plat. Legs. 936, cf. Dem. 995.17, etc. :—often with- out the dat. pers., da. mpos THv Sixny present oneself at the trial, Plat. Legg. 936 E; mpds iy [dlenv] ob« dmqyra did not appear to defend his cause, Dem. 543. 18, cf. 540. 23; dm. mpds rods ecpodéras, diarryrds, etc., to come before them, Id. 591. 27., 1011. 15, cf. dwavrnréov; and absol. to appear in court, Id. 1013. 6, cf. 898. 6., 1041. 6, al. :—but, b. dn. ént rh diacray to agree to the terms of arbitration, Id., 544. 20; dm. én) rots ddAorplos d-yHor to be present at other people’s suits, meddle in them, Id. 580. 20, cf. 133. 15. A. dm. eis... to enter into a ‘thing, attempt it, els rdv d-yava Plat. Legg. 830 A; dm. els iy riunow to come to the question of a Aeschin. 82. 21; da. els Tas xpelas Arist, Eth. N. 8. 6, 1} 80, dm. mpos Tas padnoes Plat. Theaet. 144 B; d II. of wine, to lose its sweetness, i.e. aravOnow — arapaBaros. mpos Tov Adyov, mpds Tiv Gmopiay, etc., Arist. Soph, Elench. 16, 4, etc. ; dar, mpds riy tpopiy go to seek it, Id. de An. 2. 2 8; to have recourse to.., Dem. 563. 23., 760. 24, etc. ; émt ravras Tas olxias dm, of Tpayy- Somo.ol Arist. Post. 14, 20. II. of things, to come upon one, meet or happen to one, da. daxpud por Eur. Ion 940, cf. Bion 4.73 Tots mpos ipas (Gor rocabrnv Kopéryta.. nap’ ipdv dmayray Dem, 411. 26; dim. pot kpavy) mapa Tav ducaorav Aeschin. 23.313; Bh Tis got évayrios Adyos dm. Plat. Phaedo 101 A; so in Dion. H. 4. 33, and later writers. 2. absol. to happen, occur, turn out, Ar. Lys. 420, Ep. Plat. 358 E, Arist. Pol. 5.1, 15, Top. 8. 7, 1, al.; rovraw dmavrévrov Hat. 8, 142 Schaef. :—so also in Pass., Polyb. 2. 7, 4. Graven, },=dravrnos, LXX. Gmdvrp, Adv. (amas) everywhere, nikhy andvrp all round about, Od. 8.278; «pug 5¢ pépwy dv’ duthov dm. beige (sc. Tov KAjpov) Il. 7. 183, cf, 186; da. mAavwpevos Plat. Legg. 752 A. Grrévenpa, aros, 76, (dmavtdw) a meeting, Eur. Or. 514. émévrnois, ews, },=foreg., Polyb. 5. 26, 8, etc.; dm. AapBdvew to find an occasion, Id. 12. 8, 3. II. a meeting in argument, a reply, mpos 7 Arist. Soph. Elench. 17, 12, Metaph. 3. 5, 33 dm. wotetoOat to reply, Polyb. 5. 63, 73 mpooquArs kar’ da. in conversation, Id. 10. 5, 6; ef, Plut. 2. 803 F. dmravryréov, verb, Adj. one must present oneself, appear, dm. pot eis Tiy orody Plat. Theaet. 210 D. émavrixpt, Adv., strengthd. for dvrixp, right opposite, rivds Dem. 99. I, Luc. Amor. 5; 6 dm. Adgos Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 4. 2. plainly, openly, Hipp. Art. 807. dmavrtov, Ady., strengthd. for dvriov, like dwevavriov, right opposite, és riv dm. derhy Hat. 7. 34, cf. Scylax in Miill. Geogr. 1. go. GmavrAéw, to draw off from, dm. xOovds tBpicpa Ovnray Eur. Or. 1641: to draw off, mévous rwvi Aesch. Pr. 84; da. 70 dypby Arist. Probl. 2. 41; opp. to émyéw (q. v.). II. c. acc. only, to lighten, lessen, Bapos Yox7s Eur. Alc. 354; 74 o@para balras dm. Plat, Rep. 407 D: —in Pass., Plut. Alex. 57, Philo 1. 266.—Hence verb. Adj. dmavrAqréov, one must draw off, as water, Geop. 6, 18. amravrAnots, ews, 7), a drawing off of water, Arist. Probl. 2. 33, I. ardvropat, =dravrdéw, Eur. Rhes. gor, in tmesi. Gmdvrote, Adv., always, Apollon. de Constr. 152, al., A. B. 595. amavie, fut. dow [iv]: to finish entirely, vijes dwhvucay otkade (sc. 65év), the ships performed the voyage home, Od. 7. 326 :—Pass., Q. Sm. 5. I. amdvabev, from above, from the top, Tod relxous LXX (2 Regg. 11. 24). Gra, Ady. (for dams, as woAAdms, éfdxis, etc.) :—once, once only, once Jor all, like Lat. semel (Bentl. Hor. Sat. 2. 8, 24), first in Od., bre 7’ Grn drag Ovickovo’ 12. 22; rat... dnd Ovpodv ddréaaar Ib. 350; cf. Eur. Cycl. 600; ovx drag pdvoy more than once, Aesch. Pr. 209; amag .., kodxi dis Soph. O. C. 1208 ; roAAdms kal odx? drag Hat. 7. 40; moAAdKs Te Kodx dmag Soph. O. T. 1275; obx dwag GAAA mOAAdKiS Antipho 111. 45, Plat. Legg. 711 A; od dls, GAA’ Grag pdvoy Arist. Pol. 4.15,1; dma &rt yet this once, Aesch. Ag. 1322 ;. dm. Svoiv moboiy, i.e. two square feet (I x 2), opp. to dvoiy dis (2x 2), four, Plat. Meno 82 Cc. 2. c. gen., dm, Tov énavrod, dm. éreos éxdorou Hdt. 2. 59., 4. 105; also, dm, év 7@ énavTG Id. 2. 132. II. without any notion of number, after efmep, iv, éret, ds, Sray, like Lat. ut semel, if once, when once, elmep éoreiaw ¥ arag if once you have made a treaty, Ar, Ach. 307, cf. 923; iv dwag dA@ Id. Vesp. 898, cf. Av. 342; av Gag ms dro8av7 Amphis Tur. 1; érednmep -y Gmag euol ceavrdv mapadébaxas Ib, 1129; énet dnag érapaxOnoav Thuc. 7. 44; ws dmag jpgaro Xen. Hell. 5. 4,58; ered drag adrois ptdros éyévero Id. An. I. 9, 10, cf. 3. 2, 25, Isocr. 283 D; ds drag éyxAhpara érapaxoy Dem. 277. 23: so with part., ém yav dmag meodv .. alua Aesch. Ag. Io1g; drat Oavdvros otis tor’ dvdoraas Id. Eum. 648; dmag édOdvres Plat. Parm. 165 E.—Cf. elodmag. (For the Root, v. sub a d0pootixdy and dpa ; hence d-nag, d-was, d-nAoos; cf. Skt. sakrt (semel); Lat. semel, simplex, singuli.) dmrat-dras, doa, dv, all together, the whole, mepirpéxav tiv yiv oo ae Meh yov. 1; Hepa am. Strattis Mupp. 1; amag- av Xenarch. Topp. 1. 16:—mostly in pl. x Rene, 206-4. ly in pl. all at once, all together, dmat-amhds, Adv., strengthd. for drAds, 428, Luc. Peregr. 3. amratia, 4, (dftos) in the language of the Stoics, moral worthlessness, opp. to dgia, Arr. Epict. 1. 2, 10, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 62. amdfios, ov, =dvdgios, unworthy of, rwés Plat. Legg. 645 C. IT. ove dm. [orc], c. inf., Ep. Plat. 324 B. Ady. -fws, Iambl. Myst. 5.6. Gratvé, to disclaim as unworthy, disown, Lat. dedignari, Tt or Tiva Thue. 1. 5, Polyb. 1. 67, 13, etc.:—also, dm. yh c. inf., Paus. 10. 14, 6. 2. dr. ri Tivos to deem a thing unworthy of one, Arist. Mund. 1,1, Luc. Dom. 2:—so in Med., fs Niwse dnnfiwoaro deemed them unworthy of .., banished them from .., Aesch. Eum, 367 :—Pass., to be deemed unworthy of, Aé-you Clem. Al. 84. : arraglwots, ews, , rejection, contempt, Polyb. Fr. 42, Dion. H. I. 9. Gmdopos, ov, Dor. for dmhopos. dmanat, =drnarat, Ar. Vesp. 309. Gmdarn, %), a plant like dandelion, Theophr. H. P. 7. 7, 1 (ubi v. Wim- mer), 7. 8, 3 and 11, 3, ex Cod. Urb. pro vulg. darn vel dpakn. dmrarnatat, =drramat, Soph. Ph. 846. : d-ramos, ov, with no grandfather: metaph., pdos ode dmarmoy Tdatov zrupés light not unfathered by th’ Idaean flame, Aesch, Ag. 311. ardarw, Ion, for dpdrra, ‘ pie at ov, not to be tran in general, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 4 sgressed or altered, Plut. 2. 410 F, 745 ITI, act. not passing over to another, e.g. of an office; hence, > arapaB\acros — amapktias. not passing away, unchangeable, Ep. Hebr. 7.24. 2. not transgressing, Joseph. A. J. 18.8, 2. Adv. —rws, Arr. Epict. 2. 15, 1. d-rapéBdacros, ov, not putting forth suckers, Theophr. H.P. 1.2, 5. ery, gg ov, incomparable, Origen. ct Aos, ov, without deposit made, xplow émdépBorov (sic) Inscr. Core. in C. I. 1845, 115; v. mapdBodos 11. II. Adv, -Aws, with- out danger, Schol. Il. 13. 141. : G-rapayyéAtws, Adv. without the signal of battle, Polyb. 16. 3, 1. d-rapdypamros, ov, not to be excepted against, Nicet. Ann. 158 B. Adv. —rws, Eccl. d-napdypiipos, ov, illimitable, infinite, roadrns Polyb. 16. 12, 10. G-mapdywyos, ov, not to be turned aside, Hierocl, Prov. 158. Adv. ~yous, Id. G-rapaderypaticros, ov, unexampled, Ptolem. Adv. -rws, Tzetz. d-rapddexros, ov, not acceptable, Eccl., and Gramm, II. act. not receiving or admitting, c. gen., wabnudrwvy Memno p, 4, ed. Or.; HeraBodhs, Orig. c. Cels. p. 151. Adv. -7ws, Byz. TOS, ov, not supported by parallel passages, or not consisting of extracts, Diog. L. 7. 181: hence in Gramm., dmapdera words or phrases without quoted authority, Bast. Greg. p. 348. 2. incom- parable, Eccl. d-rapdQpaveros, ov, unshaken, not to be shaken, Athanas., etc. Gmraparpypévos, Ion, part. pf. pass. of darpéw. d-trapairnros, ov, I. of persons, zot to be moved by prayer, implac- able, inexorable, inflexible, daiuev Lys. 198. 5; Scot Plat. Legg. go7 B; Aixn Dem. 772. 253; &eaorqs Lycurg.148. 4; dm. elvac wept ri Plat, Pyrrh. 16 :—Ady. —rws, implacably, inexorably, Thuc. 3. 84; dm. éxew mpds twa Polyb. 22.14, 15:—7d dmapairnrévy tivos mpds twva Plut. Popl. 3: II. of punishments, etc., not to be averted by prayers, inevitable, unmerciful, Tyumpiar Dinarch, 93.8; xoddoves Tim. Locr. 104.D; dpyh, xarnyopia Polyb. 1. 82, 9., 12. 12, 4:—hence just =dvfxeoros, Polyb. 4.24,6; duapria, unpardonable, Id, 33.8, 5. 2. not to be refused or evaded, ixérevpa Plut. 2. 950 F. d-rapakdhumros, ov, uncovered, undisguised, yup?) kal dm. karnyopla Heliod. 10. 29. Adv. —rws, undisguisedly, Plat. Rep. 538 C, Euthyd. 294 D; Comp. -érepoy Dio C. 67. 3. d-rapdKAnros, ov, d, volunti Kadovpevos Kat dm. Plut. 2. 403 B, cf. C. I. 2271. 28. be consoled, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 185, Cyrill. G-rapaxodovOnros, ov, not to be reached or attained, Tzetz.,Lyc. II. not to be followed, over hasty, rash, Basil. :—Adv. —rws, rashly, M. Anton. 2. 16; so, dmapaxodovOnota, 7%, raskness, Basil. i é-mapdéXeurrros, ov, without omission, continual, complete, Alex. Trall. 241, Eus. H. E. 1.1. Adv. —rws, Eccl. a-rapddexros, ov, = dmapariAros, Pherecr. Incert. 70, v. Poll. 2. 35. a-rapaAdyKrws, Adv. unceasingly, C. I. 2271. 7. G-rapdhytros, ov, impregnable, Byz. Aaros, ov, unchanged, unchangeable, Dion. H. 2. 71, Diod. 1.91, Plut. T. Gracch. 3 :—c, dat. exactly like, Origen. Adv. —rws, Ath. 26 A, etc. Hence the Verb dmapahAaxréw, Byz. amapahAatia, 7), unchangeableness, Plut. 2.1077 C, Sext.Emp. M. 7. 108. G~rapahéyurtos, ov, not to be deceived, Iambl. V. Pyth. 115 :—Adv. —Trws, Eccl. II. act. not deceiving, Cyrill. 98 D, Hesych. G-mapdXoyos, ov, not without reason or method, lambl. V. Pyth. 182. d-rapadvpavros [0], ov, uninjured, vexpds Nicet. de Sign, 855. 22. G-rapaptyns, és, unmixed, Schol, Od. 2. 341. G-mrapaptAAnros, ov, unrivalled, Joseph. A. J. 8. 7, 3. G@mapapiAdos, ov, (dusAAa)=foreg., Eust. Opusc. 208. 33, etc. G-rapapwOntos [0], ov, not to be persuaded or entreated, inexorable, Plat. Epin. 980 D, Plut. 2. 629 A; also inconsolable, d@upia Id. Crass. 22: so, kaxdv Heliod. 1. 14. 2. incorrigible, in Adv. —rws, Plat. Legg. 731 D. II. of conditions, devoid of comfort or relief, comfortless, Plut. 2. 332 D, 787 B. ; d-ripdpi0os, ov,=foreg., inexorable, xéap Aesch, Pr. 185: restive, Supa twdArwéy Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 620. [In Aesch, aa-, metri grat.] G-trap-dvoucros, ov, not opened, Eccl. d-rapdteoros, ov, not to be seduced, Dion. H. 8. 61. d-rapardéiteros, ov, without embarrassment or interference, clear, did- voa, Hices. ap. Ath.689C; épyy Heliod. 3.13. Adv. —rws, Arr. Epict. 2. 13, 21, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 178. a-rapatrotyros, ov, not counterfeit, genuine, Cyrill. Ady. —rws, Id. Gtrapdpporos, ov, not leaning to one side, even, An. Ox. 3. 208. d-rrapacdevtos, ov, unshaken, Jo, Chrys., etc. Adv. -rws, Epiphan. pavros, ov, undistinguished, Lxx (2 Macc. 15. 36), Basil. d-rapaonpelwros, ov, =foreg., Diosc. prooem. d-rapdonpos, ov, not counterfeit, Cyrill. c. Jul. p, 25. pachpayros, Gramm. dmapackevicta, %, want of preparation, Hipp. Acut. 395: é-rapackevacros, ov, =sq., dub. in Xen. An. 1.1, 6., 1. 5, 9 (Comp.), etc.; but found in N.T. and late writers. Adv.—rws, Arist. Rhet.Al.9, 11. d-rapdcKevos, oy, without preparation, unprepared, Antipho 131. 28 (Sup.), Thuc. 2. 87; dwapdoxevdy twa Aafeiv Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 255 am. AnpO7jvac Dem, 1017. 17; dm. mpés 7t Polyb. 1. 49, 4: also of things, dnéoracts Thuc. 3.13. Adv., dmapacedms Exe, S:axeioOae Polyb. 1. 45, 7+ 14. 10, 7. ; pea ES Adv. so as not to be drawn aside, firmly, Byz. arti , Att. -rrw: fut. gw:—to strike off, dvrimp) 5 dmdpage pacow, z : [riv alxui Il. 16. 116; dahpagev be Xapace .. Kapn 14.4973 at. Tod immou rods médas Hdt.5.112; «para Biov Soph. Tr. to15. 2. to ing, Thuc, 2.98; xat mapa- II. not to 2. =dra- 4nock or sweep off, Lat, decutere, rods émBaras amd rijs vnds Hdt.8,90; a8 Tods dnd Tod moAepiov Karaorpduaros dmdlras dr. Thuc. 7.63 >—Pass., aor. part. drapax6els Dion. H. 8. 85. 2. =dmadodm, v. sub dxpu. d-napacxnpdrioros, ov, not to be changed in form, am. 7G dpoeving évopua that does not take the form of the neuter, Hdn, in An. Ox. 3- 282. d-raparhpyros, ov, without observation, Origen, 2. inadvertent, Basil. Adv. -raws, Polyb. 3. 52, 7., 14. 1, 12. d-mapdriAros, ov, with hairs not pulled out, Ar. Lys. 279, Luc. Salt. rs d-rapdtpenros, not turned, of clothes, A. B. 29. II. of per- sons, inflexible, unchanged, Plut. 2. 745 D: rigidly just, Poll. 8, 10. Ady. —rws, M. Anton, 1. 16. é-rapdrpwros, ov, uninjured, Phot. Bibl. 157. 19. bOapros, ov, not spoiled, incorrupt, Eccl. d-rapadPopos, ov, incorruptible, Cyrill. 334 B. &@ buAaxros, ov, not tobe guarded against, Gramm, II. (from Med.) caredess, heedless, Schol. Eur. Hipp. 57. Adv.—rws,Eus,H.E. 4.7% Semapensoeercs, ov, not counterfeit, Democr. ap. Gal. 14.135. Adv. -Tas, Orig. a G-rapaxitros, ov, without anything poured in, unmixed, olvos Democt. ap. Galen. 10. 832; t5mp Heliod. 5. 16: generally, pure, Plut. 2. 968 C. d-mapaxapyros, ov, not giving ground, staunch, Polyb. 1. 61, 3- Adv., —rws diaxeioOar mept Tivos Id. 5. 106, 5. II. unyielding, Dion. H. ro. 19, Plut. 2. 10 A. GardpBodos, v. drapdBodos. dmapyla, 4, prob. a kind of succory, Theophr. H. P. 7. 8, 3. dwapypa, aros, 76,=drapxh (q.v.), and like it mostly (if not always) in pl., Ar. Pax 1056, Lyc. 106; dmdpypata dv ai Gpat pépovaw C, I. (add.) 2465 f. TI. in Aesch. Fr. 381, =pacxadiopara. Gmapyipt{«, to turn into money, Themist. 292 D. dmapytpicpés, 6, a selling for ready money, Gloss, amapyipsw, =dmrapyupi{w, Artemid. 1. 50, d-maptykAtros, ov, inflexible, rigid, Galen. bylea Iambl. V. Pyth. 13. d-rapeyxeipnros, ov, not to be attacked, Joseph. A. J. 15. 8, 1:—un- blamable, perfect, Tim, Locr. 95 A, Arr, Epict. 4. 1, 161. Adv. -ras, incontestably, Diod. 4. 78. d-rapéyxitros, ov, =dmapdxuros, Ath. 27 A. d-rapeptrdbieros, ov, =dmapanddiaros (for which it is a common v. 1.), Sext. Emp. M. 1.147. Adv. —rws, Gramm. d-rapépdiiros, ov, (wapeupaivw) not determining or defining a thing, c. gen., Gramm., v. Schiif. Dion, H. de Comp. p. 83. II. 4 drap- éuparos (sc. éyxduots), modus infinitivus, Dion. H. de Comp. 5, Apollon. de Constr. 226, etc. ; so, TO ~rov, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 204 :—Ady. -Tws, in the infinitive mood, Apollon, de Constr. 78: cf. mapéupacts. d-rapevOipnnros [it], ov, not considering carelessly, M. Anton. Io. 8. Adv. —ras, Id. 6. 53. d-rapevéxAnros, ov, not liable to be disturbed, C. I. (add.) 2114 bb, Plut. 2. 118 B. d-mapesSevros, ov, where there is no losing one’s way, 68s Basil. dn-tiptoke, fut. -apécw, to be disagreeable to, ri Thuc. 1. 38, Plut. Adv. -rws, Eccl. Il. unimpaired, 2.6 B. 2. c. acc. pers. to displease, Plat. Theaet. 202 D, Julian. 365 D. II. Med., od .. yap tt veyeoonrdv Baoidija dvip’ ana- péccagOa one must not take it ill that a king should shew displ =bvoapeoreiy, Il. 19. 183 (where the Schol. and Eust. explain it should give satisfaction, be reconciled, =dpécacOa:; but the other sense suits the context better, v. Heyn. ad 1., and is the only one used by later writers) ; dmapéoxeoOai ri to be displeased with, Hdn. 5. 2, 11, cf. 5. 6, 8., 6. 1, 24, Jo. Lyd. de Magistr. 2. 7, and v. émapeoros. amdaperros, ov, unpleasing,, Epict. Fr. 97, Stob. Ecl. 2. 216. d-mapnyspytos, ov, inconsolable, Plut. Demosth. 22, Joseph. A. J. 7. a © IL. not to be controlled, Menand. Incert. 196, Plut. Mar. 2, Anton, 6 :—Adv. —rws, inflexibly, Philo 2. 196. d-raphyopos, ov, unconsoling, Opivos Epigr. Gr. 344. 2. d-rapQéveutos, ov, unmaidenly, unfitting a maiden, Eur. Phoen. 1740, in neut. pl. as Adv.; cf. Id. I. A. 993, Ithyphall. ap. Ath. 622 E (Bgk. Lyr. p. 879). II. (a copul.) maidenly, Soph. Fr. 287. os, ov, no more a maid, Theocr. 2. 41; vdudny dvuppov map- bévov 7’ dwdpOevov ‘ virgin wife and widow’d maid,’ Eur. Hec, 612. GrapOpdopat, Pass, 4o be jointed, dré tivos (like SidpOpwors opp. to cvvapOpwors), Hipp. Art. 797 :—amdpOpwors, 7%, in Galen. dmriipiBj.éw, fo count over, take an inventory of, Xen. Ocec.9, 10: to reckon up, Id. Cyr. 5. 2, 353 muOous am. to recount, Arist. Poét. 13,7. It. to reckon or pay back, repay, Xen. Cyr. 3.1, 42, Dion. H. 4, To, etc. a&mripOpnors, ews, }, a ting over, r ting, évoparov Thuc. 5. 20: of money payment, Greg. Naz.—Also Adj. -qruKos, 4, ¢v, Walz Rhett. 7. 1027. Verb. Adj. -yréov, Byz. dmapivy [7], %, a kind of bed-straw, prob. Galium apariné, cleavers, Theophr. H. P. 8. 8, 4, cf. Sprengel Diosc. 3. 94; called gtAdvOpmros, ptAeraipios, because its burrs cling to the dress, Id. 3. 104., 4. 8, ete. dmapivis, és, of the dwapwi, xvdds Nic. Th. 953. Grrapkéw, fut. ow, to suffice, be sufficient, Aesch. Pers. 474, Soph. O. C. 1769, Eur. Fr, 884; ru Dion. H. 11. 1; mpdés 7s Sext. Emp. P. 1.185: —ovK amppke it was not enough, Ar. Fr. 395. II. to be con- tented, acquiesce, dat’ dwapxeiv Aesch. Ag. 379: so in Pass., Lyc. 1302. é&mapkouvras, Adv. (drapxéw) sufficiently, Poll. 9. 154,—perth.f. 1. foréx—. amapkréov, verb, Adj. of dadpxopat, one must offer as first-fruits, etc., Themist. 142 A, Philo 1. 533. Grapkrias, ov, d, (dperos) a north wind, Lat. Septentrio, Arist. Meteor. 2. 6, 6, al., Theophr. Fr. 6. 2, 10. The form drapktas (without 7), mentioned by Eust. 1156. 17., 1535-16, but censured by Phryn. in A. B. 1g, occurs in the Tabula Ventorum in C, 1.6180; cf. ae pro dpxre:os, 2 164 dmapktios, a, ov, northerly, mvoal Lye. 27. Gmapveopat, fut. jooua: Plat. : aor. dmnpynadpny Call. Cer. 75,107, Ap. Rh., N.T., but in Att. always —ypyq@nv, Soph. Tr. 480, Eur. Hipp. 1266, Thuc., etc.: Dep. drapveic0a Antipho 118. 20; wh. .dmapyndels yévp Plat. Soph.217.C; drapynbivat rT to refuse, reject it, Thuc..6. 56, etc.: dar. wn c. inf, Tov .. drapyndévra pry xpavar Eur.1.c.; ob« dmapvodpat 7 yt (sc.dpaoar), Soph. Ant. 443, Aj. 96; ob dwapyjcecbat pt) ob .., Plat. Gorg. 461 C; also without 7, dar. xapicac@ac Id. Phaedr. 256A. 2. in Log., opp.to xarn- yopeiv, to deny, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 32, 9, al. TI. the fut. dwapynOncerar in pass. sense, it shall be denied or refused, Soph. Ph. 527, cf. Ev. Luc, 12.9. drapvyot-Oela, 7, denial of God, amapvyct-Geos, ov, God-denying, Eccl. Gndpvyots, ews, 7, utter denial, renunciation, Philo.2. 438. dmapvyris, of, 6, one who denies utterly, Gloss. dmapvytixds, 7, dv, denying utterly, Eust. 29. 44. Ady. —K@s, Basil, dmapvos, ov, (dpvéouar) denying uéterly, dapyds éort pi) voogew Hat. 3-99, cf. Antipho 112. 27, 32: also c. gen., dmapvos obdevds Kabicraro she denied nothing, Soph. Ant.. 435. II. pass. denied, @ . . obdétv daapvoy red€0e who takes no denial,:Aesch. Supp. 1040. amdpvupar, Dep. to take away from one, Hesych, &-mapédevros, ov, inaccessible, xpnavol Diod. 17. 67. d-napétuvros, ov, without paroxysms, Alex. Trall. 10. 23. d-rapémAvoros, ov, unarmed, Byz. d-napéppytos, ov, not excitable, Theag. ap. Stob. 12. 32. © dtrapover (wapougia),. Adv..without bodily presence, Olympiod. . drapdw, and drapotpidw, to plough up, Suid. dmappevow, =dravdpiw, Theophr. H. P. 7. 4, 3, in Pass. d-nappyoiacros, ov, deprived of freedom of speech, nodirela Polyb. 23.12, 2, cf. Luc, Cal. 9, II. not speaking freely, Cic, Att... 2:— Ady., dwappyciacraws etAaBeiaba Philo 1. 477. M _Gmapors, ews, 4, (dmalipw) a sétting out, departure, Dion. H. 3. 58, Lxx (Num. 33. 2), Joseph. A. J. 17. 9, 3. drapréw, fut. iow, to.hang up from, to suspend, Arist. Mechan, 12,1 ; dr. dépnv to strangle, Bur. Andr. 412 :—Pass. tohang ‘loose,.Xen. Eq. Io, 9, Arist. Audib. 35; dad Twos Id. G. A. 2. 4, 385; -€« twos Luc. Pisc. 48; tivos Babr. 17..2. 2. metaph. to make dependent upon, dm, édmidas é éavrod Luc. Tim, 36. II. to detach, separate, opp. to ovvaprdw, roy Ad-yov THs ypahs Dem. 244.-27, cf. Arist. Rhet. 3-35, 2:—Pass., bore Thy xupav woXd Ths TéAEws danpraOa Id. Pol. 6. 4, 14; 6 mAeduow . . odd danprnyévos ris kapdias.1d.-H. A..2. 17, 22; of répa . . danpravra: dAAnAwY, opp. to cvpmtarovat,-Ib. 1. 16,7 : —but that from which one is separated is often omitted, and the Pass. used absolutely, danprnpévot wal rats mapackevais Kal -rais yvdpaus disunited, Dem, 43.23; ouvexeis al ov. draprypévor not detached, Arist. H.A. 3. 1, 5, cf. 2. 15, 14, al.; of time, rofs xaipois ob yaxpdy dmnp- haba Polyb..12. 17, 1, cf. Plut. T. Gracch. 3; Atay danpr. far different, Philo 1. 300. III. seemingly intr. in Act. to remove oneself, go away,.és Gddorptay dmaprav Thuc. 6.21, unless ras xopudds be supplied from the foreg. clause: to be away, distant, awd twos Dio C. 51. 4. ardprnpa, aros, 76, that which is hung on, as an ornament, Greg. Nyss. amapris, és, read by Littré (p. 174) in Hipp. Art. 803, and interpreted in its place; al. dnaprnros, perhaps, slung-as in a bandage. andprnots, %, a-hanging from, an appendage, tiv mrepuyiow Arist. G. AI, 14, 2. 2. suspension, Clem. Al. 248. II. detach- ment, separation, Philo. 1. 209. Ga-apti [i], Adv. completely, and, of numbers, exactly, just, *uépac dr, évvervnnovra Hat. 5. 53, cf..2.158; am. ravras Ths Téxvns Teleclid. Incert. 8; da. dpyd ev mpds re Hipp. Art. 834. II. just the contrary, ti. . dmorivey TQd dfots ;—-dnapr) 67 mov mpoohaBeiy mapa TovS éy® paGdrov, i.e. pay, on the contrary, 1 expect to receive. ., Pherecr. Kpar. 7, cf. Kopravy..6, A.B, 418; so, dwapri moeiy Tt. ev to do the precise contrary, Hipp. Acut. 390, v. Littré, III. of Time, from now, from this time, henceforth, Ar. Pl. 388, Plat. Com. op. 10,:Ev. Matth. 23. 39, etc. 2. just now, even now, Ev. Jo. 13. 19, etc.—Cf. Lob. Phryn. 21.—In signf. 1, some write it dmdpri, and Lachm. in N. T. gives dm’ dprt. araptia, ,=dmrockevn, household utensils, movables, chattels, Hippon. (70) et Theophr. ap. Poll, 10. 19. II. a public auction, Poll..l.c.; cf, dmdapriov. é dmaptilivrws, Adv. perfectly, Diog..L. 7. 60. amaptilo, fut. iow, to make Saag . . bbK amaprife mbda'does not allow his feet to move evenly, regularly, Aesch. Theb. 374 (but Herm. od xarapyife). II..to get ready, complete, Arist. G. A. 5.1, 33, Polyb., etc.; dm..dare spatpoedy elvar to make it perfectly spherical, Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 26:—Pass. to be brought to perfection, Arist. Fr. 237; to be completed, be exactly made up, Hipp. 507.7; amap- rierat eis énrd Kepadas, of the golden candlestick, Joseph. A.J. 3. 6, 73; amnptiopevos complete, perfect,Dion. H. de Dem. 50. 2. intr, to be even or exact, THS dxTaphvov. dmapriCovans Hipp. 1031 C; dm. 6 ténos Kat ro: c@pa fit exactly, Arist. Phys. 3. 5, 16; dm. mpds tt, Lat. quadrare ad... , to square with, suit exactly, Id. Pol, 5. 10, 37 5’ %) amap- tiCovoa wpa the fitting season, Id, H..A. 5. 8, 7; cf. Lob. Phryn, 447. dmapridoyla,'Ion. =tn, , an even number or sum, Hat, 7. 29,-ubi v. Valck., Lys. ap. Harp., cf. Poll. 2. 120. _Gmapriov mpoypapey, (dmapria).Lat. auctionem bonorum proscribere, to put up goods to public sale, Plut. Cic. 27., 2. 205 C. 4 1s, ews, 7), completion, perfection, pvrov Arist. Plant. 2. 4, 5. II. a perfect system, vedpwv Hipp. Art. 784. étra 16s, 6, completion, Ev. Luc. 14. 28; kat’ dmaprigpdy abso- lutely, perfectly, Dion, H. de Comp. 24, Stob. Ecl, 1. p. 258, ardpxtios — a To deny utterly, deny, Hdt. 6. 69; KAépavres rarpani Go. amapriws, Ady., (dprios)=drapri, for which it is v.1. in Hipp. 834.» a. ang mat Ti) : fut. pie :—to draw off, 70 émordpevoy dmapicayres, having skimmed off the cream, Hdt. 4. 2, ef. Diod. 5. 37. 2. metaph. to draw off, take off the force of a thing, xadn@ Gd wuxhy dpioas Ep. ap.Arist. Poét.21, 10; dwapvoréoy ray dmedav Ar. Eq. 921: also, like dmayrAéw, to exhaust, come to the end of, Plut. 2. 463 C, etc. ;—also in Med., c. gen., 6 77s BYQBNS dmapurdpevos Plut. 2. 610 E:—part. aor., dmapubeis Tiv dvw . . dvo.ay émmoddCovcay having it skimmed off the surface, Alex. Anunrp. 6. Gmapxaile, to compare to something ancient, Twt Tt Ath. .20 C. Gmapxatoopat, Pass, ¢o be or become ancient, dmnpxaimpeva old- Sashioned songs, Antiph, ArmA, 1, cf. Dion. H. de Thue. 24, etc. Gmapx%, 7, mostly used in pl. dwapyat (cf. dmapypa), 1. the beginning of a sacrifice, the primal offering (of hairs cut from the forehead), amapxal xépns Eur. Or. 96, cf. Phoen, 1525; cf. dmdpy- ovat. 2. the firstlings for sacrifice or-offering, first-fruits, ardvrav dmapxat Hat. 3. 71; dwapxds dyew Sector Soph, Tr. 183; dmapxds Ovew Eur. Fr. 520; da. oxvdevpatov Phoen. 857; émpéperv dr. Tov Gipatwy Thuc. 3.58; ray dvrww Isae. 55. 15 :—so also in sing., Actas drapxh Soph. Tr. 761; dnapyi) Tov natpwiwy xpyudroy Hat. 1. 92, etc.; dvOpwmov am. eis AcApods dmooreAde Arist. Fr. 4433; also, Kepadjs anapxiy dmd.rivos dvaridévae Hdt. 4.88; inscribed on votive offerings, dvé@nxev .. 75° dmapxnv Epigr..Gr. 754,.cf. 753 :—it became, in clater times, a. sort of banquet, Plut. 2. 40 B, ubi v. Wytt. 3. metaph., dmapxal ray éudv spoopbeyparav .Eur. Ion 402; drapyxiy THs copias. dvaridéva Plat. Prot. 343 B, etc.; dm. .dmd dtAocodias Plut..2, 172 C. ardpxopat, fut. fouar: Dep.:—to make a beginning, esp. in: sacrifice ; in Hom. always c. acc., tpixas dmdpxecOat-to begin the sacrifice with the hair, i.e. by cutting off the hair from the forehead and throwing it into the fire, kampou dnd rpiyas dpédpevos Il. 19. 254; GAN 6 ydanap- xépevos Tpixas ev Tupi Baddev Od. 14. 422, cf. 3. 446. II. later c. gen. to cut off part of a thing. to offer it, Tov w@rds TOD KTHvEOs Hadt. 4.188; da. xdpuns Eur. El. 91; T@v Kpe@v.xal ordayxvwv to offer part of them, Hdt. 4. 61: hence, 2. to. offer the firstlings or jirst- fruits, wdvrow of all sacrifices, Id. 3..24;—absol. to begin a sacrifice or offer the jirstlings, Ar. Ach. 244, Pax 1056, etc.; da.-rois Geois Xen.. Hier. 4, 2 :—eunuchs are called. danpypévot,.having had.their first- Fruits offered, Anaxandr. TloA. 1. 3. metaph. to ¢ake as thevfirst- Sruits, take as the choice -or best, Plat..Legg. 767 C, Theocr. 17. I ITT, generally 4o offer, dedicate, aratipe Sto C. I..150:B. 18, cf. Plut. Sull. 27, Anth., etc. IV. late, just like dpxopa to begin, c..gen., mnpatay Lyc, 1409; c.inf.,.Luc, Nigr. 3; so,.to practise, prelude on, dpyavev Himer. 694.—Cf. émdpxouat, kaTapxopa., Gmapxos,.6, y. sub érapyos, Gmrdpxe, fut. fu, to be the first, 5.dmdpyov trav dpxnotay the leader of the dance, Dion. H. 7.73; dupe 8 dmdpge shall lead you in the dance, Anth. P, g, 189. II. in Pind, N..4. 76, to reign far away from home, .of Teucer ; cf. dmoucéw 11, G-nipwditws, Ady. unparodied, Eust. 1090. 12. amas, mica, &rav, (Gua, mas) strengthd. for mas, quite all, the whole, and in pl. all together, freq. from Hom. downwards; éy dmagt, €is Gravrta, entirely, Valck. Phoen. 622; dao in all things, Hdt. 1.4, cf. gt. 2. with an Adj., dpyupeos 8% Zorw amas all-silver, i.e. of massive silver, Od. 4. 616., 15..116; dmas 8& tpaxds doris dv véoy «par Aesch. Pr. 35 ; pucnds ya pasos .., add’ Grav xaxév Ar. Ach. 909, ef, Theocr. 15.19, 148; 4 évayria daca 686s the exactly contrary way, Plat. Prot. 317 B. 3. with.an abstract. Subst. ad/ possible, absolute, diraa’ dvdrykn,, Ar. Thesm. 17 ; cmovd) Dion. H. 6. 2 3; dronia Polyb. 40. 6,.7 5 so, eis dmav ddinéaOas dvotas Paus. 7415, 8. 4. it sometimes takes the Art., Hdt. 3. 64, al., Aesch. Pr. 483, Thuc, 2. 13. II. after Hom. the.sing. was used, like 7@s, in the.sense of everyone, Lat. unusquisque, and neut. like may, everything, unumquodque, Heind. Plat. Phaedo 108 B;..s0, 0b mpds Tod Gravros. avdpés not in the power of every man, Hdt. 7. 153; ob«.e¢ dmavros def Td kepSaivery. ptreiv Soph. Ant. 312; é& dmayros A€yet.in. any cause whatever, Id. O. C. 807, cf. 761; otya viv das exe Cratin, 708, 53 amay yevour’ dy #59 nihil non.., Ar. Thesm. 528; so also with a. Subst., &mav7t Ady in every matter, Cratin. Xep.. 11; TO Grav, as Adv. altogether, Plat. Phaedr, 241 B; a6’ dmay Tim, Locr. 96 D. (V. sub aya, anag.) [atv Hom.;,but aay Pind., and Att., Draco 24, 29, 85; A. B. 416; yet dy Ar, Pl. 493.] érracBodsopar, Pass. to turn to soot, become sooty, Diosce. atrackapilo, fut. tow, to struggle, be convulsed, like a dying fish, da. do- mepet mépkny Xapat Ar. Fr, 416; dmackap.® yéXwr Menand, Incert. 243 A. Gnaomifopar, Dep. to take leave of, rua. Himer. 194. Gmacnaipa, to struggle or gasp away, OvicKe 8 dnaonaipovoa dies in convulsions. (cf. dmonvéw), Eur. Ion 1207. amaort, Ady. of dractos, fasting, Hesych. Gracia, 4, an abstaining fromsfood, a Fast, dm, dryev Ar, Nub. 621 > — dtracrus, vos, 7, E. M. 118. 50. marros, ov, (waréouat) not having eaten, abstaining from, ‘ood, fast- ing, Il. 19. 340, Arist. H. A. 6. 6,2, Call, Cer. adh “s $C; ong dmaoros. éinrvos 458 morijros without having tasted meat or drink, Od. 4- 788, cf. 6. 250:—whence, é34rvos épyoy dmacrov a meal which Seeds. not, Opp. H..2. 250, II. pass. not eaten, Acl. N. A. 11. 16. dnacrpinrw, to flash forth, Arat. 430, Opp. C. 1.220; c. acc. cogn., aiyAnv-Ib. 3. 479, Orph. H. 69.'6, cf. Luc. Gall, 7. améorpaiis,iews, 7, lightning, Tzetz. Hist. 9g. 106. 5.87. g b aracpindife, to make secure, fasten or shut up, cited from Porph. J , s , s aTagyo\ew — aTrauTixa. a&macyoéw, to leave one no leisure, keep him employed, Luc. Philops. 14, Heliod, 2. 21 :—Pass. to be wholly occupied or engrossed, so as to attend to nothing else, wept riwa Luc. Charid. 19. Il. rijs owvexeias Tay puTdy dracxodovans. els EauTy TA BEAn rendering them of none effect, Hdn. 7. 2. admacyoAla, 7, detention by business, Strabo 228 :—also dracxéAqo1s, %, Epiphan. amarayt, Adv. (rarayos) noiselessly, Suid. Gr&rdw, Ion. —€o: impf. #rdrov Eur. El. 938, Ion. éf-amdrecxov Orac. in Ar. Pax 1070: fut. fow: aor. hmarnoa, Ion. d— ll. g. 344, Soph. Tr. 500 (lyr.): pf. 7rarnka :—Pass., fut. drarnOfcopar Arist. An. Prior. 2. 21, 9, cf. (€f-) Plat. Crat. 436 B, Aeschin.; but also in med. form drarncopat, Plat. Phaedr. 262 A, (@-) Xen. An. 7. 3, 3: aor. #rarhOny Plat.: pf. jdrnpa: Thuc., etc.: (drarq). To cheat, trick, outwit, beguile, Lat. decipere, Il. 19. 97, Od. 17.139, etc.: to cheat’ one’s hopes, Hes. Op. 460; of” amdrnkas Soph. Ph. 929; wA€upara..& rdv modé- pov dmarhoas (acc. of cogn. signf.) Thuc. 5. 9:—absol. to be deceptive or fallacious, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 25:—Pass. to be deceived, to be self- deceived, mistaken, Soph. O. T. 594; €yvwxa . . pwrds tyrarnpévy Id, Aj. 807, etc.; riydp ob .. épyera dyyeAlas dwarmpévoy comes not deceived or frustrated? Id, El. 170, ubi v. Herm,: so in Plat., etc,; dm. mepi tt Arist. Rhet. 1. 10, 4; wept twos Id, Sens. 4, 21; dm. ravrnv Thy drarny Id. An. Post. 1. 5, I. II. in Pass, also, dwarada@a, ds.., to be deceived into thinking that.., Plat. Prot. 323 A—The compd. é{amardw is more common, esp: in Hdt. and’ Att. Prose. dm-drepOe, before a conson. —Oev, Adv. apart, aloof, dm. 8% Owphacovro Il. 2. 587, cf. Theogn. 1059, Pind. O. 7. 137: II. as Prep. with gen. far away from, awarepOev dSpidou Il. 5. 445, of. Theogn. 1153; your da, Epigr. Gr. 562. Gmiirevw, Ion. for drardw, Xenophan. ap. Sext. Emp. M. 9. 193. amitedy, Gvos, 6, a cheat, rogue, quack, Hipp. Art. 808. Plat. Rep. 451 A, Xen. Cyr: 1. 6, 27:—hence, da. Adyos Max. Tyr. 2. I. Gmréry [ara-], 4: (perh. akin to dwapioxw; q. v.):—a trick, fraud, deceit, viv 5& kaxhv-drariy BovAevcaro Il. 2. 114, cf. 4. 168: later, a stratagem. in war, Thuc, 2; 39:—often guile, in pl. wiles, ov« dp’ ueAdes .. Angew dwardwy, says Athena to Ulysses, Od. 13. 294, cf. Il. 15. 31; oodcat dara: Pind. Fr. 232. 2. 2. guile, fraud, deceit, treachery, Grav: dndrq perayvots Aesch. Supp. 110, cf. Soph. O. C. 230; dwdrns dikalas obx dwoorare Oeds Aesch. Fr. 287, cf. Pers. 93; dm, épuraw Soph. Ant. 617; dcaBodr Kat dw. Antipho 142. Io, etc.; dm. edmpemhs, opp. to Bia éupavis, Thuc. 4. 86; dm. Aexéov a being cheated out of the marriage, Soph. Ant. 630; dvev SdAov Kal daarns ‘without fraud or coviz,” Hdt. 1. 69; mera oxdrous kal dm. Plat. Legg. 864 C. 8. ’Amdrn is personified in Hes. Th. 224, cf. Luc. Merc. Cond. 42. Il. a beguiling of time, pastime, (not Att., Piers. Moer. 65), Polyb. 2: 56, 12, Dicaearch. in Miill. Geogr. 1. 98. III. as name of a plant, f. |. for dma (q. v.) in Theophr. Grarhrvs, ov, post. Adj. guileful, wily, dmarhdta eidhs skilled in wiles, Od. 14. 288; dm. BaCew Ib. 127; of a person, Nonn. D. 46. to. Gmitmhés, 7, dv, (os, ov, Plat. Criti. 107 C),=foreg:, Il, 1. 526, 165 fatherless, orphan, dotxous: dméropds re Soph. Tr. 300; dutyrap dm. re Eur. Ion 110; dz. wérpos Id. I. T. 864: also-in neut. pl., daropa réxea Id. H. BR. 114: disowned by the father, Plat. Legg. 928 E:—also, c. gen., dm. éuot not having me for a father, Soph: O. C. 1383: 2. of unknown father; like oxérios; Lat. spurius, Plut. 2. 288 D. dmravatvw, to make to wither away, Theophr. C.P. 3. 10, 8 :—Pass. to be withered, Q. Sm. rt. 66: Gmavyéfo, to flash forth, éxd.ra&v dpOarpav cédras Heliod. 3. 4; xpotay, xpHpa Id. 4. 8, Philostr. ror. II. Med. to beam forth, Call. Del. 181. 2. to see from far, Ib: 125. dravyacpa, aros, 76, radiance, effulgence, of light beaming from a luminous bedy, pwrds didiov Lxx (Sap: 7. 26); d0gns Ep. Hebr. 1. 3; cf, Philo 1. 337., 2. 356, Heliod. 5. 27. dra, Ss, 6, efflux of light, radiance, effulgence, Plut. 2. 83 D, 34 D. *Travdéo, fut. jw, to forbid, absol., éyd 8° dravda y Soph. Ph. 1293; often foll. by wc. inf., like other Verbs of prohibition, rdv dvdp’ dandia..oréyns pi) tw mapneev Id. Aj. 741, cf. O. T. 236 (where ‘Vis rijode is perh. a partit. gen., to be construed with Twa), Eur. Rhes. 934, Supp. 468, Ar. Eq. 1072. 2. in Ar. Ran. 369, rovros atde, kaihis dravde, kabOs 7d rpirov war’ anavda eioracba pioraor xopots, it is rendered ¢o bid or tell plainly, proclaim, Lat. edico; but the true sense even there is, to denounce. or warn against intrusion. II, to decline, refuse, shun, otxovy dnavdar duvaréy éori por mévous Eur, Supp. 343: to deny, renounce, veixos-dm. Theocr. 22.129; to say No, Anth, Plan. 4. 299. III. to be wanting towards, fail, pidowt Eur. Andr. 87: hence absol., to sink, die, of plants, Theophr. H. P. 5. 6, 1; dm. mpdés rt Antyll. in Matth. Med. 108: ¢o & speechless, Luc. Philop 18; dw. 7d pavreia the oracles are dumb, Plut. 2. 431 B:—dm. ind Acwod Luc. Luct. 24; «bmw Babr. 7.8; advos Anth, P. 5. 168.—Cf. dmetmov, dmaryopevo, drep&, amavSnors, ews, 7, exhaustion, Agathin. in Matthaei Med. 286. érav0débypa, 76, daring sublimity, Dio Chrys. 1. 477, dub. dmav0ab{fopat, Dep. to speak or act boldly, speak out, Plat. Apol. 37 A; freq. in late Prose, v. Lob, Phryn. 66. The form dmav@aSidfopar occurs in aor., Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 14, and here and there in Mss., as in Themist. 131 D, 135 A; but drav@adicac@a, 290 C. The Act. ara ovres* peyadoppovobrres, A. B. 419, Suid.; and in Nicet., arrav0aSéw, cf. Thom. M. p. 84. GrravOnpepile, to do on the same day: esp. to go or return the same day, els 70 orparémedoy Xen. An. 5.2, 1; x Mions eis Adyway Ael. V. H. 9. 2. GmavAva, wv, 74, (adAH).a sleeping alone, esp. the night before the wedding, when the bridegroom slept alone in the father-in-law’s house; also the presents made to the bride on the same day :—both senses in Poll. 3. 39, Hesych., E. M. But some confusion seems to exist between da- and én-avAua. GravAtfopat, aor. —yvAicOnv: Dep. :—to sleep or live away from, rijs méAews Dion. H. 8. 87. , dravAvopés, 5, seems to be used of a moon-stroke or fit caused by sleeping in the moonlight, Poéta de herbis 173. Parmen. Fr. 111 (v. edapos) ; d€omowa Xen. Oec. 1, 20; Kakovpyos Kat dmarndy Plat. Gorg. 465 B; dm. Adyos Id. Legg. 892 D; 70 dm. év Adyos Id. Crat. 407 E; oxtaypadpia dmaryddés producing illusion, Id. Criti. 107 C :—Ady. ~A@s, Iambl. Myst. 94, Poll. 9. 135. ardrnpa [mi], aros, rd, a deceit, stratagem, Aen, Tact. 23: a be- guilement, dr, 760av Anth. P. 7. 195. drirhpov, ov, gen. ovos; a deaeiibe, Zosim. Garirhvwp, opos, 6, 4, (avpp) beguiling men, Tryph. 137. amdryots, ews, }, a beguiling, LXXx (Judith to. 4). ararnris, od, 6, a deceiver, Gloss.: irreg. fem. —qrpta, }, Hesych. amirntixés, 7, dv, fraudulent, fallacious, of sophistry, Plat. Soph. 240 D, 264 D, Arist. An. Post. 1.16, al.; Comp. —«drepos, more effective in deceiving, Xen. Eq. Mag. 5,5. Adv. —«@s, Poll. 4. 24 G-rdryros [ri], ov, untrodden, Anth. P. 6. 51. II. not trodden down, not worn, new, A. B. 1. anaitipato, =sq., drnriwacpévn Aesch. Eum. 95. Gnatipdw, to dishonour greatly, drnrlunoe ll. 13. 1133 ob pev ari- phoee Oem Anth. P. app. 51. 54. anatpifo, to evaporate, dmarpife 7d irypdy Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 37, cf. Somn. 3, 25, P. A. 2. 7, 18. % ’Amiaroupedy, Gvos, 6, Cyzicene name for the third month, answering to Att. Pyanepsion, C. I. 3661, cf. 2083; written vv, Ib. 2338 :— C. F. Hermann. de Mens. p. 45. *"AmGrotpia, wy, 74, the Apaturia, a festival celebrated by the mem- bers of each pparpia at Athens in the month Pyanepsion, lasting three days, called respectively 5opmia, on which there was a banquet, Philyll. “Hpaxa. 1 (ubi vy. Meineke) ; dvdppvots, on which offerings were made to Zeus Phratrios and Athena Apaturia; and xovpe@ris, on which the grown-up youths (xodpor) were enrolled among the ppdrepes (Dem. 995. fin.), with the offering of a sheep or goat, Andoc. 16. 31, Theophr. Char, 3, Schol. Ar. Pax 890. A like festival was held in all the Ionian cities, except Ephesus and Colophon, Hdt.1.147.—Cf. A. B. 273, E.M. 533- 35- Aphrodité was called ’Amaroupia at Troezen, as presiding at this ceremony, Paus. 2. 33, 1; also ’Awdroupos, “Anarovpy or Amarouptds in some cities of the Tauric Chersonese, Strabo 495, C. I. 2109 , 2125. (Prob. there- fore from marpid, =parpia, with a euphon.; v. Dict. of Antiqq.) dmarpla, 4, exile, C. 1. 3632. g dmarpis, wos, 6, 4), without country, Tzetz. Hist. 7: 436. : \dardrwp, opos, 6, 4%, (marip) without father, of deities, abromérwp, dm. Orph. H. 9. 10; dm.., dunrwp Nonn, D. 41. 53, cf. Ep. Hebr. 7. 33 Los, a, ov, belonging to the dmavAta, dm, xAavis a garment presented on this day, Poll. 3. 40. daavdos, ov, lying alone, Hesych. dmavAdcuvos, ov, away from the avdn, Anth, P. 6, 221, susp. dratinots, ews, }, decrease, decline, Longin. 7. 3. dtravpaw, never found in pres.; impf. danupwy, as, a, in aor. sense, Hom., pl. daqvpoy Il. 1. 430: a part. of aor. form dmovpas (as if from drrovpnpt) Hom,, Dor. dmovpais Pind. P. 4. 265: aor. med. drnvparo v. |. Od. 4. 646; and-a-part. dwoupdpevos Hes. Sc. 173: for fut. dmoupyow, v. sub: daroupi Co. To take away or wrest from, rob of, c. dupl. acc. pers. et rei, @upo Oupody dmnipa Il. 6.17; dmaddév ré of’ Hrop aanipa Il, 115; Tovs pev Tvdeldns.. revxe’ danupa Ib. 334; AdBov 5€ € Oupdy dmotpas 13. 270; etc. 2. c. gen. pers., "AxtAfjos yépas abros dmnbpay 19. 89; Kodpny..’AxtAtjos éBns KAtcindey Gmovpas g. 107; cf. Od. 18. 2735; THv pa Bin déxovros dmnipay took her away by force from him unwilling, Il. 1. 430; but in Od. 4. 646, 4 o€ Bln déxovros drnupa vija, the constr. seems to be mixed, as if for ge he had said cod, or as if déovres should be déxovra (as la Roche would read), 3. c. dat. pers., moAécow . . Oupdy dmrnipa Il. 17. 236; of obrw’ amnipa Od. 3. 192. 4. c. acc. only, éxet yépas ards drovpas Il. 1. 356, 5073 éAcvOepov Fuap am. 6. 455, etc.:—Med., dmovpdpevoar yuxds having lost their lives, or having taken away each other's lives, Hes. Sc. 173. Il. after-Hom., to receive good or ill, to enjoy or suffer; so first Hes. Op. 238, ¢vuwaca réds Kaxod dvbpds drnvpa (where some read émaupe?) ; but Eur, Andr. 1029 has drnvpa tt mpés Twos, received at another's hands, without v.1., cf, Buttm. s. v. 12.—For Aesch. Pr. 28, Hipp. Jusjur., v. sub érauploxopat. (The Root of this old Ep. Verb is never found in the simple form, Ahrens nat the v y eebe, ds F, so that the sh would be do-F paw or dt-aF paw, (cf. piw, é-piw), drovpas coming from the former, etalear from “e latter. But what the 4/FPA or AFPA is remains uncertain: Curt. with some hesitation connects it with dmdé- Fepoe, v. drdepae.) amavort, Adv. of sq., unceasing, incessant, Dio C. 37. 46. é-naverros, ov, unceasing, never-ending, Parmen. Fr. 82; aldév Aesch. Supp. 573; Blos Plat. Tim. 36 E; dra Soph. Aj. 1186; da. nal dOdvaros opa Plat. Crat. 417 C, etc. :—Adv. -r@s, Arist. Mund. 2, 2. 2. not to be stopped or assuaged, insatiable, di~a Thuc. 2. 49; yvdbor Antiph. Incert.15. II. c. gen. never ceasing from, -yoaw Eur. Supp. 82. amavrixa, Adv. strengthd. for abrixa, on the spot, Dio C. 40. 15 with v. 1, dravort rai. . ‘ 166 Gravropiirife, to do or offer a thing of oneself, Plut. 2. 717 B,.Philo I. 571 :—Pass., Philo 2. 182; and Act. in same sense, Id. 1. 387, etc. ara’ éw, to go of one's own accord, desert, Thuc. 7-753 mpos iva Dion. H. de Oratt. 2; twos Dio C. 35. 17. Gmavxevilo, to ent off by the neck, Diod. Ecl. 2. 529. TI. taipov dm. to tame a bull by forcing back his neck, Philostr. 722, 864. III. to shake ve the yoke from the neck, get free struggling, like dpnvid{w, Philo 1. 305, etc.:—hence Subst. daravx. wots, 7}, Cuyod Nicet. Ann. 238 C, arapyros, dv, that can be deceived, Or. Sib. 7. 129. Gn-abSdprnais, ews, #, incorruptibility, Byz. anidioxe, fut. drapyow: aor. dmihripoy :—like dwardw, to cheat, beguile, mostly found in compos. with mapa and é¢ :—of the simple word Hom. has only dwagioxe Od. 11. 217; fade 14. 488; later dnd Anth. Plan. 4. 108; dwapdy (so we ought to read) Opp. H. 3. 4443 opt. aor. med. ddorro in act. sense, Id. 23.216. (From arr, palpare, : perh. also akin to drarn, drardw.) , ; ifw, fut. low, to skimoffthefroth, Alex.Anu.6:—Pass., Galen.6.283. i , Vv. sub droapicow. d-miixs, €s, without. thickness or solidity, Eust. 641. 35 :—in Procl., Gmaxos, ov. Hence Subst. dmdxeva, 4, thinness, Eust. 641. 33. Gmrax8onar, Dep. to be grievous, wt Sappho 37: cf. dmex@dvopat. amraxAve [iv], to free from darkness, Q. Sm. 1. 78. amaxperow, to disuse, make obsolete, Eust. Opusc. 169. Io, etc. dméyyovos, 6, %, a great grand-son or daughter, Lat. pronepos, Byz. dmeyyvdAtfe, fut. iow and iw, to give up, deliver again, Hesych. dare , Adv. part. pf. pass. desperately, Byz. & 6s, dv, = iredavés, Hesych. dméSeo0ar, dréSySoxa, v. sub drecbia. GmedSiLw, (dredos) to level, 7rédiCov tiv dxpémod Clitodem. 22. G-méSiAos, ov, unshod, Aesch. Pr. 135; in Call. Cer. 124, OY, dmeSos, ov, (a copul., rédov) even, level, flat, Lat. planus, campestris, xwpn Hdt. 1. 110, cf. 9. 25,102, Thuc. 7. 78, Xen.: as Subst., dmedov, 76, a plain, flat surface, Hat. 4. 62. GréSw, v. sub drecbiw. : daeLos, ov, (wéa) footless, Lyc. 629. an-Bifw, fut. iow, to disuse, disaccustom, Timwpias am. Twa Aeschin, 5. 273; c. inf., da. pa) moretv to use or teach not to do something, Lat. dedocere, Id. 21. 31: part. pf. dmeOuews Plut. Alex. 40; pass. dme:fio- pévos Joseph. B. J. 5.13, 4. ameQuorréov, verb. Adj. one must disuse, unteach, Geop. 14. 7, 5- daretSov, inf, dmideiv, aor. 2 with no pres. in use, dpopaw being used instead :—to look away from other things at, and so simply fo look at, és or mpdés te Thuc. 7. 71; méppwbev dmideiv Timocl. An@. 1. II. to look away from, and so to despise, Plut. 2. 1070 F. &-meWapyxta, %, disobedience 0 command, Antipho ap. A. B. 78, Dio C. Excerpt. 23. 80. @ Y disobedience, Xen. Mem. 3. 5, 5, Plut. Aemil. 31, N. T.; ar. mpds Tov Adyor Clem. Al. 159. GreWew, fut. ow, Att. form of ai0éw (though even the Trag. preferred dmaréa, q. v. 11), to be disobedient, refuse compliance, Aesch. Ag. 1049 ; opp. to me{Sopat, Plat. Phaedr. 271 B; oft. c. dat., to disobey, ove dmet- Onoas Oe@ Eur. Or. 31; dw. dua vouw wat TO Oe Plat. Legg. 741 D, etc,; Ta a dm. rit in great matters, Id. Rep. 533 B; dm. ais évexupacias not to abide by them, Id. Legg. 949 D. TI. to dis- v, Ion, aor. I pass. of dpinus. , és, disobedient, Soph. Fr. 45; dm. Tots vdpors Plat. Legg. 936 D; of ships, rots xuBepyhrais dmeWeorépas Tas vais wapetxoy less obe- dient to them, Thuc. 2. 84, cf. Xen. Eq. 3, 6; dre@éa teva to work disobedience, be disobedient, Call. Dian. 66 :—Adv., dme0@s éxew mpds twa. Plat. Rep. 391 B. 2. of things, inflexible, rigid, névrpov Acl.N.A. 1.553 otdhpov dmeéorepor Philo 2. 87; d5dvres az, unyielding, Opp. C. 2. 511; x@pos dm. impracticable, Hermesian. 5.3. II. act. not persuasive, incredible, w00os Theogn. 1235: uninviting, mpds 7iv yetow Ath. 87 C; ri yedow Id. 323 A; so of countries, Acl, ap. Suid. arabia, 4, =dreiea, Gloss. _drexdto, fut. doouar, Xen. Mem. 3. 11, 1, dow Plut. 2.1135 A:—Pass., aor. dweixdoOnv Eur., Plat.: fut. -c@joopar Themist.: pf. dmeinacpat Plat.:—the augm. tenses dmelxaCov, dmefxaca, are written dayje— by Bekker in Plat. To form from a model, to represent, express, copy, of painters, da. 7d xaddy Isocr. 4 B; 7d adv xpapa wat oxijpa Plat. Crat. 432 B, cf. Criti. 107 D, E; 31d xpwparav ax. Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 1; iuact wat oxhpacwv Arist. Post. 1, 4; metaph., am. éauréy mi to conform oneself to .. , Plat. Rep. 396 D :—Pass. to become like, resemble, tun Ib. 563 A, Crat. 419 C; drexacbels OeG in a goa s likeness, Eur. El. 979. 2. to express by a comparison, éxoip av aitd pi) Kaxdis iecaees (then follows the comparison), Soph. Fr. 162, cf. Plat. Theaet. 169 B; olos yap "AxiAAcds eyévero, dredceer dy ms Bpagtbay Id. Symp. 221 C; 70 OdAAay Thy abtny pot Soxer drekdley Thy Tav véwv the word 64AAew seems fo express the growth.., Id. Crat. 414 A; dr, 5d rod pa to express by the sound of A, Ib. 426 E:—Pass. to be copied or expressed by likeness, tots ind tav Katw dneacGeicr Id. Rep. 511 A; els dpodrnta @ drendtero (sc. robrov @) Id. Tim. 39 E; da. mpds rt to be copied in reference to.., i.e. from.., Ib. 29 C. 3. to liken, compare with, rwi 7 Eur, Supp. 146, Plat. Phaedo 76 E, Gorg. 493 B, Symp. 221 D, al.; od rowobrdy éorw, @ ob drexates not such [as that], to which you compare it, Id. Phaedo 92 B:—Pass. to be likened or com- pared, Id, Legg. 905 E, al.; impers., 4 pela the ison Tat ip is made by reference to walking, Id. Crat. 420 D; dmetxacrat Trois KaBet- $ oJ * aravtopariCw — aeipit. Bouvet Ib. 421 B.—These senses are freq. in Plat. II, ds drendoa, =ds tmemdoat, as one may guess, to conjecture, Soph. O. C, 16, Tr. 141, cf, Or, 1298; cf. émekd{w. ie Gmeuxtiota, %), representation, pipnors kai dar. Plat, Legg. 668 B, Criti. 107 B:—also -acpés, 6, Porph. Abst. 4. 7. dmeixacpa, aros, 74, a copy, representation, Plat. Crat. 402 D, 420C. Gmeacréov, verb. Adj. one must represent, Plat. Phaedr. 270 E ; dwe- Anrixd 7a Sppara da, Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 8. dretxovife, fut. iow, (eixdwv) to represent in a statue, Anth, P, 12. 56: to express, Ib. 127 :—Pass., Philo 1. 106, 154, al. H drekévicpa, 74, =drelxacpya, Epist. Socr. 20, freq. in Philo and Eccl.: —also darexévicts, 7, Byz., and dmekovcpds, 6, Epiphan. =dmeccacia. G&mexétws, dareikds, v. sub decks. dr-erdbw, fut. Aow, =deiAdw (v. sub etAw) ; mostly in Pass., és daropiny dredndels or dmehnuévos brought into great straits, Hdt. 1. 24., 2. 1415 és dvaryeainy dmeAnuévos Id. 8. 109; dmeAnOévres és orewdy forced into narrow compass, Id. 9. 34. II. to unroll, roll off, Hero Autom. 248. Grethéw, dmesAfrny, Ep. for #retAcirny, 3 dual impf. act., Od. 11. 312: later Ep. pres. daretAciw, Musae, 122, Nonn. D. 20. 204: fut. How, etc.: (dreAn). To hold out either in the way of promise or threat, and therefore, I. sometimes in good sense, to promise, ov5 ijreiAnoev dvanrt . . péfew Krerhv ExaropBny Il. 23. 863, cf. 872 :—also to boast or brag, ws Tor’ dmeAjoe 8.150; 9 wey areiAnoas ByTappovas civat dpiorous Od. 8. 383; cf. dredn I. II. commonly in bad sense, to threaten, Lat. minari, in Hom. either absol., as Il. 2. 665, Od, 21. 3068 ; or (more freq.) c, dat. pers., Od. 20, 372, etc., and freq. afterwds. ; also c. acc. cogn., ala 3 dvaords jmelAnoev piOov spake a threaten- ing speech, Il. 1. 388; dmeAds dm, v. sub dean; dely’ dmeAjowy ern Eur. Supp. 542; often also with neut. Pron. or Adj., dm. Toye @up@ Il. 15. 212; tavra, moAAd dm. Hadt. 7. 18., 1. 111, Thuc. 8. 33, etc.; wup- yous dm. Seva Aesch. Theb. 426; raidr’ dmeAnoas exes Soph. O. C. 817. 2. with acc, of the thing threatened, @4varov dm. ru Hdt. 4. 81; glpos Plut. Pomp. 47; (nulas dm. xara twos Id. Camill, 39- 3. dependent clauses were added in inf. fut., yépas . . dpatpy- ceoOat drecdeis Il. x. 161, cf. 15.179, Od, 11, 313 (v. supr. 1); and the same construction continued in use, oéas.. éxrpivev jmetdce Hat. 6. 37; dm, Spacew m1 Eur. Med. 287; am. dmoxreveiv Lys. 98. 43; rarely in inf. pres., #7. . . EAxépvey Il. 9. 682; after Hom. in inf. aor., Xen, Mem. 3- 5, 4, Hell. 5.4, 7, Theocr. 24. 16, (dy being omitted, v. Cobet V. LL. 97)- 4. in Att. also, dw. d71.., &s.., Ar. Pl, 88, Xen. An. 5. 5, 22, etc.s dm. Tim, ef pp.., Id. Cyr. 4. 5, 12. III. Pass. Grethodua, of persons, to be terrified by threats, Id. Symp. 4. 31. 2. of things, rd dmeAndévra =dretAai, Plat. Legg. 823 C:— but, later, IV. detAovpa: is found as Dep., App. Civ. 3. 29, Polyaen. 7. 35, Act. Ap. 4. 17, Clem. Al. 142. dreAn, }, mostly in pl., boastful promises, boasts, rod Tor dmesAal, ds.. imicxeo oivorord toy ; Il, 20. 83; cf. dmetAéw I. II. commonly, threats, rod Tor ametdal olxovra, Tas Tpwaly dmeidcov vies’ Axaicy ; Il. 13. 219; 0052. . AfOer’ dweAdww, Tas dvTiéw ’OSvaqe mpHrov ernmetdan- gey Od. 13. 126, cf. Il. 16. 201, Hdt. 6. 32; evOdvev dmedais Kal tAnyais Plat. Prot. 325 D, Aesch. Pr. 174, etc. :—in sing. a threat of punishment, Soph. Ant. 753, Thuc. 4.126, Plat. Lege. 668 B; dme:Ajs tvexa Tois & Taprapp Arist. An, Post. 2.11, 8. (Deriv. uncertain.) aretAnpa, aros, 7), =dmeA7, in pl., Soph. O. C. 660, Nicet. Chon. 281. drehnrip, jipos, 6, a threatener, boaster, Il. 7. 96, Call. Del. 69, Anth. P. 6.95: —Hrevpa, #, as fem. Adj., Nonn. D, 2. 257. daretAnriptos, a, ov, of or for threatening, Aéyor Hat. 8. 112. areadnris, 00, 4, =dmreAnrhp, Diod. 5. 31. Grednrixés, 4, dv,=drednripios, phoes Plat. Phaedr. 268 D; vé- pupa Id. Legg. 823. C; cf. dwexacréov. Adv. -Kas Greg. Nyss. Garadn-opos, ov, bearing threats, Jo. Chrys. drevducplvéw, Zo purify, Synes. 126 D, Walz Rhett. 1. 604. ameiAAw, like dimerAEw, to force back, but prob. only found in old Att. law phrase, éo71s dmei\ny Th 93pq whoever bars the way with the door, ap. Lys. 117. 37; cf. éfetAAw, Buttm. Lexil. s, v, eiAeiy 10. drew, (ciut sum): impf. dav, 2 sing. drpo8a Soph. Ph. 379; Ep. arény, 3 pl. dmecay, Hom. : fut. dmégopa: Ar. Nub. 887, Ep. dméacopat Hom., 3 sing. aweooeira Od. 19. 302. To be away or far from, Hom. ; revos Od. 19. 169., 20.155, al.; édy 8° dap rovrow 7d xalpav Soph. Ant. 1169; dm. dwé twos Thuc. 1. 141: c. dat., pidowiw Eur. Med. 179, cf. Tro. 393., Hdt. 4. 1, Thuc. 2. 61, etc.: but mostly, 2. absol. to be away or absent, and of things, to be away, wanting, ot 7’ ovres ot 7 dnévres, i.e, all that are, every one, Soph. Ant. 1109; Tas ovoas ré Hou ai Tas dmovoas édmiéas Id. El. 306; of the dead, Eur. Hec, 312; Tot Scot dmedvros the god not being counted, Hat. 6. 53:— in 3 pl. impf., the MSs. sometimes confound dajoay and dreary, e.g. in Thue, 1. 42. * darevp (<7 ibo), serving as fut. of dmépyouac: inf. dmévat, in Anth. P. II. 404, metri grat., daivac. To go away, depart, Od. 17. 593, al.; ote dre; =ari0t, be gone, Soph. O.T. 431; dmayv otxec@ar Dem. 246. 18, Isocr. 367 C; of mpéoBes wept trav onoviav dmnjecay Thuc. 4. 39: —of soldiers, diact otdevt kédaum will retreat, Hdt. 8. 60 33 dm. mpos Baathéa to desert to him, Xen. An. 1. 9, 29:—dm. daw to return, Ib. I. 4, 7, cf. 15; so, dmre és iuérepa return to your homes, Hdt. 6. 97; Gmipev otkade Ar, Vesp. 255; amiecav én’ ofkov Thuc. 5. 30; els Hv marpiba Arr. Epict. 2. 23, 26:—of the Nile, to recede, Hat. 2. 108 —_- dm. éni rt to go in quest of .., Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 80 —pnvos amdyros, for the common ¢6ivovros, Dem. 238. 3, C. I. 3658 :-—of dying, Luc. Tim. 15, Philostr. 825. 2. c. acc, cogn., 7, iav ameé Phe Pheds 2h, C. gn., Tpaxelay ameévar (sc. dddv) ° - % ameimov — ame:poTabys. Gmetmoy, inf, dwemeiv, Ep. dnoecmeiv, crderméuev, and part. dnoecndv, i.e. dwoFemeiv, Il. 19. 35, etc.: more rarely aor. I derma Hat. 3.153, Soph. Ant. 405; med. dwemauny Hdt. 1. 59., 5. 66, Arist. Eth. N. 8. 16, 4, but never in the best Att.: the fut, in use is dmep®, pf. dareipnxa, mostly used in signf. Iv. 2:—Pass., fut. dmoppnOjcoopa Lys. infr. cit. : aor. drepp7jOny Plat. Legg. 929 A, Dem. 899. 14:—the pres. and impf. are.supplied by dravb5dw, cadpnu, and in Att. Prose by dayopedw. To speak out, tell out, declare, piOov, ddndeiny, epnpuootyny, ayyeAlny dro- emely Hom.; prnorhpecow dmemépuev (prob. pynorijpo’ droemépev) to give them full notice, Od. 1. 91; danrcyéws droemeiv Ib. 373, Il. 9. 309; prow dwepeiv to deliver a verbal message, Hdt. 1. 152:—so also in aor. med., dweiwag0a Oavarw Cnuoby Arist. Mirab. 84. II. to deny, refuse, imiaxeo wat xardvevoov, 4 dxden’ Il. 1. 515, cf. 9. 506, 675; évppabc #) deme Plat. Rep. 523 A. III. to forbid (cf. dmaryopeda 1), very freq. in Prose, di. rw pt) Tovety to forbid one to do, tell him not to do, Hdt. 1. 155, Soph. O. C. 1760, Ar. Av. 556; and with the inf. omitted, dem elpyer pedaOpov Aesch. Ag. 1333, cf. Soph. Ant. 405; dm. tei 7 to forbid him the use of it, Arist. Pol. 2. 5, 19 :— Pass., dmetpoOat yap of . . undér emderxvivar Hdt.6.61; 7d dmetpnuevor, a forbidden thing, Id, 3. 52, Antipho 121. 42; dwelpyrac 88 tovro TO vow Xenarch. Mop. 1. 7. IV. to renounce, disown, give up, c. acc. rei, dw. piv Il. rg. 35; and not seldom in Prose, as, ef .. drepéovet .. iv cvppaxiny Hat. 7. 205; dmemeiv .. xyptxov bro . . rarpdav éoriay to renounce it by public proclamation, Eur. Alc. 737 ; Tov vidy id khpuxos dm, Plat. Legg. 928 D; mévous Eur. H. F. 1354; mpogeviay Thuc. 5. 43+ 6. 89 ; dusAlay Lys, 112. 39; Taira pev ody dmetmo: Tis dv Dem. 551. 19; dm. Ti orparnyiay to resign it, Xen. An. 7. 1, fin.; Tv dpxhy Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 13; da. yuvaika to divorce her, Plut. Lucull, 38 :—so in Pass., ai onoviai obi dmeipnyro had not been renounced, remained in force, Thuc, 5. 48; tds arovids dmoppndqcecbat Lys. 165. 28 :—(prob. never c. gen. rei, for in Il. 3. 406 is now read (with Arisfarch.) @e@v 8° émoeixe kedevBov, v. Spitzn, ad |.) :—so in Med. dwefmac0a, Hdt. 1. 59., 4. 120, 1255 da. dy averruncare, Id. 5.56; amr. rov vidv, rov mwarépa Arist. Eth. N. 8. 16, 4; dm. yvopnv to withdraw, retract it, Plut. Caes. 8. 2. intr. to give up, to be worn out, fail, flag or sink from exhaus- tion, émel 8 daetme Soph. Tr. 789, cf. Ar. Pax 306, etc.; dmeepnnds cOpa Antipho 140. 27; 0d yap mov dmepodper shall not give in, Plat. Theaet. 200 D; tas dv dmetrmorv Dem. 1265. fin.; of 8d Tov xpdvov Gmetpndres Arist. Pol. 7. 9, 9; 008° dwefmev .. paris failed not, was not unfulfilled, Aesch, Theb. 840. b. c, dat. pers. to fail or be wanting to one, ov dmeipnnas pidos Eur. Med. 460, cf. Andr. 87. c. c. dat. rei, to fail or fall short in a thing, dmepnedrwy 5: xphpuact, i.e. when they were bankrupt, Dem. 30. fin.; dm. od&paoe Isocr. 59 C, Lycurg. 153. 4; but, d. dar. kaxols, dd-ye, to give way to, sink under them, Pors. Or. 91, Hec. 942; so, dw. tmd mAHGous Kax@v Xen. Hell. 6. 3,15; da. mpds tov pivoy Plut. Camill. 18. e. also c. part., dr. Taka:mwpotpevar Ar. Lys. 778; pépovres dmepotow they will be tired of paying, Thuc. I. 121; dm. caOjpevos Plat. Phaedr. 228 B; da. Aéyov to give over speak- ing, Id. Legg. 769 E; dmeipnxa oxon@y Id. Phaedo 99 D; etc. Grreipaiyiew, to act without knowledge of right, Paul. Aeg. 6. 50. Gmepdyibia, 4, ignorance of goodness, folly, Clem. Al. 190, Hierocl. ap. Stob. 415. 55. dreip-dya0os, or, q with goodness, foolish, like dmespéxados, Eccl. :—Adv. —@ws, Diod. 15. 40. II. of infinite goodness, Eccl. *Areiprios, a, ov, Apirean, and “Arelpyev, Adv. from Apeiré, both in Od. 7. 8 ypiis “Amepain.., rhv wor “AmelpnOev vées fryaryor. Apeiré seems to be Limitless-land (from d-metpos), an imaginary place (cf. “Ymepein) : the & is Dor. for “Hietpos. dreipdxis, Adv. (die:pos) times without number, Arist. Phys. 2. 1, 8, de Xenophan, 2.2; woAAdais, padAAov 8 dm, Id, Pol. 7. 10,7; odx Graf ovd€ Sls GAN’ dm. Id. Cael. 1. 3, 12. dmelp-avSpos, ov, that has not known man :—Advy. —dpws, Byz. d-tre(pavros, ov, vy. sub dmépayTos. drrevp-apiOpos, ov, infinite, countless, Byz. d-relpaoros, ov, incapable of being tempted, xax@v Ep. Jacob. 1. 13. G-tretpGros, ov, Dor. and Att. for ameipyros. ¥ d-melpiros, ov, for dmeipacros, like Oavpards for Oavpaords, Bockh Pind. O. 6. 54 (90). II. for dweipayros, Orph. Fr. g. 1. dreipaixas, Adv. in an infinite number of ways, Plut. 2. 732 E. dmelpya0ov, Ep. dwoépyadov, poét. aor. 2 of dmeipyw, to keep away, heep off, Wndciwva ddA dwoépyade Aaod Il. 21. 599; faKea peyadns dmoepyabe obAns he pushed back the rags from the scar, Od. 21. 221; iv pn ce THode yijs dreipya Soph. O. C. 863. On the form, v. sub oxeOw, pees Ion. and Ep. darépyw, and in Hom. also dnoépyo (i.e. daro- Fépyw): fut. daeiptw: aor. dreipyafor (q. v): aor. also dietpfa Soph. Aj. 1280, Thuc. 4. 37, etc. To keep away from, debar from, G: ee 6 8 Tpias .. aidovons dméepyer Il. 24. 238; apéas Ovoav améptat Hat. 2. 124; dm. wédews Cuydv Aesch. Theb. 471; eye og" dmeipyn . . Xapas Soph, Aj. 51 ; om éorw bre dmelpyopéy Twa. . Kabjpatos Thue. 2. 39, cf. 3.453 vouwv juds dmefpyes; do you exclude us from their benefit? Ar. Vesp. 467; so, delmvov dx. 7a Cratin. Apam. 1; also, az. twa dnd rivos Hdt. 9. 68:—Med. to abstain from, keep away from, twos Plat. Legg. 879 D. 2. to keep from doing, prevent, hinder, c. acc, et inf., da. Tid movetv Soph. Aj. 70, Eur. Rhes. 4323 or pay mrovety Id. Hel. 1559; dm. re ph ylyvecOa Plat. Legg. 837 D:—Pass. to be debarred from doing, drrec@ai rwos Id. Parm.148E. | 8. c. ace. to keep back, keep off, ward off, prxpds 52 Albos péya wo dmoépyer Od. 3. 295; ris radr dmeiptev; Soph. Aj. 1280; vdcous da. Eur. Ion 1013; tinted 167 Kadpa dreipye Plat. Tim. 22 E, etc. b. vduos obdels dm. debars, checks them, Thuc. 2. 533; 7iv Biavov rpopiy dm. to prohibit it, Arist. Pol. 8. 4, 7:—Pass., puyf deipydpevos Xen. Hell. 1. 4, 15. ¢. in Hadt. 2. 99, 70 dmepypevor is the old bed of the Nile laid dry by barrin, or damming off the river ; whence the phrase just above, 6 dyxay . . be drepypévos fee, must be interpr. the reach which is formed by the water being dammed off. II. to part, divide, separate, 60 nAnts dro- épyet abxéva te o770ds re Il. 8. 325:—and so to bound, skirt, of seas and rivers, etc., 6“Adus évOev piv Kannadénas drépye, é¢ ebavipou be Tlapdaydvas Hdt. 1. 723; mpds Bopény dvepov 5 Kepapekds xéAmos dmépyet Ib. 174, cf. 204., 2. 99., 4. 55. . 2. of persons travelling, énopedero, ev dpotepp piv drépyov “Polrecoy mékw ern. keeping Rhoeteium on the left.., Hdt. 7. 43; é« Sefeqs xeupds 7d Tdy-yacov odpos dm. Ib. 112, cf. 109., 8. 35. III. to shut up, confine, évrds dm. = Fs 116; dwepypévos év rh dxpondre Id. 1. 154, cf. 5. 64; ev TO ip 4. 6. 79. Gtevpéoros, a, ov (os, ov, only Or. Sib. 1. 225), lengthd, poét. form for dietpos (signf. 11), boundless, endless, immense, ‘yaa, ditds Il. 20. 58, Od. 11. 621; Sips Batr. 4: countless, dvOpwmot, avdpes, eedva, dmowa Od. 19. 174, Hes. Fr. 39- 4, etc.: also, da. efos untold beauty, Hes. Fr. 73- 3:—once in Trag., dw. mévot Soph, Aj. 928 (lyr.) :—neut. as Adv., Q. Sm. 2. 179. Cf. dwetprros, daepeicios. *"Ametpnev, v. ’Ame:paios. amelpnka, v. sub daetror. Gar-epyréos, a, ov, verb. Adj., to be despaired of, Nicet. Ann. 179 A. Gaelpyros, Dor. and Att. daeiparos, ov; also 7, ov h. Hom. Ven. 1 333 —without trial, and so, I. act. without making trial of, without making an attempt upon, c. gen., dmetpnros . . craOpoio, of a lion, Il. 12. 304: absol. making no attempt or venture, Pind. I. 4 (3). 50. 2. without trial or experience of, unknowing of, pidérnros h. Hom. Ven. I 33: ov dweiparos Kad@y Pind. O. 11 (10). 18; dAAodan@y ode dm. ddpoe not unvisited by.., Id. N. I. 33; dm. wodeplas addmvyyos that never heard an enemy’s bugle, Demad. 180. 1:—absol. inexperienced, opp. to eb «lds, Od. 2. 170, Pind. O. 8. 80:—Adv., dmetpqrws exew twés Paus. 10. 7, I. II. pass. untried, unattempted, ob wav Ere inpdv dm. wévos éorat . . Hr’ GAxhs Hre pdBoo Il. 17. 41 (where how- ever Eust. takes it in signf. 1. 2); €oTw pndty ar. Hat. 7. 9, 3; ovdiv iv aneiparov rovros rar’ éué Dem. 310. 11, ef. Luc. Tox. 3. dmetpla, 7, (detpos A) opp. to éumetpta, want of skill, inexperience, ignorance, Hipp. Lex, Thuc. 1. 80; évmepla re THs dmeipias xparet Eur. Fr. 622; €umepia réxvnv éxotnoev 7 8 dretpia rUxny Polus ap. Arist. Metaph. 1. 1, 5; &d dwepias Plat. Theaet. 167 D; 8: dreplav Id. Gorg. 518 D. 2. c, gen. rei, Tod Oavety Eur. Phoen. 9; dm. péOns want of skill to carry it discreetly, Antipho 127. 22; dm. épyou Andoc. 23. 37; povowejs drepia Philetaer. DANI; 5: dretpiay Tod épwrav Te kat dmoxpiverOa Plat. Rep. 487 B; dmetptnat véoro [with Tt] Anth. P. app. 270. : dteipta (diretpos B), 7), infinity, infinitude, opp. to mépas, Arist. Metaph. 1. 7, 2, Plat. Phil. 16 C; dm. xpévov Id. Legg. dr. rv nécpow Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 45. 2. infinite space, Cael. I. 9, 15. ameiptros, ov, =dreipéctos, Od. 10. 195, Hes. Th. tog. Gre.po-Bubys, és, unfathomable, Synes. Hymn. 4, 171. arepo-Biws, Adv. without experience of life, Hierocl. ap. Stob. 416. drepé-Bovdos, ov, various in will, Eccl. dareipé-yapos, ov, unwedded, Eubul. "Hx. t, Nonn., etc. dtreipé-yvworos, ov, of infinite wisdom, Eccl. ~ dretp6-yovos, ov, prob. of eternal generation, Eccl. dreip6-yavos, ov, with infinite angles, Theol. Arithm. p. 1. arreipé-Sakpus, v, ignorant of tears, Aesch. Supp. 71. aretp6-Spogos, ov, d to dew, unbedewed, parched, Eur. El. 735. dtreipo-Svapos, ov, infinite in power, Porph. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1, 822, Eccl. Greipo-eSijs, €s, infinite, Procl. Instt. Th. go. dreipd-Luyos, ov, unused to the yoke, Basil. durep arros, ov, unused to the sea, Philostr. 883. : E drreipé-KiiKos, ov, without experience of evil: rd dm. inexperience of evil, unsuspiciousness, Thuc. 5. 105. II. unused to evil or misery, Eur. Alc. 97. g drrepoxiAgopat or —etopar, Dep. to want taste, Aeschin. Ep. 10. dmrepordAta, }, ignorance of the beautiful, want of taste, dr. kat dpovota Plat. Rep. 403 C; i2d dmepoxadlas Ib. 405 B; da. rept xpquara vulgar extravagance, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7,6: in pl. vulgarities, Xen. Cyr. I. 2, 3- Genabethon ov, ignorant of the beautiful, without taste, tasteless, vulgar, (in most cases it answers to Cicero’s ineptus), Plat. Legs: 775 B, Dion. H. de Plat. 2, Plut. 2. 44 D, etc.: 7d dw., =dretpoxadla Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 5. Adv, -Aws, Plat. Phaedr. 244 C, etc. dtretpo-Aexts, és, (A€xos) =drepdyapos, Ar. Thesm. 119. Gmepo-Aoyla, %, (Adyos) boundless loguacity, Sext. Emp. But ri sch A pode ov, incapable of speaking, Epiph seit dsrerpo-paxns [a], ov, Dor. —pdxas, a, 6, unused to battle, untried in war, Pind. N. 4. 49. The form —paxos, ov, Byz. dareipo-peyéOns, es, immensely large, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 44, Cleomed. 103. Adv. —@ws, Epiphan. dmetpo-petlwv, ov, infinitely greater, Cleomed. 96. dtreipo-pépipvos, ov, free from care, Byz. dtreipé-perpos, ov, 7 ble, i Byz. Gmretp6-polos, ov, = dmetpopdxns, Nonn. D. 20. 260. dsreip6-vupos, ov, bridegroom of brides innumerable, Eccl. petyept , 2), infinity of passion, Synes. 277 P. 2. 151. 1, ‘aole, B. so, absol., GAA’ daefpyor Geds God forfend! Soph, Aj. 9493 Sov pi). . 4 dmeipo-1d04s, és, free from passion or suffering, Esther (addit.) 16. 4. 168 ameipoTAactos Garetpo-mrAdovo0s, ov, infinitely more, many thousand-fold, Orig,, etc. : also dmretpoAdatuv, oy, Eust. 89.8. Adv. -ws, Greg. Nyss. drretp6-mAOpos, ov, of vast extent, Byz. Grretpo-mAn Ons, és, infinitely great or numerous, Eccl. The Subst. drretpo-mAnPera, or —rAnOla, %, Eust. 202. 43. 6-tAous, ov, ignorant of navigation, Luc. Dom, 12. dmeipé-mhovtos, ov, of vast wealth, Eus. in Hier. 19. dretpo-rovds, dv, making infinite, Byz. Grretpo-mdAepos, ov, ignorant of war, App. Mithr. 51: 70 dm, inexpe- rience in war, Dion. H. 8. 37. Adv. —yws, App. Civ. 2. 71. atreip6-trovos, ov, unused to toil, Nonn. D. 24. 276. Gmetp6-rrous, ou, many-footed, Dion. Areop. dmreipo-mpdawmos, ov, many-faced, Dion. Areop. depos, Dor. for #etpos. dtevpos (A), ov, (meipa) like dwelpynros, without trial or experience of a thing, unused to, ignorant of, unacquainted with, Lat. expers, d0Awv Theogn. 1007 ; xad@v Pind. I. 8 (7).154; Tupdvvew Hdt, 5.92, 1; Tis vavricis 1d.8.1; Mepoéwy Id.g9. 58, cf. 46; mévav, vdoov Aesch. Cho, 371, Fr. 281; yvowpns Soph. Ant. 1250; die@v Antipho III. 34; woAcuov Thue. 1. 141; Tod peyeOous rhs vngou Id. 6. 1; ypapparwy Plat. Apol. 26 D, etc. ;—of a woman, dz, dvdpds not having known a man, unwedded, Hdt. 2.111, Plat., etc.; so, dm. Aéxous Eur. Med. 672; also without A€xous, Ib. Logi. 2. absol. inexperienced, ignorant, Pind. I. 8 (7). 106; yAuxds dmelporot méAEpos Id. Fr. 76; di5acK’ drespov Aesch. Cho. 118; and freq. in Att.—Adv. dmeipws éxev Tav vépow Hadt. 2. 45 ; mpds vt Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 29; aepi rivos Isocr. 86A:—Comp, dmepérepoy mapecxevacpévot Thuc. 1. 49; also, —orépws Isocr. 240 C. dretpos (B), ov, (wefpas, répas) =Homer's dmelpwv, dmetpéoros, bound- less, infinite, oxéros Pind. Fr. 95.8; Tov ipod révd dm. aidepa Fr. 935; dretpoy eis da, Ib. 998; of number, countless, tAHIos Hdt. 1. 204; api0- pos depos mAnGe Plat. Parm. 144A; dm. 7d mAROos Id. Rep. 525 A, al.; els dm. adgdveww 7 Id. Legg. g10 B:—10 dn. the Infinite, i.e. infinite Matter, the first Principle of Anaximander, Arist. Phys. 3. 4, 9 ;—Arist. discusses the dme:pov and memepacpévoy ib. 3. 4-8; els dm. a Tpot- évat, Hew, etc., Id. An. Post. 1. 19, 4, al. 2. in Trag., often of garments, etc., iz which one is entangled past escape, endless, i.e. without end or outlet, dupiBdAnorpov Aesch. Ag. 1382; xiTwv Soph. Fr. 473; ipacpa Eur, Or. 25; cf. dwelpwy 1. 2, anépavros, aréppwr. 3. end- less, i.e. circular, dm. 5axrvAuos a simple hoop-ring, =dA.0os (Poll. 7. 179), Arist. Phys. 3.6, 10: v. dmepwy I, 3:—Ady. —pws, Id. Probl. 11. 6,6. mreipo-ofevas, és, of infinite strength, Eccl. Greipoowvn, 7), =dretpia, Eur. Hipp. 196, Med. 1094. Gtreipo-raAavros, ov, of vast wealth, Eust. Opusc. 129. 4. Gretpo-rexvys, f. 1. for —Aex7s in Orac. ap. Eus. P. E. 4. 23. Gmetp6-roKos, ov, not having brought forth, virgin, Auth. P. 6. 10. Gtreip-w8tv, ivos, %, knowing not the pains of child-birth, Nonn. D, 16. 152. In Epiphan, also —dBwwos, ov. Gtrelpwv, ov, (weipa)=dmetpos A, without experience, ignorant, only in Soph. O. T. 1088, Gaetpwv, ov, (wetpas, répas) Ep. form of depos B, boundless, endless, én’ dmeipova yatay Od. 1. 98, Hes. Th. 187; “EAAnomovtos dm. Il. 24. 5453 Ojpos am. a countless people, 24.776; tmvos dm. seeming end- less, i.e. profound sleep, Od. 7. 286; dmetpova yjs Ban Emped. 237 ; Tay HAviav am. yevébAa Simon. 8. 13. 2.=Greipos B. 2, without end or escape, decpot dmeipoves Od. 8. 340. 3, in Att. =dire:pos (B). 3, Aaving no end, circular, daxTidos an. Ar. Fr. 247 (ap. Schol. Il. 14. 200), and in an old Att. Inscr. in C. I. 150. 38 (ubi dmépwv, as Hesych., dmépova’ répas pr) €xovra); so, ev Adxw dmetpovt, of persons standing in a circle, Aesch. Fr. 407. dareip-vupos, ov, (voua) with countless names, Dion. Areop. amets, v. sub apinwm. dmevotéw, devoros, here and there in Mss. for dmor-. daréx, Prep. with gen., away out of, h. Hom. Ap, 110 :—better divisim, dw éx, like 5: éx, in’ éx, Spitazn. Exe, xviii. ad Il. dire! ‘veo, to turn out, come to be, so and so, Eust. 1062. 61. it , to turn out, Byz. = GrexBrow, to cease living, Hesych. GarexBodn, %, (drexBddAw) an expulsion, Byz. dm-éxyovos, 5, 7), a great-great-grandchild, abnepos, Simon. 172. dmexdéxopat, Dep. 4o expect anxiously, Heliod. 2. 35, Alciphro 3.7: to look for, await, N. T., Sext. Emp. 2. 73. darexdnpew, to be abroad, absent, Byz. dmexdidwpt, to give back, repay, C. I. 2266. GrexdidKw, to drive away, Byz. darexSoxH, 4, expectation, Clem, Al. 882. amexSive, to strip off from, twos tiv o.ctpay Babr. 18. 3. GrrexSviopat, fut. -dvcopar [0] : aor. 1 -e5vadpunv:—to strip off oneself, as was done in preparing for single combat, fo put off, Tov wadaidy dy- Opamov Ep. Col. 3. g:—in Eccl. :—v. perexddopat. II. to strip off for oneself, to despoil, rwa Ep. Col. 2. 15.—The form darex5id0- oxopat in Athanas. dmexSvors, ews, 4, a putting off (like clothes), Ep. Col, 2. 11, Eccl. dar-exet, Adv. thence, Byz.; dm-exeidev, Olympiod.; da-exeice, Byz. daréxiéa, v. sub xixa. dmexxAnoacpos, 5, excommunication, Eccl. dmexxAvlo, to wash out and away, Jo. Chrys. darexAavOdvopar, Med. eae entirely, Twos, only found in imperat. aor. 2, dmexreAdbeabe 5e ‘eus Od. 24. 394. dmexAéyou.at, Med, fo pick out and reject, Diosc. 1. 6, ete, exticds, 4, dv, fil for rejection, Stob, Ecl. 2. 142. — areATIOTIA. GmrexAoyn, %, rejection, opp. to éxAovyh, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 133. amekAtw, to relax, weaken, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1.120, dub. dmexputdw, to suck out, Eust. Opusc. 313. 90. Gtrexmépmrw, to send away, Byz. dméxpiors, f. 1. for dmépaais, q. v. daréxta&iots, ews, 7, a spreading out, LXX (Job. 36. 29), Galen. atrexrelvw, to extend, Athanas. 1. 212 C, dtrexrépve, to cut off, Byz. amréxryros, ov,=sq., Anth. P. 5. 270. d-mrekros, ov, uncombed, unkempt, Androt. (41) ap. Ath. 375 B, Philoch, 63, of sheep not yet a year old. ameddlo, f. 1. for dmeAAd (or, dmehi.cta, 7%, (dmeAatvw) a driving away, Cyrill. Hier. dmédaots, ews, ),=foreg., Eus, amehacrikds or —atixés, 4, dv, driving away, Justin. M. a-mé\acros, ov, unapproachable, Simon. 43. GmeAaréos, a; ov, verb. Adj. to be driven away, Philostr. 254. dmedaréov, one must drive away, Byz. Gmehartpros, a, ov, driving away, Twos Tzetz. areharns, ov, 6, a driver away, cattle stealer, etc., Byz. GmreAatve, also dwéAa as imperat. from a pres. dmeAdw, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 32; Dor. impf. dajAaov Ar. Lys, 1001: fut. -eAdow, Att,—eA@ (also in Hdt. 7. 210): pf. —eAfAaxa Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 10:—Pass., aor. —7Aa0nv [&]:— Med., aor. —jAacaynv. To drive away, expel from a place, tia ddpuwr, wédews, etc., Eur. Alc. 553, etc. ; dad rémov Xen. Cyr. 3. 2, 16: dm. t1v4 to drive away, banish him, Soph. O. C. 93, 1356, etc.: to expel (from a society), Xen, An. 3. 1, 32: to exclude, keep at a distance, Ar. Eq. 58: to remove, péBov Twi Xen. Cyr. 4. 2,10: %0 exclude from a thing, Id. Hell. 3. 2, 31 :—Med., da. ri twos to ward off, avert from him, Anth. P. 7. 303. 2. dm. orpariny to lead away an army, Hdt. 4.92: hence, often, absol, like dmdyw, to march, go away, depart, Id.1.77., 5. 25s etc.; mupwoas tds ’AOhvas amedGs Id. 8, 102: also (sub. troy) to ride away, Xen. Symp. 9, 7, etc. II. Pass. to be driven away, évOcirev Hdt. 5. 94; évredOev eis GAAov rémoy Xen, Cyr. 1. 2, 33 yas €uts mpds tivos Soph. O. C. 599 :—to be excluded from a thing, dmdons [rs orpa- tis | from the command, Hdt.7.161, cf. Xen.Cyr.1. 2, 15; THs moAcreias Lys. 149. 34; Tv dpxay Plat. Rep. 564 D; also, dm. rijs ppoyrides to be far from, Hdt. 7. 205 ; és marép’ danddOnv rixns was barred from [good] fortune on my father’s side, Eur. H, F.63; da. giAtas Themist.goC. aeheykrHs, od, 6, one who refutes, Oenom. ap. Eus. P, E. 256 B. GmeXeypos, 6, refutation, exposure, disrepute, Act. Ap. 19. 27. Garédeyéts, ews, 7), =dmeAcypds Eus. Hierocl, 1. GmehéyXw, strengthd. forédéyxa, to convict, expose, orrefute thoroughly, Antipho 131. 35; 7a twos, and 7 twos Philo 1. 205, 193, cf. C. I. (add.) 4325 &; ruvd mepi 7 M. Anton. 8. 36:—Pass. to be convicted, metas of having persuaded, Antipho 132. 2. G-méAcOpos, ov, immeasurable, by dréX pov éxovras Il. 5. 245, Od. 9. 538 3 dméheOpov dvédpape sprang back immeasurably, Il. 11. 354. G-teAcyntos, ov, unhewn, unwrought, Crantor ap. Diog. L. 4. 27. dred éoPar, dare bpevos, Ion. aor. 2 med. of ddaipéw. dmeAcvdepia, 7, the enfranchisement of a slave, Aeschin, 59.25. the state of a freedman, Lat. libertinitas, Poll. 3. 83. GmehevPepratw, to be free, act freely, Philo I. 419, etc.: in bad sense to take liberties, Id. 1. 277. dre evdepixds, h, Ov, in the condition of a freedman, Plut. Sull. 1, Cic. 7. arrehevOepwwris, ov, 6, a freedman, Strabo 235; v.1. dwedevbépwv. dr-eAeWepos, 5, an emancipated slave, a freedman, like the Lat. libertus, Plat. Legg. 930 D; dz. twos Lys. 109.13; opp. to SovAos and pérorKos, Xen. Rep. Ath. 1. 10, Arist, Pol. 3. 5, 23 da. dquévat Twa Aeschin. 59. 25 :—also dmeAevOépa, %, Lat. diberta, Isae. 58.13, Menand, ‘Par. 10; cf, Lob. Paral. 470. GrehevOepirns, 770s, %, =dredevepia 1, Byz. dmehevdepbu, to emancipate a slave, Plat. Legg. 915 A, sq. :—Pass., Ib. B; é dire cvpoupevos aipetrat érirpomoy Arist. Rhet. 3. 8, 1. drrehevbépwors, €ws, 7), emancipation, dovAwy Dem. 215. 25. améXevots, ews, , a going away, removal, Eust. 191. 13. dmedioow, to unroll, unwind, dmethigay Dio C. 46. 36 :—the Ion. form dreihooopérns, in Hero Autom, 245, ; GaréXko, Ion. for dpédnco, ameAhafo, Lacon, for éxxAnodcw, dredagey, but he deAAs, GodARs. AmeAhaios, 6, Maced. name of a month, Inscr. Delph. in Curt. 18 and 23; “AmeAAquos in C. I. 1705 i—answering to the Roman December, Evagr. H. E. 4-19; but v. Ideler Handb. Chronol. r. 430 sqq. ameAAn TOs, 6, =dyrayanarys, Aesch. (Fr. 426), acc. to A. B, 421. Amé\wy, 5, Dor. form of *ArdAAav, C. I. 1065, 8426. Grehos; 76, (médAa B) a wound not skimmed over, Call. Fr. 343. dmeAnife, fut, iow, Att, @: pf. Amica :—to give up in despair, Tt Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10, 127, Polyb. 1. 19, 12, etc. (v. dmoyeyvdaKnw) :-— Pass. to be given up in despair, Id. 10. 6, 10. 2. dm. twos to despair of, Id. 1. 55, 2, al.; mept ruvos Diod. 2. 25. 3. absol. to hope that a thing will not happen, Diog. L. 1. 59. II. Causal, to drive to despair, twa Anth. P. 11. II4. IIL. to hope to receive From another, undév dmedmicoyres Ev. Luc. 6. 35: this sense is strongly supported by the context, but has no authority, dmeAmops, 5, hopelessness, despair, Polyb. 31. 8, 11, and Eccl. Saar oe eisif verb. Adj. one must despair, Philo 2. 422, Oribas. 2.548 2. aL. ; Plut. Lycurg. 6.—Hesych, writes quotes améh\Aau* onxol, éxxAnata. (Prob. akin to ’ ameAmoria, 1, despair, despondency, Tzetz. Hist. 11. 18. arreuew — amrepiBrerros. Gmrepéw, fut. Eom, to spit up, vomit forth, Lat. evomere, Il. 14. 437, Opp. H. 1. 560, Arist. Probl. 3. 3:—Pass., dmepodpeva Ib. 20. 34. dmreproAdw, fut. jo, to sell, dmnumdda pe AdOpa Eur. lon 1371; dm. tt dvi twos to sell for a thing, Eur. Cycl. 256; 7f 7evos Xen. Symp. 8, 21; dm. twa els Aarpelav Luc. Merc. Cond. 23: to sell, i.e. to betray, } pv” Apyos BapBdpos danundda Eur. Tro. 973; am. puxhv to barter one’s life, Id. Phoen. 1228 (cf. éfeumoAdw) ; THVvS’ dmeumodGs xOovds ; dost thou smuggle her out of the country? Id. I. T. 1360 :—Pass., dep~ moAwpevoc * bought and sold,’ Ar. Ach. 374.—The edd. of Luc, have an Ion. form dmepmodéw, Tox. 28 :-—dmreumwddw is f.1., Lob. Phryn. 584. drepmrdAnors, ews, %, a selling, sale, Hipp. 23. 37 :—also—moAn, 7, Cyrill. G&reproAnr hs, 0d, 6, a seller, dealer, Lyc. 341. an-eumpoobev, Adv. from before the face of, twos Epiphan. Gnepdatvw, to present a different appearance, be incongruous, Polyb. 6. 47, 10; of verses faulty in metre, Schol. Hephaest. Hence Adv. pres. part. dtrepdatvévras, Origen. améndhaors, ews, 7, incongruity, absurdity, Strabo 454,Sext.Emp. P. 3.61. dmrepdepys, és, unlike, Theophr. H. P. 8. 8, 5. ‘darévavrt, Adv. (évavrt) opposite, c. gen., Polyb. 1. 86, 3, C. 1. 2347 ¢. 28 :—against, c. gen., Act. Ap. 17.7. 2. absol., els Tv ar. Bouvdy C. I. 2905 D. 11.—So dtrevavriov, # da. (sc. xpa) the opposite shore, és tiv da. Hdt. 7. 55.—Hence also, II. Adj. darevavrios, ov, Byz. :—Adv. —iws, Luc. Nigr. 36, but with v. 1. d7-. dmevapifa, fut. ifw, (€vapa) to strip of arms, despoil one of a thing, rods évapi(ov dn’ évrea Il. 12. 195., 15. 343. a@mevacoaro, 3 sing. aor. I med. of drovaiw, Hom. Grréveika, dtrevelyOny, v. sub dopéepw. Garevertéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of dmopépw, to be carried away, cited from Moschio. Grevedopat, Pass. (éveds) to become mute, Daniel 4. 16 (Theodot.). Gtrevérrw, v. sub drevyéra. d-revOys, és, free from grief, Aesch. Pr. 956, Bacchyl. Fr. 19, Plut. Flamin, 11, etc. amrévOnros, ov,=foreg., Aesch. Ag. 895, Eum. 912. unlamented, LXX (2 Macc. 5. 10), Epigr. Gr. 436. G@meviauréw, v. sub dmeviavriCw. “dmevatryors, ews, ), banishment for a year, Plat. Legg. 868 D (v. 1. dmenavriots). Also —ruopés, 6, A. B. 421, Hesych. ameviautilo, fut. Att. @, to go into banishment for a year, Xen. Mem. I. 3, 13: so in Plat. Legg. 866 C, Ald. gives dwevravriodrw (but our Mss. —nodrw), whereas in 868 C, all agree in dwevravreiy: v. Miiller Eum., § 44. II. to outlive the year after a thing, Dio C. 46. 49. amevvérrw, Trag. word, also devémw (but only in a lyr. passage, Eur. I. A. 533):—like dwavddm, to forbid: absol., Aesch. Theb. 1053, etc. ; dm. 71 to forbid it, Soph. O.C. 209; more commonly c. acc. et inf., da. Twa rovely Eur. Med. 813, Heracl. 556; da. rd pt) rovety Id. Ion 1282, etc. :—da. Tia Oaddpoy to order him from the chamber, Id.1. A. 553. 2. also c. acc. rei, to deprecate, dvdpoxphras 3 . . dmevvérw tvxas Aesch, Eum.957. dmevretbev, Adv. from hence, Polyb. 40. 6, 1:—henceforth, Eccl.: v. Lob. Phryn. 46. Gtrevrevktéw, to be unlucky, fail, Byz.:—Subst. darévrevkts, ews, 7, a loss, failure, Byz. Gamréé, v. sub dex. a&metdyw, fo lead or carry out, Byz. * dmeEatpéw, to take out, remove, 7s Tivos Eur. I. T. 1278, in tmesi. ametaptdw, to hang out, Te x Témov ap. Suid. dmetepyalopat, Dep. to form, fashion, cited from Julian. Gmeteopévas, Adv. pf. pass. part., in a smooth, polished manner, Cyrill. “ deEwPew, to drive out, expel, A. B. 1454. Grreoukas, Att. dtreikas, via, ds, part. of dméouea (which only occurs in late writers, Arr. Ind. 6. 8, Plut. Pericl. 8) :—znreasonable, unfair, un- natural, ob« dreds Hipp. Vet. Med. 9, Antipho 117. 1; od« dmeikds not unlikely, Polyb. 2,62,8; dmeouxds mpds Ta kadd unfitted, indisposed for noble deeds, Id. 6. 26, 12 ;—often in late Prose, Wyttenb. Ind. Plut. —Adv. dmeomxétws, unreasonably, Thuc. 6. 55; but in I. 73., 2. 8., 8. 68, he has od« dzretkérws. G-métravros, ov, not ripened, unripe, Theophr.C.P. 2.8, 4, Anth. P.9. 561. G-méretpos, ov, unripe, untimely, Anth. P. 9. 78. * d-twemAos, ov, unrobed, i.e. in her tunic only, of a girl, dremAos dpod- cao’ ard orpwpvas Pind. N. 1. 74 ;—just like povdmemAos in Eur. Hec. 933 (-wémAos here meaning a garment generally):—Aevxdv papéov Gmemos, i.e. clad in black, Eur. Phoen, 324 (cf. a as prefix, 1). Gremréw, to suffer from indigestion, Luc. Paras. 57, Plut. 2. 1 36 D. 2. Pass. of food, to be, remain undigested, Galen. dmenros, ov, (wénrw) uncooked: undigested, of food, Hipp. Epid. 1. 70, Arist. de An. 2. 4, 19, al.; of humours, crude, unconcocted, Hipp. Vet. Med. 16; odpoy Id. Acut. 390; pvpara Id. Art. 807 :—Adv. —rws, Id. Epid. 1. 943. 2. metaph., dm. nal dupdrnrov ind ris pioews Arist. Meteor. 4.7, 11, cf. 3.1, 6, al. Il. suffering from indiges- tion, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 3. III. x@par dw. countries where Sruits ripen ill, Theophr. C. P. 6. 18, 12. &mep, neut. pl. of domep, q.v., in Att. often used as Adv., =Gomep, as, so as, Aesch. Eum. 660, Soph. Aj. 167, O. T. 176, Xen., etc. amepavroAoyéw, to talk without end, Strabo 6or. : amepavrodoyta, %), =dretpodoyla, Luc. D. Mort. 10. 10 :—in Byz. also ~heoyta, 77. : ‘ @repavro-hbyos, ov, talking without end, yASooa Thales ap. Diog. L. I. 35, Philo 1. 216. : amépavros, ov, (wépas) boundless, infinite, of space, medlov Pind. N. 8. 2. pass. 169 Med. 213; Tov dépa révd’, dvr’ dm. Ar. Nub. 392; 65ds Plat. Theaet, 147C;—of Time, endless, 70 xpijpa Trav vukray door dmépavrov Ar, Nub. 33 xpévos Plat. Polit. 302 A;—of Number, countless, inginite, dm. dp.0- pos dvOpemow Plat. Criti. 119 A; dm. xaxd Id. Rep. 591 D, ete. :— generally of events, business, etc., dwépayrov jv there was no end to it, Thue. 4.36; paxpdv kai dx, palverat Arist. Eth. N. 1. 11, 2; dépayra fvprepaivey to represent as concluded what is not concluded, Luc. Philops. 9, cf. Diog. L. 7.77; pydiy aBacdnorov pnd dx. Polyb. 4. 75, 3:— Adv., 7 dwepavras dieornxds Arist. Phys. 3. 5, 9, Metaph. 10. 10, : II. allowing no escape, whence none can pass, Taprapos, dixrvov Aesch. Pr. 153, 1078 ; cf. diecpos II. 2. Gmépaors, ews, %}, (dmepdw) a spitting out, vomiting, Plut. 2. 134 E: metaph., Strabo 389 (as restored from Mss. for éwéxpvats). If. a carrying off moisture, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 8. Gméparos, ov, (wepdw) not to be crossed or passed, worapds Plut. 2. 326 E, Epigr. Gr. 1028. 58: metaph., Aids od wapBards éonw peydrha pi dm. Aesch. Supp. 1049. a-repdtwros, ov, unbounded, Plut. 2. 424D. Grrepdw, fut.dow [4], to spit off or away, disgorge, Alciphro 3. 7. i of moisture, generally, carry off, Strabo 52: so in Pass., Theophr. C. P. Ey hay 50 Grepyafopat, fut. doouat: aor. -epyacapuny: pf. -efpyaopat, which is sometimes act., sometimes pass., cf. Plat. Legg. 704 C, Tim. 30B, al., with Rep. 566 A, Phaedr. 272 A, al.: aor. —espyao0nv always in pass, sense, Id. Rep. 374 C, al.: Dep. To finish off, turn out complete, bring to perfection, ra fbdtva Tod relxous Ar. Av. 1154; often in Plat., épyov dm. Gorg. 454 A, Rep. 353 B, 603 A, al.; evdalyova méAw dm. Legg. 683 B; rév Te wodtTiKdy am. Kat Tov diddoopoy Polit. 257 A; % Téxv7 émredel, & pdots ddvvarel dmepyacacba Arist. Phys. 2. 8, 8. 2. of a painter, to fill up with colour, to represent or express perfectly, opp. to imoypawat (to sketch), Plat. Rep. 548 D, cf. 504 D: generally, to make, Sorm, cause, Id. Phil. 24 C, etc. 3. to finisha contract, Xen. Mem. I. eB II. to effect, cause, produce, dédgav Wevsn Plat. Phil. 40 D ; vienv Id. Legg. 647 B; mavoupyiay dvrt codias Ib. 747 C; dophy Arist. Fr. 327, ete. III. c. dupl. acc. to make so and so, dyadv am. twa Xen. Symp. 8, 35; Tods maidas da. SecAorépous Plat. Rep. 381 E, ef. Polit. 287 A, al. :—so pf. in pass. sense, dwetpyaopévos TUpavvos a Pipe tyrant, Id. Rep. 566 A; réxvn dretpyacpévy Id. Phaedr. 272 A; dvijp am. Kados Kéryabds Xen. Oec. 11, 3. 2. to make one thing into another, drr.tiup viv, nip dépa to make earth water, air fire, Plat. Tim. 61 B. 3. dm. twa 7 to do something to one, 6 Tt dyaOdv Huds drepyacera Id, Charm. 173 A, cf. Rival. 135 C. arepyacta, 4, a finishing off, completing, of painters, mpds Tiv dm. Thy Tov eixdvav Plat. Prot. 312 D, Arist. Poét. 4,6; cf. dmepyato- pat. II. a making, causing, producing, dm. xapiros kat Hdovqs Plat. Gorg. 462 C. III. a business, trade, 1d. Euthyphr.13 D, E: } Gx. rOv vocwy the way of treating them, treatment, Id. Alc. 2. 140 B. Gmepyaorixés, 7, dv, fit for finishing, effecting, causing, c. gen., Plat. Rep. 527 B:—1) -«n (sc. Téxv7), the art of making, twos Id. Epin. 375 D. at-epy6s, dv, away from work, idle, Artemid. 1. 42. arrépya, v. sub drelpya. arépdw, fut. fw, to bring to an end, finish, iphia Hat. 4. 62 (like dmo- Adgupopat, etc.). Gmepet, Adv., =domepel, from dep, Soph. EI. 189. amepeiSw, fut. cw, to rest, fix, settle, rds Opes Plut. 2. 681 F; rhv éyw mpds te Luc. Dem. Enc. 17. 2. intr. =Pass., €vOa % dyus ae- petdy Luc, D. Deor. 20, 8; but, II. used by earlier writers in Pass., with fut. and aor. med., 4o support oneself upon, rest upon, of a horse, dm. év TS xadwvG to lean upon the bit, Xen. Eq. 10, 7; d«7w Tots pédeot dx, supporting himself on .., Plat. Symp. 190 A, cf. Tim. 44 E, Arist. P. A. 4.8, 3, al.; da. els rodro to be fixed steadily on.., Plat. Rep.508 D; els vy xepdAaoy dm. to rest entirely on.., Ib. 581A; els dopants arn- petoOa to have a secure position fo rest upon, Polyb. 3. 66, 9; so, am. ént tt Id. 28.17, 8; mpéds 7 Hipp. Art. 820, Arist. Incess. An. 3, 3 :—of diseases, to settle in a particular part, e. g. eis BovB&va, Medic.; cf. do- oKhTTe. III. Med. in act. sense, dw. els rodro [7d ots] Xen. Cyn. 5, 323 dm. éAniéa eis Twa to a4 one’s hopes upon one, Polyb. 24. 5,3; am. dpyhy eis twa, xdpw ent twa to direct one’s anger, one's gratitude, towards him, Id. 1. 69, 7., 24. 3, 6, cf. Plut. 2. 775 E; dm. ayvo.ay ént twa to throw one's own ignorance upon another, Polyb. 38. 1,53 am. 7 els rémov to carry safely to a place, deposit in. ., Id. 3. 92, 9 :—often in Plut. 2. to force from oneself, produce with effort, wdivas drnpeicayro Call. Del. 120, cf. LXx (Job 39. 3). Gtrepeloros, oy, another Ep. form of detpéatos, as deiSedos for didnAos, in Hom. always daepetow’ Growa countless ransom, Il. 1. 13, etc. amrépetots, ews, ), a leaning upon, pressure, resistance, Plat. Crat. 427 A; dvr, mpds ddAnAa Arist. Incess. An. 3, 3, Probl. 5. 40, 6. II. infliction, Tiwwplas Plut. 2. 1130 D. méperopa, aros, 7, a prop, stay, Hesych. : Grepevyopat, Med. to belch forth, disgorge, 7 Hipp. 482. 48, Nic. Al. 380, etc.; dm. dxvny, of a river, to empty itself, Dion. P. 981; ef. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. p. 150. Cf. dmepuyydvo. drrépevtis, ews, 7), a belching forth, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. I. 9. Garepnpdopat, Pass. to be left destitute of, Tis Tod Salpovos émpedelas Plat. Polit. 274 B; dwd ray éyrawv Id. Soph. 237 D. dmépnpos, ov, strengthd. for épnuos, Schol. Pind. N. 4. 88. arepytiw, fut. tow [0], to keep back, hinder, Ap. Rh. 1. 772. d-mepidyvirros, ov, not purified, probl. in Hesych., v. Schmidt. d-repiBAerros, ov, not looked at from all sides, A. B. 819. II. 65 (who also has dmelpayros GAxé, P. 9. 61); mévrov KAS dr. Eur. 4 » incomprehensible, Iambl. V. Pyth. 162, Suid. 170 (BAnros, ov, without covering ; metaph. unclothed, bare, bald, Adyos Walz Rhett. 3. 270. d-mepryévnros, ov, not to be overcome, Diod. 3. 30. d-meplypatros, ov, not circumscribed, i.e. infinite, Eccl,: undeter- mined, cited from Cornut. Adv. —rws, Eccl. d-replypidos, ov, =foreg., Dion, H. de Comp. 22, and often in.Philo. Adv. -pws, Philo 1. 47. ameptyparpia, %, a being uncircumscribed or infinite, Eccl. d-mreplSpaxtos, ov, (Spacaw) not to be grasped, incomprehensible, Greg. ys Adv. —rws, Id. piépyacros, ov, not wrought carefully, simple, Eccl. investigated, Eccl. Gepiepyia, 4, artlessness, Perictyoné ap. Stob. 488. 53. G-mepiepyos, ov, not over-busy, artless, simple, Hipp. 22. 42, Ath. 274 A, B; dm. simplicity, Plut. 2. 1144 E; cf. Ael. V.H. 12.1. Adv. —yws, Cebes 21. pleotracpéves, Adv. pf. pass. part., =dmepiomdorws, Eccl. G-mepihyntos, ov, not traced out, d. KaOanep riwi meprypapp Plat. Legg. 770 B: indescribable, Theod. Prodr. p. 453. G-mrepihynros, ov, not encompassed by sound, A. B. 422. talked about, Greg. Nyss. d-mepPapByrws, Adv. fearlessly, Nicet, Ann, 216 D. ; d-mepAdorws, Adv. without crushing, Paul. Aeg. 122. G-mreplOpaverros, ov, unbroken, untamed, Cyrill. G-trepixdGaptos, ov, unpurified, impure, Lxx (Levit. 19. 23). d-mepixdAutros, ov, uncovered, exposed, Arist. Plant. 2. 2, 18, Adv. Tos, undisguisedly, Heliod. 8. 5. d-mrepucdévyros, ov, undisturbed, Byz. d-mepixAvortos, ov, not flooded, Byz. a-treptxotros, ov, without hindrance or interruption, Timario in Notices des Mss. 9. 216. Ady. -mws, Tzetz, Lye, 1432. d-repikdopntos, ov, not decked overmuch, Eumath. to. 11. d-repixpdrytos, ov, not controlled, Basil. d-Trepitc ov, not gaining wealth, Ptol. d-mepucrumyros, ov, not surrounded with noise, Suid. Adv. —rws, Byz. d-mrepthddntos, ov, not to be out-talked, Ar. Ran. 839:—cf. Hesych., daeptAdAnroy (so Kuster for dwepiaAAnrov) dvefamarnrov, aed. Adv. —Tos, Eust. Opusc. 191. 79. G-weptAynmros, ov, uncircumscribed, éfovoia dm. absolute power, Plut. Pomp. 25: not to be embraced or comprehended, Aéyy Philo 2. 24: opp. to dmerpos, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 42, ef. Plut. 2. 883 A. LLaX TOS, ov, rot to be fought about, worthless, Philo 1. 2. d-trepiépuvos, ov, free from care, Eust. Opusc. 248. 83 :—Adv. -vws, unthinkingly, Ar. Nub. 136. G-mepwontos, ov, incomprehensible, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 70, Philo 1. 581. Il. unintelligent, Eust. 644. 43. III. Adv. -rws, ” unawares, Polyb. 4. 57, 10. G-mepidSeutos, ov, not to be treated by a physician, incurable, Byz. d-meplodos, ov, not periodic, Dion. H. de Comp. 126. d-replotrros, ov, unregarding, reckless of, mavrav Thuc.1.41. Adv. —ros, Poll, 3. 117. G-mepiépistos, ov, unlimited, indeterminate, undefined, Longin. 44, Philo 1. 187. Adv. —rws, Galen. 7. 469. &-meprovclacros, ov, without wealth, Eust.Opusc.306. Adv.—ras,Ib.146. d-reputhdvytos, ov, without wandering or deviating, Eust. 1308. 46. d-mepirvevoros, ov, sheltered from wind, Agathin. in Matth, Med. 288. d-neplaructos, ov, not wrapt up, Joseph. A. J. 3. 7, 5- d-mepitrwros, ov, not liable to, twos Diosc. 2. 49; 7 Diog. L. 7. 122. II. not subject to chances, Arr. Epict. 1. 1, 31. d-meptrddmykros, ov, not surrounded by the sound of trumpets, Stob. 366. 35 :—in Synes. p. 13, GmeptodAmoros. Ady. —Tas, Byz. d-meptokemros, ov, inconsiderate, thoughtless, heedless, Thuc. 4. 108, Dion. H. 6.10. Ady. -rws, Thuc. 4. 10., 6.57; Comp. —drepov, 6. 65. &-reploKotros, ov, =foreg., Suid. : tomacros, ov, not drawn hither and thither, not distracted by business, Polyb. 2. 67, 7, al.; da. Twos LXx (Sirac. 41. 1) :—Ady. —Tws, Polyb. 2. 20, 10, al.; 70 da. ris eouatas the fact of power not passin from hand to hand, Plut. Aristid. 5. 2. uninterrupted, conti: > Dion. H. de Thue. 9. , =dmépirros, Phint. ap. Stob. 44. 53+ a-répioos, ov, v. dwépirros. a-meploriitos, ov, not stood around : and so, I. not guarded : without need of guards, Lat. securus, Polyb. 6. 44; 8. 2. solitary, Arr. Epict. 4. 1, 159, Diog. L. 7. 5, cf. Hemst. Ar. Pl. 333: destitute, Eccl. II. apart from circumstances, of cases considered generally and in the abstract, Walz Rhett. 3. 7., 4. 141, etc. 7 a-repioricros, ov, not dotted round, opp. to mepteotiypevos, of certain grammatical symbols, Cramer An, Par. 3. 293, etc. . &-meplotperros, ov, Basil.: —orpocos, ov, African. Cest. in Math. Vett. 278 F :=dmepirpenros. &-twepitpyros, ov, uncircumcised, Lxx (Gen. 17. 14, al.), N. Te etc. II. not dipped or circumscribed, } pots Plut. 2. 495 C. é-mepitperros, ov, not to be turned round, not to be moved, immutable, Symm., Ps. 95. 10, Plut. 2. 983 C. Adv. ~rws, Sext. Emp. M. 1.53. G-rep{tpomros, ov, not returning, Soph, El, 182: but also with collat. notion of unheeding, careless, v. Herm. : ‘ . ov, without anything over and above, without affectation, plain, simple, Plut. 2. 267 F, Philostr. 527; 70 dm. ths tpopis Luc. Nigr. 26. Adv. -rrws, plainly, Diod. 12. 26: frugally, Simpl. in Epict. p. 75. : not curiously II. not amepiBrAnTos — areryapdw. Gmepurrérys, qos, 7, simplicity, Myou Sext. Emp. M. 12. 23; Biov Clem. Al. 157. d-mepitrwros, ov, without meptr@para, Theophr. C. P. 6. 10, 3, etc. &-mepidep ns, és, not round or rounded, Theophr. C.P. 6, 1, 6. é-mreplppakros, ov, not fenced round, unprotected, Basil. é-mepidpacros, ov, without peripkrasis or circumlocution, Eust. 1941. 59- Adv. —rws, Ib, 1112. 42. G-repuppotipytos, ov, unwatched, unguarded, Byz. G-mepixdpas, Adv. without joy, Byz. é-meplipuctos, ov, not cooled down, Galen. d-mépmepos, ov, not light-minded, without vanity, Eccl. dareppippévas, Adv. of dmoppintm, negligently, Aristeas de Lxx. 106 D. Gméppw, to go away, be gone, Eur. H. F. 260: dmeppe away, begone, Lat. abi in malam rem, Ar. Nub. 783, Eccl. 169; so, ov« dmepphaoas ad Oarrov ; Cratin. Nop. 6. daepuyydve, aor. dnjpiyov, to belch forth, disgorge, tiv Kpaimddnv Menand. Incert. -517;. so Nic. Th. 253, Diog. L. 5. 77, Philo. 1. 639: of a river, Byz. II. absol. 40 eructate, Arist. Probl. 33. 5. darepvOprd, fut. dow [aow]:—to put away blushes, to be past blushing, Ar. Nub. 1216 ; dwepv0pid mas, EpvOpia 8 obdels é7s Menand. Incert, 287: —Ady. darnpvOptaxdrws, shamelessly, Apollod, Incert.1.10; aanpv8ptac- pLévws, Cyril. ap. Suid. s. v. omddwy: aarepu@pidcrws, Byz. 2. to cease to be red or flushed, Luc. Lexiph. 4. Garepixw [0], fut. gw, fo keep off or away, et yap “A@hyn. . Redcar dmepvxor Epony Il. 17.562; ovas re kivas 7 dw. Od. 18.104; drepdicor .. BoiBos xaxay pati Soph. Aj. 186 (lyr.):—c. gen., oTpaTdv.. Mpdav dmépune Thode wodcds Theogn. 775; c. acc. et inf. fo prevent one from «+, OUTE Ge Kapa arepvKopey Id. 1207 :—mostly poét., but dm. Tivt 7 to keep off from, tatra 4 edtuxin of dmepixer Hat. 1. 32; Te aad twos Xen. Mem. 2.9, 2, Oec. 5,6; dm. twa Arist. H.A. 9. 34, 6 :— Pass., maTp@as ys dmepuxdpevos debarred from.., Theogn. 1210 :— Med., €pid0s div dmepuxdpevor desisting from.., Id. 494; dmepvxov (sc. pwvijs) abstain from speech, Soph. O. C. 169 (lyr.). dmepiotBbw, fut. dow, (epvoiBn) to destroy by mildew, Theophr. C, P. 5. 10, 3, in Pass, 2. to produce mildew, Ib. 5. 9, 13- Garepvw, to tear off from, pivov dn’ doredpw epicar Od. 14. 1343 ndpriv pnrpos dmepvocayres Q. Sm. 14. 259 :—Med., Anth. P. 7. 730. [On the quantity, v. épva. Garépxopat, fut. -eAevoouar (but the Att. fut. is daetpe): pf. -eAjAvOa; aor. —7AGov: Dep. To go away, depart from, c. gen., marpns Il. 24. 796; otxov Od, 2. 136, cf. Soph. O. C. 1165, etc. ; Adyou Eur. 1. T. 546; also, dm. dd BovAeurnpiov Thuc. 8. 92; é*« xwpas Id. 1. 89, etc.; and metaph., da. é« Saxpdav to cease from them, Eur. Or. 295. 2. when used with eis, departure from one place and arrival at another is implied, dw. és Xaphis Hdt. 1. 22, cf. Soph. Ant. 818; da. eis rémoy oikqowv Andoc. 30. 30; mapa tva Luc. Tim. 11; dm. én’ otkou to de- part homewards, Thuc, 1, 92; otxade Archipp. ‘Pw. 1, al.; da. eis tiv apxaiay pow to return, Plat. Symp. 193 C; an7jrGev Obev went back to the place whence he came, Menand. “YzoB. 2. 3 ;—so metaph., dm. eis Tiv dpxatay picw Plat. Symp. 193 C. 8. absol., Hdt. 1. 199, Eur. Alc. 379, Thuc. 1. 24, etc.; raxel dmépxerar (sc. % vdcos) Soph. Ph. 808 ; nar’ dpAdy dm. Ar. Ach. 689; dweAGe TovTovl AaBav take him and be off, Id. Av. 948; dmeA@évros évcavrod Plat. Legg. 954. D. 4. c. part., dm. vix@v to come off conqueror, Aristid. 2. 2, etc., cf. Plut. Ages. 7, II. to depart from life, Diog. L. 3. 6, ubi v. Casaub., Anth. P. 11. 335, cf. Philo 1. 513. arrep, Ton, darepéw, fut. with no pres, in use: v. sub daefmor. Grrepwets, ews, 6, a thwarter, ¢udv pevéwy amepweds Il. 8. 361. Gmepwew, to retire or withdraw from, TO ke Taxa . . WOAE LOU amEpar}- oeas Il. 16, 723. arrepwh, , a keeping off, Avyphv Tzetz. d-mrepwros, ov, inconsiderate, cruel, expl. by avatdqs, oxAnpés, olov Grepiorros kat drrepiBAerros in A, B. 8; by arvyvds, etc. in Hesych. and E. M.; and the interpr. gruyvds given by the Schol, on Aesch. Cho. 600 shews that he read dwépwmos, not ~wros. Grr-épartos, ov, (pws) loveless, unloving, pws dmépwros, like ydqos ayapos, Aesch. Cho. 600; but v. dmépwos. Gares, Ion. for des, v. sub apinu. drecBéopar, (200745) Med. to undress oneself, pf. darna@npévor, GrreoOiw, fut. dréSopar: pf. dredy5 Plat. Com, Sop. 5: pf. dmed}Seuac (vy. toGiw) Arist, H. A. 8. 2, 22. To eat or gnaw off, Ar. 1). cc. dmé5opnat rods SaxrvAous Hermipp. Bp. 1, cf. Ar. Av. 26; dmeo@iet pov riy dxonv Hermipp. =rpar. 7; ris Ty kepahiy dredqdoxev ris pawidos; Ar. Ran. 984; dmecBier Thy piva ravOpdrrov Dem. 788. 25. II. to leave off eating, rd merpaia Tov ix8vdiav Theopomp, Com. div. 1, ubi vy. Meineke.—The pres. aaréSa only in late Greek. amecia, Ion. for dpecta, 4, =deats, Hesych, dméokns, €s, (mécxos) without skin, uncovered, Soph. Fr. 552. améoxAyka, dreckAnkétas, y, sub drockAjvat. dreokAnpuppévos, Adv, of dogxAnpivw, =foreg., A. B. 422. dmécoova, he is gone off, Lacon. for drecavn, drecav6n, aor. pass. ot drrogetes, Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 23: y. Lobeck Rhemat. p, 22. arecovpela, ovro, Ep. sync. aor, pass. of dmocevw. drreorpappévos, Adv. of droarpépa, in an opposite way, Plut.2.905 C. areca, ous, 7, (Greyu, cf, ebeorw) :—Ion, Noun, a being away, absence, eraccxupevous TH dmearot rhs paxns Hat. 9. 85, ef. Call. Fr. 340:— Hesych, also gives dtreorus, vos. P dmecxiipbw, to produce an eschar, Zopyrus ap, Oribas. 2. 587 Daremb.; Luc. Lexiph. 5, in part. :—Pass., aor. 1 drndéany 4 area iTuéveos — aTnAXOTPLOMEVOS. Adj. dmecxaporixés, #, dv, Paul. Aeg. 286,—in which passage it is com- monly rendered removing eschars, Gmreoxicpévas, Adv, part. pf. pass. of dwooxite, separately, Basil. a-rérnAos, ov, leafless, Anth, P. 6. 190. G-merpos, ov, without stones, Eust. 1736. 9. Gmevdtacpés, 5, (ebdia(w) a making calm, lambl. V. Pyth. 29. drevSoxéw, to despair, Athanas. dmev9aviirifw, to die well or happily, LXx (2 Macc. 6. 28). GmevOys, és, (mevOavopat) not inquired into, unknown, Lat. ignotus, keivou 8. . GdeOpoy drevOéa Ofjeev Od. 3. 88; da. dxoH Max. Tyr. 17. 9. II. act. not inguiring, ignorant, Lat. ignarus, RAGov . . drevons Od. 3.184; ¢. gen., Dion. P. 194, Anth. Plan. 303. G-mev9os, ov, =foreg., dub. in Hesych. GmevOive, to make straight again, révra dp0a dm. Plat. Tim. 71 D; xépas Secpois dm. to bind his arms straight, i.e. behind him (cf. mapeu- @dvw), Soph. Aj. 72. 2. to guide aright, to direct, SeDp’ am. podeiv Aesch. Ag. 1667; dm. Bporay rods dyvwpootvay tipavras corrects, chastises them, Eur. Bacch. 884; é« mpduvns dm. to steer, Plat. Criti. 109 C; so, mAherpos dw. rpémv Soph. Fr. 151; am. wédw to govern, rule, Id. O. T. 1045 dm. rd xowd Aeschin, 76. 13; KAjpy dx. [Thy iodrnra] to correct, restore it, Plat. Legg. 757 B, cf. Polit. 282 E; da. re mpds re to adjust, Arr, Epict. 4. 12, 16, cf. Luc. Imagg..12; Tats avAAafais ar. Tovs xpévous Dion. H. de Comp. 11. II. 7d dwevOvopévor (sc. évrepov), intestinum rectum, Galen. 2. 573, etc. drevducts, ews, 4, a direction, Paul. Aeg. p. 213: also -vopés, 6, Oribas. Mai p. 23. dtrevkos, ov, without resin, Theophr, H. P. 3. 9, 3, in Comp. -drepos. dmevkratos, a, ov,=sq., Plat. Ax. 369 B, Plut. 2. 289 B, cf. Apollon. de Constr. 252. drevxrés, 7, dv, Luc, Pseudol. 12, Heliod. 7. 25: (daevxopar):—to be deprecated, abominable, mhpara Aesch. Ag. 638; am. 7d denOjvat tov- to Plat. Legg. 628 C; ra dm. Id. Epist. 353 E. amevAoytas, ov, 6, unblessed, Basil. darevvatw, fo lull to sleep, dnevvacdévros Kakod (Dind. dm’ ebvacbévros «.), Soph. Tr. 1242. a-mevorros, ov, =dmev0is, Hesych. dmevraxréw, to pay regularly, rods pépous Strabo 206: Pass., Id. 311. amevreAilw, to make common, cheapen, Eccl. amrevpnpéw, to deprecate, Lat. abominari, Philostr. 202, 286 (v. 1. é7-). arrevxapioréw, to thank heartily, Byz.:—also Subst, -toria, , Byz. amevyeros, ov, =dmeverds, Aesch. Cho. 155, 625. Grevxopat, fut. fouar: Dep. to wisk a thing away, wish it may not happen, Lat. deprecari, c. acc. rei, dwmevxou Tavra, mpds Oe@v Eur. Hipp. 891 (ubiv. Monk); 7i pddAcor’ dy drevgatyeba; Dem. 505. 7 ;—dz. Tt Tots Oeois to pray the gods it may not be, Plat. Legg. 687 D ;—also c. inf., da, Tt un) yevéoOar Dem. 102. 16; also without pq, dwetyeobe ideiv Id. 71. 18, cf. 489. 15; so also, rovro .. yu) yévorro .. dmedxopuar Ar. Thesm. 714. II. to reject, despise, rt Aesch, Eum. 608. dmevw, to scorch off, v. devo. Grrevovilw, to sell cheap, like émevwvifw, dub. in Luc. Nigr. 23. arépbiPov, v, sub dropOibw, dmep9os, ov, softened form of dpepOos (dpéyw), boiled down,—dm. xpuads refined gold, like Lat. aurum recoctum, Theogn. 449, Hdt. 1. 50; xpuatov Thuc, 2.13; tdwp dmepOov water purified by boiling, Alex. T1v0. 1. amexQaipw, fut.-dp@: aor. dwyyxOnpa :—to hate utterly, detest, Twa Il. 3. 415, Opp. H. 5. 420:—Med., Q. Sm, 13. 255. II. to make utterly hateful, 6s Té por Urvov ax. Kal bwinv Od. 4. 105. dexPdvopat, Od. 1. citand., Ar. Pl. g10, Plat., etc.: impf. dany8avé- pny Cratin. Aidaox. 1, Xen.: fut. drexOnoopa: Hdt. 1. 89, Eur. Alc. 72, Plat., etc.; dex Odvovpas first in Themist.: pf. dwnxOnuat Thuc. 1. 75., 2. 63, Xen., etc.: aor. danxOdunv, annxOero Il. 24. 27, Att.; subj. dréxOupat Il, 4. 533 inf. drexOéo0at (not dréxOecOat, v. sub dméxOo- pat); part, drexOdpuevos Plat. Rep. 321 A: Pass. To be hated, incur hatred, dmexOdveat 8 &rt paddov Od, 2. 202: elsewhere Hom. always uses the aor., mostly c, dat. pers. to be or become hateful to one, incur his hate, dnhxOero maot Geoiat Il. 6.140; toov yap oquy . . dwhxBero unpt pedralvy 3. 454; obre ri poe mas Sipos dmwexOduevos xadenaive nor does the people roused to hate against me distress me, Od. 16. 1 143 so also in Hat. 1. 89., 3. 1, Antipho 142. 35, Thuc, 1. 136, etc.; da. mpos tiva to be hateful in his eyes, Eur. Med. 290, cf. Plut. Galb, 18, Joseph. A. J. 13. 9, 3:—¢. dat. rei, to be hated for a thing, Plat. Apol. 24 A, cf, Thuc., 2. 63 :—c. part., dw. mov Andoc. 30.19; OpidpuBous dvapvrovo aan xOdvov Cratin, Acd. 1. II. as Dep., in causal sense, Adyou dnexGavdpevor language that causes hatred, opp. to of mpds quAlay ayouat, Xen. Symp. 4, 58. daréx Gera, 7), hatred, 1. felt towards another, mpés Twa Eur. Rhes, 810, Dem. 237.16, Arist. Pol. 5.5,93 dd rv dz. Tod mdGous for it, Ib. 2.12,9 2. felt by others towards one, enmity, odium, opp. to xapis (popularity), Antipho 124, 13, Plat. Apol. 28 A, Dem, 32. 2, etc.; in pl. enmities, Plat, Apol. 23 A, Dem, 127. 19 =O: dmex@eias rut EADeiv to be hated by him, Aesch. Pr. 121; 8 da. yiyverai 7 it becomes hate- ful, Xen. Hier. 9, 2 (cf. 5d A. IV); ot’ Exeivov mpos Xapiy ovr’ EpoU mpos dréxOccav Dem. 58. 27; dméxOcray péper 7 it brings odium, Id, 1451.17; so, ToAARy exer Gm. Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 9- Sie the mmexQés, Adv. yesterday, Apollon. de Constr, 235 :—divisim da’ éx6és, Anth. P. 11. 35. amex Ohaus, ecoa, ev, Adj. odious, noxious, Andromach, 19, GréxOnpua, aos, 76, the object of hate, Eur, Tro. 425. arexPnpoctvn, 7, enmity, Eccl. GrexOqpwv, ov, gen. ovos, =sq., Poll. 8, 153. 4 amnAAoTpiopévos, Adv. of draddorpida 171 GrexOqs, és, (€xO0s) hateful, Soph. Ant. x0: hostile, Theocr. 1. 101, etc. II. hated, Isocr. 6 B; dd«epua C. I. 1156. Ady., dmexOas éxew Tut Dem, 61. 25: Sup. -€orara, Poll. 5. 116. GmexOnrixds, 7, dv, full of hatred, envious, opp. to xéAag, Arist, M. Mor. I, 32, Eth. Eud. 2. 3, 7., 3. 7, 3 GréxPopar, a later form of dwex@avoya, first found in Theocr. 7. 45, Lyc, 116, Anth, P. 5.177, Plut. Marcell. 22, etc.; for in Eur. Hipp. 1260 éndx@opat is now restored; and the inf. déy@eoa: (Il. 21. 83, Eur. Med. 290, Thue, 1. 136, etc.) is now written dteyOéc0au, being the inf, of drnxO@duny, aor. of drexOdvopa, v. Elmsl. Med. 1. c. améxa, fut. dpégo, and (Od. 19. 572) dmooxtaw; aor. dméaxov :—to heep off or away from, aixev Tudéos vidv dxocxf “IAtov ipijs Il. 6. 96, 2773 vncow dwéxow evepyéa vija Od. 15. 33; EbPolns dmeéyew .. alyas Orac. ap. Hdt. 8. 20, cf. 22; dmexe tas Bods roy taipoy Aesch. Ag. 1125, cf. Pr. 687. 2. c, dat. pers., Tor. . xetpas dpégw Od. 20. 263, ef, Spitzn, Il. 1.97. 8. with a prep., «Aides dn’ pov adyév’ Exovow the collar-bone parted the neck from the shoulders, Il. 22. 324; so, dm. mapa twos Eur. Bacch. 427. 4. c. ace. only, to keep off or away, oxorewov am. Yéyov Pind. N. 7.89; dm. pdoyavoy Eur. Or. 1519. 5. obdev dréxer c. inf., nothing hinders, debars one from doing, Plat. Crat. 407 B, Plut. 2. 433 A. II. Med., xax@v dad xetpas éxeaGat to hold one’s hands off or away from.., Od. 22. 316; Kxudpow dd xeipas éxeo#e Emped. 451; d@avdrav dm. xeipas Aesch, Eum. 350, cf. Supp. 756, Plat. Symp. 213 D, 214 D:—but mostly, 2. anéx tivos to hold oneself off a thing, abstain or desist from it, moA€uov Il. 8. 35, etc. ; Bo@y Od. 12. 321; o¥5e.. cev dbéfouar will not keep my hands off thee, Od. 19. 489; so in Hdt. 1. 66., 4. 118, al., Thue. 1. 20, etc. ;—in pf. pass., unde Tav puxpOv drecxnyévoy Dem. 828. 12 ; Gyopas dmecx. Arist. Pol. 3. 5, 7- 3. c, inf., dwéyeoGar px) oTpa- Tevoa to abstain from marching, Thue. 5. 25; AapBavey dméoxero Phi- lem, Incert. 10 ; so, dwéxeaOat Tod moreiv Xen, Mem.4. 2,3; also, da. 7d Hi) moeiv Id. Cyr. 1. 6, 32, Plat. Rep. 354 B. 4. absol. to refrain oneself, Dem. 534. 12, III. intr. in Act. to be away or far from, CG ps loci, ris méAEws ob mOAARY d5dv dméxer Thuc. 6, 97; so, dm. dnd BaBvdGyvos, etc., Hdt. 1.179, ef. 3. 26, al.; dd Oaddrras . . Sbdexa 680v jpepay do. Euphron Incert. 1. 3; dm. mapmoAAwy huepay dddv Xen. Cyr. 1.1, 33 mAeiorov dm. xara témov Arist, Meteor. 2. 6, 33 dm, Thy huloeay biaperpov Id. Cael. 2. 13, 8, etc. 2. of actions, to be far Srom, dmeixov Tis éeupéotos ovdev EXagcov were just as far from the discovery, Hdt. 1. 67; dméxev rod Aéyew, moretv Isocr. 227 D, 130 C; dnéxet Tod pr) [mparrav] Dem. 527. 21; Tooodr’ dwéxee [71s] (sc. TOD pi) KwAveY) Id. 533. 21; wAclorov dr, Tod motelv to be as far as pos- sible from doing, Xen, Mem. 1. 2, 62. 3. generally, fo be far removed jrom, modrelas, povapxias, etc., Arist. Pol. 4. 2, 2., 4. 6, 8, al.; rod péoov Id. Eth, N,. 2. 8, 7. IV. to have or receive in full, riv dmé- xptow Aeschin. 34. 35; 70 xpéos da, to receive payment in full, Call. Ep. 573 dm. rov yuoOdy Plut. Solon 22, Ev. Matth. 6. 2, al.; xapwov daw. roy movndévrav Plut. Them. 17; dm. xapw to have due thanks, ef. Jac. Anth. 2. 3. p. 243, Wyttenb, Plut. 2. 124 E. 2. impers., dméxe it sufficeth, it is enough, Ev. Marc. 14. 41, cf. Anacreont. 15. 33, Hesych. Grrewpla, 4, (drerros) indigestion, Com. Anon. 59, Arist., ete.; 5’ drepiay Id. P. A. 3. 5, 14 ;—and in pl., Id, Meteor, 4. 3, 21, Sext. Emp. P, 1. 131. amapo, Ion. for dpéyor. atréwore, Vv. pe cy wf i: amyyéopar, arqynpa, aarhynots, Ion. for d¢ny-. Piscine Med. to defend oneself, like dmodoyéopat, Arist. Probl. 29. 13, I. Senebeiigias 76, a defence, opp. to xarnyopnua, Plat. Legg. 765 B. &mnyopta, Dor. daray-, 7, =foreg., Pind. Fr. 87. 4, in pl. d-mqSaAos, ov, without rudder, Arist. Incess. An. 10, 4: so, darndd- Awros, ov, Ephr. Syr. armnéw, éo strain off, filter, Ar. Ran. 943, Theophr. H. P. 9. 8, 3. arnOypa, aros, 76, that which is filtered off, Galen, darfkoos, ov, (don) disobedient, opp. to imhkoos, Hesych. dammxptBwpéves, Adv. part. pf. pass. from dmaxpiBdw, exactly: spar- ingly, Alex. Suvrp. 1.4, ubi v. Meineke. Kros, ov, not capable of being solidified, Arist. Meteor. 4. 8, 6 sq., cf. G. A. 2. 2, 7, H. A. 3.17, I. ‘ damAynpévos, Adv. of dwad-yéa, to expl. dmmAeyéws, Schol. Il. 9. 309. aamnAeyew, to neglect, Ap. Rh. 2. 17. : dadeyéws, Ady. of darnAeyis, és, (which occurs in Greg. Naz.), without caring for anything, outright, bluntly, Hom., but only in hrase Hd0ov drndeyéws amoerneiy, Il. 9. 309, Od. 1. 373; so, viacer’ danrc- yéws straight forwards, without looking about, Ap. Rh. 1. 785 :—also darndeyés, Nic. Th. 495, Opp. C.°2. 510. (Prob. from dAéym, like ynrdeyis, avnreyns.) an-ndacris, od, 6, opp. to pindiaorys, one who keeps away from the ‘Haala, i.e. an enemy to law, with a play on HAtos (not fond of basking . in the sun), Ar. Av, 110. (V. sub Atos.) drAOrdopat, Pass. to become stupid, fatuous, Diosc. 5. 25. GarqAé, lon. for apAacg. : darn\arys (with or without dvepos), ov, 6, the east wind, Lat. subso- lanus, Hdt. 4. 22., 7. 188 (ubi v. Wessel.), Eur. Cycl. 19, Thue. 3. 233 opp. to Céeupos, Arist. Meteor, 2. 6, 6, cf. Mund. 4, 12, Sit. Vent. 3 sq., al. :—Adj. darpAworixés, 4, dv, from the quarter of the amndarns, 1d, Meteor. 2. 6, 21.—The form danAwrns is retained in Att., and appears on the Tower of Andronicus Cyrrhestes, C. I. 518; d&pyAudwrns only on a later table of the winds, Ib. 6180. (V. sub #Acos.) ; amnAAaypévas, Adv. of dra\Adaow, anerh separately, Cyrill. , in alien fashion, Epiphan. 172 0S, ov, without mud, Greg, Naz. d-mhpavros, ov, unharmed, unhurt, Od. 19.282; da. Bloros a life free From misery, Pind. O. 8, fin.:—éorw 8 dajpavrov be misery fur away, Aesch. Ag. 378. II. act. unharming, o8évos Id. Supp. 576; of persons, Nic. Th. 492. Adv. —rws, Tzetz. joTov, v. sub dpapyaprava, armpeAnpévas, Adv. of drapedéw, without being cared for, Byz. oe my 6, averter of ill, Zeds Paus. 1.32, 2, Chron, Par.inC. 1. 2374. 7. arpovia, 7, =sq., Call. Jov. 92. arnpooivn, 7, freedom from harm, safety, Theogn. 758, Epigr. Gr. (add.) 750 a. 2. harmlessness, Opp. H. 2. 647. armpprecpévos, Adv. of dmapdrévvupi, without disguise, Cyrill. wg ov, gen. ovos, (mjua) like dwppavres, unharmed, unhurt, Gddxputos kai dz. Il. 1. 415, etc., cf. Hes. Th. 955; odv vyvaly dmh- Hoves HAPov “Axarol Od. 4. 487: prosperous, vdaros. 4. 519; mAovs Eur. I. A. 1575; potpa Ap. Rh. 1. 422: without sorrow or care, dul te Pind. N. 1. 83: ¢. gen., darhuov méons oifvos Aesch. Eum. 893 :—rare in Prose, as Hdt. 1. 42., 4.179, Plat. Phaedr. 248:C, Philor. 393. II. act. doing no harm, harmless, and so gentle, kindly, propitious, ovpov dafjpovd re Acapév re Od. 7. 266, cf. 12. 167; mévros Hes. Op. 668 ; Unvov dahpova re Aapév re Il. 14. 164; pO00s 13. 748; mopmol Od, 8: 566; of the gods, drjuov xéap Pind. P. 10.33: without hostile intent, Aesch. Supp. 186: c. gen., wAods ved dar. free from harm to them, Eur.I.A.1575. amjveva, 4, (drnvhs) harshness, Theophr. Char. 15, Ap. Rh. 2. 1202. G-tvepnos, ov, (dveyos) without wind, Dio Chr. 1. 209, A.B. 424; dm. Aruhy Poll. 1. 100. darqvy, %, a four-wheeled wagon, drawn by mules, jplovor €Axov Terpakverov darnvny Il. 24. 324, cf. Od. 6. 57 with 68, 72, 73, 82; much the same as dyafa, cf. Il. 24. 266 with 324, Od. 6. 72 with 73: when used of a racing-car, as in Pind. O. 5. 6 (cf. Arist. Fr. 527), it was * still drawn by mules, jydvows feorg 7 dmqvg Id. 4. 167; Hv yap di drqyn . . hpsdvous avé inmwy €xovea Paus. 5. 9, 2. 2. later, any car or chariot, Aesch. Ag. 906, Soph. O. T. 753; dm. maAtKh Ib. 803: a.war-chariot, Strabo 200; cf. Kkamava. 3. metaph. of any con- veyance, vata dm. a ship, Eur, Med. 2123; mAwrais dmrhyyot Poéta ap. Dion. H. de Comp. 17 ; rerpaBdpovos ds bn’ amqvas, of the Trojan horse, Eur, Tro, 517. 4. metaph. also, like (edyos, a pair, e. g. of brothers, Id. Phoen. 329. (Deriv. unknown.) d-ayviKwros, ov, (rnvikn) without false hair, Nicet. 382 D. an-nvis, és, Ep. Adj. harsh, rough, hard, of persons, Il. 1. 340; so, bre Tor vdos éoriv am. 16.35; Oupos deppladros kal dm. 15.94; pMdBov drnvéa te kparepdy re Ib. 202; cf. Od. 18. 381, al.; ds per danvis avrés én Kal drnvéa €id9 cruel himself and full of cruel thoughts, 19. 329 :—rare in Att. (never in Trag.), Omws rots efwbev pndiy delfecay aanves Ar. Nub. 974 (hexam.); danves rt eimety Plat. Phaedr. 257 B, cf. Legg. 950 E; but freq. in late Prose, as Diod. Excerpt. 553. 23, Plut., etc., v. Wytt. in Indice :—Adv. —-v@s, Dio Chr. 1. 679. II. in physical sense, aAnv am. hard, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1, 14, cf. 2. 12, Cur. M. Ac. 1.5. Hence darnvo-ebas, Ecel,:—amrnvorns, }, =dmjvea, Eccl.:—and &mnvo-pev, ov, harsh-minded, Schol. Aesch. Pr.159. (The Root of the term. —yvqjs, which appears again in the opp. word mpoo- nvns, and perth. in mp-nvjs, cannot be said to be determined: v. however Curt. Gr. Et. no. 419.) arivOov, Dor. aor. 2 of darépxopat, Theocr. 2. 84, al, G-mntla, %, (ajyvuyr) want of solidity, Ptol. -&ar-qopos, Dor. and Att. & , ov: (delpw) :—hanging on high, far distant, Arat. 396, 895; and in form danéptos, Anth, P. 9, 71: c. gen., dmdopos éxOpav aloof from them, Pind. P. 8.124. Cf. daijwpos. a-mnp7s, és, (xnpds) unmaimed, Ap. Rh. 1. 888, Adv. —pwis, vy. Cramer An. Ox. 1. 84. G-wnpivos, ov, (anpiv) without scrotum, restored (for dmipnvos) by Coraés in Archestr. ap. Ath. 299 A; v. ad Galen. de Aquat. p. 204. G-rnpos, ov, =dnphs, Hadt. 1. 32, Diog. L. 5. 40, Hesych. Grnptypévws, Adv. (dapraw) consequently upon, Twe Plut. 2. 105 E. II. disjunctively, separately, M. Anton. 4. 45. amppticpévws, Adv. (dmapri{w) completely, Dion. H. 1. go, etc. dampv0ptaxdrws, dary . ¥. sub darepuO pido. G-1npwros, ov, not maimed, Theophr. C. P. 3. 5, I. Theognost. Can. 159. & , as, a, v. sub dmavpaw, amnhxeva, #, discord, enmity, Lys. ap. Harp.: daryxta, A. B. 16. darnxéw, to sound back, re-echo, Arist. Probl. 11. 6, I., 19. 11. 2, to utter, povas Arr. Epict. 2. 17, 8. II. to be out of tune, like dmdda, A. B. 16. arqxnpa, aros, 76, an echo; metaph. of sayings repeated by rote, Plat. Ax. 306 Cc. 2. generally, an utterance, expression, Longin. 9. 2. “aamxis, és, (jxos) discordant, ill-sounding, Aristid. 1. 506, Luc. Vit. Auct. 10: quarrelsome, Alciphro 3. 74. amhxnors, ews, 7, an echoing, echo, M. Anton. 4. 3. ary 6s, 7, 6v, sounding, uttering, Eust. Opusc. 203. 4. & * ed Adv. pf. part. pass. dwexOdvopat, hostilely, Philostr. 315. aarqwpos, ov, high in air, aw. 6 écav d(or Od. 12. 435: cf. dandpos. "Anta yi, v. sub amos. & wo, fut. Lar ors Dor. word for dmoméumw, Thue. 5. 77; tAou 8 dad xelpas tadAc keep them off, Archestr. ap. Ath. 321 A. Gar-rBidbw, to live remote or apart, Greg. Nyss. -amBiaerixés, 7, dv, retired, recluse, Bios-Basil. amlS.ov, 7d, Dim. of dmov, a pear, Hierophil. in Ideler Phys. 1. 416: in Hdn. Epim. 104, ambéa, 7. *Ameioy, 74, the temple of Apis, Lap. Ros. in C. I, 4697. 33. Adv. -wri, » i) , amndos — amiorew. d-mlearos, ov, (mé(w) incompressible, Arist. Meteor. 4. 8, 5., 9, 153 cf, Lob. Paral. 460. . G-miPiivos, ov, of things, incredible, unlikely, improbable, Plat. Legg. 663 E, Arist. Poét. 25, 27. 2. of persons, not to be trusted or relied on, mpés 71 in a matter, Aeschin. 28,12. —_-b. unpersuaded, unconvinced, dm, dy etn Plat. Parm. 133 B. II. not having confidence to doa thing, c. inf., Plut. Nic. 3. III. not persuasive, unconvincing, Adyos Plat. Phaedr. 265 B, cf. Arist. Rhet. 3. 3; 4., 8,13 da. A€yerv, of persons, Plut. 2.812 E, cf. 819 C; dm. (aypapos Luc. Indoct. 22 :—Ady. -vws, not persuasively, coarsely, rudely, Isocr. 87 ©, and often later. d&mBuverns, 7Tos, %, unlikeliness, improbability, airias Aeschin. 36. g II. want of persuasiveness, Joseph. c. Apion. I. 34. amt0éw, fut. How, (wei0w) Ep. form of dmedéw, c. dat., often in Hom. commonly with the negat., ov« dmi@noe pvOw he disobeyed not the words, Il. 1. 220, etc., cf, 6. 102, al.; once c. gen., 008’ dmiOnae 06d. . dyye- Ardwy h, Hom. Cer. 448 :—used once by Soph. in an anap. verse, Phil, 7447. d-mqs, és, post. for dreOys, Anth. P. 5. 87. GntOuvrnp, jpos, 6, a direstor, guide, Paul. Sil. Ambo 78. an-Wive, =drevdivw, of setting bones, Hipp. Fract. 756; of drawing lines, Anth. P, 6. 67. Gm-ikpdw, to winnow, atrov Theophr. C. P. 4. 16, 2. Gmixpavros, ov, (winpaive) not acrid, Anon. in Ideler Phys: 2. 196. dmucpos, ov, not bitter, Arist. Virt. et Vit. 4, 3. a&mucps-xodos, ov, free from bitter bile, Hesych. atidynros, ov, (niAdw) not to be pressed close, i.e. either incompressible or elastic, Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 23; cf. Lob. Paral. 460. dmipedos, ov, (mipeAn) without fat, not fat, Diocl. Caryst. ap. Ath. 316 E, Arist, H. A. 3. 14, P. A. 3. 14, 20, al.:. Comp. -wrepos, Ib. 3. 9, 143; Sup. -wraros, H. A. 3. 17, 3. amivys, és, (mivos) without dirt, clean, Ath. 661 D. amivys, prob, =éfanivns, Epigr. in Cramer An. Par. 4. 326. antvéw, (dmvns) to clean, Hesych. amivicce, (mvurds) to lack understanding, doxées 5€ pov ove dmavic- oev Od. 5. 342; wp admviscov of one lying senseless, Il. 15. 10; v. Apollon. Lex. Hom. s. v. dmwvuréw, amis, ews, %, Ion. for ddufis. amo-eSns, €s, pear-shaped, Theophr. H. P. 3. ro, 3. dmov, 70, (Gmos) a pear, Plat. Legg. 845 B, Theocr. 7. 120. 2. =dmos (4), a pear-tree, Theophr. C. P. 1. 15, 2. Gmos [4], 7%, (also 6, Eust. Opusc. 135) a pear-tree, Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 22, Theophr. H. P. 1. 3, 3, etc. 2.=amoy, a pear, Ar. Fr. 476. 3; Gm’ EvBoias dmious Hermipp. Sopp. 1.17; cf. Meineke ad Alex. Bpe7r. I. II. a kind of Euphorbia, perhaps the sun-spurge, Theophr. H. P. 9. 9, 5, Diosc. 4. 174. dmuos, 7, ov, far away, far off, distant, rndddev & dains yains Il. I. 270., 3. 49, Od. 16. 18, Soph. O. C. 1685. II.” Amos, a, ov, Apian, i.e. Peloponnesian, said (in this sense) to be derived from *Ams, Apis, a mythical king of Argos, son of Apollo, bard and physician (iarpépaytis) (which attributes lead Herm. to connect the Root with mos), Aesch, Supp. 262 sq.; "Ania yj, Ania Ody, or “Azia alone, the Peloponnese, esp. Argolis, Aesch. Ag. 257, Soph. O. C. 1303; also *Anis, iSos, 4, Theocr. 25. 183. [The former word has 4, the latter 4; yet Soph. O. C. 1685 uses signf. 1 with a, and late Ep. Poets have signf, 11 with @; Buttm. Lexil. v. “Ain yaia.] (Commonly derived from dé, as dvrios from dyzi. But Curt. p. 428 refers it to Skt. ap (agua). If this be accepted, the orig. sense must be far away over sea, Fr. outremer ; and the later sense may be compared with the modern Morea from Slav. more (mare).) animé, to press the juice from anything, Hdt. 2. 94. *Amis, wos, ews, and Ion. tos, 6, Apis, a bull worshipped in Egypt, the Greek Epaphos ace. to Hdt. 2. 153. 2. a mythical king of Argos, v. dmos It. Il. Anis ="Ania yi, cf. dmos 11. Gmtodw, to make equal, abrov dx. rois KAwrhpow, in reference to Procrustes, Plut. Thes. 11, ef. Luc. pro Imag. 13 :—Pass. to be made equal, 7H agin rav popriw to their value, Hdt. 4. 196. anicowros, ov, (moa) unpitched, Strabo 516. amoréa, fut. qow: pf. ijriornea, etc.:—Pass., fut. dmornOjcopat Diod, 32. 11, but dmorjoopar in pass. sense, Plat. Rep. 450 D. To be amigos, and so, I. to disbelieve, distrust, mistrust, ya 70 pry ober” dmioreov Od. 13. 3393 TUXnY dm. Eur, Alc.1130; maya Ar. Eccl. 775, cf. Thue. 7. 28, Xen. Ages. 5, 6., 8,.7:—Pass., rv yv@ou Tod olketou dm- oretobat was distrusted, i.e. no one could be sure of knowing, Thue. 7. 44; dir. ev paprupiats Antipho 117.11; éreddy-yvdouw dmorovpevot, ob prover Tovs amorovvras Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 17 :—but mostly, 2. c. dat. pers., Hat. 1. 158, Thuc. 8. 83, Plat., etc.: so, mas dmarnow Adyos; Soph. Ph. 1350; dm. 7h éavrav gvvéce Thuc. 3. 37, cf. 6.86; am. Twit 7 to disbelieve one ina thing, Hdt. 3.122; rw mept Twos Id. 4.96. 3. c. inf., obdév o” dmor® Kal dis oipGtat I nothing doubt that .., Soph. Aj. 9403 Gm. pi) -yevécBat 71 to doubt that it could be, Thuc. I. 10, cf. 2. Tol., 4. 40, Plat. Polit. 301 C ;—so also, dar. wi) or ph) od yévnral Tt to suspect it will or will not happen (like poRetcOa), Plat. Rep. 555 A, Meno 89 D; dm, m@s.. Id. Phaedo 73 B; dm. e.. Anth. Plan. 52, Philo 2. 555 :—Pass., 70 émrqdevpa dmoretrat ph duvardy elvat it is not be- lieved to be possible, Plat. Legg. 839 C, cf. Charm. 168 E; and so some take it in Hdt. 3. 15 ef jm07HOn yr) moAUmpyypovely if he had not been believed to be meddling, i.e. unless he had been,—but 7morhOn here ought prob. to be referred to émicrapat, v. Interpp. 4. absol. to be distrustful, incredulous, Hdt. 8.94; vape kat péuvac’ amareiv Epich. 119 Ahr.; émi ru Philo 2, g2. II. =drebéw, to disobey, Tie 2 } Hat, 6, 108 (ubi v. Valck.); and this was the word more common in Att, —— ° ‘ - ig oo 7 amtloryTEeo’ — amXoikos. Aesch, Pr. 640, Soph. Ant. 381, Tr. 1183, Plat. Apol. 29 C, al, :—absol. to be disobedient, rots dmarodow Taébe in these things, Soph. Ant. 219, cf. 656; iv 8 dmor&or but if they refuse to comply, Eur. Supp. 389, cf. Plat. Legg. 941 C. III. 70 cp’ ob« dmorhaw xGovi, i.e. I will not hesitate to commit it .., Eur. Heracl. 1024, cf. Lys. 188. 39. & ov, verb. Adj. one must mistrust, disbelieve, c. dat., Polyb. 4. 41, 8, Strabo 362. amorytixss, 7, dv, incredulous, M. Anton. I. 6. amortia, Ion. -tn, 4), unbelief, disbelief, distrust, mistrust, mioreas. . 6uOs kal dmoria dAecay aydpas beliefs and disbeliefs, Hes. Op. 370; miorer xpqpar’ amddeo’, dmorin [t] 8 éodwoa Theogn. 831; rots mapéovor da. ToAA? bmexéxuro Hat. 3. 66, cf. 2. 1523 4d dmorins Id. 3. 153, al.; ind da. pr) yevéoOat 7 from disbelief that .., Id. 1. 68; dmoria Ad-yous évdéxecOar Eur. Ion 1606 ; mépevye Tovmos &f dmorias Aesch. Ag. 268; dmariav éxew wept twos to be in doubt, Plat. Phacdo 107 B; ouppwy dm. Eur. Hel. 1617; da. rod xarnydpou want of faith in him, Arist. Rhet. 2. 23, 7; % Gm. 4% mpds GAAHAous Id. Pol. 4. 12, 5; dma. ard Twos Longin. 38. 2; mpds te Plat. Soph. 258 C. 2. of things, 7a elpy- Héva és dw. wohAhy dmixrat Hat. 1.193; ToAAds amorias exe it admits of many doubts, Plat. Rep. 450 C; 6 Adyos eis dm. xaramimre Id. Phaedo 88D; naraBaddAa twa. eis dw. Ib. C; da. mapéxew Ib. 86 E; dm’ Gv Aéyet their incredibility, Isocr. 368 C. II. want of faith, faith- lessness, unbelief, Ovnoxe 5% miorts BXaoraver 8 dm. Soph. O. C. 611, cf, Plat. Gorg. 493 C: treachery, Andoc. 23. 38, Xen. An. 2. 5, 21; Bdérev amoriay Eupol. Incert. 22. amoré-Kopos, ov, surfeited with unbelief, Or. Sib. 1.150, 177, 329. d-muorros, ov, I. pass. not to be trusted, and so, 1. of persons and their acts, not.trusty, faithless, imeppiado: wal ar, Il. 3. 106; Gcoiaiv 7’ éxOpé Kal dvOpdmoow dmore Theogn. 601; da. ds yuvaixeov yévos Eur. I. -T. 1298; doAomAoxiac Theogn. 226; dm. woveiy tiva mis- trusted, Hdt. 8. 22, cf. Xen. An. 2. 4, 7;-d. ératpelas Auuhv Soph. Aj. 683, cf. Ph. 867; Opdoe dmiorg eraipdpevos by untrustworthy, ground- less confidence, Thuc. 1. 120; #09 am. uncertain, inconstant, unstable, Plat. Legg. 705 ‘A, cf. 775 D. 2. of reports and the like, in- credible, Parmen. 76, Archil. 69, Pind. O. 1. 51, Hdt. 3. 80; répas Aesch, Pr, 822; dm. at mépa xAvew Ar. Av. 416; dm. évduor ei.., Philo 2. 556; 70.éAmtdwv dmorov what-one cannot believe even in hope, Soph. Ph. 868; mioris dmorordrn Andoc. 9. 32; so in Plat., etc. II. act. not believing or trusting, distrustful, mistrustful, incredulous, suspi- cious, Oupods 5€ To aity dmaros Od. 14.150; Ora. . dmordrepa bpbar- pGv less credulous, Hdt. 1. 8; dmoros mpds bidAurmoy distrustful towards him, Dem. 349. 15; dmoros @..xat cavr@ you do not believe what you say yourself, Plat. Apol. 26E; 70 dw.=damoria, Thuc. 8. 66. b. in N. T., unbelieving, -an unbeliever, 1 Ep. Cor. 6. 6, al. 2. not obeying, disobeying, Soph. Fr. 553; ¢. gen., Aesch. Theb. 875; éyev admatov..dvapyiay more, i.e, avapxiay éxew dmeBodoay Ti AE, Ib, 1030, cf. Eur.) T. 1476. III. Ady. dricras, 1. pass. beyond belief, Thuc. 1. 21, cf. Arist. Rhet. Al. 31. 8. 2. act. distrust- Sully, suspiciously, Thuc. 3. 83. amorootvn, 7, =dmaria, Eur. Med. 423. amorotvrws, Adv. =drioras 2, Numen. ap. Eus. P. E. 735 A. dmoré-pihos, ov, loving unbelief, Or. Sib. 8. 186. amoyxvatve, to make lean or thin, Philem, Incert. 12, Arist. H. A. 6. 20, 5 :—verb. Adj. dmoyvavréov, Arist. Probl. 1. 50, 2. amoxvow, =dmaxvaivw, Hipp. 533. 29. amoxipilopar, Dep. to set oneself to oppose firmly, give a flat denial, mpés tiva. Thuc. 1.140; mpods Tas H5ovds Plut. Agis 4, al. II. to set oneself to affirm, maintain a thing, Eust. 1278. 23, etc.; to hold fast to a thing, Synes. 167 D; read by L. Dind. in Schol. Ar. Pl. 1097 for émox~.—Hence Ady. dmoyuprorixds, positively, Eust. 1861. 41. anicxo,=dnréxw, to keep off, hold off, Od. 11. 95; xelpas epyou Joseph. B.-J. 1. 7, 3. amicwaots, ews,7, equalisation, Poll. 4. 2'7, Nicom. Ar. p. 105. antréov, verb, Adj. of detju, one must go away, Xen. An. 5. 3, 1, Amphis ’A@dp. 1, Luc, Hermot. 82. amirys (sub. ofvos), 6, (dmov) perry, Diosc. 5. 32, Geop. 8. 5. [7] amiryréov, pl. éa, verb.Adj.=dmeréov, Luc. Lexiph. 2. amyOudopat, Pass. to become a fish, Hermes Stob. Ecl. 1. 1098. dr-ixOus, v, eating no fish (cf. dwéovros), Ar, Fr. 480. 2. in Eust. 1720. '24, as Subst.,-a paltry little fish. a-mov [7], ov, not fat, Diphil. Siph. ap. Ath.120F,Aretae. Cur. M. Diut.1.5. amhaiyidorws, (rAayia (ew) Adv. not obliquely, Eust. 1229. 41. dmhaykros, ov, =drdavns, Nonn. D. 4. 313. ei Gahai, Gv, ai, (fem. pl. of dmAods) single-soled shoes, a Laconian kind, Dem, 1267. 25. amAakéw, dmdaxia, etc., v. sub durAakéw, etc. a-mAdKouvtos, ov, without cakes, Plat. Com, Moy. I. amddvera, %, constancy, unchangeableness, Suid. d-rAavas, és, not wandering, steady, fixed, Plat. Polit. 288 A, alls), gen., dwAaves dmetpyécaro Kvjoewv made it free from their influence, Id. Tim. 34 A. 2. in Astron, of stars, fixed, opp. to mAav7rat, Ib. 40 B, cf. Arist. Meteor. 1. 6,11, Metaph. 11. 8, ro, Arat. 461, Anth. P. 9. 25. II. of a line, straight, Anth. P. 6. 65. iit. not erring, Sext. Emp. M.°7.'195, ete.:—Adv. -v@s, without going astray, Max. Tyr. 5.'2: accurately, Alciphro 3. 59. anhavacia, 7, freedom from error, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 394. amhdvnros, ov, that cannot go astray or err, Babr. 50. 20, Eccl. athaoria, %, sincerity, Def. Plat. 412 E, Eust. Opusc. 89. go. d-mhacros, ov, not capable of being moulded, Arist. Meteor. 4: 8,5, ef. 9, 12. 2. not-moulded or shaped, in its natural state, simple, 3 173 Plut. 2,16 B,.62 C: natural, unaffected, unfeigned, ppéynua, eivoa, mpobupia etc, Plut, Aemil. 37, Themist. 56 D, etc. ; of persons, Cebes Tab. 20:+—Adyv. -rws, naturally, without disguise, yeAGv Ep. Plat. 319 B; avAciv Theophr. H. P. 4. 11, 4; dmoxpivecda Ael, V. H. 9- 27. 3. not fully shapen, unformed, Philo 2. 317. II. also taken as syncop. for dwéAagros, monstrous, in which sense however dadGros is the reading generally preferred; y. dAaros. d-rhar hs, és, without breadth, ypappn Arist. An. Pr. 1. 41, 43 pihjicos amX., opp. to tAdros éxov, Id. Top. 6. 6, 3. Adv. -ras, Iambl. datos, Dor. and Att. for Ep. dynos, ov, (nAnator, cf. TELXET- TAHTHS), =améAagTos, unapproachable, but always with a notion of terrible, monstrous, much like damros, Hes. Op. 147, Th. 151; dma. mip Pind, P. 1. 40 (whence it must be restored for daAjorou in Aesch. Pr. 371) 3 Opes, Tépow Pind. P, 12.15, Fr. 93; Opéupa Soph. Tr. 1093; aioa Id, Aj. 255; dwAarov dgdpBAnrdv 7° egeOpepayny Id. Fr. 350.— In many places, @mAag7os is a v.1., cf. Elmsl. and Herm. Med. 149: see also @rAnotos. d-hextos, ov, unplaited, xairn Anth. P. 7. 412, Epigr. Gr. 790. 8 :— also dtrAekns, és, Nonn. D. 42. 87. G-medvacros, ov, with no surplusage, Eust. 947.16. G-heovéxrntos, ov, free from avarice, Clem. Al. 663; without surplus, Theol. Arithm, 34. 2. pass. not to be overcome, Cyrill. ~ dmhero-peyéOns, €s, unapproachably great, Ai@os Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 41. Gaeros, ov, boundless, immense, tyos Emped. 439; ddga Pind. I. 4. 17 (3. 28); Bdpos Soph. Tr. 982; also found in Prose, xpvods amd, Hat, I. 14, 50, al.; GAes, ddwp 4. 53., 8.12; oluaryh 6. 58; waxy Plat. Soph. 246 C; aa. wat duhyavoy Id. Legg. 676 B; év xpévou pheeow dahéros Ib. 683 A; xuhv Xen. An. 4. 4, 11; mAbs Arist. G. A. 3. 5, 53 morapot dAero 7d AROS Id, Meteor. 2. 2,17; papavides amd. 7d maxos Id. Probl. 20. 13; OépuBos Polyb. 1. 50, 3, etc. (Prob. from HAE, riprAnwu, wr€ws, not to be filled, beyond measure.) G-tAevpos, ov, without sides or ribs, dwA. o700s a narrow chest, Arist. Physiogn, 5, 11: of persons, narrow-chested, opp. to evmAeupor, Ib. 6, 9. d-mhevoros, ov, not navigable, not navigated: 7d GmA..a part of the sea not yet navigated, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 16. les ov, clad in a single garment: generally =dmAods, Eupol. THdA. 27 B. Gmdnyis, (50s, 4, =dmdols (as. Subst.) a single upper garment or cloak, opp. to dmAryis, Soph. Fr. 843, Ar. Fr. 149. a-mrAnyos, ov, (wAnyh) without blow, protected from blows, Melet. in An. Ox. 3. 41. Adv. ~yws, Achmes 251. G-ANPuvros, ov, not multiplied, Porphyr. Sent. 35. Ady. —rws, Ib. d-mAnktos, ov, unstricken, of a horse needing no whip er spur, Eupol. TIdA. 2, Plat. Phaedr. 253 D, like dxéyrnros in Pind. O, 1.33: metaph., Plut. 2. 721 E:— ded, without receiving a blow,-ppovdor 8 amd. Eur. Rhes. 814; of a plant, uninjured, Theophr. H. P. 9. 14, 1. BH 1 act. not irritating or pungent, in Medic., as Antyll, Matth, 109 :—Ady. -tws, Oribas. 2. 218 Daremb. d-rAnppedrs, és, sinless, Cyril. amdqpov, ov, =drdnotos, Hesych, G-rrAnk, Fryos, 6, 4, =drAneros I, Arr. Epict. 4. 1, 124; sensu obse., Luc, Amor. 54. d-mAnpopopytos, ov, without confidence, Eccl. Adv. -rws, Eccl. d-rAnpodopta, 4, want of confidence or faith, Byz. GmAnpwros, ov, insatiable, Luc. Merc. Cond. 39 ; “Asdys Anth. P. ap- pend. 122; mavrwy Plut. 2. 524 B. 2. unfilled, Poll. 1. 121. d-rAnotacros, ov, =dmrAaros, Schol. Pind. P. 12. 15. amAnorevopar, Dep. to be insatiable, twos in a thing, Hipparch. ap. Stob. 575.8; é rut Lxx; epi re Eccl. amAnoria, %, insatiate desire, greediness, whether of food or money, ind rs dwAnorias Pherecr. Incert. 6; els rooadrny amd. ddixovro Lys. 121. 42; did rhv ama, Plat. Gorg. 493 B. 2. c. gen. rei, insatiate desire of, mAovrou, xpvood Id. Rep. 562 B, Legg..831 D; Aéxous Eur, Andr, 218; THs edx7Hs, referring to Midas, Arist. Pol. 1. 9, 11. amrAnor is, ov, insatiate in wine, Timon ap. Ath. 424 B. amAnors-Kopos, ov, insatiate, Or. Sib. 14. 5. d-mdyoros, ov, not to be filled, insatiate, greedy, Theogn. 109, Soph. El. 1336, Arist. H. A. 8. 2,.27, etc.; often confounded with émAacTos (i.e. drAaros), Elmsl. and Herm. Med. 149, Dind. Aesch, Pr. 371. 2. c. gen., dr. xpnudrov,-aiparos insatiate of money, blood, Hdt. 1. 187, 212, Plat. Legg. 773 E, etc.; eax@v Aesch. Eum. 976. II. Adyv., amdjorws éxew Plat. Gorg. 493 C, al.; awA. diaxeiobar or Exew mpis a Xen. Cyr. 4. 1, 14, Isocr. 109 D, 160 A; “ 7 Id. Antid. § 311:— Comp. —orépws Byz.:—also neut. pl., aldgas amAnora C. I. 2240; and daAnorei Hdn. Epim. 257. : GmAntos, ov, Ep. form of drAaros (q. v.), Ruhnk. h, Hom, Cer. 83. Gmdo-edyjs, és, simple or single, Theol. Arithm. 52. GmrA6n, },=dmAdrns, Synes. 288 B. GmA6-Oprk, 5, 4, with plain, untrimmed hair, Ptol. . » darhowa, %, Ion. and post. dmAoty, Call. Dian. 230, Anth. P. 7. 640: (Gdovs) :—impossibility -of sailing, detention in port, esp. from stress of weather, Aesch, Ag. 188; dAoig xpia@a Eur. I. A. 88; jodxater ind dmdolas Thuc. 4. 4, cf. 6. 22: also.in pl., dwomAéew . . dpunpevoy abrdv icxov dmAocat Hdt. 2. 119:—for Aesch. Ag. 150, v. sub éxevnis. amdotlopat, Dep.: (drAois):—to behave simply, deal openly or frankly, mpos Tovs pidous Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 18, cf. Dio C..65.7. The Act. in same sense, Schol. Od. 6. 187. AmAoikevopat, Dep. =foreg., Eust. Opuse, r18. 18. , GtAocikds, 7, dv, like.an dtdods, simple, natural, plain, Phintys ap. 174 Stob. 444. 54, Luc. Tim. 56, etc.:—Sup. -wraros Philostr. 582, Luc. ig Ady, -«@s, Dion, H. de Dem. 45. mots, (Sos, 4, simple, single, dwdotdes xAaivar Il. 24. 230, Od. 24. oi esp. as Subst. a single garment, =dmdryls, Anth. P. 5. 294. Aéxtipos, ov, with unbraided hair, Anth. P. 7. 146. Gahoxos, ov, (wAékw) =dmAewros, Opp. H. 3. 469: metaph. uncon- nected, Longin. 19. 1. : ‘Amo-xtwv, 6, nickname of a Cynic who wore his coat single instead of double, Plut. Brut. 34; v. Wyttenb. Ind. ad Plut. Gméos, 7, ov, ive aries; ij, oby, like Lat. simplex, opp. to SimAdos, duplex, two-fold, and so, I. single, dmdjv otpdv now eis“ Aidov pépew Acsch. Fr. 236, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 43 GAG relxer weprrexicey Thuc. 3. 18; od« és dxAody not in one way only, Soph. O. T. 519; dls 160° & dmv kakd Id, Aj. 277; Saws dy 4 xapis & dadijs dmAH pavh Id. Tr, 619 ; dwAds 5t Avmas efdv od« otcw dumAGs Eur. I, T. 688, b. dmdai (sc. xpnmides), al, single-soled shoes, Strattis Anuy. 4, Dem. 1267. 23. II. simple, natural, plain, straight-forward, xedev@ors dmddas (was Pind, N. 8. 61; ddods 5 pd0os este Cho. 554; aaa@ Adyw Id. Pr. 610, al.; ds dwAG Ady Ib. 46, Ar. Ach. 1153; amAods Adyos, dwAH dupynors a plain tale, Eur. Hel. 979, Plat. Rep. 392 D; ama ye kat caph Aéyw pabeiv Alex. “Lav. 1.7; obdtv Exw ddov- orepov déyew Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 323 of style, Dem. Phal. 17, etc.; of habits of life, Polyb. 9. 10, 5; véuot Alay amAof xat BapBapixot Arist. Pol, 2. 8, 19 :—damdovy fy .. dwobaveiv a plain course, Menand. ‘AA. 5. _ b. of persons, or their words, thoughts, and acts, simple, open, frank, ama yap éore rhs GAnOeias ern Aesch, Fr. 173; aad. Kal -yevvaios Plat. Rep. 361 B, etc.; dmAof rpémo Eur. I. A. 927, etc.; opp. to ddAos Ar. Pl. 1158; cf. Ruhnk. Tim, v. durAdos. —_¢. simple, 6 xperis imbxerrar elvat dmAods Arist. Rhet. 1. 2, 133; opp. to Kaxovpyos Id. H. A. 9. 1, 5, cf. Rhet. 1. 9, 29:—also in bad sense, simple, silly, Isocr. 23 E; Alay -yap dndodv 70 vopiCew .. Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 9: cf. dmA@s It. 1. b. III. simple, opp. to compound or mixed, Plat. Rep. 547 D, etc.; opp. to HEmerypévos, Kexpapévos, Arist. Metaph. 4. 5, 14, al.; daA@ yp@para Id. Color. 1,1; dwA@ dvépuara, opp. to dumdAG, Id. Post. 21, 1, cf. Rhet. 3. 3, 2,,ete. 2. dmAj Snpyoxparia absolute, sheer, downright, Plat. Polit. 302 D; dxpaota Arist. Eth. N. 7. 5+ 53 ovppopa Lys. 168. 43, etc. 3. simple, absolutely true (cf. dmA@s Il. 3), ob mavu pot doxel . . obras drAoby elvar wore . . Plat. Prot. 331 C, cf. Symp. 206 A, Theaet. 188 D, al. 4, also general, opp. to dxpiBys, Arist. Metaph. 5. 1, 1., 6.4, 11, al. IV. Adv. dmdA@s, v. sub voc. V. Comp. and Sup. dAovarepos, dtAovararos, Plat. Phaedr. 230 A, etc., cf. Lob. Phryn. 145; dmAdraros, Anth. P.6.185. — (G-mAoos is related to acopulativum, dpa, drag, qq. v., as Lat. simplex to simul: cf. dimddos, duplex.) ‘Roos, ov, contr. dtAous, ovy: I. act., of ships, not sailing, unfit for sea, not sea-worthy, tprnpns Andoc. 24.6; vats amAous moeiy Thuc. 7. 343 vijes dtd eyévovro, Ib.: of persons, vavKAnpov . . mojcas Grow Crito d:Aomp. 1 :—Comp., dwrodwrepat vais, less fit for sea, Thuc. 7.60, which Suid. cites in the form dmAovorepat,v.Lob. Phryn.t43. II. pass., of the sea, not navigable, closed to navigation (cf. dwAoa), drAous } Oddrarra ind rev .. AnoTav yéyovey Dem. 307. 19; GAyun Ap. Rh. 4.1271; mévros Polyb. 4. 38, 7; and often later. dmhondea, %, a simply passive state, and 4mAoTwaOhs, és, (wd00s) re. § simply passive, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 47. _ amXébs, 7, dv, late form for awAdos, An. Ox. 2. 331- dmdooivn, 4}, =darddrns, Lxx (Job 21. 23). \ Gmdo-otvberos, ov, simply composed or compounded, Theod. Stud. Gmho-cynpev, ov, of simple form, cited from Strabo. Gmdérys, 170s, }, singleness, THs pwvijs, Arist. Audib. 17. EL: simplicity, rhs povotxhs Plat. Rep. 404 E ; rs rpopis Diod. 3. 17. 2. of persons, simplicity, frankness, Xen. Cyr. I. 4, 3, etc. 3. liberality, 2 Ep. Cor. 8, 2., 9. 11, etc. ! 4 AmAo-ropéw, (réuvw) to cut by a simple incision, Tt Oribas. p. 1, Mai.: —Subst. -ropia, %, a simple incision, Ib. p. 2. Gmdois, 4, ofv, contr. for dAdos, GrAous, ovy, contr. for drAoos. ” Gtovotepos, —raros, v. sub dois V. ‘d-mhovrtos, ov, without riches,Soph. Fr. 718; aBpds kal odx dma, Philostr. 273; dma, dmepydoac0a Tov mdovToy Plut. Lycurg. 10, cf. 2.527B,679B. amA6u, fut. dow, (drAods) to make single, to unfold, stretch or spread out, odphy Batr. 74; o@pa Anth. P. 11. 107; foria Orph. Arg. 362, etc.; pddayya Paus. 4. 11, 2; 4. Tov dpyupov to beat it thin, Ana- creont. 10. 5:—Pass., dypevdels els 7d wAvioy HmAwOy [the fish] lay stretched out .., Babr. 4. 5:—the Med. in Anth. P. 10. 9, Orph. Arg. 280, Dion, P. 235. 2. metaph., dAwooy ceavrdy be simple, M. Anton. 4. 26.—The word is common in Eccl. and Byz. &moadtepos, Comp. of arAoos. dmhiota, 4, (dmduros) filthiness, filth, Anth. P. 7. 377. amhiicias ondyyos, 5, a sponge, so called from its dirty gray colour, Arist. H. A. 5.16, 10: in Theophr. H. P. 4. 6, 10, ai dmAvoiat is read. dmhisros, ov, (whbva) unwashen, unwashed, of clothes, ddovros dmdurous: éy eiuacw Simon. lamb. 6. 5; papavides Pherecr. Incert. 3; of sponges, AristHL A. 5.16, 8 :—also, like Gdovros, of parts of the body, Ar. Vesp. 103. &mwpa, 74, (dwAdw) that which is unfolded, an expanse, Schol. Ar. Av. 1218: @ table-cloth or coverlet, Eust. Opusc. 329. 13. amas, Ady. of dmdois, Lat. simpliciter, singly, in one way, Plat. Rep. 381 C, etc. ; dmA@s AéyeoSar in one sense, opp. to TohAaxas, meovaxas, Arist. Top. 8. 3, 2; €c0Aol piv yap dmdas, mavrodamis 5& xaxot Id, Eth. N. 2.6, 14, etc. II. simply, plainly, GAX dmd@s ppacor Aesch, Supp. 464; dmd&s re ppdfovo’ (cf. dwAwort) Id. Cho, 121 ; ards elreiy Isocr, 72 E; AaAdeiy Anaxil, Neorr. 1. 23; dmAds wat dakénrws Adyay | Aa fe ,. , amos — aro. Arist. G. A. 3.6, 2. — b. openly, frankly, Isocr. 37 D, Xen. Hell. 4, 1, 37: in good faith, Dem. 328. 3, etc, :—in bad sense, amas exe to be a simpleton, Isocr. 44 A; cf. arhoos Il. c, 2. simply, absolutely, without exception, ands ddivarov Thuc. 3.45; TOv vey xarédu odde- pla dmd&s absolutely not one, none at all, Id. 7. 345; GAGs ovdé Ev . . ouvinps Philem. Incert. 40 6; 60° éorw dyaba -.dmA@s simply all the good things there are, Ar. Ach. 873; ox éuavroy tpiv dmA@s Dem. 288. 12; dmA@s Hripwra Dem. 547 (cf. xa@dnag); amA@s absolutely, Opp. to «ard 7 (relatively), Arist. Top, 2. II, 4, et passim; amA@s Bapv, kotor, padaxdr, etc., Id. Cael. 1. 4, 1, Meteor. 4. 9, 20, al.; 7d dmAas xaddy, 7d d. dyabdy, etc., Id, Eth. N. 5. 9, 9, al.; opp. to d710dy (in some particular), Id. Pol. 5. 1, 33 also strengthd. drA@s otrws, Plat. Gorg. 468 B; tiv dmAds Bixny absolute, strict justice, opp. to Tovmenés and xdpis, Soph. Fr. 709; 4 TeAcia Kat GmrA@s Kaxia Arist. Eth. N. 5. 11, 7:—Comp. dmAovorepoy Isae. 46. 32; -répws Strabo 255: Sup. dmAovorara Plat. Legg. g21 B. 3. in a word, Lat. denique, Eur. Rhes. 851, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 33, Mem. 1. 3, 2, etc. 4. generally, opp. to capas, dupiBGs, dpopévers, Arist. Pol. 8. 7, 3, al.; ws dmk@s eimeiv Ib. 3. 14, 8, Eth. N. 3. 6, 2, al. :—in bad sense, loosely, superficially, Isocr. 43 B, Arist. Metaph. 1. 5, 16, al.; ob dad. pépey not lightly, Eur. I. A. 899; admA@s nat ws Eruxe Maxim. ap. Eus. P. E. 342 D. dmhwort, Adv., as Herm. ingeniously reads for dmA@s 7 in Aesch. Cho. 121; cf, weyaAwori and v. Sturz. Opusc. p. 255. amhwrixés, 7, dv, making one, uniting, Eccl. Gmharos, ov, (thdw) not navigated, not navigable, Arist. Mirab. 105, 2, Philo 2. 108 ; dtAwra mavra hy navigation was stopped, App. Mithr. 93. Gmvews, és, (mvéw) in Anth. P. 9. 420, wip dmveds, prob. a fire not kindled by the bellows, of love. dmrvevparos, ov, (rveDua) not blown through, without wind or current of air, Arist. Probl. 15.5, 5, Theophr. C. P. 1. 8, 3, etc. G-rvetpwv, ov, without breath, life, spirit, vexpd kat dnv. Simplic. Epict. p. 11. anvevori, Ady. of dmvevoros, without breathing, (jv Arist. Probl. ro. 67, 1, de Respir. 9, 6; da. éxew to hold one’s breath, Plat. Symp. 185 D: without drawing breath, ddyous cvveipav capas Kat dmv. Dem. 328. 12; dmv. edcev, éuenlveay Antiph. Tavup. 2. 14, Alex. “YzoQ. 1. 3. II. breathlessly, anv. xeto@at Plut. 2. 642 D. Gmvevoria, 4, a holding of the breath, not breathing, Arist. Probl, 5. 9, 2-5 33-1, 3. amvevorriat, to hold the breath, Arist. Probl. 33. 13, 1. darvevarros, ov, (mvéw) breathless, dmv. nat dvavbdos Od. 5. 456, cf. Theocr. 25. 271. II. =drvedparos, rémot Theophr. C. P. 5. 12, 7-—Ady. —ras, =dnvevori (q. v.), Pseudo-Plut. 2. 844 F. Garvora, 4, want of wind, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1081: a calm, Arist. G. A. 5. 5, 6, Probl. 26. 36, 2, Theophr. C. P. 2. 7, 5. dmvoos, ov, contr. dmvous, ovy: (véa) :—without wind, with but little air, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1082, Arist. Meteor. 2. 4, 21, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, I. II. without breath, breathless, Theopomp. Com. Incert. 9- 2. lifeless, Anth. P. 7. 229, C. I. 6248. 38. without breathing or respiration, Heracl, ap. Diog. L. 8. 60, 67, Arist. H. A. 1. I1, 1. dard, Aeol. dav Sappho 50, Inscr. Myt. in C. I. 2189, cf. 4725. 5, 4727: —Prep. with Gen, only, (Skt. and Zd. apa; Lat. ab, au-, abs; Goth, and O. Norse af; A. S. of, (cf. Engl. of, off); O.H.G. aba (von), Germ. ab-— in compos.), Orig. sense, from. — [tn6: but in old Ep. the ult. was sometimes lengthd, in arsi before a liquid, 5, or the digamma; so in Att. before p. In these cases, later Poets wrote it drai, like mapat, trai, Spitzn. Vers. Her. p.52. The first syll. long in Ep. compds., such as dmovéecdat, where otherwise the word could not stand in the verse. | I. Or Puacs, the earliest, and in Hom. the prevailing sense: ni of Motion, from, away from, tccebovro vedv dro Kad kuordwv Il. 2. 208; dyew dn’ ders, ard Tpoindev, dn’ odpavder, etc., Hom.; strengthd., éxrds dvd «duotys Il. 10. 151; so in Att. with all Verbs of Motion ; also, dm’ aldvos véos dreo implying departure from life, Il. 24. 725 :—in Hom, often of warriors fighting from chariots, etc., of pev ap" trav, of 8 dad vndy., #axovro Il. 15. 386; dp’ trmwv pdpvacba Od. 9. 495 80 %) Haxn fy dg’ trmew Hat. 1. 79, cf. Ar. Lys. 679; Aapmds éorat ap" trmav on horseback, Plat. Rep. 328 A; so also, dd vedy meCouaxeiv Thue. 7. 62; & rats vavoly aipdyevos tovs tarods ard Tovraw éokonetro Xen. Hell. 6, 2, 29 :—dppdroy dro .. katéctacoy yévuy, of tears, Eur. Hec, 241 :—joined with éx, éx Kopivéou and Tod aorparomedou Plat. Theaet. 142 A, 2. of Position, away from, Sar from, pévew amd Hs addxouo Il, 2, 292 (cf. dw dvipds eivar to live apart from a man or husband, Plut. C. Gracch. 4)3 KEKpUppevos dn dXdav Od. 23.110; so, podvos dn’ Gdwv h. Hom. Merc. 193; dn bpdarpay, am’ otaros far from sight or hearing, Il. 23. 53., 18. 272+ 22. 4543 so in Att., dmd Oaddoons gxicOnoay Thuc. 1.73 avAl- (eoda dnd réiv bra Id. 6. 64; dw otxov elva Ib. 99; omeviey and puripos far from, i.e. without using the rein, Soph. O. C, goo :—in Hom. often strengthd., riA¢ dmé.., eee dwé..: so in measurement of distances, dcoy ce’ radia dd vAjs Xen. Hell. 2. 4,4, etc.; but later the numeral follows dné, mnyyas éxov dnd u' oradioy Ths Gaddaons Diod. 4. 56; ard oradlow Kk’ ris tédews Plut. Philop. 43 karearparonédevoer dd v' oradiwy, where we should say, so many stades off or away froma place, Id. Otho 11. 8. of the mind, dd @ypo0d away from, i.e. alien from, my heart, Il. 1. 562; so, dard B4gns 10. 324; 0%. . amd cKorod, vd’ amd 5 78 Od. 11. 344 i—so in Att., amd dvOpwmetou rpémov Thue. t. 76; obK amd Tporou not without reason, Plat. Rep. 470 Bs ove amd oxomod or KaLpou Id. Theaet. 179 C, 287 E; ote amd ydyns Soph. Tr. 389; ob amd mpdrymaros Dem. 701. 23; pada woAAdy dn’ édmbos éaAero Ap. Rh. 2. — aro — aroBadrw. 863. 4. in pregnant sense, with Verbs of rest, previous motion being implied, elociée. . ordo’ &¢ OdAvpmo.o amd lov Il. 14. 154; dve- Béacev .. dad mérpas oradels Eur. Tro. 523, cf. Xen. Cyr, 6. 4,18; amd Tis Evils Kepadfjs rijy cepadrjry dvadjow, i.e. taking the chaplet of my head, and placing it on his, Plat. Symp. 212 E:—also with Verbs of hang- ing, where é* is more common, and where our idiom requires upon, dyapévy Bpdxov dad peddOpov Od. 11. 378; v. ex 1. 6. 5 with the Article, where the sense of motion often disappears, of amd rOv olindiv pevyovow, i.e. of év rais oixias pet-yovow an’ abtav, Xen. Cyr. 7:5) 233 of awd tay mipyov ..émaphtovor Ib. 6. 4, 18; aipey ra dnd Tis ys Plat. Crat. 410 B; af twa ai dnd rod Gpparos Hat. 4 8; 6 ’AOnvaios 6 dd Tov arparedparos Xen. An. 7. 2, 19. 6. in par- titive sense, aia’ dad Anldos a part taken from the booty, a share of it, Od. 5.40; draipe dad rdv kadmidwy Ar. Lys. 539; dad éxardy waldo els podvos Hdt. 6. 27; éAtyou dad woAd@y Thue. 7. 87. 7. from being, instead of, davaray dd 6varas . . éwoincas Bepevixay Theocr. 15. 106. Il. Or Time, from, after, since, Hom. only in Il. 8. 54 dnd Seizvov Owphacovro, and rare in Ep., v. Spitzn. ad 1.3 cf. Hdt. I. 133; often in Prose, dd Seimvov clvar or yevécOar Id. 1. 126., 2. 78., 5. 18, etc.; dwd r@y oirww Siarovetaba Xen. Lac. 5. 8; 7d dard Touvrou or Tovde after this, Hdt. 1. 4., 2.99; dad rovrou rod xpédvov Id. 1.82, Xen. An. 7. 5,8; 7d dm’ éxeivov Luc. Tox. 25; juépp dexdry ag’ js .. Hdt. 3. 14, etc.; devrépp huépy aad ris umphovos Id. 8. 55, cf. Xen, An, 1. 7, 18, etc.; dg’ ob xpdévov Id. Cyr. 1. 2, 13; more often ap’ ob, Lat. ex quo, Hdt. 2. 44, Thuc. 1. 18, etc. ; a’ obmep Aesch. Pers. 177; dmd wadaod, awd rod mavv Gpxaiov of olden time, Thue. f. 2., 2. 15 :—also, dm’ dpxifjs Pind. P. 8. 34, etc.; dad yeveds Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 8: —dy’ écnépas from the beginning of evening, i.e. at eventide, Thuc. 7. 29; dxd mpwrov bmvov Id. 7.43; dad vovpnvias Xen. An, 5. 6, 23; yevuevos dad ris dpxfs Plut. Caes. 5: so Lat. de die; cf. Liv. 22. 40, ab hoc sermone profectus Paulus. III. Or Oriern, Cause, etc. : 1. of that from which one is born, ob« dad Spuds odd dad mérpys not sprung from oak or rock, Od. 19. 163; yéyvovrat 8 dpa taly é re kpnvewy and 7’ ddrgéwy 10. 350; so in Att., Soph. O.T. 415, O.C. 571, etc,; but sometimes dzé denotes remote, and é¢ imme- diate, descent, rods pev did Ocav, rods & ef aitay ray Ow yeyovéres Isocr. 249 B, cf. Hdt. 7. 150, Aesch. Pr. 853; tpiros dad Acds third in descent from Zeus, Plat. Rep. 391 C; of dnd yévous twos his descend- ants, Plut. Themist. 32; Mépoews dg’ aiyaros Eur. Alc. 509 :—also of the place one springs from, immo: .. torapod dd SedAqevTos ll. 2. 839, cf. 849; of dd Smdaprys Hadt. 8. 114, cf. Thuc. 1. 89, etc.; rods dad pvyias Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 5, etc.: hence, b. metaph. of things, #4AAos dnd Xapirew beauty born of the Graces, such as they give, Od. 6. 18; pndea awd OeGy Ib. 12; yada amd Bods Aesch. Pers. 611; dq’ Apov pias Id, Eum. 314; 4) dp’ tua@y tipepia Thuc. 1. 69; 6 and tov morepiav pdBos fear inspired by the enemy, stronger than 6 ray mod. péBos, Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 53+ ¢e. later, of connexion with the founder or leader of a sect, of dad TvOarydpov, of dad TWAdrwvos, etc., Plut., Luc., etc.; so also, of dad tis “Axadnulas, and Tis Sroas, etc., Ib.; and more loosely, of dd pidocopias kat Adywy philosophers and learned men, Luc. Symp. 6; of dd oxnvijs Kat Oedrpou stage players, Plut. Sull. 2; 6 dwd BovdAfs Id, Caes. 10, etc. 2. of the Material from or cf which a thing is made, awd ¢dAov memompéva Hdt. 7.65; dm’ dupanos redxew olvoy Aesch. Ag. 970, cf. Soph. Tr. 704; dd ~yhucep® pédcros Theocr. 15. 117; OpAvy dad xpords feminine of complexion, to judge by it, Id. 16. 49:—hence, orépavos dnd rardvrov éqxovra of or weighing 60 talents, Dem. 256. 24:— Kpaois dwé re THs Hdovas cnsaeaies wat dmd tis Avmns Plat. Phaedo 59 A. 3. of the Instrument from or by which a thing is done, Tods.. népvey dm’ dpyupéoro Biwio by [arrow shot from] silver bow, Il. 24.605; réfov dro xparepod ddéxovra pdadayyas 8. 279, cf. 10. 371., 11.675; even, dwd xeupds épydterOar peydda Luc. Conscr. Hist. 293 ypvdacerda drd cKerdav, xeipav, rpaxndov Xen. Lac. 5,9; % amd gipous waxy Diod. 5. 29. 4. of the Person from whom an act comes, i.e. by whom it is done, ovdev péya epyov dn’ abrov éyévero Hdt. 1.14; (arnow dnd opéav yevéoba Id. 2. 54; empaxOn dn’ abrod ovSév Thuc. 1. 17, cf. 6. 61; dad twos BAdmrecOa, dvacba, oh {ecOat Id. 7.67, Plat. Rep. 528 A, Dem., etc.:—so that dé came to be used much like id, though mostly to indicate a less direct agency, cf. €BAnT’ ..€uijs amd xeipds deovr Il. 11.675 :—so ram’ éuod, rand cov Eur. Tro. 74, Soph. O. C, 1628.—But in many Mss., dé and bd are hardly distinguishable, Cobet V. LL. 276. 5. of the Source from which life, power, etc., is sustained, (jy dm’ bAns dypins Hdt. 1. 203; dad xrhveav kal ixdtvov Ib. 216; amd wodguov Id. 5.6; am éaxlorav nuarov Xen. Mem. 1. 2,14; dad THs dryopas Id, An. 6. 1, 1; Tpepe 70 vaurixdy and r&v vhoow Id. Hell. 4. 8,9, cf. Thuc. 1.99; dd roy Kowa mAovreiv Ar. Pl. 569, cf. Dem. 739. 21; Grd puxpay evvous.. yevévnoa Ar. Eq. 788, cf. Dem, 260.11; dg’ dpas épydfecPar quaestum corpore facere, Plut. Timol. 14. 6. of the Cause, Means, or Occasion from, by, or because of which a thing is done, amd Tovrov Kpiompdcwmov té&yakua Tov Aws movedor Hat. 2. 42; Gad twos érai- veioOat, Oavpatecbat, wpedrcioOat, Thuc. 2. 25., 6.12, Xen. Cyr. I. 1, 2; dnd trav fvppopdy SiaBdrdeadae Thuc. 5.17; Thy émavupiay exe dnd Twos Id, 1. 46; dvopa éyévero ané twos Xen, Cyr. 6. 2, 43 dm’ abray Tav Epyov upivew Dem. 25. fin.; dad rod md@ous in consequence of .., Thuc. 4. 30; Brdmrev twa dnd twos Id. 7. 29: even, Tpbmaov dnd Tivos elorhKer on occasion of his defeat, Dem. 444. 6: 50, TARHOY ovo" da ebrédpou ppevds Aesch. Ag. 1302, cf. 1643; Gd dxaroocdyns by reason of it, Hdt. 7. 164; dd rev abrdv Anupatov moved by, for the same Profits, Dem. 38. 9, etc.; for dcov dmd Bohs evexa, y. sub Evexa ‘4 175 —hence in many half adverbial usages, dad gmovbfs in earnest, eagerly, Il. 7. 3593 amd rod taou, dnd ris tons, or dx’ tons, equally, Thuc. ©. 99, 15, Dem., etc.; dad dyrimdAov mapackevfjs Thuc. 1. 91; dad rod mpo- pavois openly, Id. 1. 35 ; dd rod ebOéos, = ebOéas, etc.; xd Tod abro- Harov of free-will, Plat. Prot. 323 C:—so also, dad yAdoons by word of mouth, Hdt. 1. 123, (but also, from hearsay, Aesch. Ag. 813); dnd ordparos Plat. Theaet. 142 D; dm’ aga) at sight, Lys. 147. 32; amd xetpds (v. sub Aoylfouat) ; mevOonat 8 da’ dupdrow véorov Aesch, Ag. 988; dppudrav amo by the evidence of my eyes, Eur. Med. 216; da’ opOijs Kai dixalas Yuyxis Dem. 325. 15, etc:—dwd Tod xvayod dpyovras kadliorac@a Xen, Mem, 1. 2, 9; Tprnpdpxovs aipetobat dxd THs ovolas Dem. 262. 2:—d@’ éavrod from oneself, of one’s own accord, Thuc., etc.; dd cuvOjparos, dnd maparyyéAparos by agreement, by word of command, Hdt. 5.74, Thuc. 8. 99; dd odAmyyos by sound of trumpet, Xen. Eq. Mag. 3, 12. 7. of the Object spoken of, ra dad rijs vjgou oixéra éori the things told from or of the island. ., Hat. 4. 195, cf. 54, 53+ 7- 195 :—for Il. 22. 126, v. sub dpis. B. as ADVERB, far away: but almost always with Verbs in tmesi, as Il. 5. 214, etc., and sometimes in Prose, as Hdt. 8. 89. C. in Compos.: 1. from, asunder, as dmodtw, dmoréyvw: and hence away, off, as dmoBddAw, dnoBaiyw; removal of an accusation, as droAoyéopar, dmoynpiCouat. 2. finishing off, completing, dmep- yaCouat, dnavipsa, dxavOpani(w, dmoyAavnde. 3. ceasing from, leaving off, as dnadyéw, droxndedw, drodopipopat, droéw, dmavblgw, adpuBpiCw. 4. back again, as dmodtémpu, dmokapBdvw, dardémdous : also in full, or what is one’s own, as dnéxw, drokapBavw :—but often it only strengthens the sense of the simple, v. Herm. Soph. Aj. 216. 5. by way of abuse, as in dmoxadéw. 6. almost =a priv. ; sometimes with Verbs, as dwavidw, dmaryopevw; more freq. with Adjectives, as dmoxphyaros, anéripos, dndacros, dardpovos. D. amo, by anastroph. for dé, when it follows its Noun, as dupdrow do Soph. El. 1231, etc.; never so in Prose, 2. dro for dmeori, Timocreon 9 Bgk. a&mroayvéw, = droxabaipw, Hesych, G@rroatvupat, v. daivupar. Groatptopar, post. for dgarpéopar, Il. 1. 275. dmrotidicow, aor. 1 dronpica, to draw off, Euphor. 72. aréBa, v. sub droBaive, dmroPabilw, fut. Att. .@, to go away, oixade Ar. Fr. 400. sro-B48pa, Ion. -Bd0pn, %, a ladder for disembarking, a gangway, Hat. 9. 98, Soph. Fr. 364, Thuc. 4. 12. II. acc. to Suid., =Adoavor 1. dmoBatve: fut. -Byooua, with Ep. aor. 1 -eBfeero (Il. 2. 35): aor. 2 dweBny : pf. dwoBéBnxa ;—in these tenses intr. (though the pres. is not used by Hom.) To step off from a place, vnds da. to alight or dis- embark from a ship, Od. 13. 281; dnd rv vedy, awd THY molay Hat. 5. 86., 4. 110; é« ry vedy Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 12; absol. to disembark, Hdt. 2. 29, Thuc,, etc.; da. és xwpnv Hat. 7. 8, 2, cf, Eur. Fr. 700, Thuc. 4. 9, Lys. 192. 30; és thy yhv Thue. I, 100:—so, é immo dn. to dismount from a chariot, Il. 3. 265; trmwy-17. 480; absol., 11.618 ; but in Dem. 1408. 12, 70 doBaivew seems to be the ars desultorum, v. dmoBarns :—generally, dBdrav droBds having slipped off ground on which none should step, Soph. O. C. 166. 2. to go away, depart, Il. 1. 428., 5.133, Att.; dméBn mpds paxpdy “Odvpmoy 24. 468; pds ddpara, kard bGpa Od. 4. 657, 715; mer’ a@avdrous Il. 21. 298: —c. gen., dm, mediov Eur. Hec. 1423 dard rijs parvns Xen, Hipparch. 1, 16 :—of death, dd 5¢ POinevoe BeBGor Eur. Andr. 1021; of hopes, fo fail, come to naught, Id. Bacch. goog. IL. of events, do isswe or result from, Ta Eiedhe dmoBnoecbat ard Tis waxns Hdt. 9. 66; ravav~ tia dwéBy resulted, Plat. Phil, 39 A, cf. Legg. 782 E; 8 7 dmoBhoera Id, Prot. 318 A, etc.:—7d dwoBaivor, contr. rawoBaivoy, the issue, event, Hat. 2. 82, etc. ; rd droBalvovra, ra dwoBavra the results, Thuc. 1. 83., 2, 87, etc.; 7a dwoBnodpeva the probable results, Id. 3. 38. 2. mostly with an Adv. or other qualifying phrase, oxoméew . . Tv TeXEvTIY Kp droBnoera how it will turn out, issue, Hdt. 1. 3; dxéBn rijmep ime Ib. 86; dm, xard 7d éév Ib, 973 dm. mapa béfav, dm. ToLwdTo Id. 8. 4., 7. 23; Todvd dm, ré5€ mpaypa Eur. Med. 1419, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. §, 13; ovdiy are .. ds mpooedéexeTo anéBaivey Thuc. 4. 104, cf. 3. 26; mas % pnun Sone? tpiv dwoBjva; Andoc. 17. 12. 3. absol. to turn out well, succeed, 4 indaxeots dméBn Thuc. 4. 39, cf. 5.14; of dreams, to turn out irue, Arist. Divin. per Somn. 1, 13. 4. so of persons, with an Adj. to turn out, end by being, prove to be so and so, dm. xowvol to prove impartial, Thuc. 3. 53; dm. xeipous Plat. Legg. 952 B; ppevi- tixot am. Hipp. Coac. 184; so, of a wound, idoipoy dz, Plat. Legg, 878 Cc. b. also with eis.., dar. els Ta mwodurixd roLodro to prove fit for public affairs, Id. Symp. 192 A; és dAa@evdy dvdp’ dr. Theocr. 13. 15 — and, c. of conditions, etc., dwéBn és pouvapxiny things ended in a monarchy, Hdt, 3.82; els éy réAcov Plat. Rep. 425 C. 5, in Plat. Criti, 112 A, of Space, pé-yeOos ev jv mpds rov “Hpidavdv amoBeBnxvia running out, reaching, extending to..; TO dmoBeBnedri wodi with the hind foot, opp. to 7@ mpoBeByxd71, Arist. Incess. An. 4, 9. B. Causal, in aor, 1 dméBnoa, to make to dismount, disembark, land, (in which sense drof:Ba(w serves as pres.), dw. orpariqy Hat. 5. 63., 6. 107; és ry Vurrédccay Id. 8. 95. II. hence, in Pass., 7d droBacvé- pevoy oxédos, a leg put out so as not to bear the weight of the body, opp. to troBawépevov stood upon, Hipp. Art. 819, cf. Mochl. 852, fin. amoBéddw, fut. -Bada, to throw off, dwd Be xAaivay Padre Il. 2. 183, cf. 21. 51; ¢. gen. to throw off from, ard ppovridos aos . . Badciv Aesch. Ag. 165; dm. dupdrav tmvoy Eur. Bacch. 692 :—Med. to throw off from oneself, cast off, Svvayiv Bacidews Andoc, 27. 12. 2. to throw away, h. Hom. Merc, 388, Hat. 3. 40, etc.; dm. viv donléa Ar. y 176 Vesp. 23, etc., Andoc. 10. 22, Lys. 117. 5, efc.; rdv dvdpa tov mapds dm. to reject him, Eur. Tro. 663, cf. Plat. Theaet. 151 C, etc.; dm. 7d xépara, Tas émAds, etc., to cast or shed, Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 37-, 8. 23, al.:—Med., Plat. Legg. 802 B; obdels dm. Excoy throws goods overboard, Arist. Eth. N. 3-1,53 dm. rov gidgovra Theocr, 11, 19 :—Pass., dwoBAndels ris Tu- pavvidos Plut. Dion. c, Brut. Comp. 3; cf. éwéBAnros :—to throw away, sell - cheap, <2. Ls “ay 2 3. to it Lat. jacturam facere rei, Thv Tupavvi t. 1.60; Ta marp@a, tov orparov, Kepan: Id. 3. 53., 8. 65, al. ; Broray Soph. Fr. 520; Tv ahciay: Ar. tes 84, me, etc.; 7a dvra Antipho 115. 2 ps etc.; opp. to «rado@ar, Isocr. 128 A, Arist. Pol. 4. 4, 245; dam, dégav, téxvqv Id. de An. 3. 3,15, Metaph. 8. 3, 3, al.; dm. 7. bd Tivos Xen, Symp. 4, 32; so of persons, da, moAAods TOY orpariwrav Thuc. 4.7; Tov evepyéray Eur. H. F. 878. 4. to throw back, relegate, Plat. Legg. 630 D. GréBappo, 74, a tincture or infusion, Schol. Nic. Al. 51. dmoBatrife, to unbaptize, make one as though unbaptized, Theod. Stud. II. Med. #o rise after sinking, emerge, Byz. GroBatrw, fut. yo, to dip quite or entirely, éwvrdv Hat. 2. 47; és Thy Kidka dxwdxea Id. 4. 70; els worapdy ra ywyvdpeva Arist. Pol. 7. 17, 33 AlOov év oiv Id. H. A.8. 29, 3; papydxw tods dicrods Id. Mirab. 141 ;—metaph,, dw. riyy Aéfw eis vody Plut. Phoc. 5 :—Pass., boris 2v Gdpp ..dmeBapOn Ar. Fr. 366; mepicrepds dwoBeBappévas els pipov Alex. Eigow. 1. 2. da. tdwp to draw water, LXx (2 Macc. 1. 21). dmroBaiotvets, ews, 6, an ex-king, A.B, 1089. dréBiors, ews, 4, (dmoBaivw) a stepping off, disembarking, and Tov veayv és rérov Thuc. 3. 103, etc.; 4 vavriKi) ém GAAous andBaats land- ing from ships in the face .of an enemy, Id, 4. 10; absol., wovefoOar drd- Baow to disembark, land, Thuc. 2. 26; els réwov Id. 3.115; am. éort a landing is possible, Id, 4. 13., 6. 75; ov« éxei dméBaow does not admit of landing, or has no landing-place, Id. 4.8; &v dwoBace Tis yas= droBavres és Thy viv, Id. 1. 108; mavraxn 7 dwoBacas joav landing- places, Id. 6. 75. 2. in Polyb. 8. 6, 4 @& dmoBdcews icoipis ro tetxet, of a ladder, equal in height to the wall, when planted at the proper distance from its foot, i.e. (as appears from g. 19, 6) about one- sixth longer than the height of the wall, II. a way off, escape, Plut. Solon 14. III. a result, completion, rav eipnuévew Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2. 4, Luc. Disp. c. Hes. 6. amoBacrdfw, fut. dow, to carry away or off, Cyrill. droBirhpios, 5, of Zeus, as protector of persons landing, Arr. An. 1. 2 vp II. ra dm. (sc. iepd), offerings made on landing, Steph. B. droBarns [a], ov, 5, one that dismounts; but in usage, one who rode several horses leaping from one to the other, Lat. desultor, dmoBérny dyovicac0a Plut. Phoc. 20: see the description in h. Hom. Ap..231 sq., Dion. H. 7. 73; cf. A. B. 198, 426, E. M. 124. 31, Suid. & TuKOs, 7, Ov, of or for an dmoBarns, Suid., E. M. & Urropa, Dep. to abominate, reject with abhorrence, Walz Rhett. I. 492, I. Gr-oBeXilw, to take off the spit, Sotad. ap. Ath. 293 B, sqq. & parife, to cast from one’s rank or station, degrade, Lat. dejicere de gradu, Plut. 5. p. 657 ed. Wyttenb. sanPhace, to cough up, Hipp. Aph. 1253, Progn. 45; fut. -Bhfopa, Id, 607. 29. dmopudtopan, Dep. to force away, force back, 7) bypév Arist. Incess, An. 17, 6; 70 xwddoy Id. Probl. 11. 35, cf. G. A. 2. 4, 5, Meteor. 2. 8, 38 :—Pass. to be forced away or back, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 24, Arist. Meteor. 2.6, 15; dm. els éAdrrw rémov to be forced into.., Ib. 2. 8, 11. = to force, treat with violence, twa, Polyb. 16. 24, 5, al. II. absol. to use force, Xen. Cyt. 3. 1, 19, Arist. Meteor. 2. 6, 18, al.: to force its way, Ib. 1.13, 26,—A form —PBréopat occurs in Hipp. 458.9; and an Act. ‘# in Scholl. a ‘o, Causal of dmoBatva (y. signf. 11), to make to get off, esp. from a ship, to disembark, put on shore, Twa. Thuc. 6. 97, etc. ; Twa els témov Hat. 8. 76, Plat. Gorg. 511 E; és tiv modeplay dwoBiBafaw roy 68a Ar. Vesp. 1163; da. teva Sor adrds KeAevor Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 3— so in Med., dmoBiBacacbal Twas and Tv vedy to cause them to be put on shore, Hat. 9. 32, cf. 8. 76. , 6, a disembarkation, Iambl. V. Pyth. 17. _ dro} , fut. —Bpwow, to eat off, Anth. P. 7. 294, in aor. pass., xelpas dnoBpwhévra.. M GrroBtée, fut, dcopat, to cease to live, Philostr. 368; dmeBiw C. 1.9355: —later also -BudaKxw, Hermias in Plat. arroBiwors, ews, 7, a ceasing to live, departure, death, Plut. 2. 389 A, C. I, 4253, al. :—hence doBisorpos, ov, at or belonging to death, Byz. Suahiers, fut. yw, to ruin utterly, Pind. N. 7. 87 (as Herm. rightly reads), Plat. Legg. 795 D:—Pass., dwoBdapOjva pidov to be robbed of a friend, Soph. Aj. 941; cf. BAdmrw I. 2. j amoPdacrdve, fut.-BAaorHow, to shoot forth from, spring from, dmé- Bdracrov parpos wives Soph. O.C. 533, cf. Plut. 2. 954 C. &moBhdornpa,74,a shoot, scion, Plat. Symp. 208 B, Theophr.C.P. 1.20, 1. amoBAdornors, ews, 4, a shooting forth, growth, vedpwv Hipp. Art. 810. améPheppa, 74, a steadfast gaze, Phryn, Com. Incert. 19. dmroBXerréov, verb. Adj. one must Jook at, attend toa thing, Galen, arbBremros, ov, gazed on by all, admired, like mepiBAentos, Eur. Hec. 355, cf. Valck, Phoen, 554. : ; moPAme, fut. -—BrAépopat, Luc.Somn. 12, etc.: pf. -BeBAepa Antip. ap. Stob. 428. 10: Med., pres, Luc. V. H. 2.47 : aor., Schol, Od. 12, 247: Pass., Ar. Eccl, 726. To look away from all other objects at one, to look or gaze steadfastly, és éué Hat. 7. 1353 eis ce Eur. Andr. 246, cf. Plat. Charm. 162 B, al.; és derds Eur. Hipp. 1206; és play ruxny dm. Id. Hel. 267; mpds 7d ‘Hpaiov Hat. 9. 61, cf. Plat. Rep. 431 Bs mpés J 365. ar Baypa — amoBduros. iva Id. Phaedo 115 C, Phaedr. 234 D, al. 2. to look to, pay at- tention to, regard, és 70 waxdv Ar. Ran. 1171; els 7a xowvd Eur. Supp. 422; eis Ta mpaypara an. gpavdws éxovra Dem, 26. 17; «ls 70 Képdos pévov Demetr. Incert. 2; éni 71 Plat. Phil. 61D; ward re Luc. D. Mort. 18.1; mpés re Plat. Rep. 477C, al.; «ls a mpdypara Kat mpds rods Adyous am. Dem. 28. 3; also c. acc.s Theophr. de Vertig. 8, Plut., etc. 3. of a place, to look, face in a particular direction, mpos dddv Dio C. 76. 11; ‘Phyov mpoxods Anth. P. 9. 283. 4. to look upon with love, wonder or admiration, /ook at as a model, pattern, authority, Lat. observare, suspicere, c.acc., ob xpi) .. héyav OABoy dar. Soph. Fr. 520; dar. mwa Luc. Vit. Auct. 10; but more commonly with a Prep., eis €u’ “EAAds ..dm, Eur, I, A. 1378; 4 07) warpis eis o@ dw, Xen. Hell. 6.1, 8, cf. Thue. 3. 58; so, dm. mpés twa Eur. I, T. 928, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 30; of a vain person, dm. eis Ti éavrijs oxtav Ib. 2. 1, 22; of entire depend- ence on another, Plat. Phaedr. 239 B; of a dog watching its masters eye, Xen. An. 7. 2, 33: to look longingly, és rbv dypév Ar. Ach. 32:—Pass. to be looked up to, Ar. Eccl.726; ws ebdaipwy da. Luc. Nigr.13, cf. Somn. se? 5. és roudvd dropréas pdvov tpowatoy abrod orncopa: with a single look, Eur. Andr. 762. II. to look away, Dio Chrys. p. 272. Gr6Breipts, ews, 7, of a place, dm. Exe mpos Béppay to look towards .. , Geop. 2. 3, 7. anopAyna. 76, anything cast away, Theodot. V. T., Schol. Ar. Eq. 412. ar6BAqors, ews, },a throwing out; in Eust.1767.59 prob.an ejaculation. GmroBAnréos, a, ov, verb, Adj. to be thrown away, rejected, Plat. Rep. 387 B, Luc. Hermot. 18. amoBAntixés, 7, dv, apt to throw off, kaprav Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 3. GaréBAnTOS, ov, to be thrown away or aside, as worthless, obra dwdBAnT tart Gedy Epixvdéa SHpa. Il. 3.65; oro dwéBAnTov eros Egoerat 2. 361; ylyaprov Simon. gI, etc.:—so in late Prose, as Luc. Tox. 37, Plut. 2.821 A: capable of being lost, Diog. L. 7. 127. 2. in Eccl. excommunicated. GmoBAlirrw, fut. -BAlcw [Tt]: to cut out the comb from the hive: hence to steal away, carry off, 6 8 dwéBrce Bolpariéy pov Ar. Av. 498 :—aor. med, dmeBAloaro prob. |. in Anth. P. 7. 34.—Cf. Ruhnk. Tim. s.v. BAlr- tev, and v. imoBXicow. aroPrvlo, fut. ow, to spirt out, dw. oivov to spirt out some wine, Il. 9. 491; cf. Archil. 32, and v. mapaBrv(w. II. intr. to flow forth, anyat am. rev dpdy Philostr. 775. ; dmoBAvw, =foreg., Orph. Arg. 1066 :—also in Byz., -BAvordve. & aokw, to go away, Ap. Rh. 3. 1143. GaroBoXevs, 5, one who throws away, Straw Plat. Legg. 944 'B. aroBoan, jis, 7, a throwing away, e.g. dtd Plat. Legg. 943 E, sq.: in Gramm. the dropping of a letter, 2. a losing, loss, Lat. jactura, opp. to KTHots, xpnuarow Plat. Lach. 195E, Arist., etc.; émornuns Plat. Phaedo 75 E, cf. Euphro’Ad. 1. 27; in pl., rds ray Kaka am, Arist. Rhet.1. 6, 4. GmroBohpatos, ov, apt to throw away, c. gen., Tav bmAwy Ar. Pax 678. 2. pass. usually thrown away, worthless, Gloss. é pat, Pass., of Io, to become a cow, Eust. 278. 32. a&moBookéw, =sq., E. M. 120. 5. te Dep. to feed upon, kapéy Ar. Av. 750, 1066. GmoBovKodé, to lead astray, as cattle, Bods és Thy iSlay ayéAny Longus I. 13 :—Pass. to stray, Jo. Chr. 2. to let stray, to lose (as a bad shepherd does his sheep), yaplev yap «i. .77) Ovyarpt Tov maida amoBou- Korhoarp ..if I were to lose my daughter her son, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 13, cf, Luc. Bis Acc. 13 :—Pass. to stray, lose one’s way, Id. Navig. 4. to beguile, soothe, Id. Amor. 16: to lead astray, seduce, Eccl. A&moBouKsdnpa, aros, 75, a decoy; a delusion, Damasc. G&troBouxolile, fut. icw, =droBovkohéw, Byz. aréBpacpa, 76, that which is thrown off, scum, etc., Suid. amoBpacpés, 5, a throwing off scum, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 103. GmoBpdoosw, Att. —rre, Poll. 6, QI: mostly in aor. —€Bptioa :—to throw out froth, like boiling water, and metaph. to shake, sift out the bran from the meal, Call. Fr. 232 :—Pass. to bubble or spirt out, Hipp. 248. 33.— Cf. Ruhnk, Tim. s. v. Bpd(w. II. intr. ¢o cease to boil, Lat. defervescere; Alciphro 1. 23. améBpeypa, aros, 74, an infusion, Strabo 776, Aretae, Cur. M. Ac. 1. I, Plut. 2, 614 B. arroBpéexa, fut. fw, to steep well, soak, Theophr.C.P. 2.5, 5: metaph., 77)v ae els 03 ee, “a Stob. 218. 2, cf. Suid. s, v. ’AprororeAns. ass., aor. part.—Bpex Geis, Theophr. H. P. 5.9, 5; —Bpayels, Diosc. 1.151. GmroBpito, fut. fw, to go off to sleep, go iad’ asleep,-O8. 9.151. oat Theocr. Ep. 21; imvoy dm. Call. Ep. 17. GroBpdtat, aor. of *aroBpdxw, to swallow, gulp down part of a thing (v, sub dvaBpdgee, naraBpdgee), v.1. Anth. P. 7, 506. srepeenst %, distillation by infusion, Diosc. 1. 53. GroBpoyxSifw, fut. tow, to gulp down, Ar, Fr. 31. a&roBpoxilw, fut. low, to bind tight, Archigen. :—hence verb. Adj. dro- Bpoxvoréov, Oribas. ap. Coch. 157 :—Subst. GroBpoxicpés, 6, Antyll. in Oribas. 56, Mai. II. 40 strangle, Anth, P. 9g. 410. aroBptxw [i], to bite off, eat greedily of, rav xpe@y (partit. gen.) Eubul. Kaymva. 4; absol. to bite in pieces, Archipp. TIA, 2 ;—in Anth. P, 7. 506, 8, Planud. gave dwéBpugev (for ~€Bpogev). amoBptw, to sprout, shoot out, Byz. aréBpwors, ews, 7, a devouring, iption, mupds Eus. D. E. 29 D:—also dréBpwpa, 76, something devoured, Byz. GmroBvw, fut. Yow [0], to stop quite up, Clem. Al, 73 :—fut. med. (in pass. sense), droBvcerai co... Ta phuara will be stopped, Ar. (Fr. 1 Dind.) as corrected by Bgk. Com. Fr. 2. 1035 :—Adj. anéBuoros, ov, hidden, hushed-up, Byz. GmoBopios, ov, far from an altar, godless, f J f Kvrdwy Eur, Cycl: II. in -Eust, 1720, 28, literally, not offered on an altar. « b) , BJ , aroyatos — atodakve, G&méyatos, v. drd-yetos. amoyaréw, to make into land, Heraclid. p. 439 ed. Gale, Galen. :—Pass. (in form dtoyedopar) to be converted into earth, Philo 2. 508. Groydidaktilw, to wean from the mother’s milk, Diphil. Suv. 2:—hence _verb, Adj., -kturréov, one must wean, Medic. :—and Subst., -topds, 6, a weaning, Hipp., or —Ktiots, ews, , Theod. Stud, droyiAaxréopat, Pass. to become milky, Antyll. ap. Matth. 52. aroyaAnvidopat, Pass. 20 become calm, Democr. in Fabric. Bibl. Gr. 4,335. Grrdyevos, ov, (yf) from land, coming off land, dvepo., mvedpa Arist. Mund. 4, 10, Meteor. 2. 5, 18:—1 dmoyela (sc. atpa) a land-breeze, Arist. Probl. 26. 5; but ai dmoyéat Ib. 40; also ra dwdyea, Ib. 26. 4, cf. Lob. Paral. 473. 2. dndé-yatoy or amé-yecov, 76, a mooring cable, Polyb. 33. 7, 6, Luc. V. H. 1. 42, etc.; but perh. daéyvov is the true form, as in Béckh’s Urkunden p, 162, and restored by Dind. from Mss, in Poll. 1. 93, 104. Il. far from the earth, Plut. 2. 933 B, Luc. Lexiph. 15: 70 dm. (sc. didornwa), in Astronomy, a planet's greatest distance from the earth, its apogee, Ptolem. Groyersw, to make to jut out like a cornice or coping (yetcor), dpptot dx. 7a imep Tov duparav Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 6 :—Pass. to jut out like a cornice, Arist. G. A. 5. 2, 8. . drroyelowpa, 7d, a cornice, coping, Arist. P. A. 2. 15, 1. dmoyepifopat, Pass., of a ship, to discharge her ctrgo, Dion. H. 3. 44. Groyépw, to unburden, discharge, Hesych. ‘ Grroyévects, ews, 4, opp. to yéveots, a decease, Porph. Antr. Nymph. 31. amoyevvdw, to engender, Hipp. 458; da. ducpévecav Demad. 180. 18. droyéwnpa, 74, a scion, offspring, Tim. Locr. 97 E, Acl. N. A. 15. 8. Gmroyévvycts, ews, %, generation, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10, 105 :—daro- yevvitwp, opos, 6, Dion. Ar. améyeos, ov, v. sub dmd-yetos. Grroyevopat, Med. to take a taste of a thing, twos Plat. Rep. 354 A, Theaet. 157 C, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 4; éxdorov puxpdy da. Eubul. Kay. 4. “II. Act. droyedw to give one a taste of, Anth. P. 4. 3 (39); opp. to dwonAnpéw, Hdt. (Med.) ap. Matth. p. 78. lata toe to bank off, fence with dykes, iv Méugw Hat. 2.99; cf. yepupa. aroynpackw, to grow old, Theogn. 819, Hipp. Aph. 1245 ; dmoynpds, part. aor. (vy. s. -ynpdoxw), probs 1. Alex. Incert. 15; but dweynpaca Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 6; of vines, aca 5é.a.. . dwoynpdoxavt: fail from old age, Tab. Heracl, in C. I. 5774. 170. Groyiyvopat, Ion. and in late Att. —yivopat: fut. —yerfoopa: :—to be away from, have no part in, rijs uaxns Hdt. 9. 69; Tav dpaprnyudray Thuc. 1, 39. II. absol, to be taken away, opp. to mpooyiyvopat, Plat. Tim, 82 B, Legg. 850 A; dmeylyvero ovdéy .., mpoceyiyvero dé Thuc, 2.98: generally, to be away, absent, Antipho 118. 21, Plat. Phaedo 69 B, Dem. 98. 24; dmé tivos Aeschin. 44. 42: of diseases, opp. to mpooninrw, Hipp. 302. 33. 2. esp. of death, dw. é« trav olxi@v to depart from the house, die out of it, Hdt. 2.85; dmoyevéoGa: alone, to be dead, Ib. 136, Thuc. 5. 74; of droyevduevor the dead, Thuc. 2. 34; 6 torarov aici dm. he who died last, Hdt. 6. 58; 6 dmoyivopevos one who is dying, Id. 5. 4, Thuc. 2. 51, cf. Hdt. 3. 111. 3. to fall away, be lost, ar, ard obdtv rod orparod Thuc. 2. 98; opp. to éx- Bracravw, Paus. 5. 12, I. IIL. to arrive at, dm. Swdexaratos Hipp. 1122 E. IV. to turn out, become, Lat. evado, oxdnpds am. Ib. G; vwOpot am. Id. Prorrh. 77. V. dm. 70 txrov pépos eis Tpi- xas wat alya goes into, is consumed in forming .., Arist. H. A. 8. 6, 5. dmoytyveokw, Ion. and in late Att. -yiv@oKw: fut. -yrdoopar :—to depart from a judgment, give up a design or intention of doing, Tod (v.1. 70) paxeoOa Xen. An. I. 7, 19, cf. Polyb. 1. 29, 5, etc. ; dm. 70 moped- eo@a Xen. Hell. 7. 5, 7; da. dime Plut. Anton. 34, cf. Thes. 6; dm. #7) BonOeiy to resolve not to help, Dem. 193. 5. II. c. gen. rei, to despair of, Tijs EAevOepias Lys. 195. 7; ovdevds xpi) mpaypaTos bAws droyvavat Menand. Avon. 5 :—absol. to despair, Dem. 37. 28., 52. 16 (where some Mss. supply éavr@v), Babr. 43. 18; and c. inf., alpnoew az. Arr. An. 3. 20, 4, Luc., etc. 2. c. acc, to give up as hopeless or desperate, Tiv owrnplay Arist. Eth. N. 3.6, 11; 7ds mpeoBetas Polyb. 5. I, 5, al.; 7iv éAmida, thy miory, etc., Id. 2.35, 1, etc.; dm, Tt awd Tov mapévyrwv App. Hisp. 37: so, c. acc. pers., Dem. 69. fin.; am. abrév Polyb. 22. 9, 14:—Pass. fo be so given up, Dem. 358. 13; éAmis Dion. H. 5. 15; €AevGepia Luc. Tyrannic. 6; dmeyvwopévos desperate, Polyb. 30.8, 3; bd ray larpay dm. to be despaired of .. , Plut. Pericl.13: and Ady. -vws, in despair, Id, Nic. 21. b. to renounce, reject, Tt Hipp. 20. 145 Tiva Dio C. 73. 15. IIT. as law-term, fo refuse to re- ceive an accusation, reject, ypaphv, évdegiw Dem. 605. 15., 1327. 8: hence, 2. dm. twos (sc. déxny vel ypapyy) to reject the charge brought against a man, i.e. acquit him, opp. to KarayvyvwoKey Twos, Dem. 1020. 14, cf, Aeschin. 29. 6, etc.; da. ri Tivos Isae, 54. 20; soc. inf., dw. Tivds py adixeiv to acquit him of wrong, Lys. 95. 4:—but also, 3. dm. (sc. rijs Bixns vel ypapijs) to judge one free from the accusation, fo acguit him, Dem. 539. 3; ov« dwéyva Tijs dinns, followed by warayvavar, Id. 913. 22, sqq. Re a0 fut. Row, (GyKos) to swell up, Hipp. 517. 28. Gmoyhavkdopat, Pass. o suffer from yAatxwpa, of the eyes, Plut. Timol. 37; "AweyAavewpévos a play of Alexis (Com. Gr. 3. p. 389). dmoyAavkwors, ews, }, the growing of a yavewpa, Diosc. 1. 64. drroyAdopat, Med. to scrape off from oneself, obliterate, rov dvdpa . . dreyhaydauny Com. Anon, 96, cf. Eust. 1504. 21. : GaroyAouros, ov, with small rump, Lat. depygis, Suid, s.v. Aiorrot. ‘ daroyhixatvw, fut. dv, to sweeten, Diod. I. 40; dreyAueacpévos Diphil. Siphn, ap. Ath. 55 E. dmoyAton, 7), a place scraped bare, Medic. & 45°. 177 droyhipe [i], fut. Yo, to scrape or peel off, Aretae. Cur. M, Diut. 1. 2, Alciphro 3. 60. ; droyhwrrifopat, Pass. to be deprived of tongue, Luc. Lexiph. 15. dméyvora, %}, (dmoyyvione) despair, rod xpareiy Thuc. 3. 85. dmroyvapwv, ov, of horses, =dyvapwv, Acroyva@pov Hesych., Suid. Gmroyvwotpiixéw, strengthd, for yworpayéw, Hipp. 1292. 50. aréyvaois, ews, },=ddyvora, rod Biov Dion. H. 1. 81, Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 2. 2, Luc. Somn. 17. amoyvworéov, verb. Adj. one must give up in despair, tdnidas Philo 1. 455. 2. one must despair of, twds Synes. 15.4 C. : aro , 00, 6,=amoyyvioKwv, a desperate man, Hesych, droyvwortkas, Adv. in a desperate way, as in a hopeless case, Arr. Epict. 3. 1,24. The Adj. -txds, 4, dv, is found in Jo. Damasc. aroyopsw, = droyeuicw, Epiphan, Grroyoppba, to un-nail, i.e. take to pieces, Nicet. Ann. 210 C. Gmroyovn, 7}, =dmoyévynua, issue, posterity, Gloss. 7 Géyovos, ov, born or descended from, Lat. oriundus, TAadxou obte 71 da. tort has no descendant, Hat. 6. 86, 4: in pl. descendants, 1d. 1. 7., 4. 148,al., Thuc. 1.101; adrac yap dmé-yovor real; thy offspring? Soph. O.C. 534 :—the degrees are marked by numbers, daéy. Tpiros, Térapros, etc. Gmoypatl, to skim off, dppov yadaxros Schol. Nic. Al. 91. 3 drroypadeds, éws, 6, a registrar, C.1. (add.) 4944, Schol. Plat. IT. in Synes. 122 D, prob. an informer, spy. ; dmoypipy, }, a writing off: a register, list, of lands or property, Plat. Legg. 745 D, 850 C, Dem., etc. ; of the mevrnxoaroadya Id. 909. 105 dm, ris obolas C, 1. 123.14; éppBov Ib. (add.) 1997 C:-—a list of moneys claimed by the state, but held by a private person, Lys. 148. 25, Dem. 467. 6, etc.; cf. Dict. of Antiqq. 2. a register of persons liable to taxation, the Rom. census, Ev. Luc. 2.2; Thv am. TOY xpnua- Tav moeicbar=rovs pdpovs réocew, Plut. Aristid, 241; a roll of sol- diers, Polyb. 2. 23, 9 :—and perhaps hence, in Byz., a tax. 3. generally, 2g ooypagiis déye from a written list, Sotad. "Eyed. 1. 35. If, as Att. law-term, the copy of a declaration made before a magistrate, a deposition, Lys, 114. 30., 181. 23, Lex ap. Dem. 941. 14; moteioba: dr. =droypapev, Dem. 1246. 4; Twos Kata Tivos Andoc. 4. 19; cf. Harpocr. s, v., Att. Process, p. 254, sq. ardypidos, ov, copied :—as Subst., d., 6, a copy, Dion, H. de Isae. 11, Diog. L. 6.84; also dwéypapor, 74, Cic. Att. 12. 52, 3. aroypadw [a], fut. yw, to write off, cofy, and in Med, to have a thing copied, to have a copy made of, rT Plat. Charm: 156A, Plut. 2. 221 B: to translate, évépara Plat. Criti. 113 B. II. t6 enter in a list, register, €Ovos ev Exacrov dméypapov of ypayparicral Hat. 7. 100; in Med. to have names registered by others, Id. 5. 29:—Pass, to be registered, mapd Tois dpxovar Plat. Legg. 914 C, cf. Menand.-Kexp. 1; oes tov dpxovra Isae, 60. 34: cf. cvvamoypaopat, 2. Med. also to register for one’s own use, Ta €rea Hat. 2. 145., 3. 136, Plat., etc. 3. Med. also to give in one’s name, enlist oneself, Lys. 172.1; mpos Tov raglapxor els ae rag Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 18; eeort Tots d:o- ypapapévors exxAnora fey Arist. Pol. 4,13, 3; dm. fumedTopdpas (i.e. eis meATopdpous) Keil’s Inscr: Delph. 4; so, dm. els dyavas meypay 7] may- xpdriov to enter oneself for .., Polyb. 40. 6, 8, (dmwoypaPapevos muxrns Anth. P. 11.75); orparnylav dm. to enter as candidate for, . , Plut. Sull. 5; to register oneself as a citizen, Arist. Pol. 4. 13, 3. IIT. as Att. law-term, 1. da. ria to enter a person’s name for the purpose of accusing him, ¢o give in a copy of the charge against him, Andoc, 2, 46, etc.: generally, to inform against, denounce, Xen, Hell. 3, 3, 11; ¢ acc. et inf., Lys. 111, 2:—Med. to enter one’s ndme as an accuser, to indict, Antipho 145. 29 sq.; dm. dmoypapyy Dem. 1043. fin.; of the magistrate who receives the charge, dmoypapecOat Tijv dienv Antipho 140. 13, etc.; in Pass., of the person accused, dm. pdvov di«ny Id, 145. 32, Lys. 108. 25, etc. 2. to give in a list or inventory of property alleged to belong to the state, but held by a private person, Lys. 148. 26, etc., cf. Dem. 1246. 7, 20; dm. odolay tivds ws Sypooiay obcay Hy- perid. Euxen. 43, cf. Dem. 752. 7:—generally to give in a list or state- ment of property, 7) wAH00s rhs abray obcias Plat. Legg. 754D; rd xwpia, Tas oixias, Tiv obciay Dem. 609. fin., 1015. 10:—Med., to have such list given in, see it done, Lys. 120. 44, al.; doypagpiy daoypa- yacba Dem, 1043. fin.; cf. Isae. 67. 23., 87. 25 3 dm. dwddeuy to have it registered, Dem. 868. 17. b. also c. acc. pers., dméypayev Tavra .. €xovra abrév gave a written acknowledgment that he was in posses- sion of .., Id. 817. fin., ef. 828. 15 Fie ba to eg entered in the list of debts], Id. 791. 24. Cf. dwoypapy, and Att. Process 255. ae : 10 enfeebie, unnerve, ph ye dmoyuwens Il. 6. 265, cf. Ath, To B :—also written —yudw, in Byz. , dmoyupvatw, fut. dow, to bring into hard exercise, dwoy. orbpa to ply one’s tongue hard, Aesch. Theb. 441; abrovs Arist. H. A.9. 40,12. aroyupvew, to strip quite bare, esp. of arms; hence in Pass., 4) dmoyupvabévra Kaxdv Kat dvfvopa Gein Od, 10. 301; dmoyupvadels with the person exposed, Hes. Op. 728:—Med. ¢o strip oneself, Xen, Mem. 3. 4, 1; dmoyupvotc@a ta ivaria to strip off one's clothes, Arist. Probl. 1. 55, 3- 2. metaph, to Jay open, reveal, explain, Padus. 4. 22, 4, etc. ' Groytpvacis, ews, %, a stripping bare, Plut. 2. 751 F. dmoytvatkdopar, Pass, to become womanish, Phot. Bibl. 459. 11-_ amroyivalkwos, ews, , a making womanish, Plut. 2. 987 F. Gmroywvidopat, Pass. fo become angular, Theophr. C.P. 2. 16, 4. droddkve, fut. -djfopa, aor, —EbaKov :—to bite off a piece of, dprov Aristom. Incert. 1:—Pass., pjAa dmodednypeva with pieces bitten out, Luc. Tox. 13 —also ¢. acc. to bite off, tiv abris yA@ocay Polyaen. 8, 2. absol, ¢a bite, gnaw, dbag Cratin, MAour, a Xen. Symp, ’ 178 5, 7 :—Pass. to have one's tongue bitten, as by a pungent substance, Arist. Probl. 31. 9. amodakpirucds, 7, dv, calling forth tears, cohAvpro. Cass. Probl. 18 :-— also, droddxpuors, }, a flow of tears, Ib. drodaxptw [0], to weep much for, lament loudly, twa Plat. Phaedo 116 D; re Plut. Sull. 12, 2. dm. yvmpny is to weep away one's judg- ment, be melted to tears contrary to it, Ar. Vesp. 983. 8. to be made to weep by the use of collyrium, and so to have the eyes purged, Arist. Probl. 31. 9, Luc. Peregr. 45. 4. of trees, to weep, drip gum, etc., dm. pnrivny Plut. 2. 640 D. IL. to cease to weep, Aristox. ap. Ath. 632 B, A.B. 427: cf. dwoAoptpopa, dradyéw, . droSatravdw, fo use up, consume, Matthaei Med. 131. Gmrodamrw, fut. yw, to gnaw from, eat off, Hesych. ; arobapldve, fut. —dap9jcopa: aor. —dapSov, and in Themist. 91 A —€Spabov :—to sleep a little, Plut. Dio 26; drodapbeiv dnddveioy tnvor, v. sub dnddveios. II. to wake up, Ael. N. A. 3. 13. GroSdcpuos, ov, parted off, Baxées dm. parted from the rest, Hdt. 1. 146; dm. aica a share i een: Opp. H. 5. 444; of. dmobaréopar 11. anodacpés, 5, (dmodaréopat) a division, part of a whole, Thuc. 1. 12, Dion. H. 3.6: on the accent, v. Lob, Paral, 385 :—in Byz. also daé- Sacpa, aros, 7d. aré8acr0s, ov, divided off, Hesych. arodacrus, vos, , Ion. for dtodacpés, Hesych. GroSaréopar: fut. -ddcopar [a], Ep. -Sdccopuar:—to portion out to others, ¢o apportion, fyuov 7@ daroddccopar Il, 17. 231; “Axatois GA’ Groddccacba 22.118; col 5 ad.. ravi’ droddccopa, bao" eréoiev 24. 595; cf. Pind. N. 10. 162, Call. Del. 9, etc. II. to part off, separate, dmodagapevos pdépioy bcov bi THs arpariqs Hdt. 2. 103. SaipiAevopar, Dep. to be liberal of a thing, Gloss. ~ GrodéSeypar, pf. of dwodéxouat; but also Ion. for dwodédevypat, pf. pass. of dmodetievupe, GmoSeSeAdkorws, Ady. part. pf. act. of dmodeArdw, in a cowardly way, censured by Poll. 5, 123 as bdapOeyxrov. Grrodens, és, (5éw) wanting much, empty, Arist. Fr. 215, Plut., etc. ; vais dm. not fully manned, Id. Anton. 62. GroSei, Ion, darodéer, v. sub dmodéw. oe Grodadiccopnat, Dep. to frighten away, Il, 12. 52, in tmesi, GroSeixvupt and —Ww: fut. -del~w, lon. -béfw:—to point away from ‘other objects at one, and so, I. to point out, shew forth, display, exhibit, make known, whether by deed or word, tui te Hdt. 1. 171, al.; rdpovs wat ovyyéveay Thuc. 1. 26; 700s 7d mpdode roxjaw Aesch. Ag. 727 :—hence in various relations, 2. to bring forward, shew, produce, furnish, Lat. praestare, papripia touréow Hat. 5. 45; moddovs maidas Id. 1. 136, cf. Soph. O. T. 1405, Isocr. 385 D, Xen. Cyr. I. 2, 5.8.1, 353; a. rpdmaca Andoc, 19, 12 Bekk.; xpyuata mheior’ dm, tv 7S Kow@ Ar. Eq. 7743 popphy érépay Eur, Fr. 836. 14 (v. 1. énéSeitev); c. part., byiéa Tuva edvra dm, to produce him safe and sound, Hdt. 3. 130, cf. 134. 8. to produce or deliver in accounts, Tov Adyov Hat. 7. 119, cf. Thuc. 2. 72; dm. rerpaxdova Tadavra rereheo- péva, Hdt. 7. 118; cf. dropatyw m1. 4. sa Sage a eo Lat, promulgare, Lys. 184. 10, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 11. . to appoint, assign, Fetal ie. a Hat, 5. 67, 89; Bopdy tur Id 7. 178; &v Bovdeurhpioy Thue. 2. 15; Thy tplrqy am. éxxAnotay to fix, prescribe it, Dem. 707, fin, :—Pass., Total tar: ySpos dmodedeypévos Hdt. 1. 153; pop?) avdroicr roabrn dmodédexrat Id, 2.65. b. c. inf, xd&pas bev dwédeav AapBa- vey 7a. énirhdeca whence they appointed that they should receive. . , Xen. An, 2. 3, 14:—Pass., rolot dmobedéxOar . . EAmety (impers.) it had been appointed them to draw, Hdt, 2. 124. 6. to shew by argument, , demonstrate, Ar, Nub. 1334, Plat. Alc, 1. 114 B, al., Arist., etc. ; am. dmobelfes Andoc. 20.9; dm. ws.., Ar. Vesp. 549, Plat.; drv.. Plat., etc.; c. dupl. acc., fo prove one so and so, obs dmodeigw A€xT pov mpodéras Eur. Ion 879, etc. ; foll. by a partic., dz. rbyy . ovdey peredy Hat. 5. 94; dm. twa obdtv A€yovra to make it evident that.., 7. 17, cf. 2. 133. II. to shew forth a person or thing as so and so, hence, 1. to appoint, name, create, dm. Ta. Bacidéa, orparnyov, immapxor, etc., Hdt. 1. 124., 7.154, al., Xen. An. 1, I, 2, al.; also c. inf., orparnydv evar Hat. 5. 25; dm. rovrous Thy modw vépe Ib. 29 :— Pass. fo be so created, 1. 124, 162, al. 2. to make, render, mostly with an Adj., dm. ra pox Onpév to make him a rascal, Ar. Ran. ort ; dm, Tia Kparioror, etc., Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 23, etc. 5 yopryav dm. Tov troy Id. Eq. 1, 10; dypubrepov Plat. Gorg. 516 B; so with a Subst., ydura dm. twa Id. Theaet. 166 A, cf. Phaedo 72 C; also c. part., BAémov’ Gnodeiga o° dttrepov.. Ar. Pl. 210; am. Twds GAdorpious dvras Plat. Symp. 179 C:—Pass., moAéutor dmodederypévor declared enemies, Xen. An. 7. 1, 26, cf. Dem. 687. 11. 8. to represent as, dm. maida narpos éwvrav txacrov tévra Hat. 2. 143; Tov “Evbuplova Anpov di. to represent the story of as nonsense, Plat. Phaedo 72 B:—Pass., dybparyadin 8 airy dwobédexrat is represented, considered as.., Hat. 1. 1365 ovbe.. ubrot év Toto: dAAowwt Ocotor dmobedéxarat have not been considered, admitted among .., 2. 43 :—these two last examples are often taken as pass. usages of dodéxopat. 4. c. inf. to ordain a thing to be, Xen. Oec. 7, 30, Rep. Lac. 10, 7. , é B. Med. to shew forth, exhibit something of one’s own, dnobéfacdar iv ywapny to deliver one’s opinion, Hdt. 1. 170, 207, ef. Thue. 1. 87; also, dm. épya péyada Hat. 1. 59, al.; dfvamnynrérara 1. 16; obdev Aapnpdy Epyov 1. 174; dod. Gperas to display high qualities, Pind. N. 6. 80, (so in Act., Hyperid. Epit. 161); els d\AnAa ordow .. dmodevi- peva Aesch. Pr. 1088 ;—also of great buildings and the like, pynpdovva dm. Hat. 2. 101; xdpara afiobénra 1. 184; and, oddeniay orparntny > , ° , drodakpuTikos —amodepT pow. kat Oavpacra .. dnodexSévra Hat. prooem., cf. 9. 27. 2. often used just like Act.: dod, dr: .., to declare that.., Xen. An. + 2, 9. C. Pass., v. supr. I. 5, Il. 1, 2, 3:—note that aor. dmedeixOnv is always pass., as Hdt. 7. 154; and so mostly the pf. drobéderypat, 1.1 36, Antipho 120, 17, Xen. An. 7.1, 26; but the part. of the latter is sometimes act., as Ib. 5. 2, 9. GroSeréov, verb. Adj. one must shew forth or prove, Plat. Phaedr. 245 B. 2. c, dupl. acc. one must make one so and so, ckamavéa avrov dm. Luc. Vit. Auct. 7. dmodexrixés, 4, bv, fit for demonstrating, demonstrative, 6 dm. ovhdo~ yopds Arist, An. Post.1.6,1; és dm. Id. Eth. N. 6. 3,45 miores dm. Id. Rhet. 1. 2. 19, etc.; Sup. -draros Ad-yos Philo 2. 499 :—Adv., dmode- Tinds éxioracba Arist. An. Post. 1.6, 8. 2. dm. iaropia, dihynos in which the facts are regularly set forth and explained, Polyb. 2. 37, 3-5 4. 40, I, cf. Plut. 2. 242 F. dmoderés, 4, dv, (Philodem. in Vol. Herc. 1. 61 D), demonstrable or to be demonstrated, Arist. An. Post. 1. 10, 7, al. 2. demonstrated, Id. Eth. N. 6. 6, 1, etc, On the accent, v. Lob. Paral. 498. Gmobadtacrs, ews, }, great cowardice, Polyb. 3.103, 2; am. mpos Twa. Plut. Alex. 13. GmrodSedvaréov, verb. Adj. one must flinch, Plat. Rep. 374 E. G&rodedidw, fut. dow [a], to be very fearful, play the coward, to flinch from danger or toil, Xen. Mem. 3. 12, 2, Plat. Gorg. 480, al.; da. év laxupois pabjpacw Id. Rep. 535 B, cf. 504 A; rats yuxais Polyb. 1. 15, 73 mpés twa or 71 Id. 11. 16, 2, Luc. D. Mort. 1o. 9, ete. 2. dm. ToU mo.eiv to shrink from.. Xen. Lac. 10, 7. 3. dm. 7 to be afraid of, Polyb. 5. 84, 5. amrd5ekis, Ion. —Sekis, ews, 4: (dmodelxvupu) :—a shewing forth, making: known, exhibiting, 30 dweipoovvay .. ove drddegiv Tay dnd yaias Eur. Hipp. 196. 2. a setting forth, publication, as Hdt. calls his work “Hpoddrov .. ioropins dmddefis, 1.1; dpxis dm. an exposition, sketch of it, Thue. 1.97; dm. wept 7: Plat. Polit. 277 A; epi twos Rep. 358 B. 3. @ shewing, proving, proof, Bovdopévorol ode yévorr’ dy am. Hat. 8, 101 ; dr. moreicOar Lys. 121. 43, etc.; esp. by words, dm. Aéyew Plat. Theaet. 162 E; pépew Polyb. 12. 5,53 xphodal run dmodeige Tivos to use it as a proof of a thing, Plut. 2. 160 A; in pl. proofs, or arguments in proof of, Tivos Dem. 326, 4, etc. ; A€yerw Ti eis dddergwv Tod wepregeabar 7@ modéum Thuc. 2. 13, cf. Plat. Phaedo 73 A; dvev dmodelgews Ib. g2 C; per’ dm. Polyb. 3. 1, 3; dw. AapBdvey..rav pavOavéyray to test them by examination, etc., Plut. 2.736 D; da. réxvns a specimen, Dionys. “Opor. 1; dm. Sodval twos Plut. 2. 79 F, etc. b. in the Logic of Arist., demonstration, i.e. absolute proof by syllogistic deduction of a conclusion from known premises, An. Post. 1.1, 2., I. 4, I, al.; opp. to inductive proof (émaywyn), 1. 18, 1 ;—but sometimes in a loose sense, dx. pyropixh evOdpnua Id. Rhet. 1. 1, 11; v. sub elds. II. (from Med.) dw. épyav peyadwy a display, achievement of mighty works, etc., Hdt. 1. 207, cf. 2. 108, 148. drodeunvéw, fut. how, to be ending supper, Ath. 622 D. Grodeumvidios, ov, of or from supper, Anth. P. 6. 302. GméSevnvos, ov, =ddenvos, Hesych, II. drédemvoy, 76, in late Eccl., the after-supper service, completorium; also roy. Grobetpotopéw, to cut off by the neck, slaughter by cutting off the head, or cutting the throat, of men, Il. 18. 336., 23. 22, Luc. D. Mer. 13. 3; of sheep, Od. 11. 35; wepadry dm. Hes. Th, 280, Hence Subst., —Topy- ous, #, Eust. 1145. 63. Garodelpw, Ion. for drodépw. amoderoSarpovéw, to brood over with superstitious sfear, Schol.Thuce. 7. 50. Gmrodexdrevw, and -evois, ews, , =anodexaréw, —rwors, Gloss. Gmobexiréw, to tithe, take a tenth of, 7 LXx (1 Regg. 8. 16); mavra, Ey. Luc. 18.12; dm. rid to take tithe of him, Ep. Hebr. 7.53 Sexarny, dm, twos LXx (Deut. 14, 22). amoSexdrwors, ews, %, the taking a tenth part, tithing, Epiphan, Grobécopat, Ion. for dodéyouat. GaroBexréov, verb. Adj. of dmobéxopat, one must receive from others, ra ciopepopeva Xen. Occ. 7, 36, 2. one must accept, allow, admit, c. acc, rei, Adyor Plat. Legg. 668 A; but also c. gen. pers. et part., dm. Tuvds Aéyovros Id. Theaet. 160 C, Rep. 379 C: hence (rarely) c. gen. rei et part. pass., dm. Aeyouévns Téxvns Id. Phaedr. 272 B; v. dwodéxopar lI. 4. Gmrodexrhp, jpos, 6,=sq., Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 9, Arist. Mund, 6, 10. aarodéxrns, ov, 6, a receiver: from the time of Cleisthenes, dmodéxrat were magistrates at Athens who succeeded the KoaKpérat and paid the dicasts, C. I. 84. 19, Dem. 750. 24, Arist. Pol. 6.8, 1; v. Harp. s.v., Béckh P. E. 1. 214 :—also at Thasos, C, I. 2163 b. dmobexrixés, 4, dv, receiving, Eccl, Garodexrés, dv, (dr0déxopat) acceptable, welcome, Lat. acceptus, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 33s Plut. 2. 1061 A, N. T.; fem. -dexrf in Origen. 2. 4 B, etc. Comp. ~Orepos Diosc, Parab. 1 prooem. Ady. —rws, Gramm. GrrodevSpdopat, Pass. to become a tree, grow to a tree, Theophr. H. P. 3.17, 2; to be turned into a tree, Luc. V.H. t. 8; cf. drodevdpdopa. dmodéeacGat, aor. 1 of drodéxoua, but also II. Ion. for dzo- ibe of dmodetxvupu, darddekis, ews, 7), an accepting, acceptance, ray amo é . Io. 8. II. Ion. for deste. lid itl droSebvrws, Ady. pres. part. defectively, Epiphan. GréSeppa, aros, 76, (drodépw) a hide stripped off, Hat. 4. 64. dmodepparite, to flay, strip, Schol. Nic. Al. 301, Hesych. :—hence Subst. tapos, 5, Gloss. Gmobeppirdopat, Pass., of shields, to have their leather covering de- stroyed, im buBpov Polyb. 6. 25, 7. dtr, not to have any military service to shew, 2. 111 :—Pass., épya wéyaha b dmodeptpdw, (5éprpov) to disembowel, eviscerate, Schol, Od, rr, 578. arrodépw — arodidwme. Gmodépw, Ion. -Beipw (also in Ar. Vesp, 1286) ; fut. -depa@:—to flay or shin completely, rov Body Hat. 2. 40, cf. 42., 4.60; am. Thy Kepadty to scalp, 4. 64:—Pass., mpéBara dmodapévra Xen. An. 3. 5, 9. 2. to flay by flogging, fetch the skin off one’s back, Ar. Lys. 739- II. c. ace, rei, to strip off, da. wacay dvOpamniny (sc. Sophy) Hat. 5. 25. dmrdSecis, ews, 7}, tying up, } Tod duadod dz. Tos wardios Arist. H. A, 7. 10, I :—dm. && rod macoddAov lambl. V. P. 26 (118). dmodecpevw and -éw, to bind fast, Apollod. Pol. 45, Lxx (Prov. 26. 8). GméSeopos, 6, a band, breastband, girdle, Ar. Fr. 309. 13, Luc. D. Meretr. 12. 1. II. a bundle, bunch, Plat. Demosth, 30; oraxris LXXx, dmodex Geis, Ion. for droderydels, Hdt. GmoSéxopar, Ion. —Béxopar: fut. -5égouai, aor. -edefduny: pf. -dé- deypax (for pass. usages of this tense, v. diodelxvupt II. 3). To accept from one, to accept, xat od« dmedégar’ dowa Il. 1. 95; and so in Att., Ar. Eccl. 712, Xen, An. 6.1, 24, etc.:—dm. ywdepny mapa twos to accept advice from him, Hdt. 4. 97; dmdé8efat pov d A€éyw Plat. Crat. 430 D. 2. to accept as a teacher, follow, Xen. Mem. 4. I, 1, etc. 3. to admit to one’s presence, Plat. Prot. 323 C; tods mpeaBeurds Polyb. 22.18, 5; dm. abroy cat rd pndévra pidroppdvws Ib. 5, 1. 4. mostly of admitting into the mind, a. to receive favourably, to approve, allow, accept, admit, sanction, dodoylav Antipho 121.20; karnyopias, SiaBoAds Thue. 3. 3., 6. 29; od« dm. not to accept, to reject, Hat. 6, 43; often in Plat., d0dvai re xat dw. Adyov Rep. 531 E, cf. Prot. 329 B, Symp. 194 D, etc. ; 7¢ wapd rivos Id. Tim. 29 E :—the person from whom one accepts a statement in gen., dm. ri tivos Thue. 1. 44., 7. 48, Plat. Phil. 54 A, etc.:—but the acc. being omitted, the gen. pers. becomes immediately dependent on the Verb, as in dxovw, mostly with a partic. added, dm. rds A€é-yovros to receive or accept [a statement] from him, i.e. to believe or agree with his statements, Plat. Phaedo 92 A, E; ut) dio- déxec9e TovTou pevaxifovros ipas Dem. 1292. 9; dm. padnuariKxod m@avoroyourros Arist. Eth. N. 1. 3, 4, cf. Rhet. 2. 21, 15 ;—also without a partic., ob« drobdéxopat énavrod, ws 7d ev dbo -yé-yover I cannot satisfy myself in thinking, that .., Plat. Phaedo 96 E, cf. Euthyphro 9 E, Rep. 329 E:—absol. to accept a statement, to be satisfied, Dem, 318. 11, Arist. Pol. 2. 5, 11; so, dw. édy.. Plat. Rep. 335 D, 525 D. b. ¢o take or understand a thing, dp0a@s am. 7: Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 15, cf. Cyr. 8. 7, 10; ixavwrara Plat. Rep. 511D; roadra dvoxepas mus drodéxounar Id. Euthyphro 6 A; imémrws Thuc. 6. 53 :—here also a gen. pers. may be added, the acc. rei being understood, otrws abrod dmodexwpeba let us understand him thus (referring to what goes before), Plat. Rep. 340 C; ay dpa mis Ween TH, ur) XaAETas GAA mpdws drodexdpeOa GAAHAWY let us understand or interpret one another, Id. Legg. 634 C. II. to re- ceive back, recover, Hdt. 4. 33, Dem. 842.13; opp. to dmod:dévar, Thuc, 5.26; cf. dmodoyy I. IIL. to receive, sustain, hold out against, Polyb. 3. 43, 3-. 5. 51, 1,—Wwhere émodéx- might have been expected. amodéw, fut. -dn0w, to bind fast, tie up the navel (cf. dwddects), Plat. Symp. 190 E :—Pass., év depparig dmodéberai 7 Id. Eryx. 400 A. drodéw, fut. -Sejow, to be in want of, lack, often in accounts of numbers, Tpiakociay dmodéovra pupia 10,000 lacking or save 300, Thuc. 2. 13, cf. 4. 38, etc.: generally, rocodrov dmodéw twos so far am I from.., Plat. Ax. 366 B, 372 B, cf. Plut. 2. 1088C; c. inf., dAtyov dmodeiv elvat to want little of being, Ib. 978 E: to fall short of, be inferior to, twos Luc. Merc. Cond. 36; mAO« od woAd amodéovres GAAHAwY Got differing much in number, Dion. H. 3. 52. 2. impers. dmodet, there lacks, there is need of, Twos Plat. Ax. 369 D, Cyrill. droinhéw, to make manifest, Aesch. Fr. 305, Hipp. 544.52, Arist. H. A. 10. 3,4: Pass., Strabo 120. II. intr. to become manifest, Arist. Mirab. 59. GroSnpiywyéw, fut. yaw, to delude as a demagogue, lead astray by rhetoric or sophistry from a thing, ruvos Clem. Al. 429. GroSnpéw, Dor. -SGpéw: fut. now: pf. dwedpunea Hermipp. Popp. 8 (ubi v. Meineke), To be away from home, be abroad or on one’s travels, Hdt. 1. 29., 4. I, 152, Ar. Nub. 371, etc.; of foreign service, Id. Lys. 101; opp. to émdnyeiv, Xen. Cyr. 7.5, 69: metaph. to be absent, Pind. P. 10, 57; 6 vods mapdy drone? Ar. Eq. 1120:—some- times c. gen., dmodnyety oixias Plat. Legg. 954. B; also, awd rijs éovrGy Hdt. 9. 117; €« rijs méAews Plat, Crito 53 A; ob efeore dmodnpeiv trois Aaxedarpovios Arist. Fr. 500. 2. to go abroad, map4, Twa to visit him, Hdt. 3. 124; dm. és Alyivay kara 7m to go abroad to Aegina to fetch ..a thing, Id.8.84; so, dod. ént defrvoy eis OerraAlay Plat. Crito 53 E; évOévbe eis dAAov Témov Id. Apol. 40E; émt éumopiay Lycurg. 155. 10; war’ éum. Ib. 21; mpos Ta iepd Xen. Hell. 4.7, 3; mol ys dwedjpes ; Ar. Ran. 48; otdapdéce dm. Plat. Legg. 579 B; éxeive Id. Phaedo 61 E. G&roSnpnrys, od, 6, one who goes abroad, is not tied to his home, opp. to évinudraros, Thue. 1. 70. ; GroSnpyticds, 7, dv, fond of travelling, Dicaearch. 1. 9; mapa- graots am. banishment fo foreign parts, of ostracism, Arist. Pol. 5. 8, 12: —metaph. migratory, i.e. mortal, Arr. Epict. 3. 24, 4, cf. ib. 60 and 105. drroSnpia, Ion. -{n, %, a being from home, a going or being abroad, am. ef otxov Hat. 6.130, cf. Lys. 97.17; dm. moueiy Plat. Crito 52 B; ew Tis xwpas Id. Legg. 949 E; da, és GAAas xwpas Ib. g50 A, cf. Andoc. 33- 73 Tept Tis am. Tis exe? as to my /ife in that foreign land, i.e. be- yond the grave, Plat. Phaedo 61 E (where dmodnuety éxeize goes before), cf. 67 B, Apol. 41 A; && dwodnylas rwvds mpooye: from a long journey, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 7. aréSnpos, Dor. —-Sapos, ov, away from one's country, from home, abroad, Pind. P. 4, 8, Plut. 2. 799 F, etc. ; da. émépxeoOat from abroad, C. I. 3344 A:—less Att. than éxdypos, Moer. 143. Gaodia, 4, (wots) want of feet, Arist. P. A. I. 3, I, 4. 11, I. a&rodiaiptw, to divide off, separate from, ¢yxédvas ixOvov Eust. 1221. 36 :—Pass,, Clem. Al, 925. d strued with, refer to, mpos tx Schol, Ar. Pl, 538. 179 dmoftatdw, (v. d:artdw):—to in one’s favour in an arbitration, opp. to karabiairdw (q. v.), Omws tiv diatay abT@ dmo-, diarhoopey ap. Dem. 544. 24, cf. 545. 26; hence, dm. ruvds (sc. Tiv dieny) to decide for one, Id. 1013.14; Ta dmodarrnVévra pou Avcas 1021. 12.—Cf, droAoyéopat fin. Grrodtdkepar, Pass. to be disposed against, dislike, rwt Clem. Al. 208. dmoStahapPBavopat, Pass. to be divided off, set apart, Origen. 2. 60 B. GrobidAnmros, 7, ov, set apart, separable, Simplic. drodiacréAo, to divide, LXx (Jos. 1. 6, v. 1.) :—Pass. to be set apart, Sorbidden, Ib. (2 Mace. 6. 5). drobdiarerxife, to fence off, separate, Phot. Bibl. 285. 28. arobdtiarpiBw [7], to wear quite away, dx. tov xpévov to waste the time utterly, Aeschin. 34. 29; c. acc. pers., DioC, 44. 19:—Pass., DioC. 54.17. arodiBacKw, to teach not to do, Lat. dedocere, Hipp. Fract. 750. dmodSpackivba (sc. madd), Adv. a game at play, in which all but one ran away, described by Poll. g. 117. dmodibpackw, Ion. —foxw; fut. -dpdcopuat, Ion. -Sphaopar (Spdow only in Eccl.): aor. dmédpay, Ion, -€5pyv, opt. dmodpainy Theogn. 927, imperat, darddpa6t, inf. dwodpavat, Ion. -dphvat, part. drodpds—the only form found in Hom.; the other tenses in Hadt., etc. To run away or off, escape or flee from, esp, by stealth, Hom. (never in Il.), é« vqds Gmodpds Od. 16. 65; yds dm. 17. 5163; da. &e ris Zdpou Hadt. 3. 148; és Zdpuov 4. 43; ént OddAaccay 6, 2; dwodpaca @xero Andoc. 16. 28, cf. 31. 18, Ar. Eccl. 196, Plat, Theaet. 203 D; of runaway slaves, Xen, An. I. 4, 8 (where drodpavax is to escape by not being found, amopvyeiv by not being caught, v. Ammon.); so, of dmodpavres Inscr, Att. in Ussing, p. 58; of soldiers, to desert, Xen. An. 5. 6, 34; dmodiSpdoxovra pi} divacba Grodpava: attempting to escape, not to be able to escape, Plat. Prot. 317 B, cf. 310 C. 2. c. acc. to flee, shun, Hdt. 2.182, Ar, Pax 234, etc.; dméSpacay abrév Thuc. 1.128; Tov vdpor Arist. Pol. 2. 9, 243 ovn drédpa riv orpareiay Dem. 567. fin.; so, OTe .. TO ody dup’ dedpay (poét. for dé5pacav) Soph. Aj. 167.—Rare in Trag., cf. éxd:dpdoxw. dmodidtcKw, =drodvw, c. acc. pers., Artem. 2. 74:—Med., Parthen. 15, GroSiSwpr [1], fut. -Sécw:—to give up or back, restore, return, Tit 7t Hom. and Att.: esp. to render what is due, to pay, as debts, penalties, submission, honour, etc., Opértpa pidos Il. 4. 478; da, Twt AWBny to give him back his insult, i.e. make atonement for it, Il. 9: 3873 dam. dpo.Bhy tun Theogn. 1263; dm. thy dpoinv run Hat. 4. 119; aa. 7d Hépotpov to pay the debt of fate, Pind. N, 7. 64; 79 xpéos Hdt. 2. 136; tov vadadoy Ar. Ran. 270; tiv Gyulav, thy Karadixny Thuc. 3. 70., 5. 50; evxds Xen. Mem, 2. 2,10; dm. dmigw és “HpaxAcidas ie 2 Hdt, 1. 13, etc.—For the prevalence of this first and proper sense at Athens, see the whole speech of Dem. de Halonneso, cf. Aeschin. 65. 30; so, dm. xapiras Lys. 189. 9, cf. Thuc. 3. 63; dm. re és xdpiv, és dgei- Anua Id. 2. 40; dm. xdpw Isocr. 131 B; [jv médw] am, Trois émcyryvo- peévos olaymep mapa Tav waTépay mapeAdBopev Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 30:— Pass., ws x dxd mavra dofein Od. 2. 78; dm. yucOds, xaperes Ar. Eq. 1066, Thue. 3. 63. 2, to assign, Tats yovargt povowrny Plat. Rep. 456 B; 70 dixaoy Arist. Rhet. 1. 1, 7; TO mpds dAuhy SmAov dm. H vais Id. G. A. 3. 10, 6, ete. b. to refer to one, as belonging to his department, «is tods xpirds Tiv xplow Plat. Legg. 765 B; dm. els riy BovdAhy mept airay to refer their case to the Council, Isocr. 372 B, efi Lys. 164. 17, etc. 3. to return, render, yield, of land, émt dinxdora dmodobvat (sc. xaprév) to yield fruit two hundred-fold, Hdt. 1. 193; anédux’ Soas dy karaBad® (sc. xpiOds) Menand. Tewpy. 4:—hence perhaps metaph., 70 épyoy dm. Arist. Eth. N. 2.6, 2; da. ddxpu Eur. H. F; 489. 4, to concede, allow, c. inf. to suffer or allow a person to do, am, Tit abrovopetcOa Thuc. 1, 144, cf. 3 36; ef 6& rots piv... ém- ratrev drodwoere Dem. 27.1; dm. kodagev Id. 638. 6, cf. Lys. O44 36; dm. Tun (ynreiv Arist. Pol. 8. 7, 2, cf. Pott. 15, 10 ;—also c. acc, rei, dm. dwodoyiay tit to grant one liberty to make a defence, Andoc. 29. 16; so, 6 Adyos dme5s0n avrois right of speech was allowed them, Aeschin, 61. 16, 5. da. twa with an Adj. to render or make so and so, like dmodeixvus, dr. thy Tépyiv BeBaorépay Isocr. 12 B; TéAcov ax. 7d téxvoy Arist. G. A. 2.1, 23; Sef rds évepyelas moias dm, Id, Eth. N. 2. 1, 8. b. like drodeievups also, to exhibit, display, riv imapxoucay dperhy Andoc. 14. 39; dm. tiv idiav poppy to render, express it, Arist. Poét. 15, II. 6. to deliver over, give up, e.g. as a slave, Eur. Cycl. 239; am. Tov yuapdy T@ xpovm pfvae Antipho 129. 14. 7. da. émorodny to deliver a letter, Thuc. 7. 10, cf. Eur. I. T. 745. 8, da, tov ayava to bring it to a conclusion, wind it up, Lycurg. 169. 8. 9. Adyor dm. to render or give in an account, Lat. rationes referre, Dem. 828. 20: to give an account of, explain a thing, Eur. Or. 151 :—Pass., waprupiac dm. ap, Dem. 273. 12. 10. dm. Spkor, v. sub pitos. 11. fo render, give, rds xpicas Arist. Rhet, 1. 2, 5; dm, ri éart re to define, Id. Categ. 5, 9, cf. 1, 2 sq., al., Metaph. 6, 16, 6, al. ; éropévws rovras dm. tiv Wuyxny Id. de An. 1. 2, 14, cf. Phys. 2. 3, 3, al.: also to use by way of definition, Id. de An. 1. 1, 16, al.:—to render, interpret one word by another, dw. rv xorvAny ddacoy Ath. 479 Cc. 12. to attach or append, make depend it upon, ri rie oF eis rt Hero Autom. 266. 17., 249. I. 13. dw. ri Tivos to affirm one thing of another, Arist. Top. 5.1, 3. II. intr, to increase, much like émdidape U1, Ay 4 xdpy katd Adbyov émdidP és typos kal 7d dpovoy drobd@ és abfnow Hat. 2. 13; but Blakesley takes it as opp. to ém:59, if it increase in height and decrease in productiveness. . to return, recur, Arist. G. A. 1.18, 2, H. A. 7. 6, 6. 3. in Rhet. and Gramm. fo resume or introduce a clause answering to the mporacts, Arist. Rhet. 3. 11, 13, Dion. H, de Dem, 9, etc.; cf. dirddoats 11. 2; od dmodiéwot 70 énel has no apodosis, Schol. Od. 3. 103- b. to be con- 4, dndiwne N2 180 (se. ray Yuxny) died, C. I. ggor. III. Med. fo give away of one’s own will, to sell, first in Hdt. 1.70, etez; dw. Tus “EAAGDSa Lo take to Greece and sell it there, Id..2. 56, cf. Ar, Av. 585, etc.; c. gen. pretii, Id. Ach. 830, Pax 1237; ov« dv daeddunv moddod Tas éAmidas Plat, Phaedo 98 B; dm. rijs dgias, rod eipicxovros to sell for its worth, for what it will fetch, Aeschin. 13. 40, 41, cf. Xen. Mem. 2. 5, 5 (where drrodidoc0ax is used of the actual sale, m@adciv of offering for sale in the market, cf. Theophr. Char, 15.1); dodo [rds véas] mevradpdxpous aroddpevr Hat. 6. 89; dm. eicayyeAlay to sell, i.e. -take a bribe to Jorego, the information, Dem. 784.16; so, of dpaxpis dv dmodéuevor tiv médw Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 48: at Athens, esp. to farm out the public taxes, Dem. 475. 5, opp. to dvéouat:—Thuc. 6. 62 has the act. dmédo- gay =dné5ovro, which Bekker and Dind. restore, cf. 7.87; the Act. however is so used in Nicet. Ann. 280 C. The distinction is very clearly marked in Andoc. 13. 16, wévra dmodépevos, rd hyicea dmodiow TO dmoxreivayrt, cf. Bekk. praef. Thuc. s. fin. drroBinPéw, to strain off, filter, Geop. 9g. 20. Garo Ht, fut.-orjow, to separate, dnodiacrica Kal daxwpica Plut. 2. 968 D:—Med. to separate oneself; to run off, of liquids, Eust. Opuse, 196. 75. Gmodikdto, to acquit, opp. to-caradixd(w, Antipho 147. 5, Arist. Pol. 2. 8,15; dm, dieny Critias ap. Poll. 8. 25. _ droBikety, inf. of dméducoy, post. aor. with no pres. in use, fo throw off, Eur. H. F. 1204: to:throw down, Aesch. Ag. 1410. GaroBikéw, (din) to defend oneself on trial, Xen, Hell. 1.7, 21, Antiph. Incert. 88 :—dixn &méSuxos occurs in C. I. 1838 5, in a dub. sense. . darodtkyr hs, 08, 6, an apparitor, Gloss, Grobdivéw, to thresh corn (v. divos 111), Hdt. 2.\14, C. I. 5774. 102. GrroBiopar, Dep., post. for drodidmu, al Kev “Apna. . waxns 2 dro- Siwpar (with @ in arsi), Il. 5. 763. droStoTropméopar, fut. Aoouae: Dep. (the Act. occurs in Eust. Opusc. 262. 41): (dad, Ards, wouwh) :—to avert threatened evils by offerings to Zeus: hence generally, to conjure away, Plat. Crat. 396 E, Lysias 108. 4 ;—so in verb. Adj. drod:oropmnréoy, one must reject with abhor- rence, Plut. 2. 73 D (ubi v. Wytt.), Philo 1. 239. 2. generally, zo set aside, waive, pass by, Ath. 401 B. _ IL. -nabjpacba al do- dtomopmncacba Tov oixov to free it from’pollution, Plat, Legg. 877 E; ef. Ruhnk. Tim, Grofioméprnots, ews, i), the offering an expiatory sacrifice, Plat. Legg. 854 B, Arr. Epict. 2. 18, 20. drodtopifa, fut. tow, to mark off by dividing or defining, Arist. Pol..4. 4,13: absol. fo make a division, Ep. Jud. 19 :—hence verb, Adj. -.rréov, one must mark off, separate, td. Twos Byz.; and -0p6s, 4, a division, separation, Hermias in Plat. amoSimAdopat, Pass. fo be doubled up, Eust. 1661. 60. “dmoBis, Adv. twice, Apoll. Constr. 339. ; - drrodicketw, fo throw like a discus, Eust. Opusc. 236. 49:—Pass., Eust. IpQI. 31. ; 4 dmoditAtto, to strain or filter thoroughly, Cyril. Hieros., Ignat., the Jatter of whom has as v. 1. the Subst. daroSwAropés, 6. ‘ angie, Pass. to be covered with hides, déppacr Jo. Lyd. de stent. 45. drobulieo, to cease from thirst, be relieved of it, Eust. 871. 5. drroSww0éw, fut. -didow, to thrust away, Hices. ap. Ath. 87, cf. Hipp. 669. drrodwwkréos, a, ov, to be driven away, Hdn, Epim. 165. 2. daro- Swwxréov, one must drive away, Liban. 4. 853. dmrodiwkros, ov, thrust out, Hdn. Epim, 103. drobtdKw, fut. -dfopar —to chase away, Thuc, 3.°108., 6.102; dad twos Arist. H. A. 9.8,9; ob dodger cavrdv ex THs olxtas; take your- self off, Ar. Nub. Fight ; 70 Avmoby drodiwke ToD Biov Menand. Tox. 9. dmodintts, ews, 7, an expulsion, Antyll. in Matthaei Med. 127. droSoxet, impers., (Soxéw) mostly c. ph et inf., dwé50fé oe pay Tipo- péety it seemed good to them not to do, they resolved not.., Hdt. 1.152; érel ogn dm. ph Emdi@eey Id. 8. 111; also without py, Xen. An. 2. 3, 9: sometimes with the inf. omitted, &s oq dmé50fe when they resolved not (to go on), when they changed their mind, Hdt, 1. 172. - dmrodokipato, fut. dow, to reject .on scrutiny or trial, to reject a candi- date from want of qualification, Hat. 6. 130, Lys. 130. 33, Atchipp. ‘Tx. 3:—Pass., Aaxay dredoxipdobn apxew Dinarch, 106. 20, cf. Dem. 779. 4. 2. generally, to reject as unworthy or unfit, naoodpous dvdpas Plat. Theaet. 181 B; immov Xen. Eq. Mag-1,13; vépov Id. Mem..4. 4, 143 Thy [rob abdod] xphow ee rv véay ‘Arist. Pol. 8. 6,°10, cf. 15, al.; [1 dps] da. 7A abris Id. H. A. 9. 29, 23 Thy Toadryy SarpBaY Timocl. Apaxovr, 1.15; 76 moveiy re Xen, Cyr. 8.1, 47. Cf. dmodoxipdw. dnodoxipacia, 4, a rejection after trial, etc., Gloss. drrodoxipacréov, verb. Adj. one must reject, Xen. Eq. 3, 8. II. —éos, éu,-éov, to be rejected, Arist. Poét. 26,7, Luc. Hermot. 18. drroSoxipactikés, 7, dy, rejecting, disapproving, Sivapus Soxipactixh 4 dm. Arr. Epict. 1. 1, 1. drrodoktpdw, =drodonipalw, to reject, Hdt. 1.199. - darodoxt.0s, ov, worthless, Diosc. I. 77. ard5opa, 76, a gift, offering, Lxx (Num. 8. 13, sq.). q GmoBévrwots, ews, %, a cleansing of the teeth, Poll..2.48. (As if from drodovrém, which occurs in Gloss.) amodSotdtw, to discredit, twa Nicet. Ann. 316.A. ; amoBSopa, Gs, 4, a peeling of the skin, Medic. in Matthaei 289. drodos, 7, Ion. for dodos. & os, ov, that should be restored, Schol, Thuc. 3. 52. } aréBSoats, ews, 4, (drodidaju) a giving back, restitution, return, Tov innav Hat. 4. 9; T%v xwplav Thuc. 5. 35, Plat. Rep. 332 B; diff. from $ drrodinOéw — arodtw. &éo1s, Arist. Probl. 29. 2. 2. payment, 4 dm. Tod puc8od Thue, 8. 85; gdpov Luc. V. H. 1. 36: generally, a giving, Plat. Legg. 807 D. II. the rendering by way of definition, Arist. Categ. 7, 11, Top. 1.5, 1, al. 2, in a sentence, the answering clause (which fol- lows after the mpéracs), Dion. H. de Thue. 52, al.; v. dmodiSapu 11. 3. TIT. in Poll. 3.124, etc. (from Med.) sale. . &moBoréov, verb. Adj. one must give back, give as one’s due, tl Tit Arist. Eth. N. 8.14, 9, 9.2, 3: ome must refer, assign, Ti Tut Plat. Rep. 452 A, etc. 2. one must describe, represent, olos tuyxavet 6 Oeds.dov . . da. Plat. Rep. 379 A. II. drodoréos, a, ov, to be referred, ascribed, assigned, Ib: 456 B, Arist. Top. 6. 4, 8. t daroSorhp, fipos, 6, a giver back, repayer, Epich. 79 Ahr. :—also -S6r7ys, ov, 6, Byz. Raceorinss, h, ov, rendering, making, doing, twos Sext. Emp. M. 11. 253. 2. of or for dxddoa:s (3), E. M. 763. 8 :—Ady. —kws, Eust. 920. 55. amédovdos, 5, a freedman, Byz. GtroSoxeiov, 7d, a receptacle, reservoir, a storehouse, Lxx. GaroBoxevs, dws, 6,=daodéerns, Inscr. Thyat. in C. 1. 3490, Themist. 192 C, Joseph. A. J. 16. 6, 2. Gmrodo0x7, 7), (dmodéxopat) a receiving back, having restored to one, opp. to dmddoas, Thuc..4..81. II. acceptance, approbaticn, favour, oft. in Polyb., Diod., etc.; dmoSoxis ruyxavev mapa tive Polyb. 1.5,5,al.; dm. dfwodca Id. 2. 56, 1; év dm. Exew Teva C.1. 3524. 29, etc. Gmodoxp6, fut. dow, to bend sideways, Od. 9. 372, Orph. Fr. 18. GmréSpaypa, 76, a part taken off, Hesych, Gmrodpadeiv, v. sub drodapPave. GtroSpateretw, to run away from, 7t Tzetz. in An, Ox, 4. 8o. amrodpas, v..sub droiidpacnw. GméSpacis, Ion. -Spyors, ews, , (drodSpdonw) a running away, escape, Ti dm. mocioba Hdt. 4. 140; Bovdeverw Luc. D. Mort. 27. 9- 2. c. gen, escape from, avoidance of, orpateias Dem. 568. 9. amodpackdlw, =drobibpackw, Byz.; -SpaoKnw, Walz Rhett. 3. 579. améSpacros, ov, to be escaped, Byz. Gmrodpetriwvitw, to prune, lop with a dpémavoy, Suid. GroSpénropat, Dep., =sq., copiny Anth. P, 10, 18. Grrodpétra, fut. a, to pluck off, dddpene oikade Bérpus pluck-and.take them home, Hes. Op. 608; dz. xaprov #Bas Pind. P. 9. 193, cf. O.1- 20; so in Med., padSaxas dpas.aad xaprov SpémecOar Id, Fr. 87. 8, cf. Anth, P. 6. 303, Plut. 2. 79 D. dmrobpfivat, Jon. for -Spavat, v. sub drodidpaonw. ardSpyots, v. sub darddpacis. Grodpopy, }, (Spayeiv) a running away,-divergence, error, Cyrill. GméSpopos, ov, (Spayeiv) apart from the race, whether as too o/d-or too young to share it, Eust. 727. 18., 1592. 55:°8qq-3 oF left behind by others, Hesych. ; cf. Soph. Fr. 75. Gmrodpimra, fut. yw, aor. 1 dwéSpupa: aor. 2 drédpipov :—to tear off the skin, lacerate, pt pv drodpipa édnvordfow Il. 23. 187., 24. 213 Bh ce véot Bid Bipar’ épuscwa’, .. drodpipwot re ravra Od. 17-480; odp- kas dvbxeoot Theocr.25.267 :—Pass.,.dard xeipav pivor dmebpupbev Od. 5. 4353 whence in 426 Wolf restoresévOa x’-dnd fivods SpipOnwould have had the skin forn off, (for év6’ dd puvds ve Sp.); drodpupOnvar xada¢n Anth. P. 11. 365:—Med. to scrape oneself, to grow thin, dub. in Alciphro 3. 52. Grodtvapdopat, Pass..to be weakened, lose strength, Byz. Grodivw [0], =drodtw, to strip off, améduve Boeiny Od. 22. 364. dn-oduppos, 6, a bewailing, lamenting, Gloss. Gn-o5vpopat [7]: fut. -odtpodua:—to lament bitterly, Tt mpds Ta Hdt. 2. 141; Tvxas Aesch. Pr. 637; énavriv «al yévos 70 wav Soph. El. 1122; absol., Plat. Rep, 606 A. arddvors, ews, 7, (drodtopar) a stripping, undressing, Plut. 2. 751 F. dmobverertw, to desist through impatience, Arist. Top. 8.14, 43 Tépé 7 Plut. 2. 502 E; mpds 71 Luc, Rhet. Praec. 3 drodvorerysts, ews, 7}, discouragement, despair, Eust. Opusc. 1 26. 40: —also —rérppa, 74, Schol. Luc. Tim. a GroSvcxepaive, to be vexed, annoyed, mpés tt Theod. Prodr. atrodiréov, verb. Adj. one must strip, rwé Luc. Hermot. 38. II. from Pass., da. rats yuvaitiy they must strip off their clothes, Plat.Rep.457A- dmoStrnpiov, 74, an undressing room in the bath, Xen. Ath. 2, 10, Plat. Lys. 206 E, etc.; in the palaestra, Id. Euthyd. 272 E:—so dmé5v- Tpov, 76, Nicet. Ann. 97 D :—anéBurov, 74, a vestry, Eccl. drobve [v. da], I. in fut. -dvow, aor. 1 -€d00a, trans. used by Hom. (esp. in Il.) of stripping armour from the-slain, L..csack tei, to strip off, Ted xed 3 "Extwp dndoas dréduce Il, 18. 83, cf. 4. 532, ete,; dad wey pidra éivara Siow 2. 261; am. Th Twos Plat. Charm. 154. E. 2. c. acc. pers. to strip, dméduce tds . . yuvatxas Hat. 5. 92, 7, ef. Plat, Eleg. 12. 3; iva pi) prydv drodtp (sc. rods édormépous) Ar. Av. 712, cf. Thesm. 636, Eccl. 668 :—Pass. to be stripped of one’s clothes,. ' of Tor TodToY arobvOncopa (sc. Tov tpiBava) Ar. Vesp, 1122; tva py more kamedv07 peOvov Id. Ran..715, cf. Pl. 930; Ooiparioy drobdediicbar Lysias 117. 7; dmodudpevos stripped of its shell,-of the nautilus, Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 33- II. Med., fut, -dvcopar: aor, 1 -edvodpny Plat. Rep. 612 A (v. 1, dweAvodueda), Lys. ap. Dion, H. de Dem.11 and late writers ; but mostly with intr. aor. 2 act. dméduy, pf..dmodédvKa (used trans. by Xen. An. 5. 8, 23 woddAods Hin drodéduxev) :—to strip off oneself, take off, ciuata ravr’ dmodts-Od. 5. 3433; amddv0 . . Oolpariov Ar. Thesm. 2143 7@v tyariav drodveas (aor. 2 part. pl. fem.) having stripped off some of them, Ib. 656; dm. 70 -yjpas of a serpent casting its skin, Arist: H. A: 8. 17,8; o@p’ drodvcdpevos Epigr. Gr. 403 :— metaph., dm. riv brdnpiow Joseph. A. J. 13. 7, 1. 2. absol., azo- Svadpevos (Schol. droAve-) having stripped, Od, 5, 349; dmoduvres . , b) , aTodwpéeonat — aroOpavw. stripped naked, Thuc. 1. 6, cf. Plat. Menex. 236 D;. dwodvec@a els or xpos tt to strip for gymnastic exercises, Plut. Dem. 6, Brut. 15 ; of dmo- Sudpevor eis THy madatorpay those who strip for the palaestra, who practise there, Lys. Fr. 45.1; ls 76 -yupvdaouor C. I. 5475.14:—metaph., dnobuvres Tois dvanaiarots émiaper let us strip and set to work at the anapaestics, Ar. Ach. 627, cf. Ran. 641. Grodwpéopar, Dep. to give away, Critias 2. 3. dmodwceiw, Desiderat. to wish to give back, Procop. Hist. 545 D. Gmocixw, fut. fu, to withdraw from, Ocdy dbeuce xehedOou ll. 3. 406, as is now read with Aristarch.; cf. dsreirow Iv. Gtroeitretv, Gtroertrav, vy. sub darecror. Gmockouctdfe, to be pawerless, Achmes Onir. 287. drroepydbw, y. sub dreipyabov :—dmoépyw, v. sub dmeipyo. daéepoe, an old Ep. aor. only found in 3 pers., swept away, évba pe wip’ dadepoe Il. 6. 348; Sv pa tT evavdos ddépon. 21. 283; why pay dnodépoee péyas morapyds Ib. 329. (The quantity of the 2nd syll. in the two last passages seems to shew that it was dwéfepoe, which leads Curt. to suggest a connexion with dmavpda, i.e. dmaf paw; and perh, also with Lat. verro.) dmrofaw, fut. (now, to live off, Sov drofqv enough fo live off, Thuc. 1. 2; ¢. acc., dm. €Avpous Procop. Hist. 602 A. 2. to live poorly, Luc. Tox. 59, etc. daréfepa, aros, 76, (dmoéw) a decoction, apozem, Geop. 13. 12, 2, and Medic. Hence dwofeparifw, Hierophil. in Ideler Phys. 1. 411. drrobéwipu, =droléw, Alex. Trall. 12. 1. drrofevyvijpat, aor. -e(vyqy [¥], but also—eCedyOny Eur. El. 284, Anth. P. 12. 226: Pass.:—to be parted from, téxvwv, yuvaueds, Eur. H. F. 1376, Med. 1017; ef yapow dmeiyny if I were free from .., Id. Supp. 791; dppaxds dmrofuyeis. Id. Phoen. 998 :—damep detp’ dmeCi-yny médas (scr. #65a) as on foot did I start and come hither, like Baivew méda (v. sub Baivw a, 11. 4), Aesch, Cho. 676. 2. the Act. occurs in Manetho 3, 85, dw. cuvetvwr. aéfeviis, ews, 7, an unyoking, Schol. Od. 6. 88. daroléw, fut. —(éom, to boil till the scum is thrown off, Hipp. 407. 3, Diphil.’AzoA. 1.9. 2. intr. to cease boiling or fermenting, Alex. Anp.6. arolopéopat, Pass. to grow dark or obscure, Theod. Stud. aroliyéw, =drolevyvups, Gloss. arrélipos, ov, in a state of fermentation, Hipp. Prorth. 105. amé-tuE, vyos, 5, 1%), separated, single, Eust. Opusc. 64. 15. dn-éfo, fut. -o(jow, to smell of something, twos Ibyc. 42 Schneidew., Plut. 2.13 E: absol., Longus 1. IL. impers., dwé(ec THs. ’Apa- Bins there comes an odour trom Arabia, Hdt. 3. 113, cf. Luc. Cyn. 17. dtrolwypadéw, to portray, Ta évavtia pacpara Plat. Tim. 71 C. amrofavvups and -vw: fut. (how :—to.take the girdle off one, i.e. to discharge him from service, Hdn. 2.13, 17, etc.:—hence améfwortos, ov, discharged, dismissed, Byz. droihacodw, to make into sea, Eust. ad Dion, P. p. 200. aro0ddw, fut. -OGA&, to lose the bloom, cited from Anth. + dmoQiveréov, verb Adj. of dxoOvnaxw, one must die, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 1, 8, Bekk. (v. ll. -@avaréoy or 6vyréov). In Origen. we have dmo6a- ynréov, -Oynréor, c. Cels. 8. 394, 406. droPappéw and -Papoéw, fut. ow, to take courage, have full confidence, Xen. Occ. 16,6; c. inf. to have the boldness to.., Longin. 32. 8 :—dr. 7 to venture a thing, Paus. 10. 19, 5. droPapptvopar, vy. sub dwoOpacivopat. droWaupdfo, Ion. -Owupdto or —Qwpdfo:—to marvel much. at a thing, dpap 8 dmeOatpao’ bvepoy Od. 6. 49; dm. TA deydpeva, 7d AexGev Hdt. 1. 11, 30; moAAA GAAa Id. 2. 79 :—absol. fo wonder much, Id. 1. 68, al.; c. part., dw. dpéwy Id. 1. 88; foll. by ei, to wonder that.., Aeschin. 13. 29., 16. 42:—rare in Trag., Aesch. Ag. 318, Soph.O.C. 1586. arolavpactikas, Ady. wonderingly, Eus. D. E. 497 D. droQaupatile, =drobavpatw, Gramm. droPedopatr, Dep. to behold from afar, look at, rt Joseph. B. J. 2. 15, 1. aroPadlw, strengthd. for Gea{w, Themist. 239 D. arro0edw, poet. for drofedw, Anth. P. 12. 177, Philostr. 834. amoVepeAdw, to destroy utterly, Suid. s. vy. dmoryai@oat. Gmo0ev, Adv. (amd) from afar, opevdovav, dxovriCeay Thuc. 2. 81, Xen., etc.: c. gen., drodev tov reixous Aeschin. 14. 12. Il. afar off, at a distance, Thue. 6. 7; % yj dmo8ev Xen. Cyn, g, 2 and 16; oixeiv dx. Arist. Pol. 3.9, 10; of am. ovppaxot Ib, 8. ‘The old Att. and more usual form is daev, q. v. amd0eos, ov, far from the gods, godless, like eos, Soph. Fr. 246. amoQedw, to deify, Polyb. 12. 23, 4, Plut., etc. :—Pass., Tavupndns . . droGeovpevos Nicol. Incert. 1. 35; pera 70 drobeaPvat C. I. 2831. 75 Ep. drodemeis Anth. P. 12. 177. 2. in, Gramm. euphem, for ¢o make away with, esp. by drowning. d&robepimetia, %, regular worship, Oedy Arist. Pal. 7. 16, 14. II. restorative treatment after fatigue, Antyll. Matthaei 106, Galen. dmoPepdmevors, ews, 1),=Oepdmevots, Hesych,:—dmoSepamevréos, a, ov, to be treated medically, Soran. :—dmo8ep&revtucés, 7), dv, Of, con- nected with dmoBepaneia (11), Antyll. Matthaei 107, Galen. amoepiimetia, to treat with attention and honour, Dion. H. 3. 71, etc. 2. to treat medically, twa Hipp. 26.52; TO ddAyoby Tut Plut. 2.118 C: to apply dmoBepareia (11), Antyll. in Matthaei Med. 141, Galen. Grobepite, post. aor. dméOpica :—to cut off, dkpas ws dméOpisev Kipas Eur. Or. 128, cf, Hel, 1188; so in Archil. 127 ivas pedéov arebpicer, and often in Anth.; the regul. form —Oépica in Ael. N. A. 1.53 drebe- pica rods mpopnras cov LxXXx (Hos. 6. 6):—Med., aor. dreOpicapny Anth. P. 5. 137; do@pigac@at, of the tonsure of monks, Procop. Hist. 48 D, etc. (perhaps from a mistaken etymology, cf. amd@pigis). S 181 droépiopa, 74, v. sub dndO papa. drrdPeppos, ov, =dOeppos, Aretae. Caus.M. Diut. 2.1. II. as Subst., =HedTobTTAa, Schol. Ar. Pl. 1122. 2. akind of drink, Hipp. 582. 23, etc. anoPéotpos, ov, stored away, Joseph. A. J. 16.. ypu Gr dbears, ews, 9, (dworlOnut) a laying up in store, els Gm. yevécbat to be stored up, Plat. Legg. 844 D; yada xphocuov els dm, Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 133 dm. Tijs tpopis, of bees, Ib. 9. 38, 2; Thy dm. THs Onpas troveto@at Ib. 39, 4. 2. the setting and disposition of a dislocated or fractured limb, cited from Hipp. II. a putting aside, making away with, getting rid of, piwov, 1 Ep. Petr. 3. 21, cf. 2. I, 14. 2. an exposing of children, Arist. Pol. 7.16, 15; cf. dmorl@nue I. 7. 3. resignation of an. office, App. Civ. 1. 3. 4, dm. nwdov, mepidiou @ pause or rest of the voice in speaking, Dem. Phal. 19, etc.; so in metres, =xaTdAnéis, Hephaest. 4. 5. in Vitruy. 4. 1, 11 it seems to be =dm n i. III. =dmodurnpioy, Luc. Hipp. 5. dnobeomife, to utter as an oracle, dm. éxperpa Strabo 419, cf. Plut. Lucull. 2: to prophesy, Dion. H. 6. 43, : dmobéomors, ews, %, an oracle given, Strabo 814. Grdberros, ov, despised, 5) Tére Keir dx. Od. 17. 296, cf. Lyc. 540. (From @éccac8a, cf. roAvbeaTOs.) GroGérar, av, gi, a place in Lacedaemon, into which all misshapen children were thrown as soon as born, Plut. Lyc. 16. Gmoberéov, verb. Adj. one must sei aside, lay by, Diosc, 2.,89. drobetuxés, 7, dv, laying aside, Ttyos Schol. Ar, Pl. 8. verbs, deponent. dadBeros, ov, (droridnur) laid by, stored up, Plut. Caes. 35, Luc. Merc. Cond. 5. 2. hidden, secret, mysterious, én Plat. Phaedr. 262 A, cf. Dion, H. 11. 62, Lob. Aglaoph. p. 861. 3. reserved for special occa- sions, special, pidos Lys. 113. 44; dwped Dem. 1376. fin. II. put aside, rejected, thrown away, Plut, 2. 159 F. : Gro8éw, fut. -Pedcouat, to run away, Hdt. 8, 56, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 40. d&roflewpéw, =dmroPedouat, Arist. Mirab. 104, Polyb. 27. 4, 4, Diod., etc. dmofedpyors, ews, 2, serious contemplation, Plut. Pelop. 25, etc. dmoPewpyréov, verb. Adj. one must consider, contemplate, Plut. 2.30 A. drro¥éwors, ews, %}, deification, Strabo 284, C..I. 2832, cf. Cic. Att. I. 15. GrobqKn, 4, any place wherein to lay up a thing, a barn, magazine, storehouse, Thuc. 6. 97; dm. BiBAiww Luc. Indoct. 5; dr. cwparov a burial-place, Luc; Contempl. 22. 2. a refuge, Philist. 59. II. anything laid by, a store, dwoOnuny wovetaOat és TOV" Tlepoee to lay up store of favour with him, Hdt. 8. 109. GrroPyhacpés, 5, (OnAdtw) a sucking, sucking out, cited from Diosc. : —the Verb:-dfw in late Medic. writers. GrobnAtvew, to make weak or effeminate, to. enervate, Plut. Anton. 53; Pass., Clearch. ap. Ath, 515 F :—metaph. of plants, Theophr. H. P. 7. 4, 3, etc,;, of wine, Plut. 2, 692 D. . aroOnpiéw, to change into a beast, rv Eratosth. Catast. 1; to make quite savage, Tov Biov Plut. 2. 995 D: to exasperate, twa mpés Twa Polyb. 1. 79, 8 :—Pass. to become or be so, Id. 1. 67, 6, etc.; of wounds, Id. 1. 81, 5, ubi v. Schweigh, II. Pass. to. be full of savage creatures, Alciphro 2. 3. GrroPnpiwors, ews, , a changing into a wild, beast, Hesych. (from Pass.) fury or rage against any one, mpés Twa cited from Diod. aroPncauptfo, to store, hoard up, Diod. 5. 40, Luc. Alex. 23 :—Pass., Joseph, B. J. 7. 8, 4:—verb, Adj. drofnoavpirréov, one must lay by, store up, Clem, Al. 336. arodycauptcpés, 6, a laying by, storing up, Diod. 3. 29. a60nros, ov, not desired, Hesych., Eust.; cf. Call. Fr. 302. arrobivéopan, Pass. ‘o be filled up, choked with sand or mud, Polyb.1.75,8. aroPAdw, fut. dow, to crush quite, Gloss. dro0A(Bw [7], fut. Yew, do squeeze out, rods dpxeis Arist. H. A. 9. 50, 6, cf. Theophr. Odor. 29; Tov é Tod Bérpuos droOA:Bopevoy olvoy Diod. 3. 62; THs xwpas from the place, Luc. Jud, Voc. 2. 2. to press or force back, 7d aipa, Arist. H. A. 7. 10, 3.:—in Eur. Cycl. 237, Ruhnk. restored dmoAévery. 3. to press tightly, 74 xpadoneda Diphil. Zoryp. 2. 30: da. Tid to press upon, press, crowd, Ev. Luc. 8. 45. II, to oppress much, Aquila V. T. ard0Atppa, aos, 75, expressed juice, Diosc, I. 151. ard0Auspos, 6, oppression, Aquila V. T. ardbAupis, ews, 3, a pressing, Borptwy Diod. 3. 63. out of one's place, Luc. Jud. Voc. 2. aroOvacKe, fut. -Oavodpat, lon. -Pavéopar or —edpuar Hat. 3. 143., 7- 134 :—Strengthd. for @vjaxw, to die off, die, Hom., Pind. O. 2. 45, and once in Trag. (Eur. Fr. 582. 6); but in Com, and Prose the usual form of the pres. (v. @vyjaxw); ced droreOyn@ros Il. 22. 432; aroOvncKev mept. pacyavy. Od. 11. 424; Bdes 8 dworéOvacay Hdn 12. 393; ond Aipod Thuc. I, 126; c. dat., vdow Id. 8. 84; c. acc. cogn., Oavaror dm. Xen. Mem, 4. 8, 3, etc.; els Erepov Civ dm. Plat. Ax. 365 D :—to be ready to die, of laughter, etc., like €xOvnoxm (q. v.), At. Ach. 15 ; dm. 7@ dée Arist. M. Mor. 1. 20, 13. ITI. serving as Pass. of dzo~ relive, to be put to death, to be slain, ind twos Hdt. 1. 137. 7. 154: esp. by judicial sentence, dwo@aveiv ind ris TéAews Lycurg. 159. 29, cf. Plat. Apol. 29 C, 32 D, al., Arist. Rhet. 2. 23, 2. P aroPopeiy, inf. aor. 2 act. of droOphora. droPpactvopat, fut. tvodpas, Dep. to be very courageous or bold, dare ail things, Dem. 1407. 14: later form -Oappvvopat, Diogen. Epist. aré0pavors, ews, 4, a breaking, fracture, Medic. II. a breaking up, vepov Arist. Mund. 4, 7. ané0pavepa, 76, a fragment, Strabo 489. : aroOpavw, to break off, ves xépuuBa Aesch. Pers. 410 :—Pass, to ba broken off, Arist. Probl. 38. 8,1; metaph,, doPpavoOyva: THs evKAclas II. of II. a squeezing 182 aroOpnvéw — to be broken off from all one’s fair fame, make shipwreck of it, Ar. Nub. 997. Ero, to lament much, like dwodvpopat, Babr. 12. 3, Plot. Fab. 18, moOpiate, properly, to cut 9, -leaves: generally, to cut off, dock, Ach. ae ubi v. Elms. ree : ue wroPptykow, to wall off, build off, Byz. droPpife, v. sub drobepifa. ony ard0pie, rptxos, 6, },=dOpif, Call. Fr. 341. , «ws, 2), the clerical tonsure, Eust. Opusc. 260. 34. (V. sub dirobepices.) dsb, aros, 76, that which is cut off, Orph. Arg. 998. m60povos, ov, coming or rising from a throne, Greg. Naz. Grobpinre, fut. yw, to crush, crumble to pieces, Joseph. B. J. 3.7, 23:— metaph. to break in spirit, enervate, rds yuxds fvyKkenhacpevor TE Kai droreOpuppévor Plat. Rep. 495 E; cf. Hemst., and Ruhnk. Tim. & w@, fut. -Oopodpar: aor. dméSopoy :—to leap off from, vnds Il. 2. 702; a’ immov, dd veds Hat. 1. 80., 7. 182; of arrows, in tmesi, dard veuphpe Oopdvres Il. 16. 773 II. to leap up from, rise from, ramvor dmoOpwoKovra vojoat B yatns Od. 1.58; épws xpadins ar. Anth. P.9.443- 2. absol.to rise sheer up, shoot upwards, of rocks, Hes. Sc. 375. droPiplacis, ews, 7, a rising of smoke or vapour, Plut. 2. 647 F. Grro0ipidw, to fumigate, Arist. H. A. 6. 37, 3. droOuptos [ji], ov (fem. —7 in Simon Iamb. 6. 35): (Odds) :—not ac- cording to the mind, unpleasant, hateful, éwos Hes. Op. 708; droOvpua €pdew meets do one a disfavour, Il. 14. 261; ob te dmoOUpiov Toqoat Hdt. 7. 168. aré0ipos, ov,=d0upos: indifferent, careless, Plut. 2. 87 F. a&robuvifte, to send to the tunnies, i.e. dismiss as incorrigibly dull, Luc. Jup. Trag. 25, cf. Eust. 1720. 63. aroPipow, to put out of doors, Hesych.:—also émoOupite, Gloss. dmobvcdviov or -cravov, 74, a drinking-vessel, Polemo ap. Ath. 479F. dmro0tréov, verb. Adj. one must perform a sacrifice, Themist. 142 A. drobiw, fut. -Ovow, to offer up as a votive sacrifice, x.walpas Xen, An. 3. 2, 123 wyeudouva Ib. 4. 8, 25; edx hv Diphil. Zwyp. 2. 10. GroPwpaxilopat, Pass. to put off one’s coat of mail, ap. Suid. a&roQovupdto or -Oapdtw, Ion. for drobavpatw. GrroWeiw or —éw, and -SieKw, to swell up, dub. for ér-, Hipp. 554. 51., weep arrotSnots, ews, 4, abatement of a swelling, Strabo 54. dmotepow, = dguepdw, C. 1, 2827. 9. d-rountikés, 7, Ov, unpoetical, Schol. Dion. P. 289. G-rolytos, ov, not done, undone, wempaypévoy aroinroy Bépev Epyav rédos, Lat. infectum reddere, Pind. O. 2.30; dm. mapmoAd’ éoriv Menand. Any. 1: unformed, unfinished, Aristid. 1. 76. 2. not to be done, impossible, Plut. Cor. 38. II. rudely made, unpolished, Dion. H. de Lys. 8: esp. unpoetical, dm. Adyos i. q. medr A€gts, Id. de Comp. p. 16 :—Adyv. —rws, Id. de Dem. 39. ITI. of persons, awkward, Geop. droukecta, 7), = doixnots, esp. of the Captivity, LXx (4 Regg. 24.15, al.). Gmouéw, to go away from home, esp. asa colonist, to settle in a foreign country, emigrate, éx Témov Isocr.66 B; és @ovpious Plat. Euthyd. 271 C; éy vow Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 12;—so c. acc. loci, KaAAioray dm@enoay vaoov Pind. P. 4. 460. LI. to dwell afar off, to live or be far away (v. dndpyw U1), paxpav dm. Thuc. 3.55; mpdow am. Xen. Occ. 4, 6; dar. Tivos mpoow Eur. H. F. 557, cf. 1. A. 680; dm. rev medioy Philostr. 775 :—c. acc. to live a long way off a person, Theocr. 15. 7, si vera l.: — Soph. uses the Pass. in a singular way, % Képu@os éf éuod. . paxpdv dawxetro Corinth was inhabited far away from me, i. e. 1 settled far from Corinth, O. T. 998. amotknots, ews, 77, =sq., emigration, Hesych., Suid. Gmouxia, Ion. tn, %, (darotxos) a settlement far from home, a colony, Pind. O. 1. 36, Soph. Fr. 342, Hdt. 1. 146, etc.; correlative to pnrpd- mohis, Thuc. 1. 34; eis dm. oréAdeuv, ayetv to send, lead to form a settlement, Hdt. 4. 147., 5.1245 am. wriCev Aesch. Pr, 814; dm. éemép- mew Thuc. 1.12; da. enptocew és témoy Id. 1. 27; dm. woretobat Plat. Legg. 702 C; 4 x&pn am. oleias is an offshoot from... , Arist. Pol. 1. 2, 6. arrouile, fut. Att. 1 :—to send away from home, és vicov Od. 12. 135; &« rémov Soph. Tr. 955, cf. O. C. 1390; dm. Séyor rid Eur. El. 1008, cf. Hipp. 629:—Pass. to be settled in a far land, év paxdpow » vnoows Plat. Rep. 519 C: to emigrate, éx rhjabe THs TéAews Id. Euthyd. 302 C; dd marpds dmoxaOvat to dwell apart from.., Arist. G. A. 2. 4, 33: metaph., els 7d péoov dmpxiabn rev éaxaroy Plat. Polit. 284 E; dvayns otk dm. mond is not far removed from .., Chaerem. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1.154. II. to colonise a place, send a colony to it, c. acc., Hdt. I. 94, Thuc. 1. 243 Spupods épqyous nat mayous dourtet Aesch. Fr. 305. _d-motktAos, ov, not variegated, unadorned, simple, Philo 1. 369, etc. ; 705, ov, not variegated,Clem. Al. 286. Ady.—rws,Schol. Aesch. drrotktos, ov, (dmoxia) colonial, ypdppara Harp. Grroukis, (50s, 7, pecul. fem. of doucos, dr. wéAts a colony, Hdt. 7. 167; and without méA:s, Strab, 481, Plut. Cor. 28, etc. dmoikiors, ews, 7), the leading out a colony, Dion. H. 3. 31. dmourop.os, 6, the settlement of a colony, pera rov am. Arist. Pol. 5. 5a3 II. =dromeoia, LXx. ‘ dmrouxteréov, verb. Adj. one must send far away, Clem. Al. 233. ' drrouxverijs, 0d, 6, the leader of a colony, Menand. Rhet. 85. drrouoSopéu, to cut off by building, to wall up, barricade, tds Ovpas, ‘as S8ovs Thuc. I. 134., 7.733 so Dem. 1273. 6, 8, Plut. Caes. 49. amorkovopéw, to manage so as to get rid of a thing, Plotin. p. 331, 555 :—Med., dr. vécov, xaxlay to get rid of them by one’s manner of life, Hierocl. ap. Stob. Flor. 229. 36, Ecl. 2. 214. Gmouovounors, cas, 4, a getting rid of a thing, Cass. Probl.7o. amroxabevow. Gmroucovépnros, ov, to be got rid of, Arr. Epict. 4.1, 44. ¥ Gmoucos, ov, away from home, abroad, on travel, dm. mepmev Tid vis to send away from one’s native land, Soph. O. T. 1518. IIL. mostly as Subst., 1. of persons, a settler, colonist (as viewed from the mother country), Hdt. 5. Qu Thuc. 1. 24, 35+ J. 57s €tc.3 woAuy Sweméwy daror- kov évy tH KoAxld xwpq Xen. An. 5. 3, 2: hence Aesch. calls iron XdAvBos Sxv0dv ax., Theb. 729. 2. dwouros (sub. éAus), , a colony, like dmouia, dmoiis, Xen. An. 5. 3, 2-, 6. 2, 1; with mvAts expressed ; Ar. Lys. 582. G&roucrifopar, Dep. to complain loudly of a thing, mpds marépa darok~ rifero Tay... hvtnoe (sc. Tadra dv Hvrnce) Hdt. 1. 114. G-mro{pavros, ov, unfed, untended, Anth, P. 6. 239; metaph. in Eccl. Groote, fut. foua, to bewail loudly, 7: Aesch. Ag. 329, Soph. Ph. 278; rid Aesch, Fr. 133, Antipho 134.15; da. rt mpos Twa Eur. Med. 31; dam. Twa twos Dion. H. 5.8. dmrowa, wv, 74; (prob. from a euphon., row7, and therefore much the same as mown, mowvai; cf. the phrase 72 xpnuata drowa dvdpacoy of madaoi, Dem. 630. fin.) : I. in Hom. (only in Il.), much like Avtpa, a ransom or price paid, whether to recover one’s freedom when taken prisoner, pépwy dmepeiar’ dar. Il, 1. 13; od« dwedégar’ ar. Ib. g5, al., cf. Hdt. 6. 79; or, like (wdypia, to save one’s life, ll. 6. 49., 10. 380, etc., ef. Theogn. 727; or for the corpse of a slain friend, ds dm, pépor Kat vexpov a@yoro Il. 24. 139 ;—often with gen. of the person ransomed, Grrowa Kovpns, vivs ransom for them, I. I11,, 2. 230; vexpoto dé 5égar dm, 24. 137. II. generally, ato t, compensation, penalty, ay édkw dpecar Sbpevat 7 dmepeior am. g. 120, cf. Hdt. 9. 120: esp. by Solon’s laws the fine due from the murderer to the next of kin, like the Old Norse and Saxon weregild, Plat. Legg. 862 C; tSpews, macparav, popias dr. for violence, etc., Aesch. Pers. 808, Ag. 1420, 1670, cf. Eur. Bacch. 516, Alc. 7; in I. T. 1459 THs os oparyijs dmowa prob. re- demption, rescue from death ;—rare in Prose, droivois é{tAac@jvar Plat. Legg. 862 C, cf. Rep. 393 E. 2. Pind. often has it in good sense, @ recompense, reward, mostly absol.;\c. gen. in recompense or reward for .., dmow dperas P. 2, 26:—in sing., Todro yap dvr’ dyaBoto vdov etAnxer darowvov C. I. 6280 B. 10. Grrowde, (ro) to demand the fine due from the murderer (v. drowva. 11), Lex ap. Dem. 629. 22, cf. 630. fin.:—Med. to hold to ransom, Eur. Rhes. 177, cf. 466. Gm-owvéw, to cease to ferment, v.1, Alex. Anuntp. 6. dmowwls, Ady. unpunished, Agath. Hist. p. 248. Gmow6-Bikos, ov, exacting penalty, atoning, dixac Eur. H. F. 888. Garow6-Sopmos, ov, ransom-devouring, Lyc. 902. dmowov, 7d, v. sub drova. Gr-owos, ov, =douvos, Eust. 727. 20, etc. &-rroL0s, ov, (motos) without quality or attribute, crovyeta Democr. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1.17; #An Plut. 2. 369 A; yedos Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 2. 73 da. Biwp pure water, Ath, 33 C. dmourréov, verb. Adj. of dopépm, one must carry off, Gloss. Gmotoretw, to kill with arrows, Anth. P. 7. 743. arotow, v. sub dropépw. Gmroixopar, fut. -orxyoopat: aor. -pxdunv: Dep.:—to be gone away, to be far from, keep aloof from a thing, c. gen., drotyovrat moA€épovo Il. II, 408; doixea dvipés art gone from him, hast forsaken him, 19. 342; and so in Att. 2. absol. to be gone, to have departed, to be absent, bmas 5% Snpdv dmotxerar how long he has been gone, Od. 4. 109; dvbpos drorxopévov woddv xXpévov 21. 70, cf. 2. 253; meph marpds da- orxopevoro EpecBat his absent father, 1, 135., 3.77; dm. els Tagiv TaALY Eur, Heracl, 818. 3. to be gone, to have perished, dmotxerat xapis Eur. H. F. 134: of persons, fo be dead and gone, dwodkumioy p drrolxerat Ar. Ran. 83; more fully, da. Bidroo v. 1, Anth. P. 10. 59; of drotxdpevor =oi TeAcurqoayres, Pind. P. 1. 181, cf. 3. 4. 4. pnvds aroxo- pévov =0ivoytos, Arat. 810. Grovavitopar, Dep. to shun as an ill-omen, Lat. abominari, Gloss. . Gmrokabatpm, fut. dpa, to clear, cleanse or clean quite, dw. ri xeipa els 7a xetpépaxrpa upon the towels, Xen, Cyr. 1. 3,53 Tots mpooGiows dr. onédcow, of flies, Arist. P. A. 4. 6, 14:—Pass., Id. Probl. 31. 9:—Med. to purge oneself, Ib. 4. 30. 2. to refine metal by smelting, Strabo 399; pynrivn droxexabappevy purified, Diosc. 1. 24. metaph., dwoxexadapOat Thy poviyv to be pure in dialect, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 21. II. to cleanse off, clear away, rds tpamé{as Ar. Pax 1193; dm. tas Bavatcous Téxvas eis peroikov xépas Plut, Comp. Lyc. c. Num. 2: 40 remove by purging or clearing, Diosc. 4.63 :—Pass. to be removed by purging, Hipp. Vet. Med. 16; or by cleansing, Plat. Tim. 72.C: generally to be got rid of, Arist. Meteor. 4. 6, 9, H. A. 6. 14, 7:—Med., droxabypacbai rt to get rid of a thing, Tim. Locr. 104 B; twos to rid oneself of .., Xen. Cyr. 25 9; 27% arroxaditpite, fut. «@, to make clean, purify, LXx (Job 25. 4) :-—Ka0d- piopa, 70, =Kabappa,E.M.483.12:—Kalapiopés, 6, a purification, Byz. droxd0appa,76, that which is cleared off, an excretion, dr. % xo Arist. P. A. 4. 2, 10, cf. H. A. 5. 15, 3., 9. 40, Io. II. an expiatory offer- ing, Steph. B.: cf. #d0apya. arroxdQapors, ews, 7), that which is cleared off from metal, dross, Arist. Meteor. 4. 6, 10; of animal excretion, Id. G. A. 1. 18, 6, H. A. 7. Io, 6; droxabdpoes xodfs Thuc. 2. 49. II. lustration, expiation, Plut. Rom. 21. drroxafapréov, verb. Adj. one must purify, Aristid. 1. 25. aroxafaptixds, 4, dv, clearing off, cleansing, c. gen., Diose. 3. 25. arrokabé FOpat, fut. -edodpat, to sit down, sit, Gloss. aroxabetbo, fut. -evdjow: impf., droxanddov or —Kadeddoy and dmexabeddov :—to sleep away from home, és rd iepdv Philostr. 568; of a amroxabnwats — aroKxepdaive. woman separated from her husband, ¢o sleep apart, Eupol. Incert. 138. II, to fall asleep cver a thing, Themist. 13 D. Pte €ws, %, an unnailing, a taking down from the cross, . 1. 8765. GroxaOynpar, Pass. fo sit apart, dripwdpevor dmoxaréara (Ion. for —KaOnvrat) Hdt. 4.66; of bees, Arist. H. A. o. 40, 26; “droxabnyévn, =aipoppootoa, Lxx (Lev. 20. 18, al.). II. ¢o sit idle, Arist. H. A. g. 40, 26, Ael. V. H. 6. 12. dmokalife, to sit apart, of a judge, Polyb. 31. 10, 3. down, Plut. 2. 649 B. droxaftorravw, =sq., Polyb. 3. 98, 9, Diod. 18. 5'7:—also -tordw, Arist. Metaph. 11. 8, 12, Duris ap. Ath. 606 D, Diod. 1. 78. : Grroxabliornpt, fut.-xaragrhow: pf.—xabéoraxa Polyb, 21.9,9. To re-establish, restore, reinstate, Xen. Lac. 6, 3; Tiv woduretay Decret. Byz. ap. Dem. 256. 3; moAiras Plut. Alex. 7; dm. rwi 71 to restore or return it to one, Polyb. 3. 98, 7, etc.; dm. els abray (sc. picwv) Tim. Locr. 100 C, ef. Arist. M. Mor. 2.7, 11; eis 70 ard Id. Metaph. I. c.; dm. éavroy eis. .to carry oneself back.., Plut. 2.610 D; éi.., Diod. 5. 23:—to heal, set right, Diosc. 1. 77, etc. II. Pass., with pf. pass. dwoxaQéortipat, aor. -eordOny [a]: also aor. 2 act. -Karéorny : —to be restored, Arist. Categ. 8, 14, al.; da. els Tiv ef dpyfjs xard- aracw to return, settle down into.., Polyb. 25. 1, 1: of sicknesses, to subside, Hipp. Aph. 1258; dr. els rt to turn out so and so, Theophr. H. P. 4. 14, 5, cf. Polyb. 2. 41,14; also, dw. oreipov to turn out barren, Arist. Plant. 1. 6, 6. Groxaivipat, Pass. 2o surpass or vanquish, Th 8 abr’ ..dmexaivuro mav- Tas in wrestling again he vanquished all, Od. 8.127; ofos 59 we.. dt- exaivuto Tééw Ib. 219. amoxatpios, ov, =dxaipos, unseasonable, Soph. Ph. 155. a&mrokatotiipéopat, Pass. to assume the monarch, M. Anton. 6. 30. G@mokaiw, Att. —Kdw, fut. -catow: aor. dwéxna Il. 1. citand., —éxavoa Dem. 798. 23, Philippid. Incert. 2 :—to burn off, of medical cautery, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 54: also of intense cold (like Virgil’s frigus adurit), @UeAXav, ij kev Gnd Tpdov xepards ., ehat Il. 21. 336; dveuos Boppas . . dro- katov mavra Xen. An, 4. 5, 3; améxavoey } maxvn Tods apmédous Philippid. Incert. 2; and often in Theophr.:—Pass., dwexatoyro ai fives their noses,were frozen off, Xen. An. 7. 4, 3. dtrokiixéw, (Kann) to sink under a weight of misery, LXX (Jer. 15.9). Grrokdknots, ews, 7), cowardice, Hesych. s. v. dréxvnats. GmoKxidéw, fut. éow, to call back, recall, esp. from exile, Hdt. 3. 53, Xen, Cyr. 1. 4, 25. 2. to call away or aside, Id. An. 7. 3, 35- II. to call by a name, esp. by way of disparagement, to stigmatise as .., Tov Tod pavévros . . Edvatpov dmoKadodvres Soph. Aj. 727; ddvyapximods Kal picodjpous da. Andoc. 31.10; ws év dvetde amok. pnxavorotdy Plat. Gorg. 512 C; dpydv, cofuoriy don. twa Xen. Mem. I. 2, 57 and 6,13; ods viv bBpite wal mrwyovs dmoxade? Dem. 582.12; ws év alcxp®@ pidavrous dz, Arist. Eth. N. 9. 8,1; mapdovroy ar. (sc. twa) Timocl. Kevt. 1; yapteytiopor ax. to call it a sorry jest, Plat. Theaet. 168 D; sometimes however without any bad sense, Tods XaAeraivovras dvipwbeas dm. Arist. Eth. N. 2. 9, 7, cf. Xen. Eq. 10, 17. aroxaddomily, fut. iow, to strip of ornament, Poll. 1. 236. ‘ dtroxé\uppa, aos, 7d, a revelation, Hermas ap. Clem. Al. 426. a@moxihunricés, 7, dv, that can reveal, revealing, Clem. Al. 98. a&moxidumra, fut. yw, to uncover, Thy Kepadny, etc., Hdt. 1.119; Ta o7nOn Plat. Prot. 352A:—Med., droxad’mrec@at riv Kepadny Plut. Crass. 6. 2. to disclose, reveal, Té5€ Tis diavolas Plat. Prot. 352 A; Thy Tis pnropiehs Sbvapuy Id. Gorg. 455 D, cf. 460 A:—Med. to reveal one’s whole mind, Plut. Alex. 55., 2. 880 E, cf. Ev. Luc. 2. 35, etc.; dao- xadvnrecbat mpds tt to let one’s designs upon a thing become known, Diod. 17. 62., 18. 23 :—Pass. to be disclosed, made known, Ev. Matth. 10. 26, etc.; of persons, 2 Ep. Thess. 2. 3, 6, 8, etc.; also, Ad-yot daro- xexaduppevot naked, i.e. shameless, words, Vit. Hom. 214. II, of a covering, to remove it, Arist. de An. 2. 9, 13, in Pass. d&moxdduipis, ews, 7), an uncovering, disclosing, making known, duaprias Plut. 2.70 F: a revelation, esp. of divine mysteries, revelation, Ep. Rom. 16, 25, etc.; of persons, a manifestation, 2 Ep. Thess. 1. 7, etc. :—the Apocalypse, N.T. drokapve, fut. —Képoduat, to grow quite weary, fail or flag utterly, mostly absol., Soph. O. C. 1776, Plat. Rep. 445 B, Anth. P. 5. 47; also c. part., dm. (nrav, unxavmpevos to be quite weary of secking, etc., Plat. Meno 81D, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 35. 2. c. inf. to cease to do, poxOeiv ove dm, Eur. lon 135; pa) dwoxdpps ceavroy coat do not hesitate .., Plat. Crito 45 B. 3. c. acc., dw. mévov to flinch from toil, Lat. detrectare laborem, Xen. Hell. 7. 5, 19; so, dm. mpds Tt Plut, Arat. 33. - dmokdprre, intr. to turn off or aside, opp. to dpOodpopetv, Xen. Eq. 7,14; dm. a Tod Tépparos, of chariots in the race, Arist. Rhet. 3. 9, 6. - dtroxapiis, ews, 7, a turning off the road, Theophr. Char. 23. drroxatrvicp.os, 6, fumigation, Diosc. 3, 126. dmroKitia (v. sub xanvds), to breathe away, aor. 1 in tmesi, dd 52 Wuxi exanvecey she gasped forth her life, of Andromaché in a swoon, Il. 22. 467; cf. Q. Sm. 6. 523. : daroKkapaSoKéw, to expect earnestly, c. acc., Polyb, 16. 2, 8, Aquila Ps. 36. 7. , drroKtipadoxta, %, earnest expectation, Ep. Rom. 8.19, Phil. 1. 20. * &mokiipatopéw, to behead, Schol. Pind. O. 10. 19. Garéxappa, aros, 74, that which is clipped off, Jambl. Protr. 21. * trokapmeviopat, Dep. to enjoy the fruits of, c.acc., Nicet. Ann. 194 B. -dmoKapmife, to gather fruit; Pass. to be stript of fruit,.Poll. 1. 236. II. metaph. in Med. =droxaprevopar, c, acc. rei, Epigr. Gr. 546. 16; c. gen., Clem. Al. 105. II. to sit 183 amoxaprée, to produce fruit, to produce, Hipp. 279. 34 :—Med. #o enjoy the fruit of, Tt Pinon ies 3 amrdkapats, ews, 1), (Kelpw) a eli ping, tonsure, Eccl. émoxapréov, verb. Adj. of droxeipw, one must clip off, Eupol. Incert. 97- Garoxaprepéw, to hill oneself by abstinence, starve oneself to death, Hipp. Acut. 393, cf. Cic. Tusc. 1. 34, Plut. Num, 21, Luc. Macrob. 19; &ore HadAov dy Ode droxaprepeiy 7) ToUT’ dxovay xaprepeiv Lysipp. Incert. 2; ob« dmexaprépnae.., GAN éxaprépno’ Timocl. Kavy, I. dmokaprépyots, ews, %), suicide by hunger, Quintil. Inst. 8. 5. arokappodoyéw, = xappodoyéw, Hipp. Progn. 38. GmoKxataBaive, fut. -Byoopat, to descend from, Dion. H. 9g. 16. Grrokardyvupn, to break, rend off, Hesych. GroKxartadi«n, 7), a condemnation, Byz. GroxataAhacow, Att.—tTw, to reconcile again, Ep.Eph. 2.16, Col.1. 20. Gmoxatappéw, to flow down from, dné twos Hipp. Aph. 1259. droxateppirrw, to fling down, Galen. dmoxatdoricts, ews, 7, complete restoration, restitution, reéstablish- ment, Tod évdeods Arist. M. Mor. 2. 7,12; eis pdow Ib. 11 and 20; Tis pvowos és 7d dpxatov Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1.5: recovery from sickness, Id, Caus. M, Ac. 1.10; dro. dorpwv the return of the stars to the same place in the heavens as in the former year, Plat. Ax. 370 B, Plut. 2. 937 F, etc. ;—so that the rule of Ammon., that dzox. is used of éupuxa, aardboats of dvxa, does not hold. émoxaracréticés, f, dv, returning, recurring in a cycle or orbit, Philo I. 24; da, dpeOpoi Nicom. Arithm. p. 131. Gmrokatdcyxeots, ews, %}, a holding off, Gloss. drroxatartinpt, to lay aside, dwoxarbero (sync. aor.med.) Ap. Rh, 3.817. aroxatadaivopat, Pass. to be reflected, Aristaen, I. 3. ‘ven’ atroxatatpixw, Zo cool, Galen. droxatéxw, to hold bound, éoxarats ripwpias C. 1 5858 b. 36. a&mroxarnpar, Ion. for dmoxdOnuat. droxarop0éa, to set upright again, Arist. Eth. E. 7. 14, 10. aroxatw, from below, Gramm, aroxdrabev, from beneath, upwards, Olympiod, Lob. Phryn. 46. GroxavAifo, fut. Att. 1: (xavdds):—to break off by the stalk: to break short off, Eur. Supp. 717, Thuc. 2. 76 :—Pass. to be so broken, to be fractured across, Hipp. Fract. 778, Art. 799.—Verb. Adj. -toréov, Oribas. Mai. 18. drroxavAuots, ews, }, a breaking off by the stalk; a breaking quite across, snapping, mdadtov Luc. Merc. Cond. 1. x a&mékavdos, ov, =dxavados, Schneid. Theophr. H. P. 7. 2, 4 amréxavots, ews, 7, (droxaiw) a burning, scorching, Strabo 779. drokdo, v. sub droxaiw. améxepar, fut. —xelcopuat, used as Pass. of dmorlOnu, to be laid away from, mpopadelas drérewrat poat the tides of events lie beyond our fore- sight, Pind. N. 11, 61, cf. Arat. 110. II. absol. to be laid up in store, of money, dm. évdov dpytpov Philetaer. 2.9; mapa tun Lys. 153.45; Tee for one’s use, Xen. An. 2, 3,15; Xdpis. . fv’ dwoxerrat (as Reisk. for gtvaméxerrac) is laid up as a Common possession, Soph. Q. C.1752: hence to be kept in reserve, Id. Cyr. 3. 1, 19, Plat., etc. ; trodds got [yéAws] éorly droxeiyevos you have great store of laughter in reserve, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2,15; dm. els.., to be reserved for an occasion, Plat. Legg. 952 D; ovyyvipn, eAcos dr, Tux Dem. 633. 26, Diod, 13. 30, etc.:—c. inf, drvxnpata aadéceral ri évevdoxtpeiv Dem. 294. 143 madeiy Dion. H. 5.8; mao. . 7d Oavety dadmerra Epigr. Gr. 416, 6 :— 70 dmoxeipevov that which is in store for one, one’s fate, Schiif. Greg. p. 477- III. to be laid aside, neglected, dm; méppw Cratin. Incert. 40, cf. Plut, 2. 159 F. dmoxetpa, fut. —Kep®, Ep.—népow; aor. -éxerpa, Ep. -€xepoa :—Pass., aor. -exapny: pf. —Kéappat. To clip or cut off, properly of hair, mostly in Med., fav@}v dmexeiparo xatrny Il. 23.141; drokeipacbac Tas kepadds to have their hair shorn close, Hdt.6, 21; and absol., droxel~ pac@at to cut off one’s hair, Ar. Nub. 836; esp. in token of mourning, Isae. 47. 9; so also in Act., Xen. Eq. 5, 8, Luc. Pisc, 46 :—Pass., dts droxapévra mpdBara twice shorn or clipped, Diod. 1. 36 ; awoxexappevos porxéy, am. oxadroy, of peculiar fashions of hair-cutting, Ar. Ach. 849, Thesm. 838; c. acc., awd orepdvay Kéxapoar mipyov thou hast been shorn of thy crown of towers, Eur. Hec. gto. 2. metaph. ¢o cheat, rovs maxeis Luc. Alex. 6. II. generally, to cut through, sever, dd 8 dyupw népoe révovte Il. 10. 456; dd 5¢ préBa wacay exepoev 13. 540. III. to cut off, slay, dvSpas Aesch. Pers. 921, cf, Eur. H. F. 875, Demad. 180. 3. droxexihuppévos, Ady. part. pf. pass. openly, Isocr. 171 E, Dion. H, de Rhet. 8. 3. dmroxexivSiveupévs, Adv. part. pf. pass. venturously, Themist. 107 C. dtroxekAnpwpévas, Adv. part. pf. pass. by lot, chance, Jo, Chrys. arrokexpuppevas, Ady. part. pf. pass. by stealth, Schol. Ar. Av. 267, Eccl. Gtr-oxéAAw, to get out of the course or track, A. B. 428. aarékevos, ov, quite emptied, Diosc. 5. 45: cf. drépnpos. drroxevéw, to empty quite, drain, exhaust, Hipp. 237. 343 dm. Tods médas (where Tovs 7., more Hebraico, = Tv yaorepa), Lxx (Jud. 3. 24): —Pass., Arist. Fr. 215. érroxevréw, to pierce through, LXx (Num. 25. 8, al.), cf. Diog. L. 9. 26 :—étrokévryats, ews, 7, Lxx (Hos, 8. 13). améxevtpos, ov, away from the centre, Manetho 3. 269. dmroKkévwors, ews, %, an emptying, Matth. Medic. 147. GroxepSaives, fut. —Kepdhow, —Kepdiva: aor. -exépdnoa, —enépdava:— to have benefit, enjoyment from or of a thing, c. gen., rorod Eur. Cycl, 4323 dm. Bpaxéa to make some small gain of a thing, Andoc, 17. 32; $ absol., €veorat dmoxepdavat Luc. D. Mort. 4. 1. > pa amécAaupa, 76, loud wailing, Arr. Epict. 2. 16, 39 :—also 184 arrokepmariCw— amoKvew. _Garoxeppiirife, fut, Att. 1, to change for small coin, break into small pieces, Porph, ap, Stob. Ecl. 1, 822. 2. metaph., dm. tdv Bioy to dissipate one’s whole substance, Anth. P. 7. 607. 3 _atroKepSAarsopat, Pass. to be summed up, Eust. 1769. 4. _dmoKxepadife, to behead, Arr. Epict. 1.1, 24, LXx (Ps. 151. 7) :—Pass., Philodem. in Gomperz Herk. Stud. 1. 17, Arr. Epict. 1. 1, 29. _Gmoxepddtopa, 74, dirt that comes off the head, Poll. 2. 48. drroxepddtopés, 6, beheading, Plut. 2. 358E: amoxepidvoras, od, 6, a headsman, Strabo 531. drroxexwpiopévws, Adv. pf. pass. separately, Apollon. Lex. Hom. rt Bev, to cease to mourn for, Twa Hat. g. 31. dmroKndéa, fut. yaw, =dundéw, to be remiss, Il. 23. 413: to be faint, Sophron ap. A. B. 428. Amon dns, és,=dxndns, negligent, Galen. améxnpos, («np) free from fate or death, Emped. 461. droxhpuypa, aros, 76, a thing publicly proclaimed, dub. in Hipp. 110. _ Grroxnpixevopatr, Dep. to avert by a message, deprecate, Tt Byz. drroxnpukréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of doxnpiaow, to be expelled, Greg. Naz. GtroxnpuKros, ov, publicly renounced : 1. of a son, disinherited, disowned, Theopomp. Hist. 333, cf. Poll. 4. 93, Luc. Icarom. 14. 2. in Eccl., excommunicated, Clem. Al. 562. ; pei ov, to be sold by public auction, C. I, 123. 5. GroKnpvtis, ews, 7, a public announcement, esp. public r iation of 420:—Med., dm. ria ris BiaBdoews Thuc. 6. tor:—Pass., dm. ris det - 680u Hdt. 3.117; THs driow dbod Ib. 55, cf. 58; am. rv muda Ar. Lys. 423; THs Ovpas Timocl. Neap. I. _ 2. to shut out or exclude from, rovrwy Hat. 1. 37, etc.; awd ray dyab@y Ar. Vesp. 601: also, droxenAr}~ Kapev..Oeods pneére.. diamepav have prevented them from.., Id. Ay. 1263 :—Pass., dm. rod cirov, tav ovtiov to turn away from food, have no appetite, Hipp. 373. 44 and 46, Dem, 1260. 23; dm. rod Adyou ruxeiv Id. 1107. 3. II. c. acc. only, to shut up, close, Tas mUAas, Ta ipa Hat. 1. 150., 2. 1333 TA... mpos THY @ ExovTa 75 re Tihduoy odpos Kat } *Osoa droxAnie, of Thessaly, 7.129 ; ar. 686 to bar a road, Babr. 8. 4; dm. Tas epddous rev émrndeiav Xen, Hell. 2. 4, 3:—Pass. to be closed, dm. ai mvdas Hdt. 3, 1175 dm. 4) SxevOuet) ind *Ayabupoay, i.e. is bounded by them, Id. 4. 100, 2. to shut up, as in prison, Soph, O. T. 1388, Ar. Vesp. 719; 7H) wokw dar. pdxAors Id. Lys. 487; dm. twa év5ov Dem, 1359. 6:—Pass., dmonActeoOar ev Swpariy Lysias 93. 19. 8. to shut out, Twa Ar. Vesp. 775 ; da. Thy oyu to intercept, Hdt. 4. 7; dm. tv BAacTiy Tod wrepod ¢o bar its growth, Plat. Phaedr. 251 D:—Pass., da. ind ris inmov Hdt. 9. 50; 70 pas droxexheorat Arist. Probl. 11. 49. III. absol. io make an exception, Dem. 841. 5. amoxhémre, fut. Yu, to steal away, run away with, rr h. Hom, Merc. 522; dm. éavrdy to cheat oneself, Greg. Naz. :—Pass. in Artemid. 2. 59, to be robbed of, c. acc. dmroKAr{fopar, late form for dmoxAclopat, to be shut up, C. 1. 434. a son, disinheriting, Plut. Themist. 2, Luc, Abdic. 5. munication, Synes. 219 B. _Groknpicow, Att. -rrw: fut. fa:—to have a thing cried, to offer it Sor public sale, sell by auction, Hdt.1. 194, Plat. Com. TpeoB. 4; az. 6 rt dv dApdvy Eupol. Tag. 12 :—Pass. to be sold by auction, Lys. 148. 43, Luc, Pisc. 23. II. to renounce publicly, é¢éoTw TO maTpt tov vidv da. Plat. Legg. 928 E, sq., cf. Dem. 1006. 21, Luc. Abdic. 1, sqq.: also to declare outlawed, banish, Valck. Hdt. 1. c.: in Eccl. to excommuni- cate, Eus. H. E. 7.29, 1. III. to forbid by proclamation, dmoxe- puxrat ur) oTparevew Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 27, cf. Theophr. H. P. 4. 4, 5- moKiSiipow, to take the xidapis off, Thy xepadny Lxx (Lev. Io. 6). , GtroxiSvapat, Pass. to spread abroad froma place, Ap. Rh. 4.133, Arat.735- GrroxivSuvevors, ews, 7, a venturous attempt, rvxns Thuc. 7. 67. atroxw5ivevw, to make a bold attempt, make a desperate venture, try a Yorlorn hope, mpés twa against another, Thuc. 7. 81; 0d tay evruxovy- Tov hv 7 dm. Arist. Fr. 154; dwoxw®d. éy tu to make trial in his case, upon him, Xen. Mem, 4. 2, 5, Aeschin. 41. 43; dm. mdgais Suvdpeoe Dion. H. 3. 52; dm. wept tv. drwy Plut. Alex. 17: also c. Adj. neut., aroxw5, Tovto to make this venture, Lys. 102. 15; c¢. inf, dmoxiw5v- veveroy .. copdy Tt A€é-yeww Ar. Ran, 1108:—Pass., Mev . . dmoxentvduvev- geTat TA xphyata will be put to the uttermost hazard, Thuc. 3. 39- II. to shrink from the dangers of another, abandon him in danger, Tivos Philostr. 296. Grrokivéw, fut. yom, to remove or put away from, droxwnoacKe Tpa- méns Il. 11.635; pn pw amonwhawor Ovpdwv Od. 22. 107. Ld, intr. to move off, Aen. Tact. 10, etc. II. excom- ._ Grroxtvyats, ews, 7), a means of removing, Twos Eccl. ' Gtroxtvos, 6, (xivéw) a comic dance, of an indecent nature, Cratin. Ney. 13, Ar. Fr. 269, cf. Poll. 4. 101, Ath. 629 C:—metaph., dadmwov ebpé find some way of dancing off or escaping, Ar. Eq. 20. ' drroxipsdopar, Pass. to become varicose, pdéBes Archig. ap. Galen. Gmoxcodopat, Pass. to be changed into ivy, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, ve: II. to be deprived of the tvy-wreath, Epigr. Gr. 927. GmroKAdSevw, fo lop off the branches, Philo Bybl. ap. Eus. P. E. 35 A. GtrokAdle, fut. -—Adyéw, to ring or shout forth, Aesch, Ag. 156, Anth. P. 7. 191. ' dmr-oKxAdlo, fut. dow, to bend one’s knees, and so to rest, like kaprrew yovu, Ar. Fr. 163; cf. Soph. O. C. 196. GrroxAalo, Att. -KAdw, [aw]: fut. -KAavoopat:—to weep aloud, Hat. 2, 121, 3, etc. ; dm. ordvov Soph. Ph. 695. 2. dm, Twa or Tt to bewail much, mourn deeply for, Theogn. 931, Aesch. Pr. 637; ¢uavrdv Plat. Phaedo 117 C :—Med., dmoxAalecOar nana to bewail one’s woes, Soph. O.T.1467; rv weviay Ar. Vesp.564; Tepmvdv 7d A€fat KdrowAav- cao0aEur. Fr. 567. II. Med., also, to cease to wail, Luc. Syr.D.6. arrokAgtw, —KAakov, v. sub droxAclw. ' darékAGpos, ov, Dor. for dadiAnpos. _ dmoxAuiots, ews, 7), a breaking, of a wave, E. M.8, 41. anékAacpa, 70, a fracture of the extremity, Hipp. Offic. qi. ‘ékAavots, €ws, #, Origen. ' daroxAdw, fut. dow, to break off, 7d Képas Strabo 458 ;—a part. aor. 2 act, dwoxAds, Anacr. Fr. 16:—Med., Anth. P. 7. 506 :—Pass., ody iorip .. dppev’ droxdac0évra Theocr, 22.14. 2. to prune vines, Ar. Fr. 163. Grrok\dw [@], v. sub dmoxdaiw. * drréxAevois or —KAgors, ews, , (dmoxAclw) a shutting up, dmdxd. pov Tv mudav a shutting the gates against me, Thuc. 4. 85. Il.a shutting out, dmoxAnoes fsa (sc. €eAAov) there would be a com- plete stoppage to their works, 1d. 6. 99. arékheopa, 76, a guard-house, LXX; and so dmokAaopes, ov, 6, Arr, Epict. 4.7, 20, Aquila Ps, 141. 8. a&mroxAeoréov, verb, Adj. one must bar, shut off, mapodov Basil. amékAeoros, ov, shut off, enclosed, Aquila V. T. Gtrowdelw, fut. -cAelow: Ion, darowAniw, fut. -«Aniow (Hdt.): Att. droKkAy, fut. -Agow: Dor. fut. -Aggw Theocr. 15. 43; imper. aor. dato Ib. 77: (cf. wArclw). To shut off from or out of, Twa muha Hdt. 5. 104; Sapdrov Aesch. Pr. 670;- dm. twa to shut him out, Theocr. 15. 77; Twa TH KeyeAtbe Ar. Vesp. 775; 7H Ovpq Id. Feel = *- GmoKAqiw, Ion, for dmoxdelw: also dwoxAnto, C. I. 434. dmokAnpovépos, ov, =sq., disinherited, Arr. Epict. 3.8, 2, Eccl. dao-KAnpos, Dor.—KAdpos, ov, without lot or share of, Tovey Pind, P.5. 71,Emped.ap. Clem. Al. 721. II, absol. disinherited, Arist. Top. 2.6, 5. GaroKAnpbe, to chodse by lot from a number, Hdt. 2,32; dm. va & Sexddos Id. 3. 25; awd mavtwy trav Adxwv Thue. 4.8; at Athens, to choose or elect by lot, 1d. 8. 70, Andoc. 11.19; a:ropvaAaxas dm, Lys. 165. 35: and in Pass. to be so chosen, Dem. 778. 4, Chron, Par, in C. I. 2374. 16 :—Med., much like Act., Philo 2. 508, Plut. 27826 E. 2. to allot, assign by lot, xwpay tii Plut. Caes. 51 :—Pass. to be allotted, fall to one’s share, tut Luc. Merc, Cond. 32, Philo 2. 577:—also to have allotted to one, Tt Philo 1, 214. II. to exclude from drawing lots for office, Arist. Pol. 4. 14, 13; cf. dé«Anpos IL. a&mroxAnpwots, ews, 7), choice by lot or chance, unreasoning choice, Plut. 2.1045 F: random conduct, caprice, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 351: hence the phrases in Origen., tis ) dmoxd., c. inf., what is there unreasonable in doing so and so? and kar’ dwoxAnpwow without reason, at random, GarokAnpwréov, verb. Adj. one must choose by lot, Arist. Pol. 6. 3, 6. darokAnpwrids, 7, dv, choosing or acting by lot or chance, at random, Sext. Emp. P. 3.79. Adv. -«as, Origen. G&réxAnros, ov, (doxadéw) called or chosen out, select; of ’AmdeAnrot among the Aetolians, members of the select council, Polyb. 20. I, I, etc. 5 cf, Herm. Polit. Ant. § 184. 10. Gréxhipa, 76, a slope downwards, E. M. 374. 35: a star's declination, opp. to its dvagopd, Sext. Emp. M.5.14. [V. Lob. Paral. 418.] amoKAtvis, és, on the decline, Manctho 6, 62. GrroxXive [ft], fut. vO: Pass., aor. -exAlOny, post. -exAlvOny Theocr. 3. 37:—?o turn off or aside, 1 Od. 19.556: to turn back, h, Hom. Ven, 169 :—Pass. (like 111. 1), to slope away, of countries, mpos Témov Diod. 13. 89 : of the day, to decline, get towards evening, amokAwopevns Tihs peoapBpins, Tis }uéepns Hat. 3. 104, 1 14., 4. 181, II. Pass. to be upset, Dem. 1278. 24, Plut. Galb, 27. III. in Att. mostly intr. in Act., 1. of countries, to slope away, Lat. vergere, Polyb. 3. 47 2. 2. to turn aside or off the road, Xen. An. 2. 2, 16, Theocr. 7. 130: hence, apos Thy Ra dtrokXivoytt as one turns to go Eastward, Hdt. 4. 22. 3. often with a bad sense, to turn off, fall away, decline, degenerate, Soph. O. T. 1192; ém 7d fqOupetv Dem. 13. 43 mpos Onpwin piaw Plat. Polit. 309 E; mpds ras Adovas Arist. Eth. N. 4. I, 35, cf. Plat. Rep. 547 E; dm. ds mpds rhv dnuoxpariay Arist. Pol. 4. 8, 3, cf. 5. 7, 6 :—also without any bad sense, dz, eis twa Téxvny to in- cline, have a bent towards it, Plat. Legg. 847 A; mpds 7d xéopuov Ib. 802 E: to have a leaning, be favourably disposed, pds twa Dem. 655. 16. GrrékXtots, ews, 7), a turning off, declension, as of fortune, Plut. 2. 611 A. II. a descent, dismounting, Ib. 970 D. III. a sinking, of the sun, Id. Aemil. 17 ; of a ship, Id, Pomp. 47. GarokAtréov, verb. Adj. one must incline, mpos tt Arist. Eth. N. 9. 2, 5- Gmrd«Xiros, ov, inclined, sinking, Plut. 2. 273,.D. Gmonhvto, fut. vow, to wash away, Theophr. C. P. 5. 9, 6:—Pass., Arist. Mund. 5,12. II. in Med., Diod. 4.51; metaph., woriug Ady dApupdy doy da, Plat. Phaedr, 243 D:—hence to avert by puri- Jications, ovetpov Ar, Ran, 1340. oh pats 9, a washing off, émuddces kat da. flow and ebb, Themist. dmroxpyréov, verb. Adj. of droxdyyw, one mu . Rep. 445 B (as Bekk. for daviior). A mt STOW SEO amrdKvaLots, €ws, 7), affliction, vexation, Hesych. dmokvatw, Att. -Kvde, inf. -kvav Plat. Phil. 26 B: aor. -€xvaioa Id. Rep. 406 B :—to scrape or rub off, t Antiph, Incert. 9g. It. dmoxv. Twa to wear one out, worry to death, Ar. Eccl. 1087, Plat. ll. C.5 OU B dmoxvaies meptnatay Menand. Mic, 10; dmoxvaier yap dndia tine nal Speciale Dem. 564. 12, Theophr. Char. 7, cf. Dion, H. de em. 20 :—Pass. to be worn out, Plat. s ; el i hoa kook Baba Ee , Rep. 406 B; elopopais Xen. Hell. dm-oxvéw, to shrink from, c. acc., Tov kivévyoy Thuc. 3. 20; Tov mov Id. 8. 12 :—c, inf. to shrink from doing, Id. 4. 11, Plat. Phaedo 84 Cc, Theaet. 166 B. 2. absol, to shrink back hesitate, Thuc, 3. ” » Mest ’ + 3550 s , ° arroxvnots — aroxpive. ‘Gméxvyors, ews, #, a shrinking from, arparedv Thuc. 1.99; dm. mpés vt Plut. 2. 783 B. dmoxvytéov, verb. Adj. of dmoxvéw, Plat. Rep. 349 A, 372 A, Isocr. 171 E; cf. dmoxpnréov. anroxvitw, fut. iow, to nip or snip off, rc Hipp. 677. 6, Sotad. "EyxAet. 1.23; dé reds Diod. 2. 4; Twos Plut. 2. 977 B. dmoxviots, ews, %, a nipping off, Theophr. C.P.5.9,11. ‘ dméxvcpa, 76, that which is nipt off, a little bit, At. Pax 790. drokoyxile, to draw out with a Kéyxn (signf. 1. 2), Diosc. 1. 33. Grrokowsdopat, Pass. with fut. med. Aoopat :—to sleep away from home, Plat. Legg. 762 C; év Aaxedaiyou Eupol. Moa. 10. II. to get a alittle sleep, Hdt. 8. 76, Ar. Vesp. 213, Xen, Cyr. 2. 4, 22, sq. ;—ap- parently a military phrase, Dobree ad Ar. 1. c. TIL. dz. dad twos to rest, cease from .., Epiphan. drrokoipife, to put to sleep, Alciphro 1. 39:—Pass. to go to sleep, Ep. Socr. Grrokowwvéw, to excommunicate ;—and verb. Adj. -yréos, a, ov, to be excommunicated, Eccl. aoKouréw, to sleep away from one’s post, Decret. ap. Dem. 238. 10. Gsrékotros, ov, sleeping away from, rav avactrwv Aeschin. 45.2; ovK dr. mapa ‘Péas Luc. D. Deor. Io. 2. GroKoAhdw, to unglue, disunite, Eunap. ap. Suid., Oribas. ap. Cocch. 82: to strip off, ri Twos Eust. 854. 33. drrokodokivrwots, ews, (KodoktvOn) translation into the society of gourds, a travestie of the doéwots of the emperor Claudius, attributed to Seneca, Dio C. 60. 35. droKodot, to cut short off, Tt Call. Jov. go (in tmesi), cf. A. B. 435. amoKxoAmdopar, Pass. to form a bay, Arist. Mund, 3, 9. droxoAupBadw, to dive and swim away, Thuc. 4. 25, Dio C. 49. I. dmrokopdw, to lose one’s hair, Luc. Lexiph. 5. amoKopidy, %, a carrying away, Polyb. 25. 7, 3. Pass.) a getting away-or back, return, Thuc. 1. 137. Grokopifw, fut. Att. I@, to carry away, escort, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 12: to carry away captive, és tédw Thuc. 7. 82 :—Pass. to be carried off, oixade Andoc. 9. 7, cf. Dem. 1259. 23: to take oneself off, get away, és Témov Thuc, 5. 10; én” oixou Id. 4. 96. IL. to carry back, Ap. Rh. 4. 1106: Pass. dmicw cop. to return, Hdt. 5. 27. dmrokopicris, of, 6, a carrier, messenger, Byz. amrékoppa, aros, 76, a splinter, chip, wérpas dndxopp arepdpvov (of a man), Theocr. 10. 7; dw. dpaxviou a shred, Luc. V. H. 1. 18. dtroxoptrate, of lyre strings, to break with a snap, Anth. P. 6. 54. drokovie [7], said to be an Aetol, word for to hick up the dust, i. e. to run, dub. in Hygin. Astr. 3. 11. atroxovréw, («dvros) to thrust away or out, Byz. ‘ droKxomn, }, (dmoxdnrw) a cutting off, Aesch. Supp. 841, Hipp. Mochl. 860: at Athens, dw. xpe@v,=the Rom. ¢abulae novae, a cancelling of all debts, Andoc. 12. 7, Plat. Rep. 566 A, Legg. 736 C, Jusj. ap. Dem. 746. 24, etc.; cf. the ceudx@ea of Solon, Plut. Sol. 15. 2. in Plut. Philop. 4, rediwv dz., prob., their abrupt terminations. Il. in Gramm. apocopé, the cutting off one or more letters, esp. at the end of a word, cf. Arist. Poét. 22, 8, and v. ovyxomn. III. povijs an. a stoppage, loss of voice, Diosc. 2. 146. amrokorros, ov, castrated, Strabo 630, Suid. s.v. da. TaAAor. II. pn, abrupt, precipitous, Arr. Peripl. M. Rubr. 32. dmokotréw, to enervate, exhaust, Epiphan. amoKomréov, verb. Adj. one must hew or cut off, Philo 1. 668. a&roxonrés, 7, dv, severed from others, special, vinn Eust. 1468. 3, cf. Constantin, Caer. 42 C. arokétrw, fut. yw, to cut off, hew off, often in Hom., mostly of men’s limbs, wdpn dméxowe Il. 11. 261 ;. drd 7’ abyéva xdpas Ib. 146, etc. ; and so in Prose, xeépas da. Hdt. 6. g1, etc.; also, vn@y dmoxdpev dxpa népupBa Il..g. 2443 dad meicpar’ exopa veds Od. 10. 127; digas amé- koe tapnopoy he cut loose the trace-horse, Il. 16. 474 —Pass., dwoxe- xdpovrat, of buds, will be cut off, Ar. Nub. 1125 ; dmoxomqvae ri xeipa to have it cut off, Hdt. 6.1143; am. Ta ‘yevynrixd, of eunuchs, Philo ¥. 89; and so, absol., Luc, Eun. 8; and in Med., Arr, Epict. 2. 20, 19. 2. metaph., dr, éAmida, €deov, etc., Ap. Rh. 4.1272, Polyb. 3. 63, 8, Diod. 13. 23; dm. 70 duiBoroy ths yvwpns to decide summarily, Alciphro 1. 8. II. in Xen., dw. red dd rérov to beat off from a strong place, of soldiers, An. 3. 4, 39., 4. 2, 10; cf. dmoxpodo. III. Med. to smile the breast in mourning : c. acc. to mourn Sor, vexpév Eur. Tro. 623: cf. eémrw It. 2. to break off, in speaking, Arist. Rhet. 3. 8, 6: Pass., dwoxéxonrai tivt } povn Plut. Demosth. 25. 3. in Gramm., Pass. to be cut short by the figure apocopé, Eust. 487. 10. G&rrokopéwupn, fut. -kopéow, to make quite satisfied, Gloss. droKxopéw, to wipe off, Hesych. droKxopaéopat, Pass. (xépan)=dmoxeipowat, Aesch. Fr. 241. drroxopidow, to bring to a point, Polyb. 3. 49, 6:—Pass. to rise to a head, Hipp. Progn. 39: to run to a point, prog a, Theophr. Ign. 53. 2. metaph., dexopdpou ode rade gave them this summary answer, Hat. 5. 73° cf. éxxopupda. : &-mokos, ov, without nap, An, Ox. 2. 238 :—not shorn, Suid. Grrokocpéw, fut. now, to restore order by clearing away, to clear away, dnexdopeov tvrea Sairds Od. 7. 232: to dismantle, jpov Bickh Inscr. 1. 531: to deform, wédwv Liban. 4. 779 :—Med. to put off one’s orna- ments, Paus. 7. 26, 9 :—Pass. to be stript of them, Aristid. 1. 549. ‘dmoxdcpios, ov, (xdopos) away from the world, Greg. Naz. — -dtrokotréBilw, to dash out the last drops of wine, as in playing at the cottabus, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 56, Ath. 665 E,—translated by Cicero reliquum a poculo ejicere; cf. xérraBos, and v. Meineke Com. Gr. I. 200. 2. metaph., in late Medic., Matthaei 294, ¢o vomit. II. (ftom 185 — GmoxorraBiopés, 6, a dashing out the last drops, Ath. 667 C. 2. a vomit, Matthaei Medic. 68. Garokoupa, 7), (welpw) the tonsure; and -Kovpevopar, Pass. fo receive the tonsure, Eccl. Grrokoudtfa, fut. Att. 1@, to lighten, set free from, Twa kaxav, mabéov Eur, Or. 1341, Hec. 106; é« Bpoxidwy Anth. P. 9. 372:—4o relieve, Plut. Cleom. 18. GroKxénpos, that can be cut off, Gloss. aréxois, 7, a cutting off, Hipp. Art. 831. Gmoxpabilw, (pdb) to pluck from the fig-tree, Nic. Al. 319. Garoxpabtos, ov, plucked from the fig-tree, Anth. P. 6. 300. droxparmihde, to sleep off a debauch, Plut. Ant. 30; —(fopar, Pass., Suid.; -topos, Hesych. II. to waste in debauch, Theognet. :A08, 1. amoxpavilw, to strike off from the head, xépas Auth, P. 6, 255. i to cut off the head, Eust. 1850. 30. Gmoxpiréw, to exceed all others, Lat. superare, 5 Neihos wAnbei [Hdaros] dm. Hdt. 4. 50, cf. 75. II. trans. to control, remedy, tt Diosc. 4.9. 2. to withhold, retain, rpophy Plut. 2. 494 A. dmé-Kpiiros, without strength, exhausted, Philo 1. 209. aroxpepdlo, =droxpepdvvupt, only in Suid. Groxpépiipat, Pass. to hang down from, hang on by, Arist. H. A. 5. 21, 43 impf. dwexpepdpny Q. Sm. 11.197; aor. dmexpepdoOny. Grokpepdvup.: fut. —Kpeudow, Att. -Kpeu®:—to let hang down, aixév’ drexpépacey (of a dying bird), Il. 23. 879; xopddv mAReTpow dexpéyace the plectrum broke the string so that it hung down, Anth. P. 9. 584 :—Pass. to hang down, Arist. Probl. 27. 6. II. to hang up, suspend, rov paperpe@va Hat. 1. 216 :—Pass., Arist. H. A. 5. 21, 1.5 9. 37, 2; aor. dwexpepacOny, Luc. D. Deor. 21. 1. Gmoxpépiicts, %, a hanging down, Aét. 3. 48 :—also -Kptuacpa, atos, 76, Eust. 1334. 2. amoxpepacrés, 7, dv, hanging from a thing, Anth. P. app. 129 in tmesi :—also dtroxpepys, és, Eust. 1587. 20. dtroxpepdw, = droxpendvvusn, Arist. H. A. 5. 5:5: Grroxpe6w, 40 abstain from flesh ; and Subst., a6 of fasting, fast, carnisprivium ; both in late Eccl. drroxpOev, Adv., =xaraxp7er, f. 1. for dard xpndev, Hes. Sc. 7. aroxpypvilw, to throw from a cliff’s edge, Heliod. 8. 8. amréxpypvos, ov, broken sheer off, precipitous, dpos Baroy cat am. Hdt. 7. 176, cf. 3.111; x@pos dm. Id,8.53, cf. Thuc. 4. 31.,6.96, etc. :—metaph. of an advocate’s case, full of difficulties, mavra dméxpnuva dpa Dem. wo, O, a Pp 793. 6. aaonptBev, Adv. (doxpivw) apart from, c. gen., Ap. Rh. 2. 15: dao- xptda, Joann. Alex. tov. maparyy. p. 33- 4+ aréxpipa, aros, 76, a judicial sentence, condemnation (katraxpipa, He- sych.), TO dm. Tod Oavarov 2 Ep. Cor, 1. 9. 2. (from Med.) ax answer, C. I. 1625, 28., 2349 b. 23. Gtroxpive [7], fut, —xpivw (v. xpivw) :—to separate, set apart, Pherecr. Air. 1, Ael. V. H. 12. 8; xwpls am. Plat. Polit. 302 C, al. :—Pass. to be parted or separated, droxpwOevre parted from the throng (of two heroes coming forward as mpépaxor), Il, 5.12 (nowhere else in Hom.) ; wiOnxos Het Onpiov dmoxpiBels Archil, 82.; dmexpiOn .. rod BapBdapov €Oveos 70 ‘EXAnuikdy Hdt. 1. 60; daoxpiO7vat xwpis to be kept separate, Id. 2. 36; droxexpicOa eis ev dvopa to be separated and brought under one name, Thuc. 1. 3; also, like diaxpiOjvar, of combatants, to be parted before the fight is decided, Id. 4. 72:—in Med. writers, to be distinctly formed, Hipp. Progn. 45, Arist. H. A. 6. 3, 3: to be separated from a mixture, Hipp. Vet. Med. 13; of animal secretions, to be secreted and _ emitted, Id. 377.51; but, és rodro mavra drexplOn all illnesses determined or ended in this alone, Thuc. 2. 49, cf. Foés. Oecon. Hipp. 2. to mark by a distinctive form, distinguish, mptpyny Hat. 1. 194; vdonua tt dmoxekpiévor distinct from all others, Plat. Rep. 407 C. ake to choose out, choose, éva ipav dm. éfaiperov Hat. 6. 130, cf. Plat. Legg. 946 A; dm. rod me{od, rod arparod to choose from.., Id. 3. 17, 25: bvoiv dmoxpivas kaxoiv dm. having chosen one of two, Soph. O, T. 640 (but the metre shews that the word is corrupt). III. to reject on inguiry, xpivew wal dm. Plat. Legg. 751D; eyxpivew wai dm. Ib. 936 A; dm. twa ris vinns to decide that one kas lost the victory, decide it against one, Arist. Pol. 5. 12, 2:—also in Med., Plat. Legg. 966 D: cf. dmoxpiréov. IV. Med. droxpivopar, fut. —xptvodpar, etc.: Plat. uses pf. and plqpf. pass. in med. sense, Prot. 357 E, Gorg. 463 C, etc., but also in pass. sense (v. infr.):—/o give answer to, reply to a question, first in Eur. (for Hdt. uses only bmoxpivea@a in this sense, except in one or two dub. places, 5. 49., 8. 101), Bacch. 1272, I. A. 1354; dm. twi Ar, Nub. 1245, etc.; dm. mpds Tiva or mpés Te to a questioner or question, Thuc. 5. 42, etc., Plat, Hipp. Ma. 287 A; dm. el.., Ar. Vesp. 964; dm. d71.., Thuc. 1. 90:—c. acc., dmoxpiveaOat 70 eparnbév to answer the question, Id. 3. 61, cf. Plat. Crito 49 A: but also c, ace, cogn., dm, ob5é ypu Ar. Pl. 17; dmoxpiveo@al 71 to give an answer, Thue. 8. 71, etc. ; dm. dardxprow Plat. Legg. 658 C; andsoin Pass., rovrd por droxexpicOw let this be my answer, Id. Theaet. 187 B; wadd@s dy cot dmexéxpiro your answer would have been sufficient, Id. Gorg. 453 D, cf. Meno 75 C, Euthyd. 299 D. 2. to answer charges, defend oneself, like dmodoyéopuat, Elmsl. At. Ach,632; 5 droxpwépevos the defendant, Antipho 143. 30, cf. 119. 32. 8. the aor. pass. dexplOn =drexplvaro, he an- swered is unknown in good Att., except in Pherecr. EmAnop. 4, Plat. Alc. 2. 149 B,—if the first passage be due to Pherecr., or the dialogue to Plato ; but it occurs in Macho ap, Ath. 349 D, 577 D, becomes very common in Alex. Greek, and is often introduced by the Copyists into genuine Att., as in Xen. An.2.1,22; ef. Ammon. 21, Lob. Phryn. 108. 4. am. Tois grein to be prepared to meet events, circumstances, Arr. Epict. 2.16, 2. 186 Gréxpicts, ews, 7, a separating, nadapars dm. xeipove dnd BeAtiévey Def. Plat. 415 D :—as Medic, “ey excretion, aha i Hipp. and Arist. ; v. Foés. Oec., Indic, Aristot. II. (from Med.) a decision, answer, first in Theogn. 1167, then in Hdt. 1. 49., 5. 50 (but dmd«piots is the Ion. form), Hipp. 22. 46, Eur. Fr. 967; dm. mpds 7d épwrnua Thuc. "3. 60, cf, Xen. Hier. 1, 35. 2. a defence, Antipho 137. 6. Gmoxptréov, verb, Adj. one must reject, Plat. Rep. 377 C; opp. to éyxpiréoy, Ib. 413D; v. droxpive IIL. IL. one must answer, 1d Prot. 351 C, Alc. 1. 114 E; v. dwoxpivw Iv. amoxptricés, 7, dv, secretory, able to secrete and emit, Galen. aréxptros, ov, separated, chosen, Opp. H. 3. 266. Adv. —rws, Byz. aroKxporéw, to snap the fingers so as to make a noise, Strabo 672. G&rroxpétnpa, 74, a snap of the finger, Strabo 672, Ath. 530 C. Garékporos, ov, beaten or trodden hard, yj, xwpiov Thuc. 7. 27, Xen. Eq. 7, 15 :—generally, hard, of animals’ claws, Plut. 2.98 D: of a hard tumour, Paul. Aeg. :—metaph., yuyxi) Adivn xai dm. Philo 2.165. Adv. —rws, Epiphan. II. =dmdxpnyuvos, Coraés Heliod. p. 288, daroxpouvitw, fut. iow, to spout or gush out, Plat. 2. 699 E. dméxpovors, ews, %), (doxpovopat Pass.) a retiring, waning, THs ceAh- yns Clem. Al. 814, etc.; and so Procl. speaks of oeAnvn adnoxpovaTien, in its wane. II. the literal sense a repulse, only in Byz. daroxpoverréov, verb. Adj. one must repel, Themist. 278 A. Groxpovorikés, 4, dv, able to drive off, repel, dispel, Diosc. 1. 167: v. dréxpovats, améixpoverros, ov, beaten back, Nic. Th. 270. Garoxpovw, to beat off from a place or person, Xen. Hell. 5. 3, 22, Anth. P. 11. 351 :—more usual in Med. to beat off from oneself, beat off Tas mpooBodas Hat. 4. 200, Thuc. 2.4; avrovs émdvras Hat. 8. 61, etc.: generally ¢o repel, opp. to émurmao0ar, Sext. Emp. M. 7.400; to repel, refute an argument, Dion. H. de Comp. 25 :—Pass. to be beaten off, of an assault (cf. dwoxémrw 11), Thuc. 4. 107, Xen., etc.; dmexpovadn Ths meipas Thuc, 8. 00; dm. THs unxavas, THs melpas Polyb. 22. 11, 5, Plut., etc. II. Pass., xorvAioxioy 7d xeiAos dmoxexpoupévoy a cup with the lip knocked off, Ar. Ach. 459. III, Pass., also, to be thrown from horseback, Xen. Eq. Mag. 3, 14. a&roxpupn, 7, a covert, concealment, Symm, V. T., Byz. daoxputréov, verb. Adj. one must hide, conceal, Clem. Al. 62. Gmoxpimrw, fut. yw: used by Hom. only in aor. 1, but Ep. impf. dmoxpinracke in Hes. Th. 157: Pass., aor. -expvBny [wv], fut. -«ptB7- copa, LXX, etc. To hide from, keep hidden from, c. acc. et gen., at yap pv Oavaroo . . dvvaiuny voogw dmoxpvipat Il. 18. 465 ; c. dat, pers., améxpupev Bé por Urmovs 11. 717:—later c. dupl. acc., like Lat. ce/are aliquem aliquid, to hide or keep back from one, oiire ce Groxpipa Tiv aay ovciay Hdt. 7. 28; re dwd twos LXx (4 Regg. 4.27) :—Med., dmoxpinreabat twa 71 Plat. Legg. 702 B, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 29, etc.; am. tt to keep it back, Plat. Prot. 348 E, ef. 327 B. 2. to hide from sight, keep hidden, conceal, Od. 17. 286, and freq, in Att. ; €@nwe vixz’ dmoxpiypas paos Archil. 16.3; Tdv HAtov ind Tod TAROEOS THY dioTay dm. Hat. 7. 226; dmoxpiper dos vig Aesch. Pr. 24; xtdv da. Tt Xen. An, 4. 4, 11; dm. Tv copiar Plat. Apol. 22D; dm. re év tut Isocr, 11 B; eis 7: Ar. Eq. 424, 483, Xen. Eq. Mag. 5, 7:—Med., c. inf., dao- xpimrecOar pi) Toei tt to conceal one’s doing, Thuc. 2. 53; mept dv droxpunropeda pndéva eidévar Lys. 110.2: the pf. pass. has the same sense in.Dem. 836. 19, ov« dmoxéxp v ovciay :—Pass., TOY “EA- Aforovrov ind Tav vey dmoxexpuppévov Hat. 7. 45; Tods dmoxpu- mropévous those who withdraw from public, Alex. Incert. 8. 3. to obscure, throw into the shade, Eur. Fr. 1525 % tAnupédcca éxelvny riv goplay am, Plat. Apol. 22 D. II. dr. viv to lose from sight, of ships running out to sea, like Virgil’s Phaeacum abscondimus arces, opp. to dvolyvuut (I. 3), pedyew eis 7d éAaryos .. dmoxptpavra iv Plat. Prot. 338 A; éretd?) dwexpivapey adrovs when we got out of sight of them, Luc. V. H. 2. 38:—so prob. adrods (sc. rods ’Apyetous) should be supplied in Thuc. 5. 65; and in Hes. Fr. 44 (Gaisf.) we have dmoxpv- mrovo TeAerddes (sc. Eavrovs) disappear. droxpuvotadAdopat, Pass. to become all ice, Schol. ll. 23. 281. amoxpihh, %, a hiding-place, Lxx (Job 22. 14, al.). : dméxptos, ov, hidden, concealed, Eur. H.F. 1070; év dmoxpipy in secret, Hdt. 2. 35; da. Onoavpot hidden, stored up, Ep. Col. 2. 31. 2. c. gen., dméxpupov marpés unknown to him, Xen.Symp.8,11. II. obscure, recondite, hard to understand, Id. Mem. 3. 5, 14.3 ypeHHaTa Call. Fr, 242; dw. cvpBodra 5éATwv, of hieroglyphics, Epigr. Gr. 1028. Io. III. in Eccl., of writings, apocryphal, i. e. sometimes spurious, forged, sometimes merely unrecognised, uncanonical; v. Suicer. s. v. Adv. -pws, Aquila V. T. aréxpuipis, ews, 7, concealment, dm. roveiobat Arist. Cael. 2. 13, 9. amokrapev, —Krdpevar, daro} v. sub drorreive. -dmonrdopat, Dep. to lose p of, to alienate, Eccl. a@moxrelvw, fut. -crev@, lon. —krevéw Hdt. 3. 30: aor. I dmréxreva Il. :—pf. dwéerova Isocr. 246 B, Plat. Apol. 38 C, Xen. Apol. 29, Dem. 593- 143 plapf. 3 pl. -exrdvecay Id. 387. 21, Ion. 3 sing. —cwrévee Hat. 5. 67; later pf. dwexrdvnea Arist. Soph. Elench. 33. 2, ef. Plut. Timol. 16, (introduced by Copyists into Plat., etc.) ; also dwéxrayxa Menand. Micoup. 8, Arist. Pol. 7. 2,11, LXx; and dwéerda Polyb. 11. 18, 10 — aor. 2 —éxrivoy Il., poét. 1 pl. dwéxrapev Od. 23. 121, inf. -erapevar, -erdpev Il. 20. 165., 5. 675 :—Pass. only late (dro@vjonw being used as the Pass. by correct writers), pres. in Palaeph, 7; aor. dwexravOnv Dio C. 65. 4, LXx; pf. dmexrdvOai Polyb. 7.7, 4, LXX :—but Hom. has an aor. med. in pass. sense dwéxrazo Il, 15. 437-. 17-4723 part. dmowrd- Hevos 4. 494, etc.; cf. dronrivvupt. Stronger form of xretve, to kill, TaL slay, Hom., Hdt., once in Aesch, (Ag. 1250), never in Soph., freq. ing, »< . , $ amoxptors —a7oNauBave. Eur., and the prevailing form for erefyw in Att. Com. and Prose, as is drobynokw for OvhcKw. 2. of judges, to condemn to death, Antipho 140, 24, Plat. Apol. 30 D sq., 38 C, 39D, Xen., etc.; also of the accuser, Andoc, 34. 7, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 21, cf Thuc. 6. 61; of the executioner, to put to death, Hdt. 6.4; generally of the law, Plat. Prot. 325 B. 8. metaph., like Lat. enecare, 7d cepvov ds p am. 7d ody Eur. Hipp. 1064; od py p’ aréerew’ Id. Or, 1027. amroxrevelw, Desiderat. of dwoxreivw, dub, in Liban, 4. 1103. dtrokrévvw, later form for dmoxreivw, Anth. P, 11. 395, LXX, etc. a&mokryvoopat, Pass. to become brutish, Athanas., etc. arékrnors, ews, 7, loss; and -«ryros, ov, lost, alienated, Jo. Chr. Garoxrivvipe or —Krivips (A. B. 29), =dmoxreivw, being the commoner form of the pres. in Plat., 3 sing. —«rivvior Cratin. Bove. 3, Plat. Gorg. 469 A, 1 pl. -«rivvijper Ib. 468 B, 3 pl. -vaor (v. infr.); subj. -vp Rep. 565E; opt.—voc Phaedo 62C: inf. -vva Lys, 120. 38, Plat. Phaedo 58 B, etc.; part. vs Crito 48, etc. The pres. daroxtiwvtw is rejected by the Atticists, who write dmoxrwvdact for -ovor in Plat. Gorg. 466 C and Xen, Hell. 4. 4, 2, cf. An. 6. 3,53 3 pl. impf. dwexrivyvoay for -vov, Id, Hell. 5. 2, 43, cf. An. 6. 5, 28. daréxriots, ews, 7), the planting a colony, a colony, like dmoi«nots, Call. Apoll. 74, Dion. H. 1. 49. arokriméw, to sound loudly from, ris yAwTrns Philostr. 537: to make @ noise by striking, Suid. s. v. Tupmavor, A. B, 208. Gmokvipevo, to choose by lot, C. 1. 76, 13. GrroxtBevo, fo run hazard or risk, epi Baotdelas Diod. 17. 30. dmoxvBiordw, to plunge headlong off a place, eis tiwp Clearch. ap. Ath, 332 E. Groxvdatve, to glorify greatly, Hierocl. ap.Stob. 477. 32, Epigr. Gr. 164, dmoxvéw, to bear young, bring forth, c. acc., Arist. Fr. 66, Dion, H. 1, 70, Plut. Sull. 37; absol., Luc. D. Mar. 10, 1:—metaph., % duapria dn. Oavarov Ep. Jacob. 1. 15, cf. Philo 1, 214 :—Pass., of the child, Plut. Lycurg. 3, Hdn. 1. 5. dmoxinpa, 74, that which is brought forth, an offspring, Eccl. . GmroKkvycis, ews, 4), a bringing forth, birth, Plut, 2.907 D, etc. amroxviokw, =drorvéw, Acl. N. A. 9. 3. a&moxtAwb5éw, =droxvAiw, Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 28, in Pass. amroxvAcpa, aros, 7d, a rolling machine, Longin. 40. 4. GrokiAiw, fut. few [i], to roll away, Lxx and N. T. :—Pass., Luc. Rhet. Praec. 3. droKipatifo, to make to swell with waves, boil up, Plut. 2. 734 A: metaph., dm. tds yuxas Ib, 943 C; Axov Dion. H. de Comp. 23. Gmokivoy, 74, (xdwv) a plant, Cynanchus erectus, Diosc, 4. 81. amokivéw, to turn into a dog, Eust. 1714. 42. Gmokinrw, fut. Yu, to stoop away from the wind, Ar. Lys. 1003, in pf. dronéxtpa ; but Reisk, émuexdpapes. G&mokiprevo, to rule over, Twos Justin. M. dmoKipso, to annul, Lat. abrogare, Gloss. II. to choose one: out of an assembly, to invest with power, C. 1. 2448. VII. 37. dmrokuptéopat, Pass, to rise to a convex shape, Hipp. Progn. 39. Gmrokipwots, ews, }, annulling, Lat. abrogatio, Schol. Eur. Hec. 25. 9. a&mrokwktw, to mourn loudly over, Twa Aesch. Ag. 1544. dmoxahtors, ews, %, a hindrance, Xen. Eq. 3, 11. amokwAvréov, verb. Adj. one must hinder, Medic. GroKwdvw, fut. doo [0] :—to hinder or prevent froma thing, Twa Tivos Xen. An. 3.3, 35 dmé twos Lxx (Eccl. 2. 10); c. inf. to prevent from doing, forbid to do, Eur, Med. 1411, Plat. Theaet. 150 C, al.; also, dz. Tov moeiv Xen. Hier, 8,1; dm. pr) moveiv Id. An. 6. 4, 24. 18 ec. acc. only, to keep off, hinder, Orac. ap. Hdt. 1. 66, Thuc. 3. 28. III. absol. to stop the way, Thuc. 1. 72: impers., ovdév dmo- kote there is no hindrance, Plat. Rep. 372 E, al. & dopar, Pass. to b deaf and dumb, Arr. Epict. 2. 20, 37, Lxx (Mich, 7. 16). dmohayxave, fut, ~Arjtouae:—to obtain a portion of a' thing by Jot, in full roy ernpdrav 7d pépos dr, Hat, 4.114, cf. 115; Tv Tavaypichy poipay Id. 5-57; cf. 4-145; popov bao adroto: éwéBadre Id. 7.23; as. TavTa Y amohaxwo oixav taTpds that they may obtain .., Eur. H. F. 331. 2. an. xpirhs [etvac] to be named judge by lot, Lys. 101. 3, cf} 5 :—v. Aayxava I. 2. II, to fail in drawing lots, Plut. Cato Mi. 6., 2. 102 E: generally to lose one’s all, be left destitute, Eur. Ion 609. droAdfupar, poet, for drodapBdve, Eur. Hel. 917; cf. AdCopat. dmodatfopar, Dep. to become stone, prob. 1. in Hesych. Grrokapife, to cut the throat of, slay, wd Nicet. Ann, a71 D. a eels aros, 74, a snapping of the Jingers, fillip, Hesych. dmodakr Lo, fut. Att. a, to kick off or away, shake off, vias Theogn. 13373 Umvoy Aesch. Eum, 141. 2. to spurn, A€xos 7d Zyvds Id. Pr. 651; Ta xara Kal owrhpia Plut. Anton. 30. IL. absol. ¢o kick out, kick up, duporépors with both legs, Luc. Asin. 18. Grokaxricpés, 5, a kicking off or away, am. Biov, of a violent death, Aesch. Supp. 937, ef. Plut. 2.917 E :—also -Adkriopa, 76, a kick, Gramm, GmrokGA€w, to chatter much, to speak out heedlessly, Luc. Nigt. 22. * drohapBavin, fut. ~Anpopat, in Hdt. —Adupoua, 3. 146., 9. 38: pf Att. dretAnpa, pass. deiAnupat, Ion. dwodéAappar: in act, aor. 2 dmé- AaBor, but in pass, aor. 1 deAnpOny, Ion, dreddupOny Hat. To take or receive from another (correlat. to dmod:5évau, Plat. Rep. 332 B), mapa tivos Thue. 5. 30; oddéy dx. rod lou xpnordy Plut, 2, 258 B:—to receive what is one’s due, pucOdv Hat. 8. 137 ; dm. Tov dperddpevov podov Xen. An. 7. 7, 14; Thy anv Evvdopoy Eur. Or. 654; 74 xphyara Ar. Nub. 1274; Ta mapa Tod marpdés Antiph. Neorr. 2; dm. xpéa to have them. paid, Andoc. 25. 20; indcxeow mapa twos dmor. Xen. Symp. 3, 3; 7@ Sixara Aeschin. 27, 36 ;—in this sense opp, to AapBave, Epist. Philippi bJ , 7 4 aTroAauT pura — amroXelTw, ap. Dem. 162.17, cf. 78. 3; da. Spxous to accept them when tendered, Dem. 59. I1., 234. 10; v. sub Spxos. 2. to take of, take a part of a thing, Thuc. 6. 87, Plat. Hipp. Mi. 369 B. 3. to take away, Polyb. 22. 26, 8 and 17. 4, to hear or learn, like Lat. accipio, Plat. Rep. 614 A, Aeschin. 27. 36. II. to take back, get back, regain, recover, Tiv Tupavvida, riv rédw Hat. 1. 61., 2. 119., 3. 146, al. ; rv Hyepoviar Isocr. 44 E; Thy abriy evepyeciar Id. 307 D. 2. to have rendered to one, e. g. Adyoyr am. to demand to have an account, Aeschin. 37. 40. III. to take apart or aside, da. rea podvoy Hat. I. 209; adrov pdvoy Ar, Ran. 78; pa) wdvos 7d xpnordy dwohaBay éxe Eur, Or. 451; droAaBay oxdre consider it separately, Plat. Gorg. 495 E; thy evdaipova mAarroper [réAw], ode dmodkaBévres, GAX’ SAnv not taking any special part, but considering it as a whole, Id. Rep. 420C, cf, 392 E. IV. to cut off, intercept, arrest, Aéyav ws dmoAapporro avxvous Hdt. 9. 38; dm. rele to wall off, Thuc. 4. 102, cf. 1.7, ete. ; dr. cisw to shut up inside, Id. 1. 134; of contrary winds, éray TUxwow of dvepoe dmodaBdrvres abrovs Plat. Phaedo 58 C; kay dvepo tiv vadv aroAdBwow Philostr. 741; tiv dvamvoiy am. twds to stop his breath, suffocate him, Plut. Rom. 27; dm. rv ovriwy to debar from eating, Hipp. toq A :—often in Pass., im dvéyav dmodappOévres arrested or stopped by contrary winds, Hdt, 2. 115., 9. 114; td dAotas Thue. 6. 22; véow al xed Kal rorAguos drroAnpbels Dem. 98. 25; év dAtyw drokappbévres Hdt. 8.11; drodappOévtes mdvrobev Id. 5. 101; ev TH vow Id. 8. 70, 76, cf. 97, 108; év ois iBiows Adyous da. to be entangled in.., Plat. Euthyd. 305 D; év rovrm 7@ xax@ Id. Gorg. 522 A:—so of the course of the blood, to be stopped, Hipp. Fract. 754; otAin, xdoris drodehaupévn Id. Prorrh. 74 B, 77 B, etc.—A prose word, used by Eur, ll. cit. Grokaprptve, to make bright or famous :—Pass. to become so, €pryotot by one’s deeds, Hdt. 1. 41, €pyout re wad yvdpqor 14.6. Jo. II. to make clear, rov pOdyyov, cited from Diose. drokdumpucpa, aros, 76, splendour, Byz. Grrohdprrw, fut. yw, fo shine or beam from, alypis dméAapn’ edfkeos (sc. Pas) Il. 22. 319, cf. Ar. Av. 1009; dorip ds dméAaumer Il. 6. 295, Od. 15. 108 :—Med., xapis dmeAdpmero grace beamed from her, Il. 14. 183, cf. Od. 18. 298; xpvood dwoAdumerat gleams with gold, Luc. Syr. D. 30. II. c. acc. cogn., adyiy dod. Luc. Dom. 8; dorpamjv Callistr. 895. arréAapipis, ews, 7, a shining forth, Byz. drroAav9dvopar, dub, for é*A—, Long. 3.7; v.Schneidew. Hyperid. Lyc. 8. drohdtre, fut. Yo, to lap up like a dog, swallow greedily, Ar. Nub. 811; cf. droAadw I. 3. GtréAavois, ews, 7, the act of enjoying, enjoyment, fruition, Thuc. 2. 38. II. the result of enjoying, enjoyment, pleasure, ai dm. ai ooparikat Arist. Pol. 5.11, 23, cf. Eth. N. 7. 4,2; 6 war’ drédavorw Bios a life of pleasure, Id. Top. 1. 5, 9, etc. 2. c. gen. the advan- tage got froma thing, oirev kal wordy Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 33, cf. Hipp. Vet. Med. 12; dya0av Isocr. 7 E; dwéXavor elxods (acc. absol.) as a reward for your resemblance, Eur. Hel. 77, cf. H. F.1370; dm. éavrav éxew Plat. Tim. 83 A; da. dduenudrov the advantage, fruit of them, Luc. Tyrann, 5. dmédavopa, aros, 7d, enjoyment, Aeschin. 733.1, Plut. 2.125 C. dmohavoripia, 74, delights, enjoyments, Theod. Stud. dmodavortikds, 7, dv, devoted to enjoyment, Bios Arist. Eth. N. 1.5, 2: producing enjoyment, Id. Rhet. 1. 9, 23:—Adv., drodavoricOs Civ Id. Pol. 5. 10, 33. II. enjoyable, agreeable, of things, Ath. 87 E. a&mohavorés, dv, enjoyed, enjoyable, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 124, Plut. Cato Ma. 4. dtrohatw: fut. droAatcopa, Ary Av. 177, Plat., etc.; later, drodatow, Dion. H. 6. 4, Plut., etc. (in earlier writers no doubt an error of the Copyists as in Hyperid. Or. Fun., v. 1. Plat. Charm. 172 B):—aor. dmé- Aavoa Eur. I. T. 526, Ar., etc. :—pf. doAéAavea Plat. Com. “Yrepf. 5, Isocr. 389 B :—Pass., pf. dmodéAavrat Philostr. 257, but dmoAcAavo- pévos Plut. 2. 1089 B, 1099 D: aor. dweAavaOny Philo 1. 37.—The augm. tenses are sometimes written émfAavor, dmnAavoa, but wrongly, as noted by Hdn. ap. Herm. p. 315. (The simple Aada is not found, but prob. it was=Adw or Adfw (which was interpr. by Aristarch. d7o- Aavoricds Exw, cf. Apoll. Lex., Schol. Od. 19, 228): hence also A¢éa, Anis, and prob. Aadrpis, cf. Skt. lotas (praeda), Lat. latro, lucrum ;— Goth. aun (Germ. lohn) :—AapBdvw, 4/ AAB, seems to be akin.) To have enjoyment of a thing (cf. cvvarokatw), to have the benefit of it, c. gen. rei, THs ofs Suxacoodyys Hdt. 6. 86,1; r&v ovriaw Hipp. 12. 20, cf. Plat. Rep. 354 B; ix@dar, Aaxdvav, edeoparar, etc., to enjoy them, Amphis Aeve, 1, Aristopho I1v0. 1, ete.; moray, dopav Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 81, Hier. 1, 24, etc.; 7@v dya0@v, axXoAqs, etc., Plat. Gorg. 492 B, Legg. 781 D; rs c1mmijs dm. to take advantage of it, Dem. 579. 24; Tis e£ovotas Aeschin, 72. 15; dv7t woAM@v mévav opuKpd da. Plat. Phaedr. 255 E. 2. an acc. cogn. signf. is often added, drohavety ti wos, to enjoy an advantage from some source, Ti yap .. dv dmohavoaipt Tod paSnparos; Ar. Nub. 1231, cf. Thesm. 1008, Pl. 2 36; eAdxiora Gm. tov brapyévtwv Thuc. 1.70; Tod Blov 7 dm. Id. 2.53; trmav rocavra ayaa dm, 5 dvOpwmos Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 10, cf. Plat. Euthyd. 299 A, ete. ; Tosovrov evepias drohéAaveePlat.Com.1.c. 8, sometimes c.acc.instead of gen., dr. Tov Blov Diphil. "Ey. r. 6, cf. Menand. Incert. 53; but in both places dwoAdmret is a prob. emendation; nor is dz. kat mace Tt, in Arist. Sens. 5, 9, conclusive. 4. absol., of drohavovres, opp. to of movoovres, Arist. Pol. 2.5, 3; #rTov da. to have less enjoyment, Id. H. A. 7. 4, 6. II. in bad sense, often ironically, to have the benefit of, tav Oidimov Kaxdv dm. Eur. Phoen. 1205; dm. 7 rev ydpor Id. I. 'T. 526; hs dmodatan"Aidny .. karaBnoe Id. Andr. 543; Tav aacBav dm. 4 187 Plat. Legg. 910 B; pdaipdv re dm. Isocr. 175 B, cf. Plat. Crito 54 A; also with Preps., dd r&v GdAotpiov [wabGy] dm. Id. Rep. 606 B; é« Tijs pepehoews Tod elvar dr. in consequence of imitation 2o come to be that which he imitates, Ib, 395 C; dm’ dAAou dp0adpias dm. having caught a disease of the eyes from another, Id, Phaedr. 255 D: cf, ouva- mokave, 2. absol. to have a benefit, come finely off, Ar. Av. 1358. III. to make sport of, c. gen. pers., Plut. 2. 69 D.—The Verb is almost exclus. Att., and is used by Eur. alone of the Trag. Poets. GaroAcatve, to smooth or polish, Diod. 5, 28, Plut. 2. 350 D, etc, Garohéya, fut. f:—to pick out from a number, and so, 1. to pick out, choose, 7d dporov Hat. 5. 110, cf. 3. 14, Ar. Vesp. 578: oft in Med. to pick out for oneself, rpinxovra pupiddas rod orparod from the army, Hdt. 8. 101; é«@ mavrwv Thuc. 4.9; dmodcdeypévor picked men, Hdt. 7. 40; daewAeypévor Xen. Eq. Mag. 8, 12. 2. to pick out for the purpose of rejecting, Ar. Lys. 576; dm. twa éx Tav dinacrav Plut. Cato Mi. 48. II. later, like dmaryopevw, to decline, refuse, da. 7d xopnyeiv Polyb. 2, 63,1; da. mepi twos Id. 4: 9, 3:-—Med. to decline something offered to one, Id. Fr. 1; dwoAé-yeoOat ixeatay, déqow Plut. Sol. 12, Cato Mi. 2 :to renounce, give up, ri virnv, Tov Blov Id. Nic. 6., 2, 1060 D; and absol. to give in, make no resistance, Id. Lycurg. 22, Pomp. 23. 2. to speak of fully, Ael. N, A. 8.17, in Pass. GmrohelBu, fut. Yu, to let drop off, hence, like dmoonévdw, to pour a libation, dmodetipas (aor. part., v. Lob. Phryn. 713) Hes. Th. 793; dév- Spov dwodeiBov péd dropping honey, Diod. 17. 75, cf. Alciphro 3. 21; metaph., ixvn wpav dmoAciBec Com. Anon. 39:—Pass. to drop or run down from, twés Od. 7. 107 ; pate Hes. Sc. 174. dréAcpa, 75, a remnant, Diod. 1. 46. daroherdw, to rub out smooth, erase, émypaphy C. I. 3966. Groheurréov, verb. Adj. of dwoAcimopat, one must stay behind, Xen. Occ. 7, 38. 2. from Act., one must leave behind, Heliod. 2. 17. Garroketrro, fut. Yo: aor. dréAtroy (dréAcupa is very late; in Hes. Th, 793 it comes from dmoA«Bw, q. v.). To leave over or behind, e.g. meats not wholly eaten, 008’ dméAetrev €yxata Od. 9. 292 :—to bequeath, C. I. 2448.1. 9, ef. Mosch. 3. 98 ;—hence to leave behind one, bequeath to posterity, of writings, Diog. L. 8.58, cf. 7. 54. 2. to leave hold of, to lose, yuxdy Pind. P. 3. 180; Biov Soph. Ph. 1158; véay dpepay dmodumev Oavor Eur.Ion 720: but also conversely, €ué piv .. dar. #8n Bloros Soph. El. 185. 3. to leave behind, as in the race, to distance, and generally to surpass, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 25, Lys. 190. 37: but the Med. and Pass. are more usual in this sense, v. infr. II. to leave quite, for- sake, abandon, esp. of places one ought to defend, o8 dmoAcimovow kothov Sdpor, of bees, Il. 12. 169, cf. Hdt. 8. 41, al.; so, da. (sc. Trav moALopkinv) Id. 7. 170; Thy Evppaxlay, riv fvvapootay Thue. 3. 9, 64: of persons, Kal o° dmodcivw gov Aembpevos Eur. El. 1310; feivorv marpwiov dm, to leave him in the lurch, Theogn. 521; dwoAumdy otxerat Hadt. 3. 48, cf. 5. 103, Ar. Ran. 83; of a wife, to forsake or desert her husband, Andoe. 30. 43, Dem. 865. 6 (of the husband, droméa is used, - A. B. 421, cf. déAeufis); of sailors, to desert, Dem. 1211. 2. 2. c. inf., dw. rodrous kak@s ynpdoxev leave them to grow old, Xen. Oec. 1, 22. 8. of things, to leave alone, leave undone or unsaid, boa dmé- Aume Kreiven Te Kat didKov, .. opéa Grerédeoe Hat. 5. 92, cf. Thuc. 8. 22, Plat. Rep. 420 A, Dem, 1491. 6. III. to leave open, leave a space, dm. peraixpuov ob péya Hat. 6.77; da. ds mA€Opoy Xen, An. 6.5, 11; Ths Oaddrrns Ta pev drodemovans, 7a 5 emovans Arist. Meteor. I. 14, 26. IV. intr. to cease, fail, to be wanting, raov otmore Kapos dwédAvrat odd’ dwodeime Od. 7. 117; of rivers, to fall, sink, Hat. 2. 14, 933 (so, dm. 70 péeOpov 2,19); of swallows, d¢ éreos édvres od dmodelmovat Id. 2. 22; of flowers, to begin to wither, Xen. Symp. 8, 14 ;—also, like demeiv, to fail, flag, lose heart, Id. Cyr. 4. 2, 3, Plat. Ax. 365 A; of the moon, fo wane, Arist. An. Post. 2. 15, 2, 2. to be wanting of or in a thing, mpoOuplas obddty da. Thuc. 8. 22, cf. Plat. Rep. 533 A:—often of numbers, pydtv dod. tov mévte Plat. Legg. 828 B; ra@v elcoow dAlyov dm. Arist. H, A. 6.18, 29, etc. ; and of measures, dad reovépwv mnxéwv am. rpeis Saxr’Aovs wanting three fingers of four cubits, Hdt. 1. 60, cf. 7.117; so, whr’ ap’ bmwepBaddAowv Bods émwdiy par’ dodelrov Hes. Op. 487:—also c. inf., dAtyor dméAurov és AOjvas dmucéoOar wanted but little of coming, Hdt. 7. 9,1; Bpaxd da, yevéo0at Thuc. 7. 70; ovdty 8 drodelmere obrw modepneiy Dem. 51. 25. °- 8. c. part. to leave off doing, dm. Aéywv Xen. Occ. 6, 1 ;—or absol., 50ev, déAuwes from the point at which.., Plat. Gorg. 497 C, cf. Phaedo 112 C, Xen., etc. 4. to depart from, tx Tay Xuvpakovody Thue. 5. 43; €# Tod Mndixod mwodépou Id. 3. 10; cf. Plat. Phaedo 78 B. B. Med. (the aor. dmeAcrépuny in Ap. Rh. 1. 399, in tmesi), like Act. I. 3, to leave behind one, leave to posterity, Hdt. 2. 134. 2. to for- sake, etc., Plat. Phaedr. 240 C, al. C. Pass. to be left behind, stay behind, Hdt. 7. 221, Thue. 7. 75, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 20; pdvos dwodedeipévos Antipho 112. 3: to be unable to follow an argument, be at a loss, Plat. Theaet. 192 D. 2. to be distanced by, inferior to, Twos Dem. 51.24: to be inferior, év rit Isocr. 245 B. II. to be parted from, be absent or far from, c. gen., mor THs GAnOnins daorercippévor Hdt. 2. 106, cf. Plat. Symp. 192 D, Rep. 475 D; c. gen. pers., Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 40} sine casu, Eur. Or. 80: to be deprived of, Tod cod.. parodelmeaOax Tapov Soph. El. 1169 ; marp@as par, xOovds Eur. Med. 35, ubi v. Elmsl.; tv mpiy drodenpbets pevor Id. Or. 216. 2. to be wanting in, fall short of, bre Too oxdmrew dredeipon Ar. Eq. 253 Tois dmoAerpBetat (sc. Tis masdelas) Dem, 270. 3, cf. Isocr. 276D; drodepOels av without our cognisance, Dem. 352.12; drodepOjvar Trav mpayparay to be left in ignorance of.., Id, 813. fin. ; “arpod da. to miss the opportunity, Id. 918. 19; Ceduaros, éoprijs da. Luc, D, Mar. 15. 1, Sacrif. 1; elaBodjjs Isocr, 302 C; da. 188 amoXerroupyew Bas, ppevdv to be bereft of, to have lost, Eur.H. F. 440, Or. 216. 3. oo os ee be done, Polyb. 3. 39, 12:—impers., dmoAcimerae A€yewv iog. L. 7. 85. } Sel ebae hee to complete required service, Diog. L. 3. 99, M. Anton. 0, 22. - dtrodetya, to lick off, Ap. Rh. 4. 478: to lick clean, Ev. Luc. 16. 21. dmroketibas, v. s. er i tnokee. aroX » €ws, %, (dodeirw) a forsaking, abandonment, % dm. Tod orparonédou of the camp, Thuc. 7. 75: desertion of a husband by his wife (cf. droAcinw 11, drdrepyis), Dem. 868. 1; dmrdAeuliw dmoypd- pecba (v. dwoypadw i11. 2) Ib, 17: also, desertion of their post by soldiers, seamen, etc., Xen, Hell. 4. 4, 28, Dem. 1209. 26. » intr. a falling short, deficiency, Thuc. 4. 126; of rivers, failing, Arist. Meteor. I. 14, 1; so of the moon, waning, Id. G. A. 2. 4, 9 :—death, se oh srg yeveors, dor) 8 a. Emped. 64; so, dx. rod (hv Hyperid. itaph. 136. aéXexros, ov, (dmoAéyw) chosen out, picked, Thue. 6. 68, Xen. An. 2. 3, 15: cf. Lob. Paral. 495. GrokcAtpévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. absolutely, opp. to kara oxéow, Sext. Emp. M. 8,162: in the positive degree, opp. to nara avyxpiow (in the comparative), A.B. 3. II. freely, unreservedly, Eus. H.E.10. 5,8. G-roAguntos, ov, not warred on, Polyb. 3. go, 7, Luc. D. D. 20. 12. aréAeppa, aros, 76, (doémw) a skin, Dio C. 68. 32. d-mrédepnos, Ep. dmréAcpos, ov, without war, unwarlike, unfit for war, amr. kal dvadnis Il. 2. 201, etc., cf. Xen. Cyr. 7. 4, 13 dmodéu@ xeupi Aciwers Biov, i. e. by a woman’s hand, Eur. Hec. 1034. 2. unwar- like, peaceful, ebvopia Pind. P. 5. 89; edvat Eur. Med. 641; jovxia Dion. H. 2. 76, etc. :—Adv., drrod¢uas ioxerv Plat. Polit. 307 E. zt. not to be warred on, invincible, Aesch. Ag. 769, Cho. 54. III. méAepos ddAepos a war that is no war, a hopeless struggle, Id. Pr. go4 (where Dind. metri grat. proposes dmoA€ioros), Eur. H. F. 1433. soba spo Pass. (Aéwv) to become a lion, Heraclit. Incred. 12; metaph., cara ray éxOpav Eust. Opusc. 103. 53- drrokemBéopat, Pass. to exfoliate, of bones, Hipp. Fract. 774. drokentfw, = drokémw, to peel off, Geop. 10. 58. dmohémopa, aros, 76, a husk, peeling, Schol. Ar. Ach. 468. drohemrivopat, Pass. to become quite fine or thin, dmoderruvOevros Tov mixpod being fined away, Plat. Tim. 83 B; mAdros dmoAeerrvo- pévny Arist. H. A. 1. 5, 8; so, of a disease, Hipp. Epid. 1. 963.—The Act. in Cyrill. 647 C. ' arokenruop6s, 00, 6, a making or becoming fine or thin, Antyll. in Matthaei Med. go. Gtrodéna, fut. yw, to peel off, take off the skin, dm. paorvy: TO v@Tov (cf. do0AiBw) Eur. Cycl, 237; domep adv Ar. Av. 673; Opidaxos dmo- Acheupévas Tov KavAdy with the stalk peeled, Epich. 109 Ahr. amoXéoxero, Ep. for dmdaAero, v. sub drédAvpu. aro\eukatvw, to make all white, Lat. dealbare, Hipp. Prorth. 102, Plut. Eumen. 16:—Pass. to be or become so, Arist. Fr. 273.—Also, in Byz., dtrodevkéo., - daréAnypa, 76, the skirt or hem of a robe, Aquila V. T. GmroAnya, do leave off, desist from, c. gen., dAX’ 008’ ds dwéAnye waxns Il. 7. 263; ob8 dmodpye GAuhs 21. 5773 véov 8 drldrnyer edwd7s 24. 475; dm. épwros Plat. Rep. 490 B. 2. c. part. to leave off doing, 11, 17. 565, Od. 19. 166; [yeved)] 4 ev quer, 4 8 dmodrjyet (sc.pvovea) Il. 6. 149 :—absol. to cease, desist, 13. 230., 20.99; of the wind, to fall, Theocr. 22. 19. 3. dm, eis & to end in.., Arist, Mund, 6, 19, cf. Plut. 2. 496 A, Luc. Imag. 6. II. trans.,=droratw, Ap. Rh. 4. 767. [In Il. 15. 31, Od. 13. 151, al., the second syll. of the fut. and aor. is long in arsi, and the word is written dwoAAnéns, etc.] Hacknibs, to snap the fingers, Lat. digitis crepare, Hesych., Suid. GaréAngus, ews, 7, cessation, M. Anton. 9. 21: esp. the decline of life, Hipp. 28. 40. amoAnmréov, verb, Adj., one must admit, accept, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 388. Gtroknpéw, to chatter at random, Lat. delirare, Dem. 398. 20, Longus 1. 4; ésriva Dio C.53.23; 711d. 72.4; and so, in Polyb. 33.12, 10,L.Dind. suggests that imepBeBAnnévar and drodeAnpyicevat should be transposed. Grrédnipis, ews, 4, (drohapBavw IV) an intercepting, cutting off, én- AcrGv Thue. 7.54: a stopping, émpnviwv, otpwy Hipp. 91 C, 7¥ D, etc.; iddrwv Theophr. C. P. 3. 21, 1; dm. odds its attitude, position, Hipp. Art. 827; v. Foés. Oecon. amo Palo, fut. gw, to make drop off, throw away, Pherecr. Aovi. 8. II. intr. to drop off, vanish, ob« dmoriBages eis dmoniay za; Eupol. Tod. 28, cf. Ar. Av. 1467, and v. dmoAcrapyéw. “ dtroAtyatve, to speak with a shrill, loud voice, to be obstreperous, iv 5 dmodvyalyy Ar. Ach. 968 :—dm. abd@ to play on the flute, Plut. 2. 713 D. drr-odvywpéw, to esteem little, rivos Nicet. 315 A; tt Schol. Thuc. GmoAWdlw, =d0A0dw, Hesych.: droAWorrovéw, Greg. Nyss. &moAt0bw, fo turn into stone, petrify, Arist. Probl. 24. 11, 1, cf. Hel- lanic. 125 :—Pass. to become stone, Arist. 1. c., Mirab. 95, Strab. 251. &roAlQwors, ews, , a being turned into stone, petrifaction, Arist. Fr. 140, Theophr. Lap. 50: metaph., Arr. Epict. 1. 5, 3- ro. , to winnow away, scatter, Nicet, Ann. 394 D. &modtpvopat, Pass. to become a lake or pool, Eust. 267. 47. G@modystrdve, collat. form of dmodeimo, often in Luc., as Catapl. v al. :—Pass., Plut. Them. To. ; ; amoNtvéa, to tie up with a thread, of surgeons, Leo in Ermerins Anecd. Medic. p. 133 :-—GmoAlvwors, ews, #, operation by ligature, Paul. Aeg.6. 5. &-rohvépKytos, ov, impregnable, Strabo 556, Plut. 2. 1057 E. -d-modts, neut. +: gen, ios or ews, Ion. tos: dat. daéAc Hat. 8. 61 :-— one without city, state or country, Hat, 7. 104., 8. 61, Plat, Legg. 928 E, ¢ — ’AmoAXov. etc.: an outlaw, banished man, dm. twa TiWévat, moeiv Soph. O. C. 1357, Antipho 117. 21, etc.; mpoBadéGat Soph. Ph. 1018; dz. dytt moduTay Lys. 161. 16. 2. no true citizen, opp. to bWimodrs, Soph. Ant. 370. 38. of a country, without citizens, Plut. Timol. I. EZ: moAts Garodts a city that is no city, a ruined city, Aesch. Eum. 457, cf. Eur. Tro. 1292; also one ¢hat has no civic constitution, Plat. Legg. 766 D. émr-odo0dve, (atv is found in the Edd. of Plut., etc.): fut.-odAwOjow : aor, dm@dtabov Ar. Lys. 678, etc.; later, dmwAicOnoa Anth. P. 9. 158. To slip off or away, Thuc. 7. 65, Arist. Probl. 32. 11. 2. c. gen. to slip away from, Twos Ar. Lys. 678; THs pyhpns Alciphr. 3. 11; dm. twos, also, to cease to be intimate with one, Tids Plut. Alc. 6; dm. eis 71 Luc. Dem. Enc. 12. dn-odloOyors, ews, %, a slip off, fall, Plotin. 6. 6, 3. &-mé\tor08, ov, =aroAs, Tab. Heracl.inC.1.5774.130, Manetho 4. 282. GaroAtrapyite, fut. Att. «@, to slip off, pack off, ovxovy dyiioas te . - Gmodirapyeis; Ar. Nub. 1253; cf. doArBagw, G-moAtrevros [i], ov, without political constitution (wodureia), of nations, Arist. Pol. 7. 7, 2. Il. taking no part in public matters, no statesman, Plut. Mar. 31: withdrawn from, unfit for public affairs, Bios, yjpas Id. 2. 1098 D, etc.; of offices, language, etc., Id. Crass. 12., 2.7 A, etc.; da. Odvaros as of a private person, Id, Lyc. 29; da. Ad-you unpopular language, Id. 2. 1034 B. G-roXirns [i], ov, 6, a non-citizen, i.e, exile, pedantic word in Theo pomp. Hist. 332. G-roAtriKés, 4, dv, unfit for public business, Cic. Att. 8, 16, 1, in Sup. Grrokixpdopat, Dep. =drorcixw, to lick off, aiva Il. 21. 123 ; the Act. occurs in Dion. H. 1. 79. II. to lick, 7d mpécwmov Longus I. 5. G-moAAatAdotos, ov, not a multiple, not manifold, Damasc. aroAAHyo, v. droAnyw sub fin. *AmrodA6-Supos, ov, 6, n. pr., Apolloderus, Thuc. 7. 20, etc. :—hence Adj. -8apetos, ov, aipecis Strabo 625. dr-6AADp or —bw (Thuc. 4. 25, Arist. Pol. 4. 12,6, Menand, Incert. 7, though the form is rejected by the Atticists): impf. dmHAAuv Aesch. Pers. 654, Soph. El. 1360, but dmwAAvoy Andoc. 8. 37: fut. dmoAéow, Ep. dmodéoow, Att. dor®, Ion. droAéw Hat. 1. 34, al.: aor. dmwAeoa, Ep. aai~ Aeooa: pf. dmodmAexa :—Hom. often uses it in tmesis: the Prep. comes last in Od. 9. 534. Stronger form, of GAAuut, to destroy utterly, kill, slay, Hom., who uses it chiefly of death in battle, dm#Aece Aady *Axaidy Il. 5. 758, al.; éxmayAws dndAcooay 1. 268 :—also of things, to demolish, ta lay waste, dmwAecev “Idtov ipny 5. 648, etc.:—then very freq, in all relations, Bloroy 8 amd mapmay édréooe will waste my substance, Od. 2. 49; ot p’ dmwdAUvrny sought to destroy me (impf. sense), Soph, O. C. 1454; in pregnant sense, émel we yas é« marplas dmru- Aece drove me ruined from... , Eur. Hec. 946 :—dm. ri Tivos to destroy for the sake of .., Dem. 107. 9:—from phrases like Ad-yous dw, Tia Soph. El. 1360, Aéywv dm. ra Ar. Nub, 892, comes the sense fo talk or bore one to death, in fut., dwoAeis pe Id. Ach, 470; ofp’ dis droAcis ve Pherecr. Meraaa. 1. 20; dmode? p’ obroai, by his questions, Antiph. Sirwr. 1.8, etc.:—to ruin a woman, Lys. 92. 26. II. to lose utterly, marép éo0ddv dmwaeoa Od. 2. 46, cf. Il. 18. 82; dadArece vdoripov Hyap Od. 1. 354; amd Ovpdv ddgéaoat to lose one’s life, Il. 16. 861, Od. 12. 350; but, Oupdy od« drwAecer loses not his spirit, Soph. El. 26; tous o' drodddact Thuc. 7. 51; dmwAecav tiv dpxiv td MepaGv Xen. An. 3. 4, II, cf. 7. 2,22; pndey drodAds Tod dyxou Plat. Theaet. 154 C, etc. B. Med. dwéAdtpar: fut. -ododpar, Ion. -oAgopar Hat. 7. 218, part. daoAevpevos Ib. 209: aor. 2-wAduny: pf. -dAwAa, whence the barbarous impf. dadAwAov Ar. Thesm, 1212: plqpf. in Att. Prose some- times written daoAwAew, sometimes dmwAdAev, Thue. 4 1334 7: 27. To perish, die, Il. 1. 117, etc.: sometimes c. acc. cogn., did- AwAe kakdy popov Od, 1. 166; drwrdped? aimdy bdeOpov 9. 303; or c. dat. modi, dmwAero AvypO oAcOpw Od. 3. 87; da. ind Tivos Hat. 5. 126:—simply to be undone, aitav . . dwwr tov lév to ged rid of its poison, Arist, Fr, 334 II. to 4 2 off or level corn in a measure, level with a strickle (dmbpanrpov); hence ivina dr. to give scant measure, as was done in giving slaves their allowance, Luc, Navig. 25; «evedy dmopdgtat, commonly expl. as if olvica were omitted, to level an empty measure, i, ¢, to labour in vain, Kheocr. 15.95. ILL. to take an impression of, tv rut Trav padraxiy oxhnara ar. Plat. Tim. 50 E:—Med, to model, as a sculptor, Philostr, 250, Anth, Plan. 120; metaph. to take essions, Oey tyr pei dmo- pafapdyy Ar, Ran, 1040; dm. map’ ddr one from another, Arist, Eth. N. 9, 12, 3: generally, to copy, imitate, Dion, H, Vett, Cens, 3. 2. dmropacretiw, (uacrds) to'suck the pie sat Eug. 1, 33: t. 3. 29., 8. 1 bw, to scourge severely 09. f : , /y, cuphem, for dromépbw, dro ‘w, fut. low, to behave idly or unse Hat, 2. 162, Favor. ap. Stob. 586. 43. drroptixto, to cease yt battles, Byz. drropaxopar fas ut, speneeas, contr, —paxodpae :—to fight from the walls of a fort or town, é¢ tous Thuc, 1. 90; relxea lava drop, high or strong enough fo Aight from, Xen, Cyr. 3. 1, L1—absol. to fight desperately, fa. An, 6. 2,6; mpds re Plut, Brut, §, Heliod, 5.15 Tu ainst a thing, Plat. Caes, 17, IL. dw, rt to fight off a thing, line it, dmepaxé rovro Wdt, 7, 136; absol,, 6 piv 6) ratra Adyow drepixero 1 Ji $0, dm, ph moeiv Dion, H, 2, 60, ete. Itt, 4 bia — drouvym. dm, red to drive off in battle, Xen, Hell. 6. 5, 34+ IV. to finish a battle, fight it out, Lys. 98, 32: to resist, Arist. Probl, 2. 41. darépaxos, ov, (udxn) not fighting; unfit for service, disabled, Lat. causarius, Xen. An. 3s 45 R24 4.1, 13+ drropeOlnpr uxt, to give up the ghost, Ap. Rh. 1. 280, in tmesi. Aaonmbordopen Att, —Pass., Themist, aBa C. dro-pufoupis, ios, 7, obscene name oft a courtesan, Com, Anon, 107. dropi0lopa, Dep, to dissuade, pada ydp roe Lyarye woAN’ darepuded pv Il. 9, 109. IL, = drodoydopat, Strattis Incert, 14, "Amépuros, 6, Averter of flies, epith, of Zeus and Heracles, Paus. 5.14, 1, Clem. Al, 33. drop0ndopar, Dep, fo bellow loud, Anth, P. 9. 742. daropunriov, verb, Adj, of dmoutacopat, one must wipe one's nose, Eur, Cycl, 561, dropvernpll, fo turn up the nose at, Hesych, s, v. droaxapuv0l fev (Cod, -afav) :—so, dwopunrigo, Luc. D, Merete, 7, 3. drropunriopss, 6, mockery or disgust, Clem, Al. 198, d&ropvAAalvw, to make mouths at, 2, M. 125.15. In Hipp. Art. 799, po) GropudAjvn % yvdbos is restored from Erotian p.ga; v. Fos, Lex.t— also —pvAAlfw, Peell. in Boiss, Anecd, 3. 216, pie %, dirt from the nose, A. B, 432; &bpuka Draco 72, darépubis, «ws, , a blowing one's nose, Plut, 2, 1084 C. drropvodrropat, Dep. to abominate; to abuse, Byz. dmopiioow, Att.-rrw, to wipe the nose, piva Auth, P, 11.268 ; ceavrév Arr, Epict. 1, 6, 30} cf, dmogiw:—Med, to blow one's nose, Ar. Eq. 910, Xen, Cyr. 1,2, 16, Anth, P. 7.1345 bbarddy dm, Arist. Probl. 10. 54s 5 5 Bpaxion, dynaive dr, Plat, 2.631D, Diog. L. 4. 46. IL. metaph, to make him sharp, sharpen his wits, Plat. Rep. 343 A, ef. Horace's vir emunctae naris, and v, kopyCdw (in the opp. sense), 2, Pass,, like Lat. emungi, to be wiped clean, ic. cheated, yépow dmepdpver’ Gaos Menand, ‘Trof, 13; v. sub droopbyopat, drop, fut. vow [0], to shut the eyes close: to die, Call. Ep. 41. drr-oppaxl for, to ripen, mellow, Yccl, d-roppodvywros, ov, making no bubbles, Diose, 5. 116. dropwAivopa, v, sub pordvopuat, dropwpbw, fo make crazy, Aut. p, 105 :—also-palvw, Byz. dmrévaro, dtrovalaro, v, sub dmrovivapyat, dmovata; aor, 1 drivacca:—to remove, to send away, used by Hom. only in aor. 1, ds dy, , mepueaddéa xovpyy dip dmovdat Il, 16, 86, ubi v, Spiten., ef, Ap. Rh, 4.1492 Med, fo wend one's way back, dae- vagoaro Aovdryidvdbe Il, 2. 62g, Od. 15. 254 II, Eur, used this aor, med, {n trans, sense, dmevdooaro maida sent away her child, I. T. 1260: he also has aor, pass. dwovaa0ijvas, to be taken away, depart Jrom a ips ris marpibos Ib,175; warpds war wodcae Med, 166, V, “arava, dmovapxdi, to be quite torpid or stupid, mpos wévovs Plut, 2.8 F, dmovapknors, cos, ), . da. rv xrnpdrov, Lat. bororum | cessio, Dem. 386, 12: a desisting from, disuse of, Twos Sext. Emp. P. 1. 192, Arr. Epict. 4. 4, 39. 8. distance, interval, dpecrava TH air} dm. ep... Plat. Phaedo 111 B; dméoracw bony dpeornnis yiyverat Id. Rep. 587 D, cf. 546B; && pumpGs dm. Arist. Audib.8; 79 dad Tis yas dm. Id. H.A. 2. 11,3; &¢ r@v dm. according to their distances, Id. Cael. 2.9, 33 xard tiv mpds 7d viv dm. Id. Phys. 4. 14, 2:—in Rhet., a figure or mode of speech where the statements are distinct and isolated, Philostr. 492, cf. Aristid. 1. 288. II. a place where something is put away, repository, storehouse, Strabo. 794, Philippid. Maozp. 1, Heraclid. in Coraés’ Bibl. ITI. in Medic. a suppurative inflam- mation, throwing off the peccant humours left by fever, etc., Hipp. Epid. 3. 1083; cf. dréornua. 2. of diseases, a transition from one to another, Ib. 1.944, cf. 3. 1059, and v. peraoraats. dmooraréov, verb, Adj. of dpiorapar, one must stand off from, or give up a thing, rwds Thuc. 8.2; ob@.. dm. 7H méAet Tobrwv: Dem. 295. I, cf, Plat. Polit. 257 C. 2. of Act. dpiornut, one must keep apart, detain, inmov awé Twos Geop. 16.1, 4. Gmoorditéw, fut. 70m, to stand aloof from, twos Aesch. Cho.826, Fr. 156, 287; odKovy mdpos ye ois dweararouy pevds Soph. Ant. 9933 poppis Be Tis ons ode dneorarec was not far from.., Id. O. T. 743; to fall off from, to fail one, xoin dmocrar® pidav Ar. Av. 314, cf. Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 24, etc.; da, ray évraw to be absent from, be devoid of, Plat. Parm. 144 B, cf. Theaet. 205 A. II. absol. to stand aloof, be absent, Aesch, Cho. 444; éas, mpdow da. to stand afar off, Id. Ag. 1104, Eum. 65; opuxpoy am, Plat. Crat. 428 D. amoorarip, 6, one who has power to dissolve an assembly, Lex Lyc. ap. Plut. Lyc. 6 ;. cf. dpiorag@a below :—dpeornp (q, v.) is used somewhat differently. dmro-o7T rns, ov, 6, a munaway slave, Plut. Rom. 9: a deserter, rebel, dz, Tod BaciAéws Polyb. 5. 57, 4, Plut. Cim. 10; dm. xdov a runaway dog, Id. 2. 821 D. II. in Eccl. an apostate, renegade. admooraryats, ews, 7), revolt; and -oratyoelw, to meditate revolt, Byz. droorarikés, 7, dv, of or for rebels, rebellious, @pagos Plut. Rom. 7; of dr. the rebels, C.l, 8709:—Adv., dnooratusas éy eto be ready for revolt, Plut. Pelop. 15. II. disposed to suppurate, Hipp. Fract.'767. IiL in Gramm. = dovvieros, Eust. 1389. 28 :—Adv. —«s, Id. 635. 58. dmogratis, dos; %, pecul. fem. of dwoordrns, dm. wéAus LXX, Joseph. A. J. 11.2, 1. Also, droordtpwa, 4, Theod. Stud. drootaupiba, to fence off with a palisade, Thuc. 4. 69., 6. 101, Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 32 :—Pass., Pherecr. in Com. Fr. 5. p. 26:—cf. drorappeva, droxapakdw. droctidiSdopar, Pass., = oraguddopat, Theophr. C. P. 2. 8, 3. dmocrixte, to put forth ears of corn, Geop. 2. 24, 3. amoarteyatwo, fo uncover, muxivov péov Emped. 356, also Arist. Probl, 20. 14, 1; dm, 70 lepdv to unroof it, Strabo 198; dm. 7d Tpijpa to open it, Sotad. Maron. ap. Ath. 621 B. 2. to take off a covering, Thy oréynv Ev. Mare. 2. 4. II. drooréyw.t, to cover closely, Theophr. C. P. 5. 6; 5. amrooréyacpa, 75, a shelter against, ydxous Theophr. C. P. 5.13, 3- drooreyvéw, to cover close, Moschio ap. Ath. 207 B:—Pass. to be shut up, Hipp. 405.2: to be luted or sealed up close, Hero Spir.177, 201; cf. karacreyvdw. Seats amooréya, fut. fw, to shelter or protect from water, al Brepapises az., olov dnoyeioapa, THY trypay Arist. P. A. 2,15, 1: c. acc. only, to protect, Ib. 3. 11, 1; 7hv Cwnv Theophr. C. P. 1. 4, 5. II. to keep out water, 70 b3wp Arist. Probl. 20, 13, cf. 25. 21, Emped. 228, ‘Theophr, C. P. 3. 6, 3, al.: metaph, to keep out or off, dxAov mupyos dmoaréyet Aesch. Theb. 234; dm. mAnyds Al@wy Polyb.6. 23,5. III. to keep in water, confine it, check its outflow, Plat. Legg.844 B, cf. Arist. Probl. 25.» 18:—absol. to be water-tight, Theophr. C.P.4.12,2.,5.12,9: v,suboTéyw. amroorev6w, poét. for amoorevdw, amrooreipdopat, Pass. to become barren, Eust. Opusc. 66. 16 :—daoorel- pwots, 7, barrenness, Theod. Stud. Groortelxw, aor. dwéariyor :—to go away, to go home, Od. 11. 1 33, etc.; imperat. dadartxe Il. 1. 522; also in Hdt. 9. 56, Soph., etc. ; és vir dmooreixovros WAtov Aesch. Supp. 769. ster dmooréhio, fut. -oTeA@ :—to send off or away from, Bh EE +. Thad dmooreiAnre ‘yijs Soph. El. 71, cf, Eur. Med. 281; THod am. xOovds Id. Cycl. 468 ; éfw x@ovds Id. Phoen. 485 ; é« THs TéAews Plat. Rep. 607 B: absol. to send away, banish, Soph. Ph. 450, Eur. Hec. 731 :—Pass. to go away, depart, set out, Soph. O. T. 115; dmoareAAou xOorvds Eur. Supp. 582; dduov.. Tay éuav dmeordans Id. Hel. 660; puyas dmooranets Id. Phoen. 319; mpés ce dedp’ dreordAny Id. I. T. 1409. II. to send off, despatch, on some mission or service, Soph. Ph, 125, 1297, etc.; the usual sense in Prose, esp. of messengers, ships, etc., Hdt. 1. 46, 123, al. 5 véas én rwva Id. 7.235; cf. 8.64; aTpaTdv mapa twa Id, 5, 32; vas abrors > 199 dx. Bondovs Thuc. 1%. 45 ;—also, dim. drouinv Hdt. 4. 150; olmards Arist. Pol, 5. 7, 2; mpeoBetay Thuc. 3. 28; dyyédous Xen. An. 2.1, 5, etc. ;—c, inf., of dmooradéyres orparevesbar Hat. 3. 26, cf. 5. 33:— Pass. to be sent off, despatched, 1d. 3. 26. III. to put off, doff, Oai- Haria Ar, Lys. 1084; cf. erodh. IV. intr. to go back, retire, of the sea, Thuc. 3. 89; of seamen, Dem. 883. 15. dmoorevoxwpéw, to straiten, cramp, Athen: Mach, p. 11. Gmroorevbu, poit.—crevdw, to straiten, Theophr. Ign. 54, in Pass.; dmearel= vwro, 3 pl. plapf. pass., Theocr. 22, 101%; réos dmeorevapévos Diod. 3. 37- a&toctéve, to bewail, éOov Aristaen. 2. 18, dmoortivwnis, ews, , a straitening, straits, Schol. Il. 23. 330. dmoorevwrikds, h, dv, straitening, opp. to mAaruvticds Eust. 315. 11. - dmoorenrixés, 7}, dv, of or for discrowning, dcpa, a bridal chant, E. M. dmootépye, fut. fw, to get rid. of love, love no more, Theocr. 14. 503 Hnrépa am. Philostr. 610:—hence /o loath, reject, Lat. abominari, tt Aesch. Ag. 499; dodjv Terpand. 1; méGous tds Theocr. Epigr. 4. 14. Gmroorepedopat, Pass. to become solid, Arist. Mirab. 89, 134. droorepéa, fut. how :—Pass., fut. orepyOhoopa Lys, 126. 33, Dem. 15. 24, but also med. orepfaopar Eur. H. F. 137, Thuc. 6. gt, Dem. 765. 14; and dwoorepodpat Andoc. Ig. 26: pf. dmeorhpnyat, etc. To rob, despoil, bereave or defraud one of a thing, c. acc. pers. et gen. rei, xp7~ paraw dm. ria Hdt. 5.92, 5, cf. 7. 1553 THs Tupayvibos Ar. Av. 1605; Tis puxijs Antipho 125. 40; also, c. acc. pers, et rei, uh pe dmoarephans ++ #eovav Soph. El. 1276, cf. Antipho 122. 33, Xen. An. 7. 6, 9, Isae. 73- 46, etc.: absol. to defraud, commit fraud, Ar, Nub. 487 ; dmeorepn- ads yiryverat a defaulter (Bekk. suggests daecpnews), Plat. Phaedr, 241 B:—Pass. to be robbed or deprived of, c. gen., “EAAdSos dmeorepnuévos Hdt. 3.130; oot 8 dwearepypevn Soph. El. 813; #5ovav Ar. Nub. 1072; wavrow dy dmeornphyny Dem. 549. 123 ¢. acc., immous dmearé- pyvrat Xen, Cyr. 6. 1, 12, etc.; absol., ef 8° dmeorephueda if we have been frustrated, Soph. Aj. 781 (Badh. «ef 3’ dp’ iorepheaper). 2. dm. éavrdy Tivos to detach, withdraw oneself from a person or thing, Tav [dyaApdrow] ..dmearépna’ éuavréy Id. O. T. 1381; od« dnoaTepav ye Tay és. Thy médww Euavrdy obdévos Antipho 128. 28; dAAov abrdy dm. Thuc. 1. 40; dm. éavrdy rod ppoveiv Crobyl. Amo. 2; éxeivous.. da, ph dv ..dmorexigat to deprive them of the power of walling off, Thuc. 7. 6, cf. Plat. Legg. 868 D :—reversely, da. ri twos Plut, Aemil. 20. 3. c. acc. pers. to deprive, rob, Hdt. 7.155, Ar. Pl. 373, Plat., etc.:—in Eur. Hel. 577, 7d 5& capés yy’ droorepe’, it seems to mean, certainty fails me. 4. c. acc. rei only, to filch away, withhold, Aesch, Pr. 777, Soph. O. T. 323, Ph. 931, Ar. Nub. 1305, Dem. 528.16; Zeds dmoarepoin yapov may he avert it, Aesch. Supp. 1063. II. in Logic, to draw a negative conclusion, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 28, 11; cf. orepyrixos. dmootépyats, ews, ), deprivation, rhs dxoRs Thuc. 7. 70. , h: Ag én’ dmoorepjoe Tod SovAou for the purpose of withholding him, Plat. Legg. 936 D. dmoorepytéov, ver. Adj. one must defraud, twa twos Plut. 2. 931 D. atroorepynTis, ov, 6, a depriver, robber, Plat. Rep. 344 B, Arist. Eth. E. 3. 4, 5 ;—dmoorepnriy ayopacas dypév a farm that costs money instead of bringing it in, Philem. Incert. 6; cf. dwoorepynrinds. ; dmoctepytikés, 7, dv, of or for cheating, yvupn dr. TéKov a device for cheating one of his interest, Ar. Nub. 747, cf. 728 ;—so, wan aaromre~ pytpis, Ib. 730. ree dmoorepiokw, = droorepéw, Soph. O. C. 376 :—in Hipp. 273. 44, dio- orepi(w, to carry off, purge, pethaps should be —ioxw. amoortepivew, to rob of the crown, discrown, Luc. Jup. Trag. 10:>— Med.,. aor. -doacGat Diog. L. 2. 54 :—Subst. -wors, 7, Eumath. 425. dtroorépw, =foreg., Byz. ee. dmoomPifa, (77mBos) to repeat by heart, recite without book, Athanas., etc., cf. Eust. 974. 7 :—hence Subst..10p.6s, 6, recitation by heart, Epiphan. aréomppa, it distance, interval, like dméoraots I. 3, dm. Tov HAiov mpos tiv yay Arist. Cael. 2. 13, 9; T&v dorpaw Id. Metaph. 11. 8, 113 Tois dm. mpos Tods “yoveis mavTodamas éxetv in point of intervals, in re- lation, Id. Eth. N. 1. 10, 4. 2. an aposteme, an abscess, esp. after fever, Hipp. Aph. 1259, cf. Arist. Probl. 6. 3, Theophr. Fr. 4. 61. : amoornpitias, ov, 6, one who has an abscess, Aretae. Caus. M, Diut. 1.9. aroorpitixés, 7, dv, abscess-like, Heliod. ap. Oribas. p. 56 Mai. atrootnpartov, 76, Dim. of dréarnpa, Oribas. p. 10 Mai. dzro Lys, €s, (eldos) of the nature of an abscess, Hipp. Coac. 139. aro Lypa, aros, TO, a stay, support, Hipp. Offic. 749. 2.@ determination of humours, like drécxnyis, Hipp. 298. 41. dmoormpitopar, Med. to fix firmly, Anth. Plan. 265. 2. to support oneself firmly, throw one’s weight upon, rots pnpots Arist. Probl. 5. 19, 1; mpds 70 broxeipevoy Id. Incess. An. 3, 1, cf. Mot. An. 2, 6. II. in Medic., of diseases, to be confirmed, Hipp. 83 F. 2. dr, és aig OF humours, fo determine towards a particular part of the body, Hipp. 49. ut, Arist. H. A. 7. 9, 1;—so in Act., Hipp. 99. 8. 3 dmoornpitis, ews, 7}, a fulcrum or rest for a lever, Hipp. Mochl. 868. 5. .. és, (ariBos) off the road, solitary, Soph. Fr, 502. drooritw, to point, mark off, distinguish, lambl, in Villois, Anecd. 2, 188, in Med. :—to mark with points or lines, Galen, d&troottABdw, to make to shine, Anth. P. rd 339, Walz Rhett. 1. 640. dmoottABw, to be bright from or with, aroaridBovres Gdelparos Od. 3. 408; c. dat. (cf. oriABew édaiw), Lyc. 253, Anth. P. 5. 26. 2. absol., dréar:ABov paivera 7d Hdwp vuerds phosphorescent, Arist. Meteor. 2.9, 17: to shine brightly, Theophr. Fr. 6. 2, 1, Luc., etc. ; deris dr. els wéAayos Alciphro I. I. II. c. acc, to illuminate, Clem. Al. 89. am pus, ews, %, reflexion of light, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3.1377, Hesych, s. v. alyis. amoortAcyyifw, to scrape with a atdeyyis (q.v-):—Med. to scrape 200 oneself clean, Xen. Occ, 11, 18; part: pf. pass, dmeorAcyyopévor, scraped clean, fresh from the bath, Ar. Eq. 580, Arist. Probl. 2. 12. _ dtroatA. , 76, one’s scraping's with the ordreyyis, Strabo 224. amooroixéw, to arrange in order, Byz. amocroneiov, 74, a church dedicated to, commemorative of an apostle, Eccl. : sometimes written dmoordduov. Garoorohevs, ews, 5, at Athens, a magistrate who had to fit out a squadron for service, Dem. 262. 18., 1146 ult., Aeschin. 52. 2, Philoch. 142; cf. Herm. Pol. Ant. § 161. 20. Cf. dméarodos. amooroAh, 7, (amooréA\Aw) a sending off or away, Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 688, Eur. Phoen. 1043, in pl.: a ching, Tov vedv Thuc. 8.9: a sending forth on their journey, £évav bmodoxas kal dm. Arist. Eth. N. 4. 2,15; dodvai rt dmooroAds Tin as a parting gift, LXXx (3 Regg. 9. 16 Cod. Al.). 2. a sending forth, shooting, Bedkdv Philo Belop. 69. II. (from Pass.) a going away, an expedition, Thuc. 8. 8. 2. the office of an apostle, apostleship, 1 Ep. Cor. g. 2, Gal. 2. 8. GtrooroAuKds, 7, dv, apostolic, Eccl. Adv.—«@s, Eccl. -GrrooroAupatos, a, ov, sent off, missive, Ach. Tat. 2. 9, ubi v. Jacobs. amécroXos, 6, a wer, ambassador, envoy, 6 pev di am. és Ti MéAnroy jv Hdt. 1. 21; és Aaxedaipova tpinpei am. éyivero he went off on a mission to Laced., Id. 5. 38: cf. dwooroAeds. 2. a messenger from God, esp. of the Apostles, Ev. Matth. 10. 2, al. b. in Eccl. a book of lessons from the Apostolic Epistles. II.=cr7éddos, a fleet ready for sea, a naval squadron ot expedition, Lys. 153- 49; dmé- arodov dduévar, dwooréAdewv, rotetoOat Dem. 30. 5., 252. 7-, 262. 15, ete. 2. dréarodov, 76, with or without mAofov, a merchant-vessel or packet, Ep, Plat. 346A, Vit. Hom. 19; cf. Ruhnk. Tim. dmrooropdrifw, (crdua) to dictate to a pupil that which he is to repeat by heart, the usual way of teaching at Athens, ypdpyara dm. Plat. Euthyd. 277 A; absol., Ib. 276 C:—Pass., 7d dooropatiCépevoy a dic- tated lesson, Ib., Arist. Soph. Elench, 4, 1, cf. Ruhnk. Tim. 2. tointer- rogate, catechize, as a master his pupil, Ev, Luc, 11.53. II. to recite, = by heart, Ath. 359 D: generally, to recite, repeat, Plut. Thes. 24. mooropile, (ordua) to deprive of an edge, Philostr. Imag. 2. 17, 11. drocropde, to stop the mouth of, to stop up, Polyb. Fr. 26: opp. to dvacropow, II. =dmocropl(w, Dion. H. 6.14, in Pass.: metaph., Luc. Tim. ro. drocroppalw, to use big words, bombast, Byz. dmocrépwcts, ews, 4, laying open, opening, Tav mbpwy Arist. Probl. 8. Io: but this sense properly belongs to dvacréuwaots, cf. dwooropdbw I. ambaropyos, ov, =daropyos, Plut. 2. 491 C. ; btecropatoven, Dep. to miss the mark, err, Athanas. dahl on 9 Pass. to become squinting, Medic. -dmoorpayyaAlle, to kill by strangling, Diod. 14.12, Strabo 796. dmootpayyifw, to repress, check, Theol. Arithm. 49 A. Gmroorpa: , aros, 76, in Medic. that which is expressed, extracted. G@n-oorpikifw, to bake to a hard crust, of a quick fire, Galen. 6. 484. II. to banish by ostracism, Hesych., Suid. dn-oorpakdopat, Pass. to become dry, like a potsherd, of a diseased bone when the blood leaves it, Hipp. V. C. gto. G&moorpiirevopat, Pass. to be discharged from military service, Lat. exauctorari, Ap. Civ. 5. 26. a&roorparevtos, ov, having retired from service, Lat. emeritus, Byz. dmrootparnyos, 6, a retired general, dz. roeiv Twa to put him on the superannuated list, Dem. 669. 7. amootpitromedevopat, Dep. 2o remove one’s camp from, encamp away from, tivés Xen. An. 3. 4,34; dm. mpdow to encamp at a distance, Ib.7.7, 1. a&rootpeBASopat, Pass. to be horribly twisted, LXx. (2 Macc. 9. 7). anéorpentos, ov, turned back, =droarpapels, A. B. 10: hostile, unac- ceptable, Diogen. ap. Eus. P. E. 138 D. moortpedbw, fut. Yo: lon. aor. droorpepacxe Il. 22. 197,etc.:—Pass. and Med., fut. -orpéYopua Xen. Cyr. 5. 5, 36, Plut.: aor. -eorpagyy [a], Soph., Eur., etc.; later -eorpeaynv Lxx: fut. -orpapyoopar LXx: pf. -€orpeppa Hadt., etc.; Ion. 3 pl. -eorpdparo Hat. 1. 166. To turn back, Hom. etc.; and so, either to turn to flight, dpp’ =’Axatods avris dwoorpéypory Il. 15. 62, etc., cf. Hdt. 8.94; or fo turn back from flight, Xen. Cyr. 4. 3,1; to turn back, send home again, Thuc. 4. 97., 5. 75 :—dmoorpévarre rédas kal xeipas having twisted back the hands and feet so as to bind them, Od. 22. 173, 190, cf. Soph. O. T. 1154, Ar. Eq. 264; dwoorpépere tas xeipas abrav, @ SevOa Ar. Lys. 455; dm. tov adxéva, as in Hom. ad épvew, Hdt. 4.188 :—to turn back, guide back again, dwoorpépayres ¢Bav véas Od. 3. 162; txve dmoorpéyas having turned the steps of the oxen backwards, so as to make it appear that they |” had gone the other way,h. Hom. Merc. 76: to turn away, avert, avxév amo- Grpiaae Theogn. 858; dméorpey’ {umadw rapniba Eur. Med. 1148; but 70 mpdcwmov mpds Ta Plut. Popl. 6: to bring back, recall one from a place, ¢f ispod Xen. An. 2.6, 3; p@ras awéorpepev Mepoepédvys Oadd- poy Emped. in Bgk. Lyr. p. 431. 2. to turn away or aside, divert, Thuc. 4. 80, etc.; 7dv méAeuov és Maxedoviay Arr. An.2.1,1: fo avert a danger, an evil, etc., mip’ dm. vocov Aesch. Ag. 850; Steny Ar. Nub. 776 ; dmoorp. rixnv pi) ov yevécOat Antipho 143. 15 ; dr. els robvaytiov Tous Adyous Plat. Soph. 239 D. 8. dm. riva Tivos to dissuade from a thing, Xen. Eq. Mag. I, 12. II. as if intr. (sub. éavrdy, immov, vay, etc.), to turn back, Thuc. 6.65; da. ériow Hat. 4. 43; am. may Soph. O. C. 1403. 2. to turn away or aside, Hat, 8. 87; of a river, Id. 4.52; ravayria dm. Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 12. B. Pass. to be turned back, dmeorpap0ac rods éuBdrous, of ships, to have their beaks bent back, Hat. 1, 166, cf. 4.188; dmoorpapiva . . To mode to have one’s feet twisted, Ar. Pax 279; Tplxes dmecrpappéva close-curled, Arist. Physiogn. 5, 8. ; IL. to turn oneself from or b ° , BJ anrogrheyyirpn.a — amorpatpiCouat. away, dm. dm adAhdrwy Id, H. A. 9. 3, 5 * esp. 1. to turn one’s face away from, abandon, avoid, Lat. aversari, c. acc., Phocyl. 2; pap droorpaphs Soph. O. C.1272; wh pw dwoorpépou Eur. I. T. Sor, cf. Ar. Pax 683, Xen, Cyr. 5.5, 30; 70 Oeiov fpgdiws dmeorpapys Eur. Supp. 1593 also, c. gen., apoppos olxay Trav dmoarpapeis Soph. O. T. 431: —absol., wh, mpos Oeav, . . dnootpapys Ib. 326; dreorpaypévor Adyor hostile words, Hat. 7.160. 2. to turn oneself about, turn back, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 25; to turn and flee, lb. 6. 2,17; dmoorpaphvat to escape, Plat. Rep. 405 C. 8. dmoarpapival twos to fall off from one, desert him, Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 4. a&trroorpryyéw and -orplyywors, ews, 9, in Eust. 879. 35., 1416. 31, words of uncertain meaning, having reference to unpleasant alliteration, as in “HAtd din. Gmoorpohtw, =dmoarpépw, to avert, dnwnas Tzetz. Hom. 283. aroorpopt, 7, (dmoorpepopar) a turning back, Xen. Eq. 9, 6; dmo- orpopiy AapBavew to have one’s course turned, Plut. Lucull. 27. II. a turning away from, an escape, refuge, c. gen., TUXNS, KaK@v Aesch. Pr. 769, Soph. Fr. 684; ¢nutas Eur. Med. 1223. 2. a resort, re- source, Hdt. 8. 109, Thuc. 4. 76; xe Blov redevt? KodKér’ éor’ am. Soph. O. C. 1473, cf. Eur. Med. 603; ob# é€xov dm. Dem. 42. 2:—c. gen. objecti, ob opi éore Béaros ovdepia GAAn dm. no other means for getting water, Hdt. 2. 13; so, owrnpias dm. Thuc. 8. 75; Biov Luc. D. Meretr. 6.1; dm. rod Sfyov assistance from them, Philostr. 549. III, in Rhet. an apostrophé, when one turns away from all others to one, and addresses him specially, Longin. 16. 2, Quintil. 9. 2, 38. amootpodta, %, she that turns away, epith. of Aphrodité, Paus. g. 16, 2. améarpodos, ov, turned away, dnoorpdpous aiyas ameiptw (i.e. dmo- orpéyw kai dreipfw) Soph. Aj. 69: turned away from, c. gen., Manetho 1.57. 2. to be turned from, dreadful, epith. of the Erinyes, Orph. H. 70. 8. II. as Subst., daréatpodos, 7), an apostrophé, An. Ox. 3- 356. amroorpdwipt, to take off the trappings, Hesych. s. v. dméoager. Gmrooriyéw, fut. -o7véw: aor. I. -esrvynoa Soph. O. C. 692, also ~torvéa Opp. H. 4. 370: aor. 2 dréariyov Call. Del. 223: pf. with pres. sense —eoTU-ynxa Hat. 2. 47:—t0 hate violently, abhor, loathe utterly, Wdt. 2. 47, Soph. O. C. 186, 692, Eur. Ion 488; aa. Hdwp (in comparison with wine) Melanipp. 4: c.inf., da. yapBpédv oi yevéoGar ImmoxActiny Hat.6. 129. Grooriyyots [i], ews, 4, abhorrence, Schol. Aesch. Cho. 77. ar réov, verb. Adj. one must abhor, Byz. amoortimdty, to drive off with blows, Archil. 114. GmoortipeNtfo, to drive away by force from, rd Twos Il. 18. 158, Anth, P. 7. 603. Grootipw [0], to draw up, contract, of the effect of astringents, dpipéa .., Wore dwooripew Arist. Probl. 1.33, cf. Theophr. C. P. 2. 8, I:—pf. pass., odpa 8 dwéorumra: are stopt, Nic. Th. 433: to dull the sense of taste, Anth. P.7. 536: cf. Schaf. Greg. p. 42, who compares Germ, abstumpfen. GmoctKdte, to gather figs, v. Amips. Incert. 17. 2. to squeeze fig's, to try whether they are ripe ; metaph, of informers, with a play on ovgo- davtia, v.sub ovkopdyrns. GroctAdw, to strip off spoils from a person, hence to strip off or take away from, Ti twos Pind. P. 4. 195. II. to rob or defraud one of a thing, 5s yw’. . dweavAnoev narpas Soph. O. C. 1330 (ubi v. Elmsl. et Herm.), Isae. 54,2: also, dw. red 71 Eur. Alc.870, Xen. An.1.4,8; hence in Pass., dwoovAdo@at 71 Aesch. Pr. 174.—émoovAéw and—dw are dub.forms. GmoovAnors [i], ews, 1), a plundering, Eumath. p. 286. GmrocupBaive, =od ovpBaive, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 282, Origen., etc. G&rroocupBovdetw, to advise _Jrom a thing, dissuade, twit moteiy re Arr. Bo I. rhs 3- moouvayw, to recover a man from, awd A€émpas Lxx (4 Regg. 5. 3), with v. 1. daé rivos riy Aémpay tp. . een a&mocuvdyoyos, ov, put out of the synagogue, Ev. Jo. 9. 22, etc. GmootvaKros, ov, =drocvvdryaryos, Cyrill., Epiphan. dmoowdmrw, to disunite, disjoin, Theod. Stud, drroowvebife, to wean one from, rivds Medic. Pisses kt stronger than ob ouvepyéw, to thwart, oppose, Sext. Emp. Te 2Tae dmocipryybw, =oupryysw, Hipp. 280. 3. drootpite, to whistle aloud for want of thought, or to shew indiffer- ence, pakp’ droovpifav h,Hom. Merc. 280:—Pass. to sound like whistling, Luc. V.H. 2. 5. II. to hiss out, drive away by hissing, dnoav- pixOnoopeda Eust. Opusc. 81. go. Groovuppa, 76, that which is peeled off, an abrasion, Hipp. 426. 10, Diosc. 1. 36: cf. ovpya I. 3. II. the rubbish left in working mines, Arist. Mirab. 42. dmootpa [®], fut. -cvp& :—to tear away, Pherecyd. 57, Soph. Fr. 365 ; Tas émadgers Thuc. 7. 43: to lay bare, strip, érwmov és daréov Theocr. 22.105; Ti émemod7js qv Strabo 208. Gmocvccttéw, to absent oneself from the public table (cvoorria), Plat. Legg. 762 C. aroctetacis, ews, %, a dissolution, destruction, Clem. Al. 458. drordiyh, 7, slaughter, Byz. anécpaypa, aros, 74, =tréopaypa, Ael. N. A. 1. 34. aroopdto, in Att. Prose -oparrw Lys. 137. 11, Xen., etc.: fut. +opdga: plgpf. -eopdxe Dio C. 78. 7:—Pass., aor. ~eapayny [a] Hdt. 4.84: fut.-oparyhoopa Ar. Thesm.750:—to cut the throat ofa person, Lat. jugulo, droop. Twa. és dyyos so that the blood runs into a pail, Hdt. 4. 62, cf. Aesch. Theb. 43: generally to slay, Ar. Ach, 327, Thuc, 7. 86, Plat., etc. :—Med., to cut one’s throat, Xen. Cyr..3.1, 25. droopatplfopar, Pass. to rebound. like a ball, Arist, Probl, 24.-9; arog patpow — aroréects, 3- II. in Act. to jerk away like a ball, Tzetz. Lyc.17:—hence, =ptots, %, a throwing off, flinging as a bail, Ib. dmoahatpow, fo round off, make into balls, Ath. 42 F. dmorpaxchifw, to have one's limbs frost-bitten and mortified, immor év Kpup@ éorewres dr. Hat. 4. 28, cf. Ar. Fr. 369. IL. to fall into convulsions, Plat. Lyc. 16; cf. opaxedos. dmoohiixéArors, ews, }, gangrene, capray, doréwv Hipp. Art. 831. Gmoopadho, fut. -opGAG: aor. 1 -€opyda:—to lead astray, drive in baffled course, bvrwa mp&rov dmoophrwow deddAat és wEAayos Od. 3. 320; un..apas dmoopndree mévoro lest he baulk them of the fruits of toil, Il. 5. 567. II. mostly in Pass., esp. in aor, 2 dmeapadny [a], to be baulked or disappointed of, tijs éAnidos Hat. 6. 5: to be deprived of, ppevav Solon 25. 4, Aesch. Pr. 472; ympns Id. Pers. 392; odatas Tivos dnoopakpévor mistaken as to the nature of ., Plat. Legg. 950B: to fail in reaching, ‘Iradias Plut. Pyrrh. 15: absol. to be missing or lost, Dem. 801. 15 ; dmogpadAeaOar eis 7 to go astray, Plut. 2. 392 B:—the literal sense, to slip and fail from, dmoapanels é¢ ious érece Plut. Per. 13. dmorpahpaw or -€w, to fall headlong, v.|. Polyb. 35.5, 2. Gmoopat, dyos, 6, }, broken off, abrupt, like dwoppwt, Nic. Th. 521. dmorpatra, v. sub drocpatw. ‘ amrordpevSovaw, to hurl from or as from a sling, Diod. 2. 50, Luc. Jup. Trag. 33. dmoadhevSovnros, ov, driven away by the sling, Plut. 2. 293 B. arordevbovilw, =daroapeviovdw, Joseph. Macc. 16. dmorgpykéw, to untie, loosen, Nonn. D. 21. 152, etc. anogpnviw, to wedge tight in, dwoopnvabels dévdpw Tas xeipas Enst. Dion. P. 369: to press tight, compress as by a wedge, Philo Belop. 76, Hero Belop. 123. II. to make wedge-shaped, Paul. Aeg. ight, compress, bind up, Lat. adstrin- dnocdiyya, fut. yéw, to squeeze ti gere, Tpavua Hipp. Art. 831; orayovas Luc. Luct.19: Adyos dmeapry- Bévos a close-packed style, Lat. oratio adstricta, Luc. Rhet. Praec. 9. arooduytis, ews, , a squeezing tight, Hipp. Fract. 759, Art. 831. arroohpayife, lon. -oppnyifw : fut. Att. i@ :—to seal up, Plut. Alex. 2 in Pass. :—so in Med., Eur. Or. 1108, Ath. 34 A. II. ¢o unseal, Diog. L. 4. 59. anorppayiopa, 7d, the impression of a seal, Ath. 585 D: also the seal itself, signet, LXX (Jer. 22, 24). at-orppatva, to make to smell, yAnxan abrov dmocppaive he gives himself a whiff of pennyroyal, Anth. P. 11. 165 :—Pass., dppdter do- oppawépevov when smelt at, Diosc. 1. 64. amocpipndadréw, to shape on the anvil, Liban. in Boiss. Anecd. 1. 170. dmocyxdt, stronger form of axaw, dm. préBa to open a view, Crates Incert. 5, Arist. H. A. 3. 4, 3:—Pass., Hipp. Progn.45: cf. dmoaxda. II. to slacken, let go, sxaoTnpiay Hero Belop. 130. dmocxGAlSopa, aros, TO, (xadtdbw) a forked piece of wood for prop- ping hunting-nets, Lat. varus, Xen. Cyn. 10, 7. dmréayxiots, ews, 7), the opening of a vein, Hipp. 1228 D. letting go, in an engine, Philo Belop. 74. démoryxaw, =drocxyatw I, Hipp. 563 F, Arist. H. A. 3. 2, 13. amocxedidlo, fut. dow, =airocxediaw, to make off-hand, vépos drrecxebiacpévos Arist. Eth. N. 5. 1, 14. 2. to act off-hand or at random, Julian. 453 B, Scholl., etc. 3. to write off-hand, wepi Twos Polyb. 12. 3, 7:—to extemporise, Ath. 125 C, Philostr. 222. amécxents, ews, 4, abstinence, Plut. 2. 123 B, etc. amooxeréov, verb. Adj. of dméxopat, like dpexréov, one must abstain, twos Hipp. Acut. 394. dmooxerArdfo, strengthd. for oxerAud(w, A. B. 36. amréoxnpa, 76, a figure, copy, rwés Gramm. dmocynpitifte, to shape, fashion off, Epist. Socr. 28. Eccl. to strip of the monastic habit, amocxnow, amooyeiv, —érOar, v. sub dméxw. drrocxife, to split or cleave off, dnd 8 éaxioev abrhy [ri mérpny] Od. 4.507: to tear off, Eur. Alc, 172, Opp. H. 2. 623. 2. to sever or detach from, Tiva ard Tod ouppaxixod Hdt. 6.9; dm. Aviods to part them off, separate them, Plat. Polit. 262 B:—Pass., dwooxtaOjvae dard of a river being parted from the main stream, Hdt. 2. 17., 4. 56., tribe detached from its parent stock, etc., Id. 1.58, 143; dad THs peyadns pacBos dm. Arist. H. A. 3. 4, 5; also without dx, dmooxicbévres Tijs adAns orparijs Hat. 8. 35, cf. 7. 233, Plat. Polit. 267 B, etc.:—Med. to separate oneself, Id. Legg. 728 B. 8. metaph., da. Twa ToD Ad-you to cut him off from his speech, interrupt him in it, Ar. Nub. 1408. _ amocyis, idos, %, (ox ifw) only used in pl. dmooyxides, branches of veins, Hipp. 275. 6, Aretae.; d07@v Galen. ; of a mountain, Strabo 521. The sing. is found in Galen. 2. 578. : anécxtots, ews, %. a division, branching, of a vein, Arist. H. A. 3. 3, 21, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2. 8. anécyxiopa, 76, that which is severed, M. Anton. 4. 29. arocy' is, 00, 6, one who severs, makes a schism, Eccl. ] Gmocxowllw, to separate by a cord: generally, to separate, isolate, drecxomopévos Tact Hots ev rH méde dicators Dem. 778. 163 cf. Plut. 2. 443 B, Philo 1. 205, B19. Hence Subst. -topss, od, Theod. Stud. dmocxohdle, fo rest pr recreate oneself, éy rive Arist. Eth. N. 10. 6, 4. 2. to have leisnre for, devote oneself to, TY o1vp Ael. V. H. 12. I. 8. to spend one's leisure with one, go to him for teaching, Vita Hom. 5 and 34. ‘ amrocxodos, ov, shunning the schools, Timo ap. Diog. L. 9. 69. drrocdtw, to save or preserve from, heal from or of, vicov Soph. Ph. 1379; dm. olxade to bring safe home, Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 19, cf. An. 2. 3: 18. 2. to heep quite safe, Plat. Phil. 26 C, Legg. 692 C; da..marpds II. a II. in late’ 201 2. II. Pass., dmoowOjvae és. .to get safe to a place, Hdt. 5- 87., 7. 229, Xen. Hell. 1. 3, 22 ; émi.. Ib. 3. 1, 2: absol. to get off safe, Hdt. 2. 107, al, IIT. intr. in Act. to be safe, Ep. Plat. 336 B. Gmocwpetw, to heap up, accumulate, Byz. dmoréyn, %, (4mordcow) renunciation of the world, Eccl. dnoriynvile, v.s. dnornyavica, dréraypa, aros, 74, a prohibition, Iambl. V. Pyth. 138. Gmrorddny [i], (reivw) Adv. stretched at length, Luc. Zeux. 4, Ael. N. A. 4. 21; dm. rpéxeu Poll. 6. 175. 2. diffusely, prolixly, Philostr. 481, 500; dm. pOeyyipuevoy pbéypua npixay Poll. 4-94. dmérakros, ov, or dmoraxtés, dv: (dmordcow)i—set apart for a special use, specially appointed, ovria Hat. 2. 69, cf. Philem. Sux, 2. 2. settled, appointed, jpépa Critias 2. 27. 3. v. dmaxros, Tk. *Amordkrar, wy, ol, certain heretics mentioned by Epiphan. 2. 18: also ~raxtiKot, Id.; -raxriorat, Julian. 224 A; —raxtirav, Epiphan. 2,129. dmoridavrevw, to balance, AiGov Aim Walz Rhett. 1. 497- Groripiedw, to lock up, keep, Walz Rhett. 1, 488 :—also in Med., Ael. V. H. 1. 12 (where —peruoa@at is only f. 1.). dtrordpve, Ion. for doréuva, dmotaviw, =dnoreive, tiv xeipa Hipp. Fract. 757- Gméragis, ews, %, (dmordcow) a setting apart, esp. a classing of persons for taxation, Antipho ap. Harp., cf. Bickh P. E, 2.156. 2.=dio- tayn, Eccl. :—also -rafta, 4, Eccl. dmoricts, ews, 9, a lengthening, prolongation, of sound, owy éorw. dm, Tis povijs, i.e. dow amoreiverar } povh, Arist. H. A. 5. 14, 8, cf. de An, 2. 8, 9. 2. a stretching out, Tov mobav Plut. 2.670C; téravos és ev6d dm, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 1. 6. 3. the intention or scope of a writer, Schol. Soph. El. 1070, Apoll. de Constr. 113. dmotdcow, Att.-rrw: fut. fa :—to set apart, assign specially, xwpav twi Plat. Theaet. 153 E: to detach soldiers, Polyb, 6. 35, 3, etc. :—Pass., dneréraxro mpds 70 defiéy had his appointed post on the right, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 40; dworeraypevn dpxn a delegated office, Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 13: generally, to be fixed, appointed, x@pos Plut. 2. 120 B. II. to appoint or settle definitely, Arist. H. A. 7. 6, 6. III. Med., dzordcoopai rin to bid adieu to a person, to part from them, Ev. Lue. 9. 61, Act. Ap. 18. 21, cf. Ev. Marc. 6.46, Joseph. A. J. 11. 8, 6, Liban. 4-511; also c. dat. rei, to part from, give up, Ev. Luc. 14. 33, and often in late writers, v. Phryn. s. v. and Lob. ad l.; also, dwordgacOae 77s Baotreias Malal. p. 312: cf. cvvrdoow Iv. daroraupsopat, Pass. to be like a bull, dépypa Aealvys dworavpodrar So ctv casts the savage glance of a lioness on them, Eur. Med. 188: to rage like a bull, Cyrill, 2. of lo, to be changed into a heifer, Erotian. améravpos, ov, apart from the bull, Arist. H. A. 8.7, 3. amérapos, ov, buried apart, Dinarch. ap. Harp. et A. B. 437. Grordpevors, ews, 7), an intrenchment, Dion. H. 9. 9. amorappevw, to fence off with a ditch, mostly joined with dmooravpéa, Xen. An, 6.5, 1, Hell. 5. 4, 38, cf. Dion. H. 5. 58. dmoréOvacayv, dmroredverws, v. sub dmobvpckw. Grroretvw, fut. —rev@: pf. —réraxa: 3 pl. pass. pf. dworéravta Luc. Zeux.4. To stretch out, extend, wépos Tt abrod Arist. G.A.1.18,27; da. exe’ iy didvoray Id. de Memor. 2, 19; 7 7é5€ Luc. Mere. Cond. 13 :— Pass., Spéwava é« trav afévev amorerapéva Xen, An, 1.8, 10; 7% dyes néppw droreavopevn Arist. Meteor. 3. 6, 6, etc. 2. to lengthen, extend, prolong, produce, of the line of an army, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 40; pakporépous dr. prc8ovs to extend rewards much further, Plat. Rep. 363 D; esp. of speeches, dw. tov Adyoy Id. Gorg. 466 A; dr. paxpov wo. to make a long speech, Prot. 335 C, al.; auxvdv Adyor Gorg. 465 E; Haxpav pnow am. Rep. 605D; of brasen vessels, paxpdy %jxet Kat dmoreives [rov Hxov] Prot. 329A; dfdv dm. POdyyor Plut. Sull. 7:— Pass. to be prolonged, dmorewopévov tod morod Luc. Merc. Cond. 18. 8. to strain, tighten: Pass., mapadelypara dxpiB@s anorera- péva rais ypappais severely drawn, Luc. Rhet. Praec. g:—Med. to exert oneself, Diog. L. 5.17; bép twos about a thing, Luc. Amor. bra II. intr. to extend, awd ., eis... , Arist. H. A. 2. 11, 93 méxpe .. Id. Meteor. 1. 6, 13; dm. méppw to go too far, Plat. Gorg. 458 C; c. part. to continue doing, dm. paxdpuevot Plut, 2.60 A. droretxlfa, fut. Att. 12, to wall off, 1. by way, of Sortifying, dn, rov ‘IoOpudv Hat. 6, 36, cf. 9. 8. 2. by way of blockade, 6 Trovs Gcods dmorexicas Ar. Av. 1576; Tods év rH dxpordAe Thuc. 4. 130, cf. 1.64, Xen. Hell. r. 3, 4., 2. 4, 3:—Pass., Thuc. 6. 96 :—metaph. Zo shut out, éavt@ tiv puyhy Heliod. g. 20. 3. Med. to build a party- wall, Luc. Amor. 28. II. to rase fortifications, Polyaen. I. 3, 5; and so perhaps, da. riv dxpéroduy Arr, Epict. 4. 1, 88, ubi v. Schweigh. dmoreixtous, ews, %, the walling off a town, blockading, Thuc. 1. 65. II. a rasing of fortifications, Polyaen. t. 3, 5. amorelxiopa, aos, 76, walls built to blockade, lines of blockade, Thuc. ‘| 6.99. 7- 79, Xen. Hell. r. 3, 7. dmoraxiapos, 6,=droreixiois 1, Plut. Nic. 18, etc. drroretxiorréov, verb. Adj. one must wall off, metaph., daBodny The- mist. 278 A. drrorexpaipopat, Dep. to draw signs or proofs from a thing, conclude, c. acc, et inf., Ap. Rh. 4. 1538. darorekvéopat, Pass. fo be procreated, Tzetz. Exeg. Il. p. 9. II. to be deprived of children, LXx (Gen, 27. 45). G@moréevor, oi, (réA0s) an Achaean magistracy, v. Schweigh. Polyb. 10. 21, 9. Anew chai to bring to maturity :—Pass. to come to maturity, Arist. H. A. 6, 22, 11. II. 40 initiate, consecrate, Dion. Areop. drroreheotpos, 7, ov, to be completed, Hesych. ywépas to keep them in mind, heep in mind, remember, Eur. Fr. 364-6 dotéAcats, ews, 7), completion, Epicur..ap. Diog. L, 10. 108. . _ yA@rray dmorpnbeis having his tongue cut out, Aeschin. 24. 32; . 202 aroréhecpa, 76, full completion, unvés Arist. Mund. 5, 9; réxvns Polyb. 4. 78, 5, Plut. Lyc. 30. 2. an event, result, Polyb, 2. 39, Fi. II. as Astrolog. term, the result of certain positions of the stars on human destiny, Plut. Rom, 12, Artemid. 1. 9, etc. :—works en- titled dworeAécuara were written by Helicon and others, v. Suid. s. v. amorehecpatixés, 7, dv, productive of a result, téxvn am., opp. to Gewpynrixy, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 197 :—Ady. —K@s, in the end, finally, Eust. Opusc. 64. 3. II. astrologically influential, Ptol.: of or for astrology, Téxvn, émornyn Eust. goo. 44; dmoreheoparied name of a work on astrology by Paulus Alex. :—ol —xol astrologers, Eust. 193. 7. arotehecparoypadia, 7, a treatise on astrology, Porphyr. in Ptol.: and dtrotehecparoAoyos, 6, a writer on astrology, Theo. Arithm. Gmoreheoréov, verb. Adj. one must complete, Diosc. Ther. 2.:—Subst. GrroreAeorNs, od, 6, one who completes, Cyril. f amoredeorixés, 7, dv, accomplishing, effective, Tevos Def. Plat. 412 C, Plut. 2. 652 A. Ady. —x@s, Apollon. de Constr. 268. -dmorehevtaée, intr. to end, eis re in a thing, Hipp. Aér. 287; «is dvias, eis HDovds Plat. Prot. 353 E, 354 By; dworeAevrav at dast, Id, Polit. 310 E. II. to bring quite to an end or close, Alex. Aphr. Garoreheuth, }, =dmorekevryots, eis Te Oribas. 24 Mai. arorehevrnats, ews, 7, an ending, eis re Hipp. 409. 44, Theophr. Ign. 54. II. a conclusion, result, Plat. Soph. 264 A. yrotehéw, fut. —reAéow, Att, —reA@:—to bring quite to an end, com- plete a work, Hdt. 5. 92, 7, Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 10, Plat., etc. :—Pass., Thuc. 4. 69; part. pf. dworereAeopévos, perfect, Lat. ibus numeris absolutus, Xen. Oec. 13, 3. 2. to produce, voonpara Plat. Tim. 84 C:—Pass., Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 20. 3. to pay or perform what one is bound to pay or perform, ras ebxas oft am, Hdt. 2.65; TH Oe Ta warpia Id. 4. 180; 7a vourCdpeva Xen, Cyr. 3. 2, 193 TeAerds Twas Plat. Legg. 815 C; dwapxny Tay éx THs yijs Ib. 806 E :—also to pay or suffer, mapa- mAnow Tois KapBicov madjyaaw Ib. 695 E. 4. to accomplish, perform, Xen. Cyr. 1.2, 5; mpooraxdévra Plat. Legg. 823 D; 7a mpoo- jeovra Id, Criti. 108 D; dm. dprov to accomplish the making of bread, Hipp. Vet. Med. 9. b. esp. of astral influences, Dio C. 45. I, etc. ; cf, dmoréAecpa, 5. to render or make of a certain kind, like dzo- Seckvivar or rapéexe, Thy wédAw am, eddalpova to make the state quite happy, Plat. Legg. 718 B; dpeivous éx xetpévew am. Id. Polit. 297 B; rowovrous dvdpas Gore .., Polyb. 6. 52,11: so in Med., dpepwrov pidov dmoreAécac0a: to make him without blame towards himself, Xen. Rep. Lac. 2, 13 :—Pass., rupavvos dv7t mpoordrou drorereAcopévos Plat. Rep. 566 D; évimmov réAcov amor. turns out .., Ib. 443 B. 6. to fill up, satiate, rds émOuptas Gorg. 503 D :—Pass., Rep. 558 E, al. Ti: Pass. to be worshipped, Symp. 188 D. amorepaxile, (réuaxos) to cut a portion off, sever, Byz. dmorépve, Ion. and Ep. —répvw : fut.—reu@: aor. 2 darérepov :—to cut off, sever, mapnopias dnérapver Il. 8. 87; amd cropdxovs dpvav rape 3. 292, etc.; xpar awd... nat apOpa Tewd xepi Soph. Ph. 1207; 7ijv kepadny Hat. 2. 39, al.; 7d oxédAea Id. 2. 40; tiv piva cal ra Gra Id. 3. 154, etc.: 40 amputate, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 54; am. Tid to behead, Byz.: —Pass. to be cut off, ra dxpwrnpia drorpndjcecbar Lys. 105. 29; ve Vv kepadny Luc. Navig. 33. 2. to cut off, divide, sever, in a geogra- heal sense, 57ANts i oxeddy mavra THs “Acins Hdt. 1. 72; ovpea. ira am. [r}v xcpny], Id. 4. 255 v. infr. 1. 2:—mathematically, Hpucv . . 4 ypaupa) am. Plat. Meno 85 A, cf. Arist. Mech. 1, 13 :—Pass., of a body of troops, to be cut off from the main body, Xen. An. 3. 4, 29. 3. to cut. off, check, put an end to, Tas pnxavds Cratin. Incert. 129. 4. to cut off in argument, lay out of the question, Plat. Legg. 653 C; and in Med., Phil. 42 B:—Pass. to be so cut off or separated, Arist. Phys. 3. 3, 5- 5. aw. 7a BaddAdyria to be a cut-purse, Plat. Rep. 48 D. II. Med. to cut off for oneself, Gnorapyépevoy kpéa ate Il. 22. 347; dm. mAoxapdy Hat. 4. 34; Thy xupyv aa., Tappov dpugdpevor Ib. 3; dm. Tod wrds to cut off a bit of .., 1b. 71. . 2. to cut off, with a view of appropriating, mevrikovr’ ayéAns dmerdpvero . . Bods h. Hom. Merc. 74; Tas Oupéas . . dwordpevor Ecxov Hat. 1. 82; and in Pass., of the country cut off, Ib.; dm. rs xupas to cut off a part of.., Isocr. 134 B; owixns aw. ’ApaBias Te to have a slice or portion of .., Theocr. 17. 86. 8. to cut off from use, ate, ‘Aas Luc. Sacrif. 10. 4. dm. dis peyote tev "AOnvaie to cut off as much power as possible from them, Thue. 8. 46. améretis, ws, 4, a bringing forth, birth, Sext. Emp. M. 5. 53- dsrorepiiréopar, Pass. (répas) to be astonished as by a prodigy. Revco, to bound, limit, define, Agathem. 2.4; and droteppa- muopés, 00, 6, limitation, Gemin. El. Astron. p. 20 C; also agi a rwors, ews, 7, E. M. 583. 17. II. in Med. =Homer'’s répp’ dpaar, to look towards a point, eis 7t read by Coraés in Hipp. 23. 2, for the strange word dmoreApariCopat. ¥ ’ amoreraypévws, Adv. pf. pass. determinately, exclusively, Origen., etc. amorereppatiopéves, Ady. pf. pass. definitely, Hesych. : dmorerevypévas, Adv. of drorvyxdvm, erringly, unsuccessfully, Origen. drroretpnpévas, Ady. pf. pass. separately, Byz. — dmorerohpnpéves, Adv. pf. pass. audaciously, Origen. dmbrevypa, 76, =sq., Arist. Virt. et Vit. 7, 5, Diod. 1.1, Cic. Att. 13. 27. am us, ews, , a miscarriage, failure, Plat. Ax. 368 C ; éAmidos Plut. Galb. 23:—dmoreukrikés, 4, dv, causing miscarriage, rtvos Hippodam. ap. Stob. 554. 36: liable to failure, Arr. Epict. 3. 6, 6 and 26, 14 :—Gtro- ds Sn B.S thet Phot.; but see Lob. Phryn. 395. dmoreppbm, to reduce to ashes, Poll. 1, 167, Diosc. 5. 96.—Hence Subst. ° ° , aTroTéNeT Ma — aroTiv. : dravOpaxitw, Pherecr. Mupp. 1, Phryn. Com. Tpay. I. 1, Macho ap. Ath, 582 E;—in Sotad. EyxA. 1.1, dmerayjvica. 2. later, to fry or broil, Origen. 4 DR ty dmrorikw, fut. fo, to melt away from, abrijs 7 THs picews am. to melt away. a part of .., Plat. Tim, 65 D, cf. Theophr. C. P. 6. 1, 45 rervawpéva BrEpapa am. to reduce them, Diosc. 5. 115:—Pass., dweraien avrod tpia radavra Hat. 1. 50; dmeraxnoay ot pacGot (as Graev. for dmerdénoav), Luc. D, Mort. 28. 2. dmoriAe, Adv. afar off, juévev Anth. P. 7. 637. GmornAod, Adv. far away, Od. 9. 117, Ap. Rh. 4. 1092, etc. : also written divisim :—also GaroTnAdh, Ap. Rh. 4. 728. daréryéts, ews, , a melting away, discharging, Hipp. 304. 43. Grrornptw, to wait for, watch for, Diod. 14. 21 (al. ém7—). Gott Ba&ros, ov, Dor. and poét. for dmpéaBatos, Soph. Tr. 1030. GmrorlOnpr, fut. -Ojow:—to put away, stow away, dénas & aréOnx’ evi xNAG@ Il. 16. 254, cf. Xen. An. 2. 3, 153 dm. els deapwrqpioy Lycurg. 164. 2: v. infr. 1. 3. 2. to expose a child, Plat. Theaet. 161 A; cf. drdGeots 11. 2, infr. 11. 6. II. Med. to put away from oneself, lay aside, revxea nar drobécbar emt xOovi Il. 3. 89; Ty ZxvOucpy orodiy dm. to put it off, Hat. 4.78; dm. xdpas to cut it off, in mourning (cf. xelpw), Eur. Hel. 367; da. tov vépov to put aside, i.e. disregard, the law, Thuc. 1.77; dm. 7dv’Apodiray to quell desire, Eur. 1. A. 558 ; dm. padvpiay Dem. 42. 32., 101.6; dpyny Plut. Cor. 19; dpxjw Id. Pomp. 23. 2. to put away from oneself, avoid, escape, something odious, dro0éa0ar évimhy to wipe away the reproach, Il. 5.492; cf. Hes. Op. 760, Pind. O. 8. 90 (in aor. dmeOquaTo), 10 (11). 47. 3. to put by for oneself, stow away, Ar.Eq.1219, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 15; da. tpopiy Tots veor- tots Arist. H. A. 9. 32, 8; also, droridecOai Twa eis puAakHy Polyb. 24. 8, 8; v. supr. I. 4. droridecOa cis adOs to put off, defer, Eur. 1. T. 376, Plat. Gorg. 449 B, Xen. Symp. 2, 7, etc. :—da. Tipwpias eis Tods maidas Lys. Fr. 31. 3. 5. to reserve, keep back, Plat. Legg. 837 C, Dinarch. 94. 6. 6. dreOjxaro KéATav, of a woman, to lay down the burthen of her womb, i.e. bear a child, Call. h. Dian. 25, ef. Strabo 485 :—but, 7. pndty droribecba THY yryvopevwy to expose none of one’s children, Arist. Pol. 7. 16, 15; cf. drd0eots II. 2. 8. dm. xpovov eis Tt to employ, bestow time upon it, Polyb. 17. 9, I0. dmorikra, fut. —réfouat, to bring forth, produce, Plat. Theaet. 150 C, 182 B, Arist. H. A. 5. 12, 1, al.:—Pass., Ib. 2, Philostr. 6; x@ovds, js dreréxOnv Epigr. Gr. 261. 5. Grorihka, fut. -TIA@ Cratin. Néu. 6; aor. dwérida Ar. Fr. 546 :—to pluck or pull out, ras rpixas Hdt. 3.16; ovdtv droriAas without pulling off any of the fur, Id. 1. 123. II. to pull all the hair off, pluck bare, Tas. kepadds Ar. Lys. 578; dror:A® oe THyepov Cratin. Nop. 6:— Pass., drorertApévos oxaguoy, like dmoxexappévos, Ar. Av. 806, cf. Eccl. 724. 2. of a fish, camépiny dmorida Id. Fr. 546. amérApa, 76, a piece plucked off, yparav droripata mnpax pluckings, Theocr. 15. 19. Gmotthpés, 6, a plucking, tearing away, Medic. Grotipdw, not to honour, to slight, h. Hom. Merc. 35, Call. Fr. 103, Anth. P. app. 50. 33. II. Med. to fix a price by valuation, dip- véws amortunodpevor having fixed their price at two minae a head, Hdt. 5-773 am. woddod aicxpol iva to value it at a high price (i.e. to offer a great deal) that they may not be ugly, Hipp. Art. 803 :—Pass. to be valued, therdvow xpnudrav ap. Dem. 262. 4. III. as Att. law- term, 1. in Act. to mortgage a property according to valuation, bor- row money on mortgage, Id. 871.19.,1030. 4. 2. in Med. éo receive in pledge, lend on mortgage, Id. 871. 26. 3. in Pass, of the property, to be pledged or mortgaged, Id. 262. 4., 865. 4, C.I. (add.) 2264 u. arroripnpa, 76, a mortgage, security, Lys. ap. Harp., Isae. 59. 40, Dem. 866. 3,C.1.82, 103, al.; v. Béckh P.E. p. 191 E.Fr., and ef. dworipd 111. 1. dmotipnors, ews, , the pledging of a property, mortgaging, Dem. 878, fin. II. the Rom. census, Plut. Crass. 13, Joseph. A. J. 18. 2, I. daroripnris, of, 6, one who receives in pledge, A. B. 437- II. =Rom. censor, C. 1. 1306. Gmétipos, ov, put away from honour, stronger than drtuos, Hat. 2. 167, Soph. O. T. 215; cf. drdpra8os, dmdgevos. amotivaypa, 7, that which is shaken off, Symmach. Isai. 1. 31. drorivantixés, 7, dv, shaking off, Walz Rhett. 3. 542. Gmotivacow, to shake off, Eur. Bacch. 253:—Med., dmorwdtacbat Galen, 6, 821; dmorerivaxra: tiv ppovrida has got rid of it, Lxx. amorwvtw, =drorive, LXX:—also drorivvupt in inf. —revvdvat, part. -tivvwres, Themist. 289 C, 40 D, -rwvdrw, Joseph. A. J. 4. 8, 36. Grorivupar, pot. for drorivopar (q. v.). drotive, fut. -ricw:—to pay back, repay, return, ripiy 8 ’Apryetors dmorivépev I. 3. 286; evepyecias dmotivey Od. 22. 235. 2. to pay for a thing, mply . . uynorijpas imepBactny amorica Od. 13. 193 (in 3. 206 he had said ticac0a pynoripas itepBasins to make them pay for..); Marpéxdoo 8 “wpa .. dnorion may atone for making a prey of Patroclus, Il. 18.93; avy re peydaw dméricay made atonement with a great price, Il. 4. 161; so, dw. afua Aesch. Ag. 1338; mAnyds Tay UmEpavxav Soph. Ant, 1352. 3. more often, to pay in full, pay, Tow ov arorice: Orac. ap, Hdt. 5. 56, cf. 3.109; Cyulny Hdt. 2. 53 dpybpov Ar. Vesp. 1256; éyytas Antipho 117. 32, cf. 136. 433 xpnvara Lys. 94. 26; dgiay Luc. D. Mort. 30.1; dméricov pay the wager, Ar. Pl. 1059 :—in law, waeiv 4} dmorioa are constantly opposed to denote personal or pecuniary penalties, e. g. Lex ap. Dem. 529. 23, cf. 523. 23 8 rt xpi) wabeiv 7 dr. Plat. Polit. 299 A, cf. Apol. 36 B, Legg. 843 B, al. 4.in Aesch. Ag. 1503, dAdotwp .. rév8’ awétioev Herm., after Conington, explains it paid him as a debt, offered him as a victim ; wots, . : . dcro Liter hs , (riryavov) to eat off the gridiron, to eat broiled, like 4 » for anérigev can hardly stand for dmericaro avenged him, II. Med. . , bd , arotitAacros — aroTpodos. dmorivopat, post. dmorivupae (often written -rivvupar), Hom., Hes, Op. 245, Theogn. 362, Hdt. 6. 65, Aeschin, 73. 8: fut. —récopac:—to get paid one, to exact or require a penalty from a man, néAcwv 8° dmerivuro mowny Il. 16. 398 (ubi v. Spitzn.), etc.; dworicacba Sixnv, cf. Elms. Heracl. 852; 5€ka rddav7’ dx, Eupol. Incert. 16, etc. 2. c, acc, pers., dworicac@ai twa to avenge oneself on another, punish him, Od. 5. 24, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 35, etc. 3. c. acc. rei, to take vengeance for a thing, punish it, el né moré age Blas dmoricerat Od. 3. 216; 7a mapd- vona..0eds dw. Ar, Thesm. 684:—c. gen. rei, dm. rv .. ipav karaxav- Gévrov Hdt.6, Iol, v. supr. I. 2 :—absol. to take vengeance, Theogn. |, c., Solon 15, 16. [In pres. t in Ep., Y in Att.: fut. always 7.] dmorimAacros, ov, Dor. for dmpoonédacros, Hesych. dmétiors, ews, }, repayment, Ath. 503 B. Gmotioréov, verb. Adj. one must pay, Xen. Lac. 9, 5. d-rétieros, ov, (wori¢w) not watered, Eccl. : Gaéritos, ov, put from the breast, weaned, Philo 2. 83. dmroriw supplies the tenses of dmoriva., dmotphye, fut. fw, Ep. for dmoréuvw, to cut off from, podvoy amorph- fas mods Il. 22. 456; Tov .. Aaod dmorphtarte Io. 364, ete. 2. to cut off, sever, xeipas dnd gipet rungas 11. 146; KAcTos ré7’ dworph- youot xapddpar they cut up or plough the hill-sides, 16. 390 :—Pass., Hobvo drorunyévres Ap. Rh. 4. 1052. Grétpnpa, 76, anything cut off, a piece, Hipp. Art. 803. ~parilw, to sever, divide, Nicet. Ann. 125 D. Grorpye, 6, 7, cut off, sheer, like dmopp&, Ap. Rh. 2. 581. Grétpyots, ews, 4, a cutting off, Philo Belop. 100. Grotpntéov, verb, Adj. one must cut off, ris xdpas a portion of it, Plat. Rep. 373 D. d-rorpos, ov, unhappy, ill-starred, like dtcmorpos, Il. 24. 388, Od. 20.140; Bon Aesch. Pers. 280; wérpos dm. Eur. Hipp. 1144 :—Comp. —érepos Mosch. 4.11; Sup. -draros, Od. 1. 219. amérokos, 5, propagation, voofhparos Hipp. Art. 816. GrétoKos, ov, sprung from, resulting from, tiwos Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 16., 2. 3. GrroroApdw, to make a bold venture upon, ri Thuc. 7. 67: . inf., dr, émyetpfoat Lys. 110. 41; A€yew Aeschin. 72.17: part. pass. pf. in act. sense, di’ éAevdepias Alay dmoreroAunpévns too presumptuous liberty, Plat. Legg. 701 B; also in pass. sense, eime(v 7a. viv dmorer. Rep. 503 B. Verb. Adj. dtroroApyréov Plut. 2. 11 D. drotopas, d5os, 7, pecul. fem. of dwdropos, abrupt, sheer, mérpa Diod. 2. 13., 4. 78. 2. as Subst. a split or hewn piece of wood, Joseph. A. J. 3.1, 2: a pole used in athletic games, Poll. 10. 64, Hesych. droropets, ews, 6,=foreg. 2, Poll. 3. 151. dnoropy, %, a cutting off, Trav xepav Xen, Hell. 2.1, 32. 2.a piece, segment, ras yas Tim, Locr. 97 D: roatras éxew ras dz., of the moon in Eclipse, Arist. Cael. 2. 14,17, cf. 13, 9:—in Music, the larger segment of a tone, opp. to Aeiuya; v. Chappell, Hist of Music, p. 202. 3. a branching off, Tav pdeBiov Id. H. A. 1. 17, 16; cf. dda xtots :—a place where roads intersect, Polyb. 6. 29, 9. 4.4 break in a sentence, Dion. H. de Isaeo 15. Grroropia, }, severity, vipav Diod. 12. 16; émrypnpdroy Plt. 2.13 D. Gméropos, ov, cut off, abrupt, precipitous, dm. tore rabrn % dxpdérods Hat. 1.84, cf. 4.625 dm. é¢ Oadarrns Plat. Criti. 118A; drdropov dpovoer eis dvayxay, the metaph. being taken from one who comes suddenly ¢o the edge of a cliff, Soph. O. T. 877; cf. aimds GAeOpos. 2. metaph. severe, relentless, Ajua Eur. Alc.g83; xpiors Lxx (Sap.6.6). 38. concise, ovy- xepadaiaars Polyb. 9. 32, 6. II. absolute: Adv. —pws, absolutely, precisely, Isoct. 126 B, Dem. 1402. 16; v. Jacobson ad Ep. Polycarp. 6. dmoroketw, to shoot off arrows, dad dévipav Dio C. 37. 2; pf. pass. in med. sense, Luc. Prom. 2 :—metaph. to shoot off like an arrow, pnya- tioma Plat. Theaet. 180 A. II. to shoot a person, tuvd Tet Luc. Vit. Auct. 24; where Cobet V. LL. 238 would read xarar-. dmotopetw, to finish off by carving, Eust. Opusc. 106. 28. drroropvetw, to round off as by the lathe, in Pass., capa at oTpoy~ yoha .. 7a bvépara rerépvevra Plat. Phaedr. 234 E; imitated by Plut. 2. 45 A, and others :—hence Subst. dtrorépvevots, 7, Tzetz. amoropvéw, = foreg., Byz.:—hence Subst. dmrorépvwous, ews, }, a rounding off as by the lathe, Oribas. 130 Mai. d-noros, ov, not drinkable, twp Hdt. 4. 81, Pherecr. Kop. 4, etc. II. act. never drinking, dvot Hdt. 4.192; of grasshoppers, Plat. Phaedr. 259 C; of birds of prey, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 17., 18, 3. 2. not drinking, without drink, dovros dvhp, dr. Soph. Aj. 324, cf. Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 333; dm. dvéxecOar Arist. H. A. 8. 8, 2: not given to drinking, é5wbdot kat dr. Hipp. Aér. 281. amrotpayetv, v. sub drorpwya. std Grotpaynpa [a], 76, the remains of a dessert, v.1. for amomarnpya, Eupol. Xpuo. 15. : arorpaxnAtlo, to strangle, oxowvtows Eunap. p. 104 Nieb. ; Grorpaxuive, to make rough or hard, Lat. exasperare, (metaph.), Dion. H. de Comp. 22 :—Pass. to be or become so, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 2. dmrorpéka for dworpéxm, barbarism in Ar. Thesm, 1214. — dmotperréov, verb. Adj. one must turn away, divert, Arist. Rhet. Al. 3, 323 Te émi re Plut. 2. 125 D. 2. -réos, a, ov, to be turned away Jrom, avoided, Eus. D. E. 107 B. E : Grotperrixés, 7, dv, fit for dissuading from a thing, tivds Diosc. 1. 89, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 8; da, dpapev a arovéeco’ ppévas (where ptiper,is lyr. for #papev) Soph. El. 147; 4 Nepéa dpape Nemea favoured [him], Pind. N. 5. 81. IV. to make fitting or -pleasing, dpoavres kara ‘upd (sc. 7d yépas), Il. 1. 136. V. of pf. pass. the part. is most in use, fitted or furnished with a thing, rwi Ap. Rh. 1. 787, etc., just.as Hom. uses the intr. part. pf. dpypws. B. ntTR. :—pf. dpapa with pres. sense, Ion. and Ep. dpypa, part. dpipws, dpnpws, Hom,, Trag., and late Prose (except that Xen. has mpoo- apapéva, Hell. 4. 7, 6); Ep. fem. part. dpypvia Hes, Th. 608, and metri grat. dp%pvia Hom.; and so in Opp. H. 3. 367, «0 dpipds: Ion. and Ep. plqpf. dpfpewv, also aphpewv, with impf. sense, Il. 10. 265., 12. 56, etc. :—of the Med. we only find part. aor. 2 syncop, éppevos, 7, ov, also os, ov Hes. Op. 784, (cf. however dpnpeplévos): on aor. 2 used intr., Vv. supr. A.T. To be joined closely together, Tpaes apypbres the Trojans thronged together, in close order, ll. 13.800; dpapov xdpubés re nat donides 16. 2143; éfelns mort rotxov apypdres [miPor oivov] piled close against the wall, Od. 2, 342: hence, 2. absol. to be fixed, gpeclv How dpypds 10. 553; Ovpuds dpnpws Theocr. 25. 113 :—in Trag., dpape a thing is fixed, either physically, dpapey ide 7 dAévn Aesch. Pr. 60; or metaph., dpape yap es Gpxos Id. Ag. 1284 Dind. ; Ocav .. rloris odxér’ Gpape Eur. Med. 414; &s Tabr’ Gpape Ib. 322: absol., dpape ‘tis fixed, Ib. 745, Or. 1330, ubi v. Pors. II. to fit or suit, fit well or closely, Cwarhp apnpas a close-fitting belt, Il. 4. 134; mUAat, cavides €b (or o7tBapas) dpapviae Hom.: ¢o fit or be fitted toa thing, Sodpa, &yxos maddunpw dphpe fitted the hands, often in Hom,; «épudes pordpors dpapviat, kvnpides emapuptors dpapuiar, Hom. ; koven éxardv mpuXéeco’ dpapvia fitting 2 hundred champions, i. e../arge enough for them, ll. 5. 744; .also with a Prep., xuvén émt kporapas Gpapvia Od. 18.378, Hes. Sc. 137; bpp’ dv.. dovpar’ ev dpyovinaw apnpn Od. 5. 361; Kxepavyds ev pare: dp. joined with might and victory, Pind. O. 10 (11). 98. III. to be fitted, furnished with a thing, réppos oxoddrecaw Gphpe Il. 12. 56; wédArs mbpyos dpapvia 15. 737; Cav Ovodvas dpapvia 14. 181: hence, later, furnished, endowed with, xapirecow dpapws Pind. I. 2. 29; KdéAAe apapds Eur. El. 948 ; mohAjjow éravuplyaw dpnpws Dion. P. 28. IV. ‘to be se meet or suitable, agreeable or pleasing, like the kindred dpéoe, évt ppectv Hpapev hyiv it fitted our temper well, Od. 4. 777 (this sense nowhere else in Hom.); so, dxorrw dpapviay mpamtdecot Hes. Th. 608: also Gpapev, ’tis fair or favourable, Pind. N. 5. 81. V. we must esp. remark the syncop. part. aor. 2 med. dppevos, 9, ov, fitting, fitted or suited to(in Hom. just like pf. part. dpnpws), c. dat., iordr. . Kat émixpiov pyevov ait@ fitted or fastenéd to the mast, Od. 5. 254 (v. sub dppeva, 74); also, tpoxdy dppevov ev waddpyow Il. 18. ; wédexuv .., Gpp. &v m, Od. 5. 234. 2. fitting, fit, meet, -conve- nient, Lat. habilis, &s 6 re tis Tpoxdv dppevoy .. kepapeds Teiph- cerat Il, 18. 600; pada yap vi of dppeva etmev Hes. Sc. 116; rarely c. inf., huépa kodpyor yevécOat dppevos a day meet for girls to be born, Hes. Op. 784 (where the part. is used like an Adj. of two termin.). 3. prepared, ready, xphuara 8 ely otky wavr’ dpp Hes. Op. tie eva Tongacbat 405; dpyeva névra napacxeiy Id. Sc. 84, Theogn. 275; dppevos eis am Ap. Rh. 4. 1461. 4. agreeable, welcome, dppeva mpdgas, = & mpdgas, Pind. O. 8. 96; & dppévors Oupoy avg Pind. N. 3. 99; so of men, fefvois dppevoy Plat. Epigr. 28. ; Gpapéras, Adv. of dpapws, pf. part. of dpapioxu, compactly, closely, J % , ] , apapicxw — apyanéos. strongly, Aesch. Supp. 945, Eur. Med, 1192, Plat. Phaedr. 240 D.— Themist. 270 C has a Comp. dpapérepor. dpdowpos [pa], ov, (dpdopar) accursed, Suid. ; dpdocw, Att. —rrw: Ion, and poét. impf. dpdaoeckov Pind. : fut. dpdgw (cv) Hom., Dor. dpag Theoor. 2. 159: aor. fpaga (47-) Hom., Ep. dpaga Hes. Sc. 461 :—Pass., aor. npaxonv, Ep. dpaxOnv (cvv-) Hom. fut. med. in pass.sense xar-apdfeo@ar Plut. Caes. 44: (a euphon., pdocw). To strike hard, smite, dash in pieces, (Hom..only has it in the compds, drapdocw, cvvapdcow); of any violent impact, with collat. notion of rattling, clanging, as of horses, éwAais dp. x9dva Pind. P. 4. 401; Ovpas dp. to knock furiously at the door, Eur. Hec. 1044; Tv Ovpay Ar. Eccl. 978; in Pass. of the door, to open with a crash, Luc. D, Meretr, 15 :—dpacoev orépva, xpara to beat the breasts, the head, ix mourning, Lat. plangere, Aesch. Pers. 1054, Eur. Tro. 279; apace p@dvoyv strike harder, Aesch. Pr. 58; dpes dpdgas having smitten them, Soph. O. 'T. 1276; ijpagce BAépapa Id. Ant. 52; dp. mérpors Tivd to strike with a shower-of stones, Eur. I. T. 327; dp. xtOdpny to strike the lyre wildly, Orph. -Arg. 384; hence, bpvov, péAos etc., freq. in Nonn. 2. c. dat. modi, dpaocew dveideot, xaxots to throw with reproaches or threats, i.e. fling them wildly.about, Soph. Aj. 725, Ph. 374, cf. Ar. Nub. 1372 (and v. BdAdw I. 1). II. Pass. to be dashed against, pds ras mérpas Hat. 6. 44; mérpais Aesch. Pers. 460:—of things, to dash one against the other, Ap. Rh. 2/553, Acl. N. A. 16. 39. 2. to be inflicted, of a wound, Soph. Ant. 972.—The simple Verb is poetic, used once’by Hdt. and in late Prose ;—cf. dw-, éa-, kaT-, ovv-apacow. *Aparetov, 74, a skrine dedicated to Aratus, Paus. 2.9, 4, Plut. Arat..53. aparhprov, 76, v. dpnrnpiov. Gparikés,-7, dv, of, for prayer or cursing, Sext. Emp. M.'8. 72, Diog. L. 7. 66. Gparés, Ion. dpyrés,'7, dv, (dpdopar) accursed, unblest, which seems to be the sense of dpyrds ~yéos Il. 17.37 (where some would-read dppy- Tos, V. Spitzn. on the various interprr.), 24. 741; dparoy €Axos Soph. Ant. 972. II. prayed for: hence “Apnros, Apnrn, (proparox.), as prop. n., the Prayed-for, like the Hebrew. Samuel, Hom.: later “Ap@ros. [Gp- Ep., dp- Att.] apaxrbva, 7, a vetch, perh. lathyrus amphicarpus, Theophr, H.P..1. 1, 7. Gpaxvatos, a, ov, of or belonging to a spider, Auth. P. 6. 39, 200; dpaxvain, =dpaxvn, Ib. 9. 233:—also dpdxvetos, ov, Basil. dpaxvdopat, Dep. to weave the spider's web, Eust. 285. 41. apaxvn, 7, more Att. form of dpaxyns, dpaxyns ev ipaopare -Aesch. Ag. 1492, cf. 1516, Soph. Fr. 269, Anth.-P, 11. 110; af Aepamar dp. Arist. H. A. 5. 27, 3, though elsewhere he uses the masc. form dpax- vns. II. a spider's web, Lat. aranea, Hipp. 269.44, Anth. P. 11. 106. (V. sub dpxus.) dpaxviets, ecoa, ev, =dpdxveios, Nic. Th. 733, Al. 492. apaxvns, 6, a spider, Lat. araneus, (known in Hom. only from dpax- mov), Hes. Op. 775, Pind. Fr. 268, Aesch.\Fr. 119, Arist. H. A. 9. 49, 3, al.: in Att. mostly dpaxyn. G&pdxvov, 74, a spider's web, cobweb, Lat. aranea, Od,'8. 280., 16. 35, Cratin, Tur. 18, Pherecr. Tup. 3, Plat. Com."“EAA, 1, Arist. H. A. 9. 39; 7, etc. :—also dpayvisiov, 7d, Jo. Chr. 2. a disease in olive-trees, Theophr. H. P. 4. 14, Io. II. Dim. of dpaxvn, a small spider, Arist. H. A. 5.27, 1., 9.39, 1. [&paixv—- Hom.; apayv— Com. ll. c.] Gpaxvidw, fut. wow, to spin a cobweb, Arist. H. A. 8. 27, 2:—Pass. to be covered with cobwebs, Ib. 9. 40, 23. II. to form as it were cob- webs over,-Tod omdnvds Hipp. 280. 9. Gpaxvuddys, es, like a cobweb, Hipp. 267. 53, Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 6. 2. of liquids, filled with filaments (like a spider’s web), ovpov Hipp. Coac, 213; yada Arist. H. A. 7.3, 4; so, dpaxva@des odpeiy Diosc. 4. 66. Gpaxvo-edys, és, like a cobweb,-of thé scum of urine, Hipp. Progn. 40; also used of capillary veins or nerves, Galen. 2. 808, 366; dp. xeTmy in Medic. the retina of the crystalline lens, Greenhill Theophil..p.164. 7. dpaxvos, 6, =dpaxvns, Aesch. Supp. 886. dpaxvo-idijs [¥], és, spun by spiders, Philo 1. 666. d&paxvadys, és, =dpayvoedns, Arist.H. A, 5.23, 2:—cf. dpaxvimdys v.2. Gpaxos, 6, later form for dpaxos, Galen. *Apawp, 5, pl.“ApaBes, of, an Arab, pl. Arabs, Strabo 42. Gpdw, fut. how, an old Verb, =Brdmrw, to damage, ovde-rds Sods... apdoovr: (Dor. for dpyoover) Tab, Heracl. inC. I. 5774.-133 :—other- wise only found in pf. pass. part. dpnuévos [a], expl. by the Gramm. by BeBrappévos, distressed, harassed, worn out, once in Il., ynpat Avyp@ keira evi peyapos dpnpévos 18. 435; -more freq. in Od., vw rat Kapdry dipnpévos (cf. Horace’s ludo fatigatumg. somno) 6.2; Timre téaov, ToAvgnp’, dpnpevos G5 eBdnaas 9. 403; yhpa’ bd Armap@ dp. 11. 136; d50n dp. 18.53. (The Root has not been traced.) apBnros, a rounded knife, as of shoemakers, Nic. Th. 423. &pBvAn [¥], 4, a strong shoe coming up to the ankle, a half-boot, used by country-people, hunters, travellers, Aesch. Ag. 944, Fr. 255, and often in Eur. (who calls it Mycenian, Or. 1470); mydowarides &pB. Hipp. Art. 828; airaiow GpBidaow dppdoas 65a with shoes and all, Eur. Hipp. 1189; in which place it is taken by Eust. as=dippos, the stand of the charioteer, but v. Monk ad 1,.—Cf. Dict. Antiqq. 4pB¥Als, tGos, %j,=foreg., Theocr. 7. 26, Anth. Plan. 306. GpBiAsd-mrepos, ov, with winged shoes, Lyc. 839. *Apydbeis, of, name of one of the four old Attic tribes, Eur. Ton 1580, cf. Hdt. 5.66; cf. Aiyiopets, In Plut.Solon 23, it is written "Epyddas, prob. from a conj. of the copyist, to give the sense of Husbandmen. apyatve, to be white, Eur. Fr. 74, Opp. 3. 299. apyaAfos, a, ov, painful, troublous, grievous, Lat. gravis, dvepor Tl. p13. 795 3 pts 11. 3; vovgos 13.667; “Aoxpy xeipa Kah, Gepe apyadén apyadeor ns — apyos. (to be pronounced dpyadj), obdémor’ éc0A9 Hes. Op. 640; never in Trag., but not seldom in Com., dpy. mp@ypa Ar. Pl. 1; Adnn Id. Thesm. 788; dpyadéas veras dye Id. Lys. 764: rare in Prose, as Xen. Hier. 6, 4. 2. of persons, troublesome, vexatious, Theogn. 1208, Ar. Nub. 450, Menand. TAox. 2; dpyadewraros Ar. Eq. 978 ; rare in Prose, Aeschin. 9, 20. II. dpyadéoy éart, c, dat. et inf., dpyadéov dé pot ort KackomaaGat Il. 17. 252, cf. 12. 410, Od. 13. 312, etc.; rarely c. acc, et inf., dpyadgor 8é me mavr’ dyopeverv Il. 12. 176; or without case, dpyadéou 5& mAnkriCedd dddxoror Ards 21. 498, cf. Od. 7. 241, etc. ;—also, 2. agreeing with the obj., dpyaAgos.. 0eds Bpor@ dvBpt dapijva God is hard to be. subdued by mortal man, for dpyaréov éort BporG Oedy dapdoau, Od. 4. 397; dpyadéos yap ’OAdumos dvripépecbat Il, 1. 589. ILI. Adv, -ws, Anth. P. 9. 499. (Akin to-dAyos, cf. aropapyos (for aréuad-yos), AnPapyos, etc.). Aovénotcan NTOS, H, gri » troubl dpyds, Dor. contr. for dpynes, q. v. Spyet-Aodos (dpyi-?), ov, white-crested, xoddwa Pind. Fr. 214. *Apyéios, a, ov, of or from Argos, Argive: ’Apyeto: in Hom., like *"Axauot, for the Greeks in general :—"Apyeta (sc. yi), Argolis, Thuc. *"Apyethovrys, ov, 6, (“Apyos, *pévw) slayer of Argus, epith. of Hermes, Hom., v. Nitzsch Od. 1. 38, Soph. Fr. 972: II. acc. to Paus. ap, Eust. 183. 12. (from dpyfjs), serpent-slayer, i. e. Apollo, cf. Schol. Aesch. Pr. 569. apyéhopor, wy, oi, the legs and feet of a sheep-skin, and so, generally, offal, Ar. Vesp. 672. dpyepov, 74, Soph. Fr. 221 (in Theophr. H. P. 9. 9, 5, some read dpyepa, 76) Diosc. 2. 96:—a small white speck or ulcer partly on the cornea, partly on the sclerotic coat of the eye. Poll., 2. 65, has dpyepos, 6. dpyepavn, 7, a kind of poppy, Diosc. 2. 208. dpyévvaos, ov, =dpyevvds, Anth. P. 15. 35. dpyewvés, 7, dv, Aeol. and Dor. for dpyés, white, in Hom. almost al- ways of sheep, dpyevyijs dtecat Il. 6. 424, etc.; of woollen cloths, dpyev- vijot kadvpapévy dOévyat 3. 141; rare in Att., dpy. udaxos Pseudo-Enr, I. A. 575; «pivn Chaerem. ap. Ath. 608 F :—freq. in Anth. apyeoris, 4, in. Il, 11. 306., 21. 334, epith. of the South wind, dpye- orao Nérao, clearing, brightening, like Horace’s Notus albus, detergens nubila caelo, cf. XeuKévoros. 2. in Nic. Th. 592,=dpyns, white, with a neut. Subst. II. as a prop. n. ’Apyéorns (parox.), the North-west wind (like Bopéas, etc.), called "Apyéarns Zépupos, ’Apyéarea Zepdpoo in Hes. Th. 379, 870 ;—so in the compass of Aristatle, Meteor. 2. 6, 12.—On the accent, v. Géttl. Hes. 1. c. dpyén, dpyéra, v. sub dpyjs:—the nom. dpyéris, 4,=dpyjecoa, Nonn. D. 16. 124; voc. dpyért, Anth. P. 5. 254 :—also nom., dpyéra Mj Maxim. 7. xarapx. 305. dpyevo, =dpyéw, Galen. Gpyéw, fut. row, (dpyds, depyds), to lie idle, be unemployed, do nothing, Hipp. Mochl. 854, Soph. Fr. 742, Eur. Phoen. 625, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 15, Plat., etc.; of dpyotvres the idle, Soph, Fr. 288; yf} dpyotca lying fallow, Xen. Cyr. 1.6, 11; dpyet 7d épyaorhpiov is out of work, opp. to évepyév éa7t, Dem. 819. 17: to be slow of sight, Arist. Probl. 11.33, 4:—c. gen. rei, dpyjoer.. THs abrod Snuroupytas be so idle as to quit his work, Plat. Rep. 371 C. II. Pass. to be left undone, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 3: to be fruitless, Id, Hier, 9; 9- dpynets, ecoa, ev: Dor. dpydets, contr. dpyas, gen. Gyros: (vy. dpyds): ~—white, shining, radpov apyavra Pind. O. 13. 99; év dpydevre. pacr@ Id. P. 4. 143 and so, we ought to read dpy@s for dpyias in Aesch. Ag. 115; y. sub mbyapyos::—with neut., dpyjvra xadwa Opp. C, 2.140, of Boreas ; cf. dpynvres deAAae Orph. Arg. 685, like dpyeorqs. dpyis, ros, 6, ): also with several Ep. forms, dat. and ace. dpyé, dpyéra (v. infr.), also Ep. gen. dpyéos Nic. Al. 305, and v. I. Th. 856; dat. pl. dpyjeaot Orph. Arg. 685 : (v. dpyds) :—bright, glancing, mostly of vivid lightning, Il. 8. 133, Od. 5. 128, al., Ar. Av. 1747; opp. to yordas xepavvds, Arist. Meteor. 3. 1, 10; Zeds dpy7s, i.e. fire, Emped. 160. 2. shining, white, of fat, dpyére dnu@ Il. 11. 818; dpyéra Snydv 21. 127; of a robe, éav@ apyHrt pacw@ 3. 419; apyhre wardg Aesch. Eum. 45, cf. Soph. Tr. 675 ; dpy}s KoAwvds because of its chalky soil, Id. O. C. 670:—with neut., dpyfros éAaiou Nic. Th. 105. apyijs, Dor. dpyds, 6, a kind of serpent, dis dpyis Hipp. 1160 C, cf. dpynorns: also an obscure nickname of Demosthenes, Aeschin. 41. 15, Plut. Dem. 4. a&pynorns, 00,6, =dpyhsordpynes, glancing, quivering, wrnvos apy. Odus Aesch, Eum,181. 2. white, deppds Id. Theb..69; avevoe Theocr. 25.131. apyntns, =dpyjs, Tzetz. : pak P calievta want of employment or use, Soph. Fr. 380, Hipp. Mochl. 854: idleness, laziness, Eur. Med. 297; H. F. 5923 vdpos dpyias against those who would not work, Dem. 1308.19 ; ypapr, dpyias Arist. Fr. 381, cf. Plut. Sol. 17, 31 ;—in pl., Isocr. 148 D. 2. in good sense, rest, leisure, Trav oixetov épywy from .., Plat. Legg. 761 A. 3. in pl. to express the Lat. feriae, Arr. Epict. 4. 8, 33, App. Civ. 1. 56. dpyias, v. sub dpyneis. apyi-Bderos, ov, with white kine, of Euboea, Poéta ap. Ael. Nc A. 12. 36. Gpyt-Képawvos, ov, with bright, vivid lightning, epith. of Zeus, Il. 19. 121, al., Pind. O. 8. 3. , dpyt-Képws, 5, %, white-horned, alyes Orac. ap. Diod. Exc. Vat. p. 4. dpyucés, 7, 6v,=dpyés, indolent, Bur. Fr. 793 (Nauck pavrucots). apyAtarfs, és, Archil. 150, and dpyiAup, uros, Nic. Th. 213 (of ser~ pents), white; cf. Lob. Paral. 290. ; , GpytAAa or dpyiAa, 7, ax underground dwelling, so called in Magna Graecia, Ephorus ap. Strabo 244, cf. Eust. ad Dion, P, 1166. II. =sq., Galen, , Eust. 892. 32. 213 dpytAAos or dpythos, %, (v. dpyds) white clay, potter's earth, Lat. argilla, Arist. Probl. 9. 6, Theophr. C. P. 3. 20, 3: GpyAdwbdys or dpytAwSns, es, like clay, clayey, dpyAwdeorépny Viv, of Samos, Hdt. 2. 12, cf. Arist. Meteor. 1. 14, 17, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 5. apytdodos, v. sub dpyelAodos. Gpy-vedys, és, clouded with white, dds. Soph. Fr. 479. Gpytvoas, ecoa, ev, =dpyds (q. v.), bright-shining, white, epith. of the cities-Cameiros: and Lycastos, from their lying on chalky hills (so Hor. claram Rhodon), Il. 2. 647, 656; hence the islets off Aeolis were called "Apywotoa, Xen, Hell. 1. 6, 275, of milk, Anth. P. 7. 23; xaAudé Ap. Rh. 4. 1607. Gpyt-d5ous, ddoyros, 5, %, white-toothed, white-tusked, Aeveod sdovTes apyd5ovros dds Il. 10, 264, cf. Od. 8. 60, etc.; «éves Il, 11. 292 :—also dpy.é5ov in Ap. Rh. 2. 820. apyt-1d5ys, ov, 6,=sq., xiuapos Anth. P. 6. 299. dpyi-rous, 6, %, —touv, 76, swift-footed, dpyinodas xbvas Il, 24. 211; of rams, Soph. Aj. 237 (where the Schol, expl. it by Aevxérodas, but v. dpyds)...- —The collat. form dpy.étrovs is acc, to Hesych. Macedon. for an eagle. dpyis, (50s, },=vug (5d Thy dvdravow); Orph. ap. Clem. Al. 676. epypa, aros, 76, (dpxw) only used in. pl. dpypara,=dndpypara, dnapxai, the firstlings at a sacrifice or feast, Od. 14. 446. *Apyo-yevis, és, native of Argos, Anth. P. app. 160. Gpyo-Pavaros, ov, slow of dying, Schol. Opp. H. 1. 143. *Apydbev, Adv. from Argos, Soph. Ant. 106, Eur. I. T. 70. Gpy6-Oprk, gen. rprxos, 6, , 76, white-haired, Archimed. dpyoAas, a, 6, a kind of serpent, Suid.: cf. dpyfs. *Apyodife, fut. Att. , to take the part-of the Argives, Xen. Hell. 4. » 34, Ephor. 137. ; *ApyoNis (sub. 7), f5os, %, a district in Peloponnesus, Hat., etc. 2. as Adj., 6, 4; of Argolis, Argolic, c@4s Aesch. Supp. 236: later, “Apyo- Aukés, 7, dv, Plut. Rom. 21; Adv. —«@s, Eust. 722. 63. *Apyodiort, Ady. in the Argive tongue or fashion, Soph. Fr. 411. dpyo-oyéw, to talk idly, Basil. ( apyodoyia, #, idle talking, Eccl. :—Adj. -Aoyucés, 7, dv, Eust. Opusc. 252. 14: Ady. -«@s, Ib. 260. 86. Gpyo-pétwros, ov, with rough-hewn faces, Mov Philo Belop. 82. ‘Apeewairen ov, 6, a sailor in the ship Argo, an Argonaut, Arist.Pol. 3. 13,16, etc.; 6 Teds’ Apyovatras.roujoas, i.e. Apollonius Rhod., Strabo655. apyo-mrovds, dv, making idle, Plut. Num. 22. dpyértrous, ouv, slow of foot, Manass. Chron. 3559. “Apyos, eos, 76, name of several Greek cities, of which the Pelopon- nesian is the best known, called by Hom. ’A. ’Axauedy, Il. 9. 141; to distinguish it from ’A, TleAaoyurdv, 2. 681, Under the former name he comprehends all Argolis, and sometimes the whole Peloponnesus ; under the latter; all Thessaly ; cf. Straba.369. See the minute examination of the Homeric uses of the word in Gladstone, Hom. Studies, Achaeis, § 8. He connects it with dypés, as applied to a lowland district; while others take it in,much the same sense as regio (a tract of country) from épéya, v. Curt. p. 184.—Hence Adjs. ’Apyetos, “ApyoAis, “ApyoAurds, qq. Vv. ; *Apyddas, 6, Eur. Rhes. 41, Ar. Fr. 284. ; apyos,. 7, dv, shining, bright, glistening, of a goose (cf. Pope’s ‘ silver swan’), Od. 15. 161; of a sleek, well-fed ox, Lat. nitidus, Il. 23. 30; but in Hom. mostly used in the phrase médas dpyol, as epith. of dogs, or rather of hounds (so; dpylmobes Il. 24. 211, dpyot alone, I. 50., 18. 283), swift-footed, because all swift motion causes-a kind of glancing ot flickering light, 18. 578, Od. 2. 11, etc.; cf. wéSapyos. There is a similar connexion of notions in aiéAos. The old interpr. of white or white-footed has. been long given up, as not applicable to all dogs, v. Nitzsch Qd. 2. 11; ef. sq. 2. white, Arist. Top. 6. 11, 3. II. parox. as prop. n., “Apyos, 6, the name of a dog, Swift-foot, Od. 17. 292:—but the mythic herdsman Argus (yryevqs Aesch. Pr. 568, cf. Supp. 305) was so-called from. his. eyes being ever- open and pe (From AHAPT come also 4, pos, apyu- eo PYns, apynes, apywvdes, apyevvds, péos, dpytdos ; cf. Skt. ragami (splendeo), argunas (lux), ragatas (albus), ragatam (argentum) ; Lat. argentum (Osc. arageton), argilla.) dpyés, dv, later also 7, dy Arist. Eth. N. 9. 5, 3, Meteor. 1. 14, 11, Theophr., etc., cf. Lob. Phryn. 105 : (contr. from depyés):—properly, not working the ground, living without labour, Hdt. 5. 6: hence doing | nothing, idle, lazy, slow, opp. to épydaris, Soph. Ph. 97, Ar. Nub. 73, etc. ; dpyot émOupiat Plat. Rep. 572 E; dpyot tiv didvoray Tb. 458 A; 7d pds wav guverdy émt nav dpydv Thue. 3. 82; Beds 5& Tois dpyotow od mapicrarat Menand. Monost. 242; dv dpyds 7 if he be in no trade, Antiph. Kva@. 1, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 1. 7, 11:—c. gen. rei, idle at a thing, free from it, 7@v otxobey from domestic toils, Eur. I. A, 1000; mévov cpodpay Plat. Legg. 835. D; yuvatkas dpyovs tadaclas Ib. 806 A; dpyos alaxpay slow to evil, Aesch. Theb. 411 ;—also, dpydrepat és 70 Spay 7'Thuc. 7. 67; dpyds mepi re Plat. Legg. 966 D. 2. of things, dépv. Eur. Phoen. 1387; of money, lying idle, yielding no return, opp. to évepydés; Dem. 815. 15., 819. 225 of land, lying fallow or untilled, Isocr. 68 A, Xen. Cyr. 3. 2, 19, Theophr, H. P. 5. 9, 8; d:arpeBi) a. in which nothing is done, idle, Ar. Ran. 1498, Isocr. 49 C ; xpévos Plut. Cor. 31.—Adv., dpy@s émpédco@ar Xen. Mem. 2. 4, 73 €xetv Dem. 66. 16: Comp. and Sup. dpyérepov, -drara Xen. Oec. 15, I and 4. II. Pass. unwrought, mAds Soph. Fr. 432, e Brunckii conj.; mupot dpryot un- prepared for eating, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12; dpyyupos Paus. 3.12.3. 2. not done, yet remaining to be done, left undone, Lat. infectus, xob« iv ér’ oddity dpydv Soph. O. C. 1605; ev 8 éorly piv dpyov Eur. Phoen. 7673 ob« éy dpyois not among things neglected, Soph. O. T. 287; 74 pev mpoBéBner, duhxavey éare yeverOar dpya Theogn. 584. 3. q, wnattempted, paxn Plat. Euthyd. 272 A, 214 _ Spyérns, 070s, , idleness, sloth, Epiphan. cial meee gtr Nees or at leisure, Cyrill. YS, ov, tv) eating without working, Constt. Apost. 2. 49. _ Gpyo-hovia, %, idle talking, Rust. Opusc. or “8 apys-xpus, wos, white in colour, Byz. apytp-dyx7n, 7%, (formed after xuvd-yxn) the silver-quinsy, which De- mosthenes was said to have, when he abstained from speaking on the plea of quinsy, but really (it was said) because he was bribed, Demad. ap. Poll. 7. 104, Plut. Dem. 25. dpyupatos, a, ov, =dpyupetos, C. I. 5128. 30. dpyiip-tporBirds, h, 6v, of or for a money-changer, money-changing, Luc. Bis Acc. 13; 4 -« (sc. réxvn), Poll. 7, 170. Adv. -«as, Luc. Hist. Conscr. ro, ods, 6, a money-changer, banker, Lat. argentarius, Plat. pip Polit. $5 dg 8 12. 37, etc. » dpyiip oi, the silver-shielded, a corps of the Macedonian army, Polyb. 5. 79, 4, Phylarch. 41, etc. 4 _dpyiperos [0], ov, =dpyupeos, dpytpera péradda silver-mines, Thuc. 2. 55., 6. 91; so, Ta dpydpera (Codd, dpytipia) épya Xen. Vect. 4, 5; 7a épya 7a dpytpea Dem. 568. 17; and 7a dpytpea alone, Xen. Mem. 2. 5» 2, Aeschin. 14, 27. apyp-év5eros, ov, overlaid with silver, Jo. Chrys. :—in Cyrill. Hierosol. also dpytip-év5iros, ov. Gpyvpeos, a, ov, contr, Gpytpods, a, ody: silver, of silver, silver- shining, Lat. argenteus, Hom.; of the bow of Apollo, Il. 1. 49; of costly bowls and plate, 23. 740, Od. 4. 615; of ladies’ work-baskets, 4. 125, cf. Il. 18. 412; of baths in palaces, Od. 4. 128, etc.; so also Hes. Op. 143, Pind. O. 9. 48, Aesch. Fr. 184, etc.; dpyupods wAodros Plat. Legg. 801 D. 2. silvered, ediva Hdt. g. 82. II. as Subst. dpyv- pous, 6, a silver coin, Epiphan. and Hero ap, Gronov. Pec. Vet. p. 91, 435- dpytipevw, to dig for silver, Diod. 5. 36, Strabo 147. Gpytp-hAiros, ov, of wrought silver, Aesch, Fr. 170, Eur. Jon 1181 :— ge Adrys, ov, 6, a silver-smith, Hesych. : yuptB.ov [pt], 76, =dpyvpior, generally in a contemptuous sense, Ar. Pl. 147, Fr. 462, Eupol. Any. 42, Isocr. 291 E; v. sub xpuotéor. dpytptlopat, Med. to get or extort money, mavroGey Dinarch. g5. 21 ; twa from one, Joseph. A. J. 14. 14, 6, Inscr. Aeg. in C. I. 4957. 52, cf. 4879, al. II. the Act. in neut. sense, 4o be of a silvery colour, Eust. Opusc. 309. 36. apytpics, 77, dv, of, for or in silver, (nuta apy. a fine in money, Diod. 12. 21, Plut. Solon 23. Gpytptov [v], 76, Boeot. dpyovpioy C. I. 1569. 50:—a small coin, piece of money, Ar. Fr. 255, Xen. Occ. 19, 16, etc.; pl. (v. Poll. 9. 89), Ar. Ay. 600, Eupol. Kod. 19, Plat. Legg. 742 D, Xen. Oec. 1g, 16: then, 2. collectively money, as we also say ‘ silver,’ Ar. Pl. 156, 158, al.; dpy. Anrdy a fixed sum, Thuc. 2. 70; «is dpy. Aoyobévra cal- culated in our money, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 333 apy. Ka@apdy ‘hard cash,’ ‘Theocr. 15. 36 ;—in Com. oft. with the Art., rdpyvpioy the money, the cash, daveiCecOae Ar. Nub. 756; dmacreiv Ib. 1247; xarariBéva Antiph. Kyvow9. 1. 14, etc.; so, 7d dpy. karaBadAew Thue, I, 27, etc. ar. -==dipyupos, silver, mevrniocias pvéas apyuptou Hat. 3.13; apy. érionpov and donpov Thuc, 2. 13; oft, in Plat.;—dpyuplov dvBos, Lat. flos argenti, Hipp. 574- 53- dpyipts, iSos, 4, a silver cup or vessel, Pind. O. 9. 137, Pherecr. Mepa. 6, C.1. 140. 46., 141 B. 12,, 142.13: cf. Ath. 502 A. 2. plate in general, mivewy & dpyupidwy xpyody Anaxil. Incert. 8. Ila name given to the drachma, ap. Ath. 98 E. dpytpiopos, 6, (dpyvp{Copar) like xpnuariopds, a getting money, Strabo 300, freq. in Philo; dpyupiepod mpdpactw Inscr. Aeg. in C. 1. 4957. 37. é&pyitpirys, 6, fem. —iris, cos, %, of or belonging to silver : I. Gpyvpitis, }, as Subst. silver-ore, pAep dpyupiribos Xen. Vect. 1, 5, cf. 4,43 Karepyacdpevos Thy dpy. ap. Dem, 974. 28, cf. 29; Yi apy. Strabo 147: v. Béckh on Laureion in P. E. 2. 427 E. Tr. II. of or belonging to money, dyav apyupirns a contest in which the prize was money, on the analogy of arepavirns, Plut. 2. 820 C, Lynceus ap. Ath, 584 C. 2. in A. B. 442, a moneyed man. apyiip6-Bios, ov, (Bids) with the silver bow, Eust. 41. 11. dpytipoyvapovee, zo try or assay silver, Eumath. 434- apytpoyveopovixds, 7, dv, skilled in assaying silver, Arr. Epict. 2. 3, 2. O~ , ovos, 5, %, an assayer of silver, Plat. de Virt. 378 E, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 7, Plut. Crass. 2, ete. ; dpyip [ct], avros, 5, a precious stone, Plin. 37. 54 (cf. ddapas). dp s, ov, 6, one who takes silver or money, Greg. Naz. apytpodivns [7], ov, 6, (div7) silver-eddying, epith. of rivers, Il. 2. 753., 21. 8, 130, Hes. Th. 340, etc.; ¢f. Nonn. D. 19. 304. dpyitp os, 6, a slave to silver, ap. Suid. dpyiipo-edijs, és, like silver, silvery, divas Eur. 1. A. 752, lon 95; v5up Orph. Arg. 601; dpyupoedéi xadn@ (as Xylander for dpyvpodivéi), Tryph. * :—metaph. of the eyes in disease, Hipp. Prorrh, 102. Gpyipoets, ecoa, ev, =dpytpeos, Byz., v.1. Nic. Al. 54. b-ndos, ov, silver-studded, fipos Il. 2. 453; Opdvos Od. 7. 162, etc. &pytpo-O4Kn, %, a money-chest, Antiph. Mi5. 1, Theophr. Char. 10; cf. Poll. 4. 19. £60 ovos, ov, silver-throned, "Hpa Himer. p. 364. , dxos, 6, with a silver breastplate, Walz Rhett. 1. 531. dpytpo-xdmmnAos, 6, dealing in money, Cyrill. skh Vr tg ov, silver-broidered, Byz. oKotretov, 70, a silversmith’s shop, a mint, Antipho ap. Harp., Andoc. ap. Schol. Ar. Vesp. 1007, Arist. Probl. 24. 9, 1, C. L 123. 30. GpytpoKoméw, fo coin money, LXx (Jer. 6. 29), dub. in Poll. 7. 102. apyorns — Apys. omorip, 7p0s, 6, a coiner, Adywv Cratin. Tpog. 7. cates, if (ubera) a coiner, Phryn. Com. Eg. 5. _ ita worker in silver, silver-smith, Plut. 2. 830 E, Inser. Smyrn. in C. I. 3154, Poll. 7. 102, 103, LXx, N. T. apytipoxocptw, fo adorn with silver, C. I. 8765. IV. c. ; dpytipé-cpavos, ov, silver-headed (cf. modoxpavos), of Hadrian, Or. Sib. 5. 47. Sse suche, oy, silver-wheeled, Nonn. D. 18. To, dpytpo-Aapmas, és, (Adpme) shining with or as silver, Greg. Nyss.:— hence Verb —Aapréw, Byz. apytpodoyéw, to levy money, Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 12: ¢, acc. pers. ¢o levy money upon, lay under contribution, Thuc. 2. 69., 8. 3, Aeschin. 76. 17; etc.; so, dpy. ée mbAcw Xen, Hell. 4. 8, 30; mapa rivos Themist. 289 D. Gpytpoddyyros, ov, made for levying money, LXXx (2 Macc. 9. 3). dpytpoAoyla, 7, a levying of money, Xen. Hell. 1. I, 8, ete. apytpoAdyos, ov, (Aéyw) levying money, vats Ar. Eq. 1071, Thue. 3. 19, etc.; cf. Bockh P. E. 2. 375. &pyups-Aodos, ov, silver-crested, ap. Ideler Phys. 2. 200. dpyupoptyys, és, (uiyvupe) mixed with silver, yi Strabo 147. dpyipév, 76, a Byzantine silver coin, Byz. pytipo-vopos, 5, (véum) a money-dealer, Constt. Apost. 2. 37. épytips-racros, ov, silver-broidered, Sha Polyaen. 4. 16; évdupa Meliss. in Gal. Opusc. p. 749. dpyiipsé-reta, 7, silver-footed, regular epith. of Thetis, Il.; of Aphro- dité, Pind, P. 9.16: hence later was formed an Adj. dpyupémefos, ov, Anth, P. 5. 60. dpytpé-mnxus, vv, silver-armed, Nonn. D. 42. 419. Gpytpo-rovds, 5, a worker in silver, Anth. P. 14. 50: —rolnTos, ov, wrought in silver, Byz. dpyipé-nous, 6, , with silver feet or legs, eAlvn Xen. An. 4. 4, 21, cf. Dem, 741. 6, Polyb. 31. 3, 18. é dpytpo-mparys [a], ov, 6, a money-dealer, Cyrill. :—hence —Grucés, 7), év, Byz.: —mparetov, 76, Byz. apytpo-naAns, ov, 6, a money-dealer, Sozom. : —mwhetov, 76, Id. dpytpépitos, ov, (siCa) with a silver root, myat Taprnsoov apy. i.e. having silver in the soil, Stesich. 5. &pyipoppirys [i], ov, 5, (féw) silver-flowing, Eur. H. F. 385. dpyiipos, 6, (v. dpyds, 9, dv) white metal, i.e. silver, often mentioned in Hom., though not so often as gold; forming parts of a chariot, as the wheel-naves, Il. 5.726; the pole, Ib. 729; ornamenting armour or arms, cf. dpytpeos, dpyupéndos ; gilded over, Od. 6, 232; brought from Alybé in Pontus, é ’AAUBns, Sev dpydpov éort yevéOAn Il. 2. 857; so, THY) dpydpou Aesch, Pers. 238, etc.; apy. KoiAos, v. sub xpucds. 2. apy. xurds quicksilver (v. S5pdpyupos), Arist. de An. I. 3, 11, Meteor. 4. 8, 9, Theophr. Lap. 60. II. silver-money, and generally money, Aesch. Supp. 9353 én” dpytpw ye Thy Wuxi mpodo’s Soph. Ant. 3223 ef Tt pi) tiv dpylpw éxpaocer’ by bribery, Id, O. T. 124 ;—but in Prose not till late, as Alciphro. 2. 3; dpyptov being the classical form in this sense, v. Bickh P. E. 1. 35. apytpo-cdd mye, yyos, 5, %, with silver trumpet, Manass. Chron. 2334. Gpytpo-oxedis, és, silver-limbed, Nicet. Eug. 1. 146. apytpo-cxérros, 6, ), =Gpyupoyvapar, A, B. 18. apytpoorepys, és, (crepéw) robbing of silver, Blos dpy. a robber's life, Aesch. Cho. 1002. dpyipo-riiptas, ov, 5, an officer in the tax department at Athens under the emperors, C.I. 35.4, 355.12; also at other places, 2782, 3631, 3773, al.: —hencedpyupordpela, 7, for—rayieia,2787, 281 7:—and—rapievw, 2930. apyupo-reukros, ov, wrought of silver, Epiphan. apytpo-roixos, ov, with silver sides, Spoirn Aesch. Ag. 1539. Spyips-ro£os, ov, with silver bow, Homeric epith. of Apollo; also simply Apyupérogos, bearer of the silver bow, Il. 1. 37. Gpyupo-rpokrys, ov, 6, a nibbler of silver, a covetous man, Greg. Naz. apyiipo-paAtipos, ov, with silver trappings, Polyb. 31. 3, 6. creype-bery is, és, silver-shining, Anth, P. 11. 313 :—also —tvys, és, 'yrill, apytips-prealp, 6, , with veins of silver ore, Schol. Plat. p. 208. apytpo-xaAivos, ov, with silver or silver-studded bridle, Philostr. 532. Gpyipoxetpav, ov, (xéw) silver-flowing, Manass. Chron. 6257. Gpytpoxoéw, to melt or cast silver, Cyrill.:—hence —xoetov, 74, Eccl, dpytpoxéos, 6, (xéw) a melter of, worker in, silver, LXX (Sap. 15.9): pyY¥ps-xpoos, ov, silver-coloured, Tzetz. apytips-xpucos [3], ov, of silver and gold, perhaps silver-gilt, Byz. apytipse, to cover with silver, C. 1. 435 :—elsewhere always in Pass. to be silvered, plated, pémos tipyyvpapévos Menand. Monost. 469 ;—in Pind., of persons, dpyupwOévres adv olynpais guddais rewarded with silver wine-cups, N, 10, 80; so, doSai dpyupabetoar mpoowna songs with silver in their faces, i.e. mercenary, I. 2. 13. Apytipdins, es, (€@50s) rich in silver, rémos Xen. Vect. 4, 3- Spytpapa [0], 76, silver plate, mostly in pl., Lys. Fr. 50, Antiph. Xpvo.1, Menand. “Yur. 3, etc,:—hence Dim. dpyvpwpdtiov, 76, Arr. Epict. 3. 26, 36. apyp-dvnros, ov, bought with silver, Oepdmaw Hat. 4. 72; bpat Aesch. Ag. 949; 6 dpy., i.e. a slave, Isocr. 300 B; dpy. oéGer Eur. Alc. 676. apyup-wpuxetov, 74, a silver-mine, Schol. Aeschin. p. 27. 30 Dind. &pytipeos [iv], 7, ov, Ep. Adj. silver-shining, silver-white, Il. 18. 50, Od. 5. 230, Hes. Th. 574. (dpyt-peos is related to dpyup-os as Avyu-s to Avyup-ds: v. sub dpyés.) dpyipys, és, =foreg., Orph. Lith, 284. Hp vepos, ov, = dpyuseos, epith. of sheep, Il. 24, 621, Od, 10. 85. PyY®, dos, contr. ovs, }, (dpyds, %, by) the Argo or ship in which apda — aperréoy, — 215 Jason sailed to Colchis, the Swift, first in Od. 12. 70 :—Adj. "Apygos, a, ov, of the Argo, dépu, axdos Eur. Andr. 794, Med. 477. 2. the constellation Argo, Eratosth. Catast. 35. Gpda, ns, }, (dpdw) dirt, rh dpday dn’ éuod oxdyyioov Pherecr.’EmaA, me apSaArov, 76, a water-pot or trough, Hesych.; v. dpddvov. Gpdados, 6, v. 1. for dpda, 1. c. apSaréw, to dirty, soil, Hipp. 582. 12., 599. 6, Philem. Mavny. 2:— Pass., ipSarwpévos filthy, LXx (Sir. 21. 6). apSdvov, 7d, =dpdddcov, Poll. 8. 66, A. B. 441. Gpdela, 4, (dpiw) a watering of fields, Strabo 205, Plut. 2. 687 F; of cattle, eis dpdeiay dyew Ael, N. A. 7.12. GpSevors, ews, 1%, (dpdedw) =foreg., Polyb. 9. 43, 5, Moschio ap. Ath. 207 D:—dpSeupa, 7d, Eus, apSevréov, verb. Adj. one must water, irrigate, Geop. 9. 11. Gpdeuris, of, 6, a waterer, Manetho. 4. 258. dpdeurés, 4, dv, verb. Adj. watered, Sosith. ap. Herm. Opuse. 1. 55. dpdetw, =dpdu, to water, Lat. irrigare, Arist. H. A.8. 19, 1, Probl, 20. 15, Theophr. H. P. 7. 5, 2, etc. :—dpdw is the form used by earlier writers, except Aesch. Pr. 852:—cf. Lob. Phryn. 763, Meineke Com. Gr. 3. 158. Gp8n9p6s, 6, =dpduds, Lyc. 622, Nic. Th. 401. dpByv, Adv. contr. for dépSnv (as aipw for delpw) :—lifted up on high, of a vase carried on the head, Soph. Ant. 430, Aj.1279; pépew dpdnv Eur. Alc, 608; 7ndavros d.”Exropos rappwv imep Soph. Aj.1279. II. taken away utterly, wholly, Lat. raptim, Aesch, Pr. 1051, Eur. Hec. 887; dpiny droddtvat, dapbeipew, Lat. penitus, funditus evertere, Plat. Rep. 421 A; a. bapbelpecbar Id. Legg. 677 C, cf. Dem. 385. 2; mdvras apSnv rods Geos all together, all at once, Ar. Thesm. 274. Gpdv0-Opa, as, 7, (dpiis) a forceps to extract arrow-heads, etc., ap. Serv, ad Virg. Gpdis, %}, the point of an arrow, acc. dpi Hdt. 4.81; pl. dpds (Ion.) I. 215; gen. dpdéwy 4. 81:—on Aesch. Pr. 880, v. darupos. Gpdpos, 5, a watering-place, Il. 18. 521, Od. 13. 247, Ap. Rh. 4. 1247. dpde: impf. #pdov Plat. Tim. 76 A, Ion. 3 sing. dpdeoxe Hat. 2. 13: fut. dpow (?): aor. #poa Hdt. 5.12, subj. dpon Id. 2. 14, part. dpoas Hdt. 2. 14., 5. 12: used by Att. only in pres, and impf. (From 7 APA come also dpieta, dpduds, pda, dpdados, and perhaps paiva (€p-pdb-arat) ; cf, Skt. ardras (uvidus), ardraydmi (humecto).) To water, and so, 1. of men, to water cattle, trmous dpcaca Babv- oxolvoto MéAnros from or at the Meles, h. Hom. 8. 3; dp5. Syudevros Euphor, 75; jpoe rov immoy Hat. |. c.:—also to walk or swim cattle in water, Buttm. Lexil. s. v. déepoa: 3 :—Pass. to drink, dpdépevorh, Hom, Ap. 263. 2. of rivers, to water land, Lat. rigare, irrigare, Hdt. 2. 14, Aesch, Pers. 487, 806, etc.; also of men, pucOwrds-dpde media Timocl. Ix. 3, cf. Arist. Gen. et Corr. 2. 8, 4:—Pass. to be watered, of countries, Hdt. 2. 13; otros xepot dpddépevos watered by hand, Id. 1. 193; €€ Tov morapod Ib., cf. Ibyc. 1; Kapmods dpdopevay .. xOdva having its corn watered, Ar. Nub. 282. II. metaph. ¢o foster, cherish, Lat. fovere, orpardy, 6ABov apdew Pind. O. 5. 28, 553 xaplrav dpdey dpdcy, i.e. to cover with glory, Id. 1.6 (5). 94 (v. sub paivw) ; so, 70 Aoporindy &. Kat abfew Plat. Rep. 550 B, cf. 606 D, etc.; dpdeyv vody oivw Ar. Eq. 96, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 276 D, Xen. Symp. 2, 24. *Apéovea, 7, name of several fountains, the earliest known in Ithaca, Od. 13. 408 :—the most famous at Syracuse, said to be an Arcad, nymph, who, being pursued by the river-god Alpheius, and changed into a stream by Artemis, disappeared underground and re-appeared at Syracuse, Strabo 270; its Nymph became the Muse of Bucolic poetry. (A participial form, as if dpSovca, the Waterer:—édpéOw is quoted by Theognost. Can, 141.) dpea [ap], Ion. and poét. dpevh, 7): (dpa) :—Collective noun, menaces, threats, Aevyadéots éneetow .. kal dpein Il. 21. 339., 20. 109; moAAA Be pecdexiorst.., ToAAA 5 apelin 17. 431 :—hence the Verb dpedw= dmethéw, Hipponax ap. E. M. 139. 38, Gaisf. *Apa-Otcravos, 6, tassel of Ares, a bold word for a brave and tried warrior, Aesch. Fr. 200, (Cf. Eust. 600. 43 ;—unless it be from @d@,— cf. dpetpavhs.) *Apemiivas, és, (uatvouar) full of warlike frenzy, Simyl. ap. Plut. Rom. 17, Anth. P. 9. 210:—also —pawos, ov, Opactrns Philo 1. 375, cf. Plut. 2. 321 E, al.; a name given by the Magi to the Spirit of Evil, opp. to Oromasdes, Arist. Fr. 8, Plut. 2. 369 E, sq. :—hence —pavérns, %, Stob, Ecl. 2. 322. "Ape.o-Barys, ov, 6, marching martially, Or. Sib. 12. 160. *Apeto-Boddopat, Pass. to be tainted with Arianism, Byz, "Apeto-rayirns, “Apedmityos, 4, v. sub “Apetos méyos. *Apevos [a], ov, also a, ov Eur. H. F. 413; Ion. Apis, N, OV: CApns) :—devoted to Ares, warlike, martial, Lat. Mavortius ; in Hom., mostly of warriors, MevéAaos *Aphuos Il. 3. 339, al., cf. Apnicpiros 3 *Aphiot vies Axady 11, 800, al.; also of their arms, dpjia redxea buw 6. 340, cf. 10. 407; the Att, form only in the phrase Telos” Apetov, 4. 407, al.; also in Hdt., dpqoe dyaves conflicts in real war, opp. to yupviKot, 9. 335 OmAoy d. 4. 23; of aman, as Subst., a warrior, 6.98:— A@yva Apeia Lap. Par. in C. I. 3137. 70, cf. 4393.—The later Comp. “Apetorepos (q. v.) is prob. formed from dpelwy, as xepetdrepos from Xepelwv. — EL, as nom. pr. Arius; esp. of the heresiarch, Eccl. :—whence ’Aperavés, +véis, Apadvito, avixés, -dviopés, ~ivorijs or rns, —Gvodpuv, Eccl. *Apeios mayos, 6, the hill of Ares, over against the west side of the Acropolis at Athens, “Apjios m. Hdt. 8. 52; also “Apeos mayos (where “Apeos is gen. of “Apys) Soph. O. C. 947, of. Eur. El. 125, 8, cf. 950. -On it was held the highest judicial court, which took cognisance of murder and other capital crimes, v. Dem. 271. 14: originally it discharged high political functions, of which it was deprived in the time of Pericles: 123. 59, al., Dem. 271. 14, cf. Lys. 176. 21, Arist. Fr. 360; # & "A. méyy Bovdy Id. Pol. 2. 12, 2; also, “Apefa Bovdx C. I. 426; els rov “Apevov mayor dvaBijvat to become a member of the court, Isocr. 147 B, 265 B; év°A. méyy DBofvar dixny Arist, Rhet. 2. 23, 12; diieat Wevdo-~ Haprupii rai é¢ °A, maryou Id. Fr. 378. Its mythical origin is treated by Aesch. Eum. 681, sq.—On its history, v. Thirlw. Hist, Gr. 2. 49+ 3-23, Grote 3. 97.—The compd. ’Apeiémaryos occurs in a late Att. Inser. (C.1. 181. 15), but is used in no good writer, Lob. Phryn. 599.—But we find the noun ‘Apeorrayirys (not “Apewo-, which is late, Lob, Phryn, 698), an Areopagite, Aeschin, 11. fin., C. I. 263, 372, al., Arist. Fr. 366; proverb., ‘Apeomaryirou o«dnpbrepos Themist. 263 A, cf. Alciphro 1. 13 :—Adj., Apeonayiris Bovdy Id. 2.3; “Apeomayirixés, 4, dv, Strabo 260. Gpedtepos, a, ov, a later form of dpelwr, Theogn. 548, etc. by erp nros, %, (dpeiwv) excellence, Cyril. R pel-roApos, ov, warlike, bold, Anth. P. 9. 40. Apelpiiros, Ep. Apyidbaros, ov, (*péva, méparar) slain by Ares, i.e. slain in war, Il. 19. 31, etc.; pédvor dp. Eur. Supp. 603. 2. later it seems generally ="Apetos, martial, dp. dydév, Aja Aesch, Eum. 913, Fr. 146; x«émoe Eur. Rhes, 124. dpelwv [a], 6, 9, -ov, 76, gen. ovos, used as Comp. to dya@ds, ef, Gpioros: (v. *dpo) :—better, stouter, stronger, braver, more excellent, in Hom. of all advantages of body, birth, and fortune, e.g. Il. 1. 260; also in Hes. Op. 205, Pind. N. 7. 149, and Aesch. Pr. 420, Theb. 305, Ag. 81 :—rare in Prose, & bpiv dpevov pi) yvdvat Arist. Fr. 40. G-pekros, ov, poét. for dppexros, unaccomplished, Il. 19. 150, Simon. 111. dpéopar, Ion. for dpdopa, Hdt. II. poét. fut. of alpoya, I shall win, gain, Bockh Pind. P. 1.75 (147). *Apeo-nayirys, ov, 6, v. Apeconayirns. “Apeos, a, ov, collat. form of “Apetos, ’Apéa (sc. xptvn) the spring of Ares, Pind. P. 9. 97. Gpicar, dpécacbar, v. sub dpéoxa. Gpecketa, 7, (dpecketw) the character of an dpeokos, complaisance, obsequiousness; cringing, Arist. Eth. E. 2. 3, 7,M. Mor. 1. 29, 1; dp. Baot- A€os Polyb.6.2,12. 2. in good sense, mpds Oedy Kal dp dpéokeupc, 76, an act of obsequiousness, Plut, Demetr. 11. 4 Gpeckevopat, to comply with, rwe Clearch. ap. Ath. 256 C, Hesych.; prob. |. for dpéoxeo@at in Plut. 2. 4 D. Gpeckevtucds, 4, dv, obseguious, M. Anton. 1. 16. Gpeokévras, Ady. part. pres. act. of dpéoxw, agreeably, Eur. I. T. 463, 581, Plat. Rep. 504 B. dpeckos, 7, ov, pleasing, but mostly in bad sense, obseguious, cringing, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 13., 4. 6,1, Theophr. Char. 5. dpéckw, and impf. #pecxoy Soph. and Att. Prose: fut. dpéow Dem. 1004. 13, Ep. épécow Ap. Rh. (in compd. ovy—); aor. jpeca Hadt., Att., Ep. dpeooa Ap. Rh., inf. dpéoas Il., Xen.: pf. dphpexa Sext. Emp, M. 1. 238 :—Med., fut. dpécouat Aesch. Supp. 655, Ep. dpéooopar Il. 4. 362: aor. Hpecaunv, Ep. dp- Hes. Sc. 255, Ep. part. dpecodpevos Il, 9. 112, Theogn. (cf. égapéoxopat): aor. pass. in med. sense, Soph. Ant. 500:— Pass., aor. }pécOnv Paus., Joseph. | (On the Root, v. *dpw.) i having a pers. as the subject, 4o make good, make amends, dy eédw dpécat Il. 9. 120., 19. 138 :—so in Med., radra & dmaGev apecodpeda this will we make up among ourselves, 4.362, cf. Od. 22.55; omovdds Ocois dpécacba to make full drink-offerings to the gods, Theogn. 760. 2. in Hom. also often in Med., c. acc. pers. et dat. modi, fo appease, conciliate, abrov dpecodoOw énécoaw Kai iupw Od. 8. 396, (so, 402, Tov €eivoy dpéooona ws av Kedevers); ws Kev puv dpecoapervor meniOwpev Swporot Il, g. 112, cf. 19. 179; KaOapotor Bapois Peods dpécovra Aesch. Supp. 655; c. gen. rei, dpéoavro ppévas aivaros they sated their heart with blood, Hes. Sc. 255. 3. after Hom., c. dat. pers. to please, satisfy, ob yap pot Tlodveparns hpecke Seand(ov . . Hdt. 3.1423 Sef p’ dpéoxew rois Karw Soph. Ant, 75, cf. 89; det 3 dpéoxew Tots Kparovat to be obsequious to them, Eur. Fr. 94; dp. tpdémos tTwds to conform to his ways, Dem. 1406. fin.; 7d #oAaxeve viv dpéoxey évoy’ éxet Anaxandr. Sap. 1; cf. dpecxos:—also in Med., padcora, hpéokovro [aire] of dm’ ’AOnvéwy pleased him most, Hdt.6.128. IT. having a thing for the subject, c. dat. pers., to please, rabra dpéorer por Hat. 1. 89; «dpra of jpece 4 broOqKn Id. 8. 58, cf. 3. 40., 6. 22; so in Att. 7@ tadr’ jpecev; Soph. El. 409; col ratr’ dpéoxe Id. Ant. 211, etc.; Tots... mpéecBeow jpecxey [the proposal] pleased them, Thuc. 5. 37, cf. Plat. Theaet. 157 D, al.:—in Soph. Ant. 500, the aor. pass. must have the same sense, p95’ dpeoOeln mére (sc. pndty Trav cay Adyar). III. in Att. also c. acc. pers., od yap pw’ dpéoxer yAood gov TeOnypevn Soph. Aj, 584; ovd€ o° dpéoxe 7d. rapdy Eur. Hipp. 185, cf. Or. 210; Tou7l.. pm’ ode dp. Ar. Pl. 353, cf. Ach. 189, Ran. 103, Thuc. 1,128; mérepés ce 6 rpéros dp. Plat. Crat. 433 E, cf. 391 C, Rep. 557 B, Theaet. 172 D:—hence the pass. usage, to be pleased, satisfied, TH xpioe with the decision, Hdt. 3.34; Siairp SxvOuep 4. 78, cf. 7. 160., 9. 66; ois Adyors Thuc. 1. 129, cf. 2. 68; 7H of cvvovole Plat. Theag. 127 B; later in aor., #péo0n TH yvepn Joseph. A. J. 12. 9, 6; dpecOcis TH mepare Paus. 2. 13, 8. IV. dpécre is used, like Lat. placet, to express the opinion or resolution of a public body, Tatra Hpece ogu woréery Hdt. 8. 19; Hv 3 dpéoxy tar’ ’APnvators Eupol. (?) Incert. 143. 20; dpéoxer., elvat Acar it is resolved that.., C. I. 1711. 10:—so in Med., efeivar wap’ dmorépous dy dpéounrar edOeiy Thuc. I. 35. V. part. dpéoxav, ovaa, ov, grateful, acceptable, Scots 748 gor’ dpécnovr’ Soph. O. T. 274; apéonov A€yev Thuc. 3. 345 dpécxovras ipiy Adyous Isocr. 159 D; 7a dpéoxovra or dpéaavra, Lat. placita, the favourite dogmas of philosophers, Plut. 2. 448 A, 1006 C. 2. of persons, popular, 7H mode dp. Lys. 153. 8, cf. Plat. Legg. 951 E. it is called 4 BovAd 4 & “Apetou méryou, Inscr, vet. Att. in C. 1. 75, cf. b dpectéov, ber Adj, one must be pleased, c. inf., Tzetz. Hist.8, 212. v Philo 1. 168, oe 216 ; dpearnp, jipos, 6, a cake, as a propitiatory offering, Poll. 6. 76, A.B. 215 :—Gpeoripios, a, ov, propitiatory, @vcla Dion. H. 1. 67 :—also eorhs, ov, 6, E. M. 138. 57. » %, dv, verb. Adj. of dpéoxe, acceptable, pleasing, Simon. Iamb. 6. 46, Hdt. 1. 119, etc.; uot od« dpeord Id. 2.64; Tav cay d6yov dp. ov5€v Soph. Ant. 500, cf. O.T. 1096; cf. dpéoxa 11.1; 7a dpeord ipiv avrois aipeioOa: Lys. 141. 2:—of persons, acceptable, agreeable, rivi Plut. Anton.9. Adv., éwur@ dpeoras quite to his own satisfaction, Hdt. 6. 129. vw, =dperdw, Hesych., Eust. 1599. 32. GperGdoyia, %, jesting, Manetho 4. 447. II. in Lxx (Sirach. 36. 14) it must have the literal sense of discussion or praise of virtue. Gpetaddyos, 6, (dperh, Aéyw) a prater about virtue: at Rome a kind of jester or court-fool, Casaub. ad Suet. Aug. 74, Juven. 15. 16; cf. #00Adyos. Gperdw, fut. now, to be fit or proper, to thrive, prosper, oi dpera kaka €pya Od. 8. 329; Aaol dperHor 19. 114; also in late Prose, dperwoa 7} Philo 2. 372; ddvora 2. 280. dpern [4], 4, (v. “Apys sub fin., *dpw) :—goodness, excellence, of any kind, but in Hom. esp. of manly qualities (like Lat. vir-tus, manhood), Today dperiy dvapaivay Il. 20. 411; duelvwy mavrolas dperds jpev - mébas 75% paxerOar Kat vdov 15.642; so of the gods, ravmep Kal pelCov dper? tiny re Bin Te 9. 498; so later, dperfs évexa for his man- hood, bravery, valour, Hdt. 8.92; pl., dperds dmedelxvuvro displayed brave deeds, 1. 176., 9. 40. 2. rank, nobility, Theogn. 30, etc. ; cf, dyads. 3. in Prose generally, goodness, excellence in its kind (Arist. Metaph. 4. 16, 3, Eth. N. 2. 6, 2); of land, Hdt. 4. 198., 7. 5, Thuc, I. 2; of animals, rod imrov Hdt. 3. 88; xuvdv, imo Plat. Rep. 335 B; of things, cxevous Ib. 601 D; dordxov Archestr. ap. Ath. 105 A; of classes of persons, S:aacrod avrn dp. Plat. Apol. 18 A; dp. dnucoup- Kh, wohirixh, kvBepyyriny Id. Prot. 322 D, E, Alc. 1. 135 A; also, dp. Biov Id. Rep. 618 C; modcrefas Legg. 886 B, etc. 4, its sense in Att. still remained, like Lat. virtus, more of active excellence than of the strictly moral virtues, mb dperdy ebpévra Pind. O. 7. 163, cf. P. 4. 331, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 21, sq.; dperi rexrovien, wvBepyntien, of excellence in art, skil/, Plat. Prot. 322 D, Alc, 1.135 A :—with this is closely com- bined the notion of distinction, and so dpern seems to imply fame, praise Sor excellence, Soph. Ph. 1420, Thuc. 1. 33; dp. xat ddga Plat. Symp. 208 D; so, yevvataw dperat révew splendour of noble deeds, Eur. H. F. 357, cf. Lys. 193. 12; dperai noble deeds, Plat. Rep. 618 B. a. in philosophical writers it was the word for virtue, Plat. Rep. 500 D, Legg. 963 C, sq., Dem. 1394. 4, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 13, Pol. 4. 11, 3, al.) IIL. dp. eis riva active merit, good service done him, Thuc. 3. 58, cf. 2. 40; so, dp, wept ra Xen. An. 1. 4, 8; cf. dvramododvar dp. Thue. 4. 19; dperds rapacyxéaOat brép rvos Dem. 441. 19. &pern [4], crasis for ) dpery, Aesch. Ag. 1357. Gpery-¢ pos, ov, virtuous, Philodem. Rhet. p. 74 (Gros), cf. ib. 163. er , Pass. to become excellent, grow in goodness, Simpl. ad Epict. “Apeus, 6, Aeol, for “Apys, Alcae, 28-31, cf. Koen Greg. p. 194. dpyat, Ep. 2 sing. subj. aor. 2 med. from aipw, Il., Hes. apny , 9, help, aid, Anth. P. 9. 788, append. 333. apie [a], fut. fw, to help, aid, succour, Twi Il, 2. 363, al. (never in Od.); always to succour in war, often c. dat. pers. et modi, waxy Tpw- egow dp. Il. 1. 521., 5. 507; Spoocoy, H pev po. . eweow nai xepoly dp. Ib. 77: generally to help, succour, Aéxet "AAKpHvas Pind, N. 1. 73, cf. P. 2. 115; Ovnrois Aesch. Pr. 267, and often in Trag.; and in mock Trag. passages of Com., -yuvatkes, ov dphter’ ; Ar. Thesm. 696, cf. Pl. 475 j—tare in Prose, 6 vavrixds T@ meC@ dphge Hdt. 7.236; Tots pidrors dp. Xen. Cyr. 1.5, 133 to be good for a patient or his case, Hipp. Prorrh. 108, cf. 395. 6. 2. impers., c. inf., like Lat. juvat, it is good or Sit, pépev dptyye Pind. P..2. 173; ovyav dpryye Aesch. Eum. 571. Il. c. acc. rei, to ward off, prevent, dpntov . . GdAwow Aesch, Theb. 119; also, like dpeéw, dp. rwi tt to ward off from one, pdvov Téxvors Eur. Med. 1275, cf. Tro. 772. (Akin to dpréw, arceo, v. sub dAaAke.) apnyoav, dvos, 6, 7), a helper, Il. 4. 7, 5. 511, in fem.; masc. in Batr. 281, etc. ; dpyyovos #vidxo10 Opp. H. 5. 108. *Apyt-Soos [a], ov, swift as Ares, swift in war, Il. 8. 298., 15. 315. F os [Ap], 7, ov, (erelva) slain by Ares, Il. 22. 72. "Aptos [a], 7, ov, also os, ov, Ion. for “Apevos, Hom, :—pecul. fem. t , a50s, Q. Sm. 1. 187. *Apyliiros [H], ov, Ion. for “Apefparos, Hom. *Apyi-0opos, ov, slain in war, mrwpara Cornut, N. D. 21. *Apyi-ptdos [a], 7, ov, dear to Ares, favoured of the god of war, freq. epith. of warriors in Hom., as Il. 2. 778, cf. Hes, Th. 317, Pind. I. 7 (8). 53, etc.; of the river Thermodon, Tryph. 33. npevat, v. sub dpdopat. dpnpevos, 7, ov, v. sub dpdw, apfva, 7, the Lat. arena, Byz. dpyéts, ews, 4, (dphyw) help, succour, twos from a person, Aesch, Pr. 547, Soph. O. C. 829. II. c. gen. rei, help against a thing, means of averting it, e. g. mnudray Soph. El. 876. dpnpa, dphpev, dpypepévos, v. sub dpapicxw. a » 7, ov, v. sub dpdo. £, , 6: Ep. gen. ”Apeos, Att. “Apews Aesch. Theb. 64, Eur. El. 1258 but “Apeos (never contr.) is required by the metre in Aesch. Theb. 115, Soph. 0. C. 947, Ant. 125, El. 1423, and three times in Eur.: dat. ”Apei, contr, “Apet: acc. “Apea Soph. O>T. 190 (lyr.), Att. ”Apy (never “Apny, which seems to be an error of the scribes; for it is never required by the metre, and in Il, 5. “Apr is the true reading): voc. “Apes, Ep. (metri grat.) "Apes :—Ion. and Ep. declens.”Apys, 705, 74, 7a :—Acol. “Apeus, evos, eva, evi, ev, Alcae, 20-23 Ahr. Ares, called by the Latins Mars, apertip— apiyveros. a gigantic warrior: in Trag. the god of destruction generally, the author of plague, Soph. O. T. 190, etc.; so, és Oidimov maide..” Apns katéonny Ar. Fr. 471; in Com., ’Apews veorrds chicken of Ares, Id. Av. 385. 2. the planet Mars, Arist. Cael. 2. 12, 3. II, in Poets, as appellat. for war, battle, discord, slaughter, murder, fuvdrywpev “Apna Il. 2, 381; “Apn wlgovow Soph. O. C. 1046; xpovig adv “Ape Pind. P. 11. 555 “Apns éupdduos, “A. riWacds Aesch, Eum. 863, 3553 OnAverovp “Apet dauévray Aesch, Pr. 861; vavppaxros “A, Id. Pers. 951; AcOdAev~ arov”Apn death by stoning (cf. pévos Ax9.), Soph. Aj. 254; €vOa pddtora ylyver’ “A. ddeyewds di{upoior Bporotor, of a mortal wound, Il. 13. \. 2. warlike spirit, Aesch. Ag. 78, Eur. Phoen, 134; dy -yu- vaigiv ..”A, éveorw Soph. El. 1242, cf. Ant. 9525 wéyav é« Oupod wddgayv “A. Aesch. Ag. 48; ”Apy BAémey Ar. Pl. 328, Timocl. “Hp. I. 8. iron, Anth, P. 7. 531, cf. Plut. 2.23 C. (The 4/AP ap- pears also in dpi, dperh, dpelwy, dpiaros, the first notion of goodness (vir-tus) being that of manhood, bravery in war, v. sub *apw. M. Miiller, Sc. of L. 2. p. 323, thinks it prob. that ”Apys and Mars are identical, and refers them to the Skt. MAR (¢erere).) [@ in Hom., but a of vocat. may be long in arsi, e. g. "Apes, “Apes BpordaAovye Il. 5. 31, and gen. “Apnos has @ in Il. 2. 767, cf. Call. Jov. 77, Ap. Rh. 2. 991., 3. 183: —in Trag. Poets, regularly &, but Aesch. uses @ even in dialogue, as Th, 244, 469; and Soph. in lyrics, Aj. 252, 614, Ant. 139.] mretpa [ap], 4, fem. of sq., Call. Cer. 43, Ap. Rh. 1. 312, ete. ip [@], Apos, %, (dpdopar) one that prays: poét. for tepevds (Arist. Poét. 21, 17), a priest, Il. 1. 11., 5. 78, al.; also in metr, Inscrr., Epigr. Gr. 800, 827, 873; pl., 406. Io. dpyriptov fa). 76, a place for prayer, Plut. Thes. 35. apyrés, 7, dv, Ion. for dparés: "Aptrn, %, as n. pr., Od. 7. 54, etc. apnrupévos, f. 1. for dpurnuévos: v. dpvTa. dpQev, Il.; v. sub dpapioxw. Gp0péw, fut. now, intr. to be united, év qiddrnrt apOpnoarre Il. 7. 302; Ap. Rh. uses dpynOévres in the same sense, I. 1344. dpOpi0s, a, ov, united, of & jyiv apOmoc Hoay friends with us, in league with us, Od. 16. 427; so in Hdt. 7. 101, al.; dpOpuos 75¢ pidros Theogn, 1312; dp0jua, 74, peaceful relations, friendship, Tews pev 5H opt hy GpOpia és GAAHAovs, Ex ToUTov 5é wéAEuOs Hat. 6. 83. apOpds, 6, (*dpw) a bond, league, friendship, ap0w@ Kat prdryri h. Hom. Merc. 524, cf. Aesch. Pr. 191, Call. Fr. 199. &pOp-epBoda, 74, (EuBddrAAW) instruments for setting limbs, Galen. ; but also used for torture, Joseph. Macc. 8, 12. GpPpepBodéw, to set limbs, Math. Vett. p. Io. GpOpepBornors, ews, %, the setting of a limb, Chirurg. Vett. p. 71; also, —BoXta, %, Oribas. 138 Mai. apOpti.ov, 74, Dim. of dpOpoy, M. Anton. 4. 3. GpOpicés, 7, dv, (dpOpoy 1) of or for the joints, v. Galen. Lex. 442, prob. an error for dpOpirixds. II. (dpOpov 11) of, belonging to the article, in Grammar, Apollon. de Constr. p. 6, etc. GpOpinéds, 7, dv, (dpOpov) of or for the joints, véuos Hipp. Art. 794- II. diseased in the joints, gouty, Hipp. 1179, Damox. Svytp. I. 32, Cic. Fam. 9. 23 :—rd —«a Hipp. Aph. 1258. GpOpirts, rds, 7, as if fem. of dpOpirns, which does not occur, of or in the joints, dpOp. preypovn, etc., Medic.: 4 dpOpitis (sc. vdcos), gout, Hipp. Aph. 1247. GpOpo-Kndys, és, limb-distressing, mévor Luc. Trag. 15. SipOpov, 76, (*dpw, q.v.) a joint, Hipp. Aph. 1248, al.; day kar’ GpOpov Soph. Tr. 769; para «al dpOpa the head and joints of the neck, Id. Ph, 1208: esp. the socket of the ankle-joint, in which the dorpayaros plays, 6 dorparyados é&exmpyoe éx Tav dpOpov Hat. 3.1293 but in Hipp., the ball, opp. to the socket (korvAn), y. Galen. ad Hipp. Fract. 761; so, udppas modds vw, dpOpov Ff AvyiCera Soph. Tr. 776, ef, Ph. 1201. 2. in pl. joined with some other word, dpOpa trodoiv the ankles, Soph. O. T. 718, cf. 1032, Tr. 776; dpOpav HAvats the legs, Eur, Hec. 67; dp8pa r&v xvxdAwy the eyes, Soph. O. T. 1270; dp0pa ordparos the mouth, Eur. Cycl. 62 53 ovd€ 7d. THs pavgjs none of the organs of sound, Arist. H. A. 4.9, 8, cf.18; 7a GpOpa alone, the genitals, Hdt. 3. 87, 103., 4. 2, Arist. H. A. 5.5, 12, al.: metaph., dp8pa TOV ppevav Epich. 119 Ahr. II. the article in grammar, Arist, Poét. 21, 7, Rhet. Al. 26, 4, Dion. H. de Thuc. 37, al. dp po-wéedn, %, @ band for the limbs, fetter, Anth. P. 6. 297. apOpo-ropew, (réuve) to lop off, amputate, 7a wédn Theoph. Sim. apOpdw, (dpOpor) to fasten by a joint :—Pass. to be jointed, dpOpoovrat Kun pide mept apupov Hermipp. Moip. 2. 3; cdpara %pOpwpéva well- jointed, well-knit, Hipp. Aér. 292. II. mostly of words, ¢o utter distinctly, yA@oca apOpot tiv pavny produces articulate sounds (as Lucr. 4. 549, [voces] articulat lingua), Xen, Mem. 1. 4, 12; but, dp- Opodv yAwoony Kai vdov to nerve the tongue and mind, Theogn. 758. pOpabns, «s, (clos) well-jointed, well-knit, Xen. Cyn. 4, 1, Arist. Physiogn. 5, 8. 2. articulated, opp. to dvapOpos, Id. P. A. 3. 4, 26. Ady. -das, Galen. Gp9pwdta, 4, a particular kind of articulation, where the surfaces are only slightly concave and convex, Galen, 2. 736. dpOpwors, €ws, 1}, a jointing, compact connexion, Philo 2. 408. ; dpt— [@], insep. Prefix, like épc-, strengthening the notion conveyed by its compd.: of same Root with “Apns, dpelwr, dptoros, chiefly denoting goodness, excellence, v. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. Eendos 9: mostly in older Ep. and Lyr. (V. sub *dpw.) ITI. v. sub “Ap:paczoi. dpia, 7, a kind of oak, or ilex, = peddddpus, Theophr, H. P. 3. 16, 3. dptyvas, wros, 6, %,=sq., in nom, pl. dpiyvores, Pind. N. 5. 21; cf. Lob. Paral. 181. son of Zeus and Hera, god of war and slaughter, represented by Hom, asd dpi-yvwros [4], 7, ov, Od, 6. 108, also os, ov Il. 15. 490:—easy to be b] - apvyos — apiorreia. known, dpiyverrot 5& Ocoi wep Il. 13. 72, cf. 15. 490; Sdpara Od. 6. 300; peta 7’ dpryvwrn méderax Ib. 108. 2. well-known, far-famed, Hom. : also in bad sense, infamous, Lat. nimium notus, ® dplyvare ovBara Od. 17. 375 (where it must be pronounced & ’piyvwre). dptyos, ov, insensible to cold, Arist. Probl. 31. 22. dptywv, wvos, 6, a kind of spear, Theognost. Can. 31. dpidakpuos, ov, =sq., Arist, Probl. 3. 24. Gpi-Saxpiis, v, gen. vos, much weeping, very tearful, ydos Aesch. Pers, 9473 of persons, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 1, Probl. 30. 1, 7; proverb., dpe daxpues dvépes éxPAot Schol. Ven. Il. 1. 349. dpi-Saxpiros, ov, much wept, Hesych. GpiSaAos, ov, Dor. for dpidnAos, Simon. Gpidelxeros, ov, (Seixvupu) much shewn, hence like Lat. digito mon- stratus, famous, renowned ; Hom. uses it mostly as a Sup., c. gen., dpt- deixeros dvbpay Il, 11. 248, al.; but also, vidy .. dpidelceroy eivar Od. II. 540; dp. réxva Hes, Th. 385. Gpi-byndos, Dor. -8aXos, ov, very clear or distinct, far seen, “Ooca Simon. 185, cf. Arat. 94; pvfjpa C. I. 1050. II. quite clear, manifest, rade yap ap. Hdt. 8. 65 ;—in Tyrtae. 8. 7, dlénAa seems to be the true reading ;—cf. sq. Adv. —Aws, Byz. apifndos, ov, also 7, ov, v. infr.:—Ep. for dpiSnAos (v. Z¢. It. 2), con- spicuous, remarkable, Lat. insignis, of the light of a star, api(nAot 5é of avyai Il. 13. 244, cf. Pind. O. 2.101; of the sound of a voice, ws 8 br’ dpihadn pavy Il. 18. 219, cf. 221; of persons whom all admire, Gore Oew mep, Gupls dpifhraw 18. 519; so Hes. Op. 6, peta 5° dpitndrov puvd0e, kat ddndrov défer :—Adv., dpeChaws elpnuéva a plain tale, Od. 12. 453 :—for Il. 2. 318, v. sub di(mAos. II. (HAos) =dpiln- Awros, only in Hesych. Gpi-fidwros, ov, much to be envied, Ar. Eq. 1329; -fqAqtos in Orac. ap. Eus. P. E. 413 C. dpt-fKoos, ov, much heard of, Call. Del. 308. hearing readily, Ap. Rh. 4. 1707. GpWpards, dv, Dor. for dpiOunrds. apipew : impf. as jptOpeov as trisyll., Od. 10. 204, 3 sing. pplOper 13. 218: fut. now Plat.: aor. qplOunoa, etc.:—Med., aor. ipiOunodpny Plat. Phaedr. 270 D:—Pass., fut. med. in pass. sense adpOunoopar Eur. Bacch. 1318, fut. dpsOunOqcopat Lxx, Galen.: Ep. aor. inf. dp:Oun- Onpevae (for Hvar) Il. 2. 124. To number, count or reckon up, Od. 4. 411, Pind. N. 10, 85, etc.; avrdp éy@ dixa mayras .. éraipous jpiOpeov counted them so as to halve them, Od. 10. 204; dpOpnoavres after num- bering the army, Hdt. 7. 60; ovdels rumor’. . ApiOunoe stopped to count the enemy, Ar. Eq. 570;—poét., dpi unoes yatav dmeipecinv = perpyces, Anth. P. 11. 349:—Pass., Hdt. 6. 111., 9. 32:—in Thuc. 3. 20, the Med. %piOpotvro, they got the courses of bricks counted, is followed by dpOpodrres. 2. to count out, and so to pay, Td xpuaiov, dpyvpiov Xen. Symp. 4, 44, Dem. 1192. fin. 3. to reckon, account, év evepyeoias péper Dem. 568. 5; dp. Ta xAvTémaiba Anth. P. 9. 262; Kép5os 7 dp. Dio Chr. p. 649:—Pass. to be reckoned, év riot Eur. Hel. 729; €v ypaupaor Luc. Jud. Voc. 2; ets revas Hdn. 1.1; also, dprOpet- o0at Tay pidTarwy as one of .., Eur. Bacch. 1318; waxdpwy Theocr. 13.72. GplOunpa, 76, a reckoning, number, trav madwv Aesch. Eum. 753. GplOpnors, ews, %, a counting, reckoning up, Hdt. 2.143: a counting out, payment of money, C. I. 2058 B. 36. II. = dpiOunrinny, 4, Hipp. Epist. Gpiiunréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be reckoned, counted, Hipp. 1031 B. 2. dpOunréov, one must reckon, count, Theophr. Fr. 3. 3. dppnris, od, 6, a calculator, Plat. de Just. 373 B. Gpiopntikés, 4, dv, of or for reckoning, skilled therein, dv@parmos Plat. Gorg. 453 E; dvadovyia Arist. Eth. N. 2.6, 7: 7 dpOpnriuch (sc. Téxv7) arithmetic, Plat. Rep. 525 A, al.; dpiOunrixn without Art., Id. Gorg. II. act. far-hearing, 450 D; 4 dp. émornyn Plut. 2. 979 E; cf. Aoyorieds 1. Adv. -Ks, Plut, 2. 643 Cc. apOpnros, 7, dv, Dor. —Grds, (dpiOpuéw) that can be counted, ov« dp. Cratin. Mavérr. 2; dpiOpovpevoy 7 dpOpnrdy Arist. Phys. 4. 14, 53 opp. to perpnrdv, Id. Metaph. 4. 13, I. 2. easily numbered, few in number, dpOparot dd moAA@y pauci de multis, Theocr. 16, 87. 3. obK dpiOunrds nullo numero habitus, Id. 14. 48. dptOp.os, a, ov, =évapiOju0s, for which it is v. l. in Rhian. 1. 16, Opp. H. 1.1513; & riow dp. Dion. P. 263. 3 apOuds [a], 6, (v. *dpw) number, Lat. numerus, first in Od., AEKTO v dpiOpudv 4. 451; apiOug@ wadpa Simon. 47; ev dpibp@ Hat. 3. 6; dpid- pov € Id. 1. 14, cf. 50; és tov dp. tpioxida Id. 7.97; wAHOos és dp.Opdv the amount in point of number, Id. '7. 60; so in Att., Tov dp. da5exa Euphro Incert. 1.11; dto tives . . eis tov dp, Menand. “Emued. 2; €darrov phe dyxw pyre dpiOu@ Plat. Theaet. 155 A; ovr’ dpiOpois ore peyé0ect edarrous Id. Legg. 861 E; orabu@ Kat dp. Xen. Symp. 4, 453 pérpov xal dp. Plut. Per. 16, cf. Eur. Tro.616:—proverb.,A€yev ap.b- Hoy movrav Yapev ‘to count the pebbles on the shore,’ Pind. O. 13. 66, cf. 2.179; ob yeyvdonw Yhpay apiOpors, of a blockhead, Ephipp. MeAr. 1; ob7' dpOpdv otr’ 2reyxov. . Exwv Dionys. Op.1.13. 2. amount, sum, extent, mohds dp. xpdvov Aeschin. 7. 36; dp. THs 6500 Xen. An. 2. 2, 6; dp. dpyuptov a sum of money, Id. Cyr. 8. 2,15. 3. apOpp absol. in certain numbers, Hdt. 6. 58; but, dév8pa dpOp@ ipérepa by tale, Thuc. 2.72; dp. &3évae Dionys. ‘Ox. I. 6. 4.a number, é Setrepos dp. Eur. Ion 1014; mwoAAovs apiOpods sigan’ vavayiov Hel. 217 them, Id. Fr. 523; 008° els dpiOudv ees Adyav you come not into my account, Id, El. 1054; ovdels dp. éort twos like Lat. nullo esse in numero, Plt. 2.682 F: cf. dpOpew, xwpa I. 3. 6. also mere number, quantity, opp. to quality, worth, rar’ ob« dp. éorw, & warep, Ad-yow a mere set of words, Soph. O. C. 382; so of men, ov« dp. d\Aws not a mere lot, Eur. Tro. 476 ; so dpiOyds alone, like Horace’s nos nume- rus sumus, Ar. Nub. 1203; sometimes even of a single man, ob« dpOpdy, GAN’ Ernripms dvip’ évra not a mere unit, Eur. Heracl. 97. 7. in some phrases as a mark of completeness, of dpiOuol Tov céparos Plat. Legg. 668 D; mdvras rods dpiOpods mepAaBwy, Lat. omnibus numeris absolutus, Isocr. 224 D; mavres dpiOpot rod KaOjxovros the sum total of duty, M. Anton. 3. 1. II. a numbering, counting, pacowv dpOyot past counting, Pind. N. 2. 35; esp. in phrases, dpOydr moved oa Tis oTparihs, THY vewv to hold a muster of, review. . Hdt, 8. ae movetv Xen. An. 7. 1,7, etc.; mapeivae eis roy dp. Ib. 11; ef re Suvaroy és dp. €Adeiv can be stated in numbers, Thuc. 2. 72. III. the science of numbers, numeration, arithmetic, apOpdv, toxov copurparay Aesch. Pr. 459, cf. Hermipp. MeAt.1; dpiOudy kat BHétpwv eipnpara Soph. Fr. 379; dp. wat Aoyopov ebpeiv Plat. Phaedr. 274 C, cf. Rep. 522C: proverb., elmep yap apiOydv oida Eur. Fr. 362. 19. IV. on the Pythag. doctrine, that numbers were the constituent elements of the universe, v. Arist. Metaph. 1. 8, 22 sq., 13. 3, al., cf. Grote’s Plato. p. 10. puktpov [3], ov, (ctw) prolific, Hipp. 262, etc. Spudlo, =dpyd(w, Hesych. *Apipacrol, oi, a Scythian word, meaning one-eyed, acc. to Hdt. 4.27, who says that dpia =éy, and ood = dpOaAdpds (v.Rawlinson, 3. p. 197); whereas Eust. ad Dion. P. 31 makes dp=&, and paonds =d@0adpds ; in Aesch. Pr. 805 they are immoBdpoves. apiundov, 7d, a kind of apple, Antig. Car. ap. Ath. 82 B. div or dpts, v. app. *Aptot, oi, the ancient name of the Medes, acc. to Hdt. 7.62; applied to them or a portion of them, 3. 93., 7. 66, Strabo 510, 514; so, Méyoe kal may 70 ”Apiov (vulg.”Apecov) yévos Eudem. ap. Damasc. 7, dpy@v init.: “Apia is mentioned as a Mepoui) x&pa by Hellanic. ap. Steph. B., (so, "Apeéa in Arr. An. 3. 25); and the name “Aptavf remained as the name of a large district north of Persis, Strabo 720 sq.—Hence the emend. of Herm., copa xoppoy”Apioy (for”Apeov) I lamented with Median lament, Aesch. Cho. 423. (In Skt., arya was the name of the first three Castes, opp. to S’utra, the lowest, v. M. Miiller Sc. of L. 1. 246 sq.) dpt-mupos, ov, very bitter, Hesych. Gpimpemis, és, (mpémw) very distinguished or noble, &s kat cot efS0s wey dpinperés Od: 8. 176; dére 54 Kal rovde -yevéoOar . . dpimpenéa Tpd- evow Il. 6. 477; troy dp. 23. 4533 dp. Baothjes Od. 8. 390. 2. of things, very bright, éxe 8 aiyida . . dpmperéa Il. 15. 309; dorpa . gaiver’ dp. 8.556; and of a mountain, very conspicuous, Nijprrov dp. Od. 9. 22. Adv. -méis, Ion. -éws, C. I. 1656 c, Greg. Naz., etc. pis, v. dppw. dpis, i5os, 7, a carpenter's tool, prob. an auger or drill, Hipp. Art. 789, Callias Me6. 5, Apollod. Pol. 18 C, Anth. P. 6. 103, 205+ cf. paxrys. dpi-capos, ov, Dor. for —onpos. icapov, 74, a plant of the arum kind, Diosc. 2. 198. ’AploBndev, Adv. from Arisbé (in the Troad), Il. 2. 838. é apionpos, ov, (cjua) very notable, dpionua dé épya réruero h. Hom. Merc. 12; «at rdpBos Kal aides év dvOpwros dpionuor Tyrtae. 9. 29; elxéoy C. I, 5362 b. II. very plain, visible, rpiBos Theocr. 25. 158 :—Adv. —pws, Heliod. 6. 14. Pe dpic0-dpparos, ov, (dpioros, appa) best in the chariot-race, dp. yépas the prize of the best chariot, Pind. P. 5. 39. dpirkvdys, és, (cxt(w) very wrathful, Call. Fr. 108. tor-afXos, ov, victorious in the contest, Anth, Plan. 94. *Aporaios, 6, prop. n., Hes.: a name of Apollo, Pind. P. 9.116: also a rural hero, son of Apollo, perh. connected with Lat. arista, Virg. *Apiordpxetos, a, ov, of Aristarchus (the critic), Strabo 103. dptot-apxos, 6, best-ruling, epith. of Zeus, Simon. 70, Bacchyl. (48) ap. Apoll. de Constr. 186.—Verb dptorapxéw, to rule in the best way, Arist. Pol. 2. 11, 12 :—Subst. -apxta, 7, Byz. dpiotadiros, ov, (crapudy) rich in grapes, Anth. P. 9. 580. dpirréw, inf. dporay, lon. -jv Hipp. 366. 45: fut. jow: aor. ipl- ornoa: pf. jpiarnea Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 39, Antiph. @:A00. 1. 25; of this tense the Com. also used a syncop. I pl. #pioraper Ar, Fr. 428, Theo- pomp: Kaa. 2, inf. #proravac Hermipp. Srpar. 11: pf. pass. jplornpat, v. infr. [@p- Ar. Eq. 815, Nub. 416, Eupol. Tag. 1, al.; but dp- in Anth. P. 11. 387.] To take the dpiarov or mid-day meal, Lat. prandere (cf. dporov), Ar. Nub. 416, Eq. 815; iplorar opp. to édeinvouv, Xen. Mem. 2. 7,12, etc. ; and in Xen. An. 4. 6, 21, #ptarwy should be taken in the same sense, for, though in § 17 éweddv demvjowper is used of the same meal, defrvov is sometimes used generally for any meal :—c. acc. rei, to breakfast on, ta kat pdda Diod. "Ema. 1. 37, cf. Pherecr. Mupp. 5 :—pf. pass. impers., #plornrai 7 égapkovyrws Ar. Ran. 376. 2. to eat a second meal, opp. to povoorréw (to eat only once a day), Hipp. Vet. Med. 11, Acut. 388. dpioreta, 2, excellence, prowess, Soph. Aj. 443; also in pl., Plat. Legg. 942D. So those rhapsodies of the Il., in which the prowess of Diomede, Agamemnon, Menelaus is described (Il. 5, 11, 17), are called respectively , Avopndous, "Ayapuépvovos, Meveddou dpioreia, 410; Tov rérrapa dpiOudy Luc, Hermot. 35. . ber, as a mark of station, worth, rank, per’ dvdpav iCecOar dpiOu@ to take one’s place among men, Od. If. 449; in many Att. phrases, els dvbpay bev ob redodow dpOpdy Eur. Fr. 4953 els dp. rav kaxdy meptxapev Id. Hec. 1186; gevias dpiOu® in regard of friendship, Ib. 794; deAot yap dvipes ode €xovow ev paxp apiOpudv have no account made of Bs dptoreta, Ion. —qia, 7d, the prize of the best and bravest, the meed of valour, ap. dddvac TH agiwrarw Hat. 8.123, cf. 124; dmwairee rods Alywaras 7a dp. demanded of them the reward (they had received) for prowess, Ib. 122; 7d dp. Ths viens pépecOar Hipp. Aér. 294; so in Soph. Aj. 464, Plat., etc. ; dp. THs Gcod offered to her, C. 1.150 A. 29, 218 al.; dp. 7H Oe Ib. 151.27; so, dporeiov 7G Oe@ Ib. 158. 31. 2. the sing. is (rarely) used in same sense, Hdt. 8.11; (Plut,, Thes. 26, has yépas apioreiov, as if from an Adj. dpioretos, where either yépas or dpiorecov seems to bea gloss), 3. in sing. also, a monument of valour, memorial, 700 mpods rods BapBapous worguou Dem, 428. 16, cf. 616. 4., 1378. 5. dpiorepedo, to be left-handed, v. 1, LXX (1 Paral. 12. 2). dpirrepedwv, 7), =meptorepe@y, Orph. Arg. 916, Ael. N. A. 1. 35. &purrepo-paxos, ov, fighting left-handed, Herm. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 992. dpiotepés, a, dv, left, on the left, Lat. sinister, é dpiorepa towards, i,e. on, the left, Il. 2. 526, al.; €m dpiorepd xeepds on the Jeft hand, Od. 5. 277; én dp. xetp@v Ap. Rh. 2. 1266; map’ dpiorepd C. I. 150. 17,151, 3156. 2. dpicrepa (with or without xelp), #, the left hand, é£ apiorepijs xetpds on the left hand, Hat. 2. 30; or simply, dpt- orepis x. Id. 4. 34: so, @£ dpiorepas Soph. Ph. 20, Plat., etc.; obf dpiorepas . .vads Soph. El. 7; és dpiorephy, ev dpiorreph Hdt. 7. 42. 3. metaph. boding ill, ominous, because to a Greek augur, looking north- ward, the unlucky or western signs came from the left, Od. 20. 142, sq.: also of awkward, erring, crazy behaviour, ppevd0ev én’ dpicrepa éBas turnedst to the leftward of thy mind, Soph. Aj. 183.—Cf. omnino éra- piorepos. (Lepsius ap. Donalds. N. Cratyl, 203 n. connects d-prot-epds with Lat. si-nist-er.) ; dpiorepo-ordrns [Mi], od, 6, standing on the left, esp. in the Trag. chorus, Cratin. Sepip. g, Aristid. 2. 161. dpurrepoduv, Ep. gen. of apiorepds, ém’ dp, Il. 13. 309. dpiorepd-xeip, pos, 6, }, left-handed, Synes. 162 B. dpiorevpa, 74,=dpo'rela, a deed of prowess, Eust. 115. 14. dpuorevs, éws, 5: dual dporéow Soph. Aj. 1304: (Gptoros) :—used by Hom. mostly in pl. dpuorijes, Lat. optimates, the best or noblest, chtefs, princes, lords; so in Hat. 6, 81, Pind. P. 9. 188, and Trag. ; but sing., Aesch. Pers, 306 (Blomf.) ; dvdpds dpioréws Eur. I. A. 28. dpiorevrns, 6, an improver, mediwv ap., of a husbandman, Secund. in Gal. Opusc. p. 639. dprrreutixés, 7, dv, of, belonging to, fit for valiant deeds, Max. Tyr. 29. I, Plut. 2. 319 B. orev, to be best or bravest, freq. in Hom.; aity dpiorevey Kai imeipoxov éupevar dAdwy Il. 6.208; ds 5é « apioredqot waxy ee 11. 29; dp. év dé9Aas Pind. N. 11. 18:—to gain the prize for valour, (v. piareia, 74), gain the highest distinction, Hdt. 3. 55., 9. 105, Plat. Rep. 468 B, 540 A, 2. c. gen., dpiorederke .. Tpwwy he was the best of the Trojans.., Il, 6. 460, cf. Hdt. 5. 112., 7.206, al.; otvexa Bovdj dpioreveonev amavroy Il. 11.627, cf. Pind. N. 10. 17. 8. c. inf., dporeverke paxeoOa he was best at fighting, Il. 16. 292, 551, etc.; dpioreverke paxecdar Tpwwy, v. supr. 4. c. ace. rei, dp. Tt to be best in a thing, Pind. O. 10 (11). 76., 13.613 dp. Sxépxev to be best at [singing] the Sperchis, Theocr. 15. 98. 5. c. acc. cogn., 7a mpara kadhore apiorevoas=7@ dproredoat TA x. AaB&y, Soph. Aj. 435, cf. 1300; mavra dp. Plat. Rep. 540A; dpiorelay dp. Plut. Pelop. ¥ II. of things, to be best, dporevovaa xOovds ebxdprov best of all Zands on fruitful earth, Pind, N. 1.20; 7d «ndevoa Kad’ éavroy dpioreder Aesch. Pr. 890; of an opinion, to be deemed best, to prevail, Hdt. 7. 144. apiernriprov, 76, in Eccl., a refectory. dproryris, of, 6, (dparde) one who breakfasts, i.e. takes more than one full meal in the day, Hipp. Aér. 280. dpornticés, 7, dv, fond of one’s breakfast, Eupol. Anu. 43- dprotifo pet fut. tow, to give one breakfast, dd opicpas dardyns ipas dpotiCav anénemipev Ar. Eq. 538; Tovrous aplaricoy eb Id. Av.659; rhv wodw dp. em mevraeriay Inscr. Boeot. in C. I. 1625. 42 :—Med. to breakfast, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12. , dpiorivinv, Adv. (dpicros) according to worth or merit, Andoc..27. 22, Isocr. 71 B, Plat. Legg. 855 C; opp. to Aourivdny, Arist. Pol. 2. 11, 3 and 8; much like ear’ dperny, Ib. 9; or war’ dgiav, 3. 5,5: cf. dpirroxparia, Gpiord6-Bios, ov, living best, Orac. ap. Heliod. 2. 35. dpior Aos, 7, ov, best-advising,, epith. of Artemis, Plut. Them. 22: —Subst. —BovAta, 4, C. 1. 8750. Gpiarro~yéveOAos, ov, producing the best, xBpos Anth. P. g. 686. apioroyévos, dy, (yevéa0ar) bearing thebest children, parnp Pind.P.11.5. dipvor6-Seumvov, 76, a breakfast-dinner, Alex. Incert. 25, Menand.’Opy.6. Gpiord-Bixos, ov, judging most righteously, Greg. Naz. dporoentw, to speak excellently ; and -ewns, és, speaking excellently, Cyrill. hci dgliclanion: Pass. to be governed by the best-born, to live under an aristocratical form of government, Ar. Av. 125, Plat. Rep. 338 D; ef. Arist. Pol. 4. 8, 5. ria, %, the rule of the best-born, an aristocracy, ap. cuppa Thue. 3. 82, Plat. Polit. 301 A, etc., but, II. in Arist. Pol. an ideal constitution, the rule of the Best, (where the governors are chosen dpiorivony, war’ dgiay), its corruption being éAvyapxia, described in 4. 7, sq-; cf. Eth. N. 8. 10, 3, Plat. Menex. 238 D, Polyb. 6. 4, 3. dpioroKkpirucés, 7), év, aristocratical, inclining to aristocracy, Plat. Rep. 587 D; dp. modureia (cf. dpioroxparia 11), Arist. Pol. 2. 6, 16, ete. Adv. -«as, Ib. 4. 15, 20., 6. 1, 4. ; Gpioro-héxeta, 7, an herb promoting child-birth, like our birth-wort, Lat. aristolochia, Nic. Th. 509,9 3% Eust. 887; dprorohoxia in Theophr. H. P. 9. 20, 4, and Diosc. 3. 4; —Adxev, 76, Hipp. 572. 45. “dpioré-hoxos, ov, well-born, Epigr. in Cramer An. Par. 4. 280. Aupys [iv], ov, 6, skilled in the use of the lyre, Byz. dpioré-pavris, ews, 6, best of prophets, Soph. Ph. 1338: pl. dpraro- payribes as fem., Inscr. Ceph. in C. 1. 1929. dpuoropdxos, ov, (ax) best in fight, Pind. P. 10. 3. 2. ast apirrepevw — Apxas. n. pr., Hdt., etc. :—hence Adj. —pdxetos, ov, Anth, P. 13.8. (The ac- cent is doubtful.) dpvorov, 74, the morning meal, breakfast, twice in Hom., évrivoyro dpiorov Il, 24. 124, Od. 16, 2, where it is taken at sunrise ; so in Aesch, it is the first meal, dpirra, Seinva, 5épra 0 aipetobat Tpira Fr, 181, cf. Ag. 331 ;—later, breakfast was called dxpariopa, and then apioroy was the mid-day meal, our /uncheon, the Roman prandium, as may be seen from Thuc. 4. 90., 7. 81; dpiroy aipeiobat, moeioOar to be getting breakfast or luncheon, Hat. 3. 26., 6.78; dm dpiorov péxpt BeiAns Arist. H. A. 9. 32, 7, cf. dpiordw. (Acc. to Pott, akin to 7pt, and perhaps to our ear-ly: but it had the digamma in Hom., if we adopt the common reading évrivovro dpiorov. Since however a is long in Att., it has been proposed to read évrdvoy7’ dpiorov.) dpioré-vikos, ov, granting glorious victory, xparos Ath. 457 B. conquering gloriously, Manass. Chron. 3188. dpioro-vopia, 7), (véuw) =dpioroxparia, Suid., Hesych. dpioré-voos, ov, of the best disposition, Anth. P. 9. 213. apirrémais, matdos, 6,=dpioros mais, Byz. dpioro-rrovéw, fo prepare breakfast, ra dprororoovpeva things prepared for breakfast, Xen. Hell, 4. 5, 1:—mostly used in Med. to get one’s breakfast, Thuc. 4. 30., 8.95, Xen. An. 3. 3, I., 4. 3, 9, etc. 5. mpusrome- motnvro is a faulty form in Xen. Hell. 4. 5,8, now corrected from Mss, —Hence Subst. dproromovia, 7), Onesand. 12. Gpiororodtreurhs, od, 6, (woAirevw) honoured as best administrator, C. I. 1340, sq., v. Bockh p, 611 :—dpioroToAirns, 6, best citizen, C. 1. 1226. 10:—hence dpteromodtreta, 4), best government, Ib. 1242, 1343, 1346 :—these are all Peloponn, inscriptions. Gpirro-1révos, ov, working excellently, xeipes Pind, O. 7.94; péAwoa Pseudo-Phocyl. 159; Manetho has pl. dporomovfjes, as if from —roveds, 4.512. Adv. -vws, Cramer An. Par. 4. 281. dpirrorécea, %, (réo1s) viupn wife of a noble husband, Opp. C. 1. 6. Gprorompayéw, (mpa-yos) = dpiorevdw, Eust. 621. 39 :—Subst., —mpagia, %, excellence of conduct, Id, Opusc. 152. 8, in pl. dpieros, 7, ov, (with Art. Ep. dpioros, Att. dpioros : v. “Apns, *dpw):— best in its kind, and so in all sorts of relations, like d-ya0és, to which it serves as Sup. (cf. dpetwv) : I. of persons, 1. the best in birth and rank, noblest, and so much like dpusrevs, a chief, ’Apyelwv of aprorot Il. 4. 260, cf. 2, 580., 6. 209; dproros env, moAd 5e wreloTous dye Aaovs 2. 580 ; so, Ocav iraros Kal dpioros 19. 258; marpds maévtwy dpiarov Soph. El. 366; dvipGy Tay dplorwy dpudtn, opp. to Sjpos, Hat. 3. 81. 2. best in any way, bravest, dvopdy ad péy ap. env TeAapwmos Alas Il. 2.768, cf. 7. 50, etc.; olwvorédwy by’ dp. 6.76. b,c. dat. modi, BovA® pera mavras .. €thev diptoros 9. 54, etc.; &yxeow eivar dpiorovs Od. 4. 211. ¢. c. ace. rei, clos dpote Il. 3. 39; yuxjy dp. Ar. Nub. 1048. d. c. inf., dpeoror paxecOa Xen. Cyr. 5. 4,44; dp. ScaBodrds evdéxecPa readiest to give ear to calumnies, Hdt. 3.80; dp. dmaraa@ar best, i. e. easiest, to cheat, Thuc. 3. 38. 8. best in point of moral goodness, ets twa Eur, Alc. 83; of dp. dwmA@s kar’ dperhy Arist. Pol. 4. 7, 2. 4, best, most useful, tide Eur. Fr. 194; ai7@ Id. Heracl. 5. II. of animals, things, etc. : 1. best, finest, dporos.. timmy Il, 2. 762; pido, bdv Od. 9. 432., 14.414; TevXE dptora Il. 15.616; x@pos Od. 5-442; worapay dpioros Hdt. 4. go. 2. neut., 7a apiora, =dpio~ teia, Soph. El. 1097. III. neut. pl. as Adv. dpiora, best, most ex- cellently, Il, 3. 110, Od. 13. 365, Hat. 1. 193, al., Plat., ete. ; dpiord ye, in answers, wel/ said, Plat. Theaet. 163 C: in late Greek also dpiorws. Gptoro-cKoTos, ov, hkeen-sighted, Tzetz. Il. _ Aprororedif, to follow or imitate Aristotle, Strabo 609 :—Adj. Apiorotéhevos, a, ov, Aristotelic, Cic. Att. 13.9; also "ApioroteAtkés, ty év, Luc. Demon. 56; Adv, -«@s, Tatian. Gpirro-réxvys, ov, 6, best artificer, of Zeus, Pind. Fr. 29. Hence, -rexvia, %, excellent workmanship, Byz. dpioro-réKos, ov, =dpioroydvos, bearing the best children, Opp. C. 3. 62, Epigr. Gr. 896 :—poét. fem. dpirroréxeta, Theocr. 24. 72, Tryph. 401, C.1. 23843 cf, ducapororéxea. II. Pass. dpioTéroxos, ov, =dpiordyovos, born of the best parents, yévva Eur. Rhes. 909. : dpirroupyés, dy, (*épyw) doing illustrious things; hence Verb -ovpyéw, and Subst. -otpynpa, 74, all Byz. Apirrodavetos, a, ov, of Aristophanes, Dion. H. de Rhet. 11. 10. dpioro-pévos, ov, slaying chiefs, Tzetz. Antehom. 322. Gpioro-puys, és, of best nature, Ecphantus ap. Stob. 324. 2, in Sup. -éoraros, apioré-xalkos, ov, with, producing finest brass, Schol. Lyc. 854. Gpiors-xerp, 5, 7, won by the repre ayav Soph. Aj. oie dpior-ddiv, ivos, 6, %, bearing the best children, Anth. Plan. 221. apr-odadts, és, very slippery or treacherous, odd6s Od. 17. 196. apipivas, és, very famous, f. 1. for derpavhs in Anth. P. 7. 698. Spippibyjs, és, (ppafopar) easy to be known, very clear or manifest, like dplyvarros, dpifnros, ofjya Il. 23. 326; doréa . . dpeppadéa rérverae Il. 23. 240: so poét. Adv. ~déws, plainly, dp. dyopevec Theocr. 25. 176. 2. clear to the sight, bright with light, Theocr. 24. 39. II. very thoughtful, wise, Soph. Ant. 347 (as in Eust. 135. 25). apippev, ov, gen. ovos, (phy) very wise or prudent, Suid. dpixdopar or dppty-, v. sub dvapprydopar. dpxddos, 4, Dor. for dpxndos. Gprdvn, 7, the bar on which the threads of the warp are fastened, Hesych. ; v. Schneid. Ind, Script. R. R. p. 375. (Cf. dpkus.) Apxds, dos, 5, an Arcadian, pl. ’Apkdbes Il. 2. 611: also as Adj., 6, pias Sets tee 262 Pa bg %, the country Arcadia, Il.; “ » Ap. Rh. 2. 1052; -tOev, Ib. 1.161 -—’Apkt , Arcadian, Merle’. Tpop, 8. 2 Sen tOL ges ero ae ti TI. * ” apketos — apea. &pxetos, a, ov, =dpxrenos, of a bear, oréap Diosc. 2. 21. 2. mv0} apres an arctic, northern blast, Aesch. Fr, 127 b, as restored metri grat. by Lob. for dpitos: cf. dmaperias. IL. dpkeov, 74, a plant, the burdock, Diosc. 4. 107. Gpkedvrws, Att. contr. dpkotvres, Adv. part. pres. of dpréw, enough, abundantly, dprovvrws éxe ’tis enough, Aesch. Cho. 892, Thuc. 1. 22, Hipp. 660, etc. ; dpx. Aéyerae Arist. Eth. N. 1. 13, 9; dpkedvras exe rou Biov Vit. Hom. ; dpe. wodm«ns swift enough, Xen. Eq. 3, 12. dpxeai-yuios, ov, limb-strengthening, olvos Antiph. Tpavp. 1. 8. dpkécusos, 7, ov, assisting, Beds C. I. 9899. dpxeors, ews, 7), (dpeéw) help, aid, service, Soph. O. C. 73, C. I. (add.) 2465 f:—also dpxeopa, 76, Hesych. Gpxerés, 4, dv, sufficient, Chrysipp. Tyan. ap. Ath. 113 B, Ev. Matth. 6. 34: esp., dpeerdy [éort] it is enough, c. inf., Anth. P. 9.749. Adv. —ras, Epiphan. apxeviwos, 7, ov, of juniper, Lxx (2 Paral. 2. 8). dpxevdis, i50s, , a juniper-berry, Theophr. Odor. 5 (Schneid.), Plut. 2. 383 D:—hence dGpkev®@Sirns, ov, 6, made from juniper-berries, or Jlavoured with them, oivos Diosc. 5. 46. 2. =sq., Plut. 2. 383 E. Epevdos, 7, a juniper-bush, Lat. juniperus, ‘Theophr. H. P. 3. 3, 1, Theocr. 5. 97. dpkéw: impf. 3 sing. pe Il, Att.: fut. dpxéow: aor. Hpxeca, Dor. dpxeca Pind. O. 9. 5 :—Med., aor. #pxeodpny, but for Apkéow, which is corrupt, in Aesch. Eum. 213 Wellauer proposed 7déow, Herm. Fe ot. —Pass., inf. dpxéeoOar Hat. 9. 33, dpretoOar Hes. Fr. 181: pf. Apxeopar Sthen. in Stob. 332. 60: aor. jpxéoOny Plut., Luc.: fut, dprec@hoopat Dion. H. 6. 94, Diod., etc. (For the Root, v. sub dAaAxe: cf. Buttm. Lexil. v. xparopety 4.) Like Lat. arceo, to ward off, keep off, c. dat. pers. et acc. rei, caxos, 7d of pxece Avypdy dAcOpoy Il. 20. 289, cf. 6. 16, Simon. ro4 (159), and Att.; 6s of dad xpods jpxet bAcOpor Il. 13. 440, cf. 15.5343 wore Tovrd + dpkéoat Soph. Aj. 535; ws ove dpréco 70 ph ob ..Oaveiv would not keep off death, Ib. 727. 2. c, dat. only, to defend, muxwods 5€ of hpkece Ocupnf Il. 15. 529; odd’ Hpkece Owpne, without dat., 13. 371, 397 :—to assist, succour, 21. 131, Od. 16. 261, Soph. Aj. 824, El. 322, Eur. Hec. 1164. II. in Soph. Aj. 439, to make good, achieve, ov8 épya pelw .. dpxécas. III. mostly in Att., and always in Prose, to be strong enough, to be sufficient, to suffice, c. inf., first in Pind. O. 9.5; dpx® oo capnvioa Aesch., Pr. 621, cf. Soph. O. T. 4209; also c. part., dpxéow Ovjoxovoa my death will suffice, Id. Ant. 547, cf. Eur. Alc. 383; évdov dpxeirw pévow let him be con- tent to stay within, Soph. Aj. 76; dpxeiy yap olpar play Woyny Trad éxrivoveav Id. O. C. 498; and so in Prose, as ob fpkovy tarpot Oepa- mevovres Thue, 2. 47; ellipt., copods wamep at’ pydiy uGdrdov* dpré- covat yap [cool dvres] Eur. Heracl. 576, where we should say, it will suffice: dpx. ets Tt Xen. Cyr. 8. 2,53; Tabrdy dpe? ch@ppa én ndvras holds equally for all, Plat. Theaet. 174 A. 2. c. dat. to suffice, be enough for, satisfy, Tatra rot obk hpkeoe Hat. 2. 115, cf. Soph. Ant. 308, etc.: to be a match for, yidos apkécatu ool y wmdrrcpéve Id. Aj. 1123; mpds rods wodeputious Thue. 6.84. 8. absol. fo be enough, be strong enough, avail, endure, Bios dpreirw Aesch. Ag. 1314; ovdty yap iipxe réga Id. Pers. 278: to hold out, last, émt mrelorov dpkeiv Thuc. 1. 71, cf. Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 31; 008 ér’ dpe@ I can hold out no longer, Soph. El. 186; Gore dpweiy mAoia to be sufficient in number, Xen. An..5. 1, 13 :—often in part., dpxav, odca, ody, sufficient, enough, Bios dpxéay bnfjv Hat. 1. 31, cf. 7.28; 7a dpeodvra a-sufficiency, Eur. Supp. 865; dpxotica dmoAoyia Antipho 120. 21; dprodyra or Ta dprodyra éxetv Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 1, Symp. 4, 35: cf. dpeedyrws. 4. impers., dpel pot ’tis enough for me, 1 am well content, c. inf., obe dpréce 700” iyiv ..eixew Soph. Aj. 1242, cf. Xen. An. 5. 8, 13: c. acc. et inf., éuol Hey dpke? Todrov év Sépos pévew Soph. Aj. 80; also, dpe? por dd .., édv .., rt .., Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 14, cf. Mem. I. 4, 13. 4. 4,9: also, ep’ dpxet Bovdevew tis enough that I.., Aesch. Theb. 248; od« dpxovy pot éort c, acc. et inf., Antipho 116. 30:—also absol., dr’ ovér’ dpxe? since there is no help, Soph. Tr. 711; dpretv Sore? por it seems enough, seems good, Id. El. 1364. IV. in Pass. to be satisfied with, c. dat. rei, pn obnért dpéeaOax Tovrour Hat. 9. 33, cf. Plat. Ax. 369E, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 5, Anth. P, 6. 329, etc. 2) oft. in late Prose, c. inf. to be contented to do, Polyb. 13. 2, 4, etc. dpxn, 4, the Lat. arca, C. 1. 3484. dpxndos, 6, a young panther, Ael. N. A. 7. 47, Callix. ap. Ath. 201 ©; Dor. apxados Inscr. Vet. Lacon, in C. I. 15. dpxwos, a, ov, Arat. 741, os, ov Anth. P. 11. 59: (dpéw):—Ep. Adj. to be relied on, sure, certain, ot of émera dpmiov éccetra puyéeyv he shall have no hope to escape, Il. 2. 393; viv dpmov H arodéoOat He oaw0ijvat one of these is certain, to perish or be saved, 15. 5025 puados 5€ of dpxios Zora a sure reward, 10. 303, cf. Od. 18. 358, Hes. Op. 368; Bios dpxtos Ib. 499, 575. Il. enough, sufficient, dpxiov eiipety to be sure of having enough, Ib. 349, Ap. Rh. 2. 799, Theocr. 8. 13 ; éppa .. cptoww dpros etn that he might be a shatch for them, Id. 25. 190; déuas dpxos Opp. C. 3. 185: helpful, useful, Nic. Th. 508, Opp. C. 3-173; dpka vovcaw remedies against .., Nic. Th. 837. dpxvos, y. sub dpxetos. i dpxos, 5 and 4, =dprros, a bear, Acl. N. A. I. 31, Bust. 1156. 16, Suid. ; cf, Jac. Anth. P. 3. p. 696. dpxos, cos, 76, (dpxéw) a defence against, Bedéwv Alcae. 1. apkotvrws, contr. for dpredvrws. . &pkreta, %, (dpxreto) an offering at the Brauronia, Schol. Ar. Lys. 645. Gprreos, a, ov, of a bear, cited from Diosc. : 2 Gpxréov, verb. Adj., I. of dpxopat, one must begin, Soph. Aj. 853; dpxiv dperéov one must make a beginning, Plat. Tim. 48 B; sai 219 Tivos dpkréov one must begin with .. , Strabo 685. II, of dpxw, one must govern, Twi twos Isocr. 298 D. 2. in pass, sense, Soph, O. T. 628 (ubi v. Schneidewin), you must be ruled, i.e. obey ; so owaréov is pass. in Ar. Lys. 501; od karamAneréov in Dinarch. 103. 45. Gpkrevw, to serve as an Gprros (signf, 11), Lys. ap. Harp. s. v.: so in Med., Schol. Ar. Lys. 645. apert (sub. Sopa), 1%, a bear-skin, Anaxandr. Incert. 14. j apxrfpta,a dub. word in Eur. Fr.698 paxndper.rixns; Bernh.dAcrhpia. apxrixés, 7, dv, near the bear, arctic, northern, méAos Arist. Mund. 2, 5, Polyb. ap. Strabo 96; év 7@ 4. pépe C. I. 4449. dpxricés, 7, dv, (dpxopar) beginning, Apoll. de Constr. p. 17. Krtov, 76, a plant, Diosc. 4. prt Nic. Th. 841, Galen.; acc. to Adams, verbascum ; others lappa. dpxrios, ov, arctic, northern, Nonn. D. 38. 329. Gpkro-eSis, és, bear-like, Origen. c. Cels. p. 295; and —popdos, ov, Tzetz. Lyc. ; dpxros, %, the bear, esp. Ursus arctos, the brown bear, Od. 11. 611, h. Hom. Merc. 223, Ven, 160, Hdt. 4. 191, and Att.: the instances of the masc. are dub. (as in Arist. Color. 6, 12), the fem. being used even when both sexes are included, Id. H. A. 5. 2, 5. 2. dpxros, %, the constellation Ursa Major, also called dpaga, the Wain, (as the star just behind is called ’Apxrodpos, “Apxropidag, the Bear-ward, or Bowrns the Waggoner),”Apkroy 6°, iv kat Guagay énticdnow wadéovrat IU. 18. 487, Od. 5. 273 (where also is added of 8 dupopds éort AoeTpwv ‘NKeavoio, i.e. the only constellation then known by name, vy. Lewis, Astron. of Ancients, p. 59); 7a bd thy dproy dotknra Hdt. 5.10; apxrov orpo- pases xédevbor Soph. Tr. 131; Palamedes discovered “Apxrov orpopds Te kat Kuvos Yuxpay dvow Id. Fr. 379. 11; in pl., the greater and lesser bears, Arat. 27, Strabo 132, 133, Cic. N. D. 2. 41. 8. the region of the bear, the North, sing., Hdt. 1. 148., 5. 10, Eur. El. 733, etc. ; amd rod ad. C. I. 1534, al.; pl., Hipp. Aér. 282, 291, Plat. Criti. 118 B, etc. ;—1) érépa dperos the south pole, Arist. Meteor. 2. 5, 11:—cf. dpx- TiKOs. II. dpxros, 4, at Athens a girl appointed to the service of Artemis Brauronia or ’Apxnyérts, Eur. Fr. 767, At. Lys. 645; cf. dpxreda, dpxereta.—On the mythol. connection of this office with apxros a bear, cf. Miiller Prolegom. zur Mythol. p. 73. III. a kind of crab, prob. Cancer arctus L., Arist. H. A. 5. 17, 10, v. Meineke ad Mnesim. ‘Inn. 1. 45 (3. 574): (Cf. the forms dpros, dpxndos; Skt/ rkshas (for arkshas); Lat. ursus (for urcsus).) ; apxro-rpodos, ov, keeping bears, a bear-ward, Procop. *Apsritpos 6, (otpos, guard,) Arcturus, Bear-ward (v. sub dprros I. 2), Hes. Op. 564, 608. Il. the time of his rising, the middle of September, Hipp. Aér. 288 ; the time when cattle left the upland pastures (being stormy, Plaut. Rud. prol. 69 sq.), Soph. O. T. 1137; the time of the vintage, Plat. Legg. 844 E; ’Aperovpov émrodat Thuc. 2. 78, etc. *Apro-pvAak, 6,="Apxrodpos, Arat. 92. . apkrd-xeup, xetpos, 6, 7, with bear’s paws for hands, Artemid. 5. 49. apxridos, 6, a young bear, Poll. 5. 15. : dpkrgos, a, ov, (dperos) of a bear, yevierow Nonn. D. 2. 44. 2. arctic, northern, Dion. P. 519, etc.; Ta dpxr@a the arctic regions, the north, Luc. Contempl. 5. pkiis, vos, #: pl., nom, and acc. dpxves, —vas, Att. contr. dpxus —a net, hunter's net, Lat. cassis, Aesch. Ag. 1116, Cho. 1000; more freq. in pl, & dpitov wérraney Id. Eum. 147; dpedwy podeiv éow Eur. Cycl. 196; so also in Xen., dpeus lordvar to set nets, Cyn. 6,5; els Tas dpus épmlarew to be caught in them, Ib. 10; dpxus mAéxeo@ar Ar. Lys. 790: —metaph., dpxves £tpous the toils, i.e. perils, of the sword, Eur. Med. 1278; obs... Adpodiras dpxvow Onpedopev C. 1. 511. 6.—Also dpkvov, 76, Hesych. (who has also dpxvdov), E. M. 2. a hair-net, woman's head-dress, Hesych. (Prob. from 4/APK, a development of 4/AP (v. *dpw), to fit, join: hence also dpxedvn, and perh. dpaxv7; alse (by change of p into A) #AaKkérn: Curt. no. 489.) : apkv-cricta, 7, or -ordctov, 76, a line of nets, Xen. Cyn. 6, 6. apkvoriitos, 7, ov, Eur. Or. 1420 (dpxus, iornpe) :—beset with nets, és dpxvoraray unxavay éwreceiy into the hunter’s toils, Eur. 1. c. " dpxtorara, Ta, surrounding toils or nets, a place beset with nets, Aesch. Eum. 112, Soph. El. 1476; in Aesch. Ag. 1375 Elmsley’s Suggestion, 7- povijs dpedarar’ dy is generally received for mnpoviy dpxiorarov; while in Pers. 98, Herm. restored dpxvas”Ara for dprdorara, cf. the Schol. dpkvapéw, to watch the nets, of a spider, Ael. V. H. 1, 2. ee metaph. fo keep carefully, xahdbia Eupol. Incert. 18. épxvwpés, 6, (odpos) a watcher of nets, Xen. Cyn. 6, 5, etc. Gppa, aros, 76, a chariot, esp. a war-chariot, with two wheels, Hom. ; often in pl. for sing., Il. 4. 366, etc.; trmous bp’ dppact (evyrdvat Aesch. Pers. 190, Eur. Hipp. 111; trmovs ig’ dpyara dyew Aesch. Pr. 465 ; m@dov .. Cvyévr’ ev Gppacw Id. Pers. 795; opp. to dpydpaga (v. sub v.): also a racing-chariot drawn by horses, opp. to 6xnua (a mule-car), Pind. Fr. 73; 4. réAeov C. I. 1591. 6, al. ;—but, dpparoav dxqpara Eur: Supp. 662, cf. Phoen. 1190. 2. chariot and horses, the yoked chariot, Hom. ; Gppa ré0purmoy, rerpdopor, etc., Pind. and Trag.; metaph., 7pl- moadov dppa Sapévwr, of three goddesses, Eur. Andr. 277. 3. the team, the horses, éppacw évbdiiwor xévrpov Id. H. F. 881; Gppara.. gvoGvra kat mvéovra Ar. Pax gol; appara rpépew, like dpyarorpo+ peiv, to keep chariot horses for racing, Xen. Hier. 11, 53 pparos Tpo- evs Plat. Legg. 834 B. II. a mountain district in Attica, where omens from lightning were watched for: hence the proverb, énérav dv “Apparos dorpdin, i.e. seldom or never, Strabo 404, Plut. 2. 679 C. (Cf. dppyds, dppdte, and vy. sub *dpa.) : ‘ dppa, aos, 76, (aipw) that which one takes: food, cited from Hipp. dppa, 7, (apo) union, love,a Delphic word, Plut, 2.769 A; cf. dppn, dprvs: 220 &ppada, in Diosc. 2. 53, Syrian name of wild rue. 5 sete) %, sustenance allotted, Sood, Hes. Op. 558, 765; app. €upnvos - 10. 35; stores in a ship, Ap. Rh. 1. 393. Gpp-dpata, 78,7), @ covered carriage, generally mentioned in connexion with Persian luxury ; so Xerxes, when tired in his march, peraBaiveoxe €« Tod Gpparos és dppdpagay Hat. 7. 41, cf. 83; the ambassadors to Persia are represented as éf’ dppapagay padOaxa@s xaraxeiyevor, Ar. Ach. 70; used by women, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 40., 6. 4, 11. Gppaot-Soumos, ov, sounding in the chariot, Pind. ap. Eust. Opusc. 56. 18. ve ce fe xt, %, @ squadron of sixteen war-chariots, Asclepiod. Tact. 8, 2 échly, G&ppareos, ov, (Gppa) of or belonging to a chariot, odpryyes Pseudo- Eur. I. A. 230; dippos Xen. Cyr. 6.4, 9; (dpudrwov, Apoll. Lex. s. v. dippor, is prob. a copyist’s error) ; tpoxds Plut. 2. 890 A; péAos dpp. a kind of dirge, Eur. Or. 1385; but, vépos dpy. a martial strain, Plut. 2. 335 4, 1133 E; v. Miiller Eum., § 19. 1. pared, (dpya) to drive a chariot, go. therein, Eur. Or. 994. dpparnyés, ov, (dy) driving a chariot, Parthen. 6. 3. Gpparndaota, %, chariot-driving, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 27, Luc. Demosth. 23. GpparnAdréw, to go in a chariot, drive it, Hdt. 5.9, Xen. Symp. 4, 6. GpparnAdrns, ov, 6, a charioteer, Pind. P. 5.154, Soph.El. 700, Xen., etc. Gppar-nAdros, ov, driven round by a chariot ot wheel, e.g. Ixion, Eur. H. F, 1297. 2. 650s apy. a road for chariots, ambi. Protr. p. 60. Gppariatos, a, ov, =dpydreios, Theodoret. Gpparifopar, Dep. to go in a chariot, Lyc. 1319. Gppariov, 76, Dim. of dpya, Gloss. Gpparirys [7], ov, 6, using chariots, Avdot Philostr. 788. dpparo-Spopéw, to race in a chariot, Apollod. 3. 5, 5; vulg. -dpapéw, v. Lob. Phryn. 617: -Spopta, 1, @ chariot-race, Strabo 236: —Spépos, ov, running a chariot-race, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 1333. dpparées, cocoa, ev, =dpydreos, Critias ap. Ath. 28 C. dp os, ov, (*épyw) building chariots, Schol. Il. 24. 277. Gpparo-eota, 7%, (7i0nue) a chariot-race, Eust. 226. 6. Gpparé-xriimos éroBos, the rattling din of chariots, Aesch. Theb. 204. Gpparo-paxéw, o fight in or from a chariot, Eust. 1088. 27. Apparomnyéw, zo build a chariot, Poll. 7.115. Gpparomnyés, dv, (whyvupt) building chariots: app. dvnp a wheel- wright, chariot-maker, Il. 4. 485, Theocr. 25. 247. dpparornt, iyos, 6, 7, =foreg., Theognost. ap. A. B. 1340. Gpparo-rovds, dv, =dpyaro-mnyéds, Joseph. A. J. 6. 3, 5 :—hence Verb —trovéw, Poll. 7-113; Subst. —movta, 7, Eccl. dpparo-orpodgos, ov, turning, guiding chariots, Manass. Chron. 2030, etc.:—also Subst. -7rpopta, 7, Id. dpparo-rpodew, to keep chariot-horses, esp. for racing, Xen. Ages. 9, 6, Diog. L. 4.173; cf. dpa 2. dpparo-rpodla, 7, a keeping of chariot-horses, Xen. Hier. 11, 5. G&pparo-rpoxid, 7), the wheel-track of a chariot, Luc. Demosth. 23, Acl.N. A. 2. 37 :—Hom, uses poét. forin dpparpoxey Il. 23. 505, cf. Q.Sm. 4.516. GpparwAla, 4, acc. to the Schol. for dpyarnAagia, with a play on dpaprwata (if indeed that word should not be read, as Bentley proposed), Ar. Pax 415. p) 7s, ov, 6, =dpparnddrns, Welcker Syll. Epigr. 212 ; also, 4ppe- Aarhp, fpos, 6, Epigr. Gr. 618. 1. Eppeva, 7a, the tackling or rigging of a ship, sails, etc., like érAa, Hes. Op. 806, Theocr. 22. 13. 2. surgical apparatus, joined with Spyava, Hipp. Offic. 740, cf. Fract. 773. 8. like éwAa, any tools, téxrovos Anth. P. 6. 205, cf. 11. 203, C. I. 2058 B. 52., 2694 b. 4.— Properly neut. of dppevos, v. sub pi A B.V. I. *Appevla, 4, Armenia, peyadn and 4 puxpd Strabo 521, 527 sq., cf. App. Mithr. 105 :-—’. , a, ov, an Armenian; but also as Adj, Armenian, elsewhere’Appeviakés, 7, dv, Strabo 530:—’Appenort, Ady. in Armeni “sem éoxevaobat Id. 500. Gppevite, fut. iow, to sail, Gloss, appévov, 74, v. sub odvbug. dpph, %, (*dpw) junction, union, Q. Sm. 12. 361, ef. dppa:—of the suture of a wound, Hipp., v. Erotian. et Galen. Lex. p. 80, 442. Sppoyh, 4, (4pud¢w) a joining, junction, Luc. Zeux. 6: a fitting, ar- rangement, Polyb. 6. 18, 1, etc. 2. the joining of two bones without motion,=atpovots and opp. to dpOpov, Galen. 19. 460, cf. 2. 734. II. =dppovia, Eupol. Aly. 13. ab 6Bi0s, a, ov, (dppdtw) fitting together, dpa Theogn. 422. II. well-fitting, accordant, agreeable, \d. 724; detmvoy Pind. N. 1. 313 app. rémos a suitable place, Arist. Plant. 2.6, 1:—cf. dppd¢w 11, 2 :—Adv. -as, Plut. Aristid. 24. cc oe a rae S.o-riais, és, of accordant mould or cast, Hesych. rsape etry és, of accordant nature, Walz Rhett. 6. 556. Gppotévrws, Adv. part. pres. of sq., suitably, Diod. 3.15; the form dpyorrévrws in Philo Belop. 82. Gppotw, Att. (except in Trag.) dppérrw, Lob. Phryn. p. 2413 Dor. , Theocr. 1. 53 (in compd. ép-); the part. dppdocoy (Hipp. Art. 802) should prob. be fut. dpydcov :—impf. fppoCor, Dor. dpa Pind. N. 8. 20: fut. dppdow Trag., Att.: aor. fjppoca Il., Att., Dor. Gppoga (ovy-) Pind. N. 10. 22:—pf. ijppoxa Arist. Post. 24, 8:—Med., Ep. imper. dpudteo Od., —dfov Att.: fut. -d¢opar Galen.: aor. hppoodpny Hadt., Att., Dor. dppogdynvy Aleman 66:—Pass., pf. ijpyoopar Eur., Plat., Ion. Gppoopar Hdt.; Dor. 3 sing. Gppoxra: Ecphant. ap. Stob. 333. 48: aor. HpudcOny Plat., Dor. dpyoxOnv Diog. L. 8. 85: fut. dppo- bs a ae Soph. O. C. go8. (From 4/AP, v. *dpw.) To fit together, join, esp. of joiner’s work, Hppooer GdrAAaow (sc. TA Sodpa) Od. 5. 247; and in Med. to put together, appdgeo xahk@ sipstar | dpyara — dppovia, oxediny Ib. 162 (so, vavmnyiay dpydtew Eur, Cycl. 460) ;—so, dp- _pétev xalrav orepdvor: Pind. I, 7 (6). 54, cf infr. 11; dpBiraaw dp. médas Eur. Hipp. 1189; dpp. mda ént yaias to plant foot on ground, Id. Or. 233; apy. odds ixvia Simon. (?) 175 3 so, €v hovxaia Bdce: Béow dppooa (imper. aor. med.) Soph, O. C. 1985 apy. adtous immous to furnish them with .., Eur. Rhes. 27. b. app. Sueny eis twa to bring judgment upon him, Solon 35. 17; dpy. Tut. Biorov to accord him life, Pind. N. 7.145: to prepare, make ready, Soph. Tr. 687 ; rodrdviov Hegesipp. “Ad. I. 19 :—Med. to accommodate, suit one- self, mpos Thy mapovcay .. dpp. TUxnv Philem. Incert. 84; mpés Twa Luc. Merc, Cond. 30; dpp. atveaw to acquire it, Hipp. Lex. 2. of marriage, dppdew tut tiv Ovyarépa tiwds to betroth ones daughter to any one, Hdt. g. 108; also, Gpp. képq dvipa Pind. P. 9. 207; dpp. yapor, yapous, etc., Ib. 9, 21, Eur. Phoen. 411 :—Med. to betroth to oneself, take to wife, riv Ovyarépa tuvds Hdt. 5. 32, 47 (but Med.=Act., 2 Ep. Cor. 11. 2) :—Pass., #ppdo@a Ovyarepa rivds yuvaixa to have her betrothed or married to one, Hdt. 3. 137, v- Wyttenb. Plut. 2.138 C; cf. Soph. Ant. 570. 8. to bind fast, app. tiva év apxvor Eur. Bacch. 231. 4. to set in order, regulate, govern, orpardv Pind. N. 8. 20; o7dép’ dppoooy Eur. Tro. 758; so in Pass., [vépo.s] od« ddAAoow appoaOhaera Soph. O. C. 908 ; KovovaAals ppyoT= réunv 1 was ruled or drilled with cuffs, Ar. Eq. 1236:—esp. among the Lacedaemonians, ¢o act as harmostes, év tats ToAeow Xen, Rep. Lac. 14, 2, etc.; c. acc., dppooriy ds fppoce riv *Actay Luc, Tox. 17. 5. to arrange according to the laws of harmony, compose, évea Pind. P. 3. 202; ¢o tune instruments, Plat. Phileb. 56 A, Phaedo 85 E; etc.:—so in Med., dpudrrecda: dppoviay to maintain a harmony, Id. Rep. 591 D; dpp. tv Avpay to tune one’s lyre, Ib. 349 E; cf, évap- pbtw I. 2;—péan és 7 dp. to adapt them ¢o a subject, Simon, 116: —Pass., of the lyre, #ppdo8a to be in tune, Plat. Theaet. 144 E; Hppo- apévos in harmony or tune, Id, Phaedo 85 E; dppoviav KkadAlaTny App. Id. Lach. 188 D; dpovonrix) Kal jppoopevn Yuxh at harmony with itself, Id. Rep. 554 E. II. intr. to fit, fit well, of clothes or armour, fppoce 8 avr@ [Odpnt] Il. 3. 3333; “Extopt 8 tjpyoce revxe ént xpot 17. 210; éo8as dpudcowa -yulos Pind. P. 4.141; dp’ dppd- cet por (sc. 7a. brodhpara); Ar. Thesm. 263; apy. womep wept méda to fit like a shoe, Plat. Com. Sxev. 3; Odpag wept 7a orépva dppd tw Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 16. 2. to fit, suit, be adapted, fit for, rwt Soph. O. T. 902, El. 1293, Andoc. 29. 31; 768 ov ém ddAdoy dppdcer shall not be adapted to another, Soph. Ant. 1318; émi rivos Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 5 (cf épappyd fw); eis 71, mpds Tt Plat. Polit. 289 B, 286 D, Isocr. 21 D. 3. impers., dpud(et, it is fitting, Lat. decet, c. acc. et inf., ovyav dv appd Coe ae Soph. Tr. 731; c. inf. only, Adyous ods appdcet Aéyerv Dem. 240. 2; nayra 7a, To.adra dppdérre Kadelv Id, 568. 10, cf. 1025.43 7a Toadra pnOjva dy app. Isocr. 203 E. 4. part., dppdtrwy, ovaa, ov, fitting, suitable, Pind. P. 4. 229; dAAnAos Plat. Lach. 188 A, al. (v. sub ox7- pari{w It); c. gen., Polyb. 1. 44,1; mpds te Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 5, etc. 5. to be in tune, Adpay entre’ ews dv dppdon Macho ’Emor. I. 9. Gppot, Adv.=dpri, dpriws, just, newly, lately, Aesch, Pr. 645 (ubi v. Blomf.), Theocr. 4. 51, Lyc. 106, 2. just, gradually, a little, Hipp. 591. 47., 675. 18, etc.—Written dpy@ by Pind. acc. to Eust. Opusc. 57. 18, cf. E. M. 144. 19, and by Pherecr. (Mera. 4) as cited by Erotian ; but as the word is Doric, Meineke justly doubts its usage in Att. Comedy. (It is, in fact, an old dat. from dpyds; cf. otxot, médot, etc.) &ppodoyéw, to join, pile together, rapov Anth. P. 7. 554: Pass., #pHo- Aoynpévoy TO mpd Eavrod closely connected with .., Sext. Emp. M. 5. 78. Cf. cvvapporoyéw. Gppoddyos, ov, (dpyds, Aéyw) joining together, Gloss.: —Aéynors, 7, a joinin , Gloss,: -Aoyla, }, a joining, union, Eccl. Gppovia, 4, (dpud{w) a means of joining, a fastening of some kind, used to keep ship-planks together, youors pv . . kal dppovinaww dpnpev Od. 5. 248; of the ship, dpp’ dy . . év dpyovinow aphpp Ib. 361; of. Appovidns. , 2. a joining, joint, as between a ship’s planks, tds app. éndnrwoav 7H BUBAw caulked the joints with byblus, Hdt. 2. 96; rav apponay Siaxackovady the joints wide-gaping, Ar. Eq. 533; ai TaVv Aiba dpp.., in masonry, Diod. 2.8, cf. Paus. 8.8,8., 9.33,7 :—in anatomy, the union of two bones by mere apposition, Galen. 2. 255, im pl. 3. a frame, frame-work, pryvis dppoviay . . Adpas Soph. Fr. 232, cf. Plat. Symp. 187 A; esp. of the human frame, déppoviny dvadvépev dvOpwrovo Pseudo-Phoc. 96, cf. Hipp. 277. 6.,749 D; xwAwy éxAvros apy. Anth. P. 7. 283 3 Tas Gpp. diaxadrG Tod cu&paros, of a worm-out, decaying person, Epicr. "Avr. 2. 19. b. of the mind, dverpomos yuvatkay apy. women s perverse temperament, Eur. Hipp. 162. II. a covenant, agreement, in pl. (like cwvOjKa, etc.), pdprupo .. Kal émicxorot dpyo- vedv Il. 22. 255. III. settled government, order, Tav Aids app. Aesch. Pr. 551. IV. harmony, as a concord of sounds, first as a mythical personage, Harmonia, Music, companion of Hebé, the Graces and the Hours, h. Hom. Ap. 195; child of the Muses, Eur. Med. 834; properly a Boeotian divinity, daughter of Ares and Aphrodité, Hes. Th. 937; wife of Cadmus, Ib., Pind, P. 3. 161, Eur. Bacch. 1356; sym- bolising, both by her parentage and by her union with the introducer of the alphabet, the civilisation of a rude country by music and letters, cf. Plut. *Pelop. 19. 2. appellat. concord, music, or rather a system of music, esp. the octave-system (4 1d magHv), attributed to Pythagoras, Philolaus p. 66 Bickh, Nicom. in Mus. Vett. p. 17, Plut. 2.1145 A; é« Tagwy oKrw ovady piav app. Evppwveiv Plat, Rep. 617 B; éxra xopdat Pa i Nee 13. 6, 5, cf. Probl. 19. 25 ; cf. Chappell’s Hist. of +77 8q.;—but dpyovia never meant ‘harmony’ in the modern sense, Tb. 15. The Pythag. theory of the music of the spheres seems to have been based on this system, v. Arist, Cael, 2. 9; 1 sq., Mund, 6, 17 sq., cf. Lewis, “A ppovidns — aporpevriip. Astron. of Ancients, p.131. 8. a special kind of music, a mode, dppovia Avdia Pind. N. 4. 73; AloAls Pratinas 5, Lasus 1; cf. Plat. Rep. 398 E, 443 Dsq., Arist. Pol. 3. 3, 8., 8. 7, 8 sq. :—the technical word for this was Tovos, Vv. TévOS II. 2. d, or Tpémos IV. 4. dppoviay Méyor Aad a due arrangement of words, fit to be set to music, Plat. Theaet. 175 E,176 A:— also the intonation or modulation of the voice, Arist. Rhet. 3. 1, 4. 5. metaph., of persons and things, Aarmony, concord, Plat. Rep. 431 E, etc. “Appovidys, ov, 6, patron., son of a Carpenter, Il. 5. 60. Gppovixés, 7%, dv, skilled in music, Plat. Phaedr. 268 D; dpp., ob ryetpos a musician, Damox. Xuvp. 1. 49. II. musical, ac- cording to.the laws of musical sound, kat’ dpiOpds app. Tim. Locr. 96 A, ef, Arist. de An. 1, 3, 11. III. suitable :—ra dppovina, the theory of music, music, Plat. Phaedr. 268 E, Arist. Metaph. 12. 2, 9; so, 4 —KH (sc. émornun), Arist. ib. 3, 7, al.; apy. mpayyarela a treatise thereon, Plut. 2.1142 F. Adv. ~#@s, Aristaen. 1. 13. Gppévios, ov, fitting, harmonious, LXx (Sap. 16. 20), Clem. Al. 447. Ady. —lws, Joseph. A. J. 8. 3, 2, Philo 1. 179, lambl. V. Pyth. 20 (mostly with y. 1. dppod-), Appowddns, es, =dpudvios, Ep. ‘Socrat. 15 in Sup. -wdéoraros. &ppo-rovds, dv, uniting, joining, Schol. Lyc. 832. fippés, 6, (v. sub *dpmw), a joint, in masonry, C. I. 160, v. Béckh p 283 :—in pl. the fastenings of a door, Eur. Med. 1315, Hipp. 809; dppos Xwparos ABooradys a fissure in the tomb made b tearing away the stones at their joining, Soph. Ant. 1216; so, dpyds @vpas comes to mean a chink in the fitting of a door, Dion. H. 5. 7, Plut. Alex. 3. 2.a Fastening, bolt, peg, 4. év EiAm waryels Eur. Fr. 362. 12. 3. the shoulder-joint, Lat. armus, Hippiatr. Gppoors, ews, 1), a joining together, fitting, adapting, A. B. 15. &ppoopa, 74, joined work, ~rpdms 5 edelpOn mokiday dppooparay Eur. Hel. 411. Gppooréov, verb. Adj. one must fit, suit, adapt, Clem. Al. 196. Gppoorip, jipos, 6,=sq., Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 39. IL, = xoopnrns I. 2, Plat. Com. MpecB. 8. Gppooris, ov, 6, one who arranges or governs, esp. a harmost, governor of the islands and foreign cities, sent out by the Lacedaemonians during their supremacy, Thuc. 8. 5, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 28, etc. ; cf. Herm. Pol. Ant. § 39, and Dict. Antiqg.: the governor of a dependent colony, Xen. An. 5- 5, 19:—in App. Civ. 4. 7, used to express the Roman T'rriumvirs, and im Luc. Tox. 17 and 32 the Praefecti. 2. a betrothed husband, ap. Poll. 3. 34. Aphesricke, H, ov, fitted for joining together, Theol. Arithm. p. 3t- 2. suitable, Byz. ppoorés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of dpudtw, joined, adapted, well-fitted, Math. Vett. p. 116; ward re Polyb. 22, 11,15: suitable, fit, dppoordy pot Aéyewv Todro Philem.’A6.1. Adv. rds, Plut. 2. 438 A. Gppoorpa, 7d, sponsalia, Gloss. Gppdarwp, opos, 6, a commander, vavBar@y Aesch. Eum. 456: cf. dppoorns. appoovvos, 6, =dppyoorhs, Hesych. dppérra, dpporrévrws, Att. for dpudtw, —Cévrws, qq. v. appa, v. sub dppor, dpva, acc. sing., dual dpve, pl. dpves; v. sub dpvds. dpvayés, 6, sheep-leader(?), a word of dub. meaning in C. I. 1465. dpvikts, (Sos, 7, a sheep’s skin, Ar. Nub. 730, Plat. oan 220 B, Ariston. “HA, 4. , (Formed as if from *dpvag, a Dim. of dpvds.) dpvéa, 7), =foreg., Herodian. p. 445, ed. Piers. dpveios, a, ov, (dpvds) of a lamb or sheep, xpéa Orac. ap. Hdt. 1. 47, Pherecr. AovA. 1, Xen, An. 4. 5, 31; omAdyxva Eubul. ’Op0. 1.5; 4. éves slaughtered sheep, Soph. Aj. 309. II, dpvetov, 74, a shop where lamb is sold, a butcher's shop, Didym. ap. E. M. 146. 39. Gpverds, 6, a young ram or wether, just full grown, Il. 2. 550, ete. ; dpvews dis joined, like ipng xpos, etc., Od. 10. 572, etc. ; also, O7Aus 4. Ap. Rh, 3. 1033. dpveo-Boivys, ov, 6, feasting: on lambs, Anth. Plan. 235. dpvéopat, fut. #oopzat Aesch., Ar.; also dpynO_coua (dm-) Soph, Ph. 527, N. T.: aor. pass. qpv}Ony often in Att., as Thuc. 6. 60, etc. ; also aor. med. jpynodynvy Hom, (v. infr.), Hdt. 3.1, but rare in Att., as Eur. Ion 1026, Aeschin. 37. 8., 85. 45: pf. #pynuae Dem. 843. 10:—cf, dr-, éf-, xat-apvéopar: Dep. Opp. to nut, «trav, to deny, disown, tedy Eros apyjoacbar Il. 14. 212, Od. 8. 358, etc.; dpv. dupl run h. Hom. Merc. 390; dpy, &-eloy Eur. Hec. 303; of. Hdt. 2.174. 2. opp. to doivat, to refuse, Togov .. Sdpevat Kat apyvjoacBat Od. 21. 345, cf. Hes. Op. 406, Hdt. 3.1; dpv. yapoy Od. 1, 249; apy. xpelay to de- cline, renounce a duty or office, Dem. 319. 26; diadhenv Id. 955. 10; (way dpv., of a suicide, Anth. P. 7. 473. 8. absol. to say No, de- cline, refuse, 6 8 ipvetro orevaxitav Il. 19. 3043 airap by apvetro OTEpeds 23. 42, etc, Constr., dependent clauses are put in inf., either without pH, to deny that.., Hdt. 6.13, Aesch. Eum. 611, Eur. I. A. 966; or with pf, to say ‘that..not.., Ar. Eq. 572, Antipho 123. 12, Xen, Ath. 2.17, etc. ; dp. pi) ob .., Dio C. 50. 22: also, otn dy dpvoi- pny 7d Bpav Soph. Ph. 118; also, apy. Sr ob. , ws ov.., Xen. Rep. Ath. 2,17, Lys. 100. 41, Dem. 124. fin. ;—poét. also c, part., od -ydp ebruyxayv dpyvfioopat Eur. Alc, 1158, cf. Or. 1582. ; . dpveurip, jipos, 5, (dpyevm) in three places Hom. describes one falling headlong frem a height, 68 dpvevrfpt goucds wdarmece Il. 12.385., 16.742, Od. 12. 413; and from 16. 742, compared with 745, 750, it is plain that dpveurhp =kvBurrnrhp, a tumbler.—Hence, dpveuripta, 74, tumbling or diving tricks, Hesych. (Acc. to Schol. on Hom., from dpvés, one that butts like a ram, Curt. compares Lat. urinari (to dive), urinator (diver), Skt. vari (water), taking dpvevrjp to mean a diver.) 221 ageene od, 6, =foreg.: name of a fish, Numen, ap. Ath, 304 D, Eust, 083. 59. ; aeve, (dpvds) to frisk, tumble, Lyc. Gpvyis, 150s, %, v. sub dpvis. dpvnot-Qeos, ov, denying God, Justin. M.:—the Subst., -Oeta, %, Epiphan, Fat tatig ov, to be denied, rovrav 8° obdév éar’ dpy. Soph. Ph. 74. dpvyots, €ws, 1), a denying, denial, rovrou 8° obris rp méAet Aesch, Eum. 588 ; r@v5' dpv. ob éveort yor Soph. El. 527, cf. O. T. 578; also foll. by 70 pw c. inf., Dem. 392. 12. : dpvynct-oravpos, ov, denying the Cross, Eust. Opuse, 164. 82. apvyot-xpioros, ov, denying Christ, Eccl, dpvyréov, verb. Adj. one must deny, Arist. Top. 8. 7, 2, Heliod. 1. 26, dpvytixés, 7, dv, denying, negative, érippnua Eust, 211. 37. Adv.-x@s, Schol. Ar. Ran, 1503. dpviov, 74, Dim. of dpvds, a little ram, lamb, Lys. 906. 2, Eubul. Incert. 5A. II. a sheep-skin, fleece, Luc. Salt. 43 dpvis, (Sos, 4, a festival at Argos, in which dogs were slain, held in memory of Linos, who was said to have been torn to pieces by dogs, Conon 19; called dpvyis, fos, 9, Ael. N. A. 12. 343 cf. kuvopdytis, dpvé-yAwooov, 70, (yAdooa) sheep's-tongue, prob. a kind of plantago, Theophr. H, P. 7. 10, Fe Diosc. 2. 153, Luc. Trag. 150. apvo-kracta, 7), («reivm) a slaughter of sheep, Walz Rhett, 3. 607. dpvés, roi, ris, gen. without any nom, in use, duvds (q.v.) being used instead: (the nom, dpvés, 4, is only in late Gr., as Aesop., C. I. 8966, and fv also is late): dat, and acc. dpvi, dpva: dual dpve: pl. dpves, gen. dpvdy ; dat, dpvact Joseph. A. J. 3. 8, 10., 10, 1, Ep. dpveoat; acc. dpvas :—a lamb, Lat. agnus, agna, dpvay mpwroydvay Il. 4. 102, etc.; dpvdv yadaOnvay Crates Ter. 1; cf. péracoat, II. a sheep, whether wether or ewe, dpv’ érepov Aevedv érépny BF pedaivay Il. 3. 103; dpves xepaot Od. 4. 85. (Hence dpveos, dpviov. Prob, from FAP ; for dpvds has the digamma in Hom., and we find Fapydy in a Boeot. Inscr. in C. I. 1569. 1; cf. Skt. wra-bhras (a wether, ram) = épto-pdpos, wool-bearer, and urd, trna =respectively sheep, wool, Prob. therefore it is connected with éproy, efpos, rather than with dpphy, aries, or ram: v. Curt.) ; : dpvo-rpodia, #, the rearing of lambs, Geop. 18. 1, 2. dpvo-péyos [a], ov, Jamb-devouring, Manetho 4. 255. dpvipat, Dep., used only in pres. and impf., lengthd. form of atpopa (cf. mratpw, mrapyupac), whence the fut. dpodwa: and other tenses :— to receive for oneself, reap, win, gain, earn, esp. of honour or reward, Tiphy dpvipevor Meveddy Il. 1.159; dpvipevos marpés re péya KAéos maintaining .., 6. 446; obx lephtov ov5e Boeiny apvicOnv 22. 160; dpvipevos fv re Yuxiw wat vdcrov éralpw trying to win, striving to secure .., Od, 1.5; 80, dv.. rv padnow dpyupat Soph, Tr. 711, ete. ; kpéros dpvura Id. Ph. 838; rv dé«enow dpy. Eur, Andr. 696 ; at Arist. Pol. 3. 16,7; imper. dpyvao Sappho 75, Trag. ap.Plut. 2. 18 E;—also a few times in Prose, peoOdv dpvvcbat, like praOapvety, Plat. Prot. 349 A, Rep. 346 C, Legg. 813 C, Arist. Pol. 3.16, 7; (adv aloxpdy dpy. pa@r- Aov to choose rather, prefer, Plat. Legg. 944 C:—rarely in bad sense, dpvdpevos AdBay, perh., reaping vengeance for my injuries (cf. riaacOae AwBnyv), Eur. Hec. 1073. Cf. Ruhnk. Tim. pits Hig 6, one who sings for a lamb, Eust. Opusc. 53. 49, E. M.; cf. Tpaywods, yt 76, corrupt fordpapa, Luc. Lexiph, 2,cf. A.B. 450, Lob. Phryn, 227, dpov, 76, Lat. arum, the wake-robin, cuckoo-pint, Arist. H. A. 8. 17, 4, Theophr. H, P. 1. 6, 6, Diose. 2. 197. dpos [a], eos, 74, use, profit, help, Aesch, Supp. 885. dpédcupos, ov, (apdw) arable, fruitful, xupa ap. corn-land, Or, Sib. 14. 115; «Aliya Suid. II. metaph. fit for engendering children, Soph. Ant. 569, in poét. form dpworpos; cf. Lob. Phryn. 227. hives €os, }), arable land, corn-land, Lat, arvum, ll. 9. 580, Od. 9.134. dporéov, verb. Adj. one must plough, Gemin. in An, Ox. 3. 226. dporhp, fpos, 6, a plougher, husbandman, Il. 18. 542., 23. 835, Eur. El. 104, etc. :—in Prose, S«vOar dporijpes, opp. to vopades, Hdt. 4. 17, cf. I9I., I. 125., 7. 50; also in late Prose, as Plut. Pyrrh. 5. 2. as Adj., Bods dpornp a steer for ploughing, Hes. Op. 403, Arat. 132, dAKés Nonn, D, 3. 192. II. metaph. a begetter, father, réxvav Eur. Tro. 135, cf. Anth. P. append. 356. apérns, ov, 6,=foreg., Pind. 1. 1. 67, Hdt. 4. 2, Pherecr. Mepo. 1; Bdes dp. Hipp. Art. 7845 Thepliwv dpéra: workmen of the Muses, i.e. poets, Pind. N. 6. 55; dp. eUparos a may nr Erigae . dpornoros, ov, of or for ploughing, dp. dpa seed-time, Arat. 1053. Spire: é,a Mitel be noipynow karaloxerat, obr’ dpiracw Od. 9. 122: metaph., “Apy rov dpdéros Oepi{ovra Bporods év dAdos Aesch, Supp. 638. 2. a crop, the fruit of the field, Soph. O.'T. 270 (Schol. «apmés) :—metaph., as we say seed, réxvay bv €rexes dporor Eur. Med. 1281; bc0v evocBia xparodpev dvdciov dporoy dvipay (re- stored by Barnes for dporpov) Id, Ion 1095. 38. tillage, ploughing, Hes. Op. 382, 456; , . , aonmotTns — acKkeAoTratos. Gonporys, 770s, }, a being unknown, Gloss. rw om ov, gen. ovos, =aonpos III, only in Soph. O, C. 1668. d-anmros, ov, not liable to decay or corruption, Hipp. 885 D, Xen. Cyn. 9, 13, Arist., etc. 2. undigested, ovria Hipp. 522. 48. donpos, dv, (don) causing nausea, irksome, Hipp. Fract. 766, 774. Adv. -pas, Poll. 3. 99. 2. feeling disgust, disdainful, of a woman, Sappho 78, v. Gaisf. Hephaest. 64. ors, ov, (o70w) unsifted, Diphil. Siphn, ap. Ath. 115 D. doGevdptov, 7d, the infirmary of a monastery, Byz. do@évera, gen. as, Ion. ns (Dind. de dial. Hat. § 9), , want of strength, weakness, Thuc. 1. 3, Plat., etc.; in pl., ioyves eat dod, Plat. Rep. 618 D: esp. feebleness, sickliness, Hdt. 4.135; do0. ynpws Antipho 127. 23; owparav Thuc. 4. 36, etc. 2. a disease, Id. 2. 49, in pl. 38. do0. Biov, poverty, Hdt. 2. 47., 8. 51. 4. in moral sense, feebleness, weak- ness, THs dvOpanivys pucews Plat. Legg. 854 A, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 7. 7, 8; Tod dicpoarod Arist. Rhet. 3. 18, 4.—Rare in poetry, as Eur. H. F. 260. doevéw, to be weak, feeble, sickly, do0. wédn to be weak in limb, Eur. Or. 228; rods dpOadrpods aod. Plat. Lys. 209 F ; absol., Eur. Hipp. 274, Thuc. 7. 47, Plat., etc.; qo0évyoe he fell sick, Dem. 13. 2; do0evéov a sick man, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12 (Phot. says that wadaxt(eoOar is used of women); haste doGevovat .. Tos Kduvovow elotuy coming to visit the sick in bed, Hipp. 307. 29, cf. Polyb. 31. 21, 7. 2. to be needy, Ar. Pax 636; v. sub dodevijs 4. 3. c. inf. to be too weak to do a thing, not to be able .. , Joseph. B, J. 2. 15, 5. dobévnya, 74, a weakness, ailment, Arist. G. A. 1. 18, 61. d-oPevys, és, without strength, weak, Lat, infirmus: hence in various relations, 1. in body or frame, feeble, sickly, weakly, rods dabevéas Ths orparifjs Hdt. 4. 135, cf. Hipp. Vet. Med. 12, Pind. P. 1. 106, etc.; 6 mavranacw do. 7G cwpart Dem. 567. 25; rods dodeverdrous least able to bear eis rakarmwpiny, hardship, Hdt. 4.134; doOevéarepos mbvov éveyneiy too weak to.., Dem. 637.18; also, dad. eis dpérc.ay Id. 1471. 4:—Adv., doGevais ia xev Plat. Legg. 659E. 2. in mind, and the like, 70 doGevés Tis yvmpns the weakness, Thuc. 2. 61. 8. in power, weak, feeble, do. divayus Hat. 7. 9, 1, cf. 1. 58, Aesch. Pr. 514, Soph. O. C. 1033. 4. in property, weak, poor, of xpnuacw dobevéorepa Hdt. 2. 88; absol., 8 7° dodev}s 6 wAovotds re Eur. Supp. 434, cf. Lysias 92.2; of doBevécrepo the weaker sort, i.e. the poor, Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 30. 5. insignificant, oie do0evécratos copioris “EAAjvov Hat. 4: 953 so, doGevés oddicpa paltry, Aesch. Pr. torr; of streams, petty, small, Hdt. 2. 25; of water, of small specific gravity, rare, Id. 3. 23; of an event, és doOeves epxecbar to come fo nothing, Id. 1. 120:—so Ady. -@s, slightly, a little, Plat. Rep. 528 B; so, Comp. do@evearépas émBupeiy Id. Phaedr. 255 E; but —éorepov, Id. Charm. 172 B; and in Thue. 1. 141, —€o7repa. dodends, 7, dv, weakly, Arist. H. A. 7. 10, 3, Timo ap. Diog. L. 2. 55. Adv. -«@s, Arist. Insomn. 3, 17. doGevo-mrovéw, to make weak, App. Maced. 9. 7. doevép-ptlos, ov, with weak roots, Theophr. C. P. 4. 14, 4. dodevé-pixos, ov, weak-minded, Joseph. Macc. 15. doGevéu, to weaken, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 3. dobévwors, ews, }, weakness, faintness, Hipp. 54. 4. GcOpa, aros, 76, (dw, to blow) short-drawn breath, panting, do@pa Kat pds Il. 15. 241 ; doOpare dpyadéw Ib. 10; bn’ doOparos xevot Aesch. Pers, 484; ond doOparos dévvareiy Plat. Rep. 568 D, cf. 556 D:—for Pind. N. 10. 139, v. ppioow sub fin. II. as Medic. term, asthma, Hipp. Aph. 1248, al., v. Adams on Paul. Aeg. 3. 29. III. generally, a breath, breathing, Mosch. 3. 52: a blast, a. mupds Anth. P.9.677, Coluth. 178; xepavvod Nonn, D, 1. 2. ac0udlw, fut. dow, =sq., A. B. 451 :—also doOpatifw, Tzetz. Go®palve, to breathe hard: mostly in part. pres. panting, as after running, T@ 8 da@paivoyre xexqryv Il. 10. 376; gasping for breath, of one dying, 8 y° doOpaiver .. teece dippov 5. 585, cf. 10. 496, Pind. N. 3. 84; oddtv doOpaivwr without an effort, cf. caracOpaivw, Aesch. Eum. 651; 3 sing. doOpaive Hipp. 489. 31; doOpalvovor Arist. Probl. 11. 60; impf. #o9pacvov Luc, D. Meretr, 5. 4:—do0. 7 to pant for a thing, Heliod. 4. 3; but c. acc, cogn., daOpu. mupds Spipeiav dpoxdAjy Opp. H. 4.14.—Rare in Att. 2 doOpatixés, 4, dv, asthmatic, Galen. 8. 292, Diosc. 1. 23: panting, breathing hard, Id, 13. 106, Manetho 4. 274: so & ias, ov, Adam. Physiogn. 2. 28. doPparains, es, («fos) =foreg., Hipp. 1014 G, 1128 G. *Acia [a], Ion. -ty, 4, Asia, first in Pind. O. 7. 34, Hdt.1. 4, Aesch. Pr. 411; yj “Agia Soph. O. C. 694; (except that Hes. has it as name of an Oceanid, Th. 359) :—Adj. "Acwavés, 7, dv, Asian, Asiatic, of “Ac. the Asiatics, Thuc. 1. 6, etc.; fem. “Aovds, ddos, and ‘Acts, ‘Sos, [the latter with @], freq. in Aesch. and Eur., never in Soph., “Aovds being required by the metre in Aesch. Pers. 549, Eur. Or. 1397, Bacch. 1169, Cycl. 443, Acts in Aesch. Pers. 270, Supp. 547; in other places either form is admissible—’Agcds (sc. 79), ="Acia, Eur. Tro. 743, on 1356 ; but also (sub, «@dapa), the Asian harp, as improyed by Cepion of Lesbos, Ar. Thesm, 120, cf. Eur. Cycl. 443, Plut. 2. 1133 C:—also “Aovdrys, —Gris, Ion. Arns, Aris, Aesch. Pers. 61, Eur., etc. :— Aouitikés, 7, ov, Strabo 723 :—also ‘AotyQev, Adv. from Asia, C. I. 6336. , *Aoui-yevijs, és, of Asiatic descent, Diod. 17.77; lon. “Aovnyevis, Opp. C. 1. 235; v. Lob. Phryn. 646. *Actavilw, to imitate the Asiatics, Phot. Ser : *Aor-dpyns, ov, 6, an Asiarch, the highest religious official under the Romans in the province of Asia, Strabo 649. Act. Ap. 19. 31, C. I. 2511, 2912, al.; “Ac. vaav ray ev ’Epéow 2464 ;—also “Actapxos, with Verb -apxéw, 2990 a, cf. 3504. ’ ge 231 “Aovaro-yevijs, és, of Asian birth, Aesch. Pers. 12. dotynota, }, inability to keep silence, Plut. 2. 502 C. é-olynros, ov, never silent, Call. Del. 286, Paul. Sil, Ecphr. 203, Nonn. Adv. —rws, Eccl. d-ovypos, ov, without sigma, dat Dion. H. de Comp. 14; do. weh name of a ge of Lasus without a sigma in it, Ath. 455 C: hence Govypo-moveéw, to compose such a poem, such as Pind., Fr. 47, speaks of ; v. Eust. 1335.53, Casaub. Ath. 448 D, Schiif, Dion. H. I. c. d-ot8npos [1], ov, not of iron, wsxAor Eur. Bach. 1104: not made by iron, addag Anth, P. 9. 299. II. without sword, xeip Eur, Bacch. 736. dolStpwros, cv, =dotdnpos, Byz. *Aoriyris, Ion. for ’Aotazis. G-cucxos, ov, not nice as to food, Plut. Lyc. 16. causing satiety or disgust, of food, Id, 2.132 B. dowhe, %, @ yoke, like that of a milk-man, to carry baskets, pails, etc., Simon. 223; do. éauos Alciphro 1.1; cf, dvaqopets. dovhos, ov, v. dvdataAos. 4-olvis, és, unhurt, unharmed, of persons, 7as «i pév x’ dowéas édas Od. 11. 110; dowéa rid droméumev Hdt. 2.181; dows dmuécOar, dvaxwpéey Id, 8, 19, 116; so, dows daiuov a secure, happy fortune, Aesch. Ag. 1341; do. Bioros, aidy Id. Cho. 1018, Eum. 315. 2. rarely of things, undamaged, otxnua Hat. 2.121, 3; éav ra émiOéuara.. dow7 C. I. 989 6, cf. 991 b. II. act. not harming, doing no harm, Sappho 83, Hdt. 1. 105, Hipp. Fract. 769; dowéorepat mypwotes Id. Art. 827: harmless, of wild animals, Xen, Cyr. 1. 4, 7: harmless, innocent, Sovai Plat. Legg. 670D; dowéorara rav iSovay Id. Hipp. Ma. 303 E. 2. protecting from harm, méAews dowel corp [TUxn added by Dind.] Aesch. Theb, 826.—Adv. -v@s, Hipp. Epid. 1. 938, Arist. H, A. 9g. 18, 2: Sup. -éorara, Xen. An. 3. 3, 3. dowérnys, 770s, 6, innocence, Eunap. p. 62. dovo-yeiat, al, mud-walls, Schol. Il. 21. 321. dovos, a, ov, miry, from dots [a], so that we cannot adopt dole éy Aewdve in Il. 2. 461, for the common reading ’Aoiw év Aetyavt, in the Asian mead ; Strabo 650, the Scholl. and Eust. mention also the reading *Aaiw, Dor. gen, of "Actas, the hero Asias; but v. Spitzn. dotpakos, 6, a sort of locus? without wings, Diosc. 2. 57; cf. évos Iv. dots [a], ews, %, slime, mud, such as a swollen river brings down, Il, 21. 321, Opp. H. 3. 433, Nic. Th. 176; &¢ @addoons Charito 2, 2:—cf. don 1. Gos, ces, 7}, a singing, a song, Ptol. ap. Eust. 1312. 41. Acis [a], (50s, 3, v. sub “Agia. Gotréw, to go without food, abstain from food, fast, Eur. Hipp. 277, Plat. Symp. 220 A; do. uépas duo Arist. H. A. 8. 5, 5. 2. to have no appetite, Hipp. Aph. 1245. doiria, Ion. -t, 7), want of food, Hdt. 3. 52, Eur. Supp. 1105, both in pl. IL. abstinence from food, fasting, Hipp. Acut. 389, Arist. Eth. N. To. 9, 15. 2. want of appetite, Hipp. Aph. 1258. G-otros, ov, without food, fasting, Od. 4. 788, Soph. Aj. 324, Eur. Med. 24, Thuc. 7. 40, etc.; ix@vs Plat. Com, ‘Eopr. 3. Adv.-ws, Tzetz.; but dovri, Lxx (Job. 24. 6). a- ros, ov, not to be kept secret or unspoken, cited from Eunap. doxalpw, =craipo (with a euphon.), Q. Sm. 5. 495, dub. doxédGBos, 6,=sq., Nic. Th. 484. doxihaBarns, ov, 6,=yarewrys, the spotted lizard, Lat. stellio, prob. lacerta gecko, Ar. Nub. 170, Arist. H. A. 4. 11, 9., 8. 29, 4, al. déoxddados, 6, an unknown bird, prob. (from the story in Ovid’s Metam.) a kind of ow/, Arist. H. A. 2. 17, 34. II. as n. pr., Il. 2. 512, etc. GoKtrilw, to hoe, A. B. 24; cf. cxaditw, ckadrevo, etc. doxiidos, ov, Theocr. 10.14; doxddevros and -teTos, ov, Schol. Ib.; and doxaAros, ov, Hesych.; unhoed, unweeded. doxaddmas, 6, a bird, perhaps the same as oxoAdmaf, Arist. H. A. 9. 26. d-cxapBevros, (cxdpBos) Adv. without obliquity, Eust. Opusc. 51. 73. adoxapwvia, ),=ckapwvia, Tzetz. é-cxavdahuoros, ov, without stumbling or falling, Clem, Al. 597. doxavrys, ov, 6, a poor bed, much like xpa8Baros, Ar. Nub. 624, cf. Luc. Lexiph. 6. II. a bier, Anth. P. 7. 634. doxapdapunréw, to look without winking, Schol. Ar, Eq. 292. doxapdipucri, Adv. of doxapddpueros without winking, with un- changed look, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 28, etc. é-cxopSdapucros, ov, not blinking or winking, Ar. Eq. 292 :—Adv. -rés, Eust. 756. 59.—In Hipp. 1050 a pl. doxapdapvera: is given, doxapOpos, ov, not hopping or skipping, Hesych.; so, doxipys, és, Id. daxtiiptSa6ns, es, (elds) full of ascarides, Hipp. Coac. 144. doxiip{fo, fut. @, Att. form of capiw (with a euphon,), Cratin. Ana. 3. dokapis, (50s, }, a worm in the intestines, a maw-worm, Hipp. Aph. 1248, Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 43 cf. €Apurs. II. the larva of the éumis, Ib. 14 sq. é-cKdpioros, ov, without struggling, Schol. Soph. Aj. 833. doxapos, 5, a kind of castanet, Poll. 4. 60. : . dox-avAns, ov, 6, (dons) a bag-piper, v. Reisk. ad Dio Chr. 2, 381. d-oKiidos, ov, not dug, unhoed, Strabo 502. does, és, Od. 14. 255, v. sub doxnOas. doxela, }, (doxéw) =doxnots, Hesych. . doxeAys, és, (a euphon., axéAAw) dried up, withered, worn ont, dcke- A€es kal GOvpor Od. to. 463. 2. neut, doxedés as Adv. toughly, obstinately, stubbornly, donedes aici Od. 1. 68., 4. 543; also, doxeXéws aici Il, 19. 68: cf. meproxeAns. (In the latter usage some would refer it to @ privat., not to be dried up, unceasingly.) II. (a priv., oxédos) without legs, Plat. Tim. 34 A, Arist. G. A. 1. 5, I. 2. later (@ copul., cnbak =Iloocxedns, even, of a balance, Nic. Th. 41. doreAorrovés, dv, (a priv., onéAAw, movéa’) not allowing to pine, Tzetz., by way of deriv. for "AgKAnmds. II. not easily 232 d-okémapvos, ov, without the axe, unhewn, B4Opov Soph. O. C. ror. d-oxéracros, ov, uncovered, Diosc. 5. 132 :—also d-cKxemms, és, Anth. P. 5. 260:—and d-coxemos, ov, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 21. €MTOS, OV, inconsiderate, unreflecting, Plat. Rep. 438 A, Plut. 2. 45 E:—mostly in Adv. -rws, inconsiderately, Thuc, 6, 21, Plat. Charm. 158 E, etc.; doxémrws éxew Plat. Crat. 440D; dow. éxew tuds Id. 'Gorg. 501 C; also doxemri Athanas.; Comp. —dérepoy Plut. Demetr. t II. unconsidered, unobserved, Ar. Eccl. 258, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 19; daxenrov yiyvera wept tivos it is left unconsidered, Plat. Theaet. 184 A. 2. unseen, hidden, yapor Opp. H. 1. 773. 8. too small to be observed, inconsiderable, ev aaxénrw xpdvyw Arist. An. Post. 1. 34, I. doxépa, as, }, a winter shoe with fur inside, Hippon. 10, Lyc. 855, 1322: Dim, ackepickos, 6, metapl. pl. doxepioxa (cf. capBadicxa), Hippon. 9. d-okevaoros, ov, not made by art, natural, K4ddos Philostr, 826. Gokeuns, és, without the implements of his art, Hdt. 3. 131. without furniture, Muson, ap. Stob. 412. 24. d-cxevos, ov, unfurnished, unprepared, ov Yddv odd’ dor. Soph. O. C. 1029; dox. Bios unartificial, simple, Greg. Naz. :—c. gen., don. domidwv T€ Kal orpaTov unfurnished with .., Sopn. El. 36. II. doxevor, oi, ye troops, Paus. 8. 50, 2. ~TKEVvdpyTos, ov, not searched thoroughly, Strabo 381. G-oxerpia, 7, want of consideration, heedlessness, Polyb. 2. 63, 5. doxéw, fut. fow, to work raw materials, eipa, xépara Il. 3. 388: to work curiously, form by art, [kpnrijpa] X:ddves moAvdaldara: ed Hoxnoay Il. 23. 743; €puiv’ doxqoas Od. 23. 198; mrvgaca kal doxnoaca xiTava having folded and smoothed it, 1. 439; Gpya.. xpuo@.. «0 aie the chariot és finely wrought with gold, Il, 10. 438; yopdv haoxnoev (v. xépos) 18. 592 :—often added to Verbs in aor. part., [Opdvor] revger doxnoas with skilful art, elaborately will he make a throne, 14.240; [xpuodv] Bods Képacw tepixedev doxnoas Od. 3. 437; [éavdr] éévo’ doxnoaga Il. 14. 178, cf. 4. 110. 2. of personal adornment, to dress out, trick out, adorn, deck, doxeiv twa xéopw Hat. 3.1; doxeiv eis KaAAOs Eur. El. 1073; 5énas Eur. Tro. 1023:—freq. in Pass., émAoroe Tlepotxois toxnuévn Aesch. Pers. 182 (v. Blomf. Gloss.); od xAdais Haxnuévos Soph. El. 452; so of buildings, raords yornuévyn orvaots Hdt. 2.169; Mapiy Adm joxnyeva Id. 3. 57; absol., olenua joxnpévov Id. 2.130; o@pa Adyos Hon. tricked out with words only, not real, Soph. El. 1217:—Med., o@p’ hoxnoaro adorned his own person, Eur. Hel. 1379, cf, Alc. 161. 3. in Pind. ¢o honour a divinity, do him reverence, Lat. colere, daipova dox. Ocpamevav P. 3. 193; doxetrar O€mus O. 8. 29. II. in Att. Com. and Prose, to practise, exercise, train, Lat. exercere, properly of athletic exercise, and the like: Construct., 1. c. acc. of person or thing trained, doxeiy roy vidy Tov émyxmpiov Tpdrov Ar. Pl. 473 doxeiv 70 oda ets or mpés Te for an object or purpose, Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 20, Mem. 1. 2,19; €xOpdv ep’ Huds abrods THALKodToY HaoKh- kapev Dem, 36. 13:—Pass., cwpata eb joxnuéva Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 41; doxeiaOai 7: Ib. 2.1, 24; doxetaOae A€yev Luc. Demon. 4; Tiv Kuviciy doxnow Id. Tox. 27; Ti, év Tu Dio C. 45. 2., 60. 2; mpds Te Diod. 2. 54:—in Eccl. to discipline or mortify the body. 2. c. acc, of the thing practised, dox. réxvnv, mevraefAov Hat. 3. 125., 9.333 vavOdvew wat dox, 7 Plat. Gorg. 509 E; 4. mayxpariov, ordbioy, etc., Id. Legg. 795 B, Theag. 128 E; joxneévae pndeplay doxnow kvpiwrépay 77s modemxis Arist. Pol. 2. 9, 34 :—often metaph., dox. Thy aAnPeav, Tiv dixatoovyny Hdt. 7. 209., 1. 96; déeara Soph. O. C. 913; dperhy Eur. Fr. 219, Plat.; axdérnra Aesch. Pr. 1066, cf. Soph. Tr. 384; doéBeay Eur. Bacch. 476; Aadcdy Ar. Nub. 931, cf. Blomf, Aesch. Pr. 1102 ; c. dupl. acc., do. airoy 7a moAepixad Xen, Cyr. 8. 6, Io. 83'c. inf., doxet roravry wévew practise, endeavour to remain such, Soph. El. 10243 so, Aéyey joxnndres Id. Fr. 865; dow. yaorpds xpetrrous civat, Tovds pidous ayaa moeiv Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 454 5. 5, 123 ees eLopireiv he made a practice of associating with others, Id. Ages. II, 4. 4, absol. to practise, go into training, train, take pains, Plat. Rep. 389 C; of doxéovres those who practise gymnastics, Hipp. Acut. 384, cf. Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 29; wept rt Polyb. g. 20, 9.—Cf. doxnrds, doxnréov. Goxn, 4, =donxnots, Plat. Com. Incert. 48. dons, és, unhurt, unharmed, unscathed, often in Hom. of persons, Ay eis hyéas €XOor dor. Il. 10. 212; dox. ixduny és warpiba yatay Od. 9. 79, etc.: later, of things, dex. véotos safe return, Ap. Rh. 2. 690; donnbes mért pure, virgin honey, Antim, 9 :—in Od. 14. 255, doxnOées (so Wolf and Pors. for daeOées of the Mss.), must be pronounced as trisyll. (Perhaps from a privat., and the Root which appears in our scathe, Germ. schaden, i. e. hurt.) ~ doxnpa, 76, an exercise, practice, Hipp. Offic. 742, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 79, Occ. II, 19. Then, ov, without tents, not under canvas, Plut. Sert. 12. 2. without stage-effect, without illusion, Synes. 274 D. donors, ews, %, (doxéw) exercise, practice, training, Plat. Prot. 323 D, al.; esp. of the life and habits of an athlete, Hipp. Vet. Med. 10, Thuc. 2. 39; modem Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 343 in pl. exercises, Plat. Rep. 518 E, Polit. 294 D. II. c. gen., dor. Tivos practice of or in a thing, Thuc. 5.67; dperjjs Xen. Mem. I. 2, 20; decAlas, adr ovK dybpeias Plat. Legg. 791 B. III. generally, a mode of life, pro- fession, Luc. Vit. Aust. 7; of a philosophical sect, 4 kuvexi) dox. Id. Tox. 27. 2. in Eccl. the tic life, tici. éos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be practised, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 43- II. donnréov, one must practise, aopiav, caxppootvyy Plat. Gorg. 487 C, 507 D; mola mpds motous don. Arist. Pol. 7. 2, 18. , 76, in Eccl. a hermitage or monastery. ee , 08, 5, one who practises any art or trade, dok, Tay mode- II. juxdv etc., opp. to iidsrns Xen. Cyr. 1. 5,115 Adyav Dion. H, de Isac. | »” doKérapvos — aokwpa. 2; copins C. I. 938: but esp. =d0An7Hs, with which word it is often con- founded, Ar. Pl. 585, Plat. Rep. 403 Esq. II. a hermit or monk, Eccl. doxntikés, 7, dv, laborious, Bios Plat. Legg. 806 A; don. voonpa such as is incident to an athlete, Ar. Lys. 1085 :—Adv. —K@s, Poll. 3. 145. II. ascetic, monastic, Eccl. j doxnrés, 4, dv, curiously wrought, vijua Od. 4.1345 A€Xos 23. 189; xpipara Xenophan. 3.6; eivara Theocr. 24.138: adorned, decked, nétaw with ,., Id. 1. 33. 2. to be got or reached by practice, ob biSanxrév, GAX’ dox., of virtue, Plat. Meno 70 A, cf. Xen. Mem. I. 2, 23; padnrov h Cardy 7} dAAws THs donnrdy Arist. Eth. N. 1.9, I. II. of persons, exercised, practised in a thing, tivi Simon, 215, cf. Plut. Lyc. 30. doxyrpia, 7, fem. of doxnths: a nun, Eccl. doKntwp, opos, 6, =daxnTHs, Poeta ap. Galen, d-oklacros, ov, unshaded, Eust. 1550. 63. doktdvov, 76, =sq., Ar. Eccl. 307, Posidon, ap. Ath, 692 C. dokiov, 74, Dim. of daxds, Crates “Hp. 1, Plut. Artox. 12. d-oxvos, a, ov, without shade, unshaded, dpea Pind. N. 6. 73. shadowless, Theopomp. Hist. 272, Strabo 817, Heliod. 9. 22. é-oxttrwv [7], ov, gen. ovos, without staff, Anth. P. 9. 298. dokitns vécos, a kind of dropsy, ascites (from doxos), Epicur. ap. Plut. 2. 1097 E, Aretae. 48, Galen. 15. 891. [T] doxAnmas, d5os, 7, an uncertain plant, Diosc. 3. 106. *Aokdnmés, 6, Asclepios, Lat. Aesculapius (cf. the Dor. ’AoxAamds), in Hom. a Thessalian prince, famous as a physician, Il. 2. 729: later, son of Apollo and Coronis, tutelary god of medicine, h. Hom. 15 :— hence, "AckAnmddns, ov, 6, son of Asclepios, Il.; in pl., as a name for physicians, Theogn. 432, Plat. Rep. 405 D,—taken from Il. 2. 732, v. Littré Hipp. 1. 10 :—in Soph. Ph. 1333, “AoxAnmdav :—AckAnmetov, 76, the temple of Asclepios, Polyb. 1. 18, 2, Strabo 832; in Ms. corruptly *AakAnmoy, as in Luc. Icar. 16:—'AokAnticvos, a, ov, of, belonging to Asclepios, Td ’AokAnmieia (sc. iepa) his festival, Plat. Ion 530 A; *AoKAnmaseos [orixos], 6, a kind of verse, Hephaest. 10.7. [’Ag- KAnmiov Il. 2.731. Dem. is said to have made it proparox. "AgxAjmO0s, deriving it from 7mos, Plut. 2. 845 B; cf. Béckh Pind. P. 3. 6.] doxo-dérys, ov, 6, a string for wine-skins, Nic. Th. 928. Goko-Sopéw, to flay a person, and make a bag of his skin, Byz., cf. Solon 32. 7, Ar. Nub. 442. doko-Qvdakos, 6, a leathern bag, Ar. Fr. 217, cf. Meineke Archipp. "Au. 7, Diocl. Bary. 4. Goko-KqAns, ov, 6, having a bad rupture, Gloss. G-cKétrevtos, ov, unspied, late. doko-mypa, ,=nnpa, a knapsack, scrip, Ar. Fr. 482. d-oKxomos, ov, (cxoréw) inconsiderate, heedless, Il. 24.157, 186; Supa Parmen. 54 Karsten; doxomot twos unregardful of .., Aesch. Ag. 462. II. pass. not seen, not to be seen, invisible, mAdKes dox., of the nether world, Soph. O. C. 1682. 2. not to be seen or understood, unintelligible, obscure, énos Aesch, Cho, 816, cf. Soph. Ph. 1111; mpa@yos Id. Aj. 21; dox. xpévos an unknown time, Id. Tr. 246: inconceivable, incalculable, don. & AwBa Id. El. 864; fpyacar 5é ? doxora Ib. 1315. d-cKoros, ov, (sxonds) aimless, random, Bédn Dion. H. 8.86; doxona togevew Luc. Tox. 62. Goxo-nirivy [7], %, a leathern canteen, Antiph, Med. 1, Menand. Kapx. 6, Lxx. dokds, 6, a skin made into a bag, esp. a wine-skin, oivov .. done év aiyetw Il. 3. 247, Od. 6. 78; doxdy. . wédavos olvo.o 5. 265., 9. 196; cf. modewy 11, doxwhia¢w:—doKds Bods the bag in which Aeolus bottled up the winds, Od. 10. 19, cf. 45, 47; doxods kayhrwv skins of camel's hide, Hdt, 3. 9; d. Mapovéw a bag made from the skin of Marsyas, Id. 7. 26; ef por % Sopa pi els doxdy Tedeuthoa Gomep %) Mapovov Plat. Euthyd. 285 C; doxois eal dvddKos Xen. An. 6. 4, 23, cf. Thue. 4. 26, 2. metaph. of the bladder, Eur, Med, 679; 4. apvorros Hipp. Art. 814. 3. generally, the paunch, belly, Archil. 67. : 4. proverb. usages, a wine-skin, of a wine-bibbing-fellow, Antiph. Aiod. 2, cf. Alex. “Hatov. 1: a playful name for a child, Punch, Theophr. Char, 5, v. sub méAexus ;—so, daxdv 5eipety Tuva to skin, flay alive, abuse, or maltreat wantonly, Ar, Nub. 441; and in Pass. doxds Se5dpPar Solon 25.7. (The Root is uncertain.) &-oKétiot0s, ov, without darkness, Greg. Nyss. :—also dokétwros, or, Manass. Chron, 4618, doKoopéw, fo bear wine-skins at the feast of Bacchus, A. B, 214 :— Adj. -6pos, ov, Ib. d-ont aAvoros, ov, cleansed, purged from filth, Eccl. G-oKvheutos, ov, not pillaged or stript, Dion. H. 11. 27, Heliod. 1. 1. d-oxvhtos, ov, not pulled about, not harassed, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 71. Ady. ~THs, without being mangled or hurt, Eust., etc.: without shrinking, bropetvat rt, Eus, H. E. 4. 15. doxupov and doupoedés, 7d, a hind of St. Fohn’s wort, tutsan, Hypericum androsaemon, Diosc. 3. 172, Galen., etc. G-cKitios, ov, without cup, Hippoloch, ap, Ath. 129 F. dorwdrdto, fut. dow, to hop as at the Ackwda (the 2nd day of the tural Dionysia, when they hopped upon "greased wine-skins (daxol), Ar. Pi. 1129 (ubi v. Schol.), cf. Eubul. Aauad. 1 (doxdy els pécov KaTa- Gevres eladdAcabe) ; Virg. G. 2. 384 (unctos saluere per utres); aoKa- Ardley pdov emt rots dpisrépors, whence it appears that it means fo hop on one leg, Arist. Incess, An. 4, 8; cf. Plat, Symp. 190 A, Ael. N. A. 3. 13, Plut. 2.621 F, Poll. 2. 194, Hesych., etc.:—a form doxwdife is cited by Phryn, A, B. 24, 452, An. Bachm. t. 366, and was read in Plat. 1, c. by Stob. 395. 21. dokwopa, atos, 76, (daxds) the leather padding or lining of the hole which served for the row-lock, put there to make the oar move easily, II. Ar. Ach, 97, Ran. 364 :—so the Verb doxdopat, fo be equipt with these, Inscr. in Bockh’s Urkunden, p. 289. 58, etc. 2. a kind of leathern bellows, Apollod. Poliorc. 21 :—Dim. -drvov, 76, Hero Spir. 193. dopa, 76, (dw) a song, esp. a lyric ode or lay, Plat. Prot. 343 C sq., Alex. ’AmoB. 1. d-opayapos, ov, noiseless, Opp. H. 3. 428. goparifo, to sing an dopa, Eccl. :—Adj. dopatixés, 4, dv, Eccl., esp. of the canticles. Adv. —K@s. iopariov, 76, Dim. of dopa, Plat. Com. Incert. 50. Gopiro-ypihéew, fo write songs or canticles;—and —ypados, ov, writing, composing them, Byz.: also, dapato-pahpo-ypados, and —ypadéw, Byz. Gopidro-Kdpmrys, ov, 6, twister of song, used by Ar. of the Trag. and Dithyrambic poets of his time, Nub. 333 :—the Verb -Kaparéw, Tzetz. in Cramer An. Ox. 3. 339. dopdro-hoyéw, to repeat song's, Artemid. 1. 76. lopiro-rovds, 6, ¢ composer of songs, Ath. 181 E. dopevatrara, —éorara, v. sub dopevos. dopevéw, (dopevos) =sq., only in Dinarch. 94. 34 dopeveiv peraBodny to wish for a change. dopevitw, fut. iow, to take gladly or readily, re Polyb. 6. 8, 3 :—intr. to be satisfied with a thing, rwi, or more rarely éwi Ti, Id. 3.97, 5.5 5- 87,33 dop. e.., Id. 4. 11,5; c. part., doy, €oOovres Plut. 2. tor D.— So too as Dep., Aesop. . dopeviopos, 6, gratification, Philo 1. 450, Stob. Ecl. 2. 174. dopeviaréov, verb, Adj. one must take a thing gladly, Hipp. 268. 1. dopevirrés, 7, dv, acceptable, welcome, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 85. dopevos, 7, ov, (v. sub dvdavw) well-pleased, glad, always with a Verb, where it may be rendered by the Adv. gladly, or by a periphr. ¢o be glad to.., piryev dopevos éx Bavaro.o he was glad to have escaped death, Il. 20. 350, cf. Od. 9. 63, Pind. O. 13. 103; and freq. in Att., dopevos 5t ray. . kaptpecev ydvu Aesch. Pr. 395; dop. aipedels Thuc. 6. 12; €«dbevdov dopevos, ifiewy &£ dypod Lys. 92. 45 :—freq. in dat. in such phrases as, éuol 6€ kev dopévy ein glad would it make me! Il. 14. 108 (just like BovAopév oot éort, Lat. volentibus vobis est); dopévp 5é co... vdt droxptper pdos glad wilt thou be when night shuts out the light, Aesch. Pr. 23; ds ot dopévorot tuepa éemédappe Hat. 8. 14; dopévn 5€ por. .7mAOe Soph. Tr. 18; ws HAGes Hulv dopévors Ar. Pax 582, Plat. Crat. 418 C, etc. Adv. dopévws, gladly, readily, joyfully, like domaciws, Aesch. Pr. 728, Eur. Hel. 398, Alex. Mavdp. 2 (with v. 1. H5éws), Timocl. "Iap. 2; (but this Adv., which is common in late Greek, has often been substituted for the Adj., as in Thuc. 4. 21, Plat. Rep. 614E) :—Sup. dopevairara, -€orara, Plat, Rep. 329 C, 616A (though the Adj. makes —wrepos, -wraros, A. B. 12, Hipp. Art. 785). d-opnxros, ov, not rubbed off or rubbed smooth, Pherecr. Incert. 16. gopds, 5,=dopa, Plat. Com. Incert. 50. a-cohoikiaros, ov, =daddouos, Eust. 591.9. Adv. -Kws, Id. 316. 32: —also -kurtt, Byz. G-cddoukos, ov, without solecism, not barbarous, Soph. Fr. 555, Diog. L. 7. 18:—Adv. —xws, A. B. 452. II. metaph. uncorrupted, unspoiled, xpéas Eubul,’Apadd. 1.8; do. masdid not coarse, refined, Plut. Cleom. 13. doodia, 7, folly, stupidity, Plut. Pyrrh. 29, Luc. Astrol. 2 ; not acknow- ledged by Poll. 4. 13. a-cbpioros, ov, not to be deluded by fallacies, Arr. Epict. 1. 7, 26; do. Aéyav mapacxevais Joseph. c. Apion. 2. 41. II. unsophisti- cated, simple, Eccl. d-codos, ov, unwise, foolish, silly, Theogn. 370, Pind. O. 3. 79, Plut. 2. 330 A. Adv. —pws, Diod. 2. 29. domdfopat, fut. doonar: Ep. aor. yomdocaro Epigt. Gr. ggo. 9: Dep. To welcome kindly, bid welcome, greet, Lat. salutare, Tia Hom., etc.; often c. dat. modi, defin Romaovro érecot Te petdixiouce Il. 10. 542; xepolv 7 how. Od. 3. 35, al.; pov dom. Pind. I. 2. 37; peydrws jomalovro abrév received him with great joy, Hdt. 1. 122, cf. 3-13 mapa tiv néow dom., over wine, Id. 2.121, 4: Att. mostly with- out any modal word, e. g. Aesch. Ag. 524, Soph. O. T. 596; esp. as the common form on meeting, doma(opal ce or doma{opar alone, Ar. Nub. 1145, Pl. 1042 (v. Schol.), Plat. Euthyd. 273 B; dom. and defiovcba joined, Ar. Pl. 752; wéppwOev dom. to salute from a distance, Plat. Charm. 153 B; mpdcwbev airiy ayvos dv dom. I salute her at a respectful distance, i. e. keep away from her, Eur. Hipp. 101, cf. Plat. Rep. 499 A; dow. Tais nwmats, of the saluting of ships, Plut. Ant. 76:—dom. Twa Baotréa to hail or salute as king, Dion. H. 4. 39: metaph., dom. cvpdo- pay to bid the event welcome, Eur. Ion 587 :—of a dog, dv dy ywapipov [i5p], domd¢erat Plat. Rep. 376 A. b. to take leave of, Eur, Tro. 1276, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 2, etc.; 7a torara don. to take a last farewell, Lys. 133. 22. 2. from the modes of salutation in use, fo kiss, fondle, caress, Ar. Vesp. 607 ; dom. rots orépaot Plut. Rom. 1: hence of dogs, Lat. blandiri, Xen. Mem. 2. 3, 9 :—to cling fondly to, igov a’, ds TeKov’, dond{opat Eur. Ion 1363; pidciv «at dom. Plat. Legg. 689 A; eye bpas dor. rat ptA@ Id. Apol. 29 D. 8. of things, to follow eagerly, cleave to, like Lat. amplector, dam. 7 dpo.ov, TOY olvoy Plat. Symp. 192 A, Rep. 475 A, cf. Sext. Emp. M. 11. 44; and of dogs, dom. 7a ixvn Xen. Cyn. 3, 7. 4. dom. bre... to be glad that .., Ar. Pl. 324.—The Act. senate, and Pass., with fut. -94c0pat, occur in late Byz. deomdOnros, ov, (onabde) not struck close with the ond0n, not closely woven, xAaiva Soph. Fr. 849:—generally, not in close order, padayg Dion. H. Epit. 16. 7. éonaipw: impf. #omaipov, Ion. and Ep. domatperxoy Q. Sm, II. 104: (a euphon,, oralpw) :—to pant, gasp, struggle convulsively, in Hom. always of the dying (for so xpadin aomalpovoa must be taken Il. 13. 443)3 iowa — aomdoOypas. 233 12. 203, cf. Od. 19. 228; so Aesch, Pers. 976, Eur. I. A. 1587, Antipho 11g. 39; dom. dvm ndrw Eur. El. 843; of an infant, Hdt. 1. 111; of fish taken out of the water, Id. 9. 120, Babr. 6. 5 :—but in Hat. 8, 5) *Adciavros podvos fomatpe was the only one who still made a struggle, resistéd, cf. Dion. H. 7. 25.—A poét. and Ion, word, used only once in good Att., v. supr. Gomdhidos, 6, Ar. Fr. 588, but more commonly %, as Pherecr. Mer. 2: —aspalathus, a prickly shrub, yielding a fragrant oil, Genista acantho- clada, Theogn.1193, Theophr. H. P. 9.7, 3, Theocr. 24. 87 :—used as an instrument of torture, é’ dawaAd@ov Tid xvdwrey Plat. Rep. 616 A. dowddat [mii], axos, 5, elsewhere omdAag (q. v.), the mole, talpa caeca, Arist, H. A. 4. 8, 2, al.; dom. dvréxOova pida Opp. C. 2. 612 ; proverb., Tuprdrepos domddatos Diogenian. 8. 25. GomiAvevouat, Dep. to angle, Suid. In Suid. and Hesych. for the Subst. domadia one would expect domaArela, 7), angling. Aristaen. 1. 17 has a fut. act.-cedow: and prob. domadicat’ ddteDoat, caynvedoa in A. B. 183, should be domaAtetoat, Hesych, has a Noun domaAos, a Jish, and calls it an Athamanian word. | domaddeurhs, of, 6, an angler, Plat. Soph. 218 E; so, domadtevs, ews, 6, Nic. Th. 704, and often in Opp. domideutixés, 7, dv, of or for an angler: Kh (sc. réxvn) angling, Plat. Soph. 219 D, 221 A. d-oTrivrreia, 7}, superfluity, Teles ap. Stob. 524. 52. donipayia, domipayos, domapaywvia, v. sub dop-. donapite, for cnapi(w, =donaipw, Arist. P. A. 4. 13, 11. d-omapros, ov, of land, unsown, untilled, Od. g. 123. not sown, growing wild, Ib. 109, Numen. ap. Ath. 371 B. domdovos, a, ov, also os, oy Od. 23. 233, Luc. Necyom. 1: (dond(o- Hat) :—welcome, gladly welcomed, donacin, rpiAdroros énpdvbe vie Il. 8. 488; ds 8 Srav domdowos Bioros raidecor paveln marpés Od. 5. 394, etc. II. well-pleased, glad, yains dando énéBay 23. 238; domdcwov 8 dpa révye God kaxdrnros édvoay they released him to his joy, 5. 397 :—Adv. -iws, gladly, Hom. with a Verb, to be glad to. ., as pnpt pv donaciws yévu néppew Il. 7. 118, so 18. 232, Od. 4. 523, etc.—Ep, word: but Adv. -fws, with glad welcome, Aesch. Ag. 1555 (lyr.): gladly, Hdt. 7: 152. Cf. domacrds, dopevos. onacpa, 75,=sq., esp. in pl. embraces, Eur. Hec. 829, etc. the thing embraced, dear one, Plut. 2. 608 E. doracpés, 6, a greeting, embrace, Theogn. 858: generally, a saluta- tion, Ev. Matth. 23.7, Marc. 12. 38. 2. affection, opp. to pisos, Plat. Legg. g19 E. onacréov, verb. Adj. one must greet, Plat. Phil. 32 D. doracrikés, 7, dv, disposed to greet, kindly, friendly, Polyb. 28. 3, 10; olxos dom. a reception-room, Eccl. doracrés, 7, dv,=dondatos, welcome, Hom, (only in Od.), dom. rive §- 398., 13. 353. Ep. word, used by Hdt., capra dor, [7d mp@ypa] éroin- savro 5. 98; olow % Tupavvls mpd édevOepins hv domacrérepoy I. 62; also in Eur. Rhes. 348, Plat. Phil. 32 D. Adv. -r@s, Hdt. 4. 201; neut, donacréy as Ady., Hes. Sc. 42. : doracris, vos, 7), Ion. for domacpés, Call. Fr. 427. d-orre.oros, ov, (a7évdw) 10 be appeased by no libations, implacable, Dem. 786.10; xéros Nic. Th. 367; méAepos domeoros =donovd0s, Plut. 2.537 B. d-omeppos, ov, without seed, i. e. posterity, Il. 20. 303 :—in literal sense, opp. to moAvomepmos, Arist. G. A. 1. 18, 57; of plants, Theophr. H. P. "ties hastily, hotly, unceasingly, Hom., who uses only this neut. form as Adv., esp. in phrase damepyxés peveatvew Il. 4.32; dom. kexoA@o0ae 16. 61, etc. (The a is euphon.; unless, with Herm., we take owépxw in causal sense, and treat the a as privat., needing no instigation, impetuously.) Gomeros, ov, (a priv., elweiv) unspeakable, unutterable, Hom., Hes. ; mostly in sense of unspeakably great, dom. aléhp, poos ‘Qxeavov, %An, USwp Il. 8. 558., 18. 403, etc.; so, dow. er€os, xvdorpds, GAKn, KAaYYN, etc., Hom.; more rarely of number, countless, domera modAd Od. 4. 75 3 xpea domera g. 162 :—rpeire domeroy ye tremble unspeakably, Il. 17. 3323 but, paw) peer dameros seems to be a voice that can no longer be heard, indistinct, h. Hom. Ven, 238 (where Herm. reads tpet domerov), —but it may be runs incessant—The word is Ep., but found once in Soph, (Tr. 961), twice in Eur. (Tro. 78, Cycl. 615). A lengthd. form ddorretos is used by Q. Sm., 3. 673., 7. 193, etc. domtd-arroBAns, 7), one that throws away his shield, a runaway, Ar. Vesp. 592. domidys, v. omdns. dont8y-orpidos, f. 1. for damdnpdpos or a similar Adj, in Aesch. Ag. 825. domty-pépos, ov, shield-bearing, of warriors, Aesch. Theb. 19 ; «@pos dom. Eur. Supp. 390; cf. foreg. , domtSvov, 76, Dim, of domis, a small shield, Hermipp. Anu. 2, Menand. Incert. 227. donidickos, 5, Dim. of dois ; a’ boss, Schol. Il. 5. 743 :—also orn, %, Lxx (Ex. 39. 18): -tottov, 74, Diosc. 3. 105 ; and -tokdpvov, 74, J. Lyd. de Magistr. 1. 11. donidimrns, 6, shield-bearing, a warrior, dvépes dombcayrat Ul. 2. 554-5 16. 167, Anacr. 34 :—so, do-mdirns [87], ov, Soph. Fr. 376. domdo-yévvntos, ov, viper-gendered, Eccl. domBdo-yopyav, dvos, %, a fabulous asp-of Egypt, Epiphan. domiS6-5yK70s, ov, bitten by an adder or asp, Diosc. 2. 36. , dont66-Souros, ov, clattering with shields, Pind. I. 1. 32; cf. émdérns T. domido-adys, és, like, shaped like a shield, Diod. 3. 48. 33 asp-like, Lap. Ros. in C.1. 4697. 44- donidées, econ, ev,=foreg., Opp. H. 1. 397. 2. of plants, If. rept Soup Homaip’, ws Ore Bods KrA. Il. 13. 571; (wdv, ér’ donaipovra } domdo-Onpas, ov, 6, a snake-hunter, Gloss. 234 domtBo-Opfupov, ov, = damdopéppay, Schol. Eur. Phoen. 802. Gontdomnyeiov, 74, the workshop of an domdomnyds, Dem. 945. 15. Some Mss. —wyy0r, as in Poll. 7.155, Liban. 4. p. 626. 31. _domiSo-mnyéos, 6, a shield-maker, Poll. 1. 149, Themist. 197 C. dont8o-rovia, #, the making of the shield, Gramm. name for Il. 18, v. Eust. 1154. 41. domiSo-mords, 6, a shield-maker, Poll. 7. 155. donid6-rpodos, ov, feeding on adders or asps, Galen. domiSotxos, 6, (Ex) a shield-bearer, Soph. Fr. 376, Eur. Supp. 1144. GomiSo-hépuwy, ov, (pépBa) living by the shield, i.e. by war, dom. @iagos Eur. Phoen. 796. dontSopopéw, to bear a shield, Schol. Ar. Nub. 984. aoniBo-pdpos, ov, bearing a shield, Theod. 2 Reg. 11. 4. domdo-xeAdvn, 4}, a shield-tortoise, shield-turtle, name of a fabulous sea-monster in Byz. writers. Gomifw, to shield, cover with a shield, Hesych. d-onthos, ov,=sq., Diosc. 2.197, Anth. P. 6. 252, 1 Ep. Tim. 6. 14, 1 Petr. 1, 19, etc. Adv. —Aws, Eccl. d-omidwros [i], ov, spotless, stainless, Suid. &orivOvov, 76, prob. a vulgar form of ayivOov,v. Meineke Com.Gr. 4. 382. domis, Sos, , a round shield (evuvidos Il, 14. 428, al. ; xvedorepys Hdt. 1. 1943; dowt5os xvmdos Aesch. Theb. 489; dpupaddeoca Il. 4. 448, al.); in Hom, large enough to cover the whole man, mostly of bull's hide, overlaid with metal plates, with a boss (dupadds) in the middle, and fringed with tassels (@¥cavor): different from the SmAov or oblong shield used by the Greek men-at-arms (éA?rac), but often put for it, as opp. to the Thracian wéArn and Persian -yéppor, cf. esp. Xen. An, 2. 1, 6, Mem. 3. 9, 2:—to lose the shield, domida dmoBadeiy, was a soldier's greatest disgrace, Ar. Vesp. 19; v. domdamoBAns and cf. Bgk. Anacr. 26, Hadt. 5. 95:—metaph., ovros ydp jyiv domls od puxpd Opacovs Aesch. Ag. 1437; Thy dom. dwoBéBAnke Tod Biov Nicostr. Incert. 5. : in Prose, used for a body of men-at-arms, (domorai or émdtrat), dxTa- kioxirin donis Hdt. 5. 30, cf. Eur. Phoen. 78, Xen. An. 1.7, 10; as we say ‘a hundred lances, bayonets,’ etc., cf. aixun 1. 2, Adyxn UL:— also to estimate a victory, domidas €AaBov ws S:axootas Xen. Hell. Be Bae 8. military phrases: én’ domtdas révre wai eikoor réga- a8a: to be drawn up twenty-five deep or in file, Thuc. 4. 93; so, ém’ donidoy brlywv reraxOa Id. 7. 79; toracOa emt rpeis domidas Ar. Fr. 47; émt yrds donidos in single line, Isocr. 136 C ; én’ dowida, wap’ domida (opp. to émt Sdpu) on the left, towards or to the left, because the shield was on the left arm, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 6, An. 4. 3, 26, cf. «dive 1V. 3, kNows IIL; so, wap’ domidos Aesch. Theb. 624; ¢£ domldos Polyb. 11. 23, 53; cf. Sépu 111:—but map’ domida, literally, beside the shield, Il. 16. 400; wap’ dom. orfvat to stand in battle, Eur. Med. 250, Phoen. 1001 ; map dom. BeBnxevat Ib. 1073; moveiy Id, Or. 653, cf. Hel. 734; els dois jeew Id, Phoen. 1326:—domtdas ovyndclew (cf. cvyrAclw) ; dontia riGecOa either to bear the shield, serve, Plat. Legg. 756 A; or to lay it down, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 12,—just as TidecOar SrAa is used, v.s. TIOnm A. Il, 10 :—émetddy domls Yoh when the shields ring, i.e. when two bodies of men meet in a charge, Xen. An. 4. 3, 29:—a shield was sometimes raised as a signal for battle, etc., Hdt. 6. 115, 121, cf. Xen, Hell. 2. 1, 27. 4. of a round, flat bowl, Aristopho #:A, 1. II. an asp, the Egyptian cobra, Coluber haié L., Hdt. 4. 191, Arist. H. A. 4. 7, 14, Menand, Incert. 154; v. Nic. Th. 157-208, Ael. N. A. Io. 31. domory "1p, Hpos, 6, =sq., Soph. Aj. 565, Eur. Heracl. 277. déomorns, ov, 6, one armed with a shield, a warrior, Hom. (in Il.) always in gen. pl. domorday, Il. 4. go, etc. :—as Adj., damaral pdx00 revxéwy, i.e. the shield of Achilles, Eur. El. 443. domiotwp, opos, 6, =foreg., cAdvor domiaropes turmoil of shielded war- riors, Aesch. Ag. 404. domAayxvia, 7, unmercifulness, Athanas., etc,;—the Verb éorhayxvew in Aquila V. T. Aayxvos, ov, without bowels, or rather without heart (viscera tho- racis); metaph. heartless, spiritless, Soph. Aj. 472; merciless, in Adv. “-vws, Hesych. IL. not eating omddyxva, Plat. Com. Moenr. 1. domAjvios, ov, =sq., moa Diosc. Parab. 2. 61 ;. cf. Lob. Paral. 197. domAnvoy, 75, (a euphon., arAnyv) asplenium, spleen-wort, ceterach, - supposed to be a cure for the spleen, Diosc. 3. 151; also dowAnvos méa Id. Parab. 2. 4. domovdel, Adv. of danov5os, without truce, implacably, modeusiv Philo 2. 195. II. but also of time of peace, without formal treaty, dovael kat domovbei C, I. 2134.6. 21., 2256. 16., 2354. 9, cf. 2053 d. 9, al.; dovAl cat dorovdé 3523. dorrovbSéw, not to make or keep a covenant or treaty, Philo 2. 423, susp. éorovita, 4, a being-without truce or treaty, Poll. 8. 139. II. implacability, Liban. 4. 967 (where -eia). d-orov5os, ov, without orovdy or drink-offering, and so, I. of a god, to whom no drink-offering is poured, dom. Beds i.e. death, Eur. Alc. 424. Il. without a regular truce (which was ratified by anovdal), dvorwyh Thuc. 5. 32: of persons, without making a truce, 1d. 3, 111, 113; dondvdous rods vexpods dvedéaGat to take up their dead without leave asked, Id. 2. 22: 1d domovbov a keeping out of treaty or covenant with others, neutrality, Id. 1. 37- 2. admitting of no truce, implacable, deadly, Lat. internecinus, of war, daonovidy tT ”Apn (vulg. apa) Aesch. Ag. 12353; méAexos Dem. 314. 16, Polyb. 1. 65, 6, ete. ; donévbo. vopos ExOpav oupBddrdrcw Eur. El. 905: cf. duenpueros. doropta, %, barrenness, Manetho 4. 585, Or. Sib. 3. 542. : : , ov, =domapros, xupa Dem. 379. 4, Plut. Alex. 66,etc. II. of plants, unsown, growing without cultivation, Luc. Rhet. Praec. 8, Nic. ap. Ath, 684 B. III. Ady. —pas, in Eccl., of the Incarnation. aor WoO péeupmov — deraduros. é-onovSacros, ov, not zealously pursued ot courted, yuv7y, Eur. Fr. 503. 2. not to be sought for, mischievous, omevdev dovovdaora 1d. Bacch. 913, I. T. 202 :—Adv. —rws, Ael. N. A. Io. 30. II. act. not in earnest: 1d dom. want of earnestness, wept Tt Dion. H, 5. 72. &-orrovdt [7] or-el, Adv. without zeal, effort or trouble, l1.8.512.,15.476: without a struggle, ignobly, pi) pay domovbl ye. . droAotuny 22. 304. dorovdos, ov, =o omovdaios, Eupol. Mod. 29. Adv. -dws, Basil. dompts, %, a kind of oak, Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 7. dompos, a, ov, the Lat. asper, Ael. N. A. 1. 26, v. Jac. ad 1. II. in Byz. and Modern Greek, white; whence dompécapkos, ov, fair ; domporys, 770s, 7), whiteness; &ompo-opéw, fo dress in white; domps- ous, ouv, of fair complexion ;—all in Byz. ooa, Ion. for ariva, Att. dra, neut. pl. dors, which, whichsoever, what, whatever, Il. 10. 208, al,, Hdt,; Att. dv7a, Plat. Com. Zevs xax. 6, 7, etc. 2. interrog.,. d-cuvrédeoros, or, incomplete, douvreh tw, to be useless, Eccl. G-cuvrehijs, és, not contributing, useless, Themist. 352 C, Synes: Adv., dowredds Exe mpés ttvas Schol. Pind. O. 3. 81, II. =dovvré- Aegros, Bios M. Anton. 3. 8. ‘ &-ovrovos, ov, not strained, slack :—Adv., -vas, lazily, Sup. -drara, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 31. é-oivtpytos, ov, not pierced, imperforate, Galen. 19. 438. d-ctvtpurros, ov, not rubbed to pieces, Philo Belop. p. 60, Origen. G-CUvTPOXOS, ov, wot concurrent, Eust. Opusc. 122. 53. d-cuvitrapKtos, ov, not coéxistent, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 202, Soups, > A y > p av, ab maddy, Eumadrw ad, adbrs ad, adds ad mad, are only Att., mostly ai — avOaiperos. Trag.;—par’ ad Aesch. Eum. 254, etc.:—v. sub ats, adre—The position of ad is usually second in a sentence; but it is placed first in a Megar. Inscr. in Keil, no. iv b. ro. av, ad, bow wow, of a dog, Ar. Vesp. 903. ataive, Att. ab- (cf. dp-, érap-avaivw): impf. (xa-)avavov Luc. Amor, 12: fut. adav@ Soph., v. infr.: aor. ninva or at- Hdt.:—Pass., impf. Ar, Fr. 514: aor. nvdv@nv or ad-, v. infr., ég— Hdt. 4. 151: fut. avavOncopa: (cf. dp-); but also med. avavodpar in pass. sense, Soph., v, infr.:—Mss, and Editors differ with regard to the augm.: (for the Root,*v. aw). To dry, abavbéy (of a log of wood), Od. 9. 321; avaivey ix6ds mpds Hdov Hdt. 1. 200, cf. 2. 77, Q2., 4. 172 :—Pass., Xen. Oec, 16, 14., 19, 11, An. 2. 3, 16, etc. 2. to dry, wither, or parch up, Solon 15.35 ; avavOels ruOpuhy Aesch. Cho. 260; avava Blov I shali waste life away, pine away, Soph. El. 819: avavodpa I shall wither away, Id. Ph. 954; ndawéuny Ocdpevos Ar. Fr. 514. ma, intr. =Pass., Hipp. 598. 27.—The Act. is comparatively rare, esp. in good Attic, aviidéos a, ov, (ados) dry, parched, withered, ad. xpas bd Kad- Haros Hes. Op. 586; of hair, rough, squalid, Simon. 50. 9; of plants, Orph. Arg. 248; of the mouth, Call. Cer. 6; of eyes, sleepless, Anth. P. §. 280. Cf. abaradéos, abypnpés. avavots, ews, }, a drying up, Arist. Meteor. 4.1, 5, G. A. 5.5, 5, al. avtavry (sc. vécos), %, a wasting, atrophy, Hipp. 484. 24. Avaors, 4, ="Oaors (q. v.), Strabo 170. atacpés, 6, a drying, dryness, Hipp. 47. 43, etc.; cf. A. B. 462. dvdra, i.e. dféra, Aeol. for arn (q. v., sub fin.). avyatw, fut. dow, aor. nivyaca Anth. P. 7.726: Pass., v. infr.: (adyh): —to view in the clearest light, see distinctly, discern, Soph. Ph. 217; so also in Med., Il. 23. 458, Hes. Op. 476, Eur. Bacch. 596:—Pass., abyacbeioa being mirrored in the smooth water, Soph. Fr. 587.6. II. of the sun, to beam upon, illumine, twa Eur. Hec. 637. 2. to appear bright or white, LXx (Lev. 13. 25, al.). avyacpa, 76, brightness, whiteness, LXX (Lev. 13. 38), C. I. 8686. avyaopss, 5, a glittering, lustre, splendour, Plut. 2. 894 E. avyéw, to shine, glitter, LXX (Job. 29. 3). adyy, %, the light of the sun, sunlight, and in pl. his rays or beams, nérraro 8 abyn jeAiov Il. 17. 371, cf. Od, 6. 98., 12. 176; jeAlov ter airyas, i.e. was born, Il. 16. 188; in’ abryds HeAloo, i. e. still alive, Od. TI. 498, 619; also, Ards adyds Il. 13. 837; abyds éordeiv to see the light, i.e. to be alive, Theogn. 426, Eur. Alc. 667; aiyds Aedooew Aesch. Pers. 710; aids BAérew Eur. Andr. 935; but, im abyds Aevo- ce or ideiv 7 to hold up to the light and look at, Id. Hec. 1154, Plat. Phaedr. 267 E; im’ avyds dervivat 7 Ar. Thesm. 500; (whereas mpos and én abyhy, in Hipp. Offic. 740, are explained to mean in a full and ina side light); ducpat abryav sun-set, Pind. 1. 4. 110 (3.83); EvvopOpor airyais dawning with the sun, Aesch. Ag. 254; «dicew mpods abyds to rise surging towards the sun, Ib. 1182; Aapumpordrn Ta&Y mapeovoéwy airyéov of present days, Hipp. Fract.752; oft. in Arist. :—metaph., Blou duvros airyal ‘life’s setting sun,’ Aesch. Ag. 1123;—whereas adyal jeAloro is used of the East in Dion. P. 84, 231 :—aiyy the dawn, day-break, Act. Ap. 20. 11. 2. generally, any bright light, as of fire (v. sub éoxdpa), Od. 6. 305, Il. 2. 4563; dpi(nror dé of abyyal, of lightning, Il. 13. 244, cf. Soph. Ph. 1199; of a beacon, Il, 18. 211, Aesch, Ag. 9; Aapmabos Cratin. (?) 08. 16; cf. #AceTpopans, dréppow. 3. of the eyes, dupdrwv airyat Id. Aj. 70; also, aiyat alone, like Lat. Zumina, the eyes, Eur. Andr. 1180, Rhes. 737; so prob., dvaxAivayras Ti THs Wuxijs adyhy Plat. Rep. 540 A. 4. any gleam on the surface of bright objects, skeen, adyiy xaAxeln Il. 13. 341; xpvods avyds eager Pind. N. 4. 1343 GpBpdo.os adya wéwdov Eur. Med. 983; aby? ris xpdxns Menand. Incert. 33; so of marble, etc., Jac. Philostr. Imag. 2. 8.— Mostly poét., but freq. in Arist., chiefly in the sense of sun-light. (The Root is as yet not made out.) avyets, esoa, ev, bright-eyed, clear-sighted, Nic. Th. 34. aiyirepa, %, ax enlightener, of the moon, Orph. H. 8. 5. avyo-eins, és, brilliant, beaming, Plut. 2. 565 C; the Comp. and Sup. freq. in Philo. Adv. -60s, Philo 2. 487. atyos, 76, the morning light, dawn, Byz. aviyoup, —pos, 6, the Lat. augur, C. 1. 6494. Atyovoros, 6, Augustus, used as an Adj.=Gr. oeBaorés, Paus, 3. 11, 4, etc. :—hence Adyotoreos, ov, Dio C. 61.20; Atyoueretov, 74, the temple of Augustus, Ib. 57. 10:—Atyovoradws, ov, Augustalis, rd Abyouorahia, ludi Augustales, Ib. 54. 34. II. the month August, Sextilis, Plut. Num. 19. aty-wmés, dv, radiant, Welcker Syll. Ep. 32. 7. : 5 avsdfopar, fut. Dep.: (avsy):—to cry out, speak, adddgacda pop dvOpwmnin Hdt. 2. 55, cf. 5. 51:—to name, Opp. H. 1. 127.—An act. fut. avdago occurs in Lyc. 892; aor. nvdagaId, 360, Anth. P. 6. 218; aor. pass. avédayxGeioa Orph. H. 27. 9. a a avSdw, impf. nidar Il. 3. 203, Hdt., Att.: fut. abdjow, Dor. dow [a] Pind., Soph. » Dor. 3 pl. addacodv7t Anth. Plan. 120:—aor. 705n0a, Dor, avdaoa, Pind., etc.; part. avdjoas Il. 10. 47, Dor. abddcas Pind.; Ion. 3 sing. avdqcaoxe Il. :—pf. niinxa (ax-) Hipp. 273- 19 :—Pass., impf. nbdwpny (v. infr.): aor. 7b548nv Soph. Tr. 1106; Dor. part. addabeis Eur. Med. 175: fut. addyOqcopa Lyc. 630:—Ep. pres. 3 pl. atddwvrat Opp. H. 1. 776.—But also as Dep. avSdopat, Aesch. Pr. 766, Eum. 380, Soph. Ph. 130: impf. q8@ro Id. Aj. 772: fut. joopat Id. O, T. 846, Dor, doopar Pind. O. 2.166: (addq). TZ. ¢. ace, rei, | 1. to utter sounds, speak, Il. 1,92, etc.; Tévov abénoacx’, boov GdAot TevTH- Kovra 5.786; ds 5é Tis. avdjoacKey 17.420; avday xpavyny to utter acry, Eur, Ion 893. 2. c. acc, rei, fo speak or say, éros nbda J 247 Il. 6, 543 aida dre ppovées 18. 426; so, ode abdav &o6’ & pnd dpav kaddv Soph, O. T. 1409; ri 7a Id. O, C. 25; so in Med., Id. Ph. 1 30, 852:—also Pass., nddaro yap radra so 'twas said, Id, O. T. 731, cf. 5273 ws nddar’ éxe? Ib. g40. 8. of oracles, to utter, proclaim, tell, Ib. 392, etc. ; oborwas xopmeis yapous abdav to speak out concerning them, Aesch, Pr. 948. 4. avd. dyava to sing of a contest, like Lat. dicere, Pind, O. 1. 12. 5. absol. to speak, utter, of the statue of Memnon, Epigr. Gr. 988, 989. 8, 991, 998. 5, 1000. 7; cf. abd I. 2, avdheas Ik. II. c. acc. pers., 1. to speak to, address, often in Hom., dytiov addy twa to speak to or accost; also, éxos ré pev aytiov niéa Il. 5.170; abdav dewd mpdomodrov xaxd Eur. Hipp. 584 :—hence to call on or invoke a god, Id. H. F. 499, 1215. 2. c. ace. et inf. to tell, bid, order to do, ab. ce xaipew Pind. P. 4. 108, cf. Soph. O. C. 1630; avd. ce uh..to forbid, like dmavddw, Aesch. Theb, 1042, etc.; avda Tit woeiy Eur. I. T, 1226; add& owmay Soph. O. C. 864; avdqoas xatpew Epigr. Gr. 205. 7: so in Med., Soph. Aj. 772. 3. to call by name, call so and so, Aeus viv @eriderov avég Eur. Andr. 20: more often in Pass., abd@par mais AxiAAEws Soph. Ph, 241; Znvds abdnOels yovos Id. Tr. 1106; abdao0ar vexpdy Id, Ph. 430; Kdxior’ avddpevos most ill reported of, Aesch. Theb. 678; 6 mapapachrns év Bporots avddipevos Alex. Tpod. 2. 4. like Aéyerv, Lat. dicere, to mean such an one, Eur. Hipp. 352.—The simple Verb is used once only by Hadt., once or twice in Com. (Ar. Ran. 369, Alex. Tpop. 2), never in good Att. Prose. Cf. da-, mpo-avdda, al. atSH, Dor.av84, 7, the human voice, speech, opp. to 6upr, not so much the words as the tone, pédtros yAukiov péev addy Il, 1.249; cf.avdjes. 2. the sound or twang of the bowstring, eaddv dee xeAcBive eiKédn avdny Od, 21. 411; also, of a trumpet, Eur. Rhes. 989; of the rér7eg, Hes. Sc. 396; of the sound uttered by the statue of Memnon, Epigr. Gr. 990. 7; cf. addam I. 5. IL. =Adyos or @Hpn, a report, account, épyov dtovres avdjv Soph. O. C. 240, cf. Eur. Supp. 600, Hipp. 567. 2: an oracle, Id. I. T..976. 3. adda rivos a song in honour of .., Pind, N.9.10. (Cf. Skt. vad (Jogui), v. sub defSw,—the va or Fa being transposed, as in avfopat to wax, adpa from Skt. va (spiro).) atdijes, ecoa, ev, speaking with human voice, abdnévrav .. cxeddv dv- 6pdmav Od. 6.125; so of Ino the sea-goddess, # mply yev env Bpords avbjeoca 5. 334; and of Achilles’ horse, addjevra 8 eOyxe Ged Il. 19. 4097; Ovnrol addjevres, opp. to dOavaror, Hes. Th. 143 ;—therefore, when @eds addjeooa is applied to Calypso and Circé, Od. 10. 136., 11. 8., 12. 150, 449, it means a goddess who used the speech of mortals; so, xOdviat Beal addjeooa: Ap. Rh. 4.1322; “Apyods.. avdfjey gvAoy (as Bgk. for a#dacov) Aesch. Fr. 19.—The application of the word to goddesses gave rise to much debate among the ancients; Aristoph. Gramm. gave the explanation adopted above; Arist. proposed ovdjecca, dwel- ling on earth, in Od. 5. 334; abAheooa, dwelling in palaces, in 10. 136, al. 2. generally, vocal, nécpov abddevta Adywv Pind. Fr. 206; of the statue of Memnon, Epigr. Gr. 1000, al.; opp. to dvavbos, ap. Paus, 10, 12,8. aUBpla, 7), = oe (sc. odyypappa), a work in which the author speaks in his own person, as opp. to dialogue ; cf, abrodijyntos. Adv., avrompoowmws Aéyew Clem, Al. 543. airé-mrepos, ov, with his own wings, Aristid. 1. 15. avr-oTrtéw, to see with one’s own eyes, Paus. 4. 31, 5, Heliod. 3. 1. atr-émrns, ov, 6, seeing oneself, an eyewitness, Hdt. 2. 29., 3. 115, al., Plat. Legg. A, Euang. ’Avax. 1. avromrukds, ea, like an eyewitness, nioris avr. the credit of an eye- witness, Scymn. 128. ait-onros, ov, self-revealed, Julian. 221 B, Suid. Adv. —raws, Eccl. avro-mvOvos rpirous, 5, the very Pythian tripod itself, Psell. 144. avro-rrip, 76, very fire, fire itself, Herm. ap. Stob. 137. 35. avré-ntpos, 6, of unbolted wheaten flour, dpros Alex. Kump. 2:—so, atro-ripirys [7], ov, 6, Phryn. Com. Moaorp. 1, Hipp. 542. 56., 544. 7. . avro-rupaeuros, ov, brilliant as a very torch, Philes. atro-mreAys, ov, 6, selling one’s own goods or products, Plat. Polit. 260C; adr. mepi 7 Id, Soph. 231 D; cf. peraBoreds. adromwAuKés, 7, dv, =foreg.: 7) -«n (sc. Téxvn), the trade of an abro- mans, opp. to éumopixeh and camnducn, Plat. Soph. 223 D, cf. 224 E. avro-péypwv, ov, (fé(w) self-wrought, wérpos Aesch, Fr. 117. avro-pyrwp, opos, 6, a self-made orator, Eust. 1301. 32. air-dpodos, ov, self-covered, roofed or vaulted by nature, mérpat Opp. H.1.22; oxnvat Dion.H.1.79; abr. oréynanatural roof, Ael.N.A.16. 17. atrép-pextos, ov, self-produced, Opp. C. 2. 567, H. 1. 763. airép-pifos, ov, roots and all, Diod. 4.12; poét. adrdpifos, Babr. 36. 1. II. self-rooted, self-founded, éoria Eur. Rhes. 287. avrop-pidys, és, (simrw) self-precipitated, Schol. Eur. Phoen. 640. avrép-piitos, ov, (féw) self-flowing, flowing unbidden, Anth. P. 9. 669, Galen. 13. 626: poét. abrépuros, Pind. P. 12. 30. avrés, atrh, atré, reflexive Pron., self, Lat. ipse:—in the oblique cases used simply for the personal Pron., him, her, it :—with the Artic. 6 airés, 4 airH, 7d airé (also rairéy), etc., the very one, the same. I. self, myself, thyself, etc., acc. to the person of the Verb: often also joined with éy&, ov, etc., as abrds &yw I myself, Hom.; v. infr.: 1. oneself, one’s true self, the soul, not the body, in Od. 11. 602; but also reversely the body, not the sow/, in Il, 1. 4: or oneself, as opp. to others who are less prominent, as the king to his subjects, 6. 18., 8. 4; parent to his children, 2. 317; the man to his wife, Od. 14. 265; the warrior to his horses, Il. 2. 466; the shepherd to his herd, Od. g. 167, cf. Il. 1. 51; the people to their allies, 11. 220; the seamen to their ships, 7. 338; generally, the whole to its parts, 7. 474 :—hence airds re xal.., of a chief person with his followers, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 1, etc.:—hence also it marks emphasis without opposition, and is used absol. for the Master, (Ipse, Catull. 3. 7), as in the Pythagor. phrase Adds épa, Lat. Ipse dixit; so, Tis obros ..;—Avrés—i.e. Socrates, Ar, Nub. 219; dvaBénoov Abréy Ib. 220; dvoryérw Tis Shpar’s Abrds épxerat the Master, 1d. Fr. 261; avrods dire? Theocr. 24. 50: similarly the neut. is used, abrd Belfer, adrd onpavel res ipsa declarabit, the result will shew, Valck. Phoen. 626, Heind. Plat. Hipp. Ma. 288 B: in full, rotpyov ray’ abrd Seige Ar. Lys. 375: redupl., adrés 6” 5 xphoas airds jv 5 paprupay Aesch. Eum, 798, cf. Fr. 266 :—so, of things, che very, bd Adpoy abrév, Lat. sub cristam abroTrodl — airs. point of dawn, Thue, 2. 3 :—also, for Lat. vel, adeo, even, ob pot pédre ddyos ob” abrijs ExaBijs ll. 6, 451.—In these senses abrés in Att. Prose either precedes both the Article and Subst., or follows them both, e. g. abrds 6 vids, or 6 vids adrés. The Article can only be omitted with proper names, or nouns denoting individuals, e. g. abrds Mévaw Kriig. Xen. An. 1. 2, 20; adrds Bactheds, adros warhp, etc. 2. of oneself, of one’s own accord, Lat. sponte, like abréparos, dAda ris airds trw let each go of himself, ll. 17. 254; omed5ovra Kal abrdy drpives 8. 293 ; karanavcopev* of Bt kal adroit mavécdwv Od. 2. 168; fe yap aire Soph. O. T. 341. 3. by oneself, alone, = dvos, ards Tep édoy although alone, Il. 8. 99; dvaxopuoOijvat avrov és badnpov by himself, Hat. 5.85; wavew adroto ivariow: only with his garments, Id. 2. 47; avrol yap éopev we are by ourselves, i.e. among friends, Ar. Ach. 504, cf. Thesm. 472, Plat. Parm. 137 B; adrois rots dvdpdor.., 7) eat rots dAdo Xen, An. 2. 3, 7:—sometimes strengthd., abrds xrjoaro olos himself alone, Od. 14. 450; adrds pdvos, v. pévos 11; abrds Kad? abrév, v. €avTod. 4, Plato used adrds to signify a thing by or in itself, the abstract concept or idea, 70 dixarov abré Phaedo 65 D; adrd 7d & Parm, 143 A, al.; cf. Arist. Metaph. 2. 2, 22: the neut. adré is freq. in this sense, attached to Nouns of all genders, od« aird dixatoovyny éawvodvres, GAAG Tas dn’ airhs eddoxphnoes Plat. Rep. 363 A, ubi v. plura ap. Stallb.; more fully, ef adrd rodro, marépa, 7pwrov, dpa 6 marhp éori marhp Tivos, #) ov ; Id. Symp.199 D; ddeAdés, ard rodTo btep Ear the ideal, abstract father, brother, Ib. E:—hence, later, in compos., avroayabéy, avroavOpwros, abroypauph, adrdéimmos, avtoiyiea, etc. ; yv. Arist. Metaph. 6. 16, 6:—the more regular construction, iva avr? Bixavocivyn mpods Gdiclav abriv xpiGein, occurs in Plat. Rep. 612 C, etc.; doubled, é« 77s eixdvos pavOavey airhy Te airhy, ei KaX@s FeacTat, its very self, Id. Crat. 439 A. 5. in dative with a Subst., airés denotes accompaniment, together with, dvépovcey adry odv pdépuryye he sprang up lyre in hand, Il. 9. 194; adrp odv mHAnKe Kapyn helmet and all, 14. 498, cf. Od. 13. 118, etc.; and without ctv, air kev yain épvoa Il. 8. 24: the latter use is most frequent in Prose and Att., adrots dvipdot men and all, Hat. 6. 93; adroto: cvppaxow allies and all, Aesch, Pr. 221; and with Artic., avrotor Tots répmag: Ar. Eq. 849, etc.; abrois Tots immots Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 7: sometimes, however, the Att. also add avy, e. g. air gdy dyya Eur. Ion 32, cf. Hipp. 1213, v. Elmsl. Med. 160: cf. infr. v. 9. 6. added to ordinal Numbers, e. g. wéumros aidrés him- self the fifth, i.e. himself with four others, Thuc. 1. 46, cf. 8.35, etc.;— avrés always being the chief person. 7. when ards seems to be put for obros or éxeivos, these words are in fact understood, as aid dy, pn, 70 Séov etn this very thing, precisely this, Xen. An. 4.7,7; ad7d ove elpyra, d padrora ee Plat. Rep. 362 D; indeed in Plat, adrd Tovro is very freq., as abrd Toro 7d Cyrndév Polit. 267 C, etc.; abd tovro pdvov Gorg. 500 B; so, AeydvTwy GAAo pev ovdéy .. adTa Be Tae Thuc, 1. 139. 8. seemingly pleonast. where the Noun has gone before, to which it serves to recall the attention and add distinct- ness, as hic and is in Latin, whether in the apodosis of the same sentence (infr. 11), v. Buttm. Soph. Ph. 766; or after a stop, as Od. 7.73; Te- peated in apodosi it marks strong indignation, avrds éwaryyetAdpevos auoev.., abris dmmdecer Lys. 126. 20, cf. Aesch. Fr. 281, Xen. An. 3. 2,4. :. in connexion with the person. Pron., éy@ ards, éuébev avrijs, o& abrdy, etc., but always divisim in Hom; with an enclit, Pron. he puts avrés first, as abrév puy Od. 4.2443 so, adrov yap ce Set Tpo- pnGéws Aesch, Pr. 86: so also, adrds éyarye Plat. Phacdo 59 B, etc. :—in the oblique cases abrds coalesces with the Pron., éuavrod, ceavrod, éavrod, etc., but not in Hom., y. sub voce. b. sometimes the per- son. Pron, is omitted, as abrds... jaa: AtAaiopat, for éye adrés, Il. 13. 2525 airdy ehénoor, for gue airdv, 24. 503; adtay yap dmadédpcd? dppadinaw Od. Io. 27; in 2. 33, of adr@ is simply a strengthened form of of; and so in Att., when oé adrév, tuol ard, etc., are read divisim, they are merely emphatic, not reflexive; but in this case, adrds generally precedes the pers. Pron, cf. Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 25 with 6. 1, 14. ¢. abrés is joined with the reflexive éavrod, adrod, etc., to add force and definiteness, adrds xad’ atrod Aesch. Theb. 406; avrot ig’ air@yv Ib. 194; and sometimes between the Art. and reflex. Pron., rois abrds abrov myuacw Baptvera Id. Ag. 836, cf. Pr. 762; Tovs y’ avrds aitrod modepuiovs Soph. Aj. 1132; also, nar’ abrds avrod C. I. 5774. 1243 v. Ahr. D. D. p. 274 sq. d. also aérod is used with the possessive Pron., marpds «Aéos 48° éudv abrod Il. 6. 4.46 ; Ophvor . . énov tov abrijs Aesch. Ag. 1323; éx@pds dv rots coiow abtod Soph. O. T. 416; Tots olow abrod Ib. 1248; also, abray operéppaw dracbaNinow Od. 1.75 Tots jperépos abrav pidrors Xen. An. 7. 1, 29. e. adros éavTou is also used with Comp. and Sup. Adj., on which the gen. depends, €. g. abrds éwurod péer TOAAP brodeéorepos Hat. 2. 253 TH eupuTary éore arn éwurfjs Id. 1. 203. 10. ards for 6 airés, the same, but only in Ep., e. g. Il. 12. 225, Od. 10, 263, and in late Prose; for all the Att. instances in which adrds is the predicate (and beyond this no one extends the supposed Att. usage of adrés for 6 avrés) may properly be translated himself, etc., although the Lat. idiom would require idem: see them in Herm. Soph. Ant. 920; cf. Soph. O. T. 458 and 557 (though here others read aids), Ellendt Lex. Soph. y, adds fin. ‘la. Epich. 2 Ahrens has a Comp. avrérepos; and Ar. Pl. 8 3, a Sup, adréraros, Lat. ipsissimus, his very self: cf. Bast Greg. p. 366, 896. II. He, she, it, for the simple Pron. of 3 person, only in oblique cases, and never at the beginning of a sentence: hence unnecessarily considered enclitic by some old Gramm., y. Spitzn. Il. 12. 204. It occurs at begin- ning of a line in Il. 14. 457, Od. 16, 388. Later it is not rare in Att., though the Trag. hardly use it except in dialogue (as the Laty is is rare ipsdm, i.e, just, exactly under .., Il, 13. 615; ard 70 treplopOpov the in Lat. poetry, Bent]. Hor. Od, 3. 11, 18); in Prose it serves to recal the: airs — avroumepovcros. ‘noun which has been used earlier in the sentence, éy@ piv ofy BaciAéa, -.0b« ol6a 8 Te def adrov dudcae Xen. An. 2. 4, 73 Teipdoopa To nanny ..cvppaxeiv ait® Id. Cyr. 1. 3, 15; after a relative, bs xe Geots éeximeiOnrat, .. Exvov adrod Il, 1. 218; ods wi) e¥picKor, Kevordduoy avrois éroingay Xen. Cyr. 6. 4,9, cf. 1.9, 29; esp. where a second verb requires a change of case in the pronoun, of dy éeAcyx Oot .. , ws mpo- Séras abrods dvras TipwpyOAvar Id. An. 2. 5, 27; éxeivot, ols odx _exapifovro of Aéyovres, ob8 epidouy airots Dem. 35. 4; in subdivisions, as boo..of pev adray.. Xen. Cyr. I. 1, 1, cf. Plat. Charm, 168 E.— The nearest approach to this use in ¢he nom. case is in such instances as those given supr. I. 7. (q. v.).—A pleonast. use is alleged from Soph. Ph. 315 ols 'OAvpmor Soiév mor’ abrots, where however we should read with Porson, of” for ofs (cf. 278); for this usage dates from the time of Callim., dy 6 pev abray Epigr. 44; dy 6 pev bp Anth. P. 7.72; not rare in LXx and N, T.—On the shades of difference between the oblique cases adrovd, abr®, abréy, and the reflex. Pron. abrod, ait, abrév, v. sub éavrod. IIL. with Article 6 abrds, # airy, 7d aird, and Att. contr. abrés, airy, rabré and radrdy (as required by the metre, cf. Soph. O. T. 734 with 325, Elmsl. Med. 550): gen. rabrod, dat. radrq, pl. neut. radTa: lon. wirés, reuTd:—the very one, the same, Lat. idem, of which there are some examples even in Hom., as Il. 6. 391, Od. 7. 55, 326; ovdels abros ebruxe? more Eur. Tro. 1206; 6 abrés ei TH yvepy Thue. 3. 38, cf. 5. 753 émt 7o abrd ai yr@par epepor Id. 1. 79. 2. it freq. takes a dat., like Suoros, mapamAnotos, etc., to denote sameness or agree- ment, esp. in Prose, as taurd dv ipiv émphocopey Hat. 4. 119; ov abrov x@pov éxhumdy Epnol Aesch. Cho. 543; 6 abrds TO AlOw the same as the stone, Plat. Euthyd. 298 A; 7d aird mpacoew or macxew Tivi ‘Hdt. 4. 119, etc.; év rai7@ eivai run to be in the place with .. , Xen. An. 3.1, 27; mpociec@ai rut és ravTd éavT@ to have a person meet one, Ib. 1. 30, cf. Aesch. Cho. 210; also, ard Tabrd Tint Hat, 2. 20:— also, 6 avros.. ai (like Lat. simul ac ..) Id. 4.109; Tiv abriy rad- tv Sidvoav xat Kar’ éxeivyy HArkiay Isocr. 99 A; 6 adrés Te.., kai... , Wolf. Lept. pp. 258, 370:—6 adrds .. Haomep Stallb. Plat, Phaedo 86 A:—v. supr. I. 10. IV. Special phrases : 1. aird Exacroy each thing in itself, as it is, v. abroéxacros, Plat. Phaedo 65 E, etc. 2. aio pévor, like -abréxpyua, simply, merely, nothing but, strengthd. form of pdvov, Valck. Call. p, 28. 3. abrd, just, about, of accidental meeting, and in loose definitions of number, Herm. Vig. n. 123, xiv: but xatd raird, and ind tavré, at, about the same time, Lat. sub idem tempus, Ib. A. eis tavrd, ty rabT@, éx rot abrod, to, in, from, the same place, Att. 5. airé as Adv.=dprt, Epigr. Gr. 540. 1. V. In Compos. : 1. of itself, i.e. natural, native, not made artificially, as in abréxreros, abrépopos. 2. in a simple, rude state of nature, as in abroméxoros. 3. of mere .., of nothing but .., as in abrégvaAos, abrodrlOwos. 4. of oneself, self- .. , as in adrodidaxros, airoyvapwv, abréparos; and so independently, as in abroxparwp, airé- vopos. 5. hence, as a second self, very .. , bodily, as with proper names, A’ro@ais, Lat. altera Thais, Schiif, Mel. 28. 6. in the ab- stract, the ideal, v. supr. I. 4. 7. just, exactly, as in abrdd 8. 255 avro-ctveots, }, pure intellect, Epiphan. abro-cboriiros, ov, self-commended, approved, Epiphan. avro-cayn, 7), homicide, Byz. avro-apiiyis, és, slain by oneself or by kinsmen, both senses being com- bined in Soph. Aj. 841 (prob. a spurious passage), cf, Eur. Phoen. 1316. avrooxedd, y. sub abrocyediy. ; avrocxedidfe, fut. dow, (adroryxédios) to do, act, speak off-hand or without preparation, Plat. Crat. 413 D, Xen. Mem. 3. 5, 21. 2. c. acc. to extemporise, strike out at a heat, ra Béovra Thuc. 1, 138, cf. Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 32. IT. mostly in bad sense, to act, speak, or think unadvisedly or hastily, try rask experiments, Plat. Euthyphro 16 A, Euthyd. 278 E; wepi twos Id. Euthyphro 5 A, Apol. 20C; wept ze Arist. Pol. 7. 4,133 els Ta owpara T&v ‘EAAjvey Aeschin. 76. 12. atrocxediacpa, 74, work done off-hand, an impromptu, improvisa- tion, Arist. Poét. 4, 7, Plat. Com. Nvé p. 5. avrooxeduacpés, 6, extemporaneous speaking, Alcidam. p. 48 Bekk. atrocyedtacris, 08, 6, one who acts or speaks off-hand; and so, a raw hand, vi ph Lat. dro, opp. to rexvirns, Xen. Rep. Lac. 13, 5. avrooyediactiKés, 7, dv, extemporary, Arist. Poét. 4, 14; also -oxe- Stacrés, dv, Alcidam. p. 47 Bekk. avro-ox 510s, a, ov, also os, ov Plut. Sull. 7:—hand to hand: used by Hom., like adrooradin, in dat., airooxedin (sc. waxn) in close fight, in the fray, mélée, abrooyxedin pigar xetpas Te pévos te Il. 15. 510; in ace, as Ady.,=atrocyeddv, “Avtipatny &.. Ang abrooxediny 12. 192., 17. 2943; abrooxediny obracpévos Od. 11. 536. II. off- hand, é£ abrooxedins mepwpevos (of an improvisatore), first in h. Hom. Merc. 55; worqpara avr. Dion. H. 2. 34; Tpinpy vavanyeiy abr. Arist. Fr. 558; of persons, abrooxédios dv wept ras ionyopias Plut. 2.642 A; é« Tov abrocxebiou eimeiy Dio C. 73. 1:—Adv. —les, Paus. 6. 24, 3, LXX. avro-oxeSév, Adv, near at hand, hand to hand, Lat. cominus, in Hom, always of close fight, {«péeco’ adr. odrafoyro Il. 7. 273; Spouy GAAq- Aous abr. mek avr. dpynOnoav 13. 496; cf. Od. 22. 293 :—once. also, abrooxeda Soupt .. érdpouae Il. 16. 319: cf. abroaxédtos. 2. ready at hand, oxnvds nowdvra..tAns abrooxediov Paus, 10. 32, 15. 3. c. gen. near, close to, d\AHAwY Arat. gor. II, of Time, on the spot, at once, Ap. Rh. 1. 12., 3. 148, ete. avro-cxnpdatirros, ov, opp. to moAvaxny-, of simple form or style, Phot. Bibl. p. 73. 25. avro-cxlSis, és, simply slit: simple, imdinua Hermipp. Anz. 5. avré-cwpa, 76, the abstract or ideal body; and avro-cappoctivn, 7, abstract moderation or temperance; both in Hermias in Plat. atro-rayés, ov, without a master, independent, ap. Hesych. atbro-réhewa, 1), perfection, completeness, Ocell. Luc. p. 510, A. B. 595: —Adj. -ré\eos, ov, self-complete, perfect, Procl.: —reAeorys, %, the being abrorédeos, lambl. Myst. p. 26, 24. avro-réheotos, ov, self-accomplished, spontaneous, Opp. H. 1. 763, Anth, P. 1, 19. adbro-reis, és, ending in itself, complete in itself, Arist. Top. 1. 5, 9, Pol. 7. 3, 8:—Adv. -A@s, completely, Epicur. ap. Diog, L. 10. 85. 2. bsolute, self-subsisting, Wytt. Plut. 2. 122 E. 3. absolute, with full rarely, with reflex. sense of abrod and dAAnAwy, as abdévrns, abro- KTOVEW, 9. together with, as in abrémpepvos, adréppiCos roots and all; vy. supr. I. 5. 10. alone, by oneself, as in abrécKnvos.—For avrov, abrws, etc., v. the respective heads. (The chief authority on this subject is still Hermann’s Dissertatio de Pron. airés, Opusc. 1. 308, etc., also printed at the end of his Viger, with a summary of its contents, ib. § 123 B.) atros, v. sub abrds IT. avro-cavbipdkny, 7, cavdapdkn itself, the Form of it, Alciphro Fr. 4. avro-catpla, 7, mere rottenness, Phot. airé-capt, 6, , nothing but flesh, utterly carnal, Jo. Chrys. atréce, Adv., (avrod) thither, to the very place, oréddeoOar Hat. 3. 124; karaBatvew Ar. Lys. 873; abropodeiy Thuc. 7. 26, etc.; oper- dévp ob« dy eprxotyny airéo’ Antiph. Ap. yor. I. 19. atro-alSnpos, ov, of sheer iron, duidda abr. strokeof sword, Eur, Hel, 356. aubré-ctros, ov, bringing one's own provisions, jokingly of a mapaovtos, Crobyl. ’Amayx. 1, cf. Ath. 47 E, and v. abrddemvos. avro-cKxitavets, éws, 5, a very digger, Alciphro 3. 70. atro-ckevacros, ov, self-made, i.e. natural, Schol. Opp. H. 1. 22. atré-oxevos, ov, self-made, i.e. artless, plain, Poll. 10. 14; piaews EpevOos abr. Aristaen. 2. 21. Adv. —ws, Synes. 16 D. avré-cKoppa, 7d, essence of banter, as Ruhnk. in Alciphro 3. 43. avro-codia, 7, very wisdom, Athanas., etc. atré-codos, ov, of, with native mother-wit, Tzetz. Hist. 8. 437. avré-crropos, ov, self-sown, Aesch. Fr. 198. avréo-ctros, ov, self-sped, Aesch. Eum. 170, Soph. Fr. 503. avro-oradin (sc. uaxn), }, a stand-up fight, close fight, Ep. word, only used in dat. (cf. adrooxébios), &v y¥ abrooradiy Il. 13. 325. av’ro-ctaréw, (iarapat) to be independent, self-sufficient, Philo 1. 688. * airé-creyos, ov, =airdpopos, Dionys. Trag. ap. Ath. 401 F. avto-orépipos, ov, strong in itself, Hesych. ; abré-orotxos, ov, going by oneself, independent, ap, Suid. atré-crohos, ov, self-sent, going or acting of oneself, Soph. Ph. 496, Musze, 255, Anth. P. 7. 585; adréoroAov vavdody to let a ship by private contract, C. I. (add.) 4302 a. : abro-cropari, with one’s own mouth, Walz Rhett. 7. '736.—The Adj. -oréparos, ov, occurs in Tzetz. Ep. 22. avré-crovos, ov, sighing or lamenting for oneself, Aesch. Theb. 916. a’ré-ordXos, ov, resting on natural columns, Hesych. powers, Dio C. 52. 22; mepi twos Polyb. 3. 4, 43 mpés Te Ib. 36, 2; air. npiopa peremptory, final, without appeal, Hyperid. Euxen, 28; dixn Suid. :—Adv.—A@s, at one’s own discretion, ob« abr., GAN axpiBas arbitrarily, Lys. Fr. 22, cf. Polyb. 3. 29, 3, A. B. 467. A, sufficing for oneself: also supporting oneself, immeis Luc. Tox. 54. 5. abso- lutely accomplished, Twos by one, Polyb. 5. 12, 4. II. (7éAos Iv) taxing oneself, self-taxed, Thuc. 5. 18, cf. Stob. Ecl. 2. 55. avré-rexvos, ov, self-instructed, mpos tacw Plut. 2. gg1 E. avrérns, 770s, %, identity, Sext. Emp. M. ro. 261. avré-rrypts, 6, %, a very tiger, Manass. Chron. 2234. avro-ripn, 4, abstract, ideal honour, late Eccl. atré-rpynTos, ov, se/f-severed, Schol. Opp. H. 2. 349. avré-rokos, oy, young and all, Aesch. Ag. 137: but, atroréxos, ov, act. self-producing, Nonn. D. 8. 81, etc. atvro-tpityicés, 7, dv, arrant tragic, abr. wi@nwos Dem, 307. 25. avro-rpiis, dos, 7), the abstract number three,Schol, Arist. p.821. 36, etc. avro-tplywvov, 7d, the ideal triangle, the Form of triangle, Arist. de Gen. et Corr. 1. 2, 11, Themist. 165 A. atrorp! s, inh. Hom. Mere. 86, d5dv air., as if from abrorpo- maw, to turn straightway: but the place is dub. ; other Mss. give atro- apems ds, others abrotpom)s ws, and Herm. conj. 65dv dvriropnowr, penetraturus viam. : avré-rpodos, ov, =abréarros, a word blamed by Phryn, 201, atré-rios, ov, self-stricken, wreidjot Opp. H. 2. 358. avrod, Dor. avr and avret, Ady., properly a gen. of adrés, =én adrod rod rémov, just there or just here, Lat. illico, Hom., Hdt., and Att. ; énlaxes abtod stop there! Cratin. Eby. 6:—often with the place added, avrov évt Tpoin, abrod Tad evi xwpy here in’ Troy, etc., Il. 2.237, Od. 10. 271; avrov évOa Il. 8. 207; avrod wov dypwy somewhere there on the farm, Od. 4.639; abrot imép xepadgjs 8. 68; abrod wept reixos Aesch. Ag. 452; avrovd tavry in this very place, exactly here, Hdt. 1. 214., 3 77 4.1353 €vOa5’ abrod Solon 35 (25). 11, Ar. Pl. 1187; ois évOad avrod dnudrais Soph, O. C. 78; abrov rhwep Execey Hat. 1, 30;—-so that avrov properly precedes; but «e@@: abrod h, Hom, Ap. 3743 kar’ olxous abrod Ar. Pax 89. avrod, Att. contr. for éavrod. avro-vylea, #, health in the abstract, Arist. Fr, 182 (p. 1509 4. 17), Hermias in Plat. avro-upynyopla, 7, the ideal of hymnody, Epipkan. II. parox. \ avro-cdpperpos, ov, ideally symmetrical, Arist, Fr. 182 (p, 1509 4. 19). b. atro-umepoveros, ov, ideally super-substantial, Dion. Ar. 256 abroupyéw, to be an abroupyés, work with one’s own hand, Luc. D. Mar. 6. 1. II. c. acc. to execute or fulfil of oneself, ra. emt THis yiis Arist. Mund. 6, 7; ry pavrnfyy Luc. Syr. Dea 36; rhv émBovdjy Philostr. 517, etc.i—Pass., Dionys. ap, Eus. P. E. 774 E, avrovpynpa, aros, 75, @ piece of one’s own work, Dio Chr. 1. 403. Hi 2. a farm, Byz. aurovpynros, ov, self-wrought, rudely wrought, Anth, P. 6. 33. avroupyla, %, a working on oneself, i.e. self-murder or the murder of one’s own kin, Aesch. Eum. 336. II. one’s own working, personal labour, opp. to slave-labour, Polyb. 4. 21, 1, Plut, Cat. Ma. r. III. experience, Polyb. 9. 14, 4. atroupyicés, 7, dv, willing or able to work with one’s own hand, M. Anton. I. 5: industrious, Muson. ap. Stob. p. 370. 11:—Adv. —K@s by one’s own labour, Clem, Al. 283. II. 4 —«n (sc. réxvn), the art of making real things, not semblances (€fSwAa), Plat, Soph. 266 D. abroupy.ov, 74, a farm tilled by abroupyot, Byz. adbroupyés, dv, (*épyw) self-working, adrovpy@ xepi Soph. Ant. 52; air. Bios Dion. H. to. 19. 2. mostly as Subst. one who works his land himself (not by slaves), a husbandman, poor farmer, like épydarns, Eur. Or. 920, Plat. Rep. 565 A; adr. -yewpyol Xen. Oec. 5, 4; of the Peloponnesians, Thuc, 1. 141. b. metaph., adroupyds rijs pidoaoplas one that has worked at philosophy by himself, without a teacher, Xen. Symp. I, 5; air. rijs radamwpias engaging in hard service oneself, Polyb. 3. 17, 8. II. pass. self-wrought, i.e. rudely wrought (cf. abrooxéb5:0s), Dion, H. de Dem. 39: simple, native, pédos Anth. P. 9. 264. adroupy6-reukros, ov, =foreg. 1, Lyc, 747. avrotra, v. sub abravrov. atro-piyos Pl, ov, self-devouring, Hesych. v. abrépopBos. atvro-pivis, és, (palvouat, pavivat) self-appearing, personally appear- ing, Iambl., etc. Adv. -v@s, Byz. av iL, =abroparifw, Hesych. atr6-0ovos, ov, the very embodiment of envy, Eust. Opusc. 205. 4. atto-p0opa, 7, very destruction, Eccl.: —p@dpos, ov, self-destroyed or corrupted, Eccl. j atrégu, —w, Ep. gen. and dat. sing. and pl. of airdés, in Hom. always with a Prep., dw. avrégw from the very spot, Il. 11. 443 so, map adré- pw or —pt, 12. 302., 13. 42, etc. ; ew adrdgpw on the spot, 19. 255. avro-piiavOpwria, }, humanity itself, Greg. Naz. atro-pikauros, ov, wholly given to self-love, Joseph. A. J. 5. 6, 3. atré-dovos, ov, with the bark on, Baxrpov Theocr, 25. 208, cf. Epigr. 4, Anth. P. 6. 99. bove' , 00, 5, =abrogd Eccl. avro-éveuros, ov, self-slain, Schol. Aesch, Theb. 735- atro-dovia, 7, =atroupyia I, Schol. Aesch. Eum. 336. atro-pévos, ov, self-murdering, murdering those of one’s own family, avropéva xaxd Aesch. Theb. 850, Ag. 1091; maAdpn Anth. P. 7. 149; cf, avdévrns: Adv. -vws, Aesch, Supp. 65.—In Hom. only as prop. n. atro-pévrys, ov, 6, a murderer, Eur. Med. 1269. avré-hopBos, ov, (pépBw) =abroparyos, Aesch. Fr. 112, Arcad, 88. atro-pépyros, ov, self-borne, Nonn. D. Io. 150. atré-hoprtos, ov, bearing one’s own baggage, Aesch. Cho. 675, Soph. Fr. 250, cf. Cratin. Xep. 20. II. cargo and all, vais Plut. Aemil. 9., 2. 467 D. avro-ppévyais, ews, %, absolute prudence, Himer. Ecl. 32. avro-ppovpytos, ov, self-guarded, Justin. M. adto-puns, és, self-grown, orpwpvi olxela xat adr., of the fur of beasts, Plat. Prot. 321 A: self-existent, Critias 15. 2. self-grown, of home production, Xen. Vect. 2, 1; so, like adréxOav, & wid pidrn Kéxporos, abroputs “Arriuen Ar. Fr. 162. 3. natural, opp. to artificial, ov8és Hes. Th. 813; Aguhv Thuc. 1. 93; xpuods abr, virgin gold, Diod. 3. 45; adr. Adpor hills in their natural state, not quarried or mined, Xen. Vect. 4,2; kopivav abropud rough as it came from the tree, Theocr. 9.24; opp. to wy ba. réxvns, wild, uncultivated, Theophr. C. P. 3.1, 13 of a horse, rdv abropuy [sc. Spdpov] darpoxdfev to have natural paces, Xen. Eq. 7,41; abr. ynpvpara ‘native wood-notes wild,’ of birds, opp. to language, Plut. 2. 973 A; of style, natural, simple, Dion, H. de Dinarch. 7.—Adv., abropuas Gpoov like by nature, Plat. Gorg. 513 B. 4. 7d abropvés, the very nature, one’s own nature, Plat. Rep. 486 E: a natural state, opp. to 7d énixrnrov, Arist. Rhet. 1. 7) 33- II. act. bearing, producing of itself, spontaneously, avr. dv péper Philostr. 840. atro-puia, }, a springing spontaneously, of a fountain, cited from Liban. avré-hidos, ov, of the same, the very tribe, Eccl. airé-iros, ov, self-caused, €Axea Pind. P. 3. 83: self-existent, Nonn. Jo. 1. 3: innate, dperh Dio C. 44.37. ° 2. natural, abr. épyacia, =abroupyla, i.e. agriculture, opp. to 5¢ GAdayijs wopifey riy tpophy, Arist. it 8, 8. ate 4 avropavia, %, the voice itself, Julian. 209 B. cen, stance Hacer an oracle delivered by the god himself, Luc. Alex. 26. Adv. —vas, Basil. avro-paparos, ov, self-betrayed, self-revealed, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 173. avré-hupos, ov, (pup) self-detected, dpmdaxjparaSoph.Ant.51. IT. mostly in the phrase en abropdpy AapuBdvew, to catch in the act, Lat. in ipso furto deprehendere, Eur. lon 1214, Lys. 137. 43 sq. Dem. 382. 5., 646. fin.; én” abr, chéyxew Lys. 112. 8., 132.303 so with Pass. Verbs, én’ adropdpy dddvar Hat. 6. 72; Appear Ar. Pl. 455, Eupol. Map. 5, Antipho 111. 48, etc.: cf. dwayary} IV: hence, 2. ina more general sense, notoriously, manifestly, émtBovdevovras pavijvat én’ ; Hat. 6. 137; én’ air. xaradapBavew ria dpabéorepoy dvra 7 Poe * ‘Plat. Apol. 22 B, cf. Rep. 359 C; én’ abr. eiAnupat wAovawraros diy 4 unceasingly, I. §20., 5, 255; avroupyew — ai'rws. Xen. Symp. 3, 13; agi@ oe .. én’ abr. raird por embeitar Lys. 93. 375 én’ abr. wAémrns dv Aeschin. 55. 12; so also in reference to the arrest (dmayaryy) mentioned by Dem. 646. fin., where the offence was of old date, cf. Lys. 137. fin. 3 avré-ws, wros, 76, Very Light, of the Deity, Greg. Naz. avro-xaAkeuros, ov, self-forged, Byz. . ’ avro-xdpakros, ov, self-engraven or impressed, of an image in a mirror, Nonn. D, 5. 599. 4 F avré-xiipis, iros, }, very grace: abroxdpires ‘Arrinat the essence of Attic graces, Alciphro 3. 43. avro-xerAns, és, v. sub avrdALBos. avré-xeup, pos, 6, 7, with one’s own hand, Aesch. Supp. 592; avr. Aovew, male, ereivew Soph. Ant. 900, 1315, Aj. 573 tives @Koddun- cay ;.. dpvides abréxeipes; Ar. Av. 1132 sq., cf. Lys. 269, Theopomp. Com, Incert. 29: also c. gen, the very doer, the perpetrator of a thing, avr. rovde Tod Tapov Soph. Ant. 306; ris doed-yelas Tavrns Dem. 524. 3; abr. obre Tay dyabar obre TGV KaKGv men who accomplish neither. . , Isocr, 112 D. II. absol., like adOévrns, one who kills himself or one of his kin, Herm. Soph. Ant. 1160; but also simply @ murderer, homicide, Soph. O, T. 231, Dem. 552. 18; adrov .. vopi{a abréxeipa pov yeyxevijcOae rovros Tots epyos Id. 549. 5; in full, rov adr. rod évou Soph. O. T. 266, cf. El. 955, Plat. Rep. 615 C, Dem, 321. 18. III. as Adj. murderous, esp. of murder committed by one’s own hand or by kinsmen, avr. Odvaros, spay, potpa Eur. Phoen. 880, Or. 947, Med. 1281; mAnyévres airéxerpe praopate of brothers smitten by mutual slaughter, Soph. Ant. 172; cf. av0évrns II. 2. girdxeipa yptupara written with one's own hand, autograph, Dio C. 5d. 4. avroxeupt, Ady. of foreg., with one’s own hand, Lycurg. 165. 8, Paus. 7. 16, 4, cf. Pors. Or. 1037; cf. adroxept. avroxetpla, 7, murder perpetrated by one’s own hand, Plat. Legg. 872 B. II. mostly in dat. abroxerpia, Ion. —fp, used adverbially, =avroxept, mostly of slaughter, adr. «reivery Hdt. 1. 140; dmodéoat Id. 3. 74, cf. 66; generally, adr. dieAgey Id, 1. 123; Sracmelpew Id, 3-13; AaBety Dem. 787. 26. atroxeipito, fut. iow, todo a thing, or commit a murder with one’s own hand, Philist. (60) ap. Poll. 2.154, where the word is called mayplapoy, avroxelpios, a, ov, =airéxep, Schol. Eur. Med. 1269, Apollon, Pron. 89 A. atréxeipos, ov,=foreg., Hesych. Adv. —pws, =abroxeipt, Byz. avro-xeiporévntos, ov, self-elected, Arg. Dem. Fals. Leg. 338. 7, Eccl. avroxept, Adv. of airéxeip, post. for adroxepi, Call, Ep. 215 c. gen., abroxept mociay édapnoay Manetho 3. 200. airé-xovos, ov, country and all, Aesch. Ag. 536; but Blomf. suggested aitéxOor’ by. avr6-xPwv, ov, gen. ovos, sprung from the land itself, Lat. terrigena.: airéxOoves, of, like Lat. Aborigines, Indigenae, not settlers, of native stock, Hdt, 1. 171, Thuc. 6. 2, etc.; c. gen., avr. “IraAtas Dion. H. 1. 10 :—the Athenians were fond of being so called, Eur. Ion 29, 589, 737, Id, Fr. 362. 8, Ar. Vesp, 1076, cf. Thuc. I. 2, Isocr. 45 C, 258 C. II. as Adj. indigenous, native, Ta piv B00 aitéxOova Tay eOvéav Hat. 4. 1975 dperh Lys. 194. 37; Adxava ray aitoxOdveyv Polioch. Incert. 1. 6, avtro-xéhortos, ov, angry at oneself, Anth. P. 7. 688. avro-xophynros, ov, self-furnished, Plat. Ax. 371 D. avro-xéwvos, ov, Ep. for atoydavos, —yavos, rudely cast, massive, of a lump of iron used as a quoit, Il. 23. 826. avré-xpnpa, Adv. in very deed, really and truly, Ar. Eq. 78. just, exactly, Ael, N. A. 2. 44, Luc. Dem. Enc. 13. avré-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, ovy, with its own, natural colour, Plut. 2. 270 E. 2. of one and the same colour, Ib. 330 A. airé-xptcos, ov, of very gold, precious, Hesych, abré-xiros, ov, poured out of itself, self-flowing, Aristid. 1. 253, Schol. Pind. O. 7. 12; freq. in Nonn. avroipet or pl, Adv. of airomros, with one’s own eyes, Gramm. avroipla, 7, a seeing with one’s own eyes, Diosc. praef., Luc. Syr..D.1; Ths abroyias Inscr, Delph. in C.1.1711 A. 4; émt rhvadr. éAGeiv Ib. 17324. avr, Dor. for abrod, there, Theocr. 11, 14. avradys, es, Ion. for ai@ddns, Apollon. de Pron, 354-C, Hesych. But Hat. 6. 92 has the common form ad@adéarepor. aired, €s,=airéxeip 11, Hesych, abr-ovnris, ob, 6, one that buys for himself, Dinarch. ap. Poll. 3. 81. auTapys, es, (wpa) managing, acting or speaking of oneself, Call. Fr, (264) ap. Schol. Pind. P. 4. 107, atrépodos, ov, for abrépodos, metri grat., Greg. Naz. atitws, Ady. I. in this very manner, even so, just so, as it is, yupvoy edyra, attrws—dore yuvaixa, unarmed just as I am—like a woman, Il, 22.125; atrws dmwonep.., Soph, Aj. 1179; avrws ds.., Ap. Rh. 1. 890. 2. hence in a contemptuous sense, just so, no better, ri ob Khdeat abrws dvdpav ; why take you no better care? Il. 6, 55 (Spitzn. obrws, as in 2. 342) ; oixerat atvrws has gone off just as he pleased, Od, 4. 665: often joined with other words implying contempt, - vimos abrws a mere child, Il. 24. 726 (but in 6. 400 the same phrase denotes fondness) ; so, pay airws 20, 348; dveudAioy abras 21. 4743 abras a xOos dpodpns Od. 20. 379, ete.—Hence seems to come the form Goavrws (in Hom, always ds 8 airws),.in just the same manner, com- mon in Att., ef. Stallb, Plat, Phaedo 102 E; in Soph. Tr. 1040, 3° ai'- Tos, ws pe Gneaev, II. in reference to the past, still so, just as before, as it was, Il. 1. 133., 18. 338, Od. 20. 130; also with ér added, Aevkdy Er’ aitrws still white as when new, I. 23. 268; ért Keirat airws év kdoinot he still lies just as he was, 24. 413; so, kat atrws still, III, in vain, without effect, It. ‘ avopyy — apaipéw. ote adrws puOqcopai, GAAa ody Spey Od, 14.151; but many passages to which this sense is attributed may be referred to one of the former heads, as Il. 16. rr7., 18. 584, etc.—(As to the origin of the word, ancient and modern Gramm. dispute whether it is to be written airs (from fem. of obros) = obras, or atirws (from ards), cf. Apoll. in A.B. 585, E.M.172.34 with Buttm, Lexil. s.v., Herm. de Pron. abrés §15. The latter is the more prob. opinion. The accent, airws for ats, is called Aeol.) atiny, acc. to Jo, Gramm. 344, Acol. for abyjy. aixddéos, a, ov, (adx7) boastful, Xenophan. 3. 5. avxevifo, fut. Att. 1, (abxjv) to cut the throat of .., behead, Tovs pev nixévige Soph. Aj. 298. 2. in Philo 1. 654 (cf. 2. 372) prob. , 40 seize by the throat, throttle, which sense is cited from Hippiatr. avxéviov, 74, =adx7qy IT, Eust. 1533. 46, An. Ox. 356. 31, etc. adxévios, a, ov, belonging to the neck, révovres aby. the neck-sinews, Od. 3. 450; xalrn Opp. C. 3. 255. II. a kind of tunic, Antiph. Incert. 79. aixeviornp, fpos, 6, Bpdxos ax. a halter, Lyc. 1100. aixéw, used only in pres. and impf. yixouy, except that fut. adyhow occurs in Luc, D, Mort. 22. 2, aor. nixnoa in Anth, P. 15. 4, Apollod. 2. 4, 3, and in compos. with éf-, ém-, kar—- 1: (aiyxn). . Like xavyd- ona, to boast, plume oneself, ent tut on a thing, Batr. 57, Anth. P. 6. 283; 71 Eur. I. A. 412: with a neut. Adj., rovodrov avyxeiv Hdt. 7. 103; wey’ abxeiy Eur. Heracl. 353; pdtv 7d8 ate Id. Andr. 463: c. acc, objecti, to boast of, dorépas Anth! P. 7. 373. II. c, ace. foll. by inf. aor. or pres. to boast or declare loudly that .., abxéovres KdAdora, TiWévar ayava Hat. 2. 160, cf. Thuc. 2, 39, Eur. Andr. 311, Bacch, 310 :—but the inf. is sometimes omitted, adx@ SeBhpay boast (that I hold her), Epigr. Gr. 567. 3, cf. 822. 5., 932. 7:—Med., nbxov- Hq ..&« Bacihnwv boasted (that I was descended) from kings, Ib. 192. I. 2. c. inf, fut. to say confidently, to be proudly confident that, abx& yap .. rhvb_e Supedy épol ducew Al’ Aesch. Pr. 338, cf. 689, Pers. 741, Cratin.’Apx.1; with a negat., od yap mor’ nbyour.. pebéfeav I never thought that .., Aesch. Ag. 506, cf. Eum. 561, Eur, Heracl. 931.— Never in Soph., though he has éravy@, El.65 ; rare in Com., and in Prose. atx (not so well adx7), }, boasting, pride, xevedppoves adyat Pind. N. 11. 38 :—Dor. abxady in Hesych, expl. by xavxqow. (Prob. akin to €dxopat, q. v.) avy jes, eooa, ev, braggart, proud, Opp. H.2.677; Bods Anth. P.6.114. avxnpa, 76, a thing boasted of, an object of pride, the pride, boast, xOovds Soph. O. C. 710: cause for boasting, glory, ob yap vw és 768’ eioas atx. Ib. 713, cf. Thuc. 7. 75. II, =adx7, boasting, self- confidence, Thuc. 2. 62., 7. 66 :—for Pind. P. 1. 180, cf. dmo@duBporos. avxnpatias, ov, 6, a boaster, Eust. 537. 42.—Adj. —pariKds, 7, dv, Id. 1967. 9. auxny, évos, 6, the neck, throat, of men and beasts, Il. 7. 12, Hes, Op. 813, etc.; whether the back (Od. 10. 559) or front (Hes, Sc. 418): for its several parts, v. Arist. H. A. 1. 12, 1, P. A. 4. 11, 16:—rarely the gullet, Nic. Th. 350:—in pl., like Lat. cervices, of one neck, Soph. Fr. 487. 4, Anth. P. 5. 28, Orph. L. 137. II. metaph. any narrow band or connexion (like a neck): 1. a neck of land, isthmus, Hat. I, 72., 6. 37, Xen. An. 6. 2 (4), 3- 2. a narrow sea, strait, of the Bosphorus, Hdt. 4. 85, 118; avx. mévrov, of the Hellespont, Aesch, Pers. 72; of the point at which the Danube spreads from a single stream into several branches, Hdt. 4. 89. 3. a narrow mountain-pass, de- Jile, Id. 7. 223. 4. the neck of the thigh-bone, the womb, etc., Hipp. Art, 822 D, al. 5, the tiller in a ship, Poll. 1. go, Polyaen, 3- II, 14.—Cf. rpaxnaos. (The 4/AYX was perhaps orig. FAX =Skt. vah (veho), v. sub x.) abxyots, ews, 7, (avxéw) boasting, exultation, Thuc. 6. 16, atxyTHs, 08, 6, a boaster, blamed by Poll. 9. 146. atyxytikés, 7, dv, =adyjes, Schol. Pind. Adv. —@s, Eust. 750. 23. atyxpadéos, a, ov, avxpnpds, Choeril. p. 130. adxpéo, (adxpds) to be squalid or unwashed, Lat. squaleo, avxpets Te kakds Kat dexia éooa Od, 24. 250; so adxpeiv Ar. Nub. 442, 9, Plat. Rep. 606 D; adxpet Theophr. H, P. 4. 10, 7:—the other form adxpdw appears in part. avyy@oat Hipp. 37. 21; ad’xpdwons Arist. Meteor. 2. 4, 9; abxpavres Theophr. H. P. 8. 10; adxyavra Luc, Vit. Auct. 7; avxpacar Plut, 2.187 D, Luc., etc.; Ep. adxpudworra Nonn. D, 26. 108, etc.—Phryn. in A. B. 7. 26 remarks that, except in the part., adypéw only was used; adxuGs cited from Phryn. Com. (Incert. 18) is dub., v. Meineke: other forms might be referred to either Verb. as adxpov Ar. Pl. 84, Anaxandr. ’O5. 2. 6 3 avxunop Plat. Phaedr. 251 D, etc. abxpy, 7, =adxpds, Q. Sm. 9. 372, v. A. B. 7. aixphets, coca, ev, =adxynpds, h, Hom. 18. 6. aixpnpo-Képrs, ov, 6, with staring, squalid hair, Anaxandr, pwr, 1.9. aixpypds, a, ov, dry, without rain, xeuav Hipp. Aph. 1247, cf. Aér. 287, Arist. H. A. 8. 27; éap Id, Probl. 1.9; of places, dry, parched, rénot Plat. Legg. 761 B; xwpia Theophr. H. P, 9. 11, 10, etc, ; xapmol Diod, 2. 53. 2. dry, rough, squalid, Eur. Alc. 947; oxAnpos kat aixp. Plat. Symp. 203 C; esp. of hair, (cf. foreg.), Soph. Fr. 422, Eur. Or. 387 ; Bios Luc. Salt, 1.—Plat. Com. “Ym. 5 has the irreg. Sup. adxpd- taros. Ady. —pas, Philostr. 147. Cf. abaradéos. : atxpds, 6, (aim uro) drought, Hat. 2. 13., 4.198, Hipp. Aph. 1247 ; in pl., Thuc. 1. 23, Isocr. 191 D:—metaph., @omep aixpds tis Tis coplas a drought or dearth of .., Plat. Meno 70 C; and so perhaps, aixpos Tay oxevapiwy Ar. Pl. 839. 2. the effects of drought, squalor, pecras abxpod re Kat xdvews Plat. Rep. 614 D. 3. of style, dryness, meagreness, Dion. H. de Dem. 44 ae Lar es, (eld0s) looking dry, 7d abxpades drought, Hdt. 1. 142, cf. Arist. H. A. 8. 19; xé&pa atxpodeorépa Theophr. H. P. 8,1, 6: squalid, xéin Eur, Or. 223; odpf Plat. 2. 688 D: cf. adxpnpds. b 41a0ay Dem. 597.17. 257 aixos, 6, a kind of pulse, Herophil. in Notices des Mss., 11, 2, P- 193. aixos, 74, =aixnua, Schol. Aesch. Pers. 871. tbo, Att. atw (cf. dp-avw) :—to kindle, light a fire. va ph Tobey Gober abot (sc. mip) Od. 5. 490,—where the Att. would use évator, ef. Ar, (Fr. 589) ap. A. B. 13 :—Med. ¢o take Jire, Arat. 1035.— Only pott.; cf. dpavw, evatw, (From the same Root come atos, avaive, aborddeos, avarnpéds, aixpds, also ebm or ctw, eboTpa, Evpos; cf. Skt. ush, éshami (uro), ushnas (calidus); Lat. uro (us), ustus, Auster (?).) _atw: fut. dow: aor. Higa; [in the pres, and impf. av- is a diphthong ; in fut. and aor. a dissyll. "dtow, #ioa, cf. éravw]. To shout out, shout, call aloud, often in Hom., ave 8 "Ary Il. 20. 48, cf. Call, Dian. 56 sq.; kéwder’ dijoas 4. 508, cf. 6. 66, etc.; paxpdy dive 5. IOI; hice... weya TE dewdy re dpha 11.10; Hier 5% daxptoroy Ib. 275, etc. :—also in Trag., ave, Aandfew Aesch, Theb. 186; pydty péy dons Soph. El. 830; dewdv 8 dicas O. T. 1260: c. acc. cogn. to utter, orevaypov -- dicar’ Eur. Supp. 798; riv’ adda diiow ; Id. Ion 14465 hice povnv C. I. 4748. 2. c. acc. pers. to call upon, ade ' éraipous Il, 11. 461., 13. 475, cf. Od. 9. 65, Theocr. 13. 58. 3. rarely of things, to ring, Kappadeov dé of . . domis dicey Il. 13. 409 (y. sub ados 1): of the sea, to roar, Ap. Rh. 2. 566. “(Hence di-r7, di-réw, lon (=l-wf-4)5 the orig. Root being aF—, d-nust q. v.) Guus, 7, Acol. for dds, Hus. ; : aoéBpwpa, 7d, Megarean name of a woman’s garment, Plut. 2. 295 A; cf. GBpwya in Hesych. apayvedw, =sq., Plut. 2. 943 C; Dind. proposes dparyvicat. apayvite, fut. a Lxx: aor. -fyioa Paus., LXX :—Med., fut. -rodpat Hipp. 303. 39: aor. -7ynoduny Eur.:—Pass., fut. -ayricdjoopat: aor. -yyvicOnv Lxx (Num. 19. 12, 19). To purify, consecrate, Paus, 2. 31, 8; mupxatyy xpi dpayvicat .. olv Epigr. Gr. 1034. 28 :—Med., Tots veprépos Oeois Eur. Alc. 1146 (v. foreg.), cf. Hesych., Suid., A. B. 26. Verb. Adj. -toréov, one must purge off from oneself, punapov em THdevpa Clem. Al. 506. adayvicpes, 5, purification, Schol. Eur. adabia, %, displeasure, Eupol.’Aotp. 7. dpaSos, ov, (dpavidve) displeasing, odious, E.M. 174. 52. adadpivopar, Pass. to grow large or full, Theophr. C. P. 4. 7, 8. ddatpatis, ews, 7, a bleeding, Byz. ddaipdoow, Att. —rrw, fut. fw, to bleed, let blood, Byz. adatpepa, 76, that which is taken away as the choice part, LXX (Ex. 35- 22, Num. 18. 27, sq., al.). adhatpeparikds, 7, dv, taking away, abstracting, Gramm. ddatpé-ouxos, ov, reft of home, Byz, ddaipects, ews, 7, a taking away, carrying off, Plat. Crito 46 C, etc. ; opp. to mpdaGears, Plut. Lyc. 13. 2. as law-term, the assertion of the freedom of a reputed slave, Hyperid. ap. Suid. II. in Logic, &£ dpaipécews by abstraction, in the abstract, Arist. An, Post, 1. 18, 1: —Cicero jokes on this term, ad Att. 6. 1, 2. 2. in Gramm., the removal of initial letters, as in orf for €orn, Choerob. 1. 84, adaipéreov, verb. Adj. one must take away, Hipp. Aph. 1253, Plat. Rep. 361 A: one must exclude, Id. Polit. 291 C, IL. dpatperéos, éa, éov, to be taken away, removed, Id. Rep. 398 E. a&datperixés, 7, dv, fit for taking away, Twds Clem. Al, 286. a&daipéris, 50s, 9, a she-robber, Orph. H. 59. 18. adatperds, dv, to be taken away, separable, Plat. Polit. 303 E. Ti. proparox. dpaiperos, taken away, Arr. Epict. 3. 24,3. (On the differ- ence of accent, y. Lob. Paral. 479 :—but it is questioned.) ddarpéw, Ion. dmaipéw: fut. now: pf. dpypnea, lon. dmapalpyxa: aor. d@eidov, later dpypyoa in Galen.: (v. aipéw). To take from, take away from :—Construct.: mostly dp, ti Tu, as, otrov pév opw apeire took it from him, Od. 14. 455; and so in later writers, Aesch. Eum, 360, etc. ; (but also to relieve one of a duty, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 44): —more rarely, dp. ti twos, Ar. Pax 561, Xen. Rep. Lac. 4, 7; «ijpa xdpas Aesch. Theb. 777; €# twos Id. Eum. 444; but also 7a re Ib. 360, Soph. Ph, 933, v. infr. 1. 1., I1:—c. gen. rei, to take from a thing, fo diminish it, Xen. Vect. 4, 4:—c. acc. solo, dmeddy 7a ax0ca having taken them off, Hdt. 1.80; BaciAéar .. dpyas dpypour took away, Eur. Med, 455, cf. Ar. Pl. 22, Ran, 518. 2. to take away, exclude, separate, set aside, 7d ‘EAAnvixdy ds tv dnd ravTav dpaipodvres xupls Plat. Polit. 262 D; ri twos Id. Rep. 360 E; opp. to mpooriévat, Id. Phaedo gs E, etc. II. Med., fut. dparpjoopar (but in pass, sense, if the reading be correct, Hdt. 5. 35), and later dpe- Aodya Timostr. &:A05. 1 (cf, Meineke Com, Gr. 5. 117), Polyb. 3. 29, 7: aor. dpeAduny, in late Gr. dpecAduny, v. Phryn, 183 :—from Hom, downwards more freq. than Act, to dake away for oneself, take away, but seldom without some notion of taking for oneself, (the thing taken being still the rightful property of the person who has lost it) :—also in re- ciprocal sense, dpatpetobov Tuxnv ye have received each the fortune of the other, Eur. El. 928.—Construct. like Act., datpetoOai ri rim, as, wat 59 por yépas . . dparpoeobar dmesdcis Il. 1. 161 ;—rl twos 5. 673, 691., 9. 335, etc. Lys, 168. 36 ; (also, revxea. . dori dpedéoBarll. 13. 510) ;—so, 7 mpds Twos Eur, Tro. 1034; 71 dad twos Ar, Vesp. 883; €« twos Xen. Cyn. 12, 9 :—also c, dupl. acc. rei et pers, fo bereave or deprive of, uate od Tév8 , . dwoaipeo Kovpny Il. 1. 275, cf. Hdt. 1. 71., 7. 1043 freq. in Att., réxva dq. Twva Eur, Andr. 613, v. Elmsl. Ach. 464: rarely c. acc. pers. et gen. rei, dp. Tas xvas Tov ebpeiy Xen, Cyn, 6, 4, cf. Plut. Anton. 60, Paus. 5. 10, 9. 2. c. acc. rei, dm. Yjpeopa to cancel or rescind, Andoc. 22. 37; dpeAopévns Tis vuxrds 70 Epyov having broken off the action, Thuc. 4.134; 80, €ws «eAdalvys vuerds opp’ dpetrero Aesch. Pers, 428, cf. Xen, Hell. 1. 2, 16; dp. Thy pynuny ToAAGY 3. followed by py c. inf, = ac hinder 258 from doing, ri p’ dvipa. . detdod pa) kraveiv ; Soph. Ph. 1304, cf. Eur. Tro. 1146; xrewas, i tes cuppopd a” apeidrero [pi ereivar] Id. Andr. 913; or with inf, only, Pind. I. 1. 87;°cf. Heind. Plat. Prot. 260 A. 4. dpaipetobai twa els érevOeplay, Lat. vindicare in liber- tatem, to set a man free, Plat. Legg. 914 E, Isoct. 252E, Dem. 100.8, cf, Lys. 167. 20, 23, Aeschin. 9. 29. IIT. Pass., fut. -aypeOnoopar (y. supr. IL, init.): pf. dpypnuat, Ion. drapatpnua Hat. 7. 159, etc. -— to be robbed or deprived of a thing, to have it taken from one, 7 Aesch. Cho. 962, Hat. 3. 137, etc. ; 7¢ mpds or b4d Twos Hadt. 1. 70., 3. 65., 7. 159; &« xepay apnpeOnv had them taken out of my hands, Eur. Tro. 6; c. inf, dpppeOn Sxeipuvos derds Supa Tobpoy eioopay, was de- prived of, hindered from seeing them, Id. Hipp. 1207: more rarely, pdtv nod dparpedévros Tod byxou (as Badham for rod €vod, comparing pndiv droddds Tod Syxov just below), Plat. Theaet. 155 B. 2.6 datpebels, in law, the person who has suffered loss, the plaintiff, 1d. Legg. 915 A, cf. 914 D. oe atl Dor. for "Hpa:oros. apacn, 7, (pixds) a kind of vetch (v. paxh), Arist. H. A. 8. 10, Theophr. H. P. 8. 3, etc., v. Meineke ad Pherecr. Incert. 17. x a wild plant, dandelion, dub. in Theophr. ; v. sub dmdmn. dp-dAdopar, fut. -aAodpat, Ep. aor. part. dmdApevos Bion 4. 15 :—to spring off or down from, midnua Kodpov ke veds dphdaro, like mnonpa amdav, Aesch. Pers. 305 ; émt riv Kepadzy. .dpndato jumped off on to his head, Ar. Nub. 147; dq’ trmov Plut, Caes. 27. II. to rebound, glance off, amd rdv Aclwv Arist. de An. 2.8, 11, cf. Nic. Th. 906, Anth. P. 9. 159: to be reflected, of light, Plut. 2. 931 D. 0s, ov, without the pados or metal-boss, in which the plume was fixed, xuvén Il. 10. 258: cf. rerpdaparos, , €wS, 7), a springing off, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1.3 :—also &gadpés, 6, Antyll. in Matti A ae Iai. é db-adros, ov, springing off or back, Hesych. &hipaptave, fut.—apaprhoopat: Ep. aor. dwnuBporev Il. 15. 527., 16. 460, 467 :—to miss one’s mark, c. gen., kal Tod pév p’ dpapaprer Il, 8. 119, etc.; also in Prose, Antipho 121. 39, Xen. Hell. 6. 1, 15. II. to lose, be deprived of what one has, ce) dpapaprovon Il. 6. 411, cf. 22. 505. TO-ETrHS, és, = daproenns, random talking, Il. 3. 215. *Adapiarar, dy, of, serfs, ascripti glebae, at Crete, like the Helots in Laconia, Strabo 7o1, Ath. 263 F; written “Appapudra: in Eust. adavdve, fut. dpadjow: Ion. aor. inf, dwadeiy Hdt. 2. 129 :—to dis- please, not to please, ci 8 Spiv 86 pi00s dpayddver Od. 16. 3873; cot Tap apavdavovr’ épu Soph. Ant. 501. adavel, Adv. of davis, invisibly, obscurely, Hdn. Epim. 255. abdvera, %, a being apivas, darkness, obscurity, Pind. 1. 4. 52 (3- 49): metaph., dgidparos ap. want of illustrious birth or rank, Thue. 2. 37: II. disappearance, utter destruction, perdition, Aesch. Ag. 384.—The form dpavia is mentioned by Apollon. de Constr. p. 341. d-dvepos, ov, undistinguished ; also davépwros, oy, both in Byz. adavas, é, (palvopa, pavivar) unseen, invisible, viewless, Lat. caecus, esp. of the nether world, Tdprapos Pind. Fr. 223, cf. Aesch. Theb. 860; so, xéopa dp. a blind pit, Hdt. 6. 76; % dp. Oeds, of Proserpine, Soph. O. C. 1556; 6 dp. mddos, i.e. the South pole, Arist. Cael. 2. 2,15, Mund. 4, 14; for Thuc. 4. 67, v. gudaky I. 1. may dp, yiryvecOar=dpavitecdar to disappear, be missing, Hdt. 3. 104, -Eur. I. T. 757, Plat. Rep. 359 E; so, dg. iv disappeared, Hat. 7. 37, cf. Xen. An, 1. 4, 7:—of soldiers missing after a battle, Thuc. 2. 34. 3. unseen, unnoticed, secret, ap. vdos dBavaraw Solon 10; ap. vedpa a secret sign, Thuc, 1. 1343 ap. Xwptov out of sight, Id. 4. 29; dep. upldiov concealed, 1d. 8. 69 :—c. part., ap. eipe mov te I do it without being noticed, Xen. An. 4. 2,4; but also, dp. dv row tt Thuc, I. 68; pavricy xpwpevos ob apavis hv he was well known to do.., Xen. Mem. f. 1, 2. b. unknown, uncertain, doubtful, obscure, dq. véoos Hdt. 2.84; odv dave? Adyw on an uncertain charge, Soph. O. T. 657; év dave? A, Antipho 136. 18; pdpos Soph. O. C. 1683 ; dvopa Eur. Tro. 1322; éAmis Thue. 5. rou} mpipacs apavertarn Adb-yy Id. 1. 23; ob« dp. rexprypia Xen. Ages. 6,1; pedévras Tapavyj, opp. to ra mpos mooty, Soph. O. T. 131, cf. érotpos I. 2, fin.; ap. xapis a favour from an unknown hand, Dem. 416. 4 :—esp. of future events, 70 davés uncertainty, Hdt. 2.23; uo® piv bors Tapava wepioxomet Soph. Fr. 770; 7a dpavh peptpvay Ar. Fr. Incert. 61 Meineke ; imtp ray dpavav pavepois paprupios xphodat Arist. Eth. N. 2. 2, 6; 79 ris réxqs de. Eur. Alc. 785; 70 dq. rod xaropOwoew Thuc. 2.42; tv dpave? KetoBar, ey 7G aavel evar Id. 1. 42, ete. &y dd, Kexth 7 secretly, Plat. Legg. 954 D;—so, &* Tov dpavois Thue. I. 51., 4- 96, etc.: and é dpavois Aesch. Fr. 55: but also neut. pl. dpavf, as Ady., Eur. Hipp. 1289; and reg. Adv. dpavas, Thuc. 3. 43, etc. ; Sup. dpavécrara Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 27. 4. of persons, unnoticed, obscure, Eur, Tro. 1244, 1322, Thue. 3. 57. 5. davis odata personal property, as money, which can be secreted and made away with (cf. dpavitw 1. 7), opp. to pavepé (real), as land, Lys. Fr. 47; dpav7} KaracThoa Ti ovaiay to turn one’s property into money, Id. 160.8; so, ap. mAodTos, opp. to yf}, Ar, Eccl. 602; but in lit, sense, mAodros dp. dv od aropugas Exes aeutt Adon. 2. oe ; 4 Saaveee vitw, fut. Att. ]@: pf. Apdvixa, Dem. 950. 3 —to e unseen, Faw nat sight, vepédn..paviaev Hdov (prob. 1.) Xen. An. 3. 4, 8; hence, like Lat. abscondo, to lose sight of, Eubul. Spvyy. 1. 18, et ibi Meineke; dp. 7d avppophrarov to cancel, do away with, Hipp. Vet. Med. 17: to make away with state-criminils, so that their fate remained unknown, Hadt. 3. 126, Xen. Mem. I. 2, 53, cf. Thuc. 4. 80, Xen, An. 1. 6, 11: generally, of death, to remove from the earth, Epigr. Gr. 376. 8, 380. 6, al. :—Pass., Ty yopnv pdtv... dpaviabetoay in no part con- 3» x 4 "A garros — acacia. cealed or suppressed, Thuc, 7. 8. 2. to do away with, remove, dxos Soph. O.C. 1712; Twa wédeos to carry off one from the city, Eur. Phoen. 1041; Movoas dp. Ar. Nub. 971; ap. atrov eis Tov vewy to disappear into the temple, Id. Pl. 741. 3. to destroy utterly, rase to the ground, erase writing, etc., Thuc. 6. 54, etc. ; SAws dp. Td ipa Dem, 562. 17. 4. to obliterate or mar footsteps, Xen. Cyn. 5, 3, etc.: to obliterate the traces of bloodshed, Antipho 134. 37: ¢o spirit away a witness, Id. 135.29: to get rid of, dixnv Ar. Nub. 760. 5. to secrete, steal, Xen, Oec. 14, 2. 6. to obliterate, obscure, mar one’s good name, etc., dperqy, dfiwow, dégav, 7d Sixacoy, etc., Thuc. 7. 69., 2. 61, Plat., etc.:—but in good sense, dp. aya0@ Kandy to wipe out ill deeds by good, Thuc. 2. 42; dtcnAeay Id. 3. 58; 7a xpwpara ap. xe TOD o&paros of the wasting effect of grief, Antiph. EdwA. 1; tpixa Rapp ap. to disguise it by dyeing, Ael. V.H. 7. 20; 4p. 7a mpéowma (cf. dmpocarros) of assumed, hypocritical sadness, Ev. Matth. 6.16, cf. LXx Joel 2.20, Zach. 7.14). 7. to make away with property, dpyvpioy, vautixdy Aeschin. 14. 24., 85. 31; 8Aov 70 épyaornpiov Dem. 821. fin., cf. 820. fin., 839. 15 :—also, de. Tiv obatay to turn the property into money, for the purpose ofmaking awaywithit (cf. dpavys 5), Dem.827.12, Aeschin, 14. 38. 8. to drink off, drain a cup of wine, Eubul. Map. 3; cf. Meineke Fragm. Com, 2. 829. II. Pass. ¢o become unseen, to disappear, be missing, Hat. 4. 8,124, Soph. Ant. 255; of persons buried by a sand-storm, Hadt. 3. 26; or, lost at sea, Thuc. 8. 38, Xen. Hell. 1. 6, 24; dg. Kata Tis Gardaons, of islands, Hdt. 7.6; iroBptxeos 7p. Plut. Crass. 19; ad. ef dvOpamov Hat. 4.95, Lys. 191. 27; ap. eis UAnv to disappear into it, Xen. Cyn. 10, 23; KarayeAacdev ipavicOn was laughed down and disappeared, Thue. 3. 83. 2. to keep out of public, live retired, Xen, Ages. 9, 1. addvots, ews, , a getting rid of, rhs dixns Ar. Nub. 764; oblitera- tion, Xéyoav Plat. Soph. 259 E. II. (from Pass.) disappearance, Hat. 4.15, Arist. Probl. 30. 1, 2. adaivopes, 6,=foreg. 1, Polyb. 5. 11, 5. II. =foreg. 11, Arist. H. A. 6. 37,33; dotpov Theophr. Fr. 6.1, 2; THs veAnvys Plut. 2.670 B. adaiviorécs, éa, ov, verb. Adj. to be suppressed, Adyos Isocr. 281 B. édiimoris, ov, 6, a destroyer, susp. in Plut. 2, 828 F, Schol. Aesch. Theb. 175, etc.:—fem. davlorpia, Tzetz. ad Lyc. 187, Schol. Opp. H. 2. 487:—hence ddavorixds, 7, dv, destroying, Synes. 98 B, Schol. Aesch, Theb. 145; and Adv. -«@s, Schol. Il. 21. 220. a&dhiivierés, 7, dv, destroyed, Gloss. G-havractacros, ov, not moved by fancies, Jo. Chrys. &-avractwros, ov, unable to imagine a thing, Plut. 2. 960 D. a-hévracros, ov, without pavracia, picts Sext. Emp. M. 9g. 114. davtos, ov, (palvouat) made invisible, blotted out, utterly forgotten, dundeorot nat dd. Il. 6.60; domeppos yever) Kal dp. ANTAL 20. 303, etc. : hidden, dep. Epa Aesch. Ag. 1007; epny’ &pavrov pas (silicis venis abstrusum excudit ignem), Soph. Ph. 2973; a. éredes Pind. O. 1. 725 & Bporav ap. Biya Soph. O. T. 832; dvip dparvros ét. .oTparod he has disappeared, Aesch. Ag, 624; dp. otxecOa, éppev, =dpavicbjvat, Ib. 657, Soph. O. T. 560; dpOcia’ dpavros Eur. Hel. 606; é« xepay Id. Hipp. 827; ixvos dp. wharay disappearing, Aesch. Ag. 695. 2. in secret, dpayt. Bpeuew Pind, P. 11. 46. 3. obscure, Pind. N, 8. 58.—Only poét. and N. T. a&dbavréw, to make dpavros, make away with, Epiphan. addvrwcts, ews, , destruction, ruin, Nicet. Ann. 127 C. a&ddnrw, to fasten from or upon, Gupara ad. to tie knots on a string, Hat. 4. 98, cf. Hipp. 885 C:—so in Med., Lxx (Prov. 3. 3, al.) :—Pass. to be hung on, hang on, pf. part. dappévos (Ion. for dgnup—), Hat. 2- 121,43; apnppevos x Twos Theocr. 22. 52. dap [vv], post. Adv. properly denoting immediate sequence of one thing on another, straightway, forthwith, in Hom. mostly at the begin- ning of a sentence, with 5é€ following, apap 8’ juvoe wapnart Il. 19. 405, cf. 17. 417: or without 5€, thereupon, after that, 11. 418, Od. 2. 95- : 2. suddenly, quickly, presently, soon, apap T65e Awidv éote 2. 169; apap Kepaot rehéOovar 4. 85; strengthd., apap abrixa Il. 23. 593 :—also in Pind., méume dpdxovras dpap N. 1.60; and a few times in Trag., Aesch, Pers. 469, Soph. Tr. 135, 529, 821, 958, Eur. I. T. 1274. IT. in Theogn. 716 as if it were an Adj. swift, fleet (cf. ddprepos), matdes Bopéw rdv apap «iat wédes.—An Ion. form dgépel, in E. M. 175.15, Suid., etc. Cf. also Sturz Dial. Mac. p. 70. adapevs, ews, 6, the belly-fin of the female tunny, Arist. H. A. 5. 9,6. d-hapys, és, without papos, unclad, naked, of the Xdprres, Euphor. 66. Also, GGpos, ov, Hesych. &apkn, 4, an evergreen tree, perh. privet, Theophr. H.P. 1. 9, 3- KTOS, ov, Vv. sub dppaxTos. G-pappadxevros, ov, without medicine, not physicked, Hipp. 40%. 15: without cosmetics, favOitew dpappdxevra Alciphro Fr. 5. 4. &-pdppaktos, ov,=foreg., esp. wnpoisoned, Nic. Th. 115; KvUAig ao. Lue, D. Mort. 7. 2; Bédy Strabo 499 (where Coratés papparrots). &b-appéto, Att.—rrw, not to suit, Oenom. ap. Eus, P. E. 217 D. d-iipos, ov, =dddpwros, Call, Fr.183; cf. papdm, dpapts. but, d-papos, ov, =dpaphs, Hesych. Go-aprafe, fut. Ep. dfw, Att. dcoua: Pass., pf. -fpracpa: Xen. Cyn. 9,18; aor. 1 —npmacOny Hell. 5.4, 17; in late Inscrr,-—npmaynv [&]. To tear off or from, "Exrap 8 wpyhin xbpv0a .. xpards apapmdgat Il. 13. 189: to snatch away, steal JSrom, ti twos Ar. Eq. 1062: c. acc. only, to snatch eagerly, Soph, Tr.548, Eur. lon 1178; dp. rdv orépavov Dem. 535. 15 :—Pass., Lys. 154.36; parrds dpapmaodels, of one dead, Epigr. Gr.577-3- addprepos, a, ov, Comp. Adj, (from dpap), more fleet, T&v 5 tmmot pev €acw dpaprepor Il. 23. 311; ef. Dionys, ap. Steph. B. v. Kéometpor. addpwros, ov, (pipdw) unploughed, untilled, Call, Fr. 421. Shiota, 4, (dparos) speechlessness, caused by fear or perplexity, gxmAn- II. aparow —_— aperos. ftv Hiv apaciay re mpooridns Eur. Hel. 549; apagia p eye Id. I. A. 837, cf. Ar. Thesm. go4; de. Huds AapBave ti more xpi A€yetv Plat. Legg. 636E; eis dd. rid éuBdddcy Id. Phil. 21D; dpacia mpdyparos inability to say anything about it, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 211 :—cf. dudacia. a&pdoow, Ion. Verb, =apdw, to feel, Hipp. 565.30, etc.; dpacovabrod ra Gra Hat. 3. 69 ; so Ap. Rh. 2. 710, Call., etc. :—Med., Ap. Rh. 4. 181:— the 2 sing. aor. dpacojoy in Hipp. 566. 45 seems to be f. 1. for dpdcon. &-iros, ov, not uttered or,named, nameless, Hes. Op. 3. 2. un- . utterable, ineffable (cf. dvavinros), Eur. lon 784; ap. wéAea monstrous, Pind. N.1. 70; dp. xphyara untold sums, Hat. 7.190; dd. vépos, erdros Soph. O, T. 1314, O. C. 1464; épuOapiar dparoyr (sic |.) mAjO0s Anax- andr. pwr. 1.62; mwAav dparov raxos Epigr. Gr. 618.4; dparov ds -., there's no saying how .., i.e. marvellously, immensely, At. AV. 427, Lys. 198. Adv. -rws, Diose, I, 12. apavatve,—dpatw, Theophr. H. P. 3.18, 9 :—Pass., dipy dpavav7- gopat Ar. Eccl. 146, cf. Arist. Probl. 10. 46. a&haupés, a, dv, feeble, powerless, jire mavdds apavpod Il. 7. 235; but Hom., as well as other Poets, uses it almost exclusively in Comp. and Sup., aéo ToAAdv dpaupdrepos Ib. 457; iva ph of dpavpdrepov Béros ein 12. 458; o¥ puv daupéraros Bad’ ’Axaidy 15. 11, cf. Od. 20.11, Hes. Op. 584, Pind., etc. ; pelOpav dpavporépny, of a bridge, too weak to resist the stream, Epigr. Gr. 1078. 6; so in Prose, Xen. Eq. 12, 8; but the Posit. occurs in Tim. Locr, 102 C, Arist. Eth.N.1.11, 5. Adv.—pas, Anth. P.6. 267. (Prob. =aipos, i.e. patAos, pAadpos, withaeuphon.; cf,dpaupés.) a&daupirys, nros, 7), feebleness, Anaxag. Fr. 25. &aupsw, to make weak, Erotian. p. 56 (but with v. 1. duavpodrat), Nicet. Ann. 335 C. apavw, (aw, Att. aiw) to dry up, parch, rods ardxus Ar. Eq. 394. Cf. dpedar. addw, (a7) Ep. Verb, to handle, O&pnxa Kat dyntdra Téf apdavra rubbing and polishing them, Il.6.322; @re:Ads dpéwowv Opp. H. 5. 329; dpéwy Onoavpdy Anth. P. 11. 366.—CE. dup-, éx-apaw, dpacow, adéyyeta, 7), want of light, Max. Tyr. 40. 4. G-heyyns, és, without light, pas dup. a light that is no light, (i.e. to the blind), Soph. O. C. 1549; Eur. calls the moon vuerds deyyés BAépa- pov, as opp. to the sun, Phoen. 543 ; “Arda .. rov dpeyyéa x@por Epigr. Gr. 372. 13. 2. not visible to the eye, or, simply, obscure, faint, é5yua Aesch. Pr. 115. 3. metaph., ef 7. . ruyxaves dpeyyes pepe something i//-starred, unlucky, Soph. O. C, 1481. adeSpale, fut. dow, to remove, Byz. apedpevw, fo sit apart, Hesych. :—ageSpeta, %, seclusion, caused by menstruation, Damasc. ap. Suid. adeSpiareviovres, of, a Boeotian magistracy, Inscr. Orchom. in C.1.1593- GdeBpos, 7), menses muliebres, LXX (Lev. 15. 19, al.), Diosc. 2. 85. adedpav, dvos, 6, (€5pa) a privy, Lat. cloaca, N. T., A. B. 469. *AgeiBas, avros, 6, prop. n., the Unsparing, Od. 24. 304. adeadtw, fut. now, to be unsparing or lavish of, yuxijs Soph. El. 980; tov Biov Thuc. 2.43; éavrod Ib. 51; Tav cwyarwv Lys. 193. 5:—absol., dpeinoavres [xvdtvou, mévov, or the like] ungrudgingly, Hipp. Art. 802; recklessly, Eur. 1. T. 1354. II. in Soph. Ant. 414, ef tes Todd dpedjoo mévov should be careless of it, i.e. neglect, avoid this labour, so that dedeiv comes to. much the same as etdec@ar, v. Herm. ad l., cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 98, 869; Dind. has now received Bonitz’ conj. dxndjoor. apeadys, és, (petSouar) unsparing or lavish of, twds Aesch. Ag. 195; dp. deiparos lightly regarding it, Ap. Rh. 4. 1252; dp. mpds te Call. Epigr. 47. 2. of things, dp. 6 xardmAous xabeorhxe the landing was made without regard to cost or risk, Thuc. 4. 26: not spared, lavishly bestowed, Call. Cer.128, Anth. P. 11. 59; dpecdées dyaves Epigr. Gr. 1064. 12. II. Adv. —das, Ion. —déws (Alcae, 34, Hdt.),.Ep. —belws (Ap. Rh. 3. 897) :—freely, lavishly, Alcae. 1. c.; ds5dvae Hdt. 1. 163, Dem. 255.7; a. dmeva: ra rofeduara Hat. 9. 61:—also sparing no pains, with all zeal, Dem. 152. fin. 2. unsparingly, without mercy, karaxdpat Hdt. 1.207 ; povedew Id..9. 39; dpedéorepov Kodd- (av, dpedéorara tipmpely Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 47, An. 1. 9,133 dp. Exew éavr@y Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 31, cf. Paus. 4. 4,8. * apesdia, 4, profuseness, extravagance, Def. Plat. 412 C, Plut. 2. 762 D. 2. unsparing treatment, awparos Ep. Col, 2. 23. ddelpyvups, =arelpyw (q. v.), Ael. N. A. 12, 21. ab-exds [ds], Adv. far away, Nic. Th. 674. adexréov, verb. Adj. of dwéxopat one must abstain from, rds Xen.Mem. I. 2, 34, etc. :—so in pl. ~réa, Ar. Lys. 124. Cf. dmoaxeréov. ddextixés, 7, ov, (dwéxopat) abstemious, Arr. Epict. 2. 22, 20. &hérera, 7, simplicity, naiveté, Antiph.Mvor. 1.8, cf. Walz Rhett. 3. 306: mept riv diacray Polyb. 6. 48, 3; of style, Ath. 693 F, cf. Eust. 1279. 44. ahedns, és, (peddrcds) without a stone, even, smooth, iid tev dbehav mediov Ar. Eq. 527; cited from Soph. (Fr. 648) in A. B. 83. II. of persons, simple, plain, blunt, Dem. 1489. to, Luc. D, Deor. 4. 3; ay, yx simple, in good sense, Epigr. Gr. 727. 5, cf. 14 :—Adv. dpedds, simply, roughly, Theogn. 1211, Polyb. 39.1, 4, Plut. Pomp. 40, etc. = 2. of language, simple, not intricate or involved, opp. to év nwAous, Arist. Rhet. 3.9, 5: naive, artless, unaffected, Plut. Lyc. 21. ’ dpeAnbe, to open a wound or incision afresh, Theophr. H. P. 9. 1, 5: Pass. to be ulcerated, Hipp. 1136 B, Arist. Probl. 9. 1, 2. aq: , €ws, 7, a dragging away, Gloss. &deAxuorréov, verb. Adj. one must draw off, Antyll. in Matth. Med. 148. _ GdbéAxa, Ion. dwéAkw: fut. dpéAfw, Eur. Hec.144: but aor, dpeiAxioa, v. inf, Jo drag away suppliants, é& rod ipod Hat. 3. 48, cf. Soph. O. C. 844, Eur. Heracl. 113; dp. réxvoy, dwd paoray Id. Hec. 144; awa dnd tov Téxvov Lys. 129.13; of policemen arresting culprits, Plat. ¥ 259 Prot. 319 C; dp. rds rpmpes to drag or tow ships away, Thuc. 2. 93, cf. 7. 53, 74:—to draw aside, émi 7. Xen, Mem. 4. 5, 6; 7d Bépya dd. to draw it off, Hipp. 787 H. II. ¢o draw off liquor, nddov mu- Hata Archil. 4; OpdpBous ods apeiAxuoas pévov Aesch. Eum.184. 2. Méd., rod Séparos dpedntowpac TovAuTpoy let me draw off the sheath from .., Ar. Ach. £120, ahAkwors, ews, }, the formation ofa sore, Theophr. C. P. 5.5, 3. apedAnvite, to hellenize, i.e. civilise thoroughly, tiv BapBapoy Philo 2. 567 :—Pass. aor. -nAAHva6n Dio Chr. 2. 114. adeASrys, nros, },=apércca, Act. Ap..2. 46, and Eccl, ad fo, =dreAr-, Gloss. ddepa, 76, that which is let go; remission, LXX (1 Mace. to. 28, al.) a-hevakioros, ov, free Hae cajolery, straightforward, Philo 1. 564. _ddevos (and in Pind. dvos), 74, revenue, riches, wealth, abundance, dpevos kat mrovrov apugey Il. 1. 171, cf. 23. 298, Theogn. 30; of the wealth of the gods, Hes. Th. 112: some Poets have a masc, acc. dpevor, as Hes. Op. 24, Call. Jov. 96, Anth. P. 9. 234. (The orig. form was prob. dgvos (whence doves), € being inserted by the Ep. Poets; cf. Skt. ap-nas (income, property); Lat. op-es, op-ulentus, copia, i.e. co-op-ia.) A dhetis, ews, 4, (dméxopar) abstinence, Tivos from a thing, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 2. adépyw, to keep off, withhold, Tab. Heracl. in C. I, 83. adeperrovia, 7), incapacity for bearing labour, effeminacy, Eust. 222. 28. G-epérrovos, ov, incapable of labour, weak, effeminate, Eccl. Adv. —ves, Eccl. ddepkros, ov, (dreipyw) shut out from (cf. pvyds 2), Aesch. Cho. 446. adeppnveva, to interpret, explain, expound, 7d AexOev Tap’ adtav ap. Plat. Soph. 246 E; absol., ds od xar’ Alyumror Epp. Id. Legg. 660 B. d-epvos, ov, dowerless, Hesych. a&deprerdopat, Pass. 4o become a reptile, Stob. Ecl. 1. 1098. d&depruAdoopat, Pass. to become épavdAos, Theophr. C. P. 5. 7, 2. adéptra, to creep off, steal away, Soph. Tr. 813, O.C. 490: generally, to go away, retire, Id. Aj. 1162. d-hepros, ov, insufferable, intolerable, Aesch. Ag. 386, 395, 564, 1103, 1600, Eum. 146. adéouros tuépa, a holiday, Arist. Fr. 395, Aristid. 1. 344. "Adéoros, 6, the Releaser, epith. of Zeus, Arr. Bithyn. in E, M. 176. 32., Paus. I. 44, 13. ddeors, ews, 7, (4pinur) a letting go, dismissal, wept rhs T&v mholaw dpéoews Philipp. ap. Dem. 251. 3; of a slave or captive, Plat. Polit. 273.C; dp. ris orparelas exemption from service, Plut. Ages. 24. 2. c. gen. dp. pévov marpt a quittance from murder, Plat. Legg. 869 D: a guittance or discharge from the obligations of a bond, Dem. 893. 13., 1114.8; opp. to dmddocis xpnudrow Isocr. 364 D. 3. relaxation, exhaustion, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1085. 4. a dismissal, divorce, Plut. Pomp. 44. 5. a letting go (Lat. missio) of horses from the starting- post, immwy dp. moeiv Diod. 4. 73; and so the starting-post itself, lewaas Tapécet (so Musgr. for 7H pice) Ta Téppara, having made the winning- post ove with the starting-post, i.e, having completed the SiavAes and come back to the starting-post, Soph. El. 686, cf. Aristid.1. 339, Paus. 5. 15, 4., 6. 20, 7, and v. dernpios 2:—metaph. the first start, beginning of anything, Manetho 3. 405, etc. 6. a sending forth, discharge, emission, Tod bdaros Arist. P. A. 4. 13, 26; Tod Oopod, Tod @od Id. G. A. 2.5,10; Tod kufparos Id. H. A. 8. 30, 7; the dropping of a foal, Ib. 6. 22,8. 7.=dgeopds Ib. 9. 40, 25. adeopss, 5, a young swarm of bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 42, 3- adeoraty, 3 sing. opt. pf. syncop. of dplarnut, adeorhgw, old Att. intr. fut. formed from dpéornea, I shall be absent, away from, twés Plat. Rep. 587 B, Xen. An. 2. 4, 5.—On the form, ef. rebvigw and y. Buttm. Irreg. Verbs s. v. tort. aderrip, fpos, 6, at Cnidos, the officer who took the votes, Cnid, Inscr. in Newton p. 763, Plut. 2. 292 A; cf. dwoorarhp. adéorios, ov, far from hearth and home, dub. |. in Lxx. adératpos, ov, friendless, Theopomp. Hist. 332, ap. Poll. 3. 58. aderéov, verb, Adj. one must dismiss, Tiv oxepuw, 7d viv Aexbév, etc., Plat. Rep. 376 D, Phaedr. 260 A, al. 2. deréos, éa, éov, to be let go, Id. Euthyphro 15 D. aerhp, pos, 6, =apérns, Iambl. Protrept. p. 160. aderiptos, a, ov, (dpinut) for letting go, sending away, throwing, e. g. ap. Spyava engines for throwing stones, etc., Joseph. B. J, 3. 5, 2, cf. 5. 6, 3- 2. dpernpia (sub. ypaypn), 4, the mage dire of a race, C. I. 2758. ut. D. 7, Schol. Ar. Eq. 1156, cf. Synes. 161 C :—hence, dp. A:déckovpot, whose statues adorned the race-course, Paus. 3. 14, 7, ef. Anth. P. 9. 319:—metaph., dperhpiov mpds padnow Sext. Emp. M. 1. 4i. 8. 7d dperhprov (sc. mAoiwy), the outlet of a seaport, Strabo 494: cf. dperds I. ahérns, ov, 6, (apinut) one who lets off a military engine, Polyb. 4. 56, 3. 2. astrolog. term for certain heavenly bodies, Ptol. Ii. pass. a freed-slave among the Spartans, Myron ap. Ath, 271 F. istry h, ov, disposed to let go, remit, c. gen., dpaprnuarav Clem. Al. 464. aero-Oup-kvolkrns, ov, 5, in Byz., one who opened the barriers to start the racing chariots. a ddperos, ov, (dpinu:) let loose at large, ramging at will, ranging at large, esp. of sacred flocks that were free from work, dp. Gh@o8at yijs én’ éxxarous Spos Aesch, Pr. 666; apérov dvrav ratpwv ev TO .. lep@ Plat. Criti. 119 D; vépovrae domep dperor Id. Prot. 320 A, cf. Rep. 498 C, Isocr. 108 A, Call. Del. 36. II. metaph. of persons, dedi- cated to some god, free from worldly business, ee 822, Plut. 2. $2 260 768 A. 2. of things, dp, Hygpar holidays, Poll. 1.36; vou dp. ia range, Plut, Lys. 20. 3.70 dperov, dicentiousness, Cyril. 315 3 70 ap. Tis xéyns Luc. Dom. 7 :—Adv., —rws éppav, Sreely, Philo 1. 135. 4. of style, rambling, prolix, Luc. Tox. 56. IItl. “Agérat, or rather ’Agerai, n. pr., the place whence the Argonauts Joosed their ship, Hdt. 7.193. (On the accent v. Lob. Paral. 475 sq., Dind. de dial. Hdt. p. vi.) : d-hevkros, Vv. apuxros fin, Get, aor. 1 dpevoa (without augm.) Simon. L. citand., Ar. Thesm. 590; but part. pf. pass. speupévos Aesch. Fr. 321: aor. part. dpevdels Suid. :—to singe off, dpevav riv..rplxa Ar. Eccl. 13: absol. fo singe clear of hair, joined with dmogtpev, tiiAew, Ar. Thesm. 216, 2306, 590:—Pass,, KaA@s 7pevpevos 5 Xoipos well singed, Aesch. 1. c. 2. 40 toast, roast, xpéa Simon, Jamb. 22; pagfAous Ar, Pax 1144. _ Gbabados, ov, without a spark of fire, Hesych. _ &hebnpa, 74, a decoction, Diosc, 2. 129, Galen. 13. 9. . Ababyors, ews, },=dpeyis, Eust. Opusc. 311 82. : &helrdopar, Dep. to retire from intercourse or converse, apeyracdpny (sic legend, in A, B. 470)=dpwplAnaa, Soph, (Fr. 142) ap. Hesych.: Soph. also has éyia, Fr. 4. . ddbelus, ews, 4, a boiling offor-down, Theophr. H. P. 9. 2, 5. apapo, fut. dpepjow: Ion. daw, etc.:—to purify or refine by boiling off the refuse, to boil down, xapréy Hat. 2. 94:—esp. to boil free of dirt and dross, to ee urify, xputtov Ka8apwraroy amepnoas Id. 4.166; tov Afjpov cas. .Kkaddv é€ aloxpod memoinna Ar. Eq. 1321, cf. 1336:—Pass., tdwp dmeynuévoy Hat. 1, 188, Hipp. Aér. 285. 2. to boil off, rod VSaros pépos rt Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 37 :— Pass., dpéperar 7d GApupdy Id. Probl. 23.18; 70d dyddou pdvoy apepn- dévros Polyb. 34. 10, 12, cf. drepOos. adbéwvrat, a rare form of dpeivrat, 3 pl. pf. pass. of dpinu, Ev. Luc. 5.233 cf. dvéwvra from dvinu. aon, 9, (Grrw) a lighting, kindling, nept Adxvev ads about lamp- Jighting time, Lat. prima face, Hdt. 7. 215. II. (ropa) a touching, touch, émwvupoy 5& rav Aids yévyne’ apav réges ..”Emapoy (as Wieseler for -yevynudrwy) Aesch. Pr. 850: the sense of touch, Plat. Rep. 523 E, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 3. 10, 9 sq., de An, 2.11; du«piBeordarny . . Tay alaOjcewv Thy any Id. H. A. 1.15, 14; 7 ap? év rats alcéqcect mapéomapra Luc. Salt. 72. 2. the touch of the harp-strings, metaph., éxpedods apis xat xpovcews Plut. Pericl. 15; obxt cuppwvous s Damox. Suv7p. 1. 42. 83. a grasp, grip, in wrestling, etc., aghy évi:dévae abrod Plut..2. 86 F: hence, metaph., trois d@Anrais rijs A€fews iaxupas Tas dpds mpoccivar Set nat apterous Tas AaBds Dion. H. de Dem. 18; dpds exer kal révous icxvpods Id, de Lys. 13; div eixev dpueroy, of Cleopatra, Plut. Anton. 27. 4. of the yellow sand sprinkled over wrestlers after they were anointed, to enable them to get a grip of one another, Arr. Epict. 3.15, 4, ubi v. Schweigh, 5. a wound, hurt, LXx (2 Regg. 7. 14, al.). IIL. a junction, a joint in the body, Arist. Gen. et Corr. 1. 8, 24., I. 9, 33 V- sub émcxopnyéew. ddnBaw, fut. now, fo be past the spring of life, Poll. 2. 10 and 18, Liban. 4. 309; Thy dxphy Trav abd dpyBavres Philo 1. 516; dpnBn- ores Kado Poll, 1. 236. dgnBos, ov, beyond youth, dub. in Cyrill. -donyéopat, Ion. dany-, fut. Aoopat:—Dep. to lead the way from a point, and so generally, to lead the way, ge Jirst, Plat. Legg. 760 D, etc.; of dpnyoupevor the van, Xen. Hell. 4.8, 37; ap. THS dtronias, THs dyédns to be leader of .., Arist. Fr. 471, Mirab. 10; rijs tpecBeias Strab. 473 THS TXOATs Diog. L. 4. 14. II. ¢o tell, relate, explain, Hat. I. 24, 86, and often :—the pf. is used in pass. sense by Hdt., dmfyynrat pol 7. 5. 62: 7d danynuévov what has been told, 1. 207, cf. 9. 26.—A prose word, also found in Pseudo-Eur. Supp. 186 in signf. 11, aoqynpa, Ion. aany-, 76, a tale, narrative, Hat. 2. 3. II. a@ guiding, leadin assonente Macc. 14. by atone , like a tale, Dion, H.deRhet.1.8, Adv. -«@s, Procl. ddnyanon, ovos, 6, =apnynths Hesych.; prob. should be dpnyepdv. byynots, Ion. dany-, ws, }, a telling, narrating, dgvov dmnyhovos worthtelling, Hdt.2.70; ov dgies dm. ina way not fit to be told, Id. 3.125. _anynrap, fipos, 6, Anth, P. 14.114; and in Hesych., apnynris, od, 6,a by e. Stve, fut. vd, like jdvvw, to sweeten, Luc. Amor. 3, Plut. Dio 17. &biqKw, fo arrive at, of ndvra Set dpjxev Plat. Rep. 530E; ets 71 Hipp. 900 H., _ ddmAucta, 7, in Basil. used of childhood, nonage, cf. Phryn, Com, Incert. 8. 30:—so &dnAuci nros, #, Eust. 1282. 24:—and —~Atctwors, 9, Byz. apace, Ion. dri, cxos, 6, }, beyond youth, elderly, dvijp aandt- néorepos Hdt. 3.14; dpndcceorépay Pherecr. Incert. 65 ; acc. to Phryn. in A. B. 3, its usage was confined to the Comp.; but the Posit. also occurs in h. Hom. Cer. 140, Cratin. Incert. 95, Phryn. Com. Incert. 8 (who used jit of young persons); v. Lob. Phryn. 84. A&gnArorys, ov, 6, the analogous (but not used in Att.) form of dan- Auwrns (q. V.), C. 1. 6180, and in old Edd. of Arr. An. 5. 6, 4, al.; so the Adj. dgyAvwrixés in Ptolem. Geogr. 1. 11. dgnAda, as opp. to mpoonddw, to detach, Lat. refigo, Porphyr. Abst. 1. 57. Hence Subst., d@qAwors, 7, Gloss. &ypar, Pass. to sit apart: part. dpjpevos, Il. 15. 106. adnpepevor, tobe absent for aday, dd.,dmoxorreiv Decret.ap. Dem, 238.10. G-pypos, ov, and adypov, ov, (pun) unknown, Hesych. adyvdte, fut. dow, (jvia) to get rid of the bridle, torun away, Luc. D. Deor. 25, cf. Philo 1. 85: hence to turn restive, rebel, Hdn. 1. 4, 123 . tivbs to rebel against, Luc. Bis Acc. 20; mpds 7 Synes. 101 A. FC ‘ 6, rebellion, Plut, 2. 371 B; also dgyviders, %, Byz. ddeveros — apidpvw. wears, 5, refusing’ the reins, irmos Philo 1.114: rebellious, Eccl. ine aor. panel (iipws), to canonise as a hero, C. I. 2467-73, 2480, al. (p. 1087 sq.). dy ac I to veg down, be quiet, Hipp. 1275. 43; Polyb, 2. 64, 5. . _ddrrap, opos, 5, (apinus) the archer, epith. of Apollo, Il. 9. 404:—the Schol, gives another expl. the prophet (from a copul., and pnpi). pla, %, (Grrw) an eruption, ulceration in the mouth, tArusk, mostly in pl. dp@a, Hipp. Aph. 1248. : ab0apota, 7, incorruption, immortality, LXx (Sap. 2. 23), Plut. 2. 881 B, etc. &p0apritew, to make incorruptible or immortal, Greg, Naz. &-8apros, ov, uncorrupted, undecaying, Matt. Vett. 67 D. II. incorruptible, Arist. An. Pr. 2. 22, 3, An. Post. 1. 24, 5, al. 2. im- mortal, Dion. H. 8. 62, etc.: of poems, Epigr. Gr. 226.5; so Ady., -Ap0apras Tipav Ib. 91g. Lo. 46040, to suffer from apOat, Hipp. 581. 31., 583. 10., 584. 43, etc. GdVeyyis, és, speechless, A. B. 473. EdVeynréw, fut. jw, to be speechless, Poll. 5. 146. AGeykri, Adv. of sq., without speech, Poll. 5. 147. &-bOeyxros, ov, =apOoyyos, voiceless, unvuTnp Aesch, Eum, 245; o7é- pa Anth. P. 9. 162. 2. of places, etc., where none may speak, TGS ey dpbeynrw vamet Soph. O. C.155; dpyea Christod. Ecphr. zon. II. pass. unspeakable, Bacchyl. 10, Plat. Soph. 238 C. Adv. —rws, Iambl. Myst. p. 153. apbirs-pytis, cos, 6, 4, of eternal counsel, Greg. Naz. &b0tros, ov, later also 9, ov, Anth. P. app. 323: (p0ivw):—not liable to perish, undecaying, imperishable, freq. in Hom, (mostly in Il.), and Trag.: 1. of things, oxfjmtpoy marpwiov, apOcrov dei Il. 2.46; ypu- aén irds dp. 5.724; Kaddv Opdvoy, apd, ale 14. 238 ; “Hpaiarou Sspos 18. 370, etc.; also dp@. dumedor Od. 9.133; mip Aesch. Cho. 1037; fi Soph. Ant. 339. 2. of persons, immortal, of the gods, h, Hom, Merc, 326, cf. Hes. Th. 389, 397; of Tantalus, Pind, O. 1. 101; pd. tuvorédos, of Anacreon, Simon. 116; dpOirous Oeivar Bporov’s Aesch. Eum. 724; yévvas dpOirov Aaxdvres Soph. Fr. 267. 3. of men’s thoughts, etc., Zeds dpOra phdea cidws, Il. 24. 88, Hes. Th. 545; KA€os GpO, Il.-9. 4133 apO. Oms unceasing care, Pind. P. 8. 101; &pOrror yOpat unchanging, unchangeable, Soph. Fr. 368 ; apO:ra pndopevoror Ar. Av. 689.—Poét. word, used in late Prose, as Plut, 2. 723 E. Adv. dpGivws Or. Sib. 5. 503 [where ¢ is long]. G-p0oyyos, ov, voiceless, speechless, h. Hom. Cer. 198, Hdt. 1. 116, Aesch. Pers, 206, etc.; &pOoryyos efvat to remain silent, Id. Eum. 448; Gp0, d-yyedos of a beacon-fire, Theogn. 549; apOdyyy pbeyyopéva ord- Hart, of an epitaph, Epigr. Gr. 234. 4. 2. adpOoyya (sc. ypaupara), Plat. Theaet. 203 B, Crat. 424 C (v. sub dpwvos). like dparos, not to be spoken of, yapou Soph. Fr. 548. d-p0évyros, ov, unenvied, Pind. O, 10 (11). 7, Aesch Ag. 939: un- grudged, aivos Pind. O, to. 7. II, act. bearing no grudge against, Tt Ib. 13. 35 :-—Advy. —rws Eust. 823.8. : P0ovia, 7), freedom from envy or grudging, liberality, macav mpobv- play kat dpboviay eixopey GAdHAovs Hddcxev Plat. Prot. 327 B, cf. Clem. Al. 474; ap@ovia fv xaranive Teleclid. App. I. 10. “3 of things, plenty, abundance, Pind. N. 3. 14, Plat. Apol» 23 C, 24 E; apbovias ovons dpyi{ecOar abundance of matter for .., Lys. 120. 203 rooavTny dpboviay .. karnyopiav Dem. 547. 26; «ls dpOoviay in abundance, Xen. An. 7. 1, 33; opp. to dopia, Id. Symp. 4, 55. &-p0ovos, ov, without envy, and so: . act. free from envy, Pind. O. 6.10; dv5pa répavvoy ap. eer evar Hat. 3. 80, Plat. Rep. 500 A :—Adv. -vws, Id, Legg. 731 A. 2. ungrudging, bounteous, Lat. benignus, of earth, h. Hom, 30.16; dp0dvw péver, apbdvy xept Aesch, Ag. 305, Eur. Med. 612. II. more commonly (esp. in Prose), not grudged, bounteously given, plentiful, abundant, a0. navra mapéorat h. Hom, Ap. 536; xapmdv woAAdy re wal a. Hes. Op. 118; mAodros Solon 32; xpueds apO. Hat. 6. 132, cf. 7.83; xwpn.. apd. Alny Id. 2. 6; so in Att., dp. Bloros Aesch, Fr. 198; d@O. péver Id. Ag. 305 3 apboves xphpacw Eupol. Incert. 13; wodvs kal apO. or apd. xat modus, Xen. An. 5. 6,°25, Aeschin. 83. 2; Adyous A agp@dvovs ToLov- Tous Dem. 559. 11; év apOdvors Brorevery to live in plenty, Xen. An. 3. 2, 255 év apOdvois rpapjvat Dem. 312. 18. 2.=dyvemipOovos, un= envied, provoking no envy, 0ABos Aesch. Ag. 471. III. irreg. Comp. —orepos, Pind. O. 2. 171, Aesch. Fr. 68, Plat. Rep. 460 B; Sup. -€o7aros, Eupol. |. c.; but the regular forms -wrepos, —wraros in Xen, An. 7. 6, 28, Cyr. 5. 4, 40, ete. IV. Ady., ravra 8 agp6d- vows mapa. Solon 373 4p0. éxev Twds to have enough of it, Plat. Gorg. 494 C; ap@. Si5dvar Arist. Pol, 5. 11, 19; moAAG pe Hddoxas apd. Philem. Incert. 62. &Oopia, 7, incorruption, prob. 1. for ddapOoplainEp. Tit. 2. 7, Greg. Nyss. a-p8opos, ov, uncorrupt, of young persons, Artemid.5.95, Anth. P.9.229. apOadbdys, @ Gpile, fut. iow, towink, Clem, Al, 294. 285 Brehapurés, 7, dv, of or for the eyelids, Cael. Aur. Brehapls, (Sos, %), an eyelash, Ar. Eccl. 402: mostly in pl. eyelashes, Lat. erlia, Id. Eq. 373, Xen. Mem. 1, 4, 6, Arist. P. A, 2. 14, I, etc. II. =Brépapov, an eyelid, Id. H. A. 2.12, 7.,3-11,7, al. [Draco p. 45 says that it makes gen, -ZSos in Ion.; but no such instance is known. ] Brehapiris, «dos, 7), of or on the eyelids, tpixes Paul. Aeg. 7. p. 255. Achdpo-Kdroxos, ov, holding the eyelid, Paul, Aeg. 6. p. 179. Bhépepov, Dor. yhépapov (v, BB. 111.1), 76: (BA€éme) :—mostly in pl. (as always in Hom.), the eyelids, BAépap’ dui nab dpptas Od. g. 389; mostly of sleep, pia Br€pap’ dupixaddpas 5. 493; Umvos dad Brepa- potiy (dual) Il. 10. 187; imvov én Brepapoory Exevev Od. 20. 54, etc.; mavpov én yAcpdpos invov dvadioxowa Pind. P. 9. 43; so of sleep, yAcpapay add KAdiorpoy Ib.1.14; BA. ovpBareiv, xoruav Aesch. Ag. 15, Theb.3:—of weeping, Sdupu xapat BdAey éx Brepdpatiy Od. 17.490, cf. 23. 33: of death, Ave BA, Soph, Ant. 1302 :—rarely in sing., Bré- papov KéxApra Id. Fr. 85, cf. Eur. Or. 302; BA. 7d dvw nat 7d «aro Arist. H. A. 1.9, 1, cf. P. A. 2. 13. II. the eyes, BAcpapwr xvavedey Hes. Sc. 7 (where the fem. Adj. points to a nom. 4 BAépapos), and often in Trag., oxorwaw BA. nal dedopxéra Soph. Aj. 85, cf. Tr. 107 :—in sing., Soph. calls. the sun dyépas BAépapoy, Ant. 104; and Eur. the moon vuerds dpeyyes BAépapoy, Phoen. 546.—Cf. dupa ut. Brehaps-Evorov, 76, an instrument for trimming the eyelids, Paul. - P- 73. PAahias, 6, a fish, Dorion ap. Ath, 306 F. Bréius, ews, 9, the act of seeing, sight, Plut. Pelop. 32, Hesych. Sqv, Adv. (BaAdw) by throwing, hurling, Hesych. Anetra, v. sub BadAw, BAtipa,76, (B4AAw) a throw, cast, of dice,dAAa BAjpar' év xUBors Barely Eur. Supp. 330; of a missile, Dion. H. 10. 16:—also the missile itself, Philo 2.431. 2. a shot, wound, Hat. 3.35. 3. acoverlet, Anth.P. 7. 413. BAnpevos, v. sub BadAw, BA‘ip, Acol. for 5éAeap, Alcae. 122 Bgk. BAns, nrés, 6, %, thrown, Poita ap. Schol. Ven. Il. 23. 254. BAtjoGar, v. sub BadrAw. ; BAnotpifo, fut. iw, (BAnrés) to toss about, €avrdy BX., as a sick person on his bed, Hipp. 489. 40; BAnorpiCovres épiy ppovrid’ dv’ ‘RAAdSa yay Xenophan. 7. 2 :—Pass., = BAnorpifey éavréy, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. 1. BAnotpicpés, 6, a tossing about, restlessness, Hipp. Epid. 1. 970. BAxreipa, }, a thrower, darter, dicrév Alex. Actol. ap. Macr. Sat. 5. 22. BAnréov, verb. Adj. one must throw or put, Ev. Mare, 2. 22. BAnrucév, 76, =BAnrév (v. BAnrés 11), Theophr. ap. Ath. 314 B. BA‘jro, v. sub BaddAw. BAnréos, 4, dv, (B4AAw) stricken, palsy-stricken, Lat. sideratus, Hipp. Acut. 386, Coac. 182: smitten by disease, Aexaildes Call. Dian. 127, cf. Id. Cer. 102. II. striking : BAnrév (sc. (Gov), 74, a beast that strikes, opp. to daxerdév, Ael. N. A. 3. 32. BAjjrpov, 76, an iron band or hoop; or a nail or rivet, {vordy KoAAn= Tov BAhrpaor Il. 15. 678. BAnxalw, =sq., Autocr, (Incert. 1) in A. B. 336. BAnxGopar, aor. €BAnxnodunv Anth. P. 7. 657, Longus: Dep.:—to bleat, of sheep and goats, mpoBatiwy BAnxapévew Ar. Pax 535, ef. Fr. 3443 BAnxdpevor mpoBarioy aiyay Te .. edn Id. Pl. 293 :—also of infants, Ta 5& ovyxipavd’ dua BAnxGrat Id. Vesp. 570:—in Theocr, 16.92 for the opt. BAyxoivro (as if from —éopar), Ahrens reads BAn- xevro. (Cf. BAnxn, BAnxds, Lat. balo; O. H. G. bldzu; Germ. bléken, our bleat. 'The word is an imitation of the sound of sheep and goats, as is pnxdopar; so puKd of bulls, Bpvydopar of lions, etc.) BAnxds, ddos, 4, a bleater, dias wept BA. Opp, C. 1.145. Bhaxa, Dor. BAGX4, 7, a bleating, olav Od. 12. 266: the wailing of children, Eur. Cycl. 48; cf. dprerpephs. (V. BAnxdopat.) PAnxnOpées, 6, =foreg., Ael. N. A. 5.51. PAnxnpo, 76,=BAnxN, Hesych., Basil. BAnxyrté, dv, 74, bleaters, i. e. sheep, Ael.N. A. 2.543; BAnxnra réxva sheepish lads, of the sons of Hippocrates, Eupol. Any. 38; called BAcro- papas by Ar, Nub, roor :—Basil. has also BAnxyTiKOs, 7, dv. Aixvov, 74, a kind of fern, Diosc. 4. 186. xpos, a, dv, (BAGE) faint, gentle, dvepor Alcae. 16 (46); of the rivers of hell, dul/, sluggish (Horace’s languidum flumen), Pind. Fr. 95.9; BA. nuperés slight, Hipp. Aph. 1255, cf. Plut. Pericl. 38; BA. opvypot Hipp.,etc. Adv. -p@s, slightly, Hipp.671. 31, Ctes. ap. Phot. 41.11.—Not found in Hom, (who only has the form é8Anxpés), nor in good Att. BAAxpos, 7, a woody plant, flowering late, Theophr. C. P. 1. 7, 4. Anxodns, es, (ef50s) bleating, sheepish, Babr. 93. 5. AXwv, % (later 6, Geop.), gen. wvos, also BAnxe, gen. ods; and Y Axev, —@, Dor. yAdxwv, —:—pennyroyal, Lat. mentha buleginm, v. infr. II.=épnBaov, in acc. BAnxyw Ar. Lys. Phryn. in A. B. 30 and other Gramm. represent abe (or yAnxw) as the Ion., yAdxov (yAaxw) as the Dor. BAnxwy (BAnxw) being the Att. form, v. Schol. Ar, Pax 712: the foll. examples confirm this rule: gen. -yAqj- xovos h. Hom, Cer. 209, yAnxods Hipp. 497-33 and 473; yAdxwvos Boeot. ap. Ar. Ach. 869; acc. yAdxwva Ib. 861; yAaxw Ib. 874, Theocr. 5. 56; BAnxwaAr. Lys.l.c., cf. BAnxwvias; but dat. -yAnxot Theophr. H.P.9. 16,1, pale. ov, 6, prepared with pennyroyal, xueewv Ar, Pax 712. Allow, =RAirrw, Gramm, Aikavos, 6,=Bdatpaxos, Hesych., Choerobosc. BAtpalo [7], Lacon. -drtw :—to feel hens to see if they have eggs, Ar. Ay.530: hencesensu obscoeno, Cratin. Incert. 23, Crates Incert. 3, Ar. Lys. 1164 :—Pass. to be squeezed, Hipp. 1142 D. II. =Pairrw, E. M. 200. taovs [i], ews, }, a lewd handling, squeezing, Hesych. Altoow, v. BAirTH. 286 ts, (50s, 4, (BAitTw) honey-taking, yelp Anth. P. 9, 226. , dbos, }, a worthless woman, Menind: Biot. ag XEa, TA, =KoyXUALa or geAdyia, Epich. ap. Hesych. Atro-pdppas or —pdpas, ov, 6, a booby, v. sub BAyynrd: akin are HappdxvOos, cvxopappas. BAtrov, 76, a plant, perhaps strawberry-blite or amarant-blite, Theo- pomp. Com. diy. 1, Theophr. H, P. 1. 14, 2; in pl., Diphil.“AmA. 1. BAtrrw: aor. €BAtoa Plat. Rep. 564E: cf. dmoBAirrw:—to cut out the comb of bees, take the honey, Plat.1.c.; apniidy BX. Soph. Fr. 856: metaph., BA. rdv djpyov to rob the people of their honey, Ar. Eq. 794, ef. Lys. 475 :—Pass., mAciorov 5) . . rors nphor pédt BrLrrerat (as re- stored by Ruhnk. for BAdrrec) Plat. 1.c.; BA. 7a ouhvy the hives have their honey taken, Arist. H. A. 5. 22, 9, cf. 9. 40,55. (From same Root as wédi, wédAcrra, with B added, cf. wadands BAdg, Bpdros d-pBporos, poheiy BAwoxw, huépa peo-nuBpia, etc.) Brirupt, 76, the sound of a harp-string, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 133, cf. Diog. L. 7. 57, Galen. 8. 662. wtuptfopar, Pass. to sound like a harp-string, Galen. 8. 69, 662. Lx-@5ys, es, running at the nose,=Kxopu@y, Hipp. ap. Hesych.: so XavaBns, es, of fish, clammy, Diphil. ’AwoAem. 1. 15. Brocitipés, 4, dy, also ds, dv Hes. Sc. 250:—grim, awful, of the ex- pression of a man’s face, yedidwy BAoovpoiot mpoowmact Il. 7. 212; TH 5é of boc AauréaOnv Bdrooupjow im dppvow Il, 15. 608, cf. Hes. Sc. 147; so of lions, Ib.175; of the Kjpes, Ib. 250; 7 5¢ ovds BAooupijs, to describe a woman, Phocyl. 3. 3 :—later of anything terrible, dyos Aesch. Eum. 168; dxpy Ap. Rh. 2.740 :—in Plato, bluff, burly, valiant, yervatous Te xat Br. 7a. On Rep. 535 B; BA. ye Tiy Wuxy éxets Nicostr. Incert. 4; so, of a woman, pata yevvaia xa BA. stout, stark, Plat. Theaet. 149 A: also coarse, rough, Theophr. H. P. 9. 2, 3. Adv. -@s, Heliod, 10. 27. Brocvpéirys, nros, 4, grimness, Eust. 1194. 46. Broctps-dpav, ov, savage-minded, Aesch. Supp. 833. octip-orns, ov, 6, later masc. of sq., Opp. C. 1. 144. ocvtp-ams, dos, , (Gp) grim-looking, Topyé Il. 11. 36. ciip-wmds, dv, later form of foreg., Dion. P. 123. wlw, fut. BAvow [iH] Anth. P. 9. 819: aor. €BAvoa Ap. Rh. 4. 1446, Q. Sm., etc.; poét. opt. BAvooee Anth. P. 11. 58: aor. pass. EBAVGON Orac. in Eus. P. E. 204 D: cf. dva-, daro-Bdd(w: (v.sub préw). To bub- ble or gush forth, of liquids, Ap. Rh. |. c., Orac. in Paus. 5. 7, 3, Philostr. 132, etc.; Oeppa@y bdarwv Br. to gush with.., C.1. 5127 B. 11; c. dat., BX. Avaiy with wine, Anth. P. 11.58; c. acc. cogn., wéOv BA. to spout wine, Ib. 7.27; ¥5wp Orph. Arg. 601.—Cf. Brdo. ; Bros [0], ews, 7, a bubbling up, Anth. P. 9.819. Also BAvopa, 76, Hdn. Epim. 11, BAvopés, 6, Gloss. Brtw, =BAUlw, c. dat., pévq BAvovoa Lyc. 301 ; c. acc., Hiwp .. éBAve anyn Nonn. Jo.2.v.6; aor. €8Adee Chr. Pat. 1087 :—so also BAvoow, Nonn. Jo. 7. v. 38; BAvordve, Jo. Chrys., etc.: cf. BAirrw. [0 between two long syll. in Ep., dvaBAveore Ap. Rh. ¢ 223, cf. 4. 1417. Brwlpos, 4, dv, (BA@oKw) tall, stately, He nirvs BAwOph Il. 13. 390; ards a tnd BrwPpiy byxvnv Od. 24. 234. Prwpés, 5,=Yapds, a morsel of bread, Call. Fr. 240: cf. derdBAwpos : —Dim. Siov, 7é, Eust. 1817.55. In Philem. ap. Ath. 114 E, PAwprator dpa is the prob. 1, the Lat. guadrati. Prsdors, ews, 4, an arrival, presence, Hesych. boxw, Nic. Th. 450, (xara-, mpo-) Hom.: fut. woAoduar Aesch. Pr. 689, Soph. O. C. 1742: aor. 2 €uoAov Hom., Att. Poets, and late Prose ; imper., wéAe Cratin. Néu. to: pf. wéuBdAwxa Od., Eur. Rhes. 629 :— later, fut. BAd~w (KaTa-) Lyc. 1068; aor, 1 €BAwéa Id. 448, 1327 ; aor. 2 €BAwy ap. Hesych. (BAwoxe (i. e. pAwow, v. sub BriTTw), pododpar, poreiv are in form precisely similar to @pwoxw, Oopodpat, Gopeiv, the Roots being MOA-, @OP-; but no pres. tenses podréw, Oopéw occur, except in late Poets, Jac. Anth, P. pp. 27, 609.) To go or come, used mostly by Poets in aor. 2, dedpo poddvres Od. 3. 44; bo- Aodoa mort péyap’ Il. 6. 286; of time, amply dwdexdrn pdAn jws 24. 781; péuBrwne padtora jyap Od. 17. 190:—so in Pind. and Trag., re 7d Kiptov pédry Aesch. Ag. 766; often with a Prep., podciv cis.., ént.., mpos.., or dmd..,&..; but also c. acc. only, €uodev “Hpas Aady Pind, N. 10. 66; yhv poddvres “EAAGSa Aesch. Pers. 809, cf. Ag. 968, Supp. 239, Soph. Ph. 1332, Eur. Rhes. 223, 289 ; Bs Tédos p. Eur. Med. 921, cf. 1. T. 1421 :—c. dat. pers., pnde por. . @avaros pédor Solon x. 5, cf. Soph. O. C. 70, Ant. 233, etc.; 5: ExOpas p. Tet, 5d. ways poreiv rive (cf. id A. IV), Eur. Phoen. 479, I. A. 1392; els bromra p. TW =dpopay twa Id. El. 345; és Adyous pw. Tt Id. Med. 666.—Rare in Att. Prose, Xen. An. 7. 1, 33; and used by Ar. only in lyrics (Av. 404, Thesm. 1146, 1155, etc.), or in the mouth of a Laco- nian, Id. Lys. 984, cf. Plut. 2. 220 E, 225 D. Boayés, 4, v. sub Bovaryés :—BoayiSys, 6, of Hercules, Lyc. 652. yptov, 76, a shield of wild bull's hide, Il. 12. 22, etc. pos, 5, (Bods) a wild bull, Philostr. 265. os, Dor. for BonOdos, Pind, :—name of a Delphic month, Anecd. Delph. 16. 19, 26. Beapa, 76, (Bodw) Dor. for Bénua, D ery, xapamerés B. Aesch. Ag. 920: a loud strain, Adpas Cydias ap, Ar. Nub. 967 (Fr. 1). o-dvOepov, 75, = BovpOadpov, Hipp. ap. Galen., Nic. ap. Ath. 683.C. wtros, 6, bull-man, of the Minotaur, Tzetz. Chil. 1. 489. Béak, aos, 5, contr. BOE (Diph. Siphn..ap. Ath. 356 A), a fish, sacred to Hermes, called from the sound it makes, box!, Epich. 10 Ahr., Ar. Fr. 400, v. Ath. 286 sq. . , a, ov, the Lat. boarins; % dyopd B.= forum boarium at Rome, Dion. H. 1, 40. but the only form in use, a@ shriek, tHrémopoy tr B. Brot npis — BonPera Boappta, %, (*dpw) ox-yoker, epith. of Athena, Lyc. 520. Boaris, sos, 4, v. sub Bonrhs. Béavdos, 5, (Bods, abd) an ox-stall, Theocr. 25. 108: also BéavAov, 76, Ap. Rh. 3. 1288; BoavAvov, Orph. Arg. 436. Bodw, Ep. 3 sing. Boda, 3 pl. Bodwouv, part. Bodwy, Hom.: Ion. impf. Bodaoxe, Ap. Rh. 2. 588 :—Att. fut. Bojoopar, Dor. Bodoopar; later Bonow, Ib. 3. 792, Anth. P. 7. 32, etc., (Bodom Eur. Ion 1446 is aor. subj.) :—aor. €8dyoa Hom., Soph.; Ep. Bénoa Il. 23.847; Ion. €Bwoa 12. 337 and Hdt.; sometimes also in Att., Cratin. Incert. 168, Ar. Pax 1155: pf. BeBdnxa Philostr. 561 :—Med., Bowpevos Ar. Vesp. 1228: Ep. aor. Bofoaro Q. Sm. 10. 465, Ion. €8HaaTo Theocr. 17. 6o. —Pass., Ion. aor. €8wo6nv Hdt.: pf. BeBédnuar Anth. P. 7. 138, Ion. part. BeBapévos Hdt. 3. 39: plqpf. €BeBdnro Paus. 6.11, 2. Cf. dva-, ém-—, kata-Bodw. (The Root seems to be BOF, cf. Lat, bov-are in Enn., and bovinator with re-boare; Skt. gu, redupl. gégu (notum facere), so that perh. -yodw, -yéos belong to the same Root, cf. BB. 1). To cry aloud, to shout, 6¢) Bofeas Il. 17. 89; dcov Te yéyave Bonoas (v. sub yéyova) Od.; maca yap rédus Bod Aesch. Ag. 1106; ds dpdxwy Bog Id. Theb. 381; Bod ypaupdrwy év ovddaBais, where Bog refers to the boastful shouts of Capaneus, not to any articulate sounds, Ib. 468; of Bonodpevor men ready to shout (in the éxxAnoia), Dem. 172. 4: v. sub Kpagw. 2. of things, to roar, howl, as the wind and waves, Lat. reboare, ov5t .. kdpa técov Boag mort xépooy Il. 14. 394: to resound, echo, dug 5é 7 dxpar jioves Bodwow 17. 265 ; Bog 5é mévrios Krdudoy Aesch, Pr. 431, cf. 392, etc.; Bo@ 8 & wot KédAados sounds, Id. Pers. 605 ; TO mpaypya avepdv éoriv, ard yap Bod it proclaims itself, Ar. Vesp. 921. II. c. acc. pers. ¢o call to one, call on, Pind. P. 6. 36, Eur. Med. 205, Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 5. 2. c. ace. also, ¢o call for; shout out for, Soph. Tr, 772. 3. c. acc. cogn,, B. Body Ar. Nub. 11533; B. péAos, iwav Soph. Aj. 976, Ph. 216; so, 8. Aovydy Aesch. Chg. 402; dAyos Eur. Tro. 1310 ;—c. dupl. acc., Bodre Tov ipévauor..vip- av sound aloud the bridal hymn in honour of the bride, Ib. 335 (lyr.). 4. to noise abroad, celebrate, 7 fasavos iv ¢Boare Alex. *Ameyd. 1.73 mphypara BeBupéva dvd “Iwviny Hat. 3.39; eBuabnoay dvd. ri “EAAdda Id. 6. 131 :—cf. karaBdyros, mepiBdnros. 5. c. inf. to ery aloud or command in a loud voice to do a thing, Soph. O. T. 1287, Eur. Andr. 298 ; Bo@y rue d-yew Xen. An. 1. 8, 12; B. Tie pr) Oety, Ib. 1. 8, 19: also ¢o cry aloud that .., Epicrat. Incert. 1. 31 :—also, B. ém.., as.., Xen. An. 1. 8, 1, Antiph. Kyo. 2. Boeakés, 7, dv,=sq., only in E. M. 254. 46. Boeukés, 7, dv, (Bots) =Bdeos, of or for oxen, Cevyn B. wagons drawn by oxen, Thuc, 4.128, Xen. An. 7. 5, 2, cf. Ar. Fr.163. The form Boikés, freq. in inferior Mss. (v. Dion. H. 8. 87), is censured by Hdn. in A. B.1354. Boevos, Ep. and Ion. Béeos, a, ov: (Bods) :—of an ox or oxen, esp. of ox-hide, Hom., who uses both forms, dépya Bdeoy Od. 14. 24; Boéorory, ipdow Il, 23. 324; Bocas domidas 5. 452; Bdea xpéa Hat. 2. 37, 168; 7a Bera xpéa Plat. Rep. 338 C; -ydAa Bdetoy cows-milk, Eur. Cycl. 218; 70 Bdewov yada Arist. H. A. 3. 20,14; metaph., Bdea phyara bull- words (cf. Bovmais, etc.), Ar. Ran. 924. II. Boety or Bo€y (sc. Sop), hh, an ox-hide, d5épnrov Boény Od. 20. 2, 142, cf. 22.364; Bods peyarovo Boeiny Il. 17. 389: an ox-hide shield, Boégs eiAvpévw wpovs avpot, orepejjot 17. 492; Body 7’ eb mordoy (contr. for Boéwy) 16. 636; v. sq. and cf. iepefov. 2.=Boe’s, AdcavTe Boetas h. Hom. Ap. 487, cf. 503; Buttm. proposed to read Bofas. Joevs, ews, 6, a rope of ox-hide, évorpénrovor Boedat Od. 2. 426. 4, for Boén, v. sub Bdetos. Bow, Dor. Bod, %, (Bodw) a loud cry, shout, Hom., etc.:—in Hom, mostly the battle-cry, Bory dya0ds, as an epith. of heroes, good at the battle-cry, Il. 2. 408, al.; so, Bods 5 é7t und? bvop’ ~orw let there be not even the name of war, Theocr. 16.97; in Trag., often of the cry of suppliants, Aesch, Pers. 936, etc.; of oracles, deidovca .. Bods as av Andddwv KeAadhon Eur. lon 92 (lyr.) :—also of the roar of the sea, Od. 24.48; of the sound of musical instruments, abAol pépyeyyés Te Body é€xov Il. 18. 495, cf. Pind. O. 3. 12, P. 10.60; B. oadmvyyos Aesch. Theb. 394; the cry of birds, Soph. Ant. 1021; of beasts, Eur. Bacch. 1085 :— Bony Owiocew, ddreiy Soph. Aj. 335, Eur. Hec. 1092; epdéygaro Bon Tis Id. I. T. 1386 ; Bodcopa: ray iméprovov Body Phryn. Com. Noaorp. 4; Bony tordvat Antiph, Samp. 1.2; Bcov dnd Bohs veer as far as sound went, only in appearance, Thuc. 8, 92, Xen, Hell. 2. 4, 31. II. =Bon- Geta, aid called for, succour, Aesch. Supp. 730, Ag.1349, Soph.O.C. 1057. Bon-yevis, és, born of an ox, of bees, Anth. P.g. 363,13: cf. Bovmas 1. Bonyta, 7, a dub. word, thought by Chishull to be =Tavupokabayia C. I. 2858; cf. cvvfhyor 2. Bondév, Adv. like oxen, wive Agatharchid, Peripl. 38. Bon-Spopéw, to run toa cry for aid, haste to help, Eur. Or. 1356, Heracl. Tat, etc: cf. Bonbéw. 2. to run witha cry, App. Hann. 42, Civ. 2. 119. Bon-Spopa, wy, 74, games in memory of the succour given by Theseus against the Amazons, Plut. Thes, 27; B. méumev to lead a procession at the B., Dem. 37. 6 (restored from Mss. for Botdia). Bon-Spopin, 4, a helping, aiding, Maxim. 7. xarapx. 381. Bon-Spop.0s, ov, =Bondpdpos, of Apollo, Call. Ap. 68, Paus. 9.17, 2. Bondpoprdv, dvos, 5, the third Attic month, in which the Bondpduca were celebrated, answering nearly to our September, Dem. 29. fin., Arist. H. A. 6. 29, 2., 8.12, 6 Bon-Spopos, or, (cf. Bon-O60s) giving succour, a helper, Eur. Phoen. be; ; B. modi Id. Or. 1290; epith. of Apollo, Call. h. Ap. 69. joH0-apxos, 6, captain of auxiliaries, name of a Carthaginian officer, Polyb. 1. 79, 2, App. Pun. 70. BonPera, 4, help, aid, rescue, support, Thuc,, al. ; B. 7d Adyw mpds Twa g p Plat, Parm,128C; 4 dtp ray dicaiaw B, Dem, 1287. 27 ; BofpOcay exe Bonbéw — BouBéw. mpos Tt Arist. P. A. 2.5, 4,cf.2. 7, 2:—pl., Id. Rhet. 2. 5, 17, ete. 2. medical aid, cure, Plut. Alex. 19. II. = Bono, auxiliaries, Xen. Hell, 7.1, 20; ve@v Bonea Thuc. 4. 8: esp. of ional aid, mercenaries and the like, opp. to regular forces (mapacxevi) ovvexys), Dem. 49. I. BonPéw, Ion. Baw (as should prob. be restored in Hdt., where the Mss. give the other form, Dind. Dial. Hadt. Pp. Viii.): fut. —jow, etc, Like Bondpopéw (cf. BonOdos), to come to aid, to succour, assist, aid, c. dat. pers., Hdt. 1. 82, Eur. I. A. 79; mpés Twa Xen, Hell, 1. 2, 33 THM dyria tTwds Hdt. 5.993; tue mpds Tt Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 38; vavol B. rue to help one with .., Ib. 1. 6, 223 also, B. ru 7a dixasa Id, Mem. 2.6, 25 :—even, B, rots rev mpoydvew druxnpaaw Aeschin. 78,3; B. 7d Adyw TH toGéca, etc., Plat. Phaedo 88 E, etc.; 8. 7@ 0 to maintain his rights, Philipp. ap. Dem. 280; B. rots vépous Aeschin. 5. 23, etc. :—of a physician, Plut. Alex. 19. 2. absol. to /end aid, come to the rescue, Hdt. 1. 30., 7.158, etc., Aesch. Supp. 608 ; 8. mapa tiva Hat. 9.57; but also, émt twa against-one, Hdt. 1. 62, Thuc. 1. 126, etc. ;—8. és or ém ténoy Hat. 6. 103., 4. 125, Thuc., etc.; éxeioe Dem. 52. 1; B. mpds te either ¢o promote an object, Arist. Eth. N. 8.1, 2, or to keep it off, Id. Resp. 8, fin., H. A. 9. 37,93 xphuact with money, Id. Eth. N. 5.2, 2:—impers., Bondet mpds 71 it is serviceable for ..,' Theophr. H.P.9.20,1. 3. Pass. to be assisted, receive help, Diosc. 4. 83, Plut. 2.687 F, 689 B, 720C; Bon- Ojgopat LXXx; €BonOny Ib.: impers., uot BeBonOnrar ro Tebveare Antipho 114. 36; ravrp por BeBonOnuévor éyeydver pidocopia Plat. Ep. 347 E. Boy Pnpa, aros, 7d, an aid, resource, Arist. Rhet. 3.2,8: assistance, mpos Te Polyb. 1.22, 3. 2. a remedy, medicine, Hipp. Vet. Med. 12, Diod. 1.25. Bon Pyparicds, 4, dv, =BonOnrinds, cited from Diosc. BonPqoipos, ov, that may be assisted or cured, Theophr. H.P. 9. 16, 7. BonOyréov, verb. Adj. one must help, Xen. Hell. 6.5, 10, Dem. 14. 5. BonPynrikés, 7, dv, ready or able to help, serviceable, tu Arist. Rhet. I. 13,12; mpés rt so as to keep it off, Id. Pol. 2. 7,13; or towards pro- eee it, Id. H. A. 3. 5, 4. Boy-G60s, Dor. Bod, ov: (Boh, Ow, cf. Bon-5pduos) hasting to the battle-shout, warlike, ll. 13. 477 ; BonOdov dpya a chariot hasting to the battle, 17. 481. Il. aiding, helping, Pind. N. 7. 48; and as Subst. an assistant, Theocr. 22. 23, Call. Del. 27 :—in Prose BonOés, év, assisting, auxiliary, vijes Thuc. I. 45; and often as Subst. an assis- tant, Hdt. 5. 77., 6. 100, Antipho 111. 40, Plat., al. Bondicla, 7, a driving of oxen, cattle-lifting, Il.11. 671. place where cattle are pastured, a cattle-run, Anth.P.7.626. a struggle with a bull, Heliod. 10. 31. BonAdréw, to drive away oxen, Ar. Fr. 598: generally, to urge on, Sosith. ap. Diog. L. 7.173, v. Nike Opusc. p. 7. 2. to tend oxen, Lyc. 816, II. (80m) ¢o raise a cry, Opp. C. 4. 64. BonAarys, ov, 6, fem. —nAdtis, rds, 4: (Bods, dative) :—one that drives away oxen, a cattle-lifter, Anth. P. 11. 176. II. ox-driving, faBbos Anth. Plan, 200: ox-tormenting, ptarp Aesch. Supp. 307. III. a cattle-driver, Lys. 110. 7, Plat. Polit. 261 D. IV. in Pind. O. 13. 26, B. i:OdpayBos the dithyramb which gains a bull for the prize, or the word may refer to the worship of Acédvucos Tadpos,—v. Donaldson ad 1. Bonddrixés, 7, dv, of or for cattle-driving :— -«h (sc. Téxvn) the herdsman’s art, Plat. Euthyphro 13 D. Bénpa, 76, v. Béapya. Bon-vépos, 6, =Bovrdpos, Theocr. 20. 41. Bont, nxos, 6, Ion. for Béag, Numen. ap. Ath. 286 F. Bonporos, ov, ploughed by oxen, Nic. ap. Steph. B.s.v.’AowaddOea. Bonors, ews, }, =Bdn, a cry, a shout for assistance, Triclin. ad Soph. O. T. 419, v. l. Psalm. 22. 2. Boyrhs, 08, 6, clamorous, Hipp. 1286. 38, and now restored in 309. 6, ef, Hesych. v. #mdrat :—Dor. fem., Bodris add Aesch. Pers. 575. Bonrixés, 7, dv, shouting, noisy, Arist. Quint. 96. Bonrés, 7, dv, (Bodw) shouted or sung aloud, Ophvovet Bonréy bpuqvaoy Epigr. Gr. 418. 7. Boyris, vos, 4, Ion. for Bénars, Od. 1. 369. 69pevpa, 7d, a ditch, trench, Manass. Chron. 1673. BoOpevw, to dig a trench or pit, Geop.g. 6, 2: BoOpew, Nonn. D. 47. 69. BoPpilw, fut. iow, =foreg., Oribas. p. 117. 8 ed. Cocch., Eccl. Bodpiov, 74, Dim. of Bé@pos, a smail trench, to set plants in, Geop. 8. 8, 2. II. a small kind of ulcer, Hipp. 427. 22. Bodpo-edis, és, ditch-like, hollowed, Hipp. 641. 52. é 60pos, 5, any hole or pit dug in the ground, Lat. puteus, BéOpov Spiga Od. 10.517: the hole or trench in which a tree is planted, Bd@pov 7 efe- ie [ry édalay] Il. 17.58: @ natural trough for washing clothes in, Od. 6. 92 (wAvvol Ib. 86) :—a hole or hollow, such as a fire makes in the snow, Xen, An. 4. 5,6. Cf. Dissen Pind. N. 5.15. (Prob. from the same Root as BaOus, q. v.: cp. also Lat. fod-io.) Bo0pdw, = Bodpeda, Galen. Bé0ivos, 6,=dOpos, Cratin, Sepup. 7, Xen. Occ. 19, 3, Lys. Fr. 17, al. wns, ov, 6, aditcher, delver, Incert. V. T. 7, like alot, exclam. of dislike or of scorn, Ar. Pax 1066. jorddprov, 76, Dim. of Bods, Ar. Av. 585, Fr. 52. ofSys, ov, 6, like an ox, quiet, stupid, Menand. Incert.437- © Bol8tov, 74, Dim. of Bods, Ar. Ach. 1036, Arist. HLA. 3-21, 25 v. sub Bonipdyua, cf. Piers, Moer.276. ‘The form Bovétov, rejected by Phryn. 86, was used by Hermipp. (Képxor. 1) acc. to A. B.85; butiv. Mein. ad |. Boikés, v. sub Boeuwds. Adv, -«is, Porph. Abst. 3. 3. loiori, Adv. in ox-language, Aadeiv Porphyr. V. Pyth. 24. wwt-Gpx7s, ov, 6, a Boeotarch, one of the chief magistrates at Thebes, Hdt. 9. 15, Thuc. 4. 91, etc.; also Bouwsrapxos, Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 4.— Hence Bowwrapxéw, to be a Boeotarch, Thuc. 4. 91, Dem. 1378.22; and Bowrapxia, 7, the office of Boeotarch, Plut. Pelop. 25. II. a Ext. - 287 Bowtrdtw, to play the Boeotian, esp. to speak Boeotian, Xen, An. 3. 1, 26, Com, Anon. 341. II. to side with the Boeotians, Boeotize in politics, etc, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 34, Aeschin. 73. 24 :—also Bowrifw, Plut. 2.575 D. Bowrtétov [77], 76, Dim. of Bowréds, Ar. Ach. 872. Bow ti-oupy%js, és, (*€pyw) of Boeotian work, xpdvos Xen. Eq. 12, 3. Boworés, 6, a Boeotian, Il. 2. 494, etc. :—Boweria, 9, Boeotia, so called . from its cattle-pastures, Hes, Fr. 4 (146), etc. -—Adj. Bovdtuos, a, ov, Boeotian, with a notion of gluttonous, obra apodp’ éort rods Tpdmovs Bowwrios Eubul.“Iwv. 3, cf. Edpa.1; tut yap B. moAAd.. . éo0/wv Mnesim. Bove. 1; d¢vmewoy dvdpa xat B. Demon. ’AyeA. 1: and of dull, stupid, Plut. 2. 995 E; whence the proverb ds Bowwria, Béckh Pind. O. 6. 152, Meineke Menand. Incert. 249 :—also Bowwtixés, or—taxés, f, 6, Diod. 14 81,Strab. 404, 406 :—Ady.—xés, Strabo 404; inSchol. Il. 2.494, where the Bowwrtaxé of Hellanicus are cited :—fem. Bowwrls, (0s, Xen. Hell. 5.1, 36. Bodatos, a, ov, (BoA) violent, ‘Trag. ap, Plut. Lucull. 1. a 6ABa, 7), the Lat. vu/va, Anth. P. 11. 410. BokBaprov, 74, Dim. of BoABds, Epict. Enchir. ri BoABisvov or rather BoABirtov, 74, a small kind of cuttle-fish, with a strong smell (cf. d¢aiva, dopvAn), Hipp. 649. 35., 651. 50:—also called Bodirawa, BorBorivn, BorBiris. fear }, a white kind of BodBds, Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 9, Matro ap. th. '. BodBiov, 76, Dim. of BoABés, Hipp.669.53:—PoABioxos, 5, Anth.P.11.35. BoABirts, Sos, 7, = BodBid.or, Epich. 33 Ahr. BérBirov, 74, BEABtros, 6, worse forms of BéAvTov, ~ros, Phryn. 357. BohBo-edhs, €s, bulb-like, bulb-shaped, Paul. Aeg. 7. p. 249. BodBés, 6, Lat. bulbus, a certain bulbous root that grew wild in Greece, and was much prized, Arist. Probl. 20, 26, Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 8, v. Schol. Ar. Nub. 189, Theocr. 14.17; freq. in Com., Plut. Com. a. 1, al. BoABorivy, 4,=BodBidiov, Ath. 318 E. BodBo-pika, %, soup of bulbs and lentils, Ath. 584 D. oABASys, es, =BorABoedys, Theophr. H. P. 7. 13, 8. Bodeus, ews, 5, a slinger, Tzetz. Antehom. 393. *Bohéw, =BadAw, but hardly used save in Ep. pf. pass. BeBdAnpat, to be stricken with grief and the like, dxei . . BeBoAnpévos Frop Il. 9. 9, of. Od, 10. 247; mévOet . . BeBodAnaro waves (3 pl. plgpf.) Il. 9. 3; dunxavin BeBbAnoa Ap. Rh. 4. 1318; dupacin BeBornTo Q. Sm. 7. 726. Bodeav, Gvos, 6, (BoAn) a dunghill, Philem. Incert. 120: cf. aeroBoAdr. Bodh, %, a throw, the stroke or wound of a missile, opp. to Anyi (stroke of sword or pike), Od. 17. 283, cf. 24. 160; 8. mérpwv Eur. Or. 593 Héxpt Al@ov Kal dxovriov Bodms Thuc. 5. 65 :—also, xUBav Borat throws or casts of dice, Soph. Fr. 381; Bodais. . opd-yyos wAecev ypapny by its stroke or touch, Aesch. Ag. 1329. 2. metaph., like BéAos, B. dpOadrpSv a quick glance, Od. 4. 150; Kdrw.. BAceuparow pérer B. Aesch. Fr. 238, cf. Ag. 742. 8. also, Bodal xepavvior thunder-bolts, Id. Theb. 430; Bodat HAlov sun-beams, Soph. Aj. 877; and without Alou, mpos péoas Bodds Eur. Ion 11353 so, xpvood. . Bodats with golden rays, Epigr. Gr. 832; Bodr) xudvos a snow-shower, Eur. Bacch. 661. BoAtkn, 7, a female slave, Cretan word in Seleuc. ap. Ath. 267 C. BoAtfw, (Boris) to heave the lead, take soundings, Act. Ap. 27. 28:— Pass. to sink in water, Geop. 6.17. BoArvOos, 6, perh. the same as Bévagos, Arist. Mirab. 1, 2. BoAks, dos, 4, a missile, javelin, Plut. Demetr. 3. 2. the sounding-~ lead, Schol. Il, 24. 80. 3. dorpandy Porls a flask of lightning, Lxx. 4. a cast of the dice, Anth. P. 9. 767 :—a die, Ib. 768. Bodtonixés, 7, dv, (BdA0s) to be caught by the casting-net, Plut. 2.977 E. BoAtratwa, 7, =BorBisiov, Arist. H. A. 4. I, 27., 9. 37, 16. {rwos, 7, ov, of cow-dung, Ar. Ran. 295. éAtrov, 74, or BoAtros, 5, cow-dung, mostly in pl., Cratin, Acovuc. 6, Ar, Ach, 1026, Eq. 658; v. BoAB-. BodAa, Acol. for BovdAn, Plut. 2. 288 B, Inscrr. Lesb. in C, I. 2166. 33, 2181, 2190, etc. Pahoa = %, the icon of the dice, Anth. P. 9. 767. dAopat, =BovrAocpat, Tpwatv 52) Bddrerat Sodvar Kparos Il. 11. 319; ei. . BoAcabe abrév Te (we xrr. Od, 16. 387; viv 8 Erépws EBddXovTo Geot (vulg. €Badovro), I. 234; also impf. €BoAAdpay, Theocr. 28. 15. V. Buttm. Lexil. v. BodAopar 8. Bédos, 6, a throw with a casting-net, Orac. ap. Hat. 1. 62 (cf. pirat); péya diervoy és Bédov €Axet draws it back for a cast, Theocr, 1, 40:— metaph., els BéAoy kabloracOa, épxecOat to fall within the cast of the net, Eur. Bacch. 847, Rhes. 730:—hence a net, Ael. N. A. 8.3; for birds, Anth, P. 6. 184. » 2. the thing caught, ty@sav BéXros a draft of fishes, Aesch, Pers. 424; BéAov éxanGaOar to land one’s draft of fish, Eur. El. 582. II. a casting of teeth, Arist. H. A. 6. 22, 12, G. A. 2. 8, 18. III. a cast with the dice, Poll. 7. 204. BopBdlw, =BopPéw, Suid. BopBat, mock-heroic expression of wonder, Ar. Thesm. 45; and Ib. 48, in the exaggerated form BopBadoBopPa€. BopBawAvos, 6, (BopBéw, abdAds) a comic compd. for doxavAns, a bag- piper, with a play on BoyBvacés, Ar. Ach. 866, Vesp. 107. BopBéw, fut. 70m, to make a booming, humming noise (cf. BéuBos) 5 in Hom, always of falling bodies, to sound deep or hollow, Tpupadea xapal BopBnoe wecodoa Il. 13.530; alxpi) xadcein xapddis BopB. Teo. 16, 118, cf. Od. 18. 396; BopByoay .. xara pdoy the oars fell with a loud noise .., Od. 12.204; BépBnoev 5e Aidos the stone flew humming through the air, 8. 190;—of the sea, fo roar, Simon. 2 :—later, in the proper sense, to hum, as bees, Arist. H. A. 4. 9, 3-5 9-40 53; Theoer. 3. 14, cf. Plat. Rep. 564 D; so, BopBel 5& vexpav opnvos Soph. Fr. 693; of mosquitoes, to buzz, Ar. Pl. 538; generally of a sound, to buzz bin one’s ears, Plat. Crito 54D; also, dra BowBel wor Luc, D, Meretr. g. 2. 288 iv, Adv. buzzing, with a hum, Ap. Rh, 2. 133. BopBHes, ecoa, ev, =BouBnrids, Anth, Plan. 4. 74. BopBnors, ews, 1, a buzzing: a buzzing crowd, LXx (Baruch 2. 29). opByTHs, od, 6, a buzzer, hummer, Anth. P. 6, 236. opByricds, 7, dv, humming, Eust.945.23; PopBucds, 4, dv, Schol.Pind, BdpBos, 6, Lat. bombus, a booming, h ing, Plat, Prot. 316 A, Arist. Resp.9,5; 8. dvéuov xariévtos its booming sound, Heliod,5.27 ; of thunder, Epic.ap.Diog.L.10.102; a buzzing in the ears, Hipp.Coac.149 ; in the intes- tines, Galen. 7.241.—BépBo, 74, barbarism in Ar, Thesm.1176, (Onomat.) pBiKia, wy, 74, a kind of bee that makes a cell of clay, apis caemen- II. the cocoons taria, Arist. H. A. 5. 24 (v. 1. BopBuxoadav). of the silk-worm, Ib, 5. 19, 11. opBucias, 6, v. sub BduBué II. iopBvAn, 7, =BopBvAuos, Schol. Ap, Rh. 2. 569. op Burrdto, (BouBéw) v. sub BopBopitw. opBvArés or —WAvos, 6, an insect that hums or buzzes, a humble-bee, Ar. Vesp. 107, Arist. H, A. 9. 40, 2 and 43, 1: a gnat, mosquito, Hesych, 2. the larva of the silk-worm (v. |. BouBvuXis), Arist. H. A. 5.19, 103; vy. Schneid. vol. 3. p. 372. IL. a narrow-necked vessel, that gurgles in pouring, Hipp. 494. 55, v. Ath. 784 C, A.B. 220. (On the accent v. E. M. 380.) PopBiAts, f50s, +, =oppdrvt, Hesych. II. cf. BopBvrtds I. 2. BopBvE, dios, 6, a silk-worm (cf. BopBuadrds 1. 2), Arist. H. A. ap. Ath. 352F. 2. silk, Alciphro 1. 39. II. a kind of flute, Aesch. Fr. 55, cf. Arist. Metaph. 13.6, 8, Poll. 4.82; or partof a flute, Ib. 70:—hence Bop- Buxtas xédapos Theophr, H. P. 4.11, 3: v. Chappell Hist. of Anc. Mus. p. 268 sq. III. in Lacon., =o7dpvos, Arist. Audib. 11, 11, A. B. 1354. a ina €s, (eld0s) =BopByrikds, Ael. N. A. 6. 37. jon Bdov, dvos, d, late form for BovB&v: whence PopBwvapra, rd, drawers, Jo. Malal. 288. 10 Bonn. Bovacos or Bovarcos, 4, the bonassus or bison, wild-ox, bos urus, Arist. AGAa. 2X, ,35+5.01.45 0h: As 3. aigalt Boo-Bookés, 6, a herdsman, Suid. 06-yAnvos, ov, ox-eyed, Nonn. D. 7. 260. odunrhp, Hipos, 6, (Sapdw) a tamer of oxen, Q. Sm. 1. 524, 587. Boo-Luytov, 76, an ox-yoke, Lxx (Sirach. 26. 7). o0-firys, ov, 6, =Bovdurns, Suid. Bos-cAep, contr, BodkAap, 6, stealer of oxen, Soph, Fr. 857. Boo-Kétos, ov, ox-stealing, Orph. Arg. 1055, Nonn. D. 1. 337. Bod-Kpatpos, ov, ox-horned, Nonn. D. 13. 314. Booxracta, %, (xreive) a slaying of oxen, Ap. Rh. 4. 1724. Bodkriros, ov, (eri{w) of Thebes, founded where the heifer lay, Nonn. D. 25. 415. ack AWA ov, 5, slayer of oxen, Tryph. 361. oo-ok dts, ov, looking after oxen, Noun. D. 31. 225. Boocodos, ov, (cevw) driving oxen wild, of the gadfly, Q. Sm. 5. 64; contr., Bovogdoy, bvre pana .. Kadéovory Call. Fr. 46. Bos-criots, ews, ,=Bovaraots, Call. Del. 102. Bootes ov, drawn by or riding on oxen, Nonn. D. 1. 66. . joo-oayia, 7), slaughter of oxen, Anth. Plan. ror: cf. Bovopayéw. }o0-rpadpos, ov, =Bourp-, Dion. P. 558, Nonn. D. 14. 377. Body, fut. dow, to change into an ox, like tw, Eust. 70. 28. Popa, %, (v. B:Bpwonw) eatage, meat, properly of the food of carnivorous beasts, wovriow Sdxeot 5ds Bopdy Aesch, Pr. 583, cf. Cho. 530; Onpaiv GAvov B. Eur. Phoen. 1603, Soph. Ant. 30; «uvds B. Ar. Eq. 417; 6 Aéov . . [xatper], dre Bopay ef Arist. Eth. N. 3.10, 7: then of cannibal- like feasts, Hdt. 1. 119; «pe@v . . olxelas Bopds of their own flesh that had been served up as food, of the children of Thyestes, Aesch. Ag. 1220, cf. 15973 Bopas Tod . . Oldirov yévou food torn from the body of the son of Oedipus, Soph. Ant. 1017, cf. 1040; Bop& xalpovow dvOpomoxrévye in feeding on the corpses of slain men, Eur. Cycl. 127, cf. 249, 367; ob yap év yaorpds Bop& 70 xpnordy elvat in gluttony, 1d. Supp. 865 :—more rarely of simple food, Pind. Fr. 94, Aesch. Pers. 490, Soph. Ph. 274, etc. aos, 6, the palm-fruit, Diosc. 1. 150. . Sparov, 7d, a kind of cedar, Diod. 2. 49, ubi v. Wessel. opBopifw, (BépBopos) to be like mud, év yedoet Diosc. 5. 85. jopBops-Sipos, ov, muddy-minded, Ar. Pax 753- Bopo-Koirys, ov, 6, ar oe eh a ey ree ‘0, . }, filthily lewd, Hippon. 98, Com. in Meineke 4. 631. Beebeto e pa mire, filth, Lat. coenum, Asius 1, Aesch. Eum. 694, Ar. Vesp. 259, Plat., al.:—it differs from mmAds clay, moist earth, Lat. Jutum (q. v.), v. Hemsterh. Luc. Prom, es. 1. BopBopo-rapatis, 6, mud-stirrer, Ar. Eq. 309- BopBopo-pdyos, ov, feeding on dirt, Manass. Chron. 42 36. ‘ BopBopsw, to defile, Eccl. :—Pass. to be made muddy or miry, Arist. G. A. 3. II, 31. BopBopite, in Hesych., to have a rumbling in the bowels, for which Arist. (Probl. 27. 11) uses BopBvdcdgw :—Subst. BopBopvypss, é, a rumbling in the bowels, Hipp. Progn. 40; or BopBopvy4, Hesych. Cf. wopkopuyéw, Kopkopuy7. ‘ BopBo , €s, (€l50s) miry, filthy, mddos BopBopaidéarepos Plat. Phaedo 114 E; tads Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 16, cf. 15; O@4Aarra Menand. ‘AA. 12: of pus, ¢urbid, Hipp. Aph. 1260. Bopeddns, ov, 6, son of Boreas,Diod. 4443 Ep. Bopyddqs,Anth, P.9. 550. Bopéas, ov, 5; lon. Bopéns, Hom., or Bopijs, éw, Hdt. 2. 101., 4.375 Att. Boppas, G, Cratin. Sepp. 1, Thuc. 6. 2, al., cf. Boppadev :—the North wind, Lat. Aguilo, personified as Boreas, Od. 5. 296, etc. :—the word included winds from several northerly points, generally opp. to vd7os, B. xat dmapkrias Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 25., 2.6, 6; pl., Ib. 2. 4, 18, H. A. 9. 6, Io. 2. used to denote the North, mpds Bopijv dveuov towards BouBndcv — Béowopos. the North, Hat. 2. 10¥ ; pds Bopéav tuwvds northward of a place, Thuc. 2.96, cf. Hdt.6.139. (V. sub dpos, mons.) Bopeds, Ion. Bopetds, poét. Bopyuis, dos, 7), a Boread, daughter of Boreas, Soph. Ant. 985: also Bopyis, é5os, Nonn. D. 33. 211. It. generally as fem. Adj. boreal, northern, mvoat Aesch.-Fr. 195. Bopeacpos, 6, the festival of Boreas at Athens, Hesych. BopénQev, Adv. from the north, Dion. P.79; cf. Boppadev. Bopénvbe, Adv. northwards, Dion. P. 137. 4 Bopefjrts, tos, 7, fem. of Bépecos, Dion. P. 243. ne a, ov, =Bépeos, Anth. Plan. 230. operas, ddos, %, post. for Bopeds, Orph. Arg. 736. Bopeto@ev, post. for Bopéndev, Nonn. D, 6, 127. Bépetos, a, ov, also os, ov Soph, O. C. 1240: Ion. Boptuos, 7, ov :— from the quarter of the North wind, northern, opp. to vérios, Hat. 4. 37., 6. 31, etc.; B. dura exposed to the north, Soph. |. c.; 70 B. Tetxos, one of the Long Walls at Athens, Ar. Fr. 269, Andoc. 24. 2, Plat. Rep. 439 E; 7a B. northern districts, Arist. H. A. 8. 19, 10; THs TAedéos Bopetou yevouévns having appeared in the North, Ib. 5. 8, 10. 2. of the North wind, B. xe.pwv a winter during which northerly winds prevail, Hipp. Aph. 1247, Arist. Probl. 1. 8 sq.; Bépeca, 7a, northerly winds, Ib. 26. 31, etc. ; (rarely in sing., Xen. Cyn, 8, 1); Bopetos in the time of northerly winds, Arist. H. A. 6. 19, 4, al. ; so, Bopelwy dvray Ib. 8. 2, 36:—Sup. -draros, Manetho 4. 241. Bopevs, 6,=Bopéas, in oblique cases Bopjjos, —7, -fja, Arat. 430, 829, 882, etc.: nom. pl. Bopets, Alciphro 1. 17 Bope@ris, dos, ),=Bopeds, Paul. Sil. Ecphr. 163. Bopyids, Bopyos, Bopyis, Ion. for Bopesds, Bépetos, Bopela. Bopijs, éw, 6, lon. contr. for. Bopéas, Hdt. Bopotrovés, dv, (roréw) making one eat, appetising, Eust. 1538. 30. Bopés, 4, dv, (Bop) devouring’, gluttonous, Ar. Pax 38, Arist. Physiogn. 6,10. Adv, -@s, Ath. 186 C. Bopérns, nros, }, gluttony, voracity, Eust. Opusc. gt. 26. oppabev, Adv., Att. for BopénOev, Theophr. Fr. 6. 1, 11; also in Hipp. 353- 49- Boppaios, a, ov, also os, ov Anth. P. 9. 561, =Bépeos, Aesch. Theb, 527, Anth, P. 6. 245, etc. Bopp-armAtorns, ov, 6, aN. E. wind, Ptol.:—Adj.-amnAvorinds,7,6v,1d_ BoppGs, a, 6, Att. contr. for Bopéas, q. v. Bépves, of, unknown Libyan animals, Hdt. 4. 192; cf. dpves. Bopuadevys, ous, 6, the Borysthenes or Dnieper, a river of Scythia, Hdt. 4. 18:—Bopvoevetrns, ov, Ion. -etrys, ew, 6, an inhabitant of its banks, Hdt. 4. 17, Menand, Incert. 491. Béors, ews, 4, (Bdoxw) food, fodder, ixOicr Il. 19. 268 Onpot Q. Sm. I. 329. Booxdditos, a, ov, foddered, fatted, xhv Nic. Al. 228. Bookds, ddos, 4, feeding, fed, Nic. Th. 782, Al. 293. II. as Subst., a small kind of duck, perhaps anas crecca, the teal, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 15; cf. Baokds. Bookedv (not Booréwv), vos, 6, a feeder, Hesych. Book, 4, fodder, food, Aesch. Eum, 266; 7érecOat émt Booxny Arist. H. cane 40, 12; in pl., wjAwy re Bookads Aesch. Fr. 41, cf. Eur. Hel. 1331. . BécKnpa, 7d, that which is fed or fatted: in pl. fatted beasts, cattle, Soph. Tr. 762, Eur. Bacch. 677, Xen. Hell. 4. 6,6; of sheep, Eur. Alc. 576, El. 494; éufjs xepds B., of horses, Id. Hipp. 1356; (Hv dad Booknpdroy Arist. Pol. 6. 4, 11 ;—in dual, of a couple of pigs, Ar. Ach. 811; in sing. of a single beast, dxava rovriov Booxhparos Aesch. Fr. 270; év tpdmp Booxnparos Plat. Legg. 807 A; opp. to @npioy, Arist. M. Mor. 2. 7, 4, Strabo 775. II. food, 8. mnpovijs Aesch. Supp. 620, cf. Soph. El. 364; dvaiyaroy B. Sa:pdvev a prey drained of blood: by the Erinyes, Aesch. Eum. 302. Booknparddns, es, (eZ50s) bestial, Onpiddes wat B, Strabo 224. Béckyots, ews, 7, a feeding, pasture, Symm. V. T. Bookyréov, verb. Adj. one must feed, Tt Ar. Av. 1 359- Booxés, 6, a herdsman, Auth. P. 7. 703; B. mpoBdrwy a shepherd Diosc, 4. 118 :—in Gramm. also Booxhrwp. Bock, impf. €Bocxor, Ep. Béoxe Il. 15. 548: fut. -how Od. 17. 559, Ar. Eccl. 599: aor. €8daxnoa Geop.:—Pass. and Med., Hom., Att.: Ion. impf, Booxéoxovro Od. 12. 355; fut. Boowhoopat Serap. in Plut. 2.398 D, Or. Sib. 3. 788, Dor. Booxodpar Theocr. 5. 103: aor. ¢BooxhOnv Trag. Incert. 268 Wagner: cf. xara-, mepi-Bboxw : I. properly of the herdsman, to feed, tend, Lat. pasco, aimédta Od. 14,102; Tads Strattis Maxed. 7; 5 Bdoxwy the feeder, Arist. H. A. 5. 2, 8. 2. generally, : to feed, nourish, support, Bécnet -yaia . . dvOpdnous Od. 11. 365, cf. 14. 3255 yaorépa Bdonew to feed one’s stomach, 17. 559; mévra Bdo~ koucay pddya .."HAtov Soph. O. T. 1425 :—of soldiers, etc., to main- tain, keep, émkotpous Hat. 6. 39; vavrucdy Thuc. 7. 48: metaph., B. végov Soph. Ph. 3133; mpdyuara B. troubles, i.e, children, Ar. Vesp. 313. it. Pass., of cattle, to feed, graze, Lat. pascor, Od. 21. 49, etc.; ard gvdoxor Il. 5. 162 :—to feed on, rt Aesch. Ag. 118, Arist. H, A. 8.2, 24, al.; revi Aesch. Theb. 244. 2. metaph. ¢o be fed or nurtured, lvypotor Id. Cho. 26; xovpos nvedpacw Soph. Aj. 5593 éAniow Eur. Bacch. 617 ; and B. ret or wepi ri to run riot in a thing, Anth, P. 5. 272, 286. (Though Bécxw, Bécxopat agree so closely in sense and form with pasco, pascor, they cannot be from the same Root; for no such interchange of b and p is possible. The Root of Béoxw is BOT, cf. Bornp, Bordy, Béravn; pasco is to be found in waréopat.) Béopopov, 74, a kind of Indian grain, Id. 690. oiwvots Kat Strabo 690: also Béopopos, 6, $ Bécropos, 6, (Bods répos Opp. H. 1. 617) properly Ox-ford, name of . Boorpuynddv — Bovxoréw. several straits, of which the Thracian and Cimmerian are best ‘known, Hadt. 4. 83 and 12, etc.; but the name was sometimes given to the Hel- lespont, Aesch. Pers. 723, 756, Soph. Aj. 886, et Schol. ad Il. (For the mythic origin of the name, v. Aesch. Pr. 732, Long. 1. 30:—it is how- ever a solitary instance of Boo-, in compos., for Bods).—Adj. Boorépevos, ov, Steph. B.; Boomépuos, a, ov, Soph. Aj. l.c.: hence 7d Boowopetovy, as the name of a temple occurs in Decret. Byz. ap. Dem, 256. 11 :— Booopirys [7], ov, 5, a dweller on the Bosporus, Soph. Fr. 446: also Boorépavos, 6, Strabo 312, 495; Boomopnvds Id. 762. BoorpixnSév, Adv. curly, like curls, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 19. Boorpixilw, to curl, dress as hair, Anaxil. Incert. 10, Dion. H. 7-9: metaph. ¢o dress out, dsaddyous Dion. H. de Comp. 25. Boorpuxvov [0], 74, Dim. of sq., Auth, P. 11. 66:—a vine-tendril, Arist. H. A..5. 18, 1: a feeler of the polypus, Ib. 62'12,2- Boorpixos, 5, pl. Béorpvxa in Anth. P. 5.260: (v. sub Bérpus): —a curl or lock of hair, Archil. 52, Aesch.Cho, 178, etc. 2. poét., like Exi¢, anything twisted or wreathed, mupds B., of a flash of lightning, Aesch. Pr. 1044, cf. Valck. Phoen. 1261; v. Boorpdxuor. Il. a winged insect, acc. to some, the male of the glow-worm, Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 14. Boorpixéw, =Boorpuxifw, Poll. 2. 27, Achill. 'Tat. 1. 19, in Pass. Boorpixadys, es, curly, Philostr. 571 :—Adv. —das, Galen, joorpuxapa, aros, 76, a lock, Eumath. 2. 2. Bordpra, 74, (Bdcxw) pastures, dub. in Thuc. 5.53; al. maparordmua. Bordvy [a], 4, (Bdcxw) grass, fodder, Il. 13. 493, Plat., al.; & Bord- yns from feeding, from pasture, Theocr. 25.87; éypovra: és Boravay, of horses, Eur. Fr. 775. 27; Bor. & A€ovros the lion’s pasture, i.e. Nemea (cf. xépros), Pind. N. 6. 71; év xaxj B. in bad pasturage, Plat. Rep. 401 C, II. a herb, opp. to Adxavoy, Arist. Plant. 1. 4, 7. Bordvnfev, Adv. from the pasture, Opp. H. 4. 393- Boréivy-bayos, ov, grass-eating, Opp. H. 3. 424. Boravn-hépos, ov, herb-bearing, Nonn. D, 25. 526. Poravia, %,=Bordyn, Philo 1. 8, in pl. Bordvife, fut. iow, to root up weeds, to weed, Theophr. C. P. 3. 20, 9. Boravixés, 7, dv, of herbs, pdppaxa Plut. 2.663 C; %. 8. mapddocts the science of botany, Diosc. prooem. Boravov, 74, Dim. of Bordvn, Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 3. Bortimopds, 6, the rooting up of weeds, weeding, Geop. 2.24. Boriivo-Aoyéw, to gather herbs, Hipp, 12'78. 21. Boriivadns, es, (ef50s) herbaceous, Diosc. 4.175 :—rich in herbs, Geop. Boréopar, = Bécxoua:, Nic. Th. 394. Bortp, fjpos, 5, (Bdaxw) a herdsman, herd, Od. 15. 504; oiavay B. a soothsayer, Aesch, Theb. 24; xvwv Bornp a herdsman’s dog, Soph. Aj.297; also in late Prose, Plut. Rom. 7, al.:—fem. Béretpa as epith. of Demeter, v. Ruhnk. ad h, Cer, 122.—Also Bérys, ov, 6, (v. Bodrns), E. M. 218. 42. Bornpikéds, 4, dv, of or for a herdsman, Plut. Rom, 12, Anth. P. 6. 170. Borév, 76, (Bdcxw) =Bdoxnpa, a beast, Aesch. Ag. 1415, Soph. Tr. 690: mostly in pl. grazing beasts, Il. 18.521, Trag., etc.; but of birds, Ar. Nub. 1427; of fishes, Opp. H. 4. 630. Borpvédtov [8], 74, Dim. of Bérpus, Alex. Hayy. 1. 13. II. an earring of this pattern, Com. ap. Poll. 5.97, cf. Hesych., and v. Borpus 3. BorpiSév, Adv. (Bérpus) like a bunch of grapes, in clusters, Botpuddv mérovrat, of bees, Il. 2.89; theres 6 moddmous ga B. Arist. Fr. 315 ;— also BotpunSév, acc. to Cod. Urbinas in Theophr. H. P. 3. 16, 4. Borpunpés, 4, dv,of the grape kind, Theophr. H. P.1. 11, 5 Bortpun-pédpos, ov, grape-bearing, dpmedos Philo 1. 681. Botpvios, a, ov, of grapes, puréy Anth. P. 6. 168, Borpvirns [7], ov, 6, like grapes, a precious stone, Plin. N. H. 34. 10 (22) :—fem. Botpvitis, calamine, Galen. Botpud-5wpos, ov, grape-producing, Ar. Pax 520. Borpuo-edis, és, like a bunch of grapes, Diosc. 4. 191. Borpudes, ecoa, ev, full of grapes, clustering, olvds Ion 1. 4 (Ath. 447 D); «aods Anth. P. 9. 363; dévdpea C. 1. 6280 A. Lo. Botpus-koopos, ov, decked with grapes, Orph.H. 51, 11. Botpudopar, Pass. of grapes, to form bunches, Theophr. C. P. 1. 18, 4. Borpus-rais, matdos, 5,7, grape-born, child of the grape, xapis Anth. P. 11. 33. 2. act. bearing grapes, Theocr. Ep. 4. 8. Borpvo-criyts, és, dripping with grapes, Archestr. ap. Ath. 29 C. Borpvo-orédhavos, ov, grape-crowned, of a vine-bearing district, Archyt. p. Plut. 2.295 A; xwpqbdia Epigr. Gr. 38. Borpvo-popéw, to bear grapes, Philo 2. 54. Botpuo-xatrns, ov, 6, with clustering hair, Anth. P. 9. 524. Bérpus, vos, 6, a cluster or bunch of grapes, wédaves 8 dvd Bérpves fjoay Il. 18. 562; so in Att. 2.=Bérpuxos, Bérpus xairns Anth. P. 5. 287, Nonn. D. 1. 528, ete. 3. an earring (vy. Borpvésov 11), Ar. Fr. 309. fo. II. .an herb, also dpreyicta, Diosc. 3. 130. (From the same Root as Béorpuxos, as the form Bérpuxos shows.) Tpu-pépos, ov, grape-bearing, Psell. Srpiixos, 5,=Bdarpuxos, Pherecr. Incert. 67, cf. Bgk. Anacr. p. 2555 Dind. Eur. Or. 1267. IL. a grape-stalk, Galen. : Botpux adys, es, =foorpux dons, Eur. Phoen. 1485, ubi v. Dind, Botpvadns, es, =Borpvoedys, Eur. Bacch. 12, Theophr. H.P, 3. 13, 6. Bou-, often used in compos. to express something Auge and monstrous, e.g, BovAtpos, Bodrais, Bov-yatos, Boupdryos, Bovxavins. No doubt it is a form of Bods, as we also find compounds with tm7os, like our horse- laugh, horse-chesnut, horse-radish, etc. : Bova, , =d-yéAn maidov, and Bovdyop, 6, =dyeAdpxns, Lacedem, words in Hesych.; Bovayés occurs in many Lacon, Inserr. in C. I. 1241, 1245, 1251, al.; also written Boayés, 1350, 1370, 1453: V- Béckh I. p. 612. wBaAva, wy, 7d, a kind of bracelets, Nicostr. Incert. 7, Diphil. Mada, TI. in sing. a kind of gourd, Hesych, wb I. 289 BowBiArs, cos, 4, an African species of antelope, of a stout, ox-like form, prob. Antilopé bubalis, the hartbeeste, Hdt. 4. 192, Aesch. Fr. 316; gen. BovBaridos (sic), Arist. H. A. 3. 6, 2, cf. Arcad. p. gt: BouBaAos, 6, prob.=BovBarss, for it is grouped with €dagox and dop- «dbes, Arist. P. A. 3. 2, cf. Polyb. 12. 3, 5. BouBfr1s, dos, 4, a stream for watering cattle, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5775-1. 13; v. Franz p. 711. BouBéorov, 74, (Béoxw) a cattle-pasture, Call. Ap. 49, Arat. 1120:—in pl. grazing’, Strabo 505. BovBoors, ews, 4, (Bdcxw) =BodBpwors, E. M. 206, Bov-Bérns, ov, 6, feeding cattle, mp&ves Pind. N. 4. 85. Subst. a herdsman, Id. I. 6. (5). 46. Bov-Boros, ov, grazed by cattle, Od. 13. 246, Anth. P. 6. 114. Bov-Bpworis, ews, 7}, a ravenous appetite, famine, Opp. H. 2. 208, Call. Dem. 103, C. I. 3973; cf. BovAtuos:—in Hom. only metaph. grinding poverty or misery, Il. 24. 532. ; BouBav, dvos, 6, the groin, Lat. inguen, ll. 4. 492, etc.; mowvdv pépos ++ Bnpod Kal rpov B. Arist. H. A, 1.14, 23 in pl, péxpe BovBdvow Pherecr. Adrou, 1 :—also, like inguen, of the brum virile, Mi d Tewpy. 7. 2. a swelling in the groin, a bubo, Hipp. Aph. 1251, Arist. Probl. 5. 26. BovBovidw, to suffer from swollen groins, Ar. Ran, 1280, Vesp. 277, Callias Incert. 6 :—BovBwvuxds, 4, dv, of or affecting the groin, Georg. Cedren. 1. p. op (Bonn). BovBaviov, 76, a plant, Aster Atticus, used as a remedy for a BovBav, Diose. 4. 120. BovBwvicxos, 6, a truss for inguinal hernia, Oribas. p. 111 Mai. BovBwvo-edhs, és, like a BovBér, Poll. 4. 198. BovBawvo-«nAn, 7), inguinal hernia, Oribas. p. 112 Mai: the Adj.—1«nAucés, h, ov, suffering from it, Paul. Aeg. 6. 66, p. 200. BovBwvoopar, Pass. to swell to a BovBuv, Hipp. 272. 5. Bovydios [4], 6, (yalw) a bully, braggart (cf. Bov-), only used in yocat. as a term of reproach, Il. 13. 824, Od. 18. 79. Bouyevis, és, =Bonyevtjs, Emped. 215, Call. Fr. 230. BovyAwooov, 74, =sq. I, Diosc. 4. 120. Bov-yAwooos, Att. —rros, 6, bugloss, i.e. ox-tongue, a boragineous plant, v. Plin. 25. 8. II. 6, and 4 (v. Matro ap. Ath, 136 C, Archestr. ib, 288 A) a fish, the sole, lingulaca, Epich, 38 Ahr., cf. Arist, Fr. 277, Xenarch. Hope, 2, Opp. H. 1. 99. Bowdvov, 7d, v. Boidior. BovSédpos, ov, (5épw), flaying oxen, galling, Hes. Op. 502. as Subst. a knife for flaying, Babr. 97. 7. u-SuTys, ov, 6, a little bird, the wagtail, Opp. Ix. 3. 2. u-Luyns, 6, epith. of an Attic hero, who first yoked oxen, Hesych. ; Hercules, acc, to Suid. :—also the man who kept the bullocks at Eleusis, Inscr. Att, in C. I. 491.—Cf. Eupol. Any. 7 and 34. Bovfiyvos (sc. dporos), 6, a harvest festival at Athens, Plut. 2.144 B; also rd Bou{iya, Philo 2. 630:—8. dpa Clem, Al, 181. 32 Sylb., v. Valck. Hdt. 7. 231. Bov-lepis, és, affording summer-pasture, hetpav Soph. Tr. 188. Bov-Potvys, ov, 6, beef-eater, epith. of Hercules, Anth. Plan, 123. Bov-Odpos, ov, vaccas iniens, radpos Aesch. Supp. 301. Bov-Opéppwv, ovos, 6, , feeding cattle, mba Manass. Chron. 84: @ herdsman, Ib. 6126. , %, the sacrifice of oxen, C. I, 2336. 10., 5853. 11, Anth. P. 7.119; “Hpas in her honour, Pind. N. 10, 42; in pls Id. O. 5, 12. Bov-Giréw, to slay or sacrifice oxen, Soph. O. C. 888, Eur. El. 785, etc. : generally ¢o sacrifice or slaughter, B. bv nat tp&yov Kat xpidv Ar. Pl. 819; Tas Ouoias Tas KaOnKovcas C. I. 108. 5. Bov-Strys [¥], ov, 6, sacrificing oxen, Suid., v.1. Ath. 660 A. b , ov, of or belonging to sacrifices, esp. of oxen, tipat Aesch. Supp. 706; #5ov7 Eur. Ion . 2. on which oxen are offered, sacrificial, éaria Soph. O. C. 1495; €oxdpa Ar. Av. 1232; Huap, juEpa Aesch. Cho. 261, Eur. Hel. 1474. Bovkatos, 5, (Bodxos) Lat. bubuleus, a cowherd, Nic. Th. 5. II. one who ploughs with oxen, Theocr. 10. 1,57, Nic. Fr. 35. Bovkavaw, Boukavicpés, v. sub Bux-. Bou-Kdarn, 7), an ox stall, Hesych. Bov-kdanAos, ou, d, a cattle-dealer, Poll. 7. 185. Bouxdrtos, 6, a Delphic month, C. 1.1702, Curt. Anecd, p. 29. u-kévrys, ov, 6, a goader of oxen, ox-driver, Diogenian. 7. 86. i-Kevtpov, 74, an ox-goad, Greg. Naz. Bouxépaos, ov, =Bovxepws, Nonn. D. 14. 319. bxepas,7d, a plant, perh. fenugreek, Theophr. H.P.8.8,5, Nic. Al. 424. Bov-Kepws, wy, gen. w, horned like an ox or cow, Hdt, 2. 41; B. map- évos, of Io, Aesch, Pr. 588. II. =foreg., Diosc, 2. 124. Bouvxepddtov, 74, an ox-head, Lys. Fr. 18. A Bov-Képados, ov, bull-headed, epith. of certain Thessalian horses, roy Bovnépadov wat konmariay Ar. Fr, 135 :—Bovurepddas, gen. -a, the horse of Alexander the Great, Strabo 698, Plut. Alex. 61. ‘ Bouxtvifw, Lat. buccino, to blow the trumpet, orpépBots Sext. Emp. M. 6. 24; also Buxavite or -wiLe, Eust. 1321. 33, etc.: Bouxwdrap, 6, buccinator, C. I. 5187 ¢. 8. . Bovxohéw, Dor. Bwx-: (Bovedros):—to tend cattle, edueas Bods Bouxodgecxes (Ion. impf.), Il. 21. 448:—Med., Bovicodeia0ct alyas Evpol. Afy. 25 :—Pass. of cattle, to range the fields, graze, thos kara Boveod€ovro, of horses (cf, immoBovxddAos), Il, 20, 221; metaph. of meteors, to range through the sky, Call. Del. 176. 2. of persons, Bovnoreis SaBaciov you tend, serve him (perhaps with allusion to his IL } tauriform worship), Ar. Vesp. 10; also in Med., yi} at rivde 290 Bovkodovpevos wévoy despond not at being constantly engaged in this toil, Aesch. Eum. 73. II. metaph. like toiuaivw, Lat. pasco, lacto, to delude, beguile, w48os Aesch. Ag. 669, cf..Ar. Eccl..813 B. Av- mv Babr. 19. 7: and in Med., €Amioe BovxoAodpar I _feed myself on hopes, cheat myself with them, Valck. Hipp. 1515 adrw xdpa pipas pe Bovodyjoerat Ar, Pax 153. BouxdAnots, ews, }, a tending of cattle: metaph. a beguiling, Plat. 2. 802 E neghhipe. 76, a beguilement, Ths Avrns Babr. Fr. 3 Lewis. BoukoAta, #, a herd of cattle, h, Hom, Merc. 498, Hes.Th. 445. II, a byre, ox-stall, Hdt. 1. 114. Bovxodtdfopar, Dor. BokoAvécdopar, fut. -afoduac: Dep.:—to sing or write pastorals, Theoct. 5. 44 (with vy. 1.-afets), 60., 7. 36., 9. Tand 5 :—in Eust. 1416. 39 also ia. Bouxoducpés, 6, a singing of pastorals, Ath. 619 A (al. -copds). cone Dor. Bak-, 6, a pastoral poet, Theoer. 5. 68. KoAuKds, Dor. Bux-, 4, dv, rustic, pastoral, Theocr.1. 64, 70, etc. Bovxédrov, Dor. Bwx-, 7d, a kerd of cattle, Hdt..1. 126, Theocr. 8. 39., 25.13. 2. rd Bou. a district of lower Egypt, inhabited by shepherds, | Heliod. 1. 5. IL. a means of beguiling, wevins Anth. P. 9. 150. lovKoAis (sc. yi), (50s, %}, cattle-pasture, Dion, H.1.37; so, B. 76a Ib. 39. 6dos, Dor. Bwx-, 6, a cowherd, herdsman, Il. 13.571, Od. 11. 292, al.; with another Subst., 8. 5o0Aos Plat. Ion 540C; orm almddos .. at B, Cratin. Incert. 20; Bédee Boueddov mrepdevros, i.e. the gad- fly, Aesch. Supp. 557 :—also, 8. immay Ael. N. A. 12. 44. (For the Root, v. sub aimédos.) jou-Képuta, ns, 7), a severe cold in the head, Menand. Fr. 413. uképulos, oy, stupid-and drivelling, Hesych. Bodkos, Dor. B&kos, 6, =Boveaios, Theecr. ro. 38. Bou-Kpdviov, 74, an ox-head, E. M. 207. 55. II. name of a kind of bryony, Diosc. 4. 185. III. some-kind of surgical instrument, Oribas. p. 129 Mai. Bow-Kpavos, ov, bull-headed, Emped. 216, Call. Fr. 203: Bovxpavov, 76, an ox-head, cited from Procl. BovAaios, a, ov, (Bovd7) of the council, epith. of certain gods as having statues in the Senate House (“Eoria Bovdata’ 4 év rH Bovdn idpupévn Harp.), tiv “Eoriay émwpooe tiv B. Aeschin. 34. 10, cf. Andoc. 7. 2, Xen. Hell. 2. 3,52; of Zeus and Athena, Antipho 146. 35, cf. C. I. 1245; of Artemis, C. 1.112, 113; of a man, Oe@v BovAaios their counsellor, Ib. 1167; the form BovAlatos is a fiction of Fourmont, v. Béckh Tr. p. 95. Bovhamrepotv, absurd deriv. of BAaBepéy (BovdAdpuevov dmrew podv) suggested in Plat. Crat. 417 E. Dhan, to be a Bovdapxos, C. 1.1725, Arist. Pol. 4. 11, 5. Bovd-apxos, 5, chief of the senate, at Thyateira, C. 1. 3494; at Amorgus, Epigr. Gr. (add.) 277 a. AIL. adviser of a plan, Lat. auctor consilii, Aesch. Supp. 12, g69. f BovA&-pépos, Dor. for Bovanp-. BovAeta, 3, (BovAetw) the office of councillor, Ar. Thesm. 809. BovdAciov, 74, the court-house, Vit. Hom. 12. II. the Senate, in form BovAjpoy, C. I. 5878. BovAcupa, aros, 76, a deliberate resolution, purpose, design, Lat. con- silium, Hat. 3. 80,82, Aesch. Pr. 170, 619, etc. ; more freq. in pl., Pind. N. 5.52, Trag., and Att. Prose. ‘BovAcupariov, 75, Dim. of foreg., Ar. Eq..100. BovAevors, ews, }, deliberation, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3, 12. II. as Att.law-term, 1. aplotto murder; 2. the wrongful enrolment of a person among the public debtors, ypaph (or dien) Tis Bovdetioews prose- cution for this crime, ‘Dem. 778. 19., 792. 2, Arist. Fr. 378, Harp. s.v. BovAeuréov, verb. Adj. one must take counsel, Thuc. 7. 60; dmws.., Aesch, Ag. 847; 7/ xpi) 8pav Soph. El. 16. euTip, Tipos, 6, =Bovdeuras, Hesych. jovAeuriptov, 76,=Bovdciov, the il-chamber, senate-house, Lat. curia, Hdt. 1. 170, Aesch. Eum. 570, 684, Eur, Andr. 1097, Andoc. 6, 3, Dem., al.:—the Roman curia, Hdn. 5. 5, 12. II. the council or senate itself, Dion. H. 2. 12; of individuals, Aca BovAevripia treacherous counsellors, Eur. Andr. 446; fvaa B, Theopomp. Com. Incert, 6. Bovdeuripros, ov, = Bovdcurixds I. 2, giving advice, kaxdv 7 “Adpdory tavibe Bovkevrnpioy Aesch. Theb. 575. Bovdeuris, o¥, 5, a councillor, senator, Il. 6. 114, Hat. 9. 5, Plat., al.;— at Athens, oneof the 500, Antipho 146. 35, Andoc. 6. 41, cf. Ar. Thesm.808: —at Rome, Dion. H. 2.12, al. 2. an adviser, Qavarov Antiphot27. 29. BovAeurixés, 4, dv, of or for the council or the councillors, Bovd. épKos the oath taken by the councillors, Xen. Mem, 1.1, 18; vdpot ap. Dem. 706.13; B. ripal C. 1.1716; dpxi B. the right Zo sit in the Bovdy, Arist. Pol. 3. 1, 12. 2. able to advise or deliberate, 5 B., opp. to 6 wodepukés, Plat. Rep. 434 B, 441 A, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 6. 8, 3., 7, 10, 33 70 B. the _ deliberative faculty, Id. Pol. 1. 13, 7. II. as Subst., AovAevricdy, 76, in the Athen, theatre, the seats next the orchestra, reserved Sor the council of 500, Ar. Av. 794. 2. the senatorial order, Plut. Rom. 13. Bovdeurts, ‘50s, 7, fem. of BovAeuris, Aesch. (or Plat.’Com. Eavzp. 3) ap. E. M. 595. 40; v. Lob, Phryn. 256. ; BovAeurés, 7, dv, devised, plotted, Aesch. Cho. 494. II. being matter for deliberation, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3,17; etc. : Bovdevo, fut. cw: aor.éBovAevoa Hom., Att., Ep. BovA-Hom.: f, BeBov- Aevea Soph. O. T. 7or: for Med. and Pass., v. infr.: (Bovd ). To take counsel, deliberate, concert measures, and in past tenses to deter- mine or resolve after deliberation : 1. absol., ds BovAevoayte Il. 1. 531; Bovdevepey 758 paxeodat in council or in battle, Od. 14. 491; B. Bras ri -yévnrat 9. 420., 12. 228; Bvopeveecow péovov mépt B. 16. 234; és ye play Bovdedaopey [sc. Bovdjy] we shall agree to one plan, 2. 379; Sup B. 12. 58; B. ep Tivos Hdt. 1, 120, é ~ BovxoAnots — Bovrimdrre. 116; but, in Prose, this sense chiefly belongs to the Med., v. infr B. 2. c. acc. rei, to deliberate on, plan, devise, B. Bovdds (v. sub Bovdh); 0%... rodTov piv éBovdevoas vdov ai7h Od. 5. 23; dddv I. 444; putw 10. 311, 398; épdea 23. 217; Yevdea 14. 296; c. dat. pers., 7 yap pa Oeot BovAcvoay dAcOpoy Il. 14. 464; B. mhud Ten Od. 5.179, etc.; and so in Hdt. 9. 110, and Att.; vewrepa B. wept twos Hdt. 1. .210:—Pass. (with fut. med., Aesch. infr. cit.) : aor. €BovAevény Thuc. 1. 120, Plat.: pf. BeBovAcvpar (more often in med, sense, v. infr. B):—to be determined or resolved on, Whpos Kat’ abta@y Bovdet- cera Aesch. Theb. 198 ; BeBovdrAcurar rade Id. Pr. 998, cf. Hdt. 7. 10, 43 7A BeBovdevpéva = Bovdrctpara Id. 4. 128, cf. Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, a3 8. c. inf. to take counsel, to.resolve to do, Tov pev éya Bov- Aevoa, .. ovTapevar Od. 9. 299; so Hdt. 1. 73., 6. 52, 61, etc.: Pass., BeBovreuré agu movée Id. 5. 92, 3- II. to give counsel, ra Agora B. Aesch. Pr. 204, cf. Plat. Legg. 694 B; c. dat. pers. to advise, Il. 9. 99, Aesch. Eum. 700. III. in polit. writers, 4o be a member of council, Hdt. 6. 57, Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 16; esp. of the Council of 500 at Athens, Antipho 146. 34, Andoc. Io. 27, Plat. Gorg. 473 E, Xen, Mem. 1.1, 18, Dem., etc. ; 4 BovA?.%4 BovAevouoa Lys. 134. 16. B. Med., fut. -edcouar Aesch. Ag. 846, Cho. 218, Thuc. 1. 43, Plat.: aor. €BovAevoduny Id., etc.; Ep. BovA— Il. 2. 114; also éBov- AevOny Hdt. 7.157, Dion. H.: pf. BeBovAevpar Hat. 3. 134, Soph. El. 385, Thuc. 1. 69, Eur.,-etc.; though this is also used in pass. sense, v. supr. :—more usual in Att. Prose than the Act., 1. absol. to take counsel with oneself, deliberate, Hdt. 7. 10, 4, often in Plat. and Arist. ; dpa tut Hat. 8. 104; wept tivos Thuc, 3, 44, Plat. Phaedr. 231 A, etc.; epi 7 Id. Rep. 604 C; imép twos Ib. 428 D; mpds re Thue, 7..47 :—c. acc. cogn., 8. BovAevpa Andoc. 27.15; BavAny Plat., etc.; tcov re H dixacov Thuc. 2. 44. 2. to act as member of council, and so to originate measures, opp. to avpBovdevopxat, Arist. Pol. 4. 14, 15; 73 BovAevépevoy Ib. 16. 3. c. acc. rei, to determine with oneself, resolve on, kaxhy dmarny Bovdetoaro Il, 2. 114 (the only place in which Hom. uses the Med.) ; dAdoidy 7 wept Tivos Hat. 5..40. 4..c. inf. to resolve to do, 3. 134, Plat. Charm. 176 C. 5. rarely foll. by a relat., B. 5 re monoes Ib.; 8, Smws.. with subj., Xen. Cyr. 1. 4,13. Bovdh, 4: Dor. BwAd Decr. Byz. ap. Dem. 255. 21, etc.: Aeol. BoAAa, Plut. 2. 288 B:—Hes, has Bovdds in acc. pl., Th. 534: (BovAo- Hat) :—will, determination, Lat. consilium, esp. of the gods, Il. 1. 5, etc, 2. a counsel, piece of advice, plan, design, BovAds Bovaedovar Il, 24. 652, cf. 10.147, 327, 415: generally, counsel, advice, opp. to prowess in the field, ll. 1. 258, cf. 4. 323.,.5. 54, etc.: so, later, mparos «kat BovaG al xepaty és”Apea Epigr. Gr. 187 ; vuerl Bovdjy diddvae Hdt. 7.42; év Bovdp éxew re Id. 3. 78; Bovdjy morvetobar=Boudrev-~ coat, Id. 6. 101,.etc.; B. elonyeio@at Andoc. 9.4; 8. mporiOévar mept tivos Dem. 292. 13 ; ov Koti) BovdAr) piv we have no common ground of argument, Plat. Crito 49 D; BovAjs dp0érns 7 edBovdla Arist. Eth. N. 6. 9, 3:—in pl. counsels, Aesch. Pr. 219, Theb. 842; év Bovdats dpiaros, év Bovdaior xparioros Epigr. Gr. 854, 878. 3..a decree, Lat. auctoritas, Andoc. 9. 4., 23. 15. II. like Lat. concilium, a Council of the elders or chiefs, a Senate (cf. dyopa), Bovdiny Tle -yepdr- tow Il. 2. 53, cf. 202, Od. 3.127; in Aesch. Ag. 884, prob. the Council of Regency in the king’s absence :—at Athens, the Council or Senate of 500 created by Cleisthenes, who were in fact a committee of the éxxAn- cia, to prepare measures for that assembly, etc., Hdt. 9. 5, Ar. Vesp. 590, Antipho 145. 27, etc.; commonly called 4 BovAy (or % B, of wev- taxdoto Aeschin. 56. 35, to distinguish it from 7 B. % év ’Apelo mayy Ib. 30):—so also, the Council at Argos, Hdt. 7.140, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 29: the Roman Senate, Dion. H. 6. 69, etc.:—BovAjjs eivat to be of the Council, a member of it, Thuc. 3. 70 (whence the Schol. and Suid. made a Subst. BovA‘js, 6); dvtp Bovdgs ris ‘Papyatev Paus, 5. 20, 8; dvdpa é 7ijs Bovdijs Id. 7.11, 1. Cf.” Apecos mdryos. BovA-nyépos, 6, one who speaks in the senate, Poll. 4. 25: hence Bov- Anyopéw, fo speak in the senate, App. Civ. 3.51: and BouAnyopia, %, a speech in the senate, Poll. 4. 26. BovAnets, eoaa, ev, of good counsel, sage, Solon 25. 1. BotAnpa, 74, an intent, purpose, Plat. Legg. 769 D, 802 C, al. the express will, consent, Tis ovykAHrou Polyb. 6.15, 4. areal v. BovAcior, ovAnats, €ws, 7), a willing : one’s will, intention, purpose, mpacoey B. Eur. H. F. 1305; cf. Thuc. 3. 39, Plat. Gorg. 509 D, etc.; BovAnaw éAnifer entertains a hope and purpose, Thuc. 6. 78; Kara ri B. Plat. Crat. 420 D, al.; mapd ry 8. Arist. Eth. N. 5. 9, 5:—pl., Plat. Legg. 688 B, etc. II. the purpose or meaning of a poem, Id, Prot. 344 B: the signification of a word, Id. Crat. 421 B. Aqréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be wished Jor, Arist. M. Mor. 2. 11, z 2. BovAnréov, one must wish for, Id. Rhet. Al. 1. BovAntés, 7, dv, that is or should be willed :—1d B. the object of the will, Plat. Legg. 733 D, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 5, 1. BovAn-pépos, ov, counselling, advising, in Il. a constant epith. of princes and leaders, Bova. dvdpa 2,24, etc.; also c. gen., Bova, ’Axaiay, Tpdar, etc.: in Od. 9.112, ovr’ dyopai Bova. ore O ob” obrés ye 16. 30; (so, goxa -yoor rovrou ye .. copwrepos civat Plat. Apol. 21D); but freq. later, Soxéwv mayxv Sevrepeta yay olcecPau Hat. I. 313 yooe .. dpe yodv 1d owppoveiv Aesch. Ag. 1425, cf. 432, etc. ; sometimes used as if it were enclitic, like ye, mpds ‘your éu0d Soph. Aj. 527:—often in quoting an example, freq. in Att., e.g. Thuc. 1. 2, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 8; tov yodv dddov xpdvoy in past time at all events, Dem. 462. 1:—often also in answers, of a truth, yes certainly, ras -yoiv *A@jvas olda Soph. O. C. 24, cf. O. T. 626, Ant. 45, Eur. Phoen. 618, Plat. Soph. 219 D, etc.—Freq. separated by a word, mavu -y’ dv ody Ar. Eccl. 806, cf. Thuc. 1. 76, etc. :—but ye ody (in full) not till late, as in Dion. H. 2. 56. yoiva, youvev (not youvay), post. pl. of yévu, q. v. dese a fut. coat: Dep.: (yévv):—Ep. Verb, to clasp another's knees (v. sub yovu I. 2), and so to implore, entreat, beseech, supplicate, absol., Il, 11. 130; ¢. inf, 7@v brep.. youvd{opar ob mapedvraw éordpyevat Kparep@s in whose name... implore you to stand your ground, 15. 665; viv 5€ ce mpds warpds youvdCowa Od. 13. 324; viv 5€ ce THY ériev y., .. mpds 7 GAdxouv marpds Te I1. 66; also, pH pe .. youvav *youva{eo entreat.me not by [clasping] my knees, Hl. 22. 345, cf. Od. 13. 324. youvacpa, 74, supplication, Lyc. 1243. youvara, youvacr, Ep. youveror, etc., v. sub yévu. youvéopat, contr. —ovuar: Dep.:—Ep., like youvagopar, only used in pres. and impf., -youvodpua: Il. 21. 74, Od. 6. 149, etc. ; youvodpny 11. 29; YyouvoiicOat 10, 521; youvovpevos 4. 433, etc. youvo-miiyns, és, thich-kneed, or (better) youvo-rayhs, cramping the dnees (cf. yuorayns), Hes. Sc. 266; cf. Herm. Opusc. 6.1, 202. youvos, 4, fruitful land, purdy ds your@ dAazjs Il. 18. 57; dvd -youvdy dois olvoré5o10 Od. 1. 193, etc.; & Kptyrns és -youvdy *A@nvday 11. 323; Ths Arricns.. tov y. Tov Zovviakdy Hdt. 4. 99; so in pl., -you- votow EAevOfpos pedéovea Hes, Th. 54; youvo.w karévacoe Nepelns Ib. 329; év youvors ’A@avay Pind. I. 4. 42 (3. 43).—The two first-cited passages (y. dAwfs) led to the interpr. given by the Scholl., that +. signified a fertile spot, (réros -yovtuéraros) and was derived from 4/TEN, yevvdw. But the sense of fertility ill suits its application to Athens and Sunium, and in E, M. 239. 5 another interpr. of -youvds is preserved, viz. 6 ivmdds rémos (cf. Orion 38), a hill, eminence, kigh land, like Bouvés, cf,B 8.1. This sense well suits all the passages cited except the first two, and even here there is no reason why y. GAwijs may not mean a piece of rising ground, such as would be well adapted for a threshing-floor. yodpos, 6, a kind of cake, Solon 30. yourrarov, 74, a kind of cake, Ath. 647 C. youdns, €s, ( yeoppairive,, to teach ypippara, Pandect.: pf. pass, to be skilled in ypaumarixevouat — ypapw. ypaupara, Hesych. II. to be a ypapparevs, ypappariddovros Inscr. Boeot. in C. I. 1573, 1574, ete. Yeappdrucevopar, Dep. to be a grammarian, Anth. P. g. 169. Yeappirixés, 7, dv, knowing one’s letters, skilled in grammar, well grounded in the rudiments, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 20, Plat, Theaet. 207 B, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 4, 1, al.:—Ady. -«@s, Plat. l.c., Arist. ib. 2. 2. yp. écrapa a cup engraved with the alphabet or an inscription, Eubul. Neorr. 1, v. Ath. 466 A sq. II. as Subst., ypayparixds, 6, a teacher of the rudiments, Plut. 2. 59 F. 2. one who occupies him- self with the text of Homer and the like, a grammarian, a critic, C.I. 6083, Polyb. 32. 6, 5, Diog. L. 3. 61, etc. III. 1) -«n (with or without téxv7) grammar, Plat. Crat. 431 E, Soph. 253 A, etc.; 1) yp. émornpn Arist. Top. 6.5, 2:—also critical acumen, learning, Eratosth. ap. A. B. 725. 2. an alphabet, written character, Strab, 139, Plut. Aristid. 1, etc. ; cf. Wolf Prol. Hom, Ixiv. ¥pappdniov, 7d, Dim. of ypaypa, Luc. Merc. Cond. 36. Ypoppiciorys, ov, 6,=ypaupareds, Hdt. 2. 28., 3.123, al., Plat. Phil. 39 B. IL. one who teaches ypappata, a schoolmaster, Xen. Symp. 4, 27, and often in Plat., as Prot. 312 B, 326 D:—hence ypappattotucn, 3, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 44, An. Ox. 4. 311. Yeapparodibackadciov, 7é,=ypayupareiov 4, Plut, 2. 712 A. Ypappiro-BiSdoKados, 6, .a schoolmaster, Teles ap. Stob. 535. 15; ypoppo-SiSacKaktSys in Timon ap. Ath. 588 B; cf. Lob. Phryn. 669. Ypappiro-ecaywyevs, 6, a schoolmaster: governor, LXX (Deut. 1. 15, al.). Y¥poppii-roKos, ov, mother of letters, epith. of ink, Anth. P. 6, 63; but ¥PoppordKos is the correct form, v. Lob. Phryn. 669. Ypappiiro-Kugwv [0], wvos, nickname of a ypapparevs, a porer over records, Dem. 297. 22, Philo 2. 536. Ypappiiro-Aucpidis, iGos, 6, a puzzle-headed grammarian, Anth. P. II. 140. Ypappirohopéw, to carry or deliver letters, Strabo 251. YPappdro-hopos, ov, letter-carrying, Polyb. 2. Oi, 4, etc. Yeapparo-diAdnuov, 7d, a box for keeping records, Plut. Aristid, 21, C. I. 4094, 4247; also -efov, Plut. 2. 520 B, Sext. Emp. M. 2. 27. ypapparo-ptrat, dos, 6, a keeper of records, registrar, C, 1.1239. 17., 1240. 29, cf. Béckh p. 608. YpoppN, 7, (ypapw) the stroke or line of a pen, a@ line, as in mathe- matical figures, Plat. Meno 82 C, Rep. 509 D, etc.: also in forming letters, Lat. ductus litterarum, Id, Prot. 326.D:—an outline, Archyt. 695 Gale, Polyb. 2. 14,°8, etc. II.=BadBis, the line across the course, to mark the starting or winning place, Pind. P. 9. 208, v. Interpp. Ar. Ach. 483: metaph. of life, like Horace’s ultima linea rerum, cf. Eur. El. 956, Fr. 169:—hence, a boundary-line, edge, Hipp. Art. 839. III. the middle line on a board (like our draught-board), also called % fepa, hence proverb., Tov amd -ypaypas or ad’ iepas xveiv Al@ov to move one’s man from this line, i.e. try one’s last chance, Alcae. 77, Theocr. 6, 18; .cf. Eust. 633. 58., £397. 31: af ypaypai the board itself (cf. weaods), Poll. 9. 99. 2..5:0 ypappas waite was a game played by two parties pulling against one another across a line, like our ‘French and English,’ also called deAxvorivia, v, Plat. Corr. Supp. 2, Plat. Theaet. 181 A. IV. 4 paxpa (sc. ypayuy), v. sub ride U1, 1. ypappucds, 7, dv, linear, geometrical, Bewpia, dmddetgts Diog. L. 1. 25, Plut., etc.:—Adv. -x@s by lines, Sext. Emp. M. 3. 92. II.= ypapparirés (si vera 1.), Plut. 2. 606 C. ypappo-SiSacKxadlins, v. sub ypayparodddoxados. ypappo-edys, és, ix lines, Aristid. Quint. Adv. -das, Arist. Mund. 4, 20. ypappo-mrotktAos, ov, striped, Arist. (Fr. 279) ap. Ath. 319 C. Ypapp.o-réKos, v. sub ypaypardxos. Yeappdbns, es, (67. Séfo, imperat. of a sync. aor. from 5éxopat, Il, Ig8 10. Act, ots, 5, Receiver, Com, name of a corrupt person, Cratin. ap. Hesych., cf. Meineke 2. 58. Séov, ovros, 74, a neut. Subst., being properly part. of the impers. de?: —that which is binding, needful, right, proper, Xen. Mem, 4. 3, 8; 7a Séovra things needful or proper, advantages or duties, Thuc. 1. 22, ete. 3 II. 333 ovdty ray Sedvraw mparrew Isocr. 32 A; mpd Tod déovros before it be needful, Soph. Ph, 891; waAAov Tov 5. more than needful, Xen, Mem. 4. 3, 8, etc.: &v Béovri (sc. Katp@), in good time, Lat. opportune, Eur: Med. 1277; & 7@ déov7 Hdt. 2. 159; so also, és Séov yéyove Hat. I. 119, 186; és 5. mdpeors Soph. O. T. 1416, cf. Ant. 386; els’ déo% Aéyeww Dem. 44. 7: but, els 7d Sov for needful purposes, or in case of need, és 7d 5. xpfjc0ax Hat. 2.173; hence (at Athens) the phrase for secret service, eis 70 d€ov dmwdeca Ar. Nub. 859, ubi v. Interpp.; es ovdiv Séov dvadioxev Dem. 36. 10, etc. Seévrws, Adv. of déov, as it ought, Plat. Legg. 837 C. déos, gen. déous, 75: for the pl. v. infr. 11: poét. Setos, 74: (Sel5a) :-— like detua, fear, alarm, affright, Hom., who uses both forms, and often joins xAwpoy déos pale fear: distinguished by Ammon. from ¢éBos, as being more lasting (5€0s .. xaxod drdvora, poBos 5é 4 mapavtixa mrdbn- os), ef. Stallb. Plat. Prot. 358 Dj; we have them joined, péos re xat 5. Hadt. 4. 115; 70 5. wai 5 dp. Lys. 158. 34; d€e nad péB@ Dem. 555. 15; cf. 654. 24 ;—also, dé0s .. alaxdvn 6’ éuod Soph. Aj. 1074; iva yap 5., évOa ‘Kai aidws Vers. Cypr. in Plat. Euthyphro 12 B ;—Construct., 8, revds fear of a person or thing, Ar. Ach. 581, Thuc. 1. 26, etc. :—in Dem, 53. Ir we have reOvaor 7@ Séer rods rovodrovs (reOvaor TH de bein regarded as a compound Verb, as if mepidediact); rpémev TO dee Th meigerat Alex. Kparev. 1. 6 :—dé¢os [éori or ylyverat], c. inf., Il. 12. 246; more often foll. by w# with the subjunct., Ar. Eccl. 650, Thuc. 3. 33, etc.: also, b€os iaxere pydév, 50’ add@ Soph. O. C. 223 :—yv. sub OvnoKw I, fin. IL. awe, reverence, Aesch. Pers. 702; ddets déos dediévac to fear where no fear is, Plat. Symp. 198 A. III. reason for fear, Il.1. 515: a means of inspiring fear, 8. devdrepov Thuc. 3.45 :— rarely in pl., 5&) émemépmev Lys. 105. 9; déa moira Ael. N. A. 8. Io. Sémas, aos, 7d, pl. nom. déma Od. 15. 466, etc.: Ep. dat. demdeoor Hom., déracor Il. 15. 86: (v. darrw):—a beaker, goblet, chalice for libations, in Hom. commonly of gold, Od. 9. 316, etc.; also, xpucetors HAowt memappévoy Il. 11. 632; cf. duixvmeddos, erdpxouat —later also of earthenware, Anth. Plan. 4. 333. II. the golden bow! in which the sun floated back from West to East during the night, Sturz Pherecyd. p. 103, Kleine Stesich. 7, fin., cf. Mimnerm. g, Aesch. Fr. 66 ; —perhaps to be restored for 5éuas in Critias ap. Sext.Emp. M. 9. 54 (v. 33). Serracrpatos, a, ov, in or of a cup, Lyc. 489. Séractpov, 76,=5éras, Antim. g, and in the Swallow-song, ap. Ath, 360 (Bgk. Lyr. Gr. p. 883). Sep-dynn, 7, (5épn) a collar, Anth. P. 6. 109:—Sep-ayyxys, és, throt- tling, Ib. 107. Stparov, 7d, a necklace, Eur. Ion 1431, in pl.: a collar, Xen. Cyn. 6, 1. Separo-wéSn, 7), = Sepowédy, Anth. P. 6. 14., 9. 76. Sépas, aros, rd, = dépos, q. v. Sepds, ddos, 7), =detpas, as restored by Toup in Soph. Ph. 491. Sépypa, 76, (Sépxopar) a look, glance, kvavody AE&Vaoww bépypa Spa- kovros looking the look of .., i.e. looking like.., Aesch. Pers. 83, cf.. Eur. Med. 187, etc.:—in Hesych. also 5epypés, od, 6. Sépy, 7%, Att. for Secph, the neck, throat, Trag., as Aesch. Ag. 32 875. II. =derpas, Hesych. Sépts, cos, 4, =dépy, Hesych. II. =déppis, Poll. 2. 235. Sepx-euvijs, és, sleeping with the eyes open, Nic. Al. 67. Sepxidopar, po’t. for dépropa, Hes. Th. g11. Sépkopat, Sepxedpevos Hom.: impf. eepxduny, lon. depeéowero Od. 5. 158: fut. dépfouac only in Galen.: pf. in pres, sense 5é50pra Il., Trag., and late Prose, as Luc. Hermot. 20, Icarom. 6 and 14 :—aor. édpaxoy Od.; Aesch., Eur. (never in Soph.): the aor. also occurs in pass. forms, part. Spaxeis Pind. P. 2. 39, N. 7.43 épxOnv Aesch. Pr. 54° 5épx6n Soph. Aj. 425 (lyr.), imper. 5épxOnre Aesch. Pr. 93, depxGets Soph. Fr. 729 ; later also in med. forms, dépfaro Anth, Plan. 166, é5paxépny Anth. P. 7. 224: Poetic Dep. (From 4/AEPK come also dépy-pa, 5 dopx-ds; cf. Skt. darg (videre), pf. dadarga; A. S. torht (glorious) ; O. H. G. zoraht (clear).) To see clearly, see, Hom.; part. dedopkws, having sight, opp..to Tupads, Soph. O. T. 454: then, as light is neces- sary to sight, alive, living, (Gyros nat émt xOovt Sepxopévano Il. 1. 88, cf. Od. 16. 439; Spaxeio’ doparés since she lives in safety, Pind. P. 2. 38; dAaotor rai Sedopréor Aesch, Eum. 322; dedopxdr’ Soph. El. 66 :— often, like BAémw, with a neut. Adj., Sevdv, opepdadréoy 5. to look terrible, Hom., etc.; Seva .. dpOadpois Spaxety Aesch. Eum. 34, cf. Ag. 602; péma 5. Ar. Ran. 1336; soc. acc. cogn., mip dpPadpoior Sed0pxws Jlashing fire from his eyes, Od. 19. 446; “Apy dedopxéraw Aesch. Theb. 533 but, oxdrov ed. blind, Eur. Phoen. 377. 2. c. acc. objecti, to look on or at, esp. in pres., and aor., Hom.; éd€pxOns édvyodpaviay Aesch. Pr. 546; so, 5. eis twa Hes. Sc. 169, Eur. H. F. 951; xara Tt Aesch. Pr. 679: generally, ¢o perceive, Eur. Andr. 545; arvmov d5éd0pxa Aesch. Theb. 103 :—in Pind. P. 3. 151, =érowredw. II. of light, to flash, gleam, like the eye, pdos, péyyos Sédopxe Id. N. 3 fin., 9. 98: dedopkds BAémew to be keen-eyed, Chrysipp. ap. Gell. 14. 4.—It seems properly to be used not merely of sight, but of sharp sight, cf. Aesch. Supp. 409, Soph. Aj. 85, Lucas Quaest. Lexil. § 15: it is used only by Poets and in late Prose. , Séppa, 76, (Sépw) the skin, hide, of beasts, Lat. pellis, Hom., ete. ; 5épua Aé€ovros a lion’s skin for a cloak, Il, 10. 23; dépya wedawéy, of a shield, 6. 117:—also of shins prepared for bags, boitles, etc., Od. 2. 291 :—once in Hom. of a man’s skin stript off, Ul. 16. 341, cf. Hdt. 4. 64., 5. 253 and in Od, 13. 431, of a skin put on. 2. later, one’s skin, Lat. cutis, Aesch. Fr. 270; wept 7@ déppare Sé50.wa Ar. Eq. 27, cf. Pax 746: of the shell of a tortoise, Ar. Vesp. 429, 1292. 3. the bark of trees, Theophr. H. P. 4. 14, 10; also the skin or slough of fruit, Ib. 1. 2, 6.—Cf. dopa, dépas, Sépos, déprs. 95 7 334 Sepparixés, 7, dv, of skin, like shin, Arist. H. A. 1. 16, 5, G. A. 1. 12, 2, ete. II. depparindy (sc. dpyipiov), 76, the money received for the sale of the hides of sacrificial animals, C. 1.157. 5,27, Lycurg. ap. Harp. depparivos, 7, ov, of skin, leathern, jprivayro 3 éperud rporois ev 5. Od. 4.782.,8.53; domis Hdt.7.79; dh Arist.Fr.316; mAota Strabo 778. Seppariov, 7d, Dim. of dépua, Plat. Eryx. 400 A, Arist. Physiogn. 3, 3. Sepparis, fds, }, Dim. of dépua, Phot. Epist. 364. roupyiKds, 7), dv, (*épya) of or for tanning, Plat. Polit. 280 C. Sepparo-payéw, to eat the skin and all, Strabo 776. Seppar €w, to wear a skin or hide, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 324. Sepparo-popos, ov, clothed in skins, Strabo 776. Sepparains, es, (eldos) like skin, Arist. H. A. 2. 13, 7., 3-3» 13, etc. Seppnoris, od, 6, (Sépua, éo0iw) a worm which eats skin or leather, Soph, Fr. 397, Lys. ap. Harp. (ubi male deppuorfjs), etc. os, ov, with membranous wings, as a bat, Arist. H. A, 1. 1, v8 SeppvAdAw, = pddw, Schol. Ar. Nub. 731. Bepkis, €ws, %), the sense of sight, Orac. ap, Plut. 2. 432 B. Sépov, Ep. impf. from 5épw, Hom. Sépos and Sépas, 76, post. for 5épua, but only used in nom. and acc. (except a gen, déparos or dépous in Diod. 4. 56):—the form 8épos is preserved in Soph, ap, Schol. Ar. Av. 934, and by the best Mss. in Eur. Med. 5, Phoen. 1120, Ion 995, and is freq. in Ap. Rh.; but dépas in Eur. Med. 480, Bacch. 835, Inscr. Del. in C. I. 2265. 13. Bépprov, 74, Dim. of sq., Anacr. 19. 5 € conj. Bgk.: v. Hesych., Suid. Séppis, ews, 7, (5épos) a leathern covering or coat, Eupol. Incert. 39, Plat. Com, Incert, 35 :—in pl. screens of skin or hide, hung before forti- fications to deaden the enemy’s missiles, like the Roman cilicia, Thuc, 2. 75 (where déppets are skins generally, dipOépar dressed skins). Séprpov, 74, (Sépw) =enimAous or EwimAour, the caul or membrane which contains the bowels, Lat. omentum, Antim. 107, Hipp, 1149 E: in Od. 11. 579 the vultures of Tityos are represented Séprpov éow duvovres, where déprpoy éow is for eis 5éprpov, even to the bowels, cf. Hipp. |. c., and v. sub efow, II. in Od. 1. c., 5éprpor is expl. by Suid., E. M., etc., of the vulture’s beak; whence Lyc. used it of a sharp point, 880. Sépw, Ar., Plat., etc.; and when the first syll. is to be long, Selpw or Saipw, Ar. Nub. 442, Av. 365, Cratin. Incert. 150, Sep being also the form used by Hdt.: impf. ¢depov Hom. :—fut. 5ep@ Ar. Eq. 370: aor. €epall., (dw) Hdt., (*-) Plat.:—Med., v. dvadépw:—Pass., fut. dup/- gopat N. T.: aor. édapnv [%] Menand. Monost. 422, (47-) Xen., (é«-) Hadt.: part. dapOeis in Nicoch. Kevr. 1: pf. dé5appay, v. infr. (From ‘AEP come also dépos, bépua, Sopd, Séppis, Séprpov; cf. Skt. dar, drindmi (disseco), darvi (snake-skin), dritis (a leather bag); Goth. ga- taira (karadveyv); O. H. G. zeru, fer-zeru (to destroy). To skin, flay, of animals, 5. Bods, uRAa Hom.; «iva 5. dedappévyy, of fruitless toil, Pherecr. ap. Ar. Lys. 158:—doxdy SeddpPar to have one’s skin flayed off, Solon 32.7; so, Sep® ve OUAaxov I will make a purse of your skin, Ar. Eq. 370. II. also (like the slang words to tan or hide) to cudgel, thrash, déSoxral po SépecOar at Bépew be uépas Ar. Vesp. 485, cf. Nub. 442, Ran. 619: hence proverb., 6 pi) Sape’s dvOpwros ob madevera, like radhpara pabhuara, Menand. l.c.; cf. Aéwa U1. Séors, ews, %, (Séw) a binding together,Plat.Crat. 418 E. , II. like mdokh, the complication of a dramatic plot, opp. to Avors, Arist-Poét. 18. Biopa, 75, (dw) post. for derpds, a bond, fetter, ordhpea Sécpar Od. 1. 204, cf. 8. 278. II,a , amd Kparos xée Séopara Il. 22, 468; cf. dvadéopn, dvabnya. roy, 76, Dim. of 5éopa, Schol. agen fe ode & deuariov. Seopevtixds, 4, dv, of or for binding, Plat. Legg. 847 D. Ww, (Secpds) Nps put in chains, h. Hom. 6, 17, Eur. Bacch. 616, Plat. Legg. 808 D: ¢o tie together, as corn in the sheaf, Hes. Op. 479: 3. & twos to bind fast to.., Apollod. 2.1, 3:—Pass., derpevdeioa vrois Kaparous Epigr. Gr. 737. Beopéw, =Seopevw, Arist, Plant. 1. 2, 17, Heliod. 8. 9, Ev. Luc. 8. 29. Béopn, 9, (5éw) a package, bundle, Alex. KuBepy. 2, Arist. Fr. 134. Sécprov, 7d, =Seapds, Anth. P. 9. 479, in pl. yh Sécpuos, oy, also a, ov, Soph. Fr. 217 :—binding : metaph., binding as with a spell, enchaining, c. gen., tpvos e "Epwiwy 5. ppevav Aesch. Eum., 332, cf. 306. II. pass. bound, in bonds, captive, Soph. Aj. 299, Ph. 608, Eur, Bacch, 226, etc. 20., I. s, l8os, 4}, =3éoun, Hipp. 626. 20, 26, Theophr. H. P. 9. 16, 2. Seopds, 5; pl. Seoud h, Hom. Merc. 157, Theogn. 459, Hdt, 6. 91, and so mostly in Att. Poets, and Plat. Euthyphro A; A; but decpot Aesch. Pr, 525, Eur. Bacch. 518, 634, often in Plat. (6€w):—in Hom. generally, a band or bond, anything for tying and fastening, as a halter, ll. 6. 507: a mooring-cable, Od. 13. 100, etc.: @ door-latch, 21. 241; so in Att., a yoke-strap, Xen. An. 3. 5, 10: any bond of union, Plat. Tim. 31 C: of the vowels, Id. Soph. 253 A; Secpot modcreias, of the laws, Id. Legg. 793 B. 2. in pl. bonds, chains, fetters, x deopav AvOjvat Aesch. Pr. 509, 7703 mply av xahao0f decpa Ib. 5133 év deopoicr Soph. Fr. 60; decpois Thuc. 7. 82; 6 ént rav deopav =Seopopvdag, Luc. Tox. 29 :—hence in sing., collectively, bonds, imprisonment, a prison, Beopds dxAvdes Epigr. ap. Hdt. 5.77; obdéy dfrov deopod Hat. 3. 145; é&y deoud Soph. Ant. 858; év dnpooiy deop@ Plat. Legg. 864 E; depod ripacda Lys. 105. 16. 3. a ligature, Arist. H. A. 1. 16, 14, al.:— but deopds dpOpov in Hipp. Fract. 776, is, acc. to Galen., anchy- losis. IL. =déop7, Poll. 2.135, Eust. 862. 27; 5. dpyupiov Lxx Gen. 42. 27). pied [¥], axos, 5, 4, a gaoler, Luc. Tox, 30. Beopdu, =decpevur, to bind, fetter, late. ‘Bécpupa, 7d, a bond, fetter, Aesch. Pers. 745, Soph. Fr. 27, in pl. f depuaticos — detua. Seopwrnprov, 74, a prison, Thuc. 6. 60, Plat., al.; 5, dvdpav Hat. 3. 23. Seopaerys, ov, 6, a prisoner, captive, Hdt. 3. 143, and Att. ee as Adj. in chains, fettered, Aesch, Pr. 119 (the play is called Mpouneds 8.); so in fem., decp@ris roluvy Soph. Aj. 234; MeAavirnn 6., name of a play by Eur. Seomdéfw, mostly in pres. and impf.: fut. -dow Aesch. Pr. 208, 930, Ag. 543: aor. inf, deondoa: Eur. Alc. 486: 1. absol. to be lord or master, gain the mastery, Aesch. Pr, 208; dpxew «al 5. Plat. Phaedo 80 A, al. 2. c. gen. to be lord or master of, h. Hom. Cer. 366, Hdt. 3. 142, etc.; Zyvds (or Aids) deoméaa: Aesch. Pr. 930; deandovr’ éuod Eur, Supp. 518; 5. 7wds, opp. to dovAevery rivi, Plat. Rep. 576 A; Seondlev pdBns to own it, Aesch. Cho. 188: to make oneself master of, A€xrpos Gy &d€omroCov Eur. Andr. 928 ; and so, metaph., rovde 5. Ad-you Aesch. Ag. 543. 8. c. acc. to lord it over, 5. réAw Eur, H. F. 28:— Pass., deamd(ovrat Hipp. Aér, 290; deam0(dpevar éAcs Plat. Legg. 712 E. Séorotwa, 7, pecul. fem. of Seardrns, the mistress, lady of the house, Lat. hera, of Penelopé, Od. 14.127; dAoxos 5., of the wife of Nestor, 3. 403; ‘yuv7 6., of Arété, 7. 347. 2. from Pindar’s time, a princess, queen, P. 4.19, Fr. 87.11; dermowa médAewv, ..’APnvaiov mods Com. Anon, 49. 3. in Att. often joined with the names of goddesses, 6. ‘Exarn Aesch. Fr. 374; “Apteuis Soph. El. 626, etc.: but at Athens esp. as a name of Persephoné, Plat. Legg. 796 B, cf. Paus. 8. 37, I-10; of Kvmpis, Xenarch. Mev. 1, 21. 4. in Thessaly 5éo70.va was simply =yuvh, Hesych. . Acorooto-vatrat, av, of, Helots at Sparta who were freed on condition of serving at sea, Myron ap. Ath, 271 F, Seoméoros, ov, =Seondovvos, Aesch. Supp. 845, Eust. 846. 13. Seomocrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of deamd(w, suited to despotic rule, of per- sons, Arist. Pol. 3.17, 1 (v. 1. Seaworiedy), 7. 2, 15. Seorocwvn, %, absolute sway, despotism, Hdt. 7. 102. Seorécvvos, ov, also 7, ov Pind. P. 4. 476:—of or belonging to the master ot lord, A€xos Seon. the master’s bed, h. Hom. Cer, 144; 8d0¢ 5. Aesch. Cho. 942; péAaOpa Ar. Thesm. 42; 74.5. xpyuata the master’s property, Xen. Oec. 9, 16; 8 dvdyxat arbitrary rule, Aesch. Pers. 587. II, as Subst. =Seondrns, Tyrtae. 6. 2, C. 1. 4301 ¢ (addend.), Anaxandr. TIpwr. 1. 33. Seomoreta, 1%, the power of a master over slaves, or the relation of master to slaves, Arist. Pol. 1. 3, 4., 3.6, 3 (cf. deamorixds). 2. absolute sway, despotism, esp. of the Orientals, Plat. Legg. 698, Isocr. 113 D, C, I. 127. 28. II. as Byz. law-term, absolute property, opp.to xpyats (usufruct). Seorérevos, a, ov, =deardovvos, Lyc. 1183. Seomébreipa, 7, fem. of deaxdrys, a mistress, Soph. Fr. 868. Seomotevw, =deand{w, Lxx (3 Macc. 5. 28), C. 1. 3702, Dio C. 60, 28. Seotroréw, = deomd(w, c. gen., Plat. Tim. 44 E:—Pass. to be despotically ruled, mpos GAAns xepds Aesch. Cho. 104; of xepé Eur. Heracl. 884; de- ororovpevos Bios, opp. to dvdpxeros, Aesch. Eum. 527, cf. 696. Seomorys, ov, 6; voc, déomord; the acc. Seordrea, Seondreas are f. ll, in Hdt. 1, 11, 111, etc., y. Dind. de Dial. Hdt. p. xii: (v. sub mdcts, 6):—a master, lord, esp. of the master of the house (cf. oixodeorérns), Lat. herus, dominus, Sduov Aesch. Eum. 60, etc.; dupa yap dépwv vo- pita Seondrov mapovaiay Id. Pers. 169 ;—properly in respect of slaves, Plat. Parm. 133 D, Legg. 756 E, etc,; 5. cat SodA0s Arist. Pol. 1. 3, 3, etc.; so that the address of a slave to his master was @ d€om07’ vag Ar. Pax go, Andoc, 3. 25; @vaf déomora Ar. Pax 389, Fr. 492 :—otherwise it was used chiefly, 2. of Oriental rulers, a despot, absolute ruler, whose subjects are slaves, Lat. dominus, Hdt. 3. 89, Thuc. 6. 77; TUpav- vos kat 8, Plat. Legg, 859 A; and the pl. is used by Poets of single persons, like r¥pavvor, Aesch. Ag. 32, Cho. 53, 82 :—but, among them- selves, the free Greeks used the word in this sense chiefly of the gods, cf, Soph, Fr. 480, Eur. Hipp. 88, Ar. Vesp. 875, Xen. An. 3. 2, 13. II. generally, an owner, master, lord, k&pov, vady Pind. 0. 6. 30, P. 4. 369; wavrevparwy Aesch. Theb. 27; Tav ‘“Hpakdciwy dtdoy Soph, Ph. 262; émra deonordv, of the seven Chiefs against Thebes, Eur. Supp. 636; vod dpruyos Xen, An, 7. 4,10; cf. dvag.— After Hom., though he uses d¢omowa in Od. Seomortbtov, 74, Dim. of decrdérns, Aristaen. 1. 24. Seomorixés, 4, dv, of or for a master, deatoriat cupopgt misfortunes that befall one's master, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 64; 8. Sixatoy a master’s right, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 6,8; bropéve ri 8. dpxhy Id. Pol. 3. 14, 6; 9 5.= deomoreia Ib. I. 3, 2; so, 70 8, Plat. Legg. 697 C. II. of persons, inclined to tyranny, despotic, Id. Rep. 344 C, etc.; ddryapxia 8. Arist. Pol. 5.6, 16; dipos Ib. 4. 4, 27, etc.:—Ady.—x@s, Isocr. 62 C, Arist. Pol. 410i Sia, 2. c. gen. exercising despotic power over, Twos Id, Occ. 13. 5; 80, éort 8& rupavyls povapxia 8. rhs modeTings Kowovlas Id, Pol. 3,8 * cf. ve th eomorts, 1, —déomowa, acc. deandriv, Soph. Tr. 407, El. » Eur. Med. 17, Plat. Tim. 34C; dat. deamdridt Anth, P. 6. He “en Searortoxos, 6, Dim, of deonérns, Eur, Cycl. 267. Sern, }, (properly fem. of derds, sub, Aapas) sticks bound up,a fagot, kat- épevat Serai Il, 11. 554-,17. 663: a torch, Ar, Vesp.1361: y. sub Aayras. déns, sBos, 7), a head of garlic (perhaps from its being as it were bound up like a fagot), Hipp. ap. Erot. 1 32: in Galen, Lex. 454, Satms. SeunoecGar, Ep. inf. fut. med, of Sevw, to miss, want, Hom, Acuxahtay, avos, 5, in Hom., the father of Idomeneus, Il. 1 3. 451, and = " a 20. 478: the Thessalian Deucalion first in Hes, (Fr. 21 Géttl.), Seuxns, és,=yAuxds, Nic. Al, 228: Sed b, is sai ea pa bade 3 e0Kos, 7d, is said to be Aeol. for Sedpa, aros, 76, (Bev) that which is wet, deduara xpedy boiled flesh, as restored by Béckh Pind. O, 1, 80, from Mss., for the old reading, de¥rara. Aetvucos Acivioos, 5, Ion. for Acdvugos, Atdvucos, y. Bgk. Anacr. 2. (Acc. to E. M. 259. 32, dedvos is Indian for BaotAevs, y, Pott Et. Forsch, 1. 102.) Sevopat, Ep. for Séopar; v. dedu. SeGpo, strengthd. in Att. Sevpt (Ar. Nub. 323, Andoc. 21.8); a form Sevpw is quoted by Hdn. as occurring once in Hom., whence it was re- stored by Dind. in Il. 3. 240: Adv.: I. of Place, hither, Lat. huc, with all Verbs of motion, Hom., etc.: strengthd., depo 765° iw Od. 17. 444, cf. Il. 14. 309; also in a pregn. sense with Verbs of Rest, to [have come hither and] be here, dedpo mapéorns 3. 405; mapeote dedpo .. Bde Soph. O. C. 1253; 7d rpde wat 7a Sedpo mavr’ dvackdme: Ar, Thesm. 665 :—also with Art., paxpdy 7d 8, méAayos Soph. O. C. 66; ris 8. 6500 Ib. 1165; 70 rH5e Kal 7d Keire wal 7d 8, Ar. Av. 426, cf. Eur. Phoen. 266, 315. b, in later writers simply ere, Arist. Metaph. 1. 9, 20, Cael. 1. 2, fin. 2. often used by Hom. in cheering up, or calling to one, Here! this way! On! Come on! Lat. adesdum, aye deBpo, dedp dye, dedp’ 10, and dedp’-irw always with a Verb sing. (Sere, q. v., being used with pl.); but Sefpo is occasionally used with a pl. in Trag., 8. ire Aesch. Eum. 1044; 5. éreo@e Eur. H. F. 724:—sometimes it stands alone, dedpo, pidn, Aerpovde tpareloyer come let us .. , Od. 8. 2923 so in Att., eat poe 5. eiwé here now, tell me, Plat. Apol. 24C; Sedpéd cov orépo Kapa come let me.., Eur. Bacch. 341; and without any Verb, dedpo, od here, you! Ar. Pax 880; Sedpo mapd Saxpdry (sc. adiCov) Plat. Theaet. 144 D, etc. 3. in arguments, wéxpe 5. Tod Adyou up to this point of the argument, Id. Symp. 217 E; 70 péxpr 5. elphoda Id. Legg. 814 D; also, deip’ det mpoednavOaper Id. Polit. 292 C; 3. 5) maduv (sc. BXéne) Id. Rep. 477 D. II. of Time, until now, up to this time, hitherto, only in Att., esp. Trag.; so Plat. Theaet. 143 D, Tim. 21 D: also, Sedp’ def Eur. Med. 670, lon 56, etc., Ar. Lys. 1135 } Sedpé y' dei Aesch. Eum. 596; cf. Valck. Phoen. 121 5, Pors. Or, 1679:— in Prose also, péxpr 5. det Plat. Legg. 811 C. Acts, Acol. for Zevs, Ar, Ach. g11, cf. Koen Greg. p. 599. Sevoomoréw, to dye, stain, Alciphro 3. 11. Sevoorotta, 7, dyeing, Poll. 1. 49- Seuco-mords, dv, (Sedw) deeply dyed, ingrained, fast, of colours, 8. yeyerat 7d Bagpév Plat. Rep. 429 E; 8. pappaxa Luc. Imag. 16; 8. «at ducéxvimros Acl. N. A. 16. 1:—metaph,, déga 8. Plat. Rep. 430 A; movnpia Dinarch. tos. 23; cf. Ruhnk. Tim. Sevtdtios, a, ov, poét. for dedraros, Jac. Anth. P. p. 74. Sebraros, 7, ov, Sup. of Sedrepos, =tararos, the Last, ll. 1g. 51, ete.:— for Pind. O, 1. 80, v, sub dedpa, Sere, Adv., as pl. of dedpo, hither! Come on! Come here! just like Sedpo, but always with pl. imperat., either expressed (Sed7’ dyer’ Il. 7. 350, etc.; also, ded7’ dye, Barjxow syjropes Od. 8. 11) or understood (Sedre pido Il. 13. 481; ded7’, va.. inode Od. 8. 30): very rare in Trag., dedre, Acimere ore-yos Eur. Med. 894; Sedpo being by them used with a pl. Verb. (Acc. to Buttm. contr. from Seip’ ive.) Sevtepaywovioréw, fo be devrepayaviaris, Poll. 4. 124. Sevtep-dyovierys, 08, 5, the actor who takes second-class parts, Lat. se- eundarius, Hesych.; cf. mpwrayonorhs, borepaywuorhs. . 2. metaph. one who seconds or supports a speaker, Dem. 344. 8, Luc. Peregr. 36. Sevtepaios, a, ov, on the second day, commonly agreeing with the sub- ject of the Verb, devrepaios jv év Srapry Hat. 6.106; so Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 2, ete.; but also 7p devrepaly [sc. puépa], Hdt. 4. 113. Sevrepeta (sc. d0Aa), 7a, the second prize in a contest, hence the second place or rank, 5. vépew tii Hat. 1. 32; Sevrepetoror bmepBadra Id. 8. 123; so in Plat. Phil. 22 C, etc. II. later in sing., C. I. 2360, 28., 2758-9, Diog. L. 2. 133. 2. secondary action, Arist. Probl. 19. 42. Sevtep-oxaros, ov, the last but one, Heliod. in Cocch. Chir. p. 94. Sevrepeta, to be second, deur. rivds to be next best to it, Diosc. 3. 47: deur. twi to play second to.., Plut, Eum. 13. Sevreprafe, fut. dow, to play the second part, Ar. Eccl. 634. Sevrepias (sc. ofvos), 6, seconds, a poor wine made by pressing the grapes a second time, Lat. lora, Poll. 1. 248., 6. 17. Sevréptos, a, ov, of inferior quality, olvos Nicoph. Xetp. 6 (where L. Dind. devrepias). 2. 7d Bevrépoy or 7a Sevrépia the afterbirth, Lat. secundinae, Paul. Aeg. 6. 75. Sevrepo-Bodos, ov, shedding the teeth a second time, Hierocl. Facet. 2. Sevrepoyipéw, to marry a second time; Sevtepoyapia, 4, a second marriage; Sevrepo-yapos, ov, marrying again, all in Eccl, Sevrepo-yevijs, és, produced later, Antig. Car. 118. Sevrep-obéopat, Pass. to be repeated, Theol. Arithm., 23. Sevtepo-coiréw, to have a bedfellow, Ath. 584 B. Sevtepodoyéw, to speak a second time, Lxx (2 Macc. 13. 22). Sevrepodoyia, the second place in speaking, Hermogen. Sevrepo-Adyos, ov, = devrepayanarys, ranking between the mpwrodrdbyos and the darepoddyos, Teles ap. Stob. 68. 50. Acutepo-vépiov, 74, the second or repeated Law, the-fifth book of the Pentateuch, Lxx, y. Deut. 17. 18, Jos. 8.(9). 32. Sevreps-rotpos, ov, =torepdnorpos, Hesych. ' Sevrepi-mpwrov cd4BBaror, 7é, in Ev. Luc. 6, 1 (ace. to Scaliger) the Jirst sabbath after the second day of the feast of unleavened bread ; Wieseler (perhaps better) makes it the first sabbath of the second year in the week of years (i.e, of the year after the sabbatical year):—in Eccl. writers, % 5. xupiaxn was the first Sunday after Easter, Ducang. é Sevrepos, a, ov, second, being in fact a sort of Comp. of duo, as dedraros is the Sup., Buttm. Ausf. Gr. § 41 n: (v. sub dvo): I. in point of Order, but with a notion of Time, in Hom. (never in Od.) of one who comes in second in a race, Il, 23. 265; devrepos éAOciv 22. 2073 5. av.. mpote .. &yxos next, 20. 273, etc.; ob p’ ert Bedrepoy Bde ifer’ axos No second grief, i.e, none hereafter like this, 23. 46; sometimes as an J —- déxouat. 335 actual Comp., éeto Sevrepor after my time, Ib. 248; ool debrepov tora “twill be given thee as a second choice, i.e. will be allowed thee, Hes. Op. 34; in Att. also with the Art., 6 devrepos Soph. O. C, 1315, etc. ; ai devrepae ppovrises second thoughts, Eur. Hipp. 436; proverb., roy 5. mAody to try the next best way, Plat. Phaedo 99 D, etc.; expl. by Menand. pao. 2, 6 5. mAods éore Sijmov Acydpevos, dv dmordxy Tis mp@rov, &v k@maion mreiv. 2. after Hom. of Time itself, deurépw xpovy in after time, Pind. O. 1. 69; Sevrépy tuépy on the next day, Hat. 1. 82 (cf. Sevrepaios): Sevrépw ere rovrwy in the year after this, Id. 6. 46:—so also often in neut. as Adv., devrepoy ad, Sebrepov adris secondly, next, afterwards, again, a second time, opp. to mp@rov, Hom., Att.; in Prose also dedrepa, which Hom. has once, Il. 23. 538; also with the Art., 7d Sedrepoy Hdt. 1.79, Aesch. Ag. 1082, etc.; ra Sevrepa Thue. 6, 78; later, é« Sevrépov for the second time, Lat. denuo, Ev. Marc. 14. 71:—regul. Ady. devrépws, Plat. Legg. 955 E, etc. il. in point of Order or Rank, without any notion of Time, second, 8. per’ éxeivov Hat. 1. 31, cf. Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 4, etc. ; 8. mpés re Soph, Fr. 3253 ToAd 5, werd re far second, very much behind, Thuc. 2. 97; so c. gen., devrepos oddevds second to none, Hdt. 1.23; 8. wads ofs Eur. Tro, 614; devrepa Trav mpocdomav below expectations, Dem. 348, 22; wyyetoOat dedrepor to think quite secondary, Soph.O.C. 351; so, 8. dye, woveiabat, riGec@ac Luc. Lap. 9, Plut. 2. 162 E, cf. Id. Fab. 24. 2. the second of two, devrépn abrh herself with another, Hdt. 4. 113; cf. A. B. 89; énra Bevrepor cool a second seven sages, Euphro AdeAd, 1.12; els Kat devrepos, unus et alter, only in late writers, Schif. Dion. H. de Comp. p- 1743 & 7..% devrepoy Dio Chr. 2. 4; 8. wal rpivos two or three, Polyb. 26. 10, 2. III. as Subst., rd devrepa, =devrepeia, the second prize or place, rd 5. pépecOar Il. 23. 538, Hdt. 8. 104, cf. Valck. . 78. 2. the after-birth, Diosc. 1. 58. Sevrepo-crdtys [ui], ov, 6, one who stands in the second file of the Chorus, Themist. 175 B; v. Miiller Eum. § 12. Seurepo-riyis, és, placed in the second place, Nicom. Arithm, 18. Seutepo-rékos, ov, bearing a second time, Arist.H.A.5.14, 20. proparox. devrepdroxos, ov, the second-born, Jo. Chrys. Sevrepoupyés, dv, (* Epyw) working in the second place, secondary, opp. to mpwroupyds, Plat. Legg. 897 A; 5. réxvac Poll. 7. 6 :—but, If. xAatva devrepoupyys, lb. 7.77, seems to mean wrought a second time, second-hand ; and devrepoupyis, 6, one who vamps up such clothes; cf. éxiyvados. Seutepodxos, ov, =a Sevrepeia exw, Lyc. 204. Sevteps-hwvos, ov, speaking after one, of Echo, Nonn. D. 2. 119. Sevtepdw, to do the second time, repeat, LXX (Gen. 41. 32, al.). 5. ru to give one a second blow, Ib. (1 Regg. 26. 8). Sevrépwpa, 746, a repetition, Eust. 80. 10. Seur , €ws, H, the second rank or course, LXx (4 Regg. 23. 4). II. the Jewish traditions were so called, Eccl. Sevrepwrijs, 00,5, an expounder of the traditions, a rabbi, Eus. P.E.513.C. Seurip, jpos, 6, an utensil for cooking or baking, Poll. 10. 105. Sevw; impf. @evoy, Ep. Sedov, Ion. deverxov, all in Hom.; a 3 pl. deveoay, as if from dednut, Q. Sm. 4. 511: fut. devow Eubul. Mpoxp. I: aor, evga Trag.:—Pass., pres. in Hom.; aor. éev0qv Theophr. H.P. .9, 1: pf. dédevpar Eur. Fr. 470.5, Plat. To wet, drench, deve 5 yatay a ala] Il. 13. 655, cf. 23. 220; yAd-yos dyyea Sever 2. 471; Saxpu 5 Seve... mapeds Od. 8. 522; onxoyydv devoy Hipp. 413. 15, etc.: c. dat. modi, eipara 8 aiet ddupvor Sevecnor Il. 7. 260; and in Pass., devovro Se Sdxpvar KbAmOt Q. 570; aipare 5& xOdv Severo 17. 361; and in Med., mumvad mrepa Severar GAun wets his wings in the brine, Od. 5. 53; cf. Eur. Alc. 184, Plat. Legg. 782 C:—rarely c. gen. modi, like karadevo in Hom,, aivatos éSevce yatay Eur. Phoen. 674. 2. to mix a dry. mass with liquid, so as to make it fit to knead, Ar. Fr. 267; Sedoar wat pagar Xen. Oec. lo, 11; dprov vdare Id. Cyr. 6. 2, 28, etc, 3. to smear, nicon Hdn. 8. 4. II. Causal, to make to flow, shed, tpenvdv aly’ eevoa Soph. Aj. 376, y. Lob. ad l. : Sevw, Aco). and Ep. form of 5éw, to miss, want, the Act. only in aor., edevnoev 3° olniov axpov ixéoOar he missed, failed in reaching it, Od. g. II. elsewhere as Dep. Sevopar, fut. devpoopat, = Att. ith os reft of life, -» 20. 472: to stand in Tro. 276; & katpois Pripadiie devopévors, a phrase occurring in decrees of Asiatic cities, C, I, 2189, 3486. 2. to be wanting, deficient in, deverbac rohépono Il. 13. 310; pwaxns dpa moddAdy eSeveo 17. 142: absol, devd- pevos, Lat. egens, in need, 22. 492; Terpdms eis Exardv Sevorrd Kev it would fall short.., Ap. Rh. 3. 974:—c. inf. to desire to do, Id. 3. 1138. 3. c, gen, pers. to be inferior to, Xda Te mavra Seveat *Apyeiwy Il. 23. 484; o¥ rev devdpevos Od. 4. 264. Séha, fut. yw, fo soften by working with the hand (cf. dépa, dupSépa): 5. éavréy, sensu obscoeno,=Lat. masturbari, Eubul. Incert. 2: so in Med., Ar. Eq. 24. Sex-apparos, ov, (dupa) with ten meshes, Xen. Cyn. 2, 5. Séyarat, v. sub déxopa. F Sex-fpepos, ov, for ten days, lasting ten days, Ep. Plat. 349 D; txexerpla dex. a truce from ten days to ten days, i.e. terminable at any time on giv- ing ten days’ notice, Thuc. 5. 26, cf. Polyb: 20. 9, 5, Liv. 24. 273 amovdat dex. Thuc.6.7, 10. IL. dexHpepov, 74, a space of ten days, Poll. 1.63. Séexvupat, poét. for 5éxopar, Orph. Arg. 566, Parthen. 5, Anth. P. 9. 553- Séexopat, Jon. and Acol, Sécopar, Hdt., Sappho x. 22, Pind.:—fut. béfopat, Ep. also 5ed€fouar Il. 5. 238, but not in Att. ; dex Oqoopa (in pass. sense) LxXx:—aor. @defdpny IL, Hdt., Att.; also @€x@yv (v7-) Eur. Heracl, 757 (but dex6eis in pass. sense), pf. dédeypar Il., Att., Ion, b3 pl. dro-Bedexarat Hdt.: plqpf. édedéyunv :—Hom. also has several “tp fy II. Il. 3. 29. 336 forms of an Ep. syncop. aor., é¢yunv, éexr0 or Séero, imperat. défo, inf. 5€xOat, part. déypevos, also a-3 pl. pf. déxarar (with the redupl. thrown away), Il. 12.147; in some places however this tense is impf. in sense, v. infr. II. 4: see also deboxnpévos: Dep. (From 4/AEK, cf. Ion. and Acol. 6é4-opat, Bonds, b0x7, B0xds, Boxetov, defapevy: (v. delx- vuju, Saxrvdros, defids):—cf. also reraywv.) I. of things as the object, to take, accept, receive what is offered, Lat. accipere, Hom., etc, :—Construction: 3, 7 xeipt or xelpecor Hom., etc.; 5. ri tue to receive something at the hand of another, défaré of oxirrpoy matpwiov Il. 2. 186, etc., cf. Pors. Hec. 5333; also, 71 mapd twos Hom.; 71 &« Tivos Soph.O.T. 1106; zi rivos Il. 1. 596., 24. 305, Soph, O.T.1163 :—but also, 5. ri twos to receive in exchange for .. , xpuody pidou dvdpos é5éfaro Od. Il. 327; 71 5, mpd twos Plat. Legg. 729 D; paddov 8. re dvré twos Id. Gorg. 475 D :—also, wa@Ador 6., c. inf., to take rather, to choose to do or be .., Lys. 118. fe Xen. Hell. 5. 1,14, Symp. 4,12; and without paa- Aov, ovdels dy Se~aro pevyeiv Thuc. 1. 143, cf. Plat. Apol. 41 A; ovd« dy Begainny re éxew Andoc, 1. 25; followed by #.., Plut. Phileb. 63 B. b. simply ¢o catch, as in a vessel (cf. defapevn, 50x7), drov .. xd5ots 5, Soph, Fr. 479. 2. of mental reception, to take or accept, without murmuring, xaAendy mep édvra, dexdpeda piPoy Od. 20. 271; weijpa 5 éy rére Séfopar Il, 18. 115. b. to accept graciously, rovro 5 eyd mpoppaw 5. 23. 647; of the gods, GAX’ 8 ye déxTo piv ipa 2. 420; so, mpoopidas yépa 5., of one dead, Soph. El. 443; 7a opdyia 5. Ar. Lys. 204:—so also in Prose, 7d xpnodév, Tov oiwvdy 5. to accept, hail the omen, Hdt. 1. 63., g. gt, cf. Aesch. Ag. 1653, Soph. El. 668, Ar. Pl. 63, Xen. An. 1, 8, 17:—1to accept or approve, Tovs Adyous, THY ~up- paxinv Hdt. 1. 95, Thuc. 1. 95, etc., cf. Valck. Phoen. 462; S:dévar wat béxecOa: 7a Bixaca Thue. 1. 37, cf. h. Hom. Merc. 312: on 5éxe- 8a Bpkov, v. sub Spkos. ¢. simply give ear to, hear, Lat. accipere, daly AxhY, Pnunv dxoaiory Eur. Bacch. 1086, etc.; simply, 5. du@ay Id. Med. 175; 7a mapayyeAAdueva oféws 5. Thuc. 2. 11, 89. d. to take or regard as so and so, pydt avppopdy bexouv roy avdpa Soph. Aj. 68. 3. to take upon oneself, rv danavny Polyb. 32. 14, 5. II. of persons as the object, zo receive hospitably, entertain, Lat. excipere, Hom.; év peyapoo, év ddpoior Il, 18. 331, Od. 17. 110; also, Sdpors 8. ra Soph. O.T. 818; oréyats, wupt 8. twa Eur. Or. 47; 5. xupg Id. Med. 713; TH 7éA« 5. to admit into the city, Thuc. 4. 103; eow 5, Id. 6. 44; «is 70 refxos Xen. An. 5. 5, 6. 2. to greet, worship, oi oe, Gedy hs, dadéxar Il. 22. 434; 5. Twa EUpmpaxoy to accept or admit as an ally, Thuc. 1. 43, etc. 8. to receive as an enemy, to await the attack of, Lat. excipere, émévra 58. Il. 5. 238, cf. 15. 745; of a hunter waiting for game, 4.107; of a wild boar waiting for the hunters, 12. 147: so, eis xelpas 5. Xen. An. 4. 3, 31; Tods wodrepious 5. Hdt. 3. 54, cf. Thuc, 4. 43; émdvras 8. Id. 7.77; 5. tiv mpwrny epoboy Id. 4. 126; édéfaro wéds wévoy Eur. Supp. 39. 4. to expect, wait, c. acc, et inf. fut., GA’ del twa pra ., i ie év0ad’ édcUoecOa Od. 9. 513, cf, 12. 230; also, déypevos Alaxidny, dmére .. Angeey Il. 9. 191; Bedeypévos cladnev EdXOps 10. 62; also, unde auppopay 5éxov Tov av- dpa do not expect or assume him to be .. , Soph. Aj. 68.—In these two last senses, Hom. always uses fut. dedefopar, pf. dédeypar, and dedey- pévos, 5éypevos, which last indeed is used in this sense only, except in h, Hom. Cer. 29, Merc. 477. III. rarely with a thing as the sub- ject, to occupy, engage one, Tis dpxd vauriAias 5égaro [adrovs] ; Pind. P. 4. 124:—o receive, hold (cf. dexrinds, de~apevy), THY Tpopny Arist. H. A. 4. 6, 4, al. Iv. ingly intr. Zo d, come next, Lat. excipere, &s por déxerat Kakdy éx Kaxod alet Il. 19. 290; GAdos B ef GAAov béxerar xadkenwraros GOAos Hes. Th. 800; of places, é« Tov orewod 70 “Aprepiovoy déxerat Hat. 7.176. Sabo, aor. (as if from deyéw):—Lat. depso (cf. dépw), to work or knead a thing Zil/ it is soft, enpov dephoas pedupdea Od. 12. 48; déper Xepol 70 Béppa Hat. 4. 64; cf. cxvdodbépys. Séw (A), imper. 3 pl. dedvrav (vy. sub SiSnut): fut. Show: aor. edy0a, Ep. dca Il. 21, 30:—pf. débexa Dem. 764.18; or dé5yxa Aeschin. 46. 2: plapf. éded9xe Andoc. 31. 23:—Med., Ep. impf. déov7o Il.: aor. zdnoduny Il; Ep. 3 sing. dqodoxero ll, 24. 15 :—Pass., fut, de0jcopat Dem. 740. 9., 741. 18, etc., but de4oopuar Plat, Rep. 361 E, Xen. Cyr. 4, 3, 18:—aor. €5€6ny Att.: pf. 5éSepar, v. infr.: plqpf. é5e5éunv Andoc. 7. 26; Ep. débero Il. 5. 387; Ion. 3 pl. éded¢ar0 Hat. 1. 66, etc.—In this Verb, thongh a disyll., eo and ¢w are occas. contr. 7d dodv, TG Sovv7e Plat. Crat. 419 A, B, 421 C; cf. émédnua and the compds. dva-, éx-, ém-, kata-, tro-5éw. (From «/AE come di-dnyut, déo1s, Ser, Secpds; cf. Skt. da, dyami (di5nuc), dama (Secpés).) To bind, tie, fetter, often with a dat. modi added, decp@ Twa Shoat Il. 10. 443, etc.; also, év decpd 5. 396, bte.; joe 8 daicow xeipas .. ivaow 21. 30; 5. Twa xelpas TF. s Te Od> 12. 50; 5. é¢ Twos to bind from (i.e. to) a thing, éf émdippiddos tudor 5édevro Il. 10. 475, ef. Hdt. 4. 72; dfcai mwa ftw or & gdd@ (cf. (UAov II. 2); &y Aiwa: Ar. Ran. 619; 6. xiva Kod to tie a clog to a dog, Solon ap. Plut, Sol. 34, cf. Eur. Cycl. 234: also, 3. va mpds paparyy: Aesch. Pr. 15; mpds xlova or Kiovi Soph. Aj. 108, 240; dedepévor mpds dAAHAoUs Thue. 4. 47. 2. alone, to bind, put in bonds, ras dy éyd oe Béoupe; says Hephaistos, pointing to the nets in which he had caught Ares, Od. 8, 352 (where others take it metaph., how can I keep thee to thy pledge?); atrds 8 cénae marépa Aesch. Eum. 641; cf. Thuc. 1. 30, Dem. 733. 12, etc. 3. to bind, enchain, make still, yA@ooa B€ ol Sébera Theogn. 178; xépde Kal copta bédera Pind. P. 3. 96; yuxa 6. Ava Eur. Hipp. 160: later, to bind by spells, enchant, Anth. P. 11. 138.° 4. c. gen. to let or hinder from a thing, like Brdrrw, ednce KedcvOov Od. 4. 380, 469. II. Hom. also often uses the Med. to bind, tie, put on oneself (cf. Peete) zoce! 8 dal Arapoiaw edyoaTo Kaha. rédida tied $ BAbeo— dia them on his feet, Il, 2. 44, etc.; also Pass., mept 88 xvfjunot Boelas kvq- pibas.. dé5ero he had greaves bound round his legs, Od. 24. 228. Séw (B) Att.: fut, Sejow Plat. Rep. 395 E: aor. édénoa Lys. 183. 41, Ep. é5yoa or dfoa Il. 18. 100 (the only place where this dub. form occurs): pf, dedéqea Plat. Polit. 277 D:—Med., fut. Sefoonar Att., Dor. Seo%par Epich. ap. A. B. 90; later —n04c0pna1 Plut.: aor. eSenOnv Att.: pf. dedénuar Xen. An. 7. 7, 14, Isae. 71.19. (The forms dejow, etc., compared with the Ep. édednoa, Sevopa, point to 4/AEF, which seems to be lengthd. from 4/AE (5m, igo), v. Curt. Gr. Et. no. 264.) To lack, miss, stand in need of, c. gen., €yeio 8 edyoe. GAxrijpa yevéo0at Il. 1. c.; (elsewhere Hom. always uses the poét. form dedw, q.v.); so, Tapadelyparos 7d mapdderypa avd de5énxe Plat. Polit. 277 D, cf. Xen. Mem. 4. 2, Io. 2. often in Att., roAAod béw I want much, i.e. am far from, mostly c. inf. pres., e. g. toAAOD 5éw diro- Aoyeic@ar I am far from defending myself, Plat. Apol. 30 D; moAdOD deis eiweiy Id. Meno 79 B; 7m. 5. dyvoeiv Id. Lys. 204 E; 7. ye béovar patvecba Id. Meno 90 A; so also, purpod ébeov elva: Xen. Hell. 4. 6, 11; Tocovrou déover pepetaOax Isocr. 300 A; (also, rocodrov béw cidévac Plat. Meno 71 A); mapa puxpoy é5énoa dmoGavety Isocr, 222 B; also absol., ToAAod “ye 5ém far from it, Plat. Phaedr. 228 A; Tod mavros déw Aesch. Pr. 1006, cf. 961; mavrds Se? ToLodros eivat Plat. Soph, 221 D; (so, impers., ToAAOD Sel, etc., v. def II. 1. 6) :—so also in partic., puKpov béovra rérrapa réAavra Dem. 824. 21; the partic. is often used to express numerals compounded with 8 or 9, dvoiy déovra TEToEpaKovTa forty lacking two, thirty-eight, Hdt. 1.14; mevrhxovra dvoiv déovra érn Thuc. 2.1; évds déov elxogrdy éros the 20th year save one, the 19th, Id. 8. 6; Svoty Seotoas etxoor vavoiv Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 5:*later, some- times, the inf. stands absol., wept 7a. évds Seiv mevrHKovTa fifty save one, Arist, Rhet. 2. 14, 4; also the part. in gen., tpopadrtSes puds Seovons eixoow Id. H. A. 3. 20,14; TéAewy Svoiv deovcaw éfnnovta Diog. L. 5. 27; éfneovra évds d€ovros érn Plut. Pomp. 79. 8. part. déwv, d€ovea, as Adj., needful, 5 naipés gor xpévos Séwv Arist. An. Pr. 1. 36, 6: but rare except in neut., v. sub dor. 4. on dec impers., v. sub ber. II. as Dep. déopar: fut. denoopar: aor. é5enOny, always personal, and only used by Hom. in form Sevopar (v. sub devo) : 1 absol. to be in want or need, require, mostly in part., as kdpra dedpevos Hat. 8. 59, etc. b. to stand in need of, want, c. gen., as Hdt. 1. 36, etc.; 7a od Beira KodagTOd .. én Soph. O. T. 1148; Aapns Tivds 5. Ib. 1293; ovdiy déopai twos I have no need of him, Thuc. 8. 43; #v 7 béwvrar Baoihéws if they have any need of him, Ib. 37:—also c. inf., Tovro ér déouat pabeiv Plat. Rep. 392 D, cf. Euthyd. 275 D, ete.; 7a mparrecOa dedpeva things needing to be done, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 3; also Setrac impers., v. sub mapinue IV. I. 2. to beg a thing from a per- son, c. dupl. gen. rei et pers., T@v ed€ero opéwy Hat. 3. 157, cf. Thuc. 1. 32, etc.; often also with the neut. pron. in acc., TodTo Séopat byay Plat. Apol. 17 C, cf. Symp. 173 E, etc.: also c. acc. cogn., 5énua, or oftener déqow, Seiabai twos Ar. Ach, 1059, Aeschin. 33. 41, etc.; also c. acc, rei only, £vupopa 5. Thuc. 1. 32, etc.; duampdgwpar & S€opar Xen. An, 2. 3, 293 rarely with gen. pers. only, wy pou denOps Soph. O. C. 1170; denbets tudy having begged a favour of you, Dem. 551. 3; 5. xapiv Menand. Incert. 472 :—c. gen. pers. et inf. to beg a person to do, Hat. 1. 59, and freq. in Att., as Plat. Prot. 336 A; 5. rwos wore.., Thuc. I, 119 :— very rarely c, acc. pers,, é5¢ovTo Bowrods imws mapadmat Id. 5. 36, cf. Plut. Anton. 84. 57, Particle used generally to give greater exactness, explicitness, or positiveness to the word or words which it influences, It is prob. a shortened form of 43n, Lat. jam. It is usually rendered now, in truth, indeed, surely, really: but no single Engi. word can express 54 in all cases: its force must often be given by emphasis, or by periphrasis of various kinds. Like other Particles of similar kind, it follows the word or words which it influences, In Ep. and Lyric Poets, however, 51) yap, 5n Tore, di mapmay (Il. 19. 342) stand at the beginning of clauses. I. Usage of 57 with single words: 1. mostly after Adjectives, olos 84, pdvos 64, all alone, Od. 12. 69, Hdt, 1. 25, and Att.; esp. such as imply magnitude, quantity, and the like, péyas 54, modds 54, puxpos 59, etc.; often also with Superlatives, péyoros 8h, xpdtioros of quite the greatest, confessedly the best, Thuc. 1. 50, etc.; amdvrwy i) .. GAyt- arov Soph, Aj. 992, etc.:—so with Numerals, derw 5) mpoénea .. dicTovs Shes shot full, no less than, eight arrows, Il. 8. 297; évvea 32 Be- 5 Got..eviauTot no less than nine years, 2.134; €xTov dé i dd Hap this is just the sixth day, Eur. Or. 39, cf. Il. 24. 107, etc.; €fs 89 one only, Eur. Med. 1282, etc. 2. so also after Adverbs, woAAdaus 57 many times and oft, often ere now, Lat, jam saepe, Il. 19.85 ; dpe 5 34 quite late, 7.943 Tpis 51 no less than thrice, even thrice, Pind. P. 9. 162 3 Tadai 57 Lat. jamdudum, Soph. Ph, 806:—viv 57 even now, much like dprt, Ar. Av. 923, Plat. Theaet. 145 B, etc.; viv re eal Gdddre 7. Ib. 187 D; or, now first, now at length, 1d. Rep. A, Xen etc.:—tére 5h (57 b oy ee ix ee € on (6H fa rére Il. 13. 719, etc.) at that very time, Thuc., etc.; also, 59 réve Plat. Theaet. 156.E: atria 3) pada on the very spot, Id. Rep. 338 B, etc. :—torepov 57 yet later, Thuc. 2. 17— one se sr5 Be ae ag: when it merely adds force, val 59 yea iy, Il. I. 286, etc.; 4 54, 7 ey 54 Ib. 518, 573, etc.; od df surely not, Soph. Ph. 246, cf, Eur, Or. 106g, etc. :—v. sub dnAady, BF I~ Maas. Shaiave ged 9, etc. —v. sub dyAadqH, Sirov, 51 v F « with Verbs, 57) yap iSov épOadpotor for verily I saw him, Il. 15. 488 3 viv D dpare 54 now certainly ye see, Xen, Cyr. am en Seta 5n associated with Verbs generally influences the * peered es inf. II. 3. 4, with Substantives, not often, és 51) -» well to this A. they came, Hd 3 Té n its, complete end, Aesch. Pr. 13; y Beira 8 cet mtn A : eakit ns i. F135 coproriyy 57 Tot dvoudcova Tov dvdpa elvat: P you know, Plat. Prot, 311 E:—in Att. sometimes used. dnadwros — dyAnriHpros. ironically, Lat. scilicet, elonyarye Tas éraipléas 5h the pretended courte- sans, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 6, cf. Eur. Ion 1181, Thue. 4. 67., 6. 80:—here also 54 generally belongs to the whole clause, v, infr. 11. 5. 5. with Pronouns, to mark the person or thing strongly, éué 59 a man like me, Hdt. 3. 155; ob 54 you of all persons, Id. 1. 115, Soph. Aj. 1226; obros 37 this and no other, Hdt. 1. 43; éxeivos 57 Soph. Tr. 1091; ovros 5) 6 Swxparns, ironically, Plat. Theaet. 166 A; 7d Aeydpevoy 5) TovTo as the well-known saying goes, Id. Gorg. 514 E, cf. Eur. Hipp. 962 :—so with pers. Pronouns, 76 adv 5% Todo Plat. Symp. 221 B, cf. Gorg. 508 D, etc. :—with relatives, ds 2) viv xparéee who plainly now holds rule, Il. 21. 315; 7a 5i) Kal éyevero Hat. 1. 22; ofos 5) av just such as thou, Il. 24. 376, cf. Od. 1. 32, Soph. Aj. 995, etc.; so with relat. Advs., ds 54 Aesch. Ag. 1633; dca 59 Ar. Ach. 1, etc.:—with interrogatives, tod 5) @&vexa; Plat. Gorg. 457 E; ri 57; Id. Phaedo 58 C; wérepa 87; Soph. Ph. 1235; (and with Advs., wot 57) kai 7é0ev; Plat. Phaedr, init.; mov bn; 7 57; Ib. 228.E, etc.) :—with indef. Pronouns, 57 strengthens the indef. notion, @AAo: 59 others be they who they may, Il. 1. 295; pydets 57 no one at ail, Plat. Theaet. 170 E; 54 tis some one or other, Lat. nescio quis, Id. Phaedo 108 C, 115 D, etc.; (rarely, tts 59 Soph. Ant. 158, Eur. I. T. 946); the neut. 57 7: is common, 7 dpa 57 t+ éioxo- pev dgiov eivac; in any way, whatever it be, Il. 13. 446; 70 tamxér, TS 3H Te Kal émeixe EAAGpYecOa Hat. 1.80; obrw df Te Id. 3. 108, etc.; also, Sa71s 5n whosoever it be, Id. 1. 86; émt pucO@ Sow 5H, Lat. quantocumque, Ib. 160, etc. 6. with Conjunctions, iva 64 that in truth, Il. 23. 207, etc.; used ironically, Plat. Rep. 420 E, Meno 86D; (and so, S71 54 Id. Phaedr. 268 D) ;—ds 59 Il. 5. 24, etc.: ironically, Ar. Vesp. 1315, Plat.;—ydp 59 for manifestly, Aesch. Cho. 874, 891, Plat. Theaet. 156 C; ob yap 37 Soph. O. C, 265 ;—dnws 54 Thuc., etc.;—but mostly with temporal Conjunctions, éme? 54 strengthd. for émei (v, sub éretdn), bre 5h, Gray 5H, és Te 5H, ei 5H, etc. :—hence Hf is often used with a participle, when the part. represents a Conjunction and Verb, dre 3} édvres inasmuch as they clearly are, Hdt. 8. 90; ds pévoy vifovca 5H just as if she were .., Eur. I. T. 1338, cf. Hdt. 1. 66, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 4, ete, ; v. GAAd III. 6, yap IV. 3. II. usage of 57 in reference to whole clauses: 1. to continue a narrative, in which case it often follows pév, so then, so, Tore piv 52) «- Hovxiny exe Hdt. 1. 11; SddAwv pev 37 eveye Ib. 32; Tov pev méume Ib. 116; also alone, efs 52) TovTwy.. so one of these.., Ib. 114, etc. :—often in summing up, Toatra pey 5) radra, Lat. haec hactenus, Aesch. Pr. 500, etc.; Todro 5) 70 a&yos.., Thuc, 1. 127; Tovrwy 5) évexa Xen. Cyr. 3. 2, 28, etc.; so in summing up numbers, -yiyvovrat 5} obror xiAvor these then amount to 1000, Ib. I. 5, § :—so also in re- suming after a parenthesis, "AvOpopaxn, Ovyarnp peyadnropos “Heriw- vos... , Todmep 5) Ovyarnp Il. 6. 395; ovros 6h .., 6 pev 5h Hdt. 1. 43; févous piv A€y, .. A€yos 57) TODS MavTas KTA. Dem, 45. 1g, 25, etc. 2. in inferences, Hdt., etc. ; esp. to express what is unexpected or surprising, kai ov 5 ..s0 then you too..! Aesch. Pr. 298, ef. Plat. Theaet. 159 C, etc.; ob 8 éy "Acda 57) keto Eur. El. 122; cf. Aesch, Theb. 652, Soph. Tr. 153, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 8: often in questions, rovoicde 5 oe Zeds én’ airtdpaow aixiCerac; is it then for such causes? Aesch, Pr. 255, cf. 118 ; mod 5) 7a pavredpata; Id. Cho. goo, cf. 405; mis oi..; Id. Pers. 735; 7t 8 obv..; Plat. Theaet. 156 C. 3. with Imperat. and Subjunct., 7) i) . . éméAzeo only do not expect, Il. 1.545, cf. 5. 684, etc. ; xapapev bi waves now let us all go, Soph. Ph. 1469; évvoetre yap 54 for do but consider, Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, 53 so, dye 5h, pepe 5h, te 5H, oxdmer 37, etc., often in Prose. 4. to express what follows a fortiori, werd Stray ye 54 above all with arms, Thuc. 4. 78; wn Ti ye 4 not to mention that, Dem, 24. 23; ef 5¢ 51) médeuos fife Id. 17. 4. 5. «at 6n and what is more, adding an emphatic statement, Il. 1. 161., 15. 251; in Prose mostly, nat 6) kai.., és Alyurrov dmixero.., kat 57) Kai és Sdpdis Hdt. 1. 30, etc., cf. 5. 67, Lys. 130. 13; at 5) wal voy ri $s; and now what do you say? Plat. Theaet. 187 C; kai 8) pev oby mapévra yes, and actually here present, Soph. O, C. 31:—esp. in a series, iyieta nal icxds nal Kdddos Kal tAOdTOs 6h and above all riches, Plat. Meno 87 E, ef. Rep. 367 C, 493 D. b. «ai 57 is also in answers Hj wai napéorn Kami répp dinero; Answ. kat di) mt diccais jv .. wAais, he was even so far as .., Soph. Aj. 49;—BAe~ov xdrw. Answ. kal 51) BAénw, well, 1 am looking, Ar. Av. 175, cf. Pax 327, Pl. 227 sq., Soph. El. 317 sq., 1436, Plat. Gorg. 448 B, etc. ;—mpdadeyé viv Hou. Answ. pata xai 54 Soph. O. C.173; so without al, dwoxpivov wept Gy épwrd. Answ. épwra 57 Plat. Theaet. 157 D. ec. also in assumptions or suppositions, xat 5%) éeypar and now suppose I have accepted, Aesch. Eum. 894, cf. Cho. 565, Eur. Med. 386, 1065, 1107, Ar. Vesp. 1224, etc. 6. 54 in apodosi, after ef or édy, Il, 5. 898, Hat. 1. 108, Plat., etc.; after dre or Hxa, even then, Soph. Ant. 170 sq., El..9543 after éwet or éresdy, Xen. Cyr. 1.6, 14, Plat., etc. ; after ds, Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 4; after év @ Id. An. 1. Io, Io. SydAwros, ov, contr. for d7idAwros, q. v. : Siypo, 74, a bite, sting, Xen. Mem. 1. 3, 12, Arist. H.A.8. 24, 6, al.: metaph., 5. Adwns Aesch. Ag. 791; épwros Soph. Fr. 721; cf, bdevey UI. ~Bnypés, 6, the act of biting: gnawing pain, Hipp. 221E, Theophr. H. P. 4. 4, 5. 2. metaph. of a speech, 6. éxetv Plut. 2. 68 E. gs: in pl. caustics, Id. Pericl. 15. 804, Ep. Adv.,=div, long, for a long time, Hom. ; 3. wat Sodrcxév Il. 10.52; 5. pada Il. 5.587; ov pera 70a not Jong after, Ap. Rh. 2.651. Bybee and SyOd«ts, Adv.,=foreg., Nic. Al. 215. ‘ BaPev (not S40e, for Eur. El. 268 is corrected by Elmsl.) :—Adv., being a strengthd. form of 54, really, in very truth, Tt bi) Gvipwévres d70ev movhoovet; what then will they do. when they are really grown up? Hat. 6. 138; dpre d70ev Plat. Polit. 297 C :—also epexegetic, like Lat. vide- f, 337 licet, that is to say, ws Zeds dvacoo d90ev Aesch. Pr. 202; ws aida 5. Hi) réxows Eur. El, 268, cf. Ion 831 :—but, 2. mostly used ironi-: cally, like 6nAadq, Lat. scilicet, to imply that a statement is not true, of poy HOEAncav dmodécar bAOev ..as he pretended, Hat. 1. 59; dndev ovdev iaropay Soph. Tr. 382; ov« ént Kkwrvpn GdAd rapawvecn Snbev Thuc, I. 92, cf. 127., 3. 111:—often after ds, mostly with a word inter- posed, pépovres ds dypny d90ev Hdt. 1. 73; ds xatacKdmous 8. édvras Id. 3. 136, cf. 6. 39., 8. 5; in Poets before ds, xévrpov Saber ws éxav xept Eur. H. F.949; eiotper . . d90ev ds Cavotpevor Id. Or. Ilig, cf. Aesch. Theb. 247 ; Oeariy d90ev ws ote bv7’ Endy Eur. lon 656. II. jrom that time, thenceforth, Anacreont. 1. 16, cf. Hesych, 5nPive, fut. tv@, (5994) to tarry, be long, delay, Il. 1. 27, ete. Syiddwros, ov, (Shios, Gddva) taken by the enemy, captive, Eur. Andr. 105; contr, dpdAwros Aesch. Theb. 72. Anvdveipa, %, destroying her spouse, the wife of Hercules,—her name expressing the legend of his death, Soph., etc. dijios, 7, ov, Ep. for ddios, q. v. Sniorhs, ijros, #, battle-strife, the battle, often in Hom. (esp. Il.): mortal struggle, death, Od. 12. 257. : Sylow, Ep. opt. Syidwey Od. 4. 226, part. Snidwy Il.; Att. pres. 8y0, dpovpev, -odre Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 18, Ar. Lys. 1146; part. dyav even in Il, 17. 65: impf. edzouv Thuc. 1. 65, Xen., édnlovy Hat. 8. 33, 50 (2dzfeuv 5. 89); Ep. Sfouv Il. 11. 71: fut. dpdow Il, Att.: aor. édywoa Thuc., subj. inden, -wor Il., part. Sywoas Il., Ion. dgidaas Hdt., Dor. dgdoas C. 1.175: pf. de5:jaxa Walz Rhett. 8. 193:—Med., fut. (in pass. sense) Ap. Rh. 2. 117: aor. I SyHoac0a Q. Sm. 5.567, cf. 374 :—Pass., aor. ebniwOny Hat. 7. 133, SpwGeis Hom.: pf. dedqwpévos Luc. D. Mort. 10. 11.—Hom. contracts this Verb, when the ¢ is followed by a long syll.: the forms dyid@er, dnidav, Snidgyro, might be Ep. forms of a pres. dnidw, which perhaps led Ap. Rh. (2. 292) to form an impf. énidacKov; but Ap. Rh. also has an impf. dfiov, as from dniw, 374- To cut dcwn, slay, xadK@ dnidow ll. 17. 566, etc.; yet Snidav wep Marpd- #do1L0 Gavévros slaying [men].., 18. 195: absol., djovy were slaying, 16. 7713 Syidwvro were being slain, 13. 675; “Exropa Spwoavre 22. 218; Kixdvey ind dyw0évres Od. y. 66 :—dzour .. Bolas were cleaving shields, Il. 5. 452, etc.; also of a spear, to cut asunder, 14. 518 —of a savage beast, to rend, tear, éyxata navra Aaptoca dyav 17. 65, cf. 16. 158; Tov méryava deSqupévos having had his beard cut off, Luc. D. Mort. Io. 11. II. after Hom. to waste or ravage a country, _ Hat. 5. 89., 7. 133, etc.; 8. xdpay Ar. Lys. 1146, Thuc. 1. 81, etc.; doru dpdaew mupi Soph. O. C. 1349. Sni-hoBos, Dor. Said-, ov, scaring the foe, restored by Bgk. in Alcae. 28 :—in Hom. only as prop. n. Syeripros, oy, biting, torturing, xapdtas Eur. Hec. 235. SHerys, ov, 6, (Saxvw) a biter, Poeta in Stob. Ecl. 1. 106; 8. Adyos Plut. 2. 55 B:—with neut. Subst., dj«rg ordpare Anth. Plan. 4. 266. Syerikds, 7, dv, able to bite, biting, stinging, paddyya Arist. H. A. 9- 39515 Tay ixOvov of 5, Id. P. A. 3.1, 13 —pungent, pappaxov Luc. Nigt. 37; and so metaph., doretoy «al 5. Id. Demon. 50. SnAadH (for d7Aa 4, and some Edd. so write it), Adv. guite clearly, manifestly, clearly, plainly, Soph. O. T. 1501, Eur. I. A. 1366, etc. :— also iron., like 590ev, mpopdatos rhode SnAadh on this pretext for- sooth, Hdt. 4. 135:—often in answers, ob mOAN eveott dewd TO ‘vhee wand ;.. dnrhaby yes plainly, of course, Ar. Vesp. 441, cf. Plat. Crito 40 B, etc. ' és SyAatve, collat. form of sq., Hesych. uw, to inform against, denounce, rwd Hegesipp. ap. Eus. H. E. 3. 20. (From Lat. delator.) 4 éopat, Dor. 84A— Theocr. 15. 48:—fut. Aoopar: aor. 2onAnodpny : pf. de54Anpac Eur. Hipp. 175 (but in pass. sense, Hdt. 4. 198., 8. 100) :— the Act. 57Ajow, —qcas only in Or. Sib. 7,44, 28): indeed the Verb and all derivs. (except S%Anpa) are scarcely known in good Att., BAdmrw being used instead: Dep.: I. mostly of persons, to hurt, do a mischief to, whmws [iarmous] SnAjoea, by accident, Il. 23. 428; but also. on purpose, "Axyasods imtp bpxia SyrnocacOa 4.66; He ce.. dvdpes édnAnoavro did thee a mischief, i.e. slew thee, Od. 11. 401; pi HE. - dnrjoerat fi xadx@ (Ep. for —yrat) 22. 368; also of the sword, fuvdv bnAnogaro xaAdkés Ib. 278: so in Ion. Prose, iva pi) Exorév opeas Syré- cada: Hat. 6. 36, cf. 7.51; waciordy apeas ednréero % EaOhs Id. 9. 63 — to hurt by magic potions, Theocr. 9. 36. II. of things, to damage, spoil, waste, kaprov éénAngav7’ ll. 1.156; so in Hdt., yqv Snknodpevos 4- 115; GApiy énavOéovoav, hore kat rds mupapidas dndéecba 2. 12:—in Hom. esp, in the phrase, dpxia dyAnoacOa to violate a truce, Il, 3. 107, etc,:—of thieves, wn ris. . bgAnoerat (Ep. subj.) should steal them, Od. 8. 444, cf. 13. 124. 2. absol. to do mischief, be hurtful, év6a ke a7) Bovdr) SnAHoerat Il. 14. 102: c. acc. cogn., 78’ baa . . dvdpis eénAjoarro all the mischief they did, Od, 10. 459. SyAtets, coca, ev, =dyAjyav, Orph. Arg. g2t. SHAnpa, 76, a mischief, bane, vn 8. bane of ships, Od. 12. 286; ddormépwy Aesch. Fr.121; Bporois"h. Hom. Ap. 364 ; yovedow .. apav @ épov dndjpara Soph, O. T.1495 ; TUxns dAjpact Epigr. Gr. 538. SyAtpov, ov, gen. ovos, baneful, noxious, Bporav Sndjpova cv baneful to them, their bane, Od. 18. 85, 116., 21. 308; dques dvOpdomew ov by Atipoves doing men no hurt, Hdt, 2. 74 :—absol., of the gods, oxé- thiol ore, Geoi, SyAHpoves Il. 24. 33; in Od. 5.118 the Mss. give {yAq- poves (though Eust. notices the v. 1. 5yA-). : SHANG, ews, }, mischief, ruin, bane, Hdt. 1. 41., 4.112, Theophr. H. P. 7.13.43 injury of health, Hipp. Jusj. SyAnrhp, fipos, 6, a destroyer, Ep. Hom. 14. 8. Aytiptos, ov, noxious, pappaxa Hdn, 3. 5, C. 1. 3044 42. 2. 338 haan (sc. pdppakov), 74, poison, Arist. Plant. 1. 5, 7, Plut. 2. SqHAnmnpsdys, es, noxious, Arist. Plant. 1.7, 2. d Andros, a, ov, also os, ov Eur., Delian, Trag., etc.:—é A., name of Apollo, Soph. Aj. 704, Thuc. 1.13}; Tois AnAlows Kal rats AnAlas, the gods and goddesses worshipped at Delos, Ar. Thesm. 334 :—AyAvos, 6, a Delian, Hdt., etc.: pecul. fem. AnArds, dos, 4, a@ Delian woman, xoupat A. h, Hom. Ap. 157, Eur. H. F. 687; also as Adj., with a neut. Subst., AnAudow yuddors as Seidl. in Eur. I. T. 1235. Il. 4 Anas (sc. vais), the Delian ship, which bore Theseus to Crete when he slew the Minotaur, In memory of this, a ship was sent every fourth year, with a solemn deputation to the Delian Apollo; v. Oewpis, Oewpds, cf. Plat. Phaedo 58, Bockh P. E.1. 286 sq.:—the members of this deputation were Andtacrat, Ath. 234 E, Harpocr., Hesych. III, 7a Aja (sc. iepd) the quinguennial festival of Apollo at Delos (v. supr. 11), Thuc. 3- 104, Xen. Mem. 4. 8, 2. Ando-yevis, Dor. AGA-, és, Delos-born, Simon. 34. Dor. for BovAopat, Theoer. 5. 27, Tim. Locr. 94D, Archytas ap. Stob. t.1. 70, Plut. 2. 219 D, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 146. SnAovért, i.e. 57Ady [orev] St, used parenthetically much like 5jAad4, quite clearly, manifestly, plainly, Plat. Crito 53 A, Gorg. 487 D, etc. But the full phrase appears in many writers, as eat 59Aov Sri. . od« bp0ds dmapécxoipev Thuc. 3. 38; 7a Kupou dhAov bri obrws exer Xen. An. I. 3, 9, cf. Cyr. 2. 4, 24, etc.; v, S7t HIT. II. often used epexegetically, that is to say, namely, Lat. scilicet, Plat. Symp. 199 A, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 6, etc.; and in Gramm, it is the common form for introducing the explanation of a word. SndAo-rovew, to make clear, Plut. Pericl. 33. AjAos, 7, Delos, one of the Cyclades, birthplace of and sacred to Apollo and Artemis, Od. 6. 162, etc.: called also ’Opruyia: in a post- Hom. myth it was said to have floated about, till Zeus fixed it to receive Latona, Pind. Fr. 58, cf. Strabo 485:—proverb., des domep els A. rhéwv, from the careless joviality of the AjAcaoral, Paroemiogr. (Prob. from SijAos, because of the legend that it became visible on a sudden, Arist. ap. Plin. 4. 22, E. M. 264. 22.) SiAos, 7, ov, also os, ov Eur. Med. 1197: Ep. SéeAos: (v. sub dios fin.) : I. properly, visible, conspicuous, d€ehov 3 ent ofjpa 7’ €Onxay Il. 10. 466: but, II. commonly, clear to the mind, mani- Jest, evident, viv 8 75n 765€ SHAov Od. 20. 333, etc. 2.. in Att. often d7Ads eis with Part, (where acc. to our idiom it would be d7Adv éorw dt. .), BpAds or aGdryeavas Pépwy i.e. it is clear that he takes it ill, Soph. Ph. rorr, cf. O. T. 673, 1008, etc. ; SHAoi eloe pi) emrpée- ovres they are clearly not going to permit, it is clear that they will not, Thuc. 1.71; so with ds, 59Ads éorw Gs Te Spacelwv kaxdy Soph. Aj. 3263; Siro EveoOar cs dpyCdpevor Lys. 128, 27, cf. Xen. An. 1. 5, 9; diAos épacba . . dy being as was plainly to be seen, Eur. Or. 350: —also with Sze and a Verb, instead of the partic., d9Ads éorw ore. . dxjeoev Ar. Pl. 333, cf. Thuc. 1. 93:—and also, acc. to our idiom, 57Ady [eer] or .., v. sub SyAovér.:—sometimes the part. or relat. clause must be supplied, xarayeAGs pov,—djros ef (sc. karayeA@y) Ar. Av. 1407, cf. Id. Lys. 919; d7Aot 6e (sc. ob pévovres) Thuc. 5. 10. 3. SHArov woteiv to shew plainly, rw Thuc. 6. 34, etc.; with a part., 5jAov énovjoare . . pndicavres Id. 3. 64. 4, dhador itself is used like SydadH, as avros mpds abrod: SyAoy.., all by himself, ‘tis manifest, Soph. Aj. 906; dAyewa Ipéxvy, SfAov Id. Fr. 521; &« wiOw dvrheis, dqAov Theocr. 10. 13 :—also, d7Aor dé to introduce a proof, foll. by yap, Thue. 1. 11, Arist. Color. 6, 20; cf. reunpiov. 5. the Adv. Shdws is not Att., Poll. 6. 207. SyAdw, fut. dow, etc. :—Pass., fut. SykwOfocopar Thuc. 1. 144; also SnAdoopa in pass. sense, Soph. O. C. 581 (in act., Or. Sib, 1. 294); and SednAdoopar Hipp. Art. 809 H. To make visible or manifest, to shew, exhibit, rov dvbp’ Axis 8. Soph. Ph. 616; rofoy dppa Syrdwors warpl; Id. O. C. 462; with inf. added, ds yévos drAnrov GvOpdro.o SyrAdoory” dpay Id. O. T. 792, etc.:—Pass. to be or become manifest, ld. 1. c., etc. 2. to make known, disclose, reveal, Aesch. Pers. 519, Soph. O. T. 77, etc. 3. to prove, Id, O. C. 146, Thue. I. 3. 4. to declare, Id. 4. 68: to explain, set forth, Id. 2. 62; also to indicate, signify, Id. 1.10, etc. Construct.: mostly, 5. 7wi 7« Antipho 114. 34: also, 5. 71 mpds or eis ra Soph. Tr. 369, Thuc. 1.90; 6. ret mept rivos Lys. 116. 42; wept 71 Isocr. 223 B:—often foll. by a relat. clause, 8. 571 Soph. El. 1106, etc.; 8. wept twos, ds .., Thuc. 1. 72, 73; 5. b7.. Hat. 2. 149, cf. 1. 57, etc.; add [sc. 7d épyov] dyAwoe ws. ., Dem. 390.19; but this is often ex] by a Partic., oxevn re yap ve kal 7d aT nvov bndodrov . . dvd’ ds ef Soph. O. C. 556; ws oe SnrAdow xaxév [évra] Id. O. C. 783, cf. Ant. 471; the partic., if it refers to the nom, of the Verb, is itself in nom., dykdow marpt pi) domdrayxvos yeyas I will shew my father that I am no weakling, Id. Aj. 472; dyAois. . 7 kadxalvove’ éros thou shewest that thou art pondering . ., it is clear that thou art.., Id. Ant. 20; Sdois ds onpavay 7 Ib. 242; dnrAdow ob mapayevdpevos I will shew that I was not present, Antipho 120. 8; Byddaee -yeyevnuévos Thuc. 1. 21:—in these last examples 5yAdw is= SpAos elui, and comes very near the intr, usage. II. intr. to be clear or papicd SnAot Gre ob« ‘Ophpov Ta Kimpia ered tore Hat. 2. 117; dndo? be Tatra .., bri ovrws exe Plat. Gorg. 483 D; dyrdoe 4 éx0pa mp@rov, drav .., Andoc. 30. 31. 2. impers. dyA0t =S5HAdV tort Hat. 9. 68, Plat. Crat. 434 C, Arist..Pol. 4. 11,15; dyAdoa Lys. 118. 2, Plat. Rep. 497 C; inprace Xen, Mem. I. 2, 32, cf. Cyr. 7.1, 30. 76, a means of making known, Plat. Legg. 792 A, etc. , €ws, ), @ pointing out, manifestation, explaining, shewing, Thuc, 1. 73, Plat. Min. 314 A, Polit, 287 A; 6. moueioba = dqroby, | SnAnrnpodns — Anurrpros. Thue. 4. 40. 2. a direction, order, } Tav apxévrov 5. Plat. Legg. 2B. “bakery, verb. Adj. one must set forth, Plat. Tim. 48 E, Philo 1. 15. Sydorikés, 4, dv, indicative, twos Hipp. Acut. 391, Arist. Physiogn. 4,4. Adv. -«@s, Aen. Tact. 14. Snrwrés, 7, dv, able to be shewn, Arist. de Xenoph. etc. 5, I. Sypiywyée, to be a Snpayoryds, to lead the people, kadws 5, Isocr. 18 A; but almost always in bad sense, as Ar. Ran. 419, etc.; cf. dyua- yoryds. 2. c. ace. pers., 5. dvdpas to curry favour with, win by popular arts, Xen. An, 7. 6, 4, cf. Arist. Pol. 5. 6, 6., 10, 31., II, 33.— Pass. fo be won over, conciliated by popular arts, Joseph. A. J. 16. 2, 5: —opp. to rupavvetw, Isocr. 215 C. 8. c. acc. rei, to introduce measures so as to win popularity, Dion. H. de vi Demosth. p. 1001; Bovads 5, Lxx (1 Esdr. 5. 73). II. in Causal sense, 5. teva fo make him popular, App. Civ. 5. 53. Sypitywyla, %, the control or leadership of the people, Ar, Eq. 191, Arist. Pol. 5.6, 6; cf. dnpayoryds. Sypaywyicds, 7, dv, fit for or like a demagogue, Ar. Eq. 217, Polyb. 15. 21, 1: generally, popular, of a dancer, Poll. 4. 96. Syp-dywyos, 4, a popular leader, of Pericles, Isocr. 184 D; 5. dyaGot Lys. 178. 33: but commonly, 2. in bad sense, a leader of the mob, an unprincipled, factious orator, demagogue, such as Cleon, Thuc, 4. 21, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 27, etc.; Adyot Snuayaryod, Epya Tupdvvov Andoc. 32. 37; €or yap 5.6 rod Shou KéAaé Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 12, cf. 4. 4, 28, etc.: cf. Snpnydpos. Snp-airyros, ov, demanded by the people, Synes. 174 B. Sypaxtbrov [xt], 74, Comic Dim. of 57 pos (cf. Syutdcov), Ar. Eq. 823. Sypdparos, ov, (dpdopuar) prayed for by the people: hence as a prop. n. of a king of Sparta, Hdt., etc.; v. Eust. 1093. 57. Snpapxéw, to be 5nuapyxos at Athens, Isae, 111. 4, Dem. 1306. 22; or tribune at Rome, App. Civ. 1. 2, etc. Snpapxta, 7, the office or rank of djpapxos, Dem, 1318. 18: the tri- bunate, Plut. Fab. 9, etc—The municipal body of a modern Gr. com- mune is so called. Sypapxixés, 7, dv, tribunician, Plut. Cato Mi. 40, Dio C. 54. 28; dn- papxexis efovotas, tribunicia potestate, as a title of the Emperor, C. I. 320, 1299, 1305, etc. Shp-apxos, 6, a governor of the people, and so, 1, at Athens, the president of a djpos, who managed its affairs, kept the registers, and had to enforce the collection of certain taxes, Ar. Nub. 37, Lysias ap. Harp., Dem. 1208. 5, Lex ib, 1069: in earlier times the corresponding officer was called vavxpapos, Arist. Fr. 359, Béckh P. E. 2. 281 sq. 2. at Rome, a tribune of the plebs, Dion. H. 6. 89, Plut. Cor. 7, ete. Sypepacréw, to be a dnuepacrhs, A. B. 1361: Subst. ta, %, Poll. 3. 65. P-epaoris, ov, 6, a friend of the people, Plat. Alc. 1.132 A. Shpevors, ews, }, confiscation of one's property, Lat. publicatio bonorum, xpnHarav Snpedoes Plat. Prot. 325 C, cf. Dem. 215. 24, Arist. Pol. 4. 14, 33 Snpevon tv iwapxdvrav (ypuodv Dem. 528.7; THs ovcias C. I. 2691 d. Sypevo, (570s) to declare or seize as public property, esp. of a citizen's goods, to confiscate them, Lat. publicare, Thuc. 5. 60, Andoc. 7. 43, al. ; TOAAG 8. bid Trav dixacrnpioy Arist. Pol. 6. 5, 3 :—also, 5. 7d Hdn. 2. 14 :—Pass., Ta Snyevdpeva Arist. Fre. 394, 401. II. generally, to make public, 5e5jpevrar xpdros the power is in the hands of the people, Eur, Cycl. oe in Pass., also, to be published, Plat. Phil. 14D, E. SypexOns, és, (ExOos) hated by the people, Call. in A. B. 1188. Sypnyopéw, to be a Snunyédpos, to speak in the bly, Lat. concionari, Ar. Eq. 956, etc. ; mpd rod modrrevecbar Kat 5. tué Dem. 245.9; 3. rept twos Lys. 144.5; 5. mpés rivas Plat. Legg. 817 C; év rois dxAots Arist. Fr. 72 :—also c. acc. cogn., 5. Adyov Dem. 345. 29; 5. Te mapa Tit Id. 657.3: Pass., rd deinunyopnpéva public speeches, 1d. 3.44. 2. II. esp. to make popular speeches, such as are filled with popular fallacies, to speak rhetorically or ad captandum, to use clap-trap, Plat. Gorg. 482 C, 503 B, Theaet.162D, Rep.350E; ray dnunyopiav dy dnu. Dem. 579.15; dnp. mpds xdpiy, mpds HBovny Id. 29. 17., 51. 9. Cf. Snudopat, pyropevo. Sypnyopta, Ue deliberative speaking (as we should say parliamentary), opp. to forensic (Siaviey), Arist. Rhet. 1, 1, 10, etc.: a speech in the public assembly, Aeschin. 36. 31. II. esp. popular oratory, ‘oe vier i agreg 162 D. PnyoptKos, 7, ov, of or for public speaking, qualified for it, Xen. Mem. I. 2, 48; 6. oopla Plat. Rep. 365 D, a. hpee hier Rhet, 3. 12. 5 :—H -Kn (sc. téxv7n), =dyuryopia, Plat. Soph. 222 C; so, 7a Snun- yoptxa Arist. Rhet.1.1,10. Sypnyopos, 6, (d-yopetw) a popular orator, mostly in a bad sense, Plat. Gorg. 520 B, Legg. 908 D, etc.:—riyat 3. a speaker's honours, Eur. Hec. 2543 orpopat dnunydpor rhetorical tricks, Aesch. Supp. 623. SypnAacta, }, banishment decreed by the people, exile, Aesch. Supp. 7: —s0 puy?) SnpHAaros, Ib. 614. MBNTHP, TEpos and pos, : an acc. Anpyrpay also occurs, as if from a nom. Anpyrpa, Epigr. ap. Paus. 1. 37, 2, and has often been introduced by copyists for Ajuntpa, v. Dobr. ad Ar. Pl. 64 :—Demeter, Lat. Ceres, goddess of agriculture and rural life, mother of Persephoné ; seldom mentioned in Il. (2. 696., 5. 500., 14. 326, cf, dx7m), once in Od. (5. 125), the chief authority for her legends being h. Hom. Cer.; worshipped specially at Eleusis (cf.’EAevoivia), Arist. Fr.594; and at Enna, Id. Mirab. 82. 2. appell., as a name for bread, Opp. H. 3. 463; y. sub derh, kaprés. (Commonly expl. as an old form of F9 yx p, but v. sub 64.) wen ov, Ga Mss. sometimes wrongly Anuarpetos, as in Plut. 2. ws - sch.) he or belonging to Demeter, Bios Aesch. Fr. 413 pT » com, Theophr. C. P. 2. 4, 5: Anyhrpios (sc. phy), in 4 Ont drov Bithynia, being the last part of August and the first of September :—also Anpyrpiakés, 4, dv, Geop. 1. 12, 36. II. pecul. fem. Anpytprés, dos, 1. name of a Tribe at Athens, created in honour of Demetrius Poliorcetes, Plut. Demetr. 10. 2.a city in Thessaly built by him, Polyb. 3.6, 4, etc.:—Anunrprets, oi, its citizens, Polyb. 5.99, 3. IIi. 70 Anphrpiov the temple of D., Strabo 435. IV. 7a Anphrpia her festival, Poll. 1. 37, etc.: but, later, in honour of Demetrius P., Plut. Demetr, 12. V. Anpytpidy, dvos, 6, new name of the month Movvvximyv, in honour of Demetrius P., Plut. Demetr. 12. Sypldrov [5], 74, Comic Dim. of dfpuos, used by way of coaxing, Ar. Eq. 726, 1199; cf. Snpaxidior. Snpifw, to affect popularity, cheat the people, Ar. Vesp. 699. Snypro-epyds, dy, post. for Snusovpyds, q. v. Snpro-mwAnOys, és, abounding for public use, erivn 5. cattle of which the people have large store, Aesch. Ag. 128. Sy ra, Ta, goods seized by public authority, and put up for sale: included among the heads of revenue by Ar. Vesp. 659; cf. Lys. ap. Poll. lo. 96, Béckh P. E, 1. 265., 2. 127 sqq. » Dor, Sap—, ov, and in Aesch. Cho. 55 a, ov: (89 u0s):—belonging to the people, olkos Od. 20. 264; alcvpyra: 5. judges elected by the people, 8.259; mpngis & 745° idtn, ob Shjpuos not public, 3.82; so, Snusov h tdov 4. 314, cf. 2.32: as Adv., Sjyua wives at the public cost, I. 17. 250: 70 Syywwov,=70 xowdy, the commonweal, Aesch. Supp. 370, 699 :— cf. Snydatos. IL. 6 Sjpmos (sc. SoDA0s), the public executioner, Ar. Eccl, 81, Plat. Rep. 439 E, Lysias 135.9, Aeschin. 44. fin., etc.; (Sdpuos paorixrop in Aesch, Eum. 159); also, 6 xowds dyyuos Plat. Legg. 872 B. 2. a public physician, mrwxds Rv wat 5. Phoenicid. Incert. 1. 13.—Cf. dnudcros 1, Syudxowwos. Snproupyctov, 74, a work-place, App. Pun. 93. Snproupyéw, to be a Snusoupyds, practise a trade, do work, Plat. Soph. 219 C, etc. ; rem for one, Id. Legg. 846E; % dvvapis 7) Snpoupynoaca the operative power, Arist. P. A. 2. 1, 22, cf. I. 5, 4 and 5, al. 2. c. acc. rei, to work at, fabricate, Plat. Polit. 388E; 5. rév vidy els dperhy to train him to.., Plut. Cato Ma. 20:—Pass. tobe wrought or fabricated, often in Plat.; 7a Sypcovpyotpeva artisans’ works, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 3, I. II. to be one of the magistrates called 5nyuovpyot, Plat. Rep. 342 E, C. I. 44156; Sapsopyéovros Mixxwyos Inscr. Boeot. ib. 1567. Snprovpynpa, 74, a work of art, piece of workmanship, od Tixns odd dvOpumow 5., of the universe, Zaleuc. ap. Stob. 279. 20; 5. xepav Dion H. de Comp. 1. i Ri }, a making, creating, (gow Plat. Tim. 41 C, etc.; 6. Tivos é« Tivos Id. Polit. 280 C. 2. workmanship, handicraft, Id. Rep. 401 A, 495 D. 3. a function, operation, Arist. H. A. 1. 3, ae 4. 5. rev rexvav a handling ot practicing them, Plat. Symp. 197 A. II. the office of a magistrate (v. Snpsovpydés 11) : generally, a magistracy, office, Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 5. Snproupyikés, 7, dv, of or for a Snmovpyds or handicraftsman, Plat. Phaedr. 248 E; % 8. réxvq Id. Prot. 322 D; 5. rexvqpara base mechanical works, Id. Legg. 846 D:—Adv.-«@s, workmanlike, Ar. Pax 429. IL. of or for the magistrates, 7) Enpoupynéy the official class, Arist. Pol. 4. 4, 16; 5. tiuai Ath. 660 C. provpytov, Dor. Saprdpyiov, 74, the council-room of the Sny.ovpryol at Cnidos, Newton’s Inscrr. Cnid. no. 52. Snproupyés, Ep. Snpiroepyds, 6: (*épyw):—one who works for the people, a skilled workman, handicraftsman (opp. to iiimrqs, Plat. Polit. 298 C, Prot. 327 C, Ion 531 C): among them in early times we have soothsayers, surgeons, heralds, along with carpenters, etc., Od. 17. 383 sq. 19. 135, cf. Plat. Symp. 188 D; éxddAmevoe fidos .. “Atdys, Snwuoupyds aypios Soph. Aj. 1035; esp. of medical practitioners (cf. Snyuos M1. 2), Hipp. Vet. Med. 8, Plat. Symp. 186 D; as opp. to scientific physicians, Arist. Pol. 3. 11, 11; so, of sculptors, Plat. Rep. 529 E: of confectioners, Hdt. 7. 31; esp. a maker of bride-cakes, Meineke Menand. p. 45; of 5. the artisan class at Athens, Arist. Frr. 346, 347:—generally, a framer, maker, vopav, wohetelas Id. Pol. 2. 12, I and 13; Adéyow Aeschin. 84. 36; 5. kax@y author of ill, Eur. Incert. 323; weBovs 5.) pyropixn Plat. Gorg. 453 A; 5. 7Hs dperhs Arist. Pol. 7.9,7: metaph., dpOpos Snysoepyés morn that calls man io work, h. Hom. Merc, 98. 2. the Maker of the world, Xen. Mem. I. 4, 9, cf. Plat. Tim. 40 C, Rep. 530 A:—hence, in the Neo-Platonic philo- sophy, as the name of God, dnp. (¢ évrwy) Fabricator, opp. to «riarys (é£ ob dvrwv) Creator, Philo 1. 632, etc. II. in some Pelopon- nesian states, the name of a magistrate, Thuc. 5. 47, Epist. Philipp. ap. Dem. 280. 3; cf. émdSnpsoupyds, and v, Miiller Dor. 3. 8. § 5; so, in the Achaean League, Polyb. 24.5, 16:—in Dor. forms, Saysoupyol or Saptopyoi, Newton Inscrr. Cnid. nos. 40, 50, 51.—Cf. Snysoupyew I, -la 1, -«xés 11, -1ov.—In Arist. Pol. 3. 2, 2, there is a play upon the double meaning. Syprworl, Adv. publicly, formed like peyadwori,. Draco 37. 5. 5np0-Bépos, ov, devourer of the people, 5. Bactheds Il. 1.231; used of Caligula, Philo 2. 561. ‘ Snpo-yépwv, ovros, 6, an elder of the people, an elder, chief, Ul. 11. 372: in pl. the nobles, chiefs, cf. Lat. senatores, A. Sax. ealdormen, Ii. 3. 149, Eur. Andr. 300 (in a chorus), cf. Arist. Eth. N.2.9,6; Syuoy. @eés,=Lat. deus minorum gentium, Anth, P. 9. 331- os, 6, a public teacher, preacher, Eccl. , és, vulgar, low, xBindia Hipp. Art. 837. 3 Snpdvev, Adv. at the public cost, opp. to oixdbev, dnpdber GAqura daxa Od. 19. 197 :—from among the people, Ap. Rh. 1. 7. II. dypdGer E’mvpidys an Eupyrian by deme, i. e. by birth-place, Anth. P. append. 328. — duos. 339 —and Sypobowla, %, a public feast, Arist. in Stob. Ecl, 1.82, Luc. Dem, Encom, 16, C. I. 2880, al. 5yp6-Opoos, oov, contr. -Opous, ovr, uttered by the people, ohun, apa 8. Aesch. Ag. 938, 1409, 1413: 5. dvapxia lawlessness of popular clamour, Ib. 883. ros, ov, cursed publicly, Eccl. po-Kn dis, 6, friend of the people, Lat. poplicola, Strabo 652, Dion. H. 5. 19, Plut. Poplic. ro. Sypd-kowos (sc. SofAos), 6, =Shysos I, the executioner, Soph. Fr. 869, Antipho 113. 33, Isocr. 361 D. II. as Adj., dnpdxowos, ov, vile, common, of coarse food, Lyc. ap. Ath. 420C. Snpo-KéAak, 5, a mob-flatierer, Dion. H. 6. 60, Luc. Dem. Enc. 31. Snpoxoréw, to curry mob-favour, Plut. C. Gracch. g. Sypokdampa, 74, an attempt to gain mob-favour, App. Civ. 1. 24. Snpoxomia, 7, love of mob-popularity, Dion. H. 6. 60, Epigr. Gr. p. xix. Snpoxomucds, 7, dv, of or suited to a Snpordaros, Bios 5. Plat. Phaedr. 248 E; 5. wepi twa M. Anton. 1.16. Ady. —Kas, Basil. émos, 6, a demagogue, Dion. H. 5. 65: cf. dogoxémos. Snpdxpavros, ov, ratified by the people, dpa 5. Aesch. Ag. 457. Sypoxpiréopatr, Pass. with fut. med. -*parjcopa: (Thue. 8. 48, Lys. 213. 14, Dem. 731. 15, but -xparnOjcopa: Thuc. 8. 75: pf. dednuoxpd- That Dio C. 52. 13). To have a democratical constitution, live in a democracy, Hat. 6. 43, Ar. Ach. 642, Thuc. 5. 29, etc.; méAis Smpo- xparoupévn Lex ap. Andoc. 12. 4, cf. Lys. 120.28: cf.dAvyapyéopa. 2. impers., Sypoxpareira: democratic principles prevail, Arist. Pol. 2. 6, 17. II. the Act. in Byz. writers, of the factions of the Circus (87u0), to cause a riot, Jo. Malal. 393, etc.; cf. dnporevopat. poKparia, 7, democracy, popular government, Hat. 6. 43, Antipho 146. 39; 5. karadvelons Andoc. 12. 42; on its nature, v. Thuc. 6. 89, Arist. Pol. 3. 7, 5.. 4. 4, 12., 6.1 sq. Snpoxpirife, to be on the democratical side, App. Pun. 70. Snpoxpirixds, 7, dv, of or for a democracy, vopor Plat..Rep. 338 E; dnuoxparinéy 71 Spav to do a popular act, Ar. Ran. 952; 70 dikaov 7d Sn. Arist. Pol. 3. 9, 1:—Adv. -x@s, Diod. 2. 32. II. of per- sons, favouring democracy, Lys. 171. 36, Plat. Rep. 571 A, Arist. Eth. N. 5.3, 7: but Syyorseds is more common of persons, Anpoxptrecor, of, the followers of Democritus of Abdera, Ael. V.H. 12. 25, Plut. 2. 1108 E. Snps-Aevoros, ov, publicly stoned, 5. pévos death by public stoning, Soph. Ant. 36. Snpodoyéw, =Sypudopar, Anth, P. 7. 440. Snpodoyrxés, 4, dv, of or for public speaking : 6 3. a mob-orator, Plat. Soph. 268 B :—so Snpoddyos, 6, Synes. 55 A :—hence AnpodoyoxAtav, 6, a nickname given by the Chorus to Bdelycleon in Ar. Vesp. 342. » Dor. Sap-—, Pass. to talk popularly, to please or amuse the people (cf. Snpoxonéw), -yAvet Tt Sapwodpeba we will try some pleasant popular lay, Pind. I. 8 (7). 18; cf. djuawpa:—so, Sqnuotpevov A€ yew to talk ad captandum, Plat. Theaet. 161 E. II. io be publicly known, Teep albqe D ], 6, a moby latan, Ar. Ran. 108 ‘os [tT], 6,a jackanapes, charlatan, Ar. . 1085. re sgl made a citizen, but not one by birth, Plut. Solon 24, Luc. Scyth, 8, cf. Dem. 1376. 15. Snpo-mpaxros, ov, done by the people, Aesch. Sapp. 942. hs, és, hurled by the people, dpat 8. Aesch. Ag. 1616. Stjpos, 6, a district, country, , Bowwrot pada iova Sipov zxovres Il. 5.710; Avxins év miovt Sjyw 16. 437, cf. Od. 13. 322, etc. ; "Wdans evi Syuw 1. 103; Snpw evi Tpwwv 13. 266; Aaol dvd Shpov 16. 95 j—in all these places it is purely local, as in the phrase djpos évelpow the land of dreams, 24. 12 :—also, the people of such a district, wéAnt re mavri Te Shpw to town and country, Il. 3. 50. Il. hence (as in early times the common people were scattered through the country, while the chiefs held ba ses es Ay $8. 108, batt wou avnp, opp. to BactAeds, Efoxos dvqp, etc., Il. 2. 188, 198, cf. 11. oie ert ks, Aesch. Theb. 199, 1006, cf. Snudérns; rarely of a single person, juos éév being a commoner, Il. 12: 213:—so also in historians, ‘he commons, commonalty, opp. to of evdaipoves, Hat. 1.196; to of maxées, Id. 5. 30, cf. 66; to of dvvarot Thuc. 5.4; of ..érava- ordvres Tos duvarois Kal évres Sjpos Id. 8.73; (so, as collect. with pl. Verb, h. Hom. Cer. 271); so in writers of Roman Hist., to express the Lat. Plebs, Dion. H. 6. 88, etc.; 70d woAAod 5. efs unus de plebe, Luc. Sat. 3; 7ov 5. dw Id. Gall. 22 :—of the soldiers, opp. to officers, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 14:—then, the people generally, Baxrpioy éppe wavwdrs 5. Aesch. Pers. 732. 2. generally, a horde, mass, ix@vov Antiph. Tip. I. 73 Tupavvew Philostr. 498; dpvéav, mOnxav Alciphro 3. 30. III. in democratical states, like wAjOos, the commons, the people, the free citizens, Hdt.1.170., 3.81; esp. at Athens, v. Ar, Eq. 40 sqq. 2. democracy, opp. to of éAtyo, Hdt, 3. 82; to of tupavvat, Andoc. 14. 22, etc.; Tadra xaTadve dijpoy, ov Kwpydia Philippid. Incert. 2; 5. 6 €oxaros Arist. Pol. 3. 4, 12. 8. like éx- kAnata, the Assembly of the Commons, % Bovds) kai 6 8. often in Inscrr., etc. IV. duo, of, (from signf. 1) townships, hundreds, =Dor. k@pa, Lat. pagi, being very ancient divisions of Attica, which were distributed by Cleisthenes among his ten pvAai: in the time of Hdt. they were Ioo in number (Io in each @vAq), afterwards increased to 174, Strabo 396 :—hence in Att. style, ée d)uov or simply Shpou added to a name, Saparns x djpou Aexedenber Hat. 9. 73 ; Snuou ‘AAatev’s Antiph. Tupp. 2; also, ray Sjpyow Tidevs Plat. Euthyphro 2 B; tar 5. Oopixios Dem, 1003. 15 (where, as in other places, it was altered by the copyists into Tov Sypov, y. Dind. praef. Dem. p. xii. ed, 1825); never TO Sqpy, Sypovowéw, to give a public feast, C. 1. (addend,) 2143 f, 2374¢. 60: 4 put vulg. in Schol. Ar, Ran. 86. V. name for a prostitute, #youv Z2 340 Kowh TO Shum, Archil. (173) ap. Eust. a faction in the Circus; v. sub dnyoxparéopar. (The Root is un- certain. Some Etym, refer it to /AAM, Sapatw, Lat. dom-inus, comparing A.S. team (a family), Germ. zunft, as if the orig. sense were a body of people united by social ties, But the orig. sense seems to be that of cultivated land, and this leads to the comparison of O. Norse tun, A. S. téin, Germ. zaun, an enclosure: v. Vigftisson in Icel. Dict. s. v. ttin.) Sypds, 6, (Root uncert.) fat, Body..alova Syud Il. 13. 168, cf. Hes. Th. 538, Ar. Vesp. 40, etc.; SimAaxe 5nu@ (of sacrificial meat) with fat above and fat below, Il. 23. 243 :—also of men, xopée xvas 73° olwvods 5nu@ 8. 380. AnpooVéveros, a, ov, Demosthenic, Longin. 34: so Anpoobevucds, 7, év, Dion, H. de Rhet. 11. 10, Luc. Dem. Encom. 15. Anpoobevife, to imitate Demosthenes, Plut. Cic. 24. Snpoota, Adv., v. Snudcros. Sypocievors, ews, 7,=Shpuevots, Eccl, Sypooretdw, to make public or common, to confiscate, like Snpevw, Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 10. 2. to make public, publish, Plut. 2. 34 C :—Pass., Ta Sednpoorevpéva common sayings, as yv@b ceavrév, Arist. Rhet. 2. 21, 13. 3. 5. riv Tod cuparos &pay to prostitute it, Dion. H. 1. 84. II. intr. ¢o be in the public service,esp. of physicians in receipt of a salary from the state, to practise as a state-physician (cf. Syjuos 11), Ar. Ach. 1030, Plat. Gorg. 514 D: generally, to be a public man, opp. to iikwrevw, Ib. 515 A, Apol. 32A; portion 5, to devote oneself in every thought ¢o the common good, Plut. 2, 823 C :—also of things, év Badavetw Snpoorevorrs Id. Phoc. 4. pootos, Dor. Sap-, a, ov, belonging to the people or state, Lat. publicus, opp. to tios, dypds 8., Lat. ager publicus, Hdt. 5.29; 5. xph- Hara Cratin, Iva. 2; wAodros Thuc. 1. 80; xwpa, opp. to lepd, idios, Arist. Pol. 2. 8, 3; 95. tpawe(a C. I. 123. 43; dy@ves, dixas Aeschin. 1. 11, etc.:—Syudotoy elva, yiyvecbat to be, become state-property, be confiscated, etc., Thuc. 2. 13, C. I. 355. 41, Plat., etc.; yyy 5. moveiy Lys. 150. 31. 2. common, Snpoowraros tpéros Arist. Top. 8. 12, 1, cf. Soph. Elench. 1, 4. II. as-Subst. : 1. 6 Snpoatos (sc. SopAos), a public slave or servant, as, the public crier, Hdt. 6. 121: a policeman, Ar. Lys. 436, cf. Bockh P. E, 4. 277: a public notary,= ypappareds, Dem, 381. 2, etc.: a public executioner, Diod.14.102. _b. a public victim, = pappaxos 1, Schol. Ar. Eq. 1136. Cf. dfycos ar. III. as neut., dypdoroy, 7d, the state, Lat. respublica, Hat. 1. 14, Andoc. 10, 17, Aeschin. 62. 6. 2. any public building, as a public hall, Hat. 6. 52, 57. 3. the treasury, elsewhere 7d xo.wdy, Andoc. 10. 16, Dem. 573.11, Dinarch. 105. 11. 4. the public prison, Thue. 5. 18. 5. 7a 5. state-property, Ar. Vesp. 554. Iv. as fem., 4 Sapocia (sc. oxnvy) the tent of the Spartan kings, Lat. praetorium, oi rept Sapociay the king's council, Xen. Hell. 4. 5, 8, Lac. $254, V. as Ady.: 1. dat. Snpootg, Ion. -in, at the public expense, Hdt. 1. 30, etc.; by public consent, Dem. 530. 15; on public service, Id. 1102.11: but, 3. xpivey to try in the public courts, Andoc. 14. 17; 8. reOvdvar to die by the hands of the executioner, Dem, 1126. 3 2, éx Snyootov by public authority, Xen. Rep. Lac. 3, 3. 3. 4. regul. Ady. -fws, VI. in Byz. writers, neut. pl. Sypdova, 3. rap@pey Ar. Av. 396. Strabo 562, and late Prose, poorde, to confiscate, like dnpedw, Snpooredw, Thuc. 3. 68:—in Pass., of the Ager Publicus.at Rome, ¢o be converted to public use, Dion. H. 8. 74. TI. Pass., also, to be commonly known, be published, Plat. Soph. 232 D, Plut. 2. 507 F. : Snpoor-avys, ov, 6, a farmer of ther , Lat. publi , Strabo 205: hence Snpocwvla, 4, a meng 5 of the revenues, Memno ap. Phot. Bibl. 232, 233; and Sypocimvy, 74, the office of revenue-leases, Plut. 2.820C. ocados, ov, (owlw) saving the people; but II. dnpdccoos, (cevw) driven away by the people ;—both in Hesych. ; ; EqporeAys, és, (téAos) at the public cost, public, national, Ovoia Hat. 6. 57, C.1. 3493. 93 €oprH Thuc. 2.15; dnp. fepd redciv Dem. 531. 25; Td lepa 7a 5., opp. to Ta idiwrind, C.1. 2656.9. Ady. Ads, Suid. Sqpotepos, a, ov, poét. for Snuorsds 1, Ap. Rh. 3. 606. ii.= Snpudowos, common, vulgar, Kimps Anth. P. 9. 415. Bypo-repmrijs, és, popular, attractive, Plat. Minos 321A. i> ek ney Pass. 4o be a Snpdrys, hpdpny 1d0e Snuoredorro Lys. 166. 33 sq., cf. Dem. 1314. 9. II. in Act. of the factions of the Circus, Byz.; cf. dypoxparéopar I. . POTS, ov, 6, one of the people, a commoner, plebeian, opp. to a man of rank, Tyrtae. 2.7, Hdt. 2.172., 5.11; so, 5. dvyp Soph. Aj. 1071; 6. eds Ar. Pax 921; 8. re at Eévos Eur. Supp. 895; Snndrac men of the people, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 58, Cyr. 2. 3, 7- 2. =idiwrys, yvword Acyew Snudryot to speak popularly, Hipp. Vet. Med. 8, cf. Acut. 384, Art. 830. II. one of the same people, a fellow-citizen, Pind. N. 7. 96, Eur. Alc. 1057. III..at Athens, one of the same deme (cf. guaérns), Soph. O. C. 78, Susario 1, C. 1. 82, 33, al. 5 pparepas wat 5, Cratin. Jun. Xerp. 1:—so fem. Sypris, udos,-Ar. Lys. 333, Theocr. 28. 22. Snporixés, 7, dv, of or for the people, in common use, common, 6. ypap- para in Egypt, opp. to the ipd, Hat. 2. 36.(v. sub fepoyAupurds) ; of opinions and the like, lar, Arist. Metaph. 1. 8, 6. 2. public, = Snpdoros, Dion. H. 7.63 :—1a —K4 public affairs, Alciphro 1. 4. II. of the populace, one of them, Lat. plebetus, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 6, Dem. 581. 24. 2. on the popular or democratic side, Lat. popularis, Ar, Nub. 205, Av. 1584; Thy ob 6. mapavoplay Thuc. 6. 28; A€yers.d Bef mpoo- iva 7O Sqyorin@ Dem, 286. 9; ob5ey 5. mparre to do nothing for the people, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 39: generally, popular, 6. rat prrdvO perros Id. Mem. 1. 2, 60; Tay peTplay Twa Kat 5, Dem. §73. fin.; Tay moA- dyuds — dnpitparos. Ady wat 8. Id. 581. 24; Syporiedy rodro SpG Antiph. MAoue. 1. 19 — often in Adv. —nas, affably, kindly, kad@s kat 5. Dem. 719. 8. 3} of governments, popular, democratic, Isocr. 185 E, Arist. Pol. 4. 3, 8 and 5, 3:—Adv., xphodae dAAnjAows 5. as members of a free state, Ib. 5. 8, 5, cf. 5. 9, 2. III. of or belonging to a deme, opp. to dnpo- ows, ap. Dem. 1074. 20. Sypodxos, ov, (€xw) protecting the people, as epith. of guardian deities, Soph. O. C, 458; Snpodxor yas, x8ovds ruling the people of the land, Ib. 1086, 1348. Sypo-payos [a], ov,=SyuoBdpos, rypavvos Theogn. 1181. Sypo-havis, és, (palyw) public, solemn, éoprt Philo 2. 169. Snypo-P0dpos, ov, ruining the people, Callistr. Stat. 14. Sypo-xapys, és, pleasing the people, popular, late; v. Lob. Phryn. 486. Sypo-Kapiorhs, o0, 6, .a mob-courtier, Eur. Hec. 134:—Ady. Snpoxd- piotixds, like a dnpoxapiorgs, Schol. Il. 2. 350. Sypde, v. sub Snpdoua, Sypadys, es, (cid0s) of the people, popular, povorrn Plat. Phaedo 61 A; owppooryn Id. Legg. 710 A; ortxtdra Plut. Pericl. 30 ; Adyos Ael. V. H. 3. 45 :—70 5. wAf00s the common herd, Hdn. 1. 4:—of a prostitute, com- mon, Anth. P. 7. 345. Adv. -d@s, Origen. Shpopa, 74, a popular pastime, xapitwv Saympara odes for public performance, Stesich. 34 (ap. Ar. Pac. 798); cf dnudopat. Syp-wpeArs, és, of public use, Adyor Plat. Phaedr. 227 E; Hyenmv Plut. Sull. 30: 70 5. the common good, Hdn, 2. 3. Adv. -Ads, C. I. 4415 b. Syv, Dor. S4v (or Sodv, Alcman 127, cf. Jo. Alex. 37. 31): Adv. :— long, for a long while, Il. 5. 412; obd€ yap .. djv Hv nor was he long- lived, 6. 131., 16. 736; Shy di pt pido. Gpev Theogn. 1243. 2. long ago, div otxecOa Od. 18. 313. II. of Place, far, much, ova diy xa¢ero avdpds Il. 16. 736.—Only Ep., for in Aesch. Pers. 584. @nv should prob. be restored. (The Dor. dody points to an orig. form dfay, and this indicates a connexion with 4/AIF, Lat. diu (cf. diu-rnus, bi-du-um with dies): hence come d5yvatds, 56d, 5nOdxs, SnOdvw, Snpds.) Syvatds, 7, dv, Dor. Savavds, a, dv :—/long-lived, Il. 5. 407; 8. KA€os Theocr. 16.54: long-continued, d5o:mopin C. 1.6255. 2. old, aged, xépat Aesch. Pr. 794: ancient, Opdvot Ib, 912, (and in Eum. 845 davacav should be restored, with L. Dind., for dapiay or dapaday), Call. Fr. 105. II. /ate, Lat. serus, Ap. Rh. 4. 645; Syvaidy, as Adyv., Ib. 3. §90:—Odwoa and Anvain, Over-speed and Loitering, Emped. 24. Snvapiov, 7d, a Roman coin, a denary, nearly, but not quite, =Gr. Spaxyuy, being worth about 84d., Plut. 2. goo C. Svea, 74, only in pl. counsels, plans, arts, whether good or bad, 5. decay Od, 23. 82; 5. #ma Il. 4. 361; dAopwia Od. 10. 289; dixaca wal ma Hes. Th. 236.—The sing. nom. 8fjvos, eos, 74, is cited by Hesych., while Suid., no doubt incorrectly, makes it Sjveov. (Cf. dqw.) SHE, gen. dSyxds, 5 or 4, a worm in wood, Schol. Hes. Op. 418. SyElOdpos, ov, =daxéOvyos, heart-eating, wasting, of love, Aesch. Ag. 744; comically, 5, 6¢4Apn Sopat. ap. Ath. 101 B. Sifts, ews, , (Saxvw) a bite, biting, Arist. H. A. 9: 39, 2: a stinging pain, Hipp. Vet. Med. 16 :—metaph. of biting jokes, Plut. Lycurg. 14. 5pdo, contr. for dnidw. Syrobev, indef. Adv., commonly written 84 moev, from any quarter, Lat. undecunque, Aesch, Cho. 632. Shore, indef. Adv., commonly written 54 mote, Dor. SqmoKa, at some time, once upon a time, Od. 6. 102, Aesch. Ag. 577, Eur. Supp. 1130. 2. «i 84 wore, Lat. si quando, Il. 1. 40; Ort bf wore that as all know .., Dem. 524. 20; dmd0ev 84 tore (v.1. 54 Todev) from some quarter or other, Id. 925. 5. 3. as interrog., ri 54 wore; what in the world ? what or why now? Lat. quidnam, Donat. Ter. Andr, 3-43 (cf. yap 111.1); xatror ri 34 wore; jam vero quid tandem? Dem. 50. 4; also, dors SHmore, 6 7 8. mpdgavra Hat. 6. 134; Saris 8. dy Plat. Phaedr. 273C s—tdaon 34 wore; how many do you suppose? Dem. 463.12. 4. also, 57 mot ovv,=Lat. cunque, Id. 1010.15. Cf. Lob. Phryn. 373. Sirov, indef. Adv., commonly written 84 tov, perhaps, it may be, @ 54 mov ddedpedr Exrave Il, 24. 736: in Att. mostly with a sense of doubtless, I suppose, I presume, of course, Lat. scilicet, nimirum, od Snmov tAntév Aesch. Pr. 1064; r&v Aatov 5. ris évopdtero Soph, O. T, 1042; cf, Ar.Pl. 491,582, Thuc,1.121,etc.: often in phrases, tere yap 5) ov, pBépvnode “yap 89 mov, Dem. 25. 15, etc.; oxédov topev dnavres bf Tov Id. 31. 73 ovdels 59 mov dyvoei Id. 356. 9, etc. II. as interrog. implying an affirm. answer, tiv alypddwroy ndrowba n mov; i.e. I presume you know, Soph. Tr. 417; dydpotoy &4 mov Plat.: ob 34 mou; is it not so? implying a negat. answer, as Ar. Ran, 526, Pl. 261. Siyrovbey, indef. Ady., much like djmou, and chiefly used before a vowel, Ar. Vesp. 296, Pl. 140, and often in Com,; also in Lysias 106, 23, Plat., etc.; ovdapas Shrovbev Dem. 832.15: cf. Ruhnk. Tim. Sypidopar, Dep. (Ofjpis) ,40 contend, mept vexpod Snprdacbat (v. 1. Snpl- cac8at) Il. 17. 7343 wor’ dup’ otpoor bv’ dvépe Snpdacboy wrangle about boundaries, ‘12. 421; absol., br’ dporor . . Snpidwvro Od. 8. 78; ot 8 adrol SnpiadoOoy Il. 21, 467: 5. twi to contend with one, Ap. Rh. 4-1729.—The Act. 8nprda, to contest a prize, occurs in post-Hom. Poets,’ aatd Pind. N. 11. 34; dypiavres Ap. Rh. 1. 752, cf. Opp..C.1. 230.— tom another form Syplopat [7] (used by Pind. O. 13. 63) Hom. has aor. 1 med. dypigayro, Od..8.76; 3 dual aor. 1 pass. SnpwOnrny (as if from Sypivopat), Il. 16, 756; and Theocr, a fut. dypicopar, 22. 70:—of this, an Act, occurs in Theogn, 995, Sypudvrow; in Theocr. 25. 82, ode dv Tol 71s edqpiey meph Tiufjs, cf. Lyc. 1306. [¥ in pres.; 7 in fut. and aor.] Biipis, %, a fight, battle, contest, il, 17. 158, etc. (but only in acc.) : . in Aesch, é i ; 1 : aa = . Supp. 412, Epigr. Gr. 3435 gen. dnpios Aesch. Ag. 942s ¢ Syplairos, ov, (pdw) =dpelparos, Anth, P, 722, _ 8ypé-Bros, Dor. Sap-, ov, long-lived, Aesch. Theb. 5214. Snpés, 4, we dnv) long, too lorig, Snpdv xpévov for a long, long time, Il. 14. 206, 305,.h. Hom. Cer, 282; more often dnpdv (sub. ypévor) as Adv. all too long, ll. 2. 298, etc.; so, émd dnpdv 9. 415; often with a negat., ob5€ oé pny Snpdy .. dAvgew 10. 371, cf. 2. 435, etc.:— the Trag. only use the Dor. form dapdés, woAdy Sapév re xpévoy Soph. Aj. 414, cf. Aesch. Supp. 359, Eur. I. T. 1339; Sapév alone, Aesch. Pr. 646, 940, Soph., etc. ; cf. A@nyn, xuvmyés, etc. Syodoxero, vy. sub 5éw Zo bind. Sie, post. aor. of 5éw to bind: also for é5éqae, aor. of 5éw to want. Sijra, Adv., lengthd. and more emphatic form of 89, first found in Hadt. 4. 69, but mostly used by Att. Poets (esp. Aesch.), and Plat. It is never placed at the beginning of a sentence or verse, except in Soph. Aj. 986. Commonly rendered manifestly, certainly, to be sure, of course : 1. in answers, mostly added to a word which echoes the question, as icagw dorms Apfe..; Answ. ioace d97a aye they know, Eur, Med. 13723 ywyvwone® bpets..; Answ. yeyvdonopey d97a oh yes we know her, Ar. Thesm. 606; id; Answ. id dra Aesch. Pers. 1071; Soph. O.-C. 536; dp’ ob« oldy re; Answ. od dfra Plat. Meno 73 B, cf. Rep. 333 A, 381 B, 563 E, Phaedo goD; (also with a word repeated in the same speech, &s p’ dmwAecas !—dawaAecas 547° how hast thou destroyed me!—ay, destroyed indeed, Soph. El. 1164; 5varqve.—dvbornve dqra Id. Ph. 760):—sometimes to correct the previous speaker, otxreupé 6 has... Answ. otxrepe d9ra .. éxydvous nay rather pity .., Eur. El. 673, cf. 676 :—also without repeating the word, airds 8 dvado? djra yes truly .., Aesch. Theb, 813, cf. Ar. Ran. 552: often with a negat., not so, od Sijra pad roy “AmddAw Id. Eq. 871; 0d 897° Eywrye faith not I, Id. Av. 1391, cf. Eur. Med, 1048; od dra Lacon. ap. Arist. Rhet. 3. 18, 6, cf. Pol. 5. 11, 3. 2. in questions, mostly to mark an inference or consequence, ti 5y7a; what then? Aesch. Pr. 627, Ar. Nub. 1087, etc., cf. Elmsl. Ar. Ach. 1024 (1011); m@s d97a; Aesch. Ag. 1211, Ar. Nub. 79; dpa 57a; Soph. O. T. 1014; ira Bra; Eur. Hec. 623; GAda. Sijra..; as the last of several questions, Soph. Aj. 466, Eur. Or. 781, etc.; mod d97’ 5 Tivos; Aesch. Cho. 916, cf. 1075, etc. :—some- times it expresses indignation, «al 57° érdApas; and so thou hast dared? Soph. Ant. 449; ravra dir’ dvacyerd; Id. Ph. 987; 4 Tadra 577’ dvexra; Id. O. T. 429; €yvwxas ody Sijr’..; Ar. Eq. 871 :—and some- times there is a touch of irony, 7@ o@ Stkalw dAr emorécOat pe del; your principle of justice forsooth, Soph. El. 1037, cf. O. T. 364:—so where a question is rather implied than put, esp. after GAAd, GAX’ % téxvay Bar’ dys Hv epipepos Ib. 1375, cf. Ar. Av. 375, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 283 C; rdv Evpurelay olc0a dhra napdévoy of course you know.., Soph. Tr. 1219. 8. in prayers or wishes, déAo1o dra now a murrain take thee! Ar. Nub, 6; AaBod, AaBod S77’ take, oh take hold, Eur. Or. 219, cf. 1231, etc.; oxdme 5774 only look, Plat. Gorg. 452 B:— with pA, it strengthens the deprecatory force, pi) 57a TodTd yy Soph. Ph. 763, cf. 1367; pi) dfra, pr) S97" Wore Ib. 830, cf. 1153. 4. sometimes in resuming after a parenthesis, €omépas ye . .,—éomépas 57jra, Plat. Gorg. 310 C, IT. rarely, like 54 1, to influence single words, Grace dra Ar. Eccl. 1143. wre, contr. for di) abre, restored for dedre by Seidl. in Anacr. 13. So, to find, meet with, always in pres. with fut. sense, dfers Il. 13. 260, Od. 7-495 Sjopev 6. 291; Syere Il. 9. 418, 685; also Sjovor Ap. Rh. 4. 591; Shwpev, dho.per Ib. 1336, 1460. (Prob. akin to *5aw, dazvar.) An®, dos, contr. ods, 4, = Anunrnp, Demeter, Lat. Ceres, first inh. Hom, Cer. 47, 211, 492; “EAevowvias Anods év «éAmos Soph. Ant. 1121, cf. Eur. Supp. 290; Anods xapmés Ar. Pl. 515; dat. Anot Epigr. in C. I. 1. Pp. 458:—Adj. Ang@os, a, ov, sacred to Demeter, Anth. P. append. 50. 5:— Anwivy, }, daughter of Demeter, Proserpine, Call. Fr. 48. Ai, Ata, v. sub Zeds, Sid, poét. Stat, Prep. governing Gen. and Acc.—Rad. sense, through ; never anastroph. for fear of confusion with Afa: v. however Herm. on Elmsl. Med. 1143. [Properly Sia: but Hom. uses f in arsi at the begin- ning of a line, Il. 3. 357., 4.1365, etc.: alsod, metri grat., often in Hom., for which Aesch. uses S:at, Ag. 448, 1133, 1453, 1485:—Oid as monosyll., Ar. Nub. 916, Av. 1752, Eccl. 1156, as also in the compd. dnpdBios— dia. 341 later, in quoting an authority, lorope? Sid rhs Sevrépas in the course of.., Ath. 438 B. 3. of being one among a number, xeiro Travve- adpevos bd phrwy Od. 9. 298: hence arises a notion of preéminence, éxpere kal 5:d mavrov (unless this is rather a notion of prominence,— standing oué above all others), Il. 20. 104; so in Hdt., eddoxipéovre did navrov 6, 63, cf. 1. 25, etc. 4. in Prose, sometimes, of ex- tension along a whole distance, mapnke did Tiode THs Oaddoons H akTh Hdt. 4. 39; Addos, 5 of 1d cravpwpa mepieBéBAnvro Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 22. 5. in Prose, also, of Intervals of Space, da tpiqKovra dépov at intervals of 30 layers, i.e. after every 30th layer, Hdt. 1.179; did. Séxa erddAgewy at every toth battlement, Thuc. 3. 21; cf. infr. Ir. 3 :—but also, simply, 5a wevre oradiav at an interval or distance of 5 stades, Hdt. 7. 30, cf. 198; dia rocovrov pGAdov i ded woAAGY Hyepav 6609 at so short a distance, etc., Thuc. 2.29; 8d moAAo# at much distance, 3-94; Sid mAciorov 2. 97; d eAdaoovos 3. 5¥; etc. If. of Time, 1. of duration from one end of a period to the other, throughout, during, 5d mavrds Tod xpévov Hdt. 9. 13; 8 bAov Tob aidvos Thuc. 1.70; 6’ ai@vos Soph. El. 1024; &° 7uépas GAns Ar. Pax 27; &:’ GAns THs vuerds Xen., etc.: then without an Adj., 5” nue pys all day long, Hdt. 1. 97; 51d vexrds, BC Erous, dd evcavrod, bid Biov, etc., Xen. An. 4. 6, 22, etc.:—also with Adjs. alone, did mayrdés con- tinually, Aesch. Cho. 862, etc.; 5¢ éAtyou for a short time, Thuc. 1.773 id paxpod Eur. Hec, 320 :—so, 6d. réAovs continually, Aesch. Pr. 273, etc.; 6 did péoou xpévos Hat. 8. 27. 2. of the interval which has passed between two points of Time, 8: xpévov moAAod or bid moAAOD xp- after a long time, Hat. 3. 27, Ar. Pl. 1045; 5 dAtyou xp., did Haxpod xp. Xen.; also without an Adj., a xp. after a time, Soph. Ph. 758, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 28, etc.; and with Adjs. alone, &:’ dAtyou Ib.; od id paxpod Thuc. 6. 15, 91; Sid woAAod Luc. Nigr. 2, etc.:—so with Numerals, 8 éréwy efxoor Hdt. 6. 118, etc.:—but, did rHs EBSdpns till the seventh day, Luc. Hist. Conscr, 21:—also distributively, xpovos 5d xpévou mpovBarve time after time, Soph. Ph, 285 ; dAAos 6:’ GAAov Eur. Andr, 1251. 3. of successive Intervals, dd tpirns Huépys every other day, Hdt. 2. 37; dia Tpirov éreos Ib. 4, etc, (cf. Lewis Astr. of Anc. p. 115); 8d mevrernpidos every quinguennium, Hat. 3. 975 5¢ érous méumrou, of the Olympic games, Ar. Pl. 583; (but, d:° évdexdrou éreos in the course of the 11th year, Hdt. 1, 62); 5: énavrod, & rous every year, Xen. Rep. Ath. 1. 16, etc. ; v. supr. 1.5. III. Causal, through, by, a. of the Agent, 3’ dyyéAwy or —ou émenpuredecOat by the mouth of .., Hdt. 1. 69., 6. 4, cf. 1.1133 8¢ Eppnvéws Aéyew Xen. An, 2. 3, 17, etc.; meadvr’ GAAorpias dial -yuvaieds by her doing (not on account of her, v. infr. B. 111. 1), Aesch. Ag. 449; 51d BaciA dow mepuevat to owe one’s birth to them, Xen. Cyr. 7. 2, 24:—often, 8: éavrov moeiv tt of oneself, not by another's agency, Ib. 1. 1, 4, etc.; but also, by oneself alone, unassisted, Dem. 194. 9., 605. 10, etc. b. of the Instrument or Means, dia xetp@v, = xepol, by hand (properly, by holding between the hands), Soph. O. C. 470; also, 5:d xeupov or xetpds Exe, AaBeiv in the hand, Id. Ant. 916, 1258; dd orépyow éxew Ib. 639; % dxovovea my) & day Id. O. T. 1387; 8d ordparos éxew Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 25; dad pvhuns €xew Luc. Catapl.g; ai dd odparos. A5ovat Xen, Mem. 1. 5, 6; etc. ¢. of the Manner or Way in which a thing is done, where dia with its Noun often serves as an Ady., dd Adyov ovyylyvecOat to hold intercourse by word, Plat. Polit. 272 B; d:d wéOns Id. Symp. 176E; malo dv dpyiis through passion, in passion, Soph. O. T. 807; 5id Taxous = Taxéws, Id. Aj.822; 5d omovdfs in haste, hastily, Eur. Bacch. 212; 8¢ aidois with reverence, respectfully, Ib. 441; de Wevdav enn lying words, Id. Hel. 309; ai dd xapreptas émpédccat long-continued exertions, Xen, Mem. 2.1, 20; also with Adjs., 8d Bpaxéwy, dd paxpav Tovs Adyous mroreiabat, for Bpaxéws, paxp&s, Isocr. 297 B, Plat. Gorg. 449 B; dmo- xpivecOat dia Bpaxvraroy Ib. D.: vy. infr. Iv. 2. in late Prose, of the Material out of which a thing is made, xaracxevdaey cidwdra 5: édépayros kat xpucod Diod. 17. 115, cf. Plut. Num. 8, Schaf. Dion. H. de Comp. p. 167. IV. in Hdt. and Att. we also find a peculiar d:ampémoy ap. Aesch. Pers. 1006,—in which places, to avoid the 1 synizesis, Dind. proposes to read (4, (ampémoy (like {amupos for Sudmupos in Aesch. Pr. 1084) ; cf. ¢4.} A. WirH GENIT. I. of Place or Space: 1. of motion in a line, from one end to the other, through, right through, in Hom. often of the effect of weapons, da pevy domidos HAGE. . Eyxos, Kal did Oxpnkos .., Il. 3.3573 Soupt Badrey Adpagoy xuvens bid 12.183; 50 Gpou ..éyxos HAGev 4. 481; so in Att., Turpwaoxew did TOD Owpaxos Xen. An. 1. 8, 26, etc. :—often also of persons, 7A@e Sid Sxac@v out through the Scaean gate, Il. 3. 263 :—this sense appears most clearly in Il. 14. 288 &¢ Hépos aidép’ ixaver quite through the lower air even to the ether, cf. 2. 458; so, did Tpwev wérero straight through them, 13. 7553 so, &’ Ouparos..A«iBav ddxpvov Soph. O, C. 1250, etc. This tadic. sense is strengthd. by compos. with mpé or é«, Sépu 8 dpOadpoto Siampd Kal da iviov AAGer Il. 14. 494, cf. 5. 280; (often also as Ady. without case, 4 5 Siampd. . Huger peAtn 20. 276, cf. 21, 164); so, Bite mpobpov 15. 124; Sie peyapoo Od, 10, 388, etc.:—in Att. also, dd redous from beginning to end, Aesch. Pr. 273; 5d mavrow édOeiv to go through all offices in succession, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 15, cf. Dem. 288. 10; ef, htanacay, 2. of motion through a space, but not in a line, throughout, all through, over, épxeoOat bid medion Il. 11.754; 50° Cpeode Io. 185, etc.; ddvv7n 51d xpods HAGE through all his frame, 11. 398; Tedxe Body 5 dareos Od. 10.118; 5’ dpidov Il. 6. 226, etc.: so in Att., GopiBov bid trav rdgcov idvros Xen. An, 1, 8, 16, cf. 2, 4, 26, etc. — ¢ 867. 5d. pds -yvmpns yiryvecGae Isocr. 69 A:—so also with Verbs of motion, 5d pdxns Epxecbar to engage in battle, Hdt. 6. 9 Thuc., etc.; did modépou, did didias lévat ivi Xen. An. 3. 2, 8; did dixns levar Tx to go to law with.., Soph. Ant. 742, cf. Thuc. 6.60; dd rixns lévac Soph. O. T. 773; 8 dpyis feev Id. O. C. 905; did Adyov éauT> depixéaOat to. hold converse with oneself, Eur. Med. 868; da Adywr, did “yAwaons tévat to come to open speech, Id. Tro. 916, Supp. 112; dad girnparov lévat to come to kissing, Id. Andr. 416; did ducarocdyns © iévat kat coxppoodyns Plat. Prot. 232 A, etc?; and in pass. sense, &° dex Gelas eXOeiv Ti to be hated by .., Aesch, Pr, 121 :—also with trans, Verbs, 8¢ aizias Exe or dyey Tuva to hold in fault, Thuc. 1.35, etc.; 5” épyis éxew Twa Id. 2. 37, etc.; did pudaxijs Exe re 1d. 7.8; 80 olxrou éxev red, 50 aloxdvns exert Eur. Hec. 851, I. T. 683 ; 8d 2évOous 7d Yijpas Sudryew Xen. Cyr. 4.6, 6; de oddévos moretabai rt Soph. O. C. 584. B. WItH acc. I. of Place, only in Poets, in same sense as bia. c. gen., 1. through, % 8% 5a mrixas HAGe.. xadxds Il. 7. 2473; Hite id Spupad .. cat VAny 11. 118, cf. 23. 122, etc.; dd rappov édavvew across it, 12. 62; BR dd dHpa, etc.; so in Att. 2. throughout, over, Gxeov dv dxpras Od. g. 400, cf. 14. 2; dpaBos Bt ia orépa yiyver’ d5dvrav Il. 10. 375; (but, wvdor, dy .. bd ordpa .. dyorro through his mouth, 14. 91; 80, d:@ ordpar’ docav teioa Hes. Th. 65; as also in Trag.); vopor 5 aidépa rexvwbévres Soph. O. T. II. of Time, also only in Poets, 5:0 yve«ra Il. 2. 57, etc. ; 342 bid yAvKdv tmvoy during sweet sleep, Mosch. 4. 91. III. Causal, 1. of Persons, through, by aid of, uxjoa bd. .’Adhvny Od. 8. 520, cf. 13.121; did Symds.. fAov 19. 155; dd ce by thy fault or service, Soph. O, C. 1129, Ar. Pl. 145, cf. 160, 170 :—so also in Prose, through, by reason of, on account of, bt hyas 'Thuc. 1. 41, cf. Xen. An. 7. 6, 333 ob & éué Andoc. 18. 40; ef p2) Be’ Huds Lys. 125.36; adrds &’ abrov for his own sake, Plat. Rep. 367 B, etc. ; so, ef pa) did twa if it had not been for .., but for him, MiAridbny eis 7d Bdpabpoy éuBadreiv &pnpicarro, nai «i pi) dd rov mpbravy événecev dy Id. Gorg. 516 E, cf. Dem. 364. 10 sq.; €f ur) Sid Thy exelvov pérdnow Thuc. 2. 18, cf. Ar. Vesp. 558 :—rarely, if ever, in correct authors to express the Agent, for in Pind. N. 7. 30, ‘OSvoaéos Adyos éyévero 5 “Opunpov may be ren- dered—his tale is known because, by reason of Homer, known as widely as Homer is known; etc. 2. of things, which express the Cause, Occasion, or Purpose, 5:’ éuiy iéryra because of my will, Il. 15. 41; 5: pir “AOnvns, “A@nvains dd Bovdds Hom.; &¢ dppadias for, through want of thought, Od. 19. 523; 8’ drag@aAlas, etc. ; so, often in Att., &’ dxOnddva for the sake of vexing, Thuc. 4. 40, cf. 102., 5. 533 80 évdevav by reason of poverty, Xen, An. 7. 8,6; da xadpa, did ye udva Ib. 1. 7,6; 5 dppootyny, &’ dyvo.ay, etc., Plat., etc.: often also with neut. Adjs., did ti; wherefore?—did rodro, dd TadTa on this account ; 3’ 8, Be & on which account ; 81d woAAG for many reasons; etc. ‘ OC. WiTHOUT OASE as Adv. throughout, Hom., who strengthens it by using dd mpd, v. supr. A. I. 1. D. IN comros., I. through, right through, of Space, as in SiaBaive,, diéxw, Summed. II. in different directions, as in d:a- népne, diapopéw :—hence of separation, asunder, as in Lat. dis- (a cog- nate word, v. sub do), as in Siaipéw, Sarda, deacKeddvvvpr :—hence of difference or disagreement, at variance, as in diapavéw, Srapépw; or simply mutual relation, one with another, as in diaywvifopa, duddw, diagiAoripéopat, v. Valck. Hat. 5. 18. 6. 15, Kiessl. Theocr. 5. 22, III. preéminence, as in dampémw, Siapépw. Iv. completion, to the end, utterly, as in depyaCopar, diapdxopat (cf. Lat. decertare), d.amparra, diapeipo :—also of Time, as in dafidw. Vv. simply to add strength, throughly, out and out, as in d:ayadnvicm, etc. ; v. (4. VI. of mixture, between, partly, esp. in Adj., as 5:aAev- kos, didxpuaos, 3idxAwpos, etc. Sia, 7, fem. of dios. Aia, 74, (fepd) = Adora, Inscr. Teia in C. I. 3044. 34. SraPaSile, fut. -rofpar, later -1@ Luc. Dem. Enc. 1:—to go across, Thuc. 6. 101. 2. to walk to and fro, App. Civ. 1. 25, Luc. 1. c.; so in pres, med,, Themist. 253 A. SiaBd0pa, 4, a ladder, Strabo 763: esp. a ship's ladder, Luc. Tox. 20. Si4BaOpov, 76, a kind of slipper, Lat. diabathrum, Alex. ‘Igoor. 1. 8, Alciphro 3. 46. SiaBatvo, fut. —BAcopar: I. intr. to make a stride, walk or stand with the legs apart, Lat. divaricari, eb d:aBds of a man plantin himself firmly for fighting, Il. 12. 458, cf. Tyrtae. 7. 21; &5é diaBas Ar. Vesp. 688; récovde Baya diaBeBnxdros Id. Eq. 77; opp. to oup- - BeBnwws, Xen. Eq. 1, 143 wédas pr) KaBeBGras Hipp. Art. 808 :— metaph., 8. éni twa to go with huge strides against .., Luc. Anach. 32; édvéuara d:aBeBnkdra great straddling words, Dion. H. de Comp. 22: v. ovpPaive init., and cf. ikabArns. II. c. acc. to step across, pass over, Tappov Il. 12. 50; mépov OQxeavoio Hes. Th. 292, ef. Aesch. Pers, 864; roy morapydv Hadt. 4. 75, etc., cf. 4. 88., 7. 353 also, &:d worapod Xen. An. 4. 8, 2. 2. absol. (@4Aaccar or Tora- yév being omitted), fo cross over, like Lat. trajicere,"HAw5 és ebpv- xopov daBhyevar Od. 4.635; és rhvd_ Tiv Hreipov Hat. 4.118; mAoiw Id. 1. 186; and often in Att., as Thuc. 1. 114: metaph., 7@ Ady@ 5:éBawve és EipuBidbea he went over to him, Hadt. 8. 62. , fut, -BaA@: pf. —BéBAnxa:—to throw over or across, to set over, carry over or across, véas Hdt. 5. 33, 34: hence, 2. seemingly intr., like Lat. trajicere, to pass over, cross, pass, en ee Hat. 9.114; mpés.., Eur. Supp. 931: also c. acc. spatii, 5. époy Aesch. Fr. 66; yepupas Eur. Rhes. 117; 7dv “Idvov Thuc. 6. 30; Td wéAayos eis rémov Demetr. Sued. I. 8. to put through, rhs Odpas Sdxrv- Aov Diog. L. 1. 118; TUAos SiaBeBAnuévos Hd ris fpvpod Arr. An. 2. a: II. in Ar. Pax 643, drra diaBddo Ts adr@, Tadr’ dy Hoio7 Hoey, it is used for mapaBaAo, whatever scraps they threw to him, with a play on signf. Iv. III. to set at variance, make a quarrel between, éue wai "Ayd0wva Plat. Symp. 222 C, D, cf. Rep. 498 C; so, 5, [reds] GAAHAots Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 8:—Pass. to be at variance with, ivi Plat. Phaedo 67 E. IV. like Lat. traducere, to attack a man’s character, slander, calumniate, accuse, differre aliquem sermonibus, c. acc. pers., #4 pe SaBadfs orpar@ Soph. Ph. 582; 5. rods “AOnvaious mpds tov ’Apraépvea Hat. 5: 96; rods MeAomovyyatous és robs “EAAnvas Thue. 3. 109; &Bador {rods “Iwvas ws dr’ éxcivous drodoiaro ai vijes Hat. 8.90; SaBaddv abrods ds oddity dAnbes ey v> Exovor Thue. 4. 45: also c. acc. rei, to reproach a man with .., 77 drvxig Antipho 119. 34; 8. Twa els or mpés Tt Luc. Demon, 50, Macr. 14; él rue Hdn. 2. 6:—8. eros to declare it not genuine, Plut. Thes. 34:—Pass., d:aBda- AeaOal ri to be filled with suspicion and hatred against another, Hdt. 5. 35. 6. 64, Thuc. 8. 81, 83, Andoc. 22. 40; pds wa Hat. 8. 22, Arist. Rhet. 3. 2, 43 els twa Thuc. 4..22. 2. c. acc. rei, fo mis- represent, Dem. 303. 8., 836. 6, etc.:—to speak or state slanderously, Hat, 8. 110; &s obros BéBaddey Dem. 232. 1, cf. 229, 26; Tod7d pov BaBarrc Id. 234. 21: generally, to give hostile information, without any insinuation of falsehood, Thuc. 3. 4. V. to deceive by false ts, impose upon, Twd Hat. 3. 1., 5. 50:—so in Med., Id. 9. 116, Ar. Av. 1648 (ub: ni v. Schol.) :—Pass., RuvBePAHjobat tis. . to be slanderously told } ota — draBorg. that .., Plat. Phaedr. 255 A. VI. in Med,, &iaBdAAcoPar dorpa- yadous mpds twa to throw against him, Plut. 2. 148 D, 272 F. SaBamriLopat, Dep. to dive for amatch, mpés Twa Polyaen. 4.2, 6. 2. metaph. to contend in foul language with, rivt Dem. 782.26; cf. tava. vitw, to test thoroughly, Plat. Legg. 736C, Arr. Epict. 3. 26, 13. SiaPaoelw, = 5iaByoelw, Dio C. 40. 32. HdPaors, ews, }, (B:aBalvw) a crossing over, passage, 5. movetobar Hat. 1. 186, etc. : the act of crossing, ai 8. rv dxeTGy BiaomHot Tas padayyas Arist. Pol. 5. 3, 16. 2. a means or place of crossing, Hdt. 1. 205: 8. rorapod a ford, Thuc. 7. 74, Xen, An. I. 5, 12, etc.: a bridge, Ib. 2. 3, 10: the passage along a ship’s deck, Hipp. Ep. 1276, Plut. Cim. 12. IL. 4 ray dpav 5. the transition of the seasons, Ael. N. A. 9. 46. III. in Gramm. the transitive power of Verbs, Apoll. de Pron. 316 B, etc. IV. in Prosody, of the pauses in pronuncia- tion caused by long syllables and the like, Dion. H. de Comp. 20. BiaBdoko, =diaBaiver, to strut about, baBdone Ar. Av. 486. SiaPaordfe, fut. dow, 4o carry over, Aquil. V. T., etc. II. to weigh in the hand, estimate, Plut. Demosth. 25, Luc, Ep. Sat. 33. IIT. to bear with to the end, lo. Chrys. Hom. Iv (1 Cor.) 32 D. diaPairéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. that can be crossed or passed through, morapos Xen. An. 2. 4, 6; vamos Ib. 6. 5, 12. SiaBaripra (sc. iept), 74, offerings before crossing the border, 7a 5. mpovxmpe, Ta 5, &yevero they were favourable, Lat. addicebant, Thuc. 5.54, 55, cf. Xen. Hell. 4. 7, 2; also for crossing a river, Plut. Luc. 24. II.=70 maoxa, Philo 2. 292. SiaBdrys, ov, 5, one who ferries over or crosses, Ar. Fr. 726. SiaBaricos, 7, dv, able to pass through, penetrating, Greg. Naz. 2. of Verbs, transitive, Apoll. de Construct. p. 43, etc. II. slipping through the fingers, Schol. Ar. Nub. 448. arés, H, ov, verb. Adj. of diaBaive, to be crossed or passed, fordable, Hdt.1. 75, Thuc., etc.; vijcoy 5. é¢ irelpou easily got at from the main land, Hdt. 4. 195 :—Aeol. £4Baros, Sappho 150. SraBeBardopar, Dep. to maintain strongly, Dem. 220.4; of mpecBurepor 3. ovdey Arist. Rhet. 2.13, 1; 5. yeyovéva: rt Diod. 13.90, cf. Dion. H. 2. 39:—to be positive, wept Tivos Polyb. 12.12, 6, Sext. Emp, P. 1. 191. SiaPeBalwors, ews, 7), strong affirmation, Gloss. SiaPeBarwrikds, 4, dv, with strong affirmation, 5. avvbecpos E.M. 415. Adv. -«@s, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 233. SidBypa, 74, a step across, a step, LXxX (Ps. 84. 13), Hesych. SiaByoelw, Desiderat. of daBaivw, Agath. 39 D; cf. daBacelw. SiaBarys, ov, 6, (5:aBalyw) the compass, so called from its outstretched legs, Lat. circinus, Ar. Nub. 178, Av. 1003 :—in Plat. Phileb. 56 B and Plut. 2. 802 E, it is commonly taken to mean a carpenter's level, Lat. libella, but without necessity. II. the siphon, Lat. diabetes, Columella 3. 10, Hero Spirit. p. 156. III. as Medic. term, the disease diabetes, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 2. SraPrdlopar, strengthd. for Brd{owar, Eur. I. T. 1365; of plants, to force their way through the soil, Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 7. SraPtPaf, fut. dow, Causal of diaBaivw, to carry over or across, to transport, lead over, 5. Tov orpardv Kara yepipas Hdt. 1. 753; és iv vijcov rods émdiras Thuc. 4.8: also c. acc. loci, torapdr 8, Tid to take one across a river, Plat. Legg. goo C, Plut. Pelop. 24 :—metaph. 5. ent 7a bpoedy 7d xphoipoy Plut. 2. 34 B. 2. later, to pass time, v. Schiif. Schol, Ar. Pl. 847.—AraBiBdoxw is f. 1. in Hipp. Fract. 763. Sia, ps, 6, a passage, transition, Apoll. de Pron. 404 B. SiaPiBacrinés, 4, dv, of Verbs, transitive, Apoll. de Constr. 294. SiaPiBpdokw, fut. -Bpdooua: pf. pass. -BéBpwyar:—to eat up, con- sume, Hipp. 469. 14, Plat. Tim, 83 A:—Pass., 5:aBéBpma0ar Luc. Indoct. 1. Bu wo, fut. doouar: aor. 2 -eBiwr, inf, —Biavar:—to Live through, pass, xpévoy Plat. Legg. 730C; Bioy Isocr. 203 B:—absol. to spend one's whole life, 8. d:xaiws, dowrara Plat.Gorg. 526 A, Meno 81 B; c. pattic., HeAerGy diaBeBioxévar Xen. Apol. 3, cf. Mem. 4.8, 4; and so verb, Adj., StaBuwtéov waifovra Plat. Legg. 803 E. StaPAaordv, fut. -BAacriow, to shoot out, Theophr. C, P. 4. 8, 1. SiaBAdoryots, ews, 7}, a shooting out, Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 10. SiaPdérrw, to look straight before one, Plat. Phaedo 86 D, Arist. Insomn. 3, 13; 6. els twa, mpds Tia Plut. Alex. 14., 2.548 B. 2. to see clearly, Dionys, @egp. 1. 13. SaBAyréov, verb. Adj. one must slander, Clem. Al. 445. SiaPAnrixds, 7, dv,=daBodrixds, Poll. 5.118, 127. SiaBAnrwp, opos, 6, a slanderer, Manetho 4. 236. SiaBoda, fut. Hoopat, to shout out, proclaim, publish, Aesch. Pers. 638 (where d:aBodow is subj. aor., not fut.):—Pass. to be in every one’s mouth, to be the common talk, Ep. Plat. 312 B; diaBeBonpévos émi Tu Luc. Necyom. 6. II. to cry out, 5. dr .., ds. ., Thuc. 8. 53, 78. TIL. Med. to contend in shouting, Dem. 806. 2. SiaBdnors, ews, 4, a crying out or aloud, Plut. 2. 455 B. StaBdyros, ov, noised abroad, famous, Plut. Lycurg. 5. Cf. mepeBdnros. SraBoA%, 7), (S:aBdddrw) false accusation, slander, Lat. calumnia, Epich. 122 Ahr,; emt draBodH eimeiv Hat. 3. 66, 73; 8. Adyou Thuc. 8. 91 ; diaBodds évbéxeaOat, mpociecOat to give ear to them, Hdt. 3. 80., 6. 1233 6. éxew to be liable to s/ander, Menand. Incert. 250; 6. exe ws.., to have it slanderously said that.., Isocr. 184 C; év diaBorh nabeornnévat, yevécOat Lys, 171. 31, etc.; Sadvoev Thy uaBoAnY the charge (which he alleged to be) false, Thuc. 1,131; &aBodais rais éuais the accusations which I bring, Eur. Andr, 1005 (v. «Aémrw II) ; but, 47) 3. the slanders against me, Plat. Apol. 19 B; so, 8. els éué Andoc. 5, 11; xard twos Plut. Them, 4; 8. moveiv, Ave to create, do anything with prejudice against an antagonist, Arist. Rhet. 2. 14, 7, cf. 15, I sq. IL. a quarrel, enmity, (cf, d:aB4AAw 112), rel Tas diaBorla — diaypurvytis. ldtas 5, Thuc. 6. 65; %) mpds ria 5., Plut.2. 479 B; % mpds 71 8. dislike of it, Id. 110 A, etc. IIL. fraud, Schol. Ar. Pl. 373. SaPoAla, Ion. -ty, 7, post. for kaBorH, Theogn, 324; in pl., Pind. P. 2.140. In both places the 2nd syll. is long, and prob. Bgk. is right in restoring the poét. form d:a:BoAla; cf. kararBards, perarBodla. SiaPodukds, 4, dv, slanderous, devilish, Eccl. Sia Bodos, ov, slanderous, backbiting,, ypats Menand. Incert. 485; dia- Bodwraros Ar. Eq. 45; SiaBodrdv tt, aliquid invidiae, Andoc. 22. 38. 2. as Subst., a slanderer, Pind. Fr. 270, Arist. Top. 4. 5,9 and 11: esp. the Slanderer, the Devil, N.T. 3. Adv. -Aws, fester invidiously, Thuc. 6. 15. taBopBéw, to buzz through, Dionys. Areop. SiaBopPopvlw, strengthd. for BopBopt(w, Hipp. Aph. 1252, etc. Sra. bpscos: ov, stretching northwards, Strabo 86. StaBopos, ov, (BiBpwoxw) eating through, devouring, vécos Soph. Tr. 1084, Ph. 7 (v. karagra w I. 2). II. proparox. d:aPopos, ov, pass. eaten through, eaten up, consumed, 1d. Tr. 676. SiaPoorptixSop.at, Pass.to be all curled, iaBeBoorpyxwpévos Archil.152. SiaBovKod tw, to cheat with false hopes, Luc. D. Mort. 5. 2:—Med., d:a- Bovorciabat rit to beguile oneself with .., Themist. 255 D. SiaBovAevopar, Dep. to deliberate or discuss pro and con, discuss thoroughly, Andoc. 22.12, Thuc. 2. 5., 7.50. SiaPovAta, 7, =sq., Lxx (Ps. 5. 10, Hos. 11. 7). SiaBovArov, 74, counsel, deliberation, Polyb. 3. 20, I, ete. II. a resolution, decree, Id. 4.24, 2, etc. III. a council, Id. 29. 4, 2. SiaBpaBeww, to assign as an umpire, Aesop. 35. om sc és, wet through, soaked, Luc. Trag. 304. SiaBpéxw, to wet through, soak, raprvpara Aesch. Fr. 318; absol., Arist. Probl. 1. 55 :—Pass., dAgira (wp@ diaBpayévra Ael.N. A, 1. 21; d:aBeBpeypévos, of a person, soaked in liquor, Heliod. 5. 31. SiaBptpdopar, Dep., strengthd. for Bprpdopar, Themist, 261 C. SiaBpoxtopés, 6, catching in a noBse, entangling, Galen. SiaBpoyos, ov, (SiaBpéxw) very wet, moist, ¢upa Eur, El. 503; dyxos Hdacr 4, Id. Bacch. 1051; yf Hipp. Aér. 286, etc. 2. wet through, soaked, sodden, vais 5. ships with their timbers soaked and rotten, Thuc. 7.12; yj Arist. Soph. Elench. 5, 8; odp¢ Id. Probl. 2. 34: metaph., €pwrt, wen 8. Luc. Tox. 15, Bis Acc. 17. SidBpwpa, 7d, (aBiBphonw) that which is ‘eaten through; wormeaten wood, parchment, etc., Strabo 609. SdBpwors, ews, 7, ulceration, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. y. SiaBpwrikds, 4, dv, able to eat through, corrosive, Jo. Chrys. StaBvw, fo thrust through so as to stop up, Hipp. 260. 48 :—Med. (from —Buvéw), diaBvveovrar diorods 5d THs apiorepis they pass arrows through their left hand, Hdt. 4. 71 :—Pass., mdddAcov bd THs Tpdmos StaBuverac (perhaps —€erar) is passed through the keel, Id. 2. 96. SiaysAnvilw, to make quite calm, 7a mpéowna Ar. Eq. 646. St-iydvanréw, fo be full of indignation, Dem. 833.17, Plut. 2.74 A, etc. Siaydvanryots, ews, ), great indignation, Plut. Mar. 16. SiayyeAla, %, a notification, Joseph. B. J. 3.8, 5. SiayyéAAw, fut. AD: aor. depyyerda (never Sipyyedov in good Greek, v. dyyéAAw) :—to give notice by a messenger, to send as a message, Xen. An. I. 6, 2, etc.; duaryy. eis.. Id. Mem. 3. 11, 33 ™pds Twa Philipp. ap. Dem. 163. 8:—generally, to noise abroad, proclaim, 6. 6rt.. Pind. N. 5. 6; 7: Eur. Hel. 436, Plat. Prot. 317 A; also c. inf. to order to do, Eur. I. A. 353 :—Med. ¢o pass the word of command from man to man, inform one another, Xen. An. 3. 4, 36. SidyyeApa, 76, a message, notice, LXX (3 Regg. 4. 27). Su-dyyedos, 6, a messenger, negotiator, Lat, internuncius, esp. a secret informant, go-between, spy, Thuc. 7. 73. 2. later, a special officer in the Greek army, an adjutant, Plut. 2. 678 D, cf. Wess. Hdt. 6. 4; for the Lat. tesserarius, Plut. Galb. 24. StayeAdw, fut. doopar [H], to laugh at, mock, twa Eur. Bacch. 272, 322, Xen. An. 2. 6, 26, Plut. 2. 1118 C. 2. intr. to smile, look cheering, of the air, Theophr. H. P. 8. 2, 4; of water, Plut. 2. 950 A. Stayevopar, Med. to taste, Plut. 2. 469 B:—Srdyevors, ews, 7}, a tasting, Geop. 7. 7- Suenytyypate, to tune up, Athenio SapoOp. 1. 31, ex emend. Dobr. Stayl-yvopat, Ion. and in late Gr. —yivopar: fut. yevnoopar: Dep.:—to go through, pass, réaade ern Plat. Apol. 32 E; Thy vixra Xen, An, I. 10, 19: absol. to go through life, live, Ar. Av. 45, Thuc. 5. 16: to sur- vive, Hipp. Epid. 1. 939; €dv Gpa dayryvmpeda if we live long enoigh, Aeschin. 4. 22; 5. dad ris Téxvns to subsist by it, Arist. Pol. 2. 8, 10; yevvalws 8. év rim to behave nobly in.., Plut. 2. 119 D:—often with part., daylyvecbar dpxwy to continue in the government, Xen, Cyr. 1.1, 1; ovdty GAAo rody dayeyévnrat 7} Biackonm@y he was never anything but a theorist, Id. Mem. 4. 8, 4; 5. coAaxedav Dem. 680. 19; cf. dia- TerEw. II. to be between, intervene, elapse, xpévou peragy dia- yyvouévou Lys. 93.6; so, oldaper .. fbn rn burd ry Kpice éxeivn dia- yeyovéra ap. Dem. 541. Io. Stayryvaokw, Ion. and in late Gr. —ytvaoKe: fut. -yrdoopat | :—to know one from the other, distinguish, discern, Lat. dignoscere, ed dia- yeyvdsonovres Il. 23. 240; evOa hayvavar xahends iv dvbpa Exacrov 7. 424; 8. el dpotot eiot to distinguish whether they are equals or no, Hadt. 1. 134; 008’ dy... &ayvoln, Avos 7 KavvaBis eon Id. 4.745 9. mbrepov .., #.. Arist. Meteor. 4. 10, 12; 3. Tov kadédy Te Kal Toy ai- axpév Plat. Symp. 186 C; 8. 70 ép0dv xat wy Aeschin. 82. 26; 6. riy OhAccay nal Tov dppeva Arist. H. A. 9. 7,73 5. Tods vewrépous nai rods mpecBurépous te Trav dddvrov Ib. 2. 2, 2:—B, turds ovras.., i.e. 5. bydy otrwés elow.., Ar. Eq. 517 :—Pass., Tov xadndv pi) Beayeyvar- aiecOat TH xpog mpds Tov xpuaév Arist, Mirab. 49. 2. to discern e 343 exactly, tt Soph, El. 1186; 8. 67t .. , Isocr. 36 C. IL. to determine, vote to do so and so, c. inf., Hdt. 6, 138 :—Pass., impers., 5:é-yvworo avrois Tas amovdds AeAVoOat Thuc. 1. 118. 2. as Athen, law-term, to determine or decide a suit, Lat. dijudicare, dixnv Aesch. Eum. 709 ; 7a, duduaBynrqjoipa Antipho 120. 41, cf. 141. 29; 5. didr.., Arist. Pol. 2.7, 6:—to give judgment, mepi twos Thuc. 4. 46, Lys. 110. 18, Dem. 838. 24:—Pass., xplais dieyvaopévn Thuc. 3.53; éupevérwoar év Tots SiaryvmoGetor Lex ap. Dem. 545. 9. TIT. =davayyveonw, to read through, Polyb. 3. 32, 2. SiaykvAifopor, Dep. (dyxdAn) to hold a javelin by the thong,—only in part. pf. pass. diyyxuAropévos, ready to throw or shoot, Xen. An. 4-35 28 :—so (from -aykvAdopar), SiyyxvdAwpévos Ib. 5. 2,12; and (from —topar), réfov, Kepavvdy duyyxvAnpévos ready to shoot with .. ,Hdn.1.14, Luc. Jup. Conf. 15. St-aykavifopar, Dep. to lean on one’s elbow, Damasc. St-aykowcpés, 6, a leaning on the elbow, Plut. 2.644 A. SiayAatoow, to shine brightly, draprés Ap. Rh. 1.1281. SiayAdde, to scoop out, ebvds ev Payd0oor SiaryAdpao’ Od. 4. 438: nowhere else found, whence prob, the v. l. dkayvayao’. SidyAuppa, 76, scrapings, Schol. Ar. Ran. 835, Hesych. SidyAumros, ov, carved in intaglio, engraved, Anth. P. 6. 227. SiayAvho, fo carve through, carve in intaglio, engrave, opp. to dva- yAtvgw, Androsth. ap. Ath. 93 C, Diod. 1. 66. Stayvapn, 7,=Sidyvwors, a decree, resolution, vote, Tliuc. 1.87; 6. movetobat Id. 3. 67; wept twos Id, 3. 42. Siayvapov, ov, distinguishing, and so rewarding, dctav Antipho 122. 39- II. as Byzant. law-term, an arbitrator. vayvwptlo, to make known, speak publicly, wept rivos Ev. Luc. 2. 17. Stdyvwors, ews, 7, a distinguishing, a means of distinguishing or dis- cerning, Eur. Hipp. 926; xaddv i pi) rowovray tis 5.; Dem. 269. 27; 5. puvas nat ovyns Arist. Cael. 2. 9, 4: esp. of medical diagnosis, Hipp. V.C, gor, Galen. 2. power of discernment, Eur. Hipp. 696. II. a resolving, deciding’, 5, roveto@at, to decide, determine a matter, Antipho 143. 30, Thuc. 1.50; taxtorny éxet 5. Isocr.9 C; 5. rijs dgtas moveioOae to determine the value, Plat. Legg. 865 C; 6. wept rivos Dem. 227. 25. Biayvworéov, verb. Adj. one must distinguish, Luc, Hermot. 16. bia s, ov, 6, one who examines and decides, cited from Isocr. Sta Ks, 7, Ov, able to distinguish, Luc, Salt. 74, etc.: 4) -Kn, the art of distinguishing [diseases], name given by late writers to Galen’s treatise wep) emovOérav Térav. Stayvwords, 7, dv, to be distinguished, Galen. Biayoyytlw, fut. cw, to mutter or murmur among themselves, Ev. Luc, 15. 2., 19. 7; cf. Heliod. 7. 27. Staydpevors, ews, 7), a declaration, Porphyr. Bi-yopetw (cf. dyopetw, Sefrov) to speak plainly, declare, Hat. 7. 38, and often in later Prose: to establish, Dion. H. 1.78: to give orders, mivi c. inf., Plut. C. Gracch. 16.—Pass. to be declared or established, Plat. Legg. 757 A. II. to relate in detail, Dion. H. 11. 19. III. to speak of, cards 5. rd Luc. Pisc. 26. ypappa, 76, (Siaypapw) that which is marked out by lines, a Jigure, form, plan, Plat. Rep. 529 E. 2. a geometrical Figure, diagram, Xen. Mem. 4.7, 3, Plat. Phaedo 73B, etc.: a problem, (nrety wat évadtvew, Horep 5. Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3, 11, cf. Soph, Elench. 16, 5. - 3. in Music, the gamut or a scale, Phanias ap. Ath, 352 D; ap évds 8, on one note, Plut. 2. 55 D. II. a written list, register, Lat. scrip- tura, Dem, 183.,20., I150. 4. IIL. a decree, edict, C. 1. 2556. 64., 2671. 45, Plut. Marcell. 24. : ; Siaypappile, to divide by lines: hence to play at draughts, Philem. Incert. 115; and Staypappropés, 6, a game like draughts, Poll. 9. 99, y. Er, Clay. Cic. s. v. seriptorum duodecim ludus, Sidypamros, ov, (Siaypapw IV) crossed out, duey Hesych. Biaypideds, dws, 5, one who makes a did-ypappa: at Athens, one who drew up financial tables, Harp. s. v. d:d-ypappa 11. 2. a describer, 70ayv 5. Marcell. Vit. Thuc. p. xvi Bekk. Siaypagy, 7, a marking off by lines, Plat. Rep. 501 A: a geometrical Jigure, diagram, Plut. Philop. 4; } 5. rev pidAdwy their Sigure, outline, Theophr. H. P. 3. 13; 1, cf. 1. 13, 2. II. a description, sketch, Arist. Top. I. 14, 3, Eth. N. 2. 7, 1: @ register, Lat. scriptura, dmav- Trav Tay yeve Diphil. Zoryp. 2.7, cf. C. I. 3060. IIL. a decree, ordinance, Dion. H. 3. 36. IV. a crossing out, cancelling, esp. of a debt, Polyb. 32. 13, 73 V- Saypadw Iv. Siaypdde, fut. yw, fo mark out by lines, draw out, Lat. delineare, Tiv modu Plat.. Rep. 500 E: also 8. Adyq, to describe, Id. Legg. 778 A: so absol., Plut. Nic. 23, etc.: deayp. ypanpny to draw a line between, Plat. Com, Supp. 2. II. to draw out, give a list of, rds mpordces Arist. An. Pr. 1. 30, 1, Rhet. 2. 1, 9 III, to write in a list, enroll, levy, orpatim@ras, Lat. conscribere milites, Polyb. 6.12, 6. Iv. to draw a line through, cross out, and so to strike off the list, Lat. cir- cumscribere (cf. d:aypapy Iv), Ar. Lys. 676, Plat. Rep. 387 B, and so prob. in Eur. El. 1073 :—®. dixny to strike a cause out of the list, cancel, quash it, Ar. Nub. 774, cf. Lysias 148. 34, Dem. 1324. 12: in Med., duaypdpacba Birny to give up a cause, withdraw it, Lys. ap. Harp., Dem. 501. 20, cf. Ruhnk. Tim., Hemst. Thom, M. p. 211, Bremi Lys. rept Sny. Gbut. 5. V. to pay by note of hand, pay a debt, Lat. per- scribere, Dion, H. 5. 28, C. 1. 4864-4890. Biaypyyopéw, to keep awake, Hdn. 3. 4: to awake out of sleep, Byz. Si-ayptaive, strengthd, for dypralyw, Plut. Brut. 20. St-aypunvéw, fo lie awake, tv paxp@ xpévy vuierds 5. Ar. Ran. 931; tiv viera Diod. 14. 105. Staypunvyris, od, 6, one who lies awake, Schol. Ar. Eq. 277. 344 Stayupvalo, fut. dow, to keep in hard exercise, Polyaen, 6. 1 :—Med, to take hard exercise, Galen., B 6. Za Stayupvacta, 7, hard anak Eus. H.E. to. 4, Siayupvia, to strip naked, riv dAjeay 5. Eunap. Exc. p. 84. 3. Si-dyxo, fut. -dyéw, strengthd, for dyxw, Luc. Anach. 31. dt-dyo, fut. -dgw, to carry over or across, mopOuijes 8 dpa rovs ye 5ih- yayov Od. 20.187; 5. tiv orparidy, etc., Thuc. 4. 78, Xen., etc. II. of Time, to pass, spend, go through, aidva h. Hom. 19.7; Biorov, Biov Aesch, Pers, 711, Soph. O. C. 1619, Ar. Nub. 463; xpévov, yijpas, juepar Xen.,etc.; xpdvos di7jyé weappearsto be = xpévoy difyor, Soph. El. 782 :— also, 5. €oprqy to celebrate it (cf. dyw Iv. 2), Ath, 363 F:—hence, 2. intr., without Bloy, to pass life, live, like Lat. degere, transigere, Hdt. 1. 94, Dem. 311. 28, etc.; 5. év giAocopia Plat. Theaet. 1 yA A: to tarry, év T@ Sicacrnpiy Id. Euthyphr. 3 E :—also in Med., dia-yopevos Id. Rep. 344 E, etc. b. to delay, put off time, Thuc. 1. 90. c. to continue, 6. cvwm Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 14; &v evdaryovia Dem. 794. 19: often c. part. to continue doing so and so, 8, pavOdavwy, émpeddpevos Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 6., 7. 5, 85; A€ywr SHye Id. An. 1. 2, 11. d. with Advs., év rots oh pes os 6. Thuc. 7. 71; dprora Xen. Mem, 4. 4, 15; €0 Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 33; duvdtvws Id. Pol. 4. 11, 9; so, evoeBR 5. rpérov mept twa to conduct oneself piously, Ar. Ran. 457. III. to make to continue or keep in a certain state, réAcy dp0o0dixaroy 5, Aesch. Eum. 995; méAes év dpovolg Isocr. 35 B; év maar Trois xara Biov .. driyev bwas Dem. 255. 11 :—in Euclid., to produce a line. Iv. to entertain, amuse a person, Xen. An. I. 2, 11; Térrapow dBéras Tov djjpov 5, Dem. 1459. fin. (in prooem.), cf. Luc. Phal. Pr. 3 :—also intr. to amuse oneself, Hemst. Thom, M. 213: cf. d:aywyn U. 2. Vv. to we or duct business, Dio C. VI. to separate, force apart, LXx (Ezek. 16. 25); rods d8évras Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 1. 6. Siiyoyh, %, a@ carrying across (?) II. a passing of life, a way or course of life, Lat. ratio vitae, 5. Biov Plat. Rep. 344 E: absol., Id. Theaet. 177 A, etc. 2. a way of passing time, t, pastime, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 8, 1., 10. 6, 3; 5. éAevBépios Id. Pol. 8. 5,8; d:aywyal tod au¢qv public pastimes, Ib. 3. 9,13; cf. Wytt. Plut. 126 B, 158 D. 8. delay, Dio C. 57. 3. III. management, rv mpay- pare 5. dispatch of business, Dio C. 48. 5 :—also, 9 1d Tovra 8. in- struction in.., Ep. Plat. 343 E. IV. a station for ships, Hdn, 4. 2. Siaywyicds, 7, dv, of or for a passage; TéAos 5. =sq., Strabo 192. Svayaytov, 74, a transit-duty, Polyb. 4. 52, 53 V. mapaywy.or. ' Sv-dyovide, fut. dow, strengthd. for dyavidw, C. I. 2058 B. 22, Polyb. 3. 105, 5: c. acc. to stand in dread of, Id. 3. 102, 10. S-tywvifopar, Dep. to contend, struggle or fight against, rit and mp/s 7wa Xen. Mem. 3. 9, 2, Cyr. 1. 6, 26; Tatra 5, mpds ddAAmAous Ib. I. 2, 12. II. to fight desperately, Thuc. 5.10: contend earnestly, of the Chorus, Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 16: to decide the contest, wept or bwép Twos Aeschin. 72. 27, etc. S.a~yavios, ov, from angle to angle, diagonal, Aristid. Quint. p. 118, Vitruy. 9. 1. Adv. -iws, Nicom. Geras. p. 122. Siaywvieréov, verb. Adv. one must make a great effort, Philo 2. 471. St-Gywvoleréw, fo set at variance, Polyb. 26. 7, 7. Srabdve, fut.—djgopa, to bite hard: metaph., 5. red Polyb. 4.87, 5: —Med. to have a biting-match with, Twi Plut. 2. 1105 A. Siadaxptw [0], to weep, shed tears, Dion. H. Io. 17. SraBSdarw, fut. Yo, to tear asunder, rend, bid 5t xpba Kaddy eayev ll. 5. 858, cf. 21. 398. Siabiréopar: aor. iaddcacdar: Dep.: 1. in reciprocal sense, to divide among themselves, 5: xrhjow Saréovro Il. 5.158, Hes. Th. 606. 2. in act. sense, to divide, distribute, did madpa SacacKkero (lon. for @5acaro), Il. 9. 333, cf Pind. O. 1. 8, etc.; Sieddoavro tiv Antnv Hdt. 8. 121; és pvdds dreSacavro distributed them among the tribes, Id. 4. 145:—Pass. to be divided, ys diadarouperns App. Civ. 1.1. Sradelkvupr, fut. -deffw, Ion, —defw:—strengthd. for deievupe, to shew clearly, shew plainly, often in Hdt., mostly foll. by a relat. clause with Br; also c. part., duadeg~drw tis BactAgos Kxndipevos 8, 118:—Pass., diadenvicda esv wodéuios let him be declared the king's enemy, 3. 72. II. sometimes intrans. in forms dédefe and ws Siédefe, it was clear, manifest, 2. 134., 3. 82, v. Schweigh. 2. 117. Siabexrhp, 5, a transmitter, onpeiov Aen. Tact. 6 and 7. Biadéxrwp, opos, 6, (Siadéxopar) an inheritor, kaparov Manetho 4. 223. II. pass. as Adj., wAovros 5, inherited wealth, Eur. Ion 478. Siabétvos, ov, of right, good omen, Hat. 7. 180. Biddekts, ews, 1, =51a50x7y, Hipp. 1170 A. Sradépkopar, aor. -<5ptixoy: Dep. to see one a od dy vai Siadpdnor would not see us through |t 344- II. ¢o see over, vijgoy Stasin. ap. Tzetz. , to bind, thy Kepaddy 6. Travia Jo, Lyd. de Mens. 1. 18: Srad_ecpdw is gies from aga a 4 Sid-Seopos, 6, a connectin, , Hipp. 237. 12. SiaBeréov, verb. Adj. one oie bind round, Oribas. p. 157 Cocchi. SidSeros, ov, (Scadéw) bound fast, xadwol bidderor yevdo inmeiwy bits firm bound through the horse’s mouth, Aesch. Theb. 122; 7Aé«rpy 5. set in .., Heliod. 5. 13; 6. Tatviaus tds xépas Liban. 4. 189. ; Sradéxopar, fut. fonar: Dep.:—to receive one. from another, Lat. excipere, 3. Adyov to take up the word, i.e. to speak next, Plat. Rep. 576 B; (also without Adyoy, Hdt. 8. 142); so, 6. vdpous, réxvnv Antipho 112. 1, Lys. 168. 35. 2. 5. rhv dpxny to succeed to the government, Polyb. 2. 4, 7, etc., (for which Hdt. uses éxd€éxopat, cf. v. ll, ad 1. 26); THY vad 3. rut, of a trierarch (cf. d.ad0x7 1), Dem. 1218. 23. TI. d:a- BéxeaGai rut to succeed one, take his place, relieve him on guard, etc., through another, he cloud], Il, 14. * Plat. Legg. 758 B, Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, 18:—later, 5. rwa Arist. Pol. 4.1 5-4 ¢ SearyuuvaCo — duddoars. 7, Polyb. 17. 3, 6. 2. absol. to relieve one another, rots tmmots with fresh horses, Xen. An, 1. 5, 2: 40 succeed, of diabexdpevar orparn- yot Lys. 135. 30, cf. Arist. Pol. 4. 6, 10; of diadetdpevor the successors (of Alexander), Polyb. 9. 34, 11; and as a Subst., of Tlvppou 5. App. Illyr. 1:—part. pf. pass., vdé elodryer nal vig dade? diadedeypevy in turns, by turns, Lat. vidissim, Soph. Tr. 30; so, duadegapevor Hat. 8. 142, Act. 7. 45; cf. &ddoyxos, III. later, = Lat. subrogare, Diod. Excerpt. 2. 507. Siadéw, fut. -40w, to bind round, 5. ro mhoiov Hat. 2. 29, cf. 4.1543 5. ra xaAxeia Tawvia Arist. Audib. 36 :—Pass., diadedenévos fast-bound, Plat. Phaedo 82 E:—Med., 5. inatia rais Aaais to bind, wrap them round ¢heir left arms, App. Mithr. 86 :—absol., dsadjcac@at to bind one's head (with a diadem), Plut. Demetr. 41; 6 Siadovpevos the boy binding his hair, a famous statue by Polycletus, v. Miiller Archiiol, § 120. 3: and in Pass., deadedepévos thy Kepadny Siadppart, pirpa having one’s head bound with .., Diod. 4. 4, Luc. D. Mort. 12. 3. SiadnACopar, Dep. fo do great harm to, tear to pieces, dAtyou ce Kives diednAnoayro Od. 14. 37, cf. Theocr. 24. 83. SidSyAos, ov, also 7, ov, Arist. H. A. 9. 7, 10:—distinguished or dis- tinguishable among others, Thuc. 4. 68, Plat. Rep. 474 B, etc. SiadnAdw, tomake manifest, Plut. Caes. 6, Diog.L.4.46, Joseph. B. J.6.9, 3. SiadSypa, 76, (S:adéw) a band or fillet: esp. the band round the Tupa of the Persian king, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 13, Plut. 2.488 D: it was adopted by Alexander, Arr. An, 7.22; and worn by the Macedon. kings, Hdn.1.3, 7; and then by kings generally, Plut. 2. 753 D, cf. Diod. 20. 54; its colour was blue with white spots, caerulea fascia albo distincta, Q, Curt. 3. 3, 19. Siainparo-popéw, to wear a diadem, Byz.; Siasypirto-hdpos, ov, bearing a diadem, Plut. Ant, 54. SiadiSpdckw, fut. -dpdcopar: Ion, SadiSpyokw, —Spyoopar: aor. 2 -édpay ; pf. -b€5paxa:—to run off, get away, escape, Hdt»8. 75, al.; biade5paxdres shirkers, Ar. Ach. 601. 2. c.acc. to run away from, escape from, tivd Hat. 3. 135. SradiSwpr, fut. -Sb0w;—io give from hand to hand, to pass on, give or hand over, Lat. tradere, Kapmadia exovres Siadwaovew aAAHAots Plat. Rep, 328 A:—Pass., of reports, to be spread abroad, Adyos 51€560q Xen, Cyr. 4. 2, 10; diadobévros tod Adyou Isocr. 83 D, cf. 204 B; mapa Tav dpxaioy 5. to be handed down by tradition, Arist. Cael. 1. 2. 3a, 2. to distribute, ivi ts Xen, An. I. 10, 28, Dem. 1188. 21; 7H odAmcyye cw) eis dravras 5, Plut. Flamin. 10:—Pass., 7d diadiBdpevoy eis Tas pA€Bas, of food, Arist. P. A. 4. 4,55 cf. diado- ots. 3. 5. xépas to cast one’s eyes around, Eur. Or. 1267, cf. Phoen. 1371. II. intr. 2o spread about, Arist. H. A. 1. 16, 13. 2. =evdibupt, to remit, Hipp. 396. 53. SiabiKdlw, fut. dow, to give judgment in a case, Andoc. 4. 42, Plat. Rep. 614 C:—c. acc. rei, to decide, rule, Xen. Ath. 3, 4; duedikagay dixas (Boeot.) Keil Inscrr, Iv. b. 10; tds duquoByrqces Arist. Fr. 385: cf. dadicacia, 2. Med, to go to law, dispute, diadiweacdpevos TH Bovdp wept dAnOelas Dinarch. 105. 5, cf. Plat. Symp. 175 E, etc,; d:a- dixdcacba ev pirors Td mpds ené to settle by friendly arbitration, Dem. 864. 8. b. in Med. also to submit oneself to trial, Plat. Phaedo 107 D, 113, Xen. Hell. 5. 3,10:—the aor. pass. dradiacOjvat = bradiucdoasbat occurs in Diog. L. 1. 74, Dio C. 48. 12. II. =6id rod SAov Erous Sixd{w, Critias 62. Siadixardw, to hold a thing to be right, Thuc. 4. 106: to defend as matter of right, rt and bmép Twos Dio C. 40. 62., 39. 60. Siadixioia, %, an action or lawsuit brought to decide who (of several claimants) was entitled to any right or privilege, or who was liable to any burden, as, who was the tightful heir to the estate of a deceased person (d:a5. xAjpov Dem, 1082. 16), or to the hand of an heiress (v. énixdnpos); or to settle the claim of a citizen to money said to be chargeable on an estate confiscated to the Treasury, Lys. 148. 11; ora claim to exemption from a Aevrovpyia, Dem. 841. 5; or to decide who shall pay certain sums due on account of the Tpinpapxia, Id. 704. 93 etc. :—riv 3. moretobar C. I. (add.) 2349 6. 2. metaph., 5. 7@ Bhpart mpos 7d OT parhyyiov a dispute between the orators and the war-office, Aeschin, 74. 19: generally, riv ray dporelwy 5. the com- petition for public honours, Plat. Legg. 952 D. 3. diadseaciav mpobeivat Tals yvwpais to put the question to the vote, Dion. H. 11. 21. diadixacpa, 74, the object of litigation in a diakinacla, Lys. 149. 7, cf. Att. Process, p. 368. Srabtkacpés, 6, a lawsuit : contention, Aquila V. T. dia-Bikéw, (dix) to contend at law :—oi diabinodvres the contending parties, Plut. 2.196 B; but in Dio C. 40. 55, the judges. di-abucéw, fo do wrong, to injure, Ib. 58. 16. d14-Btxos, 6, one party in a suit, Jo. Chrys., Isid. Pelus., etc. drdbumAos, ov, (Surdd0s) doubled, Diosc. 3. 105. Siadidpeva, Zo drive horses as in a chariot-race, Eur. Or. 990. Brabordoxllw, (Sotdve) to rub as with a pestle, Hesych. Braboripates, fut. dow, to test closely, Xen. Occ. 1g, 16. draBoxls, (50s, %, (S0xbs) a cross-beam, Hesych. BidBopa, 74, (d:adidwpt) a distribution of money, C. I. 1625. 61. dradovew, to shake in pieces, overthrow, Dionys. Areop. Siadokdle, strengthd. for 5o¢d¢w, Plat. Phileb. 38 B. StaBoparifopar, Dep. to fight with spears, skirmish, Lat. velitari, Polyb. 5. 84, 2, M. Anton. 4. 3: cf. dagepifouac. Biadopiiniopés, 6, a fighting with the spear, M. Anton. 7:3. Siaddcrpos, ov, transmitted, Synes. 202 D. Pant. os, %, (GadiBwpr) a distribution, ic.; 9. oUupav an evacuation, Hipp. Epid. 1083 ; THS Tpopys 5. it: distribution through the body, Arist ‘aecbey ri ie c 6. 4 "beéiv dis dvOpumous communication .., Arr. Epict, 1. 12, 6. ; largess, Dem. 1ogt. 24, dadoréos . BiaBoréos, a, cov, verb. Adj. tobe published, Isocr. 281 B, II. diadoréov one must distribute, Plat. Tim. 19 A. Srad0x 4, 3, (5:a5éXopar) a taking from another, 8. veds, of a trierarch (cf. 3:ad€xopat I. 2), Dem. 1206. 10: and so, 2. succession, G@AAos map GAdov iadoxais mAnpovpevor by successions or reliefs, Aesch. Ag. 313;—s0, Siadoxy Tay emyvyvopnévay Thuc. 2. 36; 7% Tav Téxvav 5, Arist, Pol. 7.16, 2 :—oft. in dat. pl., dvdccwy diad0xaiow év pépe érrav- ciaow Eur. Supp. 406; d:adoyxais Epviwy (apparently) by successive attacks of the Furies, Id. I. T. 79; paxpats 5. by long pedigrees, Hdn. I, 2:—so with Preps., é« d:adoxjs aAAHAos in turns, Lat. vicissim, Dem. 46.1, cf. Antiph. "Ayp. 9, Arist. Phys. 5. 4, 10; nara d:adox}v xpévou or Kard diadoxyv Thue. 7. 27, 28; kard diadoyds Arist. Mund. 6, 12. II. as a concrete noun, in military sense, a relief, relay, % 5. rh mpicbev pudrakh épxerat Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 17, cf. Dem. 567. 18. 2. the ion (i.e. 's), Luc. Nigr. 38 :—ai Avadoxai was the name of a work by Sotion on the Successions or successive chiefs of the Philosophic Schools, Ath. 162E, cf. Diog. L. prooem. 1., 2. 12, Plut. 605 B. Srd5ox0s, 6, 7, (Huadéxopar) succeeding a person in a thing: 2 c. dat. pers. et gen, rei, 5. MeyaBatw rhs orparnyins his successor in the command, Hdt. 5. 26, cf. 1. 162, etc. ; and so in Att., @vnrois .. duddoxor HoxOnpdrow succeeding them in, i.e. relieving them from, toils, Aesch. Pr. 464, cf. 1027; got TOvde diddoxos Séuwv Eur. Alc. 655, cf. Isocr. 393 A. 2. c. gen, rei only, 5. rijs "Aorudxov vavapxtas succeeding to his command, Thuc. 8. 85. 8. c. gen. pers. only, péyyos imvov 5, sleep’s successor light, Soph. Ph. 867. 4. c. dat. pers. only, 5. KaAedvipw Xen. An. 7. 2, 5 ;—and in a similar sense, épyoust 8° Epya did- Soxa Eur. Andr. 743; xaxdy xax@ 8. Ib. 804; but Eur. sometimes uses it in a quasi-act. sense, Avan .. biddox0s KaKd@y Kakois bringing a suc- cession of evils after evils, Hec, 588; dyav .. yowv dors 5d50x0s Supp. 71. 5. absol., 5d50xo1 epoirav they went to work in relays or gangs, Hdt. 7. 22, cf. Thuc. 1.110: neut. pl. as Ady. in succession, Eur. Andr. 1201, diadpaparife, to finish acting a play, M. Anton. 3.8, Diog. L. 3. 56. SvabpGvat, Ion. -Spijvat, v. sub diadidpdonw. Stadpaot-roAtrat, of, citizens who shirk all state burdens, Ar.Ran. 1014. diddpaors, ews, }, (Stadidpdoxw) an escape, Joseph. A. J. 18.5, 4. Svadpdcaopat, Dep. to seize hold of, twos Polyb. 1. 58,8) Siadpyorevo or SiadSpymerevw, fo run off, go over to, a word suggested as an emend. for the vox nihili demphorevce in Hdt. 4.79: cf. Sparerevo, Sradpopy, }, (Seadpapeiv) a running about through a city, Aesch, Theb. 351, cf. Hipp. 1240 C, Polyb. 15. 30, 2; af d:adpopal ray dorépay (cf. bi:abéw, S:aicow), Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 33, al.; 3. Exe, to spread, of a disease, Plut. 2. 825 D. 2. a running across, Antipho 124. 22: a foray, Plut. Luc. 39. II. a place for running through, passage through, Xen. Cyn. 10, 8: an aqueduct, Plut. Lucull. 39. . &td-Spopos, ov, running through or about, wandering, pvyal Aesch. Theb. 191; A€xos 5. stray, lawless love, Lat. co jugium desultorium, Eur. El. 1156; €uBodra xioor 8. the lintels of the pillars reeling, Id. Bacch.592. II. as Subst., d:d5popos, 6, = d:a5pou7 11, Luc. Hipp. 6. SiaSvvw Hipp. 300. 2, Arist. de An. 1. 2, 3; Svadtw Hdt. 2.66; more commonly as Dep. diadvoua, fut. -dtcouar: aor. 2 d:édvv :—to sii; through a hole or gap, diadvvres bid Tod Teixous Thuc. 4.110; 51d rov- Tov pirta babvopévn Xen. Mem. 2.6, 22: absol. to slip through, slip away, Hdt. 1. c.; d:abds Ar. Vesp. 212; wav 6 yépwv mn dadverat ; Ib. 396. 2. c. acc. to evade, shirk, rois diadvopévors Tas Aevroupyias Lys. 162. 34, cf. Dem. 1045. 27; &mn.. diaddcera Tov Adyoy Plat. Soph. 231 C, etc.; 7d dixny Sodvar d:advs Dem. 271. 19. Sidbdvors, ews, , a passing through, passage, Tim. Locr. 100 E, Theophr. Odor. 50:—metaph. in pl. evasions, twos from a thing, Dem. 744. 5. II. in pl. passages, galleries, in mines, etc., Diod. 5. 36. diabirixés, 4, dv, penetrating, Theophr. C. P. 5. 14, I. Sradve, v. daddvw. Siadwpéopar, Dep. to distribute in presents, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 6. 2. generally ¢o distribute, assign, Twas eis Tas énapxias Joseph. B. J. 6. 9, 2. Sia-elBw (i. e. dafeidw), fut. -efcopat, to discern, distinguish, aipiov dy dperhy bacicera will discern, test his manhood, Hl. 8. 535 :—Pass., évOa padior’ aperiy diaelberar is discerned, 13. 277; simply to appear between, Ap. Rh. 2. 579, cf. Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 1; and v. defor. Si-aelSe, fut.—aeicopar: Att. Si-GSe, —doopar: Med., aor. didcacbat A.B. 37:—1to contend in singing, twit with one, Theocr. 5. 22. II. 70 biqdd pevor the song sung between the acts, Arist. Poét. 26,6. III. to produce a discord, opp. to cvvddw, Heracl. ap. Arist. Mund. 5, 5. Staepévos, part. pf. pass. of dln. ; Staevmépev, v. sub drefrov. ' Bt-Gépros, v. sub diyépros. Stafaw, Ion. —fow, inf. daljv: fut. how:—to live through, pass, Tov Bloy Eur. I. A. 923; 7d xaé’ apépay Plat. Rep. 561 C, etc.:—then, absol., like Lat. degere, Ar. Pl. go6, Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 8. 2. c. part., like d:afidw, to live by doing so and so, wonparyéovres ié(wov they sup- ported life by .., Hdt. 3. 25; so also, 5. dwé twos to live off or bya thing, Soph. Ph. 535, Ar. Av. 1434; m@s oby d:é(ns f wé0ev; Ar. Pl. 606; 5. voup by pasturage, Plat. Legg. 679 A. ‘ Stalevypos, 6,=didevgis, Polyb. Io. 7, 1. Sialetiyviipat, Pass. fo be disjoined, separated, parted, twos from one, Aeschin. 52. 13; dé twos Xen. An, 4. 2, 10:—absol,, Arist. Pol. 3. 3, 3, etc.: to be divorced, Plat. Legg. 784 B (cf. diaCevgis 3) ; SueCevrypevor a disjunctive proposition, Sext. Emp. Hyp. 2. 191, Diog. L. 7. 69. 2. 70 del. obarnya the disjunct system of music, in which two tetrachords were so combined that the first note of one was a tone lower than the last note of the other, whereas in the ovynypévoy the last note of the one served as the first note of the other (cf. dd ¢evgis 2), Euclid, Harm. Be drabéw. 345 p. 12 Meibom.; also, rd overnua 7d kara did¢evg Ib. p. 18, etc.; Terpaxopdov dieCevrypévov Plut.2. 1029 A, 1038 E: v. Dict. of Antt. p. 775> dialevarixés, 7, dv, disjunctive, Diog. L. 7.72. Adv.-Kas, Apoll. de Construct. p. 9. Sidlevtis, ews, 7, a disjoining, parting, Plat. Phaedo 88 B; 8. roretaOar, =dialevyvivar, Id. Legg. 930 B; % 5. rar -yuvauedv, at Sparta, Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 9 2. as Musical term, the disjunction of two tetrachords, Plut. 2. 491 A, etc.; v. diacedyvupe 2. Sraléw, to boil through, Suid. SrafnAeviopat, Dep. to rival, dub. 1. Hipp. 28. 25. SialnAoriméopar, Dep. to engage in rivalry, rw Ath, 588 E; mpés tie Polyb. Fr. 61. i Sidbyors, ews, 7, a way of living, Porphyr. in Stob. Ecl. 2. 378. : Sdiafntéw, fut. now, to search through, examine, Eupol.(?) in Meineke Com. Fr. 2. 577, Plat. Polit. 258 B. II. to seek out, invent, Aéyous Ar. Thesm, 439. Sidfopar, Dep. to set the warp in the loom, i.e. to begin the web, Nicoph. Mavdwp. 1; opp. to mpopopetabar Tov athpuova, Schol. Ar. Av. 4:—cf, Slacpa, dérropat. Sialiyia, 7), = dia fevgis, Anth. P. 5.9. Stalwypihéw, to paint completely, Plat. Tim. 55 C, Ael. V. H. 12. 41. Sidlwopa, 74, that which is put round asa girdle: hence, la girdle, drawers, Lat. subligaculum, 8. Exew wept 7a. aisoia Thuc. t. 6; cf. Kalavvup, mepiCapa, didCwopa. 2. ppevav 6.=didppaypa U1, Arist. P, A. 3.10, 1; 705, 70 rod Odpaxos Id, H. A. 1.17,8: generally, a partition, Ib. 1. 13, 2. 3. the cornice or frieze in architecture, Lat. corona, Theophr. Lap. 7, Ath. 205 C. 4. a narrow gallery or lobby, giving access to the seats in a theatre, Lat. praecinctio, C. I. 2755 (addend.), 4283, Vitruv., cf. Miiller Archiol. d. Kunst § 289. 6. 5. a band in stone, Diosc. 5. 144. 6. an isthmus, Plut. Phoc. 13. Siafwopariov, 74, Dim. of d&dfwpa (signf. 1), Gloss. Stalwpetw, to make into soup, Ta xpéa Hipp. 536.10; dub, Stalavvdpr or —va, fut. -Céaw :—to gird round, and s0, like bro(év- vupt, to undergird a ship, in Med. for oneself, App. Civ. 5. 9 :—Med. to gird oneself with, diaCwvvvoba éoO7ra, dxwdaxny Luc. Somn, 6, Gymn. 6:—Pass., die(wopévor wearing the dudopa (1.1), Thue. 1. 6. II. metaph. to engirdle, encompass, of fire, Plut. Brut. 31; rév adxéva (i.e. the Chersonese) 5. épvyact Id. Pericl. 19, cf. Polyb. 5. 69, 1:—Pass. to bass like a girdle, 51d r&v Tpomey Arist. Mund. 2, 7. udfwors, ews, 4, a cincture, % Tod CwdiaKod 3. Eudem. ap. Theon. Smyrn. 4o. Sidfwopa, 7, =didlwpa 1.1, Plut. 2. 132 A. dialworip, jpos, 5, the twelfth vertebra in the back, Poll. 2.179. _ dtaldorpa, 7, =did(wpa tT. 1, Persae. ap. Ath. 607 C, Sialdw, Ion. for dialdw, St-dqp, impf. ddny, Ep. Verb, ¢o blow through, c.acc,, Tods isiyrowt) we ob7’ dvépav dianuevos Od. 5. 478., 19. 440; mHea .. od Sidnarts dvéyou Hes.Op.512; c. gen., ray [obpiv] Ywxpds édy Sidnor [Bopéas] Ib. 515. Sialidacoetw, fo part by the sea, Alciphro 2. 3. SialdArw, to warm through, Plut. 2. 799 R. Siabappéw, to take heart, Ael. N. A. 4. 14. Srabedopar, fut. dcoua [a]: Dep.:—to look through, look into, examine, tt Plat, Prot. 316 A, Crat. 424 D; 5. Sony xmpav é€xouey Xen, An. 3. 1, 19 :—so verb. Adj., Svabearéov Aoyiou@ Plat. Rep. 611 C. diaberdw, to fumigate thoroughly, eb dieBelwoev pé-yapoy Od. 22. 494. Siabédyw, to soothe thoroughly, Incert. ap. Suid. s. v. karemddovea. SidOepa, 76, (SearlOnpu) the disposition of the stars at one’s nativity, Sext. Emp. M. 5. 53, etc. SrabepiLo, to pass the summer, Jo. Lyd. de Magistr. 1. 46. to cut asunder, Hesych. s. vy. dtapjoat. Siabeppatver, fut. av, to warm through, Plat. Tim. 65 E, Arist. Probl, 4. 32, etc.:—Pass, to be heated, inflamed, Hipp. Art. 817; by drinking, Dem. 402. 23, Plut. Siabeppiiota, %, a warming through, Epicur. ap. Plut. 2. 1109 F. Sid0eppos, ov, thoroughly warm or hot, Hipp. Vet. Med. 15. of a hot temperament, Arist. Rhet. 2. 12, 8, Probl. 27. 3. SidGects, ews, %, (SiariOnut) a placing in order, arrangement, Lat. dis- positio (4% Tod €xovros pépn Tagis Arist. Metaph. 4.19); THs woAurelas Plat.Legg.710B; ray feviow Id. Tim.27 A. 2. the disposition or com= position in a work of art, as opp. to evjpeats, Id. Phaedr, 236 A, Polyb. 34-4, 1, etc. ; 6. gdijs Eupol. Incert. 3; r@v ém@y Phryn. Com. Tpays. 8:—also the thing represented, the subject of a picture, etc., Callix. ap: Ath. 210 B; cf. Wyttenb. Plut. 2. 16 B, 17 B:—also of geographical description, Strabo 9:—rhetorical art, per’ adfnoews rat d:adecews Polyb. 2.61, 1. 8. a disposition of property, a will, testament, =diadhKn, Lys. Fr. 44, Plat. Legg. 922 B. 4. a disposing of, selling, sale, Isocr, 224 B, Strabo 496, Plut. Solon 24; cf. Gronov. Harpocr, s. v.: generally, ofs 5. etopos abundant means of disposing of it, of making away with it, Arist. Rhet. 1. 12, 8. II.. (from Pass.) one’s dis- position, state, condition, such as health, illness, heat, cold, sleep, Arist. Categ. 8, 5, G. A. 5. I, Io, etc.; of the body, Hipp. Vet. Med. 10; of the mind, és «at 6. Plat. Phil. 11D; qiAdcopos tiv 5. Id. Rep. 489 A; distinguished from és, Arist. de An. 2. 5, 6, ubi v. Trendel. 2. in Gramm. of the different species of Verbs, Apoll. de Constr. p. 210. Siabeopoberéw, to arrange and set in order, Plat. Tim. 42 D. Siabérns, ov, 6, (SiariOnu) one who arranges, Damasc. ap. Suid. 5. xpnopay, like dtacKevaorns, a collector and arranger of oracles, Hdt. 7. 6, ubi v. Bihr ; cf. ScartOnpe 11L:—also Svaberhp, jpos, Plat. Legg. 765 A; Siabew, fut. -Oevoopa, to run about, Thuc. 8. 92, etc.; of reports, to p spread, Xen, Oec, 20, 3; so of a panic fear, Id, Cyr. 6. 2, 13; dorépes II. II. 346 d.ab€ovres shooting stars, Arist. Meteor. 1.5, 5. II. to run a race. Plat. Theaet. 148 C; rit with or against .. , Id. Prot. 335 E; mpés Teva Plut. 2. 58 E:—c. acc. cogn.,.5. tiv Aapmada to run the torch-race, Id. Solon 1. _ biabyyn, 7, v. sub dabry7. 5 0, to sharpen to the uttermost, tiv yA@ooay Ann. Comn. Sabjen, 7, (S:ari6nu) a disposition of property by will, a will, testa- ment, Ar. Vesp. 584, 589, and often in Oratt.; xara di:adheny by will, C. I. 1997 :—also in pl., dradheas drabécba Lys. 155. 23; O€c0ai C. I. 2690, etc.: cf. diddeors 3. II. af dwéppyro: 5. mystic deposits on which the common weal depended, prob. oracles (cf. dua0érs), Dinarch. 91.17; v. Lob, Aglaoph. 965. III. a convention or arrange- ment between two parties, covenant, diabécOar diadhenv énot Ar. Ay. 439; so in Lxx, N. T., and Eccl; IV. v. sub &advyn. SaPyAtve, fut. iva, strengthd. for 67dvvw, Theophr. C. P. 1. 16, I. , to hunt after, cited from Philostr. SiaOyprd, strengthd. for Onpidw, Plut. 2. 330 B. Biabtyydvopa, Pass. to be touched continually, Arist. H. A. 10. 1, 7. - Siabiyy, %, a term used by Democr. for ragis, arrangement, Arist. Metaph. 1. 4, 11., 7. 2, 2, Gen. et Corr. 1. 2, 9., 1.9, 4 (mostly with v. 1. S:aO7yf, as in Suid. s. v. puopds); so, in Sext. Emp. M. 7.137, &aOnenv is an error for diadeyhv. Adw, fut. dow, to break in pieces, Acl. N. A. 4. 21. S-aPAéw, to struggle desperately, mpds riva Ael. V.H. 5.63; Tut Conon 12, II. to struggle through, Biov Heliod. 7.5; dyaves d:a0Aov- pevot Clem. Al. 29. St-a8Anréov, verb. Adj. one must fight it out, Philo 2. 471. SiaKi foo [t], fut. Yo, to break in pieces, Call. Fr. 67. BiaboAbw, to make quite dark or muddy, 04dagcay Plut. 2. 978 B. , to confound utterly, twa Thuc. 5. 29, Luc, Alex. 31: absol. to make a great noise, Plut. Galb. 18. Sd0paveros, ov, easily broken, Theophr. Lap. 11. SiaPpatw, to break in small pieces, Plat. Tim, 57 A, Theophr. C. P. 6. 9, 3:—Pass., Arist. H. A. 9. 14, 3- St-aOpéw, to look through, look closely into, examine closely, Ar. Eq. 543, Nub. 700, Thesm. 658. SralprapBevo, strengthd. for OpapBedw, App. Pun. 135. SiaPpife, shortd. from dcadepifw, Q. Sm. 8. 322. Sralpotw, fo spread a report, give out, Thuc. 6. 46; 5. év rats méAcawv, 6m.., Xen. Hell. 1. 6, 4:—the Pass. in Dio C. 53. 19., 61. 8. Si-abpotle, to collect, Galen. SrabpiAkw (v. sub OpurAéw), = d:aPpoéw ;:—mostly used in pf. and plqpf. Pass., to be commonly reported, diereOpvAnro ds .. Xen. Mem. I. 1, 2, cf. Plut, Cim, 15. II. to be talked deaf, S:a0pvdovpevos ind gov Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 37; SiareOpvAnpa: dodo Plat. Lys. 205 B; da- TeOpvdnpévos Ta Gra Id. Rep. 358 C. 5 aris, (50s, ,=Opvpparis, Antiph. Avonpar. 2. Siabp , 20. pass. Serpugny [U], II., SeOpupOny Diog.L.7.153- To break in sunder, break in pieces, shiver: in Hom. only once, Tptx9a Te Kai rerpaxoa diarpupér [70 gipos] Il. 3. 363; domides drareOpyypévar Xen. Ages. 2,14; d:a0ptmrew 70 xpdvov Luc. D. Mort. 20. 2. _II, metaph., like Lat. frangere, to break down by profligate living and indulgence, to enervate, pamper, spoil, make weak and womanish, Plat. Lys. 210 E, Xen. Rep. Lac. 2, 1:—Pass. like Lat. frangi, to be broken down, enervated, pampered, spoilt, wdovrw Aesch. Pr. 891; did rv mAohroy Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 353 b1d wOAAGY avOpiraw Ib. I. 2, 24; diareOpdpOar Tov Blov Acl. V.H. 13.8; 7@ Big Plut, Pomp. 18; dareOpuppévos ra dra Koda- xelats, Lat. animo fractus, Id. Dio 8; hence Adv., duareOpuppévas Exew Plat. Legg. 922 C. 2. Med. to give oneself airs; of a prudish girl, to play off her coy tricks, rwe Theocr. 6. 15; of a singer, daOpvrrerat Hon is beginning her airs and attitudes, Id. 15. 99. S.a0p ews, 4, (Seadptrrw It. 2) affectation, Jo. Chrys. kw, to spring asunder, Emped. ap. Arist.Sens. 2,9, Opp. H. 1.549. a, wv, Ta, a sort of rail across the doorway of a Greek house, the same as prothyra in a Rom. house, Vitruv. 6. 10. Brat, StarBoAla, v. sub did, d:aBorla. y8nv, Adv. (d:atcow) bursting through, cited from Opp. Si-alPopar, Pass. to be inflamed, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 11. Sr-aOprdfo, fut. dow, to become quite clear and fine, éddnet BrarOpidCerv it seemed likely to be fine, Xen. An. 4. 4, 10. Bt-aOpos, ov, quite clear and fine, Plut. Sull. 7. _ Bi-aWtcow, to move rapidly in different directions, B.addocovow adpat they change rapidly, Pind. O. 7, fin. IL. c. acc., Ams diardvace ppevas it rushes through the heart, Bacchyl. 27. 3. : ov, blood-stained, Hipp. 267. 40; dvug Eur. Hec. 656; diacpov dvarruew to spit blood, Plut. Arat. 52, cf. Polyb. 8. 14, 5. ; Btatve, fut. dvd, aor. é8inva: (orig. unknown) :—to wet, moisten, ime 8 obk eBinve Il, 22. 495 5 in Pass., dkaivero. .dfwv 13.30; olvy Ge Axionic. in Meineke Com. Fr.5.93:—Med., diaivesOar doce to wet one's eyes, Aesch. Pers. 1064; and absol. fo weep, Ib. 258 ;—Ib. 1038, 1039, Xerxes cries Séauve, Slave ipa, and the Chorus replies diaivopat, which can only mean (as the Schol.) weep, weep for the calamity—J weep. —Rare in Prose, Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 26, Heliod. ap. Stob, t. 100. 6, cf. tkds, ~7ds. rereaia ews, H, division into parts, divisibility, Arist. Metaph. 4. 6, 19, al. II. a dividing, division, of money, Hdt. 7. 144; of spoil, Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 553 & Kaipécer [YHhpowv] in the reckoning of the votes on either side, Aesch. Eum. 749. III. distinction, ayvaoias re Kal yviscews Plat. Soph. 267 B; ris Sypoxparias kal ris ddvyapxias Arist. Pol. 4. 9, 1, etc. IV. in Logic, division of genus into its species, Plat. Soph. 264 C, 267 D, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 31, al.; opp. tot SiaOnryy — draraw. ovvaywyn, Plat. Phaedr. 266 B, 2. the fallacy of division (cf. ovv- Oeors), Arist. Soph. Elench. 6and 20; called Caluus or Acervalis, Cic. Divin. 2. 4, Acad, Post. 2. 16. V.. in Rhet. a division or distribution into heads, Cicero’s partitio, see Sopater in Walz Rhett. VI. in Gramm. the separation of a diphthong into two syllables:—or of one word into two, card dialpeowy dvayvworéov Ath. 492.A. Siatperéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be divided, Plat. Rep. 412 B. btatperéov, one must divide, Id. Legg. 874 E, Arist. Pol. 8. 7, 1. Svaipérns, ov, 6, a divider, distributer, Greg, Naz. . Siaiperixés, 4, dv, of or for dividing, divisible, Plat. Soph, 226 Cc. 2. able to divide, separative, Arist. Probl. 5. 37, Plut. 2. 952 B, II. in Logic, by means of division, Arist. An. Post. 2. 5, 4: —Ady. -#@s, Plut. 2. 802 F. III. in Rhet. partitive, Hermog. Siaiperés, 7, dv, divided, separated, opp. to ovvOeros, Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, 20; 6. Tupavvibes, of oligarchies and pure democracies, Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 35- 2. divisible, opp. to cvvexns, Id. Phys. 1. 2, 8; An. Post. 2. 6, 3, Eth. N. 2. 6, 4:—8. vais that can be taken to pieces, Id, de An. 1. 5, 26. IL. divided, distributed, yotpav ys Siatperhy vépev Soph. Tr. 163, ubi v. Dind. III. distinguishable, ob 5. Adyp not to be distinguished or determined by word, Thuc. 1. 84. St-arpéw, fut. fow: aor. —efAov: aor. pass. —ppéOny :—to take one from another, to cleave in twain, to divide into parts, iid 8 dpcporépous €dr€ «vtdous donibos Il, 20, 280; maida ard pédca dteAdy Hdt. 1. 119; 6. Aaryév to cut it open, Ib, 123; 5. mvAlda to break it open, Thuc. 4. 110., 6. 515 5. tiv dpophy to tear it away, pull down, Ib. 48; Tods oravpovs Xen, An. 5. 2, 21; 5. rod relxous to take down part of the wall, make a breach in it, Thuc. 2. 75; 70 dieppypueévov the breach, Ib. 76., 5.3; dup- pnuévor 70 brdCwpa, of insects, Arist. H. A. 5. 30, I. II. to divide, 580 poipas Avdav the Lydians into two parts, Hat. 1. 94, cf. 4. 148, Dem. 1170, 25; so, 5. rptxf Plat. Phaedr. 253 C; 6. eis S00 Dem. 144.27; 5. rods dueivous nat rods xelpovas Plat. Legg. g50C; 3. eis Ta €Aaxiora Arist. Sens. 3, 19; eis duowopeph Id. H. A. 1. 1, 1:— Med. to divide for themselves, vais Thuc. 4. 1%: but also to divide among themselves, ripds Hes. Th. 112; Tiv Aniny Hat. g. 85; 7d epyov Thue. 7. 19, cf. 5. 114; 7a brapxovra Dem. 1113. 10:—Pass., dinpy- Hévot kar’ dvaravaas divided into relays, Thuc. 2. 75; Scatphoopat as fut. pass., Plat. Polit. 261 C. 2. to divide or dissolve (into the com- ponent parts), opp. to svvribévat, Plat. Phaedo 78 C, etc., cf. Arist. Rhet. Road; Bi III. to distinguish, ai6@ nat caxppoovyny Xen. Occ. 7, 26; Tupavvidos «ién Sto drelAopey Arist. Pol. 4. 10, 2:—absol., Ar. Nub. 742 :—Med., Plat. Theaet. 182 C. 2. to determine, decide, diatpety Suaopds Hdt. 4. 23; dikas Aesch. Eum, 472; Todto mpaypa Ib. 488 ; Yjpy 5. rod5e mparyparos mépt Ib. 630; KAhpw 5.7dv viKwTa Plat. Legg. 946 B; 5. mept twos Arist. Phys. 6. 9, 2, etc.; 8. méoa.., etc., Id. Pol. 4. 16, 2, etc.: absol., Ar. Ran. 1100 :—also, 8, e?7e Eur. Bacch. 206. 3. to say distinctly and expressly, to define, interpret, Hat. 3. 103., 7.16; so in Med., Id. 7. 47, and often in Plat.: 3. wept twos Plat. Charm. 163 D. IV. in Logic, to divide, 5. nat’ ¢iSn Id. Phaedr. 273 E: to divide a genus into its species, Arist. An. Pr. I. 31, al. dt-alpw, fut. dap, to raise up, lift up, 6. dvw Tov avyéva Xen. Eq. Io, 3:—Med, to lift up oneself, Arist. Mund. 1,1: to lift up what is one’s own, 5. riv Baxrnpiay Plut. Lys. 15 (unless 7H Baxrnpiq be restored, when S:apdpevos will be used as by Theophr., v. infr.); técov 5. to take so much on oneself, Plat, Ax. 370 B:—Pass., 8. els, mpds. typos Philo 2. 510, 614. II. to separate, remove, rov médepov amd .. , Plut. Ages. 15 :—Med., dtapdpevos (sc. rd oxéAn), grandi gradu (Casaub.), Theophr, Char. 3. 2. 5. 7d ordpua to open one’s mouth, Dem. 375. 14., 405. 26: hence in Rhet. writers, dunpyévos, one who speaks ore rotundo, lofty, sublime, Dion. H. de Rhet. 6. 6, de Vett. Scriptt. 5. 3 Hermog., etc. IIT. intr. (sub. éavrdv, etc.), to ft oneself over, cross, 76 méharyos Arist. Fr. 268 ; rdv mépov Polyb. 1. 37, 1; els XumeAlay Id. 1. 24, 5, etc.; cf. atpw. Si-arcbdvopar, fut. qoouai : Dep. :—to perceive distinctly, distinguish perfectly, vt Plat. Phaedr. 250 A, Soph. 253 D, ete. " dv-aicow, fut. -aigw: Att. -deqw or —dtrw (often written darre without «, Bekk. Arist. Meteor. 1, 4,7, al.), fut. -gga :—to rusk or dart through or across, Aayds és 7d pécov diffe Hat. 4. 134: also c. acc., Ave’ Opn didooen Soph. O. T. 208; of sound, ax® .. dipgev dytpov puxéy Aesch, Pr. 133; (but, phn dipte spread abroad, Eur. 1. A. 426) ; and c. gen., omagpos dite wAeupw Soph. Tr. 1083; daorépes Sudrrovres shooting stars, Arist. 1. c, Bvaicréw, to make an end of, airy duntorwoe Soph. Tr. 881. Si-arcxWwopat, strengthd. for aicxdvopat, Luc. Electr. 3- Siavra, 7, (v. sub (dw) :—a way of living, mode of life; with special reference to food and dress, maintenance, board and lodging, Lat. cultus victusque, 7a. Tis otxor dairns Soph. O. C. 3523 mrmy@ dairy Ib. 751; axdnpds dtairas éxmoveiv Eur. Fr, 529; 8. éxew Aesch, Pr. 490, Hat. I. 35, Thue, 1. 6; mapa Tun Hat. 1,136; 8. movetcOae to pass one’s life, Id. 2. 68; (but, diarray érorqaaro ray waldwy he made them live, Id. 2. 3)3 9. Cons peraBddrAay Id. ¥. 157, cf, Thuc, 2. 16, 2. a dwelling, abode, Arist. Eth, N. 1. 6, 3, Plut. 2. 515 E, etc.: @ room, Lat. diaeta (later zeta), Ar. Ran. 114, C. I. 3268, Plut.; of animals, Arist. Mund, 6, 16. 3. as Medic. term, a prescribed manner of life, diet, Hipp. Vet. Med. 9, Plat. Rep. 404 A. II. at Athens, arbitration, Soph. El. 1073, Lexap.Andoc. 12.5; contrasted with bien, Arist. Rhet.1.13,193 eupévey 7 5. Ar. Vesp.524; diarray émerpépar tivi Lysias8g3. 10, Isocr. 373E, Isae.54.7; dpAciv riv 3. to have judgment against one, Dem.862. 2. 2. the office of arbiter, Hyperid. Euxen. 41: cf, dacrnrhs. Siatde ; impf. Siyray Dion. H. 2. 75, but also édairwy A. B. gt, in compos. kar-ediyra Dem. 1190. 7: fut. Scartnaw Id, 861. 28 :—aor. 1 II. diairnua — Bifrnoa Isae. Menecl. § 31, Plut., etc.; da-ediyrnoa Isae. Euphil. § 12, Dem, 1013.14; xared-Id. 541. fin., 545. 25, etc.; wered— Luc. D. Mort. 12. 3; Dor. dalraca Pind. P. 9. 119 :—pf. deduyryKa Dem. 902. 26: plapf. xar-ededinrhxe: Id. 542. 6:—Med. and Pass., impf. digr&pny Plat. Com, “Yrep8. 1, Lys. 897. 7, etc., Ion. darrwmpny,—Gro Hat. 3. 65., 4.95: fut. dcarrpoopa: Lys. 145, fin.: so also in pass. forms, aor. d:pTH- Onv Thue, 7. 87, Isae. 57. 40; SiacrhOnv Hdt. 2. 112 (aor. med. only in compd. kara-): pf. dediyrnua Thue. 7. 77: plapf. egededuprnro Id. 1.132.—The double augm. and redupl. is the rule in compds., but in the simple Verb only occurs in pf. and plqpf., v. Veitch Gr. Verbs s. v. (dta:- 7a). To feed in a certain way, to diet, Twa mws Hipp. Aph. 1243; 5. Tovs vooovvras Plut. Cato Ma. 23:—Pass., diarrao0ar kara wordy Hipp. Epid. 3. 1086 ; S:arr@rar oxéAos Id. Art. 824. 2. Med. and Pass. to lead a certain course of life, to live, éw’ d-ypod Hat. 1. 120, cf. 123, Thuc. 1.6, etc.; mapa ru Hdt. 2.112, Soph. O. C. 928; Toby Sépoow Ib. 769, etc.; diarraabar dye, xarw to live up or down-stairs, Lys. 92. 31; woAAG és Oeods vdpupa 8. to live in the observance of .., Thuc. 7. 77; 5. dxpiBas Andoc. 33. 19; dvetuévws Thuc. 2. 39, cf. 1.6, etc.: diacray twa 5. Ep. Plat. 330 C. II. fo be arbiter or umpire (darrnrhs), Isae. de Menecl. Haer. § 38; otros Siarrayv jyuiv Dem, 541. 20; c. acc. cogn., 5. Biavray Arist. Fr. 414. 2. c. acc. rei, to be judge of, deter- mine, decide, Theocr. 12. 34, Dion. H. 7. 52:—also, to settle, accomplish a thing, Pind. P. 9. 121. 3. generally, to regulate, govern, wéAw Id. O. g. 100, cf. Dem. 1142. 26. 4. to reconcile, rwd Ti App. Civ. 5.93. dfatrnpa, 7d, mostly in pl. food, diet, Hipp. Vet. Med. 13; in sing., Arist. Probl. 1.56. 2. in pl. also, rules of life, a mode or course of life, esp. -in regard of diet, Hipp. Vet.Med.g, Xen.Mem.1.6, 5: generally, institu- tions, customs, Thuc. 1.6, Xen. Ath. 1, 8. 3. an abode, Heliod. 2. 26. Siarrjopos, ov, belonging to a d:arryrhs, Isae. ap. Poll. 8. 64. Stairnréov, verb. Adj. one must diet oneself, live, Hipp. 347. 49. Starryrhprov, 7d, (Siarra I. 2) in pl. the dwelling rooms of a house, * Xen. Oec, 9, 4. Starryrijs, of, 6, an arbitrator, umpire, Lat. arbiter, Hdt. 5. 95, Plat. Legg. 956 C, etc.; ris yap dixns .. yiyverai por 5. Srpdtrwy Dem. 541. 16; dkarynrijs ..6 péoos Arist. Pol. 4.12, 5.—At Athens the diacryral were a body of men of mature age (prob. over 50) chosen annually by lot; to one of whom the magistrate could refer any private suit, instead of bringing it before the #A:agrat, though either party had a right of appeal to this court: they were paid by the fee of a drachma (wapdoraats) charged oneach party. There were also private d:arryrai, chosen by the parties, and invested with such powers as the parties agreed upon. See Herm. Pol, Anth. § 145, or, for a full account, Meier Die Didtelen Athens (1846). II. in Byz. law, =judex pedaneus. Starnrikés, 7, dv, of or for diet: 4 5. (sc. réxvn) wholesome living, dietetics, Hipp. 405. 42. II. of or for the b:arrnrhs, Adyos 5. an arbitration, Strabo 461. Sv-arwvilw, to perpetuate, Philo 2. 318 :—intr. to be eternal, Tb. 154. Siatdvios, a, ov, strengthd. for aidvos, lasting through time, ever- Jasting, Plat. Tim. 39 E. Adv. —ws, Procl. St-crwpéopar, Pass. to float about, move to and fro, Plat. Tim. 78 E. Siaxiins, és, (Siaxalw) burnt through, very hot, Theophr. Vent. 21; 7@ (naw 5. Luc: Dom. 31. Adv. ds, Alciphro 1. 27. SiakdPaipw, fut. dpa, to cleanse or purge thoroughly, Ar. Eccl. 847, Plat. Rep. 399 E:—in Med., Id. Legg. 735 C. II. to prune, Theophr. H. P, 2.7, 2. , Siaxd0aplfw, fut. .@, =foreg., Ev. Matth. 3.12, Luc. 3. 17. SiaxdPapors, ews, 7, a thorough cleansing or purging, Plat. Legg. 735 Dz. IL. a pruning, Theophr. H.P. 2.7, 2, C. P. 3. 7, 5, al. SiaxabéLopar, Med. to take each his own seat, Plut. 2. 412 F; so Sa- ae Id. Cic. 47 :—of an army, ¢o occupy a position, Joseph. A. J. 14. 16, 1. Sraxabitéve, to sit down apart, LXx. Braxailw, to make to sit apart, set apart, Xen. Occ. 6, 6. intr. =foreg., Lxx (2 Regg. 11.1); so in Med., Joseph. B. J. 1.15, 6. Stakato, fut. -cavow, to burn through, heat to excess, Hdt. 2, 26:— Pass., yj] S5idOeppos kat d:axexavpévy Arist. Probl. 12. 3, cf. Meteor. 1. 8, 2, etc.; diaxexavpévos els 7d peAdvrarov Luc. Herc. 1; % diaxe- kavpévn (avn the torrid zone, Plut. 2. 896 B. 2. metaph. fo in- flame, excite, often in Plut.; c. acc. cogn., 5. giAoriuiay Theopomp. (Hist.) ¥r. 239. 3. in Surgery, to brand, applying cautery across or throughout, és 7 Hipp. Art. 787; mépyy Ib. 805. StaxtiAoKayaPiLopar, Dep. fo vie with another in virtue (kadond-yabia), mii Diog. ap. Stob. 59. 8. Siakadumrw, fut. yw, to reveal to view, Dem. 155. 26:—Med., draxa- Avpacba 7d ivdriov to throw aside one’s cloak, Ael. V. H. 5. 19. Staxdumra, fut. yw, to bend or turn about, LXX (4 Regg. 4. 34). Bidkapipis, ews, 7, a bending, turning, Greg, Naz. Staxadvdcow, only in aor. 1, pay Tov Adpuyya Sexavaté cov; has aught run gurgling through thy throat? Eur, Cyel. 157: ef. €y-, &x-Kavaoow. BiaktimnActw, to keep a shop, be a retail-trader, Dio Chr. 1. 278. Staxanvilw, to fumigate, Jo. Chrys. BiaxdpaSoxéw, o expect anxiously, Diphil. "Eum. 4, Plat. Ant. 56. Biakdpbios, ov, heart-piercing, ddtvn Joseph. A. J. 19. 8, 2. Staxaprepéw, to endure to the end, last out, Hdt. 3.52; és 7d €xaTov 7-107; els tiv marpida 5, to stand by one’s country, Lycurg. 158. 333 €/ TH cvppayla Xen, Hell. 7. 2, 1: c. part., 6, woAeuov Ib. 7. 4, 8: c. inf., 8. yi) Aé-yery to be obstinate in refusing to speak, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 26. 2. c. acc. to bear patiently, 5. rnAuadrny hpépav, Alex. Tog. A; kaxondGeay 3, Polyb. 37. 3, 4- Staxarehéyxopat, Med. to confute thoroughly, rit Act. Ap. 18. 28. II. @ 347 II. to hold III. to keep on Svaxlvnpa. Siaxaréxw, to keep in check, Polyb. 2. 51, 2, etc. in possession, Ib. 70, 3: to inhabit, Ib. 17, 5. foot, rov méAenov Diod. 15. 82. Siakaroxh, 7, a holding, possessing, Epiphan. 1. 703, etc. dtakdroxos, ov, holding, possessing, Gloss. Staxavdéw, to run to stalk, Lat. decaulescere, Theophr. C. P. 7. 2, 4. Staxauvidtw, («advos) to determine by lot, Ar. Pax 1081. Sidkavors, ews, 7, (Siaxalw) the use of cautery, Hipp. Art. 806, burning heat, Plut. 2, 892 E. Siaxavoréov, verb. Adj. one must burn through, Geop. 17. 25. Siakedlw, fut. dow, to cleave asunder, did fdAa davd nedooa Od. 15. 322, cf. Ap. Rh. 4. 392. Sidkepar, inf. -eefoOar: fut. yar :—serving as Pass. to d:arlOnue (cf. Xen. Hell. 4. 1, 33., 6.5, 1):—to be in a certain state of mind, body or cir ances, to be disposed or affected so and so, Hdt. 2. 83, etc. : often, like €yw, with an Ady., ws S:dxetyar what a state I am in, Eur. Tro. 113; dpadre ws 5, ind rhs vécouv Thuc. 7. 77, etc.; sxeddv piv obra Sianewrat, mire pry yeA@vres TA, Plat. Phaedo 59 A; Kaas, HoxOnpas, pavaws 5, to be in a sad state, sorry plight, Id. Gorg. 504 E, etc.; often also, ed or eax@s 5. rx to be well or ill disposed towards him, Isae. 48. 18, etc.; mpés rva Isocr. 28 D, cf. Isae. 25. 235; qudtueds or oixeiws 5. Tut Xen. An. 2. 5, 27.,7- 5,16; ém@pOdvas 5, 71 to be envied by him, Thuc. 1.75; trémrws tie 5, to be suspected by him, Id. 8.68; épwrinds 5. rev Kade to be in love with .. , Plat. Symp. 216D; drAnatws 5. mpos Thy Hdovivy Xen. Cyr. 4. 1, 14; Adup 5.=Avpaiveodat, Hdt. 2, 162:—1d diaxeipevov=7d maoxov, Arist. Soph. Elench, 4, 9. II. of things, to be settled, fixed, or ordered, tis of diéxecro so was it ordered him, Hes. Sc. 20; Ta dcaxelyeva certain conditions, settled terms, ém biaxepévorot povvopaxjoa Hdt. 9. 26; of a gift, Gyewvov dianeioerat it will be better disposed of, Xen. An. 7. 3, 17. Staxeipw, fut. —Kep@ and —Képow: pf. -Kéxapea :—properly, to cut in pieces, ph Tis... meipatw diaxépoa: éudv mos to make it null, frustrate it, Il. 8.8; cf. émnetpa, émindarw :—Pass., oxevdpia draxexappevos shorn of his trappings, Ar. Vesp. 1313. Stakexpipévws, Ady. part. pf. pass. of diaxpivw, differently from, twds Arist. H. A. 8. 16, 2. II. specially, 5. dpiorn Paus. 10. 33, 7. StaxéAeupa (or —KéAevopa), 76, an exhortation, command, Plat, Legg. 805 C. Saediabian: Dep. to exhort, give orders, direct, 8. rit elvat, moseiv, etc., Hdt. 1. 36, Lys. 174. 17, etc.; 5. rive TodTO, more’y 7 Plat. Euthy- phro 6D; so, 5. Srws.. Id. Rep. 549 E; also, 5. twit re (sc. moreiv) Id. Soph. 218 A, etc.; 5. tu alone, Id. Phaedo 61 A: absol., Id. Theaet. 148 E, etc. 2. to encourage one another, Hdt.1.1., 3.773 often with dAAjAos added, to cheer one another on, Xen. An. 4. 8, 3: hence even, 5. éavr@ Id. Cyr. 1. 4, 13. 3. to admonish, inform, rt tept twos Isocr. 206 E.—The Act. only in Suid. StaxeAevopos, 6, an exhortation, cheering on, Thuc. 7. 71. StaxeAevorréov, verb. Adj. one must direct, Plat. Legg. 631 D. Svakevijs or better Sid Kevijs, Adv. for dd xevijs mpagews, in vain, idly, to no purpose, Hipp. 1210 G, Eur. Tro. 753, cf. Thuc. 4.126; 5. ddAAws Ar. Vesp. 929; parny 6. Plat. Com. $day 2. 21. Stdkevos, ov, quite empty or hollow; 7d 5. a gap, vacuum, Thuc. 4.135.» 5.71; 7a 5. hollows, Plat. Tim. 58 B, 60 E. IL. quite empty or vain, Id. Legg. 820E. III. thin, lank, Plut. Lyc. 17, Poplic. 15; 5. dedopxévau to have a gaunt, hungry look, Luc. Necyom. 15. diaxevéw, to empty outright, Hipp. 248.9, in Pass. Staxevréw, to pierce through, make a puncture, Hipp. 406. 43: verb. Adj. -Kevryréov, Geop. 17. 19, 2. faiheanve: €ws, rede piercing through, puncturing, Hipp. 267. 32. Siaxévwors, ews, }, an emptying out, Hesych. s. v. dueAapvgas. Staxepdvvupar, Pass. to be mixed up with, twos Philostr. 592. Svaxepparife, to change into small coin, dpaxpny Ar. Vesp. 789. Bvakepropéw, strengthd. for xepropéw, to mock at, Dio C. 43. 20. Staxextpévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. of diaxéo, excessively, like Lat. effusé, 5, yedGy ap. Suid. , jie ; Staxexwptopévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. of d:axwpi{w, distinctly, Suid, s. v. Sraxexptmevars, Staxnpixevopar, Dep. to negotiate by herald, mpés twa Thuc. 4. 28. II. in Byz. authors, both in Med, and Act., =sq. Staxynptcow, fut. fo, to proclaim by herald, év biaxexnpuypévors in de- clared war, Plut. Arat. 10 :—Med.=foreg. 1, Diod. 18. 7. 2. to sell by auction, riy oixiay Philostr. 603 ; Ti odctay Plut. Cic. 33. SraxcywAtle, strengthd. for xvy«Ai{w, Hipp. Art. 838, Ar. Fr. 94. Staxwdivevw, to run all risks, make a desperate attempt, hazard all, absol., Thuc. 8. 27, etc.; 5. odpare Antipho 136. 36; és 7c Thue. 7. 47; mpos Twa Id,1.142; also-c.inf., Id. 7.1; (and so in verb, Adj., Sta- KivSiveuréov pavae one must speak at all risks, Plat. Tim. 72D); 6. brép or mpbs twos Lys, 192. 20, Xen. Cyr. 8. 8, 4; mept twos Dem. 1477.28: c. inf., 5.4 xpnardv [7d cdpua] yevécOar 7H) pa) rovnpdy Plat, Prot, 313 A:—Pass. of the attempt, fo be risked, hazarded, Dem. 866. 27; diaxexvduvevpéva pappara desperate remedies, Isocr, 225 D; so in verb. Adj., é5dxee Suaxtvduvevréa [eivar] Arr, An, I. 1. Siaxivéw, to move thoroughly, dpOpov Hipp. Art. 786 :—Pass. to be put in motion, move, Hdt. 3. 108, Hipp. Art. 797; so late writers in Act. 2. to throw into disorder, confound, ra. wempaypéva Thuc. 5 25: to agitate, rd cvppaxied Plut.C. Gracch. 10. Il. to sift thoroughly, scrutinise, pry into, Lat. excutere, tov voov Ar. Nub. 4775 tiva. trepi Twos Sosipat. ap. Ath. 378 C. ; ; ‘ Siaxlvypa, 76, displacement of a bone, partial dislocation, Hipp. Fract. 775 —so Stakivyors, ews, 1), Galen. 12. p. 456. II. £ 348 Siaxipvdo, to mix well, ri tive or év Tue Hipp. 361. 1., 557. 9. “Svaxixpypt, to lend to various persons : in Pass., iuakexpypevov TaAay~ tov Dem. 817. 2. » SidkAaors, ews, 7, feebleness, povijs Jo. Chrys.; v. sq. I. SiaxAdw (v. sub HAdw), to break in twain, Toga... xepot diakddooas (Ep. for —*Adgas) Il. 5. 216. II. in Pass., like d:apvmropat, Lat. Srangi, diaxdGo0at "Iavinds to practise soft Yonian airs (motus Fonici), Ar. Thesm, 163; d:axexAacpévos enervated, Luc. Demon. 18; d:axde- pevor puOpot, opp. to dvdpwdes, Dion. H. de Dem. 43, etc. ‘StdkAcrots, ews, 7, a blocking up, Joseph. A. J. 18. 6, 4. “Brawdelw (v. xAciw), to separate by shutting out, to shut out, Lat. discludere, xopnytas tTivi Polyb. 1. 82,13; twa amd THs xwpas Ib. 73,6. \ énrw, to steal at different times, dca dé diaxéxdewrae Dem. 817. 7; 70 5e SiaxAarey word the number stolen [by the soldiers] and so dis- persed was great, Thuc. 7. 85, cf. Plut. Nic. 27. II. to keep alive by stealth, twa Hat. 1. 38; éavrdy Plut. Sull. 22. III. to keep back by stealth, 7 dmodoyla 5. riy karnyoptay Lys. 175. 19; Suandén- TovTa Tois EavTov Adyous adnPeav Dem. 846. Io. StaxAnpovopéw, to disperse, Longin. 12. 4. SiakAnpse, to assign by lot, allot, ep éxdorp .. pepvqy Aesch. Supp. 978: and in Pass., Plat. Legg. 760 C. 2. to choose by lot, Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 36; 70 déxaror 5. Oaveiv, of decimating soldiers, App. Civ. 2. 47 :—Med. to cast lots, Thuc. 8. 30, Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 343 mpds opas airovs Dem. 1380. 4. StaxAjpwors, ews, 7, a casting of lots, Porphyr., Eccl. - StaxAtpaxlfo, strengthd. for xAruaxifw, Plat. Com. IpecB. 2. StaxAtve, to turn away or retreat from, ris dyopas Polyb. 11. 9, 8; dé tivos Id. 6. 41, IT. 2. c. acc. to decline, shun, 1d. 35. 4, 6. SidkAtors, ews, , a retreat, Plut. Pyrrh. 21. StaxAovéw, to shake violently, Hesych. StakAvlo, to wash, wash out, dvrp’, & mévros vorid: 8, Eur. I. T. 107, ‘cf. Ath. 381 B:—Med. to wash out one’s mouth, Hipp. 1207, Arist. Probl. 27. 3:—Pass. to be washed out, Oepu@ with hot water, Id. G.A. 2. 4, 27: to be purged, Medic. “SidkAvopa, 74, a lotion for washing out the mouth, 5, ddovrad-yias to prevent tooth-ache, Diosc. 1.53; so StakAvopes, 6, Id. -SiaxAd0o, strengthd. for cAwOw, Greg. Naz. SiaxAwmdw, post. for daxAérrw, to steal away, dub. 1. Anth. P. 5. 213: —Reisk. 5: kAwrdy. Siaxvatw (v. «vaiw), to scrape or grate to nothing, dyrv 6. to grind out his eye, Eur. Cycl. 487 :—Pass. to be lacerated, Hipp. 644.49; Siaxvato- pévns Kapakos the spear being shivered, Aesch. Ag. 65. 2. to wear out, wear away, } dovrin 5, Hipp. 451.2; md0os p’ Pet dianvaicas Ar. Eccl. 957, cf. Eur. I. A. 27, Heracl. 297; 8.’Opéarny to murder Orestes (i.e. the character, by bad acting), Strattis "AvOp. 1:—Pass. to be worn quite away, destroyed, aixias, udx@os Aesch. Pr. 94, 541, cf. Eur. Med. 164, Alc. 108; d:axvarcOnjoera Ar. Pax 251; 70 xpwpa Siaxexvao- pévos having lost all one’s colour, Id, Nub, 120. Btanvitw, fo pull to pieces, 5. dvOea Anth. P. 4. 1, 32:—Pass., Arist. H. A. 6. 16, 4., 7. 3, 8. 2. to pull to pieces (by attacking), 5. kat oveopayre Dion. H. de Dem. 35. Srdkoudos, ov, guite hollow, Diod. 17. 115. : Biaxotpiivéw, fo hold rule through, Il. 4. 230 (ubi nunc 51d Korp-). - BiakoAdKevouat, Med. to vie with each other in flattery, Isoct. 266 B: —Act. in Schol. Eur. BiiKxodAdw, to glue together, Luc. Indoct. 16 :—Pass,, Ald diaxexod- Xnpévos formed of stones morticed together, 1d. Hipp. 6. oAovdéw, strengthd. for doAovdéw, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 275. Spr er eet to dive and swim across, C. 1. 2347 ¢. 30, Polyb. . 46, 8. 5 a copibh, %, @ carrying over, Twds els rérov Thuc. 3. 76. Staxopilo, fut. Att. 1@, to carry over or across, els Thy vijcov Thue. 3.753 mévre cradious 5. ra Hat. 1. 31 :—Med. to carry over what is one’s own, 8. Tods maidas, Id. 1. 89 :—Pass. to be carried over, Thuc. 1. 136: to pass over, cross, Id. 3. 23, Andoc. 27. 34, Plat. Legg. 905 B. II. to recover, revive, Twa citric Hipp. 479. 28. Staxopiorys, od, 6, a carrier, émarodAdy, cited from Synes. -Bidkoppa, 76, a cut, gash, Hipp. Prorrh. 100. Siaxoprdle, fut. dow, to boast one against the other, TOAAA 51) Brendu- magas ov Kavu, restored by Burges for daxdpucas (which is against the metre) in Ar. Av, 1248. Biaxopzréw, strengthd, for xoéw, Pind. Fr. 128, Posidon. ap. Ath. 212 B. Siaxovéw, Ion. Siyx—: impf. edcaxdvovy Eur. Cycl. 406 (Herm.), Alcae. Com. ’Evéup. 2, Nicostr. in Meineke Fr. 5. 84; later also diyedvour N.T.: fut. -fow Hadt., Plat.:—aor. diqxdvnoa Aristid., inf. daxov7- oat Antipho 113. 10: pf. Sedunxdvnea Archedic. Ono. 2, cf. Moer, 121: —Med., impf. dinxovodpny Luc. Philops. 35: fut. —foopat Id.: aor. dinxovnadpny Id.:—Pass., fut. Sedaxovgopat Joseph. A. J. 18. 8, 7: aor, éhaxovfOnv Dem. 1206. 19: pf. Sedvaxdvnpat, v. infr. 11: (did~ Kovos). To minister, serve, do service, absol., Eur. Ion 397, Ar. Av, 1323; c. dat. pers., Dem. 362, ult., etc.; 5. daxovend Epya Arist. Pol. 14,73 8. broOqjnaus twWds Antipho 113.19; 5. mapd TO BSeondry ‘osidipp. "AwoxA. 1; 8. mpds te to be serviceable towards .., Plat. Rep. 371 D:—Med. ¢o minister to one’s own needs, serve oneself, Soph. Ph. 287; abr@ diaxovetoda Ar. Ach. 1017; Siakovodvres kat dtiaxovodpevot éavrois acting as servants and serving themselves, Plat. Legg. 763 A: also simply like the Act., civov huiv xpuoiy Siaxovovpevor Luc, Asin. 53- 3. to be a deacon, 1 Ep. Tim. 3. 10 and 13, Eccl. _ iL ©. acc, rei, fo serve up, supply, Lat. ministrare, rive 6 re dv Bend Hat. 4-154, Plat, Polit. ago A; 5. yépous Posidipp. Xop. 1. 19 :—Pass. to be | Staxipyaw — draxovw. supplied, rh méAet CSiaxovhOnoay [ai mpdges] Dem. 1206.18 ; Tay Kaas dedcaxovnpevev Id, 1230. 10. Swixévynpa, 76, servants’ business, service, dovdikd 5, Plat, Theaet. r75 E, ef. Arist. Pol. t. 7, 3, C. I. 2811 5. 24. TI. in pl. instru- ments of service, as jugs, etc., Ath. 274 B. Siakdvyois, ews, 7, a serving, doing service, Plat. Legg. 633 C. Svaxovyréoy, verb. Adj. one must minister; and Staxovyrys, od, 6, fem. —Hrpra, 7), a minister, all in Eccl. Suaxovia, 4%, the office of a didxovos, service, Thuc. 1. 133, Plat. Rep. 371 C, etc.; ob éore radr’ dpxy, GAN’ empédecd tis Kat 8. Aeschin. 55. 35- 2. attendance on a duty, ministration, Dem. 296. 29; % 6. 4 kaOnuepivy, of ministering to external wants, Act. Ap. 6.1; but also, 7 5. Tov Adyou Ib. 4, cf. 1. 17, etc. 8. deaconship, Eccl. II. a body of servants or attendants, Polyb. 15. 25, 4. III. instru- ments of service (cf. d:axévnua 11), Moschio ap. Ath. 208 B. Siaxovicés, 7, dv, good at service, serviceable, Ar. Pl. 1170, etc.; in Comp. —wrepos, Plat. Gorg. 517 B; ai 5. mpdges, 7d 5. épya servants’ business, menial work, Arist. Pol. 3. 4, 12., 7-14, 73 5. dperat Ib. 1. 13, 2. Ady. —K@s, in a business-like way, Menand. Any. ¥. Biaxévov, 76, a sort of cake, Pherecr. Incert. 6. Siaxoviopar [vi], Pass. fo roll in the dust, Hipp. 1293. 22: and so, to prepare for combat, Plut. 2.970 F. Siakévicca, 7), a deaconess, Eccl. Stakovos [G], Ion. SuqKovos, 6:—a servant, waiting-man, menial, Lat. minister, Hdt. 4. 71, 72, etc.: a messenger, Aesch. Pr. 942, Soph. Ph. 497; Spvi8a Kat enpuxa kal 56. Id. Fr. 141 :—also as fem., Ar, Thesm. 1116, Dem. 762. 4. 2. a minister of the church, esp. a deacon, i Ep. Tim. 3. 8, etc.: and in fem, a deaconess, Ep, Rom. 16, 1. II. as Adj. serving, serviceable, Plat. Polit. 290 C; irreg. Comp. daxovéorepos Epich. 159 Ahr. (Buttm., Lexil. vy: dsdxropos 3, makes it prob. that the Root is the same as the Root of didéew, and that d:deropos is a collat. form; v. sub d:a*w.—The old deriv. from d:4, «dvs, one who is dusty with running (cf. xoviw), is untenable, if for no other reason, from the quantity of the a.) St-ticovrifw, fo throw a javelin at, Twa Eus, P. E. 210 D:—Med. to contend with others at throwing the javelin, Xen. Cyt. 1. 4,43 mpds twa Theophr. Char. 27. Staxévrwcts, ews, 7, =xdvTwors, Ael. N. A. 12. 43. Staxomrh, , a gash, cleft, as in a wounded bone, Hipp. V. C, goo, Plut. Mar, 19, etc, Stdkompos, ov, well-manured, Theophr. C. P. 4. 12, 3. Staxdmrw, to cut in two, cut through, 5d dépnv exowe péocony Anacr. 80; then in Thuc. 2. 4, Xen. An. 7. 1, 17, etc. :—Pass. ¢o receive a gash, Hipp. Aph. 1257, Polyb. 2. 30, 7. 2. to break through the enemy’s line, 3. rdgw Xen, An. 1.8, 10; tiv pddayya, Tovs toAepuious Plut. Pyrrh. 7, etc.:—and absol., to break through the enemy’s line, Xem Hell. 7. 5, 23, etc.; 5, mpds rds eioddous Id. Cyr. 3. 3, 66; so, of a weapon, 5. dxpt Tod deAGetv Luc. Nigr. 37. 3. to cut off, break off, interrupt, stop short, riv mepioSoy Arist. Rhet. 3.9,43; 5. Tas diadv- ges Polyb, 1. 69, 5; Umvov Ael. N. A. 3. 37. 4, to stamp falsely, of coin, like mapaxémrw, ap. Suid. II. intr. to break through, burst through, Xen. Hell. 7.5, 23. Staxopevo, =sq., Ar. Thesm. 480, Euphor. Fr. 164, Luc. D. Meretr.11. 2. Siaxopéw, (xdpn) to deflower, ravish, Luc. D. Marin. 13. 1. Staxopis, és, = didKopos, twvds Plat. Legg. 629 B; tivé Plut. Lyc. 15. Staxdpyors, ews, 7, rape, ravishment, Joseph. A. J. 7. 8, 1, Scholl. Sraxopifw, =diiaxopéw, Hesych. s. v. diaxexdpirrat. II. («dépy M1) to gaze intently at, Hesych. Staxopkoptiyéw, to rumble through, ri yaorépa Ar. Nub. 387. Sidkopos, ov, satiated, glutted, twébs with a thing, Hdt. 3. 117, Xen. Lac. 1, 5. Adv.-pws, immoderately, Dio C. 68. 7. Stakootdkts, Adv. two hundred times or two-hundred-fold, Oribas. p.103. _, Buaixdoror, Ton. Sink-, at, a, two hundred: sing. with n. of multitude, trmos 6. two hundred horse, Thuc. 1. 62, cf. Xen, Cyr. 4. 6, 2. diaKoctovrd-xous, ouv, two-hundred-fold, Strabo 731; Tyrwh. d:axo- oaxouv, cf. rpraxoctdxour in Strabo 742; but Suid. has a form SvaKo- CLovTaKis. Siaxooocrds, H, dv, the two-hundredth, Dion. H. 8. 83. Siakoct0-rexcapakovrd-xous, ouv, two-hundred-and- forty -fold, Strabo 831. ; Siakocpéw, to divide and marshal, muster in array, ds Tods Hyépoves died peov Il. 2.476; 8. rhv rowmiy Thuc. 1. 20:—Pass., €imep .. és Bewdbas diaxocpnbeipev “Axaroi (Ep. for -einpev) Il, 2.126; dd tptxa koopnbevres Ib. 655; v. sub rpixa, didrpixa. 2. generally, to ar- range, regulate, set in order, Hdt. 1. 100, Thuc. 2. 100, Plat., al. :— Med,, may péyapoy Stexoophaavro got it all set in order,Od.22.457; 5.73 o®pa Hipp, 344. II. to adorn variously, rwi 7 Crobyl. Incert. 3. vakdopnors, €ws, 7, a setting in order, arranging, regulating, oixn- cewv Plat. Symp. 209 A; trav vépar Id. Legg. 853 A:—the term was used by the Pythagoreans and others for the orderly arrangement of the Universe, Arist. Metaph. 1. 5, 2, cf. Fr.13, Plut. Pericl. 4, Diod. 12. 20; ef. also xpyopootvn. Staxoopyrixés, 4, dv, regulative, Iambl, Myst. p. 177. didkoopos, 6,=b:axdcpnats, 6 rod Blov 5, Arist. Mund. 6, 25; 5. ovpavod Kat ‘vis Ib. 37: Democritus wrote works entitled uéyas and puxpds Atdxoopos, Diog. L.9.13. 2. battle-order, Thuc. 4.93: II. the Catalogue of ships in Il. 2, Strabo 542. Biaxoupile, intr. to become lighter for an interval, remit,Hipp.Epid.1.945. aetna sremit,Hipp. Epid.1.945 , fut. —axovgouar: (v. dicovw) :—to hear through, hear out or , to the end, ri Xen. Occ. 11, I, etc.:—fo hear or learn from another, Te. +b Tivos Plat. Polit. 264 B; mapa twos Theopomp. Hist, 277; 6. 7a ddfavTa dcaco\yig — tots dpxovow Arist, Pol. 2. 11, 6:—also c. gen. rei, 8. rv Ad-yow Plat. Parm.126C; mepi tivos Polyb. 3.15,4:—but c. gen. pers, to be a hearer or disciple of, Plut. Cic. 4, cf. Ep. Plat. 338 D. Srdkoypis, ews, 4, = Saxony, Theophr. C. P. 5.9, 11. Staxpiisaiv, fut. dvd, to shake violently, Arist. ap. Stob. 1. 628. Siaxpdtw, Zo scream continually, Ar. Av. 307. II. 5. rivi to match another at screaming, Id, Eq. 1403. Siaxpiiréw, to hold fast, detain, Phylarch. Fr. 24, Dion.H. 1. 79, etc. 2. tosupport, 5émas Ath. 492 A: metaph. tosupport, keep alive, aitév Diog.L.9. 43- II, intr. to hold back, App. Civ. 2.8: to hold one’s own, Plut.Sert. 7. biakparyots, ews, 7, a holding fast, retention, Diosc, Ther. praef. sub fin. : possession, Schol. Thue. 1. 139, Suid. v. ddpioros. Staxpairyticds, 7, dv, able to hold fast, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 72. Staxpékw, Zo strike the strings of the lyre, Anth. Plan. 307. Staxpypvite, strengthd. for xpnuvi¢w, Joseph. B. J. 1. 2, 4. Sitaxpynvéw, Dor. -Kpavée, to make to flow, mua Theocr. 7. 154. B-axpiBodoyéopar, Dep. Zo inguire too minutely, Plat. Soph. 245 E. St-axpiBdw, to portray exactly, ”Epwra Simon. 188. 2. to examine or discuss minutely or with precision, 7+ Xen. Cyt. 2.1, 27, Arist. Soph. Elench, 7, 5, Eth. N. 10. 8, 3 :—so in Med., Plat. Theaet. 184 D; epi twos Isocr.44C; dinepiBwrau the subject has been ined minutely, Arist. Rhet. 1.8, 7:—in Pass. also to be brought to exactness or perfection, Id. Eth. N. 3. 3,8, etc. ; of dineptBapévor accomplished persons, Plat. Legg. 965 A; Sinkp. Téxvar Ath, 511 D:—also verb. Adj. -wréov c, acc., Plut. Lys. 12. Svaxpib4, Adv.=sq., Opp. C. 2. 496. SiaxptSév, Adv. (Saxpivm) eminently, above all, Lat. eximi2, dvaxpiddv elvat dpioros, like éfoxa, Il. 12. 103., 15. 108; dpiorous 5. Hdt. 4. 53; 8. qoxnpévn Kbpn Luc, Amor. 3. 2. distinctly, Nic. Th. 955. Staxpive, fut.—«piv@: (v. xpivw) :—to separate one from another, HoT’ airéda .. aimédor dvipes feta diaxpivwow Il, 2. 475: to part com- batants, eiodee Saluwv dupe Siaxpivy 7. 292, etc.; ef pr) vié.. dia- xpwée pévos dvbpov 2. 387, cf. Hdt. 8. 18; 5. grdéovre Od. 4. 179; also, ornuovas ovyxexupévovs 5, Plat. Crat. 388 B; 5. thy xéuny to part it, Plut. Rom. 15 :—Pass. fo be parted, of combatants, duaxpivO7- pevar 7j5n ’Apyetous kat Tp@as (Ep. inf. aor. 1 pass.) IL. 3. 98, cf. 102., 7. 306, etc.; so also in fut. med. d:axpuéecOat, Od. 18. 149., 20. 180; KtaxpOijvac dw ddAndov Thuc, 1. 105, cf. 3.93 duaxplvecOae mpds .. zo part and join different parties, Id. 1. 18. 2. in old philosophers, ’ to separate or dissolve into elemental parts, opp. to ovyxpive, Anaxag. ap. Arist. Phys. 8. 9, 7, Emped. ap. Metaph. 1. 4, 8:—oft. in Pass., Epich. 126 Ahr., Plat. Phaedo 71 B, Parm. 157 A, etc. II. to distinguish, Lat. discernere, nal x’ ddads.. dtaxpivae 76 ofpa Od. 8. 195; ovdéva d:axplywy without distinction of persons, Hdt. 3. 39; 5. THY Kpdenv nar Tods ornpovas Plat. Crat. 388 B; odx? 5. riv mevexpav } mAovaiay Diod. ’EmxAnp. 1.8; also, 5. ri Twos Plat. Tim. 58 B, etc. : —absol. to make a distinction, 4 votoos diaxpive év ovdéx Hipp. 486. 32; so also in pf. pass., daxexpipeOa Tas Te KaOapds H5ovds Kal .. Plat. Phileb. 52 C; but plqpf. in pass. sense, duexéxpiro ovdév no distinction was made, Thuc. I. 49. III. to settle, decide, of judges, Pind. QO.8. 32; 5. dixas Hdt.1. 100; Bia Te Kpivnor Oépioras Theocr. 25. 46; also to determine a fever, mark its crisis, Hipp. 137; 5. atpeow Hat. 1. 11; 5. ¢..Id. 7.54; 5. mepi rivos Ar. Av. 719 :—Med., veixos 5. to get it decided, Hes. Op.35; 70 (nroupévor Plat. Phileb.46B; tad7a .. Smws more éxe 5. Dem. 890. 1 :—Pass. of persons, to come to a decision, énéecai ye yyturiout We SiaxpwOévre Il. 20. 212; al rw Tav ToAlww H dupidroya, d.axpiOjpev Foed. Dor. ap. Thuc. 5. 79; daxpietpev mepi twos Plat. Euthyphro 7C: also of combatants, payn diaxpiOjvae mpds Twa Hat. 9. 58; mpds twa bwép twos LXxX (Joel. 3. 2); SmAas f Adyous Siaxpi- vecOat Philipp. ap. Dem. 163. 15; d:axpivec@at absol., Lat. decertare, Polyb. 3.111, 2; Tet with one, Ep. Jud. g:—in full pass. sense, méAeyos diaxpWqoera Hdt. 7. 206. IV. to set [a place] apart for holy pur- poses, Pind,O, 10 (11). 56. V. to interpret, Junc. ap. Stob. 598. 43- VI. Med. and Pass, to doubt, hesitate, pndtv diaxpivdpevos Act. Ap. 10. 20., 11.12; pi) daxpiOAre Ev. Matth. 21. 21, cf. Ep. Rom. 4.20. Atdxpuor, of, the Mountaineers (dwelling in Acaxpia), one of the three political parties at Athens, after Solon’s time, Ar. Vesp. 1223, Plut. Sol. 13; cf. brepdupioe. Sidkpiois, ews, %, separation, dissolution, opp. to av-yxpiots, Emped. ap. Arist. Gen. et Corr. 2. 6, 11, Anax. ap. Phys. 3. 4, 5, Plat., al. 2 in concrete sense, a solution, } drpts tdaros 5. éoriw Arist. Meteor. 1. 3, 18, cf. 1. 4, 3. IL. a decisi: ination, judgment, Plat. Legg, 765 A, Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 27: interpretation of dreams or omens, Paus. 1. 34, 5- IIL. a dispute, Polyb. 18. 11, 4: quarrel, Arat. 109. LY: in Xen. Cyn. 4, 1, the space between the eyes in dogs. Staxpuréov or —€a, verb. Adj. one must decide, Thuc. 1. 86. Staxpirixds, 4, dv, discrete, opp. to compound (avyxpitixés), Arist. Metaph. 9. 7, 7. 2. separative, } —Kh, opp. to #ovyxpiruch (q. v.), Plat. Polit. 282 B sqq. :—Adv. -«@s, Sext, Emp. M. 7. 117. II. able to-distinguish, ris ovatas Plat. Crat. 388 °C. Sidxptros, ov, separated ; and so, choice, excellent, Theocr. 22. 163. Si-axpoPoAriLopar, Dep. to skirmish with others, Joseph. B. J. 4.7, 1. ‘Bi-axpoBodtopés, 6, a skirmishing, mockfight, Strabo 155. Staxporéw, fo strike through, sensu obscoeno, Lat. pertundere, Eur. Cycl. 180. IL. to resolve into component parts, as words into their ele- ments, opp. to ovyxporéw, Plat. Crat. 421 C. IIL. to knock off fetters, Plut. 2. 304 B. ; Stakpovors, ews, 7, a pudting off, esp. of a cause, Dem. 1265. 14; of danger, Plut. Cor. 19. Staxpovonikés, 4, dv, able to drive away, Twds Clem. Al. 821. P pe » deter SrarauBave. 349 4. 2. to prove by knocking or ringing, as one does an earthen vessel, 5. ceive tyes etre cabpdv pbéyyera: Plat. Theaet..179 D; cf. Luc. Paras. 4, and vy. mepixpovw. II. in Med. to drive from oneself, get rid of, elude, rods “EAAnvas Hat, 7. 168 ; iv mpdaodov Dion. H. 3. 33 Maxpds orparnyias Plut. Nic. 6; duaxpovecOa: 7d dodvar dixnvy Dem. 556.25; and absol., in same sense, Id. 575. 6., 579.13; 5. Tuva to evade his creditor by delays, of a debtor, Id. g11. 8, cf. 988. 7; so, 5. Tov napévta xpévoy Id. 351. 15, etc.; and absol. to practise evasions and delays, 1d. 1266, 11 :—Pass., d:axpovoOjvat ris Tipwplas to escape from punishment, Id, 741. 24. III. to hinder, entangle, éavrov dia~ Kpovew év Tois mpaypact Plut.2.80D. Cf. éxxpovw, mapaxpovo. Staxptmre, strengthd. for cpUmrw, Poll. 6. 209, Diog. L. 4. 16. Siaxrevifw, to comb well, dexrencpéva perpaxia Philostr. 335. Siax 6s, 6, a combing through, Clem. Al. 261. Staxropta, the office of a didxropos, service, Musae. 6, Anth. P. 6.68. Sidkropos, 6, the regular epith. of Hermes in Hom., did«ropos *Apyet- pévrns ll. 2. 103, Od. 5. 43, etc.; but Scderopos alone in Od. 12. 390., 15. 319. Its sense is disputed. The common deriv. is from did-yw, the Conductor, Guide, which suits the character of Hermes in Hom. (cf, épsovvys), as in Il. 5. 390 (where he releases Ares), 24. 339 (where he conducts Priam to Achilles), Od. 1. 84 (where he releases Ulysses), 11. 625 (where he guides Hercules from Hades). It is, however, commonly interpreted the Messenger, Minister of Zeus,=6 diayov ras dyyedias: but such an office is never attributed to him in IL, and is not necessary in Od.; v, Nitzsch ad 1. 84; and there is still less authority for the in-. terpr. 6 did-yor Tas Yuxds (E. M, 268. 20) adopted by Luc. Contempl. 1, where Charon calls Hermes his ovvd:d«ropos (cf, Ar, Ran. 140, where diaryey is used of Charon),—Buttm. considers it as merely another form of diaxovos, q. v.—Later writers used it in the general sense of attendant, as Call. Fr. 164, of Athena’s owl; Anth. P. 7. 161, of Jove’s eagle; Luc. Alex. 33 calls a poet woAéuwv 6,; and Nonn, has it even as a neut. Adj., Sideropa dniéryros éyxea D. 39. 82. Slacros, ov, carried through pipes, of oils or unguents used at the bath, C. I. (add.) 2820, 3871 b. Sidktwp, opos, 6,=foreg., Bovrdy 5. Anth, P. ro, ror. SiaxtPepvaw, to steer through, pilot, ra Ovyrd, ravOpmmva. Plat. Tim. 42E, Legg. 709 B; of a physician, Arist. Probl. 1. 3. BtaxvPevw, to play at dice with another, mpés twa Plut. Rom. 5: hence to make a hazard or stake, wept twos Id, 2,128 A. Biakixdw, to mix one with another, jumble,dva kat carw 5. Dem. 263.19. StaktAwb5éw, to roll about, Arist. H. A. 9. 8, 5. Staxipatve, to raise into waves, 70 médayos, Luc. D. Marin. 15. 4. StaxivopOarptlopar, Med. to look askance one at another, Com. Anon, 116, v. ap. Eust. 756, 60, and Hesych. Biaxtare, fut. yw, to stoop and creep through a narrow place, Hdt. 3. 145, Ar. Eccl. 930. 2. to stoop so as to peep in, Ar. Pax 78; did ris xepapldos Diphil. Xpvo. 1; 3. mpds te to pry into, Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 66. Staxtipirropar, Dep. to butt against, twi Synes. 77 C. Stakipse, to confirm, ratify, A. B. 35. StaxwSavifw, strengthd. for kwdavitw, Lys. ap. E. M. 267. 30, Dem. 393-17. IL. to bruit abroad, Strabo 99. StaxdAdpa, aros, 74, a hindrance, obstacle, Plat. Legg. — D. BiaxdAdors, ews, }, a hindering, preventing, al Trav avatpécewy 5, Plat. Rep. 469 E; trav mpoaipecéwy Arist. Rhet. Al. 2, 3. StaxwAtréov, verb. Adj. one must hinder, Plat. Rep. 401 B. SiaxwAdrijs, of, 6, a Ainderer, Hdt. 6. 56, Plat. Phaedr. 239 E. SiaxwAtricds, 4, dv, preventive, Plat. Polit. 280 D, Arist. H. A. Io. 1, 12. SiaxwAtw [i], fut. dow, fo hinder, prevent, Tid pi) moveiv Hat. 8. 144, ef. Lys. 161. 25; or with inf. only, Eur. Hec. 150, Plat. Apol. 31 E; 5. twa Thuc. 8. 92, Arist. Eth, N. 8.8, 5; 5. rua re (sc. moveiv) Ep. Plat. 315 D;. 8. wd Twos Diod. 17. 40; 8. pdvov Soph. O.C. 1771; 6. 7d mpayya Alcae, Com. Tay. 2:—Pass., daxwAvOels tuxety Antipho 121, ult,; & dexwdvOn (sc. toreiv) Dem. 245. 12. Staxwpewdéw, to satirise, Plat. Gorg. 462 E, Arist. Poét. 22, 9. Siakwxy, v. sub dio“wx7. SuadaPn, %, a seizing by the middle, Dion. H. 19. 12. Siadayxdve, fut. -Ajfopyat, to divide or part by lot, Hat. 4. 68, Aesch. Theb, 789, 816, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, I, etc., of. Ruhnk. Tim, ; daa One7rd odhpy 5. Eur. Phoen. 68 :—metaph. to zear in pieces, Id. Bacch, 1292. Sradaporopéopar, Pass. to have one’s throat cut, Mnesim. “Immorp, 1. 16, Siadakéw, to crack asunder, burst, Ar. Nub. 410. Siadaxrile, fut. iow, to kick away, spurn, Theocr. 24. 25, Plut. 2.648 B. Siadiréw, to talk with, rt or mpds Twa Polyb. 1. 85, 2, etc.; Tvl, mepit or imép Tivos Ib., etc. II. 5. twit 7 to talk over a thing with another, Eur. Cycl. 175 :—Pass. to be much talked of, Ev. Luc. 1.65. SraddAnors, ews, 7, talking, discourse, Schol. Pind, O, 7. 17. StakapBdvw, fut. —Ajyouar: aor. d€AGBov: pf. SieiAnpa: pf. pass. SietAnupat, also KuaAeAnppa Ar. Eccl. 1ogo, Ion, —AéAappas Hdt.: (vy. AapBave). To take or receive severally, i.e. each for himself, each his own share, iva diadapBavoey Exacro 7a dfia Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 1, cf. An, 5. 3, 43 5. olxias Lys, 120. 41, cf, Dem, g18. 10, etc, II. to grasp ox lay hold of separately, d:adaBévres .. Tas xeipas Kat Tods wédas Hadt. 4. 94 :—hence ¢o seize or arrest, twa Id. 1. 114, Plat. Rep. 615 E; diadcAappevos dyera:Hdt. 4.68, 2. asa gymnastic term, fo grasp round the waist, seize by the middle, d:adaBdv iyyxupicas (v. d-yeupi{w), Ar. Eq. 262; d:adapBdvev rods veavicxous érpaxgdwey Plut. Anton. 33 ; in full, péoov 5. ruvd (Terent. medium arripere), Ach. Tat. 3. 13 :—of the soul, desAnupévy bd Tod cwparoeSods Plat. Phaedo 81 C. 2. metaph. to embrace many particulars in one, Arist. Mund. 5,6, Theophr. Staxpotw, fo knock or drive through, opjva Theophr. C, P. 2. 15; DH. P. 8, 1, 6. III. to divide, rdv motapoy és Tpinwogias bid~ / 350 puxas 5, Hdt. 1. 190, 202., 5. 52; 7px Shdexa pépyn 5. to divide 12 parts into 3 (i.e. of 4 each), Plat. Legg. 763 C; iva xopis Hyas da- AdBn, of a person taking his seat between two others, Id. Symp. 222 E; 5. cis Uo mavras to divide them into two patties, Arist. Pol. 4.11, 13; 6 mropOpos 5. riv SixeAtav Id. Mirab. 105 :—Pass., worapds d:adckappévos mevraxou divided into five channels, Hdt. 3.117; Oupaxes drecAnupévor 7 Bapos ind Trav Tod ohparos pep&y coat-armour having its weight distributed so as to be borne by the several parts of the body, Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 13. 2. to mark at intervals, orhdaus 5. rods Spous Decret. ap. Dem. 278. 23; 7a reixn 5. pudakrypios Kal mipyos to provide them at intervals with.., Arist. Pol. 7.12, 1; émeodias 5. tiv molnow Id. Post. 23, 5:—of Time, ra 7av wpdy enavrois i- e:Anupéve Plat. Legg. 886 A. 8. to cut off, intercept, ra orevé- mopa Thuc. 7. 73; 5. rappw Polyb. 5.99, 9; 5. puAaxais Id. 1. 18, 4, etc.:—absol., diadaBév at intervals, Hipp. 617. 34. 4. to mark off, distinguish, at modvreiat .. Tods wreiaTous Stecdnpact Isocr. 44 A; 8. rdv Shyov, rods dmépous Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 14., 6. 5, 10:—Pass., ¥ Xpwpact deAnppévn, Lat. coloribus distincta, marked with various colours, Plat. Phaedo 110 B. 5. to divide or distinguish in thought, ravra 5. rots diavonpact Id, Legg. 777 A; 5. dixa avrods TO mailay kat TO pn Ib. 935 A, cf. Eur. El. 373; did ray Epywr 3. ri miotw to draw distinctive arguments from facts, Arist. Pol. 7. 1, 6:—hence ¢o determine, define, Tt Polyb. 15.5, 2; mept twos Arist. P. A. 3. 4, 13 imép tivos Polyb. 2. 42,7; 5. ri def moreiv Id. 4.25, 1, etc.; c.inf., 30.9, 2: and in later Prose, simply, to think, believe, Luc. Nigr. 26, etc. 6. to state distinctly, discuss, Lat. disserere, Philipp. ap. Dem. 165. 17, Apollon. de Constr. 27. 9, etc.; so in Med., Schiif. Greg. 7.931: cf. BerAnupéevas. 7. to interrupt in speaking, Arist. Probl. 5. 1, 2, etc. 8. to quote, mention, Byz. Siadapmpive, to make splendid, illustrate, 7 Plut. 2.735 A. Siaddprre, 26 shine through, Arist. H. A. 2. 11, 10., 4.9, 123 metaph., 3. 7d Kaddy (sc. a ras druxias) Id. Eth. N. 1. 10, 12. 2. to dawn, déAapev juépa Ar. Pl. 744; absol., d:addymovros (sc. Tod HAiov) Plut, Pyrrh. 32. 2. metaph. to shine or be conspicuous in a composition, 5, idéa: Isocr. 233 B; of men, to be conspicuous, Call. ap. Suid. s.v. Kaaa. II. of the voice, to sound clearly so as to be heard through a crowd, Arist. Probl. 19. 45, 2. BidAapipis, ews, , a lighting up, Arist. Meteor. 2. 9, 19. II. metaph. distinction, éxewv tid év diaddppe C. I. 3524. 29. avOdve, fut. -Anjow, and in Hipp. 399 —Ajoopat; aor. 5éAaBov :— to escape notice, with part., duadnoe ypyords wv Isocr. 29, ult.; but also diadabdy elaépxerac Thuc. 3. 25: c. acc. pers. to escape the notice of, Oeovs Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 19; o¢ TovTo StadéAnGe Plat. Euthyd. 278 A. Siddavpos, ov, =mepidppodos, Hesych. Siadtixatva, to cut asunder as with a plough, dd kiya d. Opp. H. 5. 264. Sv-aAyéw, strengthd. for dAyéw, Polyb. 4. 4, 2. &t-aAyns, és, grievous, dra Aesch.Cho, 68; the Schol. explains it by dia- evifovca, whence Paley suggests that he found aidv7s in his Ms. II. suffering great pain, Plut. Alex. 75. Biadéyw, fut. fw, to pick out one from another, to pick out, Hdt.8. 107, 113, Xen. Oec. 8, 9, etc.; mavra eis tv xwvedoer al els kaBapov drareser Or. Sib. 2. 213., 3. 87., 8. 412 :—to distinguish, Plat. Legg. 735 B. If. thy omhy picking open the hole, to escape, Ar. Lys. 720. B. as Dep., duadéyouar: fut. Sead€fopar Isocr. 233 D, 255 E, etc. ; also -AexOAcopat Id. 195 C, Dem. 311. 19: aor. deAefapnv Hom., Ar. Fr. 321; also dueAéxOnv, Hdt., Att.; rarely aor. 2 d:aAeyivar Arist. Top. 7. 5, 2. 8. 3, 6, 3 pl. &éAeyey C. 1. 3052. 10., 3656.7: pf. dxel- Aeypast Plat. Theaet. 158 C, Isocr.; plapf. dueiAexro Dem. 553. 11 (but in pass, sense, Lys. 114. 36): cf. mpodiadéyo. To converse with, hold converse with, c. dat. pers, poe Tavra pidos died€garo Ovyds Il, 11. 407; cf. Archil. 74, Hdt. 3. 50, 51, Ar. Nub, 425, etc. ; mpés rwa Plat. Polit. 272 D, etc.; 8. ri rit or mpds T1va to discuss a question with another, Xen. Mem. 1,6} 1.,2. 10, 1; 5. Spous, mpaypara Arist. An. Post, 2.7, 5, etc. ; 5. wept twos Isocr. 28 B, Dem, pie 21; Tut mepl twos Thuc. 8.93; 6. Tit ph moveiv to argue with one against doing, Id. 5.593 €t rovro 7d Pijpa wat ph rout) bieréxOnv eyw Dem. 305.5; of vépor ovdev ror 8. have nothing ¢o say to him, concern him not, Id. 1070. 4, cf. Aeschin, 3.27; 5. mpds Tt to argue on.., Arist. An. Pr. 1. 43; or against... , Id. Phys. 1. 2, 3:—absol. to discourse, reason, Xen. Mem. 4. 5, 12, Isocr. 104, etc., often in Plat.; obre pwvel ove 5. Arist. H. A. 4.9, 3 -—the Act. is so used by Hermipp. Kepx. 5. 2. of the dialectic method of the Socratics, where the conclusions were not drawn directly by the speaker, but elicited by discussion, ob épi{eav GAdd 5. Plat. Rep. 454 A, ef. 511 C, Theaet. 167 E, etc., and v. sub d:adenrieds. 3. to use a dialect or language, Hat. 1. 142, cf. Polyb. 1. 80, 6: to write in prose, opp. to ry, Dion. H. de Comp. 20. fin. 4. in Att., euphem. for avvovoratw, to have intercourse, Ar. Eccl. 890, Pl. 1082. BtadelBopar, Pass. to flow in different directions, Plut. 2. 136B Wyttenb. Sidheppa, 76, (Starelrw) an interval, Plat. Tim. 59 B, Arist. P. A. 4. 5,393 in music, Id. Probl. 19. 41; of time, Polyb. 1. 66, 2; é« d:a- Acipparoy at intervals, Plut. Pericl. 7. Bi-tideuwrv, 74, (Giarelpw) a liniment, Hipp. 635. 17. Bradelae, fut. Yo: aor. déAcrov:—to leave an interval between, 7d éalporoy Arist. Phys. 5.3, 3:—Pass., dueAéAcewro a gap had been left, Hat. 7. 40, 41; Sadéderrrar paxpa. xwpa Arist. H. A, 2. 11, 5. 2. to intermit, tiv dxelav Id. G. A. 3. 7, 5 :—esp. of Time, Scadurov 7pé- pny, tmavrév having left an interval of . . , Hat. 3. 157, Dem. 459. 13; diadindv having waited an instant, Ar. Nub. 496; xpévov dAtyov Isocr, 84 B; woddy xpévor Arist. Pol, 3.15, 6; later also in gen., 6. weds dcadapmpive — diadAayua. Hyperid. Euxen. 42. II. intr. fo stand at intervals, dbo théOpa dn’ ddAndwv 5. Thuc. 7. 38, cf. Xen. An. 4. 7,6; 70 déppa 8. is discon- tinuous, opp. to cuvexés éort, Arist. H. A. 3. 11, 4: TO Siadetrov an interval or gap, Ib. 4.8, 13 :—impers., SuaAeiwer there are intervals, of the heavens, opp. to rAnpyn dorépwy efvat, Id. Meteor. 1.8, 19. 2. c. part., but mostly with negat., ob mumore 5iéAecwov (yra@v Xen. Apol. 16; ovdeva diadéAorma xpdvov diaBaddAdpevos I have never ceased to be slandered, Isocr. 233 D. 3. of Time, Siadurévrwv érdv rpidv, Scadtrovans tuépas after an interval of .., Thuc. 1. 112., 3. 74; 7d SiaXetrov the interval of time, Arist. Phys. 5. 4, 11. 4, in part. intermittent, d.arelmovres mvéovaw of dvepor Id. Meteor. 2. 5, 11, cf. G. A. 2.8, 13; 5. wuperés Hipp. Aph. 1251, etc. Si-Aelgo, fut. yw, to anoint, Hipp. 614. 52. Plut. Arat. 13, Ath. 407 C. Siadelxa, fut. fw, Zo lick clean, Ar. Eq. 1034, Vesp. 904. SidAerts, ews, 7, an interval, interstice, Hipp. Art. 802, Diog. L. 7. 51. Siadexréov, verb. Adj. of diadéyopar, one must discourse, Isocr. 260 C, Plat. Lys, 211 C:—esp. dialectically, Arist. An. Post. 1. 12, 3. Siadekrixevopat, Dep. Zo use logic, M. Anton. 8. 13. Stadexrixds, 7, dv, skilled in dialectic (v. infr.), 6 Gpwrdy Kat droxpi- vecOat Svvdpevos Plat. Crat. 390 C: able to evolve truth by discussion, Id. Rep. 534 B; S:adexrixwrepos more like a logical disputant, Id. Meno 75D. II. 4 diadexrixn (sc. réxvn) dialectic, the art of discussing a point by way of question and answer, evolution of truth by such dis- cussion, logical debate, invented by Zeno of Elea, Arist. Fr. 54; and perfected by Socrates, vy. Grote Plat. 1. 241 sq., 256 sq.; 9 6. metpagrixi Tept dv % dirocodia yyapiorixh Arist. Metaph. 3. 2, 20; but Plato placed his dialectic above all sciences, Womep Opryxds Tois pabjpacw Hy 5. éndve netrac Rep. 534 E:—also, 7d —«év Soph. 253 E. 2. in a positive sense, the Logic of probabilities, opp. to positive de- monstration, Arist. Top. 1.1, 2 and 14, 5, Rhet.1.1,1; cf. Pacium ad Anal, Pr. 1. 1, 6:—the dialectic of the Stoics comprehended also grammar. III. Adv. -x@s, in dialectic manner, Plat, Phil. 17 A, etc.: for the sake of argument, opp. to car’ dAnOeray, Arist. Top. 1. 14, 5, cf, de An. 1.1, 8. SidAexros, 7, (Suadéyouat) discourse, conversation, Hipp. Art. 794; mpés Twa Plat. Symp. 203 A: discussion, debate, arguing, Plat. Theaet. 146 B, Rep. 454A. 2. common language or talk, Arist. Poét. 22, 14; %) éwOvia 6, Id. Rhet. 3.2, 5. IL. speech, language, way of talk- ing, Ar. Fr. 552; xawviy 5. Aad@y Antiph. OBp. 1; 5. duviov, opp. to 7a évbov Spdxovros, Hermipp. ’AQ. yoy. 2: articulate speech, language, opp. to pov, Arist.H.A. 4.9, 16; idvov Todr’ dvOpwmov Ib.; 70d dvOpdsrov pla gown, GAAA Siddexror woAAaL Id. Probl. 10. 38. 2. the lan- guage of a country, esp. the dialect of a special district, as the Ionic, Attic, etc., were dialects of Greek, Gramm. ; also a local word or ex- pression, Plut. Alex. 31 :—cf. yA@ooa II. III. a way of speak- ing, enunciation, Dem. 982. 19. IV. style, Dion. H. de Comp. 3- V. in Music, expression, Arist. de An. 2. 4, 18. diadcAtpévas, Adv. (5iadvw) laxly, opp. to apodpas, Arist. Probl. 11. 13. II. not in composition, Ath. 676F ; ¢. g. wédas devs as com- pared with modwxns, Eust. 64. 22. Biddefis, ews, %, discourse, arguing, Ar. Nub. 317, Ep. Plat. 350 D. IL. =d:ddexros 11, Dio C. 60. 17. dtademroAoyéopar, Dep. to discourse subtly, chop logic, Tit with one, Ar, Nub. 1496. SidAemros, ov, very small or narrow, éphy Eust. 11 57-18. Stakemrive, to make thin, reduce, Hipp. Fract. 759. Stadeoxaive, to prate, chatter, A. B. 21. Stadevkaivw, to shew light through, Philostr. 883. Eust. Opuse. 257. 66. SudAeukos, ov, marked with white, Arist. Probl. 2 3. 6, Strabo 807, Plut. SvaAnKdopar, Dep. to Jaugh at, Ael, Dion. ap. Eust, 1208. 41. BidAngis, Hipp. Art. 788; cf. d:apaivopa 2. IT. metaph. transparent, manifest, 743 Hdn diapavy Soph. O. T. 754: distinct, distinctly seen, «los 5. Plat. Rep. 544 D, 548 C :—so in Ady. -v@s, Thuc. 2. 65, Xen. An. 5.9, 24, Plat. 2. famous, illustrious, Plat. Rep.600 B, Tim. 25 B. Siahappaxetw, to give medicine to, Twa Plut. 2.157 C. Biddaots, ews, 7, (Suapaivw) a view through, opp. to €upaots, Theophr. Lap. 30, Plut. 2. 354 B. SiahavAilw, fut: iow, to hold very cheap, Plat. Legg. 804 B. Stadatioxw, lon. —pookw:—to shew light through, to dawn, dp’ HpEepy Si.apwoKovan as soon as day began to dawn, Hat. 3. 86., 9. 453 apt S:apadtcrovtos (absol.) Polyb. 31. 22,13: ef. duavyaco. dradeyyys, és, transparent, Luc. Amor. 26. Stadepovrws, Ady. part. pres. act. of d:apépw, differently from, at odds with, dvapepdvras H.., Lys. 188. 35, Plat. Rep. 538 B, Phaedo 85 B. 2. c. gen., d:apepdvTws Tov GddXow above all others, Id. Crito 52 B, etc. II. absol. differently, in different ways or degrees, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 7, 19, Pol. 1. 13, 7, etc. 2. especially, excessively, Thuc, 1. 38, etc.; 8. #rrov Plat. Legg. 862 D. Siadépw: fut. Solow and dioicouar, h. Hom, Mere. 255, etc.: aor. 1 Sinveyea, Ion. Sijvea: aor.2 dinveyxor. To carry over or across, 8. vais tov “Io@pdv Thuc. 8. 8: to carry from one to another, diahépes xnptypara Eur. Supp. 382; [7d HAexrpor] diapéperat eis Tods “EAAnVas Arist. Mirab. 81:—metaph., yA@ooay b:oloe will put the tongue in motion, will speak, Soph. Tr. 323; cf. Skint. 2. of Time, 6. rov aidva, Tov Biov, Lat. peragere vitam, to go through life, Hdt. 3. 40, Eur. Hel. 10; rijv vixra Id, Rhes. 600; and absol., dais d:oice Ib. 982 :—in Med. to live, continue, dynpot TaAAa drapepovrat Hipp. Art. 823; cod bolcerar pdvos will pass his life apart from thee, Soph. Aj. 511; oxorovpevos bioice: Xen. Mem, 2. 1, 24 (ex emend. Bast. pro b:éon). 3. to bear through, bear to the end, oxjmrpa Eur. I. A. 1195; ‘yaorpds dyxov 6., of a woman, Id. Ion 15, cf. Xen. Mem. 2. 2, 5 : hence, 4. to bear to the end, go through with, Tédepov Hat. 1. 25, Thuc. 1.11: but also to bear the burden of war, Id. 6. 54:—to en- dure, support, sustain, Lat. perferre, with an Adv., like Lat. facillime or graviter ferre, pdora yap 76 ody re od Kaye d.olaw Todpov Soph. O. T. 321; so, 5. rérpoy Sd«pvor Eur. Hipp. 1143. II. to carry dif- ferent ways, Ar. Lys. 570, etc.: to toss about, Smdicya .. diapépav éopevdiva Eur. Supp. 715; 8. 7as xdpas to turn the eyes about, Id. Bacch. 1087, Or. 1262:—Pass. to be carried different ways, dispersed, opp. to ovppépecOa:, Plat. Soph. 242 D, Arist. Mund. 5, 5: to be tossed about, like Lat. jactari, Strabo 144. 2. 5. rd to spread his fame abroad, Pind, P. 11. 91; eis dwavras Thy pyfpny abrod 8. Dem. 1415.12; so in Pass., pyun diapépera Plut. 2. 163 C. 8. to tear asunder, Lat. differre, Aesch. Cho. 68 (as the Schol.), Eur. Bacch. 754, Arist. Poét. 8, 4, in Pass. :—metaph. ¢o distract, thy yuxiv pporriow Plut. 2.133 D: cf. drapopéo. 4. 5. ri\y Wipov to give one’s vote a different way, i.e. against another, Hdt. 4. 138, etc.: but.also simply, fo give each man his vote, Eur, Or. 46, Thuc. 4. 74, Xen. Symp. 5, 8 5. épavous diapépety =diadvecOai, to pay them up, Lycurg. 150. 38; cf. épa- vos. III. intr. to differ, ova 5. Pind. N. 7. 79; dp’ of rexdvres diapépovow 7) rpopat ; is it one’s parents or nurture fhat make the dif- Jerence? Eur, Hec. 599: c. gen. to be different from, Id. Or. 251, Thuc. 5. 86, etc.: c, acc., obdev diotces Xaipepavros thy iow Ar. Nub. 503; 70 8.. apavitey tepd éo6’ bre rod Kimrev dradeper Dem. 562. 18; 8. Tas Hoppas Arist. H. A. 2.1, 33 8. eis 71, év ru Xen. Hier. 1, 2 and 7; kara 7 Arist. H. A. 1.1, 1; mpés rt Ib. 2. 13, 10, etc.; Tim 8. 7a dp- peva Tov Onretiiy .. BewpeicOw Id. P. A. 4.8, 10; c. inf., novn Th popph ta) obxi mpéBara «iva: 5. Luc. Alex. 15; with the Art., Wipor tpeis dijveyay 76 pi Oavdrov rphoa three votes made the difference of capital punishment, i.e. there was a majority of only three against it, Dem. 676. 10. _ 2. impers. diadéper, it makes a difference, wAciorov 6., Lat. multum interest, Hipp. Aph. 1253; Bpayd 5. rois Oavoday, eé.., Eur. Tro. 1248, etc.; oddity diapéeper, ob diaéper it makes no odds, Lat, nihil refert, Plat. Prot. 329 D, Phaedo 89 C, etc.; opexpor oter Srapepav.; Id. Rep. 467 C;—c. dat. pers., duapéper por it makes a difference to me, Antipho 130. 46, Plat. Prot, 316 B, etc.; aird idia 7 8. he has some private interest at stake, Thuc. 3.42; el dpiv wh te 6. if you see no objection, Plat. Lach. 187 D; ri dé oor 5. etre... , etre pH; Id. Rep. 349 A, cf. Gorg. 497 B, etc.; c. inf., ob8¢ ri of brépepev dro~ Oavéev Hdt. 1. 85, cf. Antipho 130, fin., etc. 3. 70 8. the differ- ence, the odds, Plat. Legg. 723 C;=7d fvpépoy Antiph. ’Avaow(. 1; so, Ta Biapépovra Thue. 6. 92, Lys. 187. 13, Isae. 47. 353 émordpevos 7a dap. wapaBalvery rodua Andoc, 31. 33:—but 7a 6. also simply points of difference, in character and the like, Thuc. 1. 70, etc. 4. to be different fr ‘om a man, generally in point of excess, i.e. to surpass, excel him, twés Thuc. 3. 39; rwi in a thing, Id. 2. 39, Alex. Tad. 1. 6; & rm Isocr. 34 E; eis re Plat. Apol. 35 A; ward te Xen. Lac. 1, 10; mpdés rt Aeschin, 25. 42; c. inf, 8. ruvds mpoBiBaca (i.e. TO mpo-~ iBdoar) Plat. Prot..328 A: sometimes foll. by #, like a Comp., méAv diépepey drA€~acOar H ..it was far better .. than .. , Xen. An: 3. 4, 33, cf, Mem, 3. 11, 14, Vect. 4, 25 (where it means to differ in point 5, mapa tux Polyb. 10, 27, 5:—absol. to excel, — Suapevyw — duapvrdaccw. surpass, émt tet Isocr. 210 C. 5. to prevail, dmiorws én roAd Sinveyxe Thuc, 3. 83. 6. to quarrel, struggle, Teleclid. ‘Ho. Hi 7. to come between, intervene, 6 diapépwy xpévos Antipho 140. 35. 8. to belong to, wi, as property, Philo 1. 207. Iv. in Pass., much like the intr. usage, to differ, be at variance, quarrel, Amphis Sawp. 1; wepi twos Hat. 1,173, Plat. Euthyphro 7B; 8. rue to differ with, Antipho 134. 22, Plat., etc.; rut wept Tivos Thuc. 5. 31; mpos twa Lys. 150. fin.; dé re Id. 117. 38; also, diapépecOar yup Hdt. 7. 220; 5. ws.. 20 maintain on the contrary that .., Dem. 1296. 24; ob diapépopar,=ot por Siapéper, Id. 112. fin.—The word is altogether post-Hom. Siahevya, fut. -pevgopat, to flee through, get away from, escape, rd or Tt Hdt. 1. 204., 3. 19, etc., Antipho 140. 9; @dvaroy Plat. Apol. 39 A; véonua Arist. H. A. 8. 21,—absol., Hdt. I. 10, etc.; é« ris MfAou Thue. 8. 39; 5. é« aévow eis dyaOa Plat. Legg. 815 E; duapedyer 8 ov5e viv but it is not now too date, Dem. 139. 17. 2. to escape one, escape one’s notice or memory, Plat. Phaedo 95 E, Meno 96E, etc.; danépevyé pe, Lat. fugit me, Isocr. 80 B. Stadeverixés, 7, dv, (Sapevyw) able to escape, Luc. Tim. 29. Sradevtis, ews, 7), an escaping, of escape, Thuc. 3. 23, and (with v. 1, didpuges) Plut. Ti. Gracch. 5. Siadypile, fut. iow, post. if :—to make known, spread abroad, Dion. H. 11. 46, Arat. Phaen. 221, N. T. ;—also in Med., Dion. P. 26. dtapave, to be much beforehand, always found with v. 1. p8dva, Plut. Demetr. 7, Joseph. A. J. 15.5, 1, Liban. 4. 883. ruK6s, 7), 6v, destructive, Arist. Probl. 1. 47, Poll. 5. 132. Siapleipw: fut. -pOepa, Ep. —pOépow Il. 13. 625: pf. duépOapxa Eur. Med. 226, etc.; also d:ép9opa, v. infr. 11:—Pass., fut. d:apOtipyoopar Thue. 4. 37; Ion. dapOepéopat Hat. 8. 108., 9. 42: 3 pl. plapf. duepOd- paro Id. 8. go. To destroy utterly, mod Il. 13.625; épya Hat. 1. 36, and Att.: fo make away with, kill, rid Id. g. 88, etc: to destroy, ruin, HD hepa pice ce wat d.apOepet Soph. O. T. 438, cf. Ph. 1069 ; 3. xépa to weaken, slacken one’s hand, Eur. Med. 1055: to upset a chariot, Lys. Fr. 2.5: to disable a ship, Hdt. 1. 166, 167, Andoc. 18. 32, etc. (cf. xaraddw) ; 5. riv ovvouciay to break up the party, Plat. Prot. 338 D:—absol. to forget (cf. ddAAvpt), Eur. Hipp. 389. 2. in moral sense, to corrupt, ruin, yvdpnv tivds Aesch. Ag. 932; 5. Tods véous, Tovs vewrépous Plat. Apol. 25 A, 30 B, etc.:—esp. ¢o corrupt by bribes, Lat. corrumpere, Hdt. 5. 51; dpyuplw 5. rid Lys. 180.17; ént xphuaot Dem. 241. 1:—8. yuvatka to seduce a woman, Lys. 93. 16, etc.; ef. Eur. Bacch, 318 :—8. rods vépous to falsify, counterfeit them, Isocr. 373 B. 3. obdév Kap9elpas Tod xpwparos having changed nothing of his colour, Plat. Phaedo 117 B. II. Pass. to be destroyed, 5. éni rois ivartois to be murdered for the clothes he wore, Antipho 117. I: esp. to be crippled, disabled, Hdt. 1. 34, 166, etc.: iv dxony drepOappévos deaf, Id. 1. 38: 7a oxédea 8. with their legs broken, Id. 8. 28; d€pPapyar déuas 7d wav Soph. Tr. 1056; 7a dupara 5. blind, Plat. Rep. 517 A; rds ppévas Eur. Hel. 1192; 7d ppevav iiapbapév = ppevoPrAdBea, Eur. Or. 297 :—absol., duepOappévos blighted, corrupt, Plat. Rep. 614 B. IIT. the pf. 5:épOopa. is intr. in Hom., to have lost one’s wits (cf, Eur. mox cit.), diépOopas Il. 15.128; and so in late Prose, but mostly in partic. (as in mapépOopa), diepOopds ala corrupted blood, Galen, ; yada 5. 75y Joseph. A. J. 5.5.43 7a 6. o@para Plut. 2. 87 C, cf. 128 E, cf. Luc. Soloec. 3, (v. plura in Lob. Phryn. 160) :— but, 2. in good Att. always trans., Tas .. éamiSas dépOopev Soph. El. 306; rds ppévas diépOope.. wovapxia Eur. Hipp. 1013 (ubi v. Valck) ; rév Adyoy 6, Cratin. Incert. 156, cf. Pherecr. Xeep., Ar. Fr. 418, Menand. ’AdeA¢. 6. SiapPovéw, to envy, ri Lxx (Esth. 6. 3, v.1.):—to grudge, rwi 7 Jo Chrys. :—Pass. to be envied, Joseph. A. J. 2. 6, 7. * StadGopa, Ion. —py, 7), (SuapOelpw) destruction, ruin, blight, death, rhs. médews Thuc. 8. 86; ém d:apOopH dreorecrke Hat. 4. 164; me xpe SiapOopas Plat. Menex. 242 D; pl., Soph. O. T. 573, etc. 2. destruction, blight, of things, dupdrav d:apPopal Ib. 552; d:apPopa poppis Aesch. Pr. 643. 3. in moral sense, corruption, seduction, T@v véwv Xen, Apol. 19 ; «ptr@v Arist. Rhet. 1. 12, 8. 4. putrescence of the foetus in the womb, Hipp. 591. 23. TI. in pass. sense, ix@vorv Me a prey for fishes, of a corpse, like dpmayy, Soph. Aj. 1297; moAeptos HBpiopa cat 6. Eur. H. F. 459. SrapVopeds, éws, 5, a corrupter, rav vou Plato Crit.53C; Trav véwv Themist. Or. 296 B :—also as fem. in Eur. Hipp. 682 (v. 1. dsapOopa). Sr-adinpr, to dismiss, disband, Xen, Hell. 3. 2, 24, Dem. 677. 18; v. sub diappéew. Bradt overkéw, todispute earnestly, Arist. Soph. Elench. 3,1, Plut. Alex. 29. SiadiAoripéopat, Dep. to strive emulously, Theophr. H. P. 4, 4, 1; mH imp twos Plut. Aristid. 16. : SiadA€yw, fut. fw, fo burn through, Plut. Alc. 39: to inflame, ras uxds Id, Mar. 16. : x ‘ SraporBalw, to drive mad, diareporBacba kaxots Soph. Aj. 332: Stadowiooopat, Pass. to become quite red, Hipp. 192 B. Stadordw, Ion. -€w, to wander or roam about continually, Hdt. 1.60, 186; bid ris xdupas Ar. Av. 557; 5. THs “IraAlas Plut. Caes. 33 :—of a report, 4o get abroad, Plut. Fab. 8, etc. ; : *Sradhopa, , (Suapépw) difference, distinction, Thuc. 3. 10, etc. ; mapa 7 Dion, H. de Comp. 15; mpés tTiva Plut. 2. 1075 C; deapopdy exew to differ, Menand. ‘Pam(. 2, etc. 2. in Logic, the differentia of a species, éx Tod yévous Kal Ta di:apopy 7d eiSos Arist. Metaph. 9. 7, 8, ef. Top. 6, 1, I, al.: hence Suadopat almost = species, Id. Pol, 3. 14, 2, 4.1, 11, Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 4. II. variance, disagreement, Hat. 1.1; 5. éxew rwi Eur, Med. 75; also in pl., rds dapopds Srarpéewv, FA 363 karadapBave to settle the differences, Hdt. 4. 23., 7.9, 2, etc. ; 80, 8. G€o0a Kad@s Andoc. 18. 21; Siaopat rpds Tivos Plat. Phaedr, 231 B; 5. reat wept twos Lys, 172.2; & 8. Karacrival rox Antipho 11. 38: v. sub mecods, III. distinction, excellence, Plat. Tim. 23 A. IV. advantage, profit, Antipho 118. 15 ; cf. didqopos 1. 4, Stadhopéw, =diaptpa, to spread abroad, disperse, déos bpd did Leivor popéovat Od. 19. 3333 o&por .. Bapophjoa .. ob pddvoy Diphil. Incert. 19; Thy bypérnra Plut. 2. 366 C, etc.; Thy ovclay Ib. 484 A; 5. epar-, maddy Tv Kparmadny Ib. 127 F. 2. to carry away, carry off, Lat. differre, rovs oravpovs Thuc. 6. 100; esp. as plunder, xphyara 7a od Scapopéer Hat. 1. 88, cf. 3.53; dy cow h Siamepopnuevey Dem. 822. 28, cf. 442. 25. 8. to plunder, otkov, modu, etc., Hdt. 3. 53, etc. 3 Srapopetobae tnd Tivos Dem. 1120. 25; duapopetoba rhv ydpny to be robbed of one’s wits, Plat. Legg. 672 B. 4. also to tear in pieces, addAau 5e Sapdras Srepdpovy Eur. Bacch. 739; bd kuvav re Kal olovav dtapopotpevos Hdt. 7. 10,8, cf. Ar. Av. 338. II. =tragdépw 1. I, ¢o carry across from one place to another, mpooddov and fuppayov Siapopoupeévns Thuc. 6. 91. III. a sense peculiar to this form is, to throw off by perspiration, Galen., etc., cf. dsapopyrixds :—Pass., of snow, to thaw, Geop. 19. 6, 4. IV. Pass. to be doubtful, Diog. L. 7. 69. Siapopypa, 74, a thing thrown to and fro; the game of ball, Hesych., Suid. II. a thing torn to pieces, a prey, LXX (Jer. 37. 16). Siadpycis, ews, 7, a plundering, Plut. Cor. 9, etc. II. per- spiration, Galen. III. dubitation, perplexity, Plut. 2. 389 A. Siadopytixds, 7, dv, promoting perspiration, diaphoretic, Galen. Stadopia, 7, =d:apopa 1, Dion. H. de Rhet. 41. 10. Siahopos, ov, (Siapépw) different, unlike, Hdt. 2. 83., 4. 81, Plat. Legg. 964 A, etc.; c. gen. differing from, Id. Phil. 61 D, etc. 2. differing or disagreeing with another, moAAois d:dopds ei Eur. Med. 579: esp. in hostile sense, at variance with, KAeopévei Hdt. 5.75; Tots oixetos Lys. 144. 2; GAAHAoLs, éavrois Plat. Prot. 337 B, Legg. 679 B; so also c. gen., 6. revos one’s adversary, Dem. 849, Io, cf. Antiph. Tpitay. 1, Philem. Incert. 67. 3. distinguished, excellent, remarkable, Antiph. ‘Oyomwatp. 1; 8. yAvadrnrt Diod. 2.57; mpds dperhy Plut. Cleom. 16. 4. making a difference to one, _&. in good sense, ad- vantageous, profitable, important, 5. érépov paddov Thuc. 4.3; mpds Te Plat. Legg. 779 B. b. rarely in bad sense, injurious, yelrove pndty motety 5. Ib. 843 C. II. as Subst., d:apopor, 74, 1. difference, opixpdv te 70 8. ebpor Tes dv Hdt. 2.7; dudopa wodAdAd Gey Bporotow . eicopw I see many differences between gods and men, Eur, Supp. 612; péya 70 5. éort Hipp. 792 E; dpa puxpad ra 3. rijs obaias Isae, 89. 1; Hrixa y éatt ra Siaopa evOad’ H exe toAepeiv Dem. 16. 26. 2. what concerns one, Tav Hpiv és TA péeyiora Siaddpwy matters of the ate concern to us, Thuc, 4. 86; tydckotray ivray ait@ ray 5. em, 362. 25, cf. Arist. Oec. 2. 34, 4. 8. a difference, disagree- ment, €vexa TOV avrots ida 3. on account of their private differences, Thuc. &. 68, cf. 2. 27 and 37, etc. 4. in reference to money-matters, the difference, balance, Hyperid. Euxen. 30, cf. Epict. Enchir. 25. 4: ex- penditure, Arist. de Virt. et Vit.7, 1 and 3; 4 pexpodoyla éort pedwria tov 5. Theophr. Char. 10; in pl. expenses, Dem. 887. 8:—a sum of money, Polyb. 4. 18,8, C. I. 2335. 33., 2695: price, Luc. Hermot. 81, C.1. 2347 ¢. 56. III. Adv. -pws, with a difference, variously, Thue. 6. 18. 2. 3. gxew to differ, Plat., etc.; 5. €xew Twi to differ with .. , Dem. 898. 11. 8. excellently, Id. 761. 26. Stahophrys, 7Tos, %, difference, Plat. Rep. 587 E, Theaet. 209 A, etc. Svahpaypa, aros, 76, a partition-wall, barrier, Thuc. 1.133, Diod. 1. 33. IL. the muscle which divides the thorax from the abdomen, the midriff, diaphragm (Homer's ¢péves), Plat. Tim. 70 A, 84D: cf. did{wpa 11:—8. rod pverijpos the cartilage which divides the nostrils, Arist. H. A. 1. 11, 8. Siadpdyvups, to barricade, Plut. Cam, 34, in Med. :—Pass. to be barri- caded, mporerxicpactw Id. Aemil, 13; €AAoBa diameppaypéva with divi- sions, Theophr. H. P. 8. 5, 2. SvapHdys, és, distinct, of sound; in Adv. -éws, Hipp. 408. 39. Siadpalo, to speak distinctly, ds... por pHrnp diewéppase Il. 18,9; dte- méppade xovpp, Od. 6. 47, cf. 17. 590: v. éwéppador. Stappdoow, Att. -Trw, = iappayvuju, Hdn. 3. 1. Srappéw, fut. jow, to let through, let pass, dd THs wWéAEwS.. THY KViCaY od dtappycere Ar. Av. 193; Sus pi) Sapphoere rods modepious Thuc. 7. 32.—Cf, eloppéew. diapploce, strengthd. for dpicaw, Poll. 1. 107. ’ .S.adpovrifa, to meditate on, consider, rt Hipp. Aér. 280; 5. Spapua to compose, Lat. meditari, Ael. V. H. 2. 21:—absol. to meditate, Epicr. Incert. I. 22, 2. c. gen. to take care of, pay regard to, Arist. Pol. 2. 4, 8. St-adpos, ov, all foamy, Galen. Siadpoupéw, to keep one’s post: metaph., dvameppodpnrar Bios Aesch. Fr. 263. f Staduds, dos, 4, =diapvy, Diod. 1. 47, v.1. 5. 22. Siapvyyave, =dapetyw, Thuc. 7. 44, Aeschin. 55. 13. Siadiyy, 4, (Sapevyw) a refuge, means of escape, Twos from a thing, Plat. Prot. 321 A, al. ; €« revos Plut. Alcib. 25. Siaghun, }, (eapdw) any natural break, a joint, suture, division, branch, 7a d07G.. . Siapuds Exe xwpis dm’ ddAHAwY Plat. Phaedo 98 C, cf, Polit. 259 D, Philostr. 168: a cleft, division, as in nuts, Xen. An. 5. 4, 29, ef. Plut. Cic. 1: a joint in reeds or grasses, Longus 1.9: the division between the teeth, Plut. Pyrrh. 3: cf. duapuors 11. II. a stratum or vein of earth, stone, metal, Theophr. Lap. 63. StadvAaxréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be watched, preserved, Xen. Cyr. 5.3,43- SiapiAraxticés, 1, dv, fit for preserving, Def. Plat. 412 A. SiapiAdeoow, Att. -rTw, fut. fo, fo watch closely, guard carefully, 7a 364 reixea, ri modu Hdt. 6. 101, 1333 Thy so in Med. to guard for oneself, Eur. I. e closely, Ta pérpa Hat. 2. 121, 1. 3. to observe, maintain, rods vopous Plat. Legg. 951 B; elpqyny Philipp. ap. Dem. 251. 24; 3.70 ph) arovdagew to guard against being particular.., Plat. Polit. 261 E; 5. Om.., to take care that.., Id. Criti. 112 D. Sidgutis, ews, %, v. 1. for —peugis (q. we Vopat, Pass., with aor. 2 act. dépiv, pf. d:amépixa :—to grow through, of buds, Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 7. II. to be disjoined, ‘os “Evés Emped. 71, cf. 66. III. to grow between, Arist. Fr. 316, Theophr. C. P. 3. 7, 9:—1o intervene, xpdvos diépv Kat mavra égnpruro Hat. 1. 61. IV. to be different from, twos Philostr. 884. V. to be grown up with, closely connected with, twos Plut. Dio 12, Cic. 14, v. Wyttenb. ap. Schif. adl. [@ only in arsi, Eratosth, ap, Ath. 189 Siadipdw, fut. dow, to together, Epiphan. Siapiode, to blow in different directions, disperse, pi}. .6 dvepos abtiy (ri Yoxiv) KapueG Plat. Phaedo 77 D:—Pass., Ib. 80 D, 84 B. If. to blow or breathe through, Luc. Hermot. 68 ; é« rod ordparos Plut. 2. 50 B. Stneho qn. %, exhalation from the body, Arist. Probl. 13. 4, 5. Siadiors, ews, }, (Skapdw) a growing through, bursting of the bud, ‘Theophr. H. P.8. 1, 6. II. =daguy i, Arist. H. A. 1. 16, 13., 6.3, 18, etc.: the point of separation between the stalk and branch, Hipp. 259.29. S-apioow, fut. fw, aor.—npioa :—to draw continnally, oivov d:apvadd pevoy Od. 16.110. II. to draw away, tear away, ToAAOY BE Sinpuae capkos 6d6vTt 19. 450; did F evrepa xadkds Hpvo’ Il. 13. 508., 17. 315. Stadiiretw, zo plant out, Theophr. H. P. 4. 4, 3: to plant, Ar. Fr. 162. Stadwvéw, fo sound apart, to be dissonant, differ in tone, voice, like dvappooréw, Plat. Gorg. 482 B. 2. generally, o disagree, Plat., etc.; 5. mept tivos Arist. Metaph.12.9,14; Stapavel re TOY xpnudrav the accounts disagree, are not balanced, Polyb. 22. 26, 23 :—0d. Ti to disagree with, Plat. Polit. 292 B, etc.; GAAHAaS Evupoveiv 7) 5. Id. Phaedo ro1 D; 7@ wevder 5. raAnOEs Arist. Eth, N. 1. 8, 1, al. :—Pass., Siapavetrat it is disputed, Dion. H. 1. 45. II. to breathe one's Zast, Agatharch. in Phot. 457.25: to perish, be lost, of books, Diod. 16.3. Stapwvia, 7%, discord, Plat. Legg. 689 A, 691 A; Stadavypa, Tzetz. Bid-pwvos, ov, discordant, Diod. 4.55; Twe with one, Luc. Cyn. 16; Sidpovoy ~Axerv, a musical phrase, Damox. Suvrp. 1. 61. oxo, lon. for kapatonw. i Siahwrife, fut. Att. 1, to enlighten, Plut. 2.76B; Big dapwrica rérov to clear a place by force, Fr. eclaircir, Id. Cato Ma. 20. Siaxdlopar, Dep. to withdraw, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 315 cf. eye fw I. Siaxaivw, to gape wide, yawn, Plut. 2.976 B, 980 B. ; Siaxddaous, ews, 7, a disuniting in the bones of the skull, Hipp. V. C. 903 :—BaxdAacpa, 7d, an hiatus, Dion.H.de Comp.22. SiaxGAdw, fut. dow, to loosen, relax, 7d nip 5. ro wemnyds Arist. Probl. 4.3; Tas dppovlas rod amparos Epicr. ’Av7iA. 2. 19; 5. péAaOpa. to unbar, Eur, 1. A. 1340. II. to make supple by exercise, Xen. Eq. RSG III. intr. to be relaxed, open, gape, daréov Hipp. V. C. 903. Siaxtpdoow, Att. -rrw, fut. fe, to sever, divide, Dion. H. de Demagth. 43: to se out, carve, — ae >i ee a bua ‘opar, Dep. to distribute as presents, Diod. 19. 20. Sr go a form of diaxaivw, Ar. Eq. 533, Theophr. H. P. 3.9, 1. Siaxavvéw, to relax, soften, Jo. Chrys. Siaxepdto, fut. dow, to pass the winter, Thuc. 7. 42, Xen. An. 7.6, 31. Sax éw, to lead by the hand, Clem. Al. 5 26. Staxerpifw, fut. Att. r aa have in — 7 Ta, para Andoc. 21. 43., 19. pg aed Aeon Tov Kowwdy Arist. Pol. 6 638. 42, etc.:—Pass., Xen. An. 1.9, 17- Jay hands on, to slay, Polyb. 8. 23, 8, Plat. 2. 220 B. Siaxetprors, ews, 7H, management, administration, Thuc. 1.97. Sraxerpropids, 6, manipulation, papyaxwv Hipp. 1022 G. Biaxetporovéw, fo choose between two persons or things by show of hands, or, generally, by open vote, to elect, Dem. 1152.9}; so in Med., Xen. Hell, I. 7, 34 :—Pass. to be so elected, Plat. Legg. 755 D: cf. raynpiCopar, Biaxetporovia, 4, choice between two persons or things, election, 5. moveiv =tiaxetporoveiv, Dem. 707. 25, etc.; 5. dddvar to allow a right of election, Aeschin. 59. 13. Sraxerpdw, = draxerpi(w, dub. in Strabo and Lxx. “Braxéw (v. xéw): fut. yew: aor. -éxea, Ep. -Exeva (the only tense used by Hom.). To pour different ways, to disperse, rov xovv Hat. 2, 150:—in Hom. ¢o cut up a victim, aly’ dpa pur béxevay Od. 3. 456, cf. Il. 7. 316, ete. 2. to dissolve, melt down, fuse, xaAndv Paus. 9. 41, 1: to break up, disjoin, undo, opp. to myvivat, Plat. Phil. 46D; vipa... xéxevay dedAAat Ap. Rh, 3. 320:—8. pvpara to disperse tumours, Theophr. Odor. 61; 8. ixvn to destroy ail traces, Xen. Cyn. 5, 3. 3. metaph. fo confound, 7a PeBovrevpéva Hat. 8. 57. II. oftener in Pass. to be poured from one vessel into another, Hat. 6, 119, cf. Arist. Fr. 233. 2. to run through, spread about, Thuc. 2. 75, 76. 3; to be dissolved, melted, Xen. Cyn. 8, 1, Arist., etc. ; of a corpse, Hat, 3. 16; to disperse, of soldiers, Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 34; of humours, Hipp. 1137 B. 4. metaph. to be or become diffuse, Plat. Symp. 206D: ¢o be dissipated, ind plOns diaxexupévos Id. Legg. 775 C; parakoy kai Siaxexupévoy Brémey Arist. Physiogn. 6, 485; 5. mpécwrov Plut. Alex. BN persons, of the sea, #o be calm, Id. 2. 82 F. mapodoy Lys. 193. 29, etc. ; A. 369. 2. to observ = Pa Pepe) 3 cf. Lys. 115. 16., 156. 13: 8, 16:—so in Med., Hipp. II. in Med. also, to aww, strengthd. for yAavéw, Twa T1vt Nonn. D, 2. 166. isa nize, sa 4. for xAevdtw, c, acc., Dem. 1221. 26, Plat. Ax. 364 B; absol,, Polyb. 30. 13, 12. 4 Sea puéis — Sarvs. SiaxAralve, fut. dvd, strengthd. for xAtalyw, Hipp. 674. 11.” diaxAlw, strengthd. for xAtw: part. pf. darexAldws, Archipp. Incert. 3. SidxAwpos, ov, with a shade of pale green, Philo de VIL, Mir. 7. Stax, old form for daxdvvupe (q.v.), Suaxody 7d xX@pya to complete the mound, Hdt. 8. 97. . me Staxpdopat, fut. qooza:, with Dor. 3 sing. diaxpyoetrar Theocr. 15. 54. I. Dep., c. dat. rei, to use constantly or habitually, +} aiTR yAdoop Hat. 1. 58; 7G atrd rpdre 2.127; ob« oivy diaxpéovra I. 71, cf. 2.77; €0nre pownknin 4.43; TD adnein 6. to speak the truth, 3. 723 oipwyy apOdvy 3. 66, cf. 6. 58; dperp 7. 102; dyvapoatry 6. 10; dvaidein re kat GBovdAly 7. 210 ;—tare in Att., Awd Soarep dpy 4, to use hunger as a sauce, Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 12. re b. like Lat. utor, of passive states, to meet with, suffer under, cuupoph péyadn, Tootry Hopw, Lat. affici morte, Hdt. 3. 117., 1.167; abxm@ 6. Id, 2, 13. 2. c. acc, pers. to use up, consume, destroy, Lat. conjicere, I. 24, 110, Antipho 113. 45, Thuc. ¥. 126., 3. 36, etc. II. Pass. to be lent out to different persons, kara Siaxocias Kal rprakoctas épod Te TdAavroy diakexpnyevov Dem. 817. 1: cf. xpdw (C) B. 2. to be killed, Diog. L. 1. 102, diaxpépmrropat, strengthd. for xpéumropar, A. B. 72. Siaxpéopar, subj. Staxpéwpar, Jon. for hkaxp@par, Siaxpyoros, ov, very good, Lync. ap. Ath. 109 D. Siaxpiopa, 74, an unguent, salve, Paul. Aeg. p. 185. 18, etc. Sidxpirros, ov, anointed, Diosc. 1. 34; 70 6.=dedxpropa, Galen. Siaxplo [7], fut. iow, to besmear all over, Hipp. 889 F; twi with a thing, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 6 Siaxptcos, ov, interwoven with gold, iudriv Dem. 522. 2; éabfres Polyb. 6. 53, 7; tmodnpara Plut. 2. 142 C. SiaxdAos, ov, very juicy, succulent, Arist. H. A. 8. 21, 4. diaxtors, ews, }, (Siaxéw) a pouring forth, diffusion, Plat. Crat..419 C; 5. Aiuywdn AapBdvey to spread out like a lake, Plut. Mar. 27. 2. a spreading abroad, wasting, onépyaros Theophr. C. P. 4. 4, 7. II. dissolution, opp. to miéis, Arist. Meteor. 4. 5, 2. IIL. merri- ment, Plut. Cato Mi. 46. Siaxirucés, 77, dv, able to dissolve, tis capxés Plat. Tim. 60 B. Sraxovvupt, =diaxdw, Strabo 245. diaxwptw, to go through, Plat. Tim. 78 A. 2. to pass through, as excrement, Hipp. 889 F :—impers., earw diexwpet abrots they laboured under diarrhoea, Xen. An. 4. 8, 20, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 268 B: of a person, Diog. L. 8. 19; 5. dwemra to pass food, Arist. P. A. 3. 14, 13. 3. of coins, to be current, Luc. Luct. 10. 4. metaph. ¢o go on well, Polyb. 8. 23. II. to go asunder, Arr. An. 1.1, 8; 5. €is mAaTos or eis BA9os, of a mountain-range, /o part so asto leave a plain between, Ib. 2.8. Siaxopypa, 7d, excrement, Hipp. Aph. 1244, etc.:—so Staxdpyors, €ws, 7), excretion, Ib. 1245, etc., Arist. P. A. 3. 14, 15 >—Biaxwpytids, h, ov, laxative, Hipp. Aér. 284, etc. Siaxwpife, fut. Att. 1:—to separate, Xen. Occ. 9, 73 Tt dad Tivos Plat. Polit. 262 B; 7 «at 71 Epicr. Incert. 1. 14:—Pass., Plat. Tim. 59 C, Phileb. 17 A. Siaxcoprors, ews, 4, separation, Arist. G. A. 1. 18, 26. Staxaopiopa, 74, a cleft, division, Luc. V. H. 2. 43- diaxwpropss, 6,=diaxwpicis, Joseph. A. J. 6. 11, Io. Siaxwpiorys, od, 5, a divider, Gloss. dtaxwpiotixés, 7, dv, apt to divide or separate, Epiphan. diaxwors, ews, 7), the making of a mound, Diod. 1 3: 47+ Srapiladrrw, to feel with the Jingers, scratch, Hesych. drarpaipo, to brush away, blow away, atpar diaatpovot mrekrévny kamvou Ar. Av. 1717; dtapatpovaa mérdovs (sc. atpa) Hermipp. ’AQ. ‘yor. 4 :—to scratch through, of birds, Opp. H. 2. 115. II. intr. fo flutter in the wind, Nic. Al. 127. StaipdhAw, strengthd. for yadArw, Eupol. Bar. 1. Sidwadpa, used by the Lxx, in the Psalms, for the Hebr. Selah: for its various interpretations, v. Suicer s. y. Staipavo, strengthd. for Yate, Hipp. Art. 824. Siatpdw, fut. Aow, to scratch through, Suid. Braieyon, fut. gw, strengthd, for péy, Plat. Legg. 639 A. Brarpevda, to deceive utterly, Dem. 1482.26; so in Med., Andoc. 6. 38; and in aor. pass., Polyb. 3. 109, 12: but, monly diapevdouat, Pass.: pf. ddWevopat : ceived, mistaken, Isocr. 82 A, Dem. 1 5. 133 Ttvos to be cheated of, deceived in a person or thing, Xen. Mem. 4.2, 27, Dem. 626. 24; mept twos Ep, Plat. 351 D; mepi re Arist. Eth. N, 6, 12, 10; ve in a thing; Id. Pol. 71,45; tue Id. Eth. N. 6. 3, 1. Bidipevors, ews, 4, deceit, Stob. Ecl, 2. 220. Sidpevopa, 76, a falsehood, Aquila V. T. StapeverGs, Adv. with fraudulent purpose, Stob. Ecl. 2. 230. SialpnAdpdw, to handle a thing, Lat. pertrectare, LXx, Oribas. p. 103 Matth. Verb. Adj. -pnréoy Paul, Aeg. p. 47. 27. Srapypifopar, fut. Att. codpar: Dep.:—to vote in order with ballots (Wapo, calculi), to give one's vote, Antipho 130. 13, Hyperid. Euxen. 49, etc, ; 5. mept twos Plat. Legg. 937A; 8. xpuBinv, xpipa Andoc. 29. 16, Thuc. 4.88: cf. davnguords. II. to decide by vote, te Lys. 175.10; Tavry diaynpicacbe Dem. 842. fin. P cone 8s pol snd qs a beim by ballot, voting, eschin. 11. 21; 5. movetv =d:awnditec 6. Xen. Hell. 1.7, 14. asi ebeciapta Stay propis, 6,=foreg., Ath, 218 A, Stay proerés, 7, éy, elected, apxat xpunr} Ynpy 5. Arist.Rhet. Al. 3,17. SrapOvptfa, to whisper among themselves, Polyb. 15. 26,8, Luc. Gall. 25, Stapurtixés, 4, dv, cooling, refreshing, Hipp. 364. 27. 5 Sidipukts, %, a cooling, Plut. 2. 967 F. II. more com- aor. dueWevaOnv :—to be de- Plat. Legg. 855 D, 18 ; mporiéva TI dtatwixw — dda. Srapixo, fut. fw, to cool, refresh, Hipp. Vet. Med. 14 :—Pass. to be chilly, rd dxpa Id, Acut. 388. 2. to air, ventilate, dry and clean, vads Thuc. 7. 12, etc.; so of misers bringing out their hoards, Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 21 :—in Plut. Lys. 23, for mapadtov nat Siaydxov Thy éxelvov duvapiv the prob. 1. is dkayqxor, crumbling it away. Sid, v. sub deanu. SiBapos, ov, (B7pua) on two legs, Eur. Rhes. 215. St-Bidos, ov, double-dyed, of purple cloth, Horace’s Zanae bis murice tinctae, Plin. 9. 63; 4 5. (sc. 064s), a robe of rarest purple, Cic. Fam. 2.16; cf. devrepoupyés. SBorla, 4, (BdAAw) =5iBodros xAaiva, Plut. 2. 754 F. II. a double-edged lance, halbert, Ar. Fr. 401, Hdn. 2. 13 :—in Plut. Mar. 25, of a German weapon, perhaps the framea of Tacit. Germ. 6. SiBodos, ov, (BadAAw) twice-thrown, 8. xAaiva a garment doubled and thrown over the shoulders, Lat. duplex paenula, Poll. 7. 47, Hesych. II. two-pointed, Eur. Rhes. 374, Anth. P. 6.282; gene- tally, redoubled, v.s. 5:6Bodos. 5t-Bpaxus, «a, v, af two short syllables, Terent. Maur. 1365, etc. SiBpoxos, ov, (Bpéxw) twice soaked or moistened, Diosc. 1.65. 5i-yapéw, ¢o marry a second time; S-yapia, 4, a second marriage, Eccl, Styappa, x6, indecl., Donat. ad Terent. Andr. 1. 2,2: also 8tyappos littera, Terent. Maur, 163, cf. 645; and Styappov (sc. grorxetoy) Macrob, de Verb. 6. 13:—the digamma, a name first found in the Gramm. of the ast century (Tryphe in Mus. Crit. 1. p. 34, Apoll. de Pron. p. 366); described, though not named, by Dion. H. 1. 20: womep appa dirrais emt play dpOny emCeryvipevoy tais tAayias, ds Fedévn wat Favag kat Fotkos nat favyp. This form, which appears in Inscrr. (v. infr.) and in Mss., identifies it with the Latin F, though in sound it is said te have been nearer V, Priscian. 1. 4,12. But the Lat. F holds the same place in the alph, with the Hebr. vav (1), which as a numeral =6; and, when it is remembered that the Greek sign for 6 was Ss’, there can be little doubt that this character (afterwards used to denote the letters or) orig. represented the digamma, which was then the 6th letter in the Greek alphabet. The emperor Claudius attempted to Teplace the conson. V by the digamma, and wrote it like a reversed F, as TERMINAMIT, TRIVMUIRI, etc., v. Gruter pp. 196, 236, 238. The Gramm. called it the Aeolic digamma, prob. because it was known to them from Aeol. Poets: Apoll. (de Pron. pp. 366, 397) cites For, Fe, Feds, (sibi, se, suus) from Sappho and Alcae., and the metre requires foive, Fasea. in Alcae. 39; Feerfjv in 54; Féorepe in Sappho 96, etc. ; also avws (Le. dfws) appears for #ws in Sappho 11; xavdgas (for xarFagas) in Hes., v. sub karéyvupe; adda (i.e. dfara) appears in Pind. P. 2. 51 (an Aeol. ode); and it remained in Boeot. Inscrr. of a late date, Foixia C. 1.1565, cf. 1563 b; Faorv 1569 c. 3; Frooredia 1563 5; «opafudss, tpayafudds, papafvbds, avdafudds (for kwpaodds or «xwpgdds, etc.) 1583: v. Ahrens D. Aeol. pp. 30sq., 169 sq. II. it also appears in Dor., as aifel for aief in a very ancient Crissean Inscr. (C.1. no. 1); Flware for elkoot, medaForxor for pérouwor, AtFi for Aut (Jovi), in old Argive Inscrr. (nos. 14, 18, 19, 29); but most often in Lacon., v. Ahrens D. Dor. p. 40 sq. III. it was often preserved in Lat. and other languages when lost in Greek, as olvos vinum, olxos vicus, épyov Germ. Werke (work), fudetv videre, etc. :—sometimes also before ?, as Fonyvuy frango, v. Ahrens D. Aeol. p. 33 :—it also occurred ‘in the middle of words, as shewn by &Fév ovum, 6fFis ovis, AGFos Davus, Priscian. 6. 53. IV. it passed into 8 in a number of Lacon. words, as Bayés, Bavvas, Belxart, Béepyor, Boivos, for dyds, dvag, eixoat, épyov, oivos, Ahrens ID. Dor. p. 44 sq.:—there are also many Dor. words cited by Hesych. with initial y, prob. by an error for the digamma, as yavda- ve for dvbdvey, yabos for ides, yéap for ap (ver), yéros for éros (féros ocours in Tab. Heracl.), -yeoria for éoria (Vesta), -yoivos for olvos, etc., Ahrens Ib. p. §3 sq.:—for these and other changes of the digamma, v. Curt. Gr, Et. p. 541 (549) sq. V. that it existed when the bulk of the Homeric poems were composed was first seen by Bentley ; see extracts from his paper in Donaldson New Cratyl. 1.c. 5 append. ; and for a list of Homeric words in which metrical reasons require it, v. Heyne Hom. 7. p. 730sq. But it is prob. that it had fallen into disuse when the Homeric poems received their present form; for in many cases, as in the addition of v épeAxvorinéy, words have evidently been altered through Zgnorance of the existence of the digamma, as in Il. 1. 14, 83, 110, 151, etc.; and there are other cases where the existence of the digamma is ignored, so that the lines must have been composed when the letter was no longer in use, as t. 64, 106, 203, etc.: v. Curt. Gr. Et. p. 510 (548). , Si-yiipos, oy, married to two people, adulterous, Stesich. 74, Manetho 5. 291. II. married a second time, Hippol. Haer. 9. 12. Si-yevas, és, of doubtful sex, Eust. 150. 27. di-yAnvos, ov, witk two eye-balls, Theocr. Ep. 6. Si-yAvdos, ov, doubly indented, Greg. Nyss. Si-yAwooos, Att. -rros, ov :—speaking two languages, Lat. bilinguis, Thuc. 8. 85, cf. 4. 109: hence as Subst., 5iyAwocos, 6, an interpreter, Plut. Them. 6. II. double-tongued, deceitful, LXx (Sirac, 5,9, al.). Si-yvwpos, ov, of two minds, vacillating, Diogenian. 4. 32; so, Svyva- poov, 6, #, Schol. Eur. Or. 633. Subst., Sryvopta, %, duplicity of mind, Achmes-Onir. 143. &t-yovia, 7}, double parturition, Arist. G, A. 1. 11, 7. Sl-yovos, ov, twice-born, of Bacchus, Anth. P. 9. 524. 2. twin: double, paoOAns 5. Soph. Fr. 137; 5. para two bodies, Bur. El. 1178: but, II. parox., dvyévos, ov, bearing twice or twins, Hesych. Styutos, ov, (yviov) of two members, Auctt. Mus. iSaypa, aros, 74, a lesson, Hipp. Fract. 750, Ar. Nub. 668, Plat. Clit. 409B; xpdvos 5, wortAwraroy Eur, Fr. 293. 8 365 Sianréov, verb, Adj. one must teach, Plat. Rep. 452 A. Bidaxrhptos, ov,=sq.: 7d dudaxrhpioy a proof, Hipp. Acut. 390. diBaxrikds, 7, dv, apt at teaching, Philo 2.412,1 Tim. 3.2.,2 Tim, 2.24. Sianréds, 7, dv, also és, dv, Plat. Eryx. 398 D: I. of things, taught, learnt, dnavra yap co Taya vovderhyara Kelvns didaxrd of her teaching, Soph. El. 344. 2. that can or ought to be taught or learnt, Pind, N. 3. 71; 7d 5., opp. to dppyra, prob. things which may be taught by study and experience, without revelation, Soph. O. T, 300; didagor .., ef didaxrd por if I may learn them, Id. Tr. 64, ef. 671; 7d pev 5. pavOdva Id. Fr. 723; xdor’ od Bidaxrdv (sc. 7d THs Tuxns) Eur. Alc. 786, cf. Supp. 914:—the question whether virtue could be taught is discussed in Plat. Meno, cf. Prot. 328 C, Euthyd. 274E, Arist. Eth. 1.9. II. of persons, taught, instructed, rds in a thing, Lxx, N.T. Sidaxrpa, 7a, the teacher's fee, Lat. Minerval, Poll. 6. 186. St-SaxrvAwaios, a, ov, two fingers long or broad, Sext. Emp. M., ro. 156 :—so &t-BdxriAos, ov, Hipp. Art. 783, Theophr. diSakts, ews, %, teaching, instruction, Eur. Hec. 600. diBacKxdAciov, 74, a teaching-place, school, Soph. Fr. 799, Antipho 142. 33, Thue. 7. 29, Plat., etc.; 7d radia 7a éx rv didacKadclwv Hyperid. Euxen. 343 70 Swxparindy 5. Dion. H. de Dem. 2; cf. porrdw, II; in pl.=didaxrpa, Vita Hom. 26. SiWacKidrta, 4, teaching, instr Z , Lat. disciplina, Pind. P. 4. 180, Even. 1, Hipp. Lex 2, Xen. Cyr. 8.7, 24, Plat., etc. ; 8. mor cioGat or wapéxetv to serve as @ lesson to one, Thuc, 2. 42, 87; é 6. opp. to éf @@ous, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 1, I. 2. an admonition, announce- ment by words, Id. Poét. 19, 6. II. the preparation, rehearsing of a chorus, etc., 5. re xopay Plat. Gorg. 501 E, cf. Simon. 148; also, a drama so produced, the whole Tetralogy, Plut. Cim. 8, Pericl. 5; v.’ biddono 11. 2. di5acxadiac or wept Sidackadiay, Catalogues of the Dramas, their writers, dates, and success, such as were compiled by Arist. and others, v, Arist. Frr. 575-587, cf. Casaub. Ath. 235 C. SiBackidtxds, 7, dv, fit for teaching, capable of giving instruction, instructive, Plat. Crat. 388 B, Xen. Mem. I. 2, 21; mepi tevos Plat. Gorg. 455 A:—2% -Kn (sc. réxvn) the faculty of giving instruction, Id. Soph. 231 B; ruvés in or about a thing, Id. Gorg. 453 E; 70 -«év, Id: Legg. 813 B:—rémos 6., locus classicus, Gramm. Adv. —«@s, Plat. Crat. 388 B, Polyb. 6. 3, 5; Sup. ddacxadtewrara Clem. Al. 380. SiBacKddvov, 76, a thing taught, a science or art (=aird 7d pdbnua, Suid.), Hdt. 5. 58: a lesson, Xen. Eq. 11, 5. II. in pl., =didaxrpa, Plut. Alex. 7. BiSdekiAos, 6 and 7, a teacher, master, h. Hom. Merc. 556, etc.; 5d. téxvns maons Bporois Aesch. Pr. 110; dewey épyov Lys. 127. 25; b:5acKadov AaBety to get a master, Soph. Fr. 779; «is didacKaAou (sc. olxov) portray to go to school, Plat. Alc. 1. 109 D, étc.; didacxddwy or &« didacndAwvy draddAayivat to leave school, Id. Gorg. 514C, Prot. 326C; év diSackddwy at school, Id. Alc. 1.110 A. IL. a dithyrambic or dramatic poet was called xopod ddacKados, or simply 4:540xaos, Cratin. *Qp. 2, Ar. Av. 912, Ach. 628, Antipho 143. 4, because he himself superin- tended the rehearsals of the chorus: cf. xopodiddcKados and dddoxw 11. BiBdoKw, Ep. inf. -Euevar and —éyer Il. g. 442., 23. 308: fut. ddago Att.: aor. édi5aga Il., Att.; poét. @i3acxnca Voss h. Hom. Cer. 144, Hes. Op. 64, Pind. P. 4. 386: pf. dediSaxa Att.:—Med., fut. ddago- pat Att.: aor. é:dagdpny Att.:—Pass., fut. ddaxOqeona Dion. H, 3. 70, etc.: aor. €:54xOny Hdt., Att.: pf. dedidaypar Il., Plat. Redupl. form of Sdw, in causal sense: (v. sub daw). To teach (i.e. instruct or inform) a person, or teack a thing, Hom., etc.: hence c. dupl. acc., ce -. lrmoatvas ebidagav they taught thee riding, -Il. 23. 307, cf. Od. 8. 481; so in Att., woAAd Siddoxe p’ 6 modds Bioros Eur. Hipp. 252, etc.; also, 5. teva wept Tivos Ar. Nub. 382; rovrows &5. (if rovrous be not the true reading), in Plat. Theaet. 201 B, must be expl. by attraction to the relat. ofs:—c. acc. pers. et inf., ce didaoxovow Geol adrol tyaydpnv éuevar teach thee to be .., Od. 1. 384; and c. inf. only, dSidage “Apreps avr? BadAc dypia mavra she taught how to shoot, Il. 5. 51, and often so ;—also with inf. omitted, &ddoxew twa innéa [sc. efvar] to teach one to be.., train one as a horseman, Plat. Meno 94 B; so, 5. twa aopdy, xaxév Elms. Heracl. 575, Stallb. Plat. Prot. 327 C: —Med. #o teach oneself, learn, pOéypa Kat behest épyas ebdafaro Soph. Ant. 356: but the usual sense of the Med. is didackev tid 5 v, dare ali docendum, esp. of a father, ¢o have his son taught or educated, 7a dada .. kdicxecbat Tods vieis Plat. Prot. 325 B; 5. rovs vieis Tas xovpas Epyacias Arist. Pol. 6.7, 3; ¢. inf., 5. 2a in- meve Plat. Rep. 467 E; d:ddoxec@at twa tmréa (sc. evar) Id. Meno 93 D; cf. Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 5, Pors. Med. 297:—(this distinction between Act. and Med. was neglected by some Poets and late Prose writers, the Med. being used just like the Act. in Simon. 147, Pind. O. 8. 77, Luc. Somn. io, etc.; but in Ar. Nub. 783 Elmsl. restored d:dagaip’ av o” Ere for &dagaiuny o° ert, and in Plat. Rep. 421 E, Cobet suggests dddfec for —erat):—Pass. to be taught, to learn, c. gen., bdacKdpevos ToAEgLOLO trained, skilled in war, Ul. 16. 811, cf. *54: also c. acc., Ta ce mport pacw “AxiAATjos 5ed:54x0ar which [medicines] they say thou wert taught by Achilles, Il. 11. 831; ds or’ €8:5dx07 or’ oldev Kaddy oddév Hdt. 3.81; ddacxw nat didaoxopay Ad-yous Eur. Andr. 739: but often c. inf., Seddarypevor elvar xetpondea Hat. 2. 6g, ete.; Bpépos hidoxerac A€yew Gxodcat 6 Eur. Supp. 914; also, &ddoxecOar ws .. Xen. Hell. 2. 3> 45> II. absol. to explain, Thuc. 2. 60: to shew by argument, prove, Aéyov Sdacxérw Xen. An. 5. 7,11, etc.; 3. epi Twos ws.., Thuc. 3. 713 HAlwoy éort 7d ddAatéveupa .., Tepacopar .. diddgac Aeschin, 87. fin. III. d:ddcnev is pecul. used of the dithyrambic and dramatic Poets, who taught the actors their parts, and superintended the getting up and bringing out of their pieces, 5, &OUpapBov, dpapya to on” “0 366 bring a piece out, Hat. 1. 23., 6. 21, cf. Plat. Prot. 327 D, etc.; in Med., dddgacbae xopdév Simon, 147: v. C. I. 211-226, ddacxadla u1, iddo~ «ahos It, and cf. Bottiger Quid sit docere fabulam, Opusc. p. 284. dibixH, 7, =didagis, teaching, Hdt. 3.134, Thuc., etc.; 5. worefoOae Thuc, 4. 126 :—but only in late Poets, as Pseudo-Phocyl. 79. II. =bidacxaXia I. 2, Epigr. Gr. 608. 4. SiSypr, Ep. redupl. form of dé (as rlOnpe of *0éw), to bind, fetter, & mor’ “AxtdAeds .. di5n wdaxov0 Av-youoww (Ep. 3 impf. for 6/57), Il. 11. 105: of bé a’. év derpotar didévTwv (as Pors. for Sedvrwv) let them bind thee, Od. 12.545 3 pl. indic, d:5éd0x occurs in Xen. An. 5.8, 24 (vulg. deapevovor). fe Pr , to run away, only found in compds., daro-, cuvato-, d:a-, jpdcke, except that Hesych. has d:Spdoxwv’ pevywv. Redupl. from 4/APA, whence do-dpavat, oe ao ea ol cf, Skt. dra, drami (fugio), ap-adran (an-é5pav): dptipeiv, dpdpos, etc., come prob. from a kindred Root, Curt. no. 275.) 5i-Spaxpos [1], ov, worth two drachms, at that price, Arist. Occ. 2. 373 5. éwACrat soldiers with pay of two drachms a day, Thuc. 3.17 :—so &- Spaxpratos, Critias 49; Sv8paxpatos, Eudem. ap. Galen. II. Spaxpov, 76, a double-drachm or half-shekel, paid to the temple-treasury at Jerusalem, Lxx (Nehem, ro. 32, cf. Ex. 38. 26), Ev. Matth. 17. 34. Avdupatos, 6, a name of Zeus as worshipped at Didyma in Miletus jointly with Apollo, Nic. ap. Ath. 477 B, cf. Hdt. 6.19; (so Awupets, 6, of Apollo, Orph. H. 33); 7d Ardupaiov, their temple at Miletus, Plut. Pomp. 24 :—Avdvpeua, 7a, their festival there, Inscr. Cnid. in Newton, p- 771, cf. C. I. 2881, -2, -3, -8. BiStp-dvop [4], 4, %,76, touching both the men, xaxd Aesch. Theb, 849. S.Stpa-rdkos, ov, Dor. for ddvpnrd«os, = didupordxos, Theocr. 1. 25, Call. Ap. 54, Anth. P. 6. 99, etc. SWIpdev [a], ovos, 6, 7%, post. for S{5upos, used by Hom, only in dual nom. and pl. dat. ¢win-brothers, twins, Il. 5. 548., 6. 26., 16. 682. SiSupeto, to bear twins, LXx (Cantic. 4. 2). Supra, 74, certain medullary particles near the pineal gland of the brain, Galen. 3. 678. S(Supvos, post. for Sf5vpos (as vavupvos for vovumos), restored by Herm. metri grat. in Pind. O. 3. 61. SwWipo-yevijs, és, twin-born, Eur. Hel. 206, SGipd-Liyos, ov, with a pair of horses; twofold, téwp Nonn. D. 15. 21; also Si8updluk, vyos, 4, %, dipppos Id. D, 21. 210. SiStipo-Opoos, ov, double-voiced, jxu Nonn, Jo. 9. v. 16. SBip.6-Krir0s, ov, double-sounding, Nonn. D. 20. 307. Sl(Stipos [7], 7, ov, also os, ov Pind. P. 4.371 (cf. di5upvos), Eur.H. F.656, Plat. Criti. 114 B:—redupl. from d¥0, double, twofold, twain, Od. 19. 227, ll. 23. 641, and often in Att.; d:ddpav xepoiv Soph. El. 206; also in sing., dda xept with each hand, Pind. P. 2.17; 5. GAs, i.e. the Pontus and Bosporus, Soph. Ant. 967; 5. yévos Menand. Epigr. 1. II. twin, 5. kactyvnros Pind. N. 1.56; 5. téxvar dpora Soph. O. C. 1693 ; 3. réxea Eur. Hel. 220, 2. Subst., déSvpoe twins, Il. 23. 641, Hdt. 5. 41: of the Twins in the zodiac, C.I. 6179; also didupa, ra, Hat. 6. 52; div ddduw Eur, Or. 1401. b. of 5. the testicles, Anth. P.5.126, Galen. BUSvpsrys, 770s, }, duality, Plat. Phileb. 57 D. SWvporoKéw, fo bear twins, Hecatae. 58, Arist. H. A. 6. 19, 3. Sitporokia, #, a bearing of twins, Arist. G. A. 4. 4, 38. SBipo-rékos, ov, bearing twins, Arist. H, A. 6. 19, 3. Sivpd-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, ovy, two-coloured, Musae. 59 :— heterocl. acc. pl. &duyéxpoas Nonn, D. 21. 2174. BiSwpr, Il. 23. 620, Att.; impf. ed/dw, di5w Od. 11. 289, Il. 5. 165, etc, 3 pl. édidecay Hat. 8. 9, Att.; but the more usu. forms of the pres. and impf. are from * , esp. in Ep. and Ion., d:d0fs, 5:S0tc0a Il. g. 164., 19. 270; S:B0f Od. 17. 350, Hdt., also in Aesch. Supp. 1010; Rdodor Il. 19. 265, etc. :—imper. di5ov Hdt. 3. 140, Eur.; Dor. did0 Pind. O. 1.136, Ep. didw0r Od. 3. 380; inf. dd0dv Theogn. 1302, Ep. &doova Il. 24. 425; Dor. d:dav Theocr. 29. 9):—impf. €didovy —ous -ov Hom. (Ep. didov Il, Hdt., Att.; 3 pl. édiSovv Hes. Op. 138, also Sov h. Hom. Cer. 437, di50v Ib. 328; Ep. impf. ddcxov Il. 14. 382: —fut. Show Att., Ep. dddow Od. 13. 358., 24. 314 :—aor. I €dwxa, Ep. dana, Hom., Att.; aor. 2 €5wv, whereof €6wxa is used only in the indic., dev in the pl. indic. €5opev @507e E5oaav, and in the other moods, dds, 38, Soin, Sodvat, Sovs ; special Ep. forms of aor., subj. 3 sing. 4p, SHpor, Spor Il. 16.725., 1. 324, Od. 2.1443 1 pl. SHoper Il.7. 299, Od. 16. 184, 3 pl. Shaan Il. 1.137; inf. ddpevat, Sdper x. 116., 18. 458, (also Dor., Ar. Lys. 1163, etc.); in late writers also a regul. aor. 1, dwops Anth. P. append. 204, cf. Schol. Aesch. Pr. 292, etc. :—pf. 6é5axa Pind., Att., Boeot. 3 pl. dwo-dedbav@ Inscr. Orchom. in C. I. 1569. 35: plqpf. éde- Biwer Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 26:—Med. (v. dodi8ajpu) :—Pass., fut. d00n00- pat Eur. Phoen. 1650, Isae., etc.: aor. €560nv Od. 2. 78, Att.: pf. dédopau Il. 5. 428, Aesch. Supp. 1041, Thuc.; 3 pl. 6é50v7a Eur. Supp. 757: plapf. éé50ro Thuc. 3. 109. (Redupl. from 4/AO, whence also Borhp, ddats, d5pa, dapov, davos, etc. ; cf. Skt. da, dadémni (dibmpe), data (dator), danam (donum, cf. danunt for dant, davos) ; Lat. da-re, dator, dos, donum, dedo, ett. ; Slav. dami (do), daru (donum), dani (vectigal).) Orig. sense, to give, tiene (with implied notion of giving freely, opp. to drobdiéwu), ri 7, from Hom. downwards the commonest construct.: in pres. and impf. fo be ready to give, to offer, Il. 9. 519, Hadt. 5. 94., 9. 109, Ar. Fr. 156, Xen. An. 6.1, 9, etc.; 7d biddpeva things offered, Dem. 267. 6. 2. of the gods, to grant, assign, Koos, vikny, etc., Hom., etc.; and of evils, 5, dd-yea, dras, ehdea, etc., IL 1, 96, etc. ; later, eB d:Sdvae Twi to give good fortune, provide well for .., Soph. O. T, 1081, O. C. 642, Eur. Andr, 750 :—absol. of the laws, to grant permission, allow, SeBundrav avrg av vbpor Isac.63.8. 3 didayr — StecAnupevos. Att. 4. with an inf. added, fefvos yap of Cdanev .. és méAcpov popéev gave it him fo wear in war, Il. 15. 532, cf. 23. 21, 183; dae Tevxea Oeparovrs pophvar 7. 149:—later often of giving to eat or drink, é« xeepds d:d00 meiv Hdt. 4.172, cf. Cratin. Noy. 7, Pherecr. Kop, 3, etc.; di50u popeiy Ar. Fr. 10; di50v pacaoOa Eupol. Avoy. 2; dds katapayeiv Hegem. &:A. 1; also, tiv xvAcka 80s évmety Pherecr. Aova, 4, cf. Diphil. "AwoA. r. 8; then with the inf. omitted, gidAnv dane xepdoas Ephipp.”EpnB. 3; inst és Diphil. Masd. 1; so also of giving water to wash with, di50v Kava xerpés [sc. viac@ac] Alex. Incert. I, 2, Archedic. Ono. I. 3. 5. Prose phrases, 5. Spxov, opp. to AapBavery, to offer or tender an oath, Isae. 77.16, v. Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 27 sq.:—6. Pipoy, yvwpny to give a vote, an opinion, Dem. 542. 18., 704. 5; for 5. &axeporoviar, v. s. voce :—5. xdp, = xapi{ec@at, Soph. Aj. 1354, Cratin. Incert.143; épyi xapw Sods having indulged .. ,Soph. O. C. 855 :—aAdyor tiv? 5. to give one leave to speak, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 20; but, 5. Adyov éaurG to deliberate, Hdt.1.97; ov«, ei id0ins .. cavT@ Adyov Soph. O. T. 583 :—8. dixny or dixas, v. sub Sinn :—dxory 5. rik to give ear to.., Id. El. 30, etc. II. c, acc. pers. to give up as prey, give over, deliver up, axéeoot pe duos Od. 19.1675 py. . ddbvpow edonev Il. 5. 397; “Exropa xvoiv 23. 21; mupt twa Od. 24. 65; mAnyais tid Plat. Rep. 574 C; edwxe Ojpas pdBw Pind. P. 5. 82. 2. of parents, ¢o give their daughter ¢o wife, Ovyarépa dvbpi Il, 6. 192, Od. 4. 7; and so of Telemachus, dvépi pnrépa dwow 2, 223; Saunvbe edocay airny gave her in marriage to go to Samé, 15. 367, cf. 17. 442; with inf. added, 540m cor Xapirww play dmview Il. 14. 268 :—in Prose and Att., dvyarépa 5, rwt yuvaixa Hat. 1. 107, cf, Thuc, 6. 59, Xen., etc.; absol., €{S0cav «al Hyovro é dAAHAwy Hat. 5. 92, cf, Eur, Med, 288 ;—but the commoner word was éxdidwye, Wes. Hdt. 5. 92. 8. in Att., &ddvar Td Ti to grant another to one’s en- treaties, pardon him at one’s request, (like Romulum Marti redonare, Hor. Od. 3. 3, 33). Xen. An. 6. 4, 31 :—:ddvar wi 7 to forgive one a thing, remit its punishment, Lat. condonare alicui aliquid, Interpp. Eur. Cycl. 296, Dem. 274.1, 8. 4, bddévae éavrdv Tir to give oneself up, Hdt. 6. 108, Soph. Ph. 84, Thuc. 2. 68; rut els xeipas Soph. El. 1348; 6. éavrdy rots devois Dem. 258. 18; els xevddvous Polyb. 3. 17, 8, etc.; c, inf., didwo’ éxdv xreive éavrévy Soph. Ph. 1341 :—v. infr. Iv. III. in vows and prayers, c, acc. pers. et inf. to grant, allow, bring about that .., esp. in prayers, often in Hom. ; 80s dropOi- pevoy Sivat Sépov”Aidos eiow grant that he may go.., Il. 3. 322; dés pe ticacOa give me to.., Aesch. Cho. 18, Eum. 31; but also c, dat. pers., ToUT@ .. evTuxeiv Soiev Oeot Id. Theb. 421; Oeot dotéy wor’ abrois ..madeiv Soph, Ph. 316, cf. O. C, 1101, 1287, Plat. Legg. 813 C; (in this form, és is often omitted). IV. seemingly intr. to give oneself up, devote oneself, Twi, esp. }5ovq, only in Att., Valck, Phoen. 21, Diatr. p. 233; els Sypoxontay Diod. Excerpt. 2. 567, 45; Spdum Sods at full speed, Alciphro 3. 47; cf. éxdiSapu, évdiBwpu. V. the Pass. occurs but once in Hom. (but cf. dwodidape), of Tor déd0Tat ToAEKHA. épya not to thee do deeds of war belong, Il. 5. 428; but freq. in Att. Ste, v. sub dios. II. die, v. sub die. Steyyva, }, (@yydn) surety, bail, Schol. Thuc. 3. 70. Steyyudw, fut. now, I. of persons, in Act. to give or (in pres. and impf.) offer to give bail for, and in Med. to take bail for, é:eyyvevros Mevegévov rdv maida, Maciwy adtiv énrd raddvrov deyyuncaro Isocr. 361 C, ef. Plut. Caes. 11 :—Pass. to be bailed by any one, deraxoctwv Taddvray Tots mpotévars dunryyunuévor bailed by their Proxeni for eight hundred talents, Thuc. 3.70; td twos Dem. 1358. 28. II. ¢o give in pledge or security, 7a o¶ xpnyctev for money, Dion. H. 7. 12. Seyyunors, ews, 7, a giving or offering of bail, Dem. 724. 6, v. Att. Process. p. 521. II. a pledging, Dion. H. 11. 32. dreyelpa, to wake quite up, Hipp. 1237, Anaxipp. "Eyxad. 1. 47:—Pass., Arist. Probl. 3. 34; Ep. aor. pass. déypero, Anth. P. 5. 275. Siéyepors, 7), an arousing, Jul. Afric. in Math. Vett. 315. Sveyeptucds, f, dv, exciting, stimulant, rwés Sext. Emp. M.6. 19,Ath.64B. Sveykadéw, to continue to accuse, rivds Eccl., Byz. Sveykorrrw, strengthd. for éyxdérrw, Stob. Ecl. 1. 632. SreSeke, v. sub dvadelevupe. BréSqv, Adv. (S:inur) throughout, to the end, Hesych. SréSpapov, v. sub darpéxa. dreBpia, 7, a sitting apart, of birds whose position was ominous of strife, opp. to ouvedpia, Arist. H.A.9. 1, 10; pl. dedpetar (-iac?), Id. Eth. E. 7. 2, 13. SreSprov, 7d, (€pa) a seat for two persons, Incert. ap. Suid. diebpos, ov, (€0pa) sitting apart, opp. to odvedpos, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 103 cf. Bedpia, II. diedpos, 6, =Biedprov, Ath. 197 B. Siebevypévws, Adv. (ScaCev-yvupe) separately, Justin, M. Srebifw, to become chronic, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 2. SreBijs, és, (dvetSov) transparent, clear, Theophr. C. P. 6. 19, 2. _dteiBov, inf. di8eiv, aor. 2 with no pres. in use, S:opdw being used instead :—to see thoroughly, discern, (on the Homeric usage, V. dia-eidw), 7 Ar. Nub. 168, Plat. Phaedr. 264; dudeiv wept twos Id. Phaedo 62 B. 2. to see through :—Pass., dedopévn ev tdart vigos Call. Del. 1415 dievbopévn meBiowo seen through or across the plain, Ap. Rh. 1. 546. II. pf. diowa, inf. Bedévar Ep. dldevar (Ap. Rh. 4. 1360), to know the difference between, to distinguish, dvdpav..rdv kaxdv drecévat Eur. Med. 518, cf, Ar. Ran. 975, Plat. Phaedr. 262 A: to decide, Soph. 0.C. 295.—The poét. fut. de’couat in Nic. Th, 494, 837, is better assigned to dieu to go through. SretAéw, fo unroll a book, Plut. 2. 1039 E. SrerAnppévas, Ady. (SiadapBdva) distinctly, precisely, Xen.Oec. 11, 25 to offer to the gods, éwarduBas, tpd Geotow Il. 12, 6, Od. 1. 67, and J (al. duerAnupévos) ; opp. to ddiaAfnrws, Philod. Vol. Herc. 1, 77 ed. Ox. SrecAvomae — dréEerme. SrerAvopat, Pass, Zo slip out of, SietAvabeioa B5poro Ap. Rh, 4. 35. Slept, serving as fut. to dépxopuar, impf. dupe: fut. dceécopae Nic. Th. 494, 837, ef. Hesych. :—to go to and fro, roam about, Ar. Ach. 845; of a report, ¢o spread, Adyos duper Plut. Ant. 56. 2. to get through, escape, did THY mépow Arist. Cael. 3.8, 14; ew Theophr. C. P. 5. 9, 12, 8. c. acc. to go through, 7d Grepoy Arist. Phys. 3. 4, 14, etc. ; also c, acc. cogn., 5. rdv Gefov Spdpuov Plat. Ax. 370 E. b. to go through a subject in speaking or writing, to narrate, describe, discuss, Id. Crito 47 C, cf. Ar. Av. 1392: also, 8. 7G Adyw Plat. Gorg. 506 A. Cf. Bregecpu. Sie, to be through: déop f.1. for doicet, v. sub Kapépw. Svetrov, in Hom. also dtaetror (i.e. uaF etrov), serving as aor. 2 to d:ayopevw :—to say through, tell fully or distinctly, rd Exacta bietnopev Il, 11. 705, Od. 12. 16; pepeypévor.., ) dndvevOe; diermé por, Eppa daciw Il. 10. 425; 7d aivvypa 5. Soph. O. T. 394; rpdrov méver Id. Tr. 22; to declare, of an oracle, Id. O. T. 854: to interpret a riddle, Ib. 394; so in Plat. 2. to speak one with another, converse, diaccmepev GAAHAw Od. 4. 215. II. in Med. to fix upon, agree, &y & xpévw dmodwoe Arist. Oec. 2. 30, 1, cf. Eth. E. 7. 10, 22.—Cf. depG, dreipya. Steipyw, Ep. and Ion. S:épyw, Ep. also Steépyw:—to keep asunder, separate, Tods di€epryov enddgues Il. 12. 424; then in Hdt. 1. 180, Pind. N. 6. 4, Thuc. 3. 107; 8. rod pi ovyxexdobae Arist. H. A. 6. 3, 18. 2. to keep off, ward off, Plat. Legg. 880 B. II. seem- ingly intr., to lie between, Xen. An. 30%, 2 Sveipyka, v. sub dep :—Brelpopar, v. sub diépopac. Sietpvw, Ion. for depiw, to draw across, ras véas tov icOudy Hat. 7. 24; 5, ri twos Ap. Rh, 1. 687: cf. &icOpicw. Stelpw, aor. inf. dépoae Hipp. Art. 788, 833, 834, (so that diefpac Ib. 472. 20, is prob. corrupt), but part. defpas Luc. Alex. 26, Ael. V. H. 4. 28:—pf. deipxa Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 10. To pass or draw through, bmdderrpoy 5d xavpdrov Hipp. l.c.; xeipas &d trav Kavdvov Xen. lic.; tov Bdxrvdoy bad rHs dais Ael. l.c.:—Aeschin. 77. 28 is cor- Tupt. II. ¢o string together in order, Adéyos drepdpevos=eipd- Hevos, Dion. H. de Comp. 26. St-erpwvd-Eevos, ov, dissembling with one’s guests, treacherous under the mask of hospitality, Ar. Pax 623; cf. xareipwvevouat, Srets, v. sub deine. StacSive or -Stw, to go into and through, cited from Alex. Aphr. S.ék, before a vowel SteE (Archil. 154), v. iid A. 1.1; cf. wapéx. BSexBaivw, fo go through and out of, Ta Spy Strabo 536. StekBaddo, to throw out through, dd Twos Galen, (sub. otpardv) to march through, xcupay Polyb. 4. 68, 5, etc. SexBodn, %, a mountain-pass, in pl., Polyb. 1. 75, 4., 3. 40, I» SrexBdrrov, 74, a medicine to eject a dead foetus, Hipp. 634. 9. SrexSiSwpr, = diadidwps, Hipp. 612. 32. SrexSikéw, strengthd. for éxdieéw, Gramm., and Pandect. SrexSpopy, 7, a passing through, Poéta ap. Eus. P. E. 444 B. SrexSvopar, aor. duefduv :—to slip out through, Hipp. 305.523 5. roy 8xAoy Plut. Timol. to. s SréxSiiors, ews, , a means of escape, 5. pv mice-holes, Ath. 98 D. 2. an evasion, trick, Plut, Sertor. 13. SrexOéw, fut. -Oevoopat, to run through, Arist. Mund. 4, 19, Plut.Pelop. 17. SrexOpdoxe, inf. aor. -Oopéewv, to leap through, Opp. H. 4. 674. Stekkumrw, to peep out, Lxx (2 Macc. 3. 19). SrexAdptw, to shine out through, Heliod. 2. 31. BvexAavOdvopar, Med. to forget utterly, Q. Sm. 13. 380. SvexAvw, to dissolve, relax, Galen. Srexpypvopar, Zo ind, Philo Belop. p. 57. Srexpulde, to suck out, Geop. 7. 15, 2. Svextratw, to break or burst through, rwds Philostr. 732; da Tivos Paus. 7. 16, 5 ;-c. acc., Dioxipp. ‘Iorop. 1, App. Civ. 5. 34, etc.; absol., Luc. Tox. 61; cf. dexmtnrw,—Also in Med., 5. rds n¥Aas Dion. H, 11. 37. Svexrepatve, fut. av, to go through with, 7a rovrav éxdpeva 5, Xen. Occ. 6, 1 :—Pass., mplv .. Bios dexmepavO7 Soph. Fr. 572. Srexmepardopar, Pass. fo pass out through, Strabo 536. Siexmepdw, fut. ow and dow:—to pass out through, c. acc., Tas “Hpaxdeas ornaas Hat. 4.152; 5. riv dvvdpor, to pass quite through it, Id. 3. 4; Tov morapdy Id. 5. 52; Bloy Eur. Supp. 954. 2. absol., 5. és x@dva Aesch, Pers, 485: of food, like d:axwpéw, Plat. Tim. 73 A. II. to pass by, overlook, Ar. Pl. 283, v. Schol. SrexrepSikilo, = diawepdixi(w, Suid. Svexrn Saw, to leap or bound violently, rapdia Aristaen. 2. 13. Stexmimrw, to get out through, Twds Plut. 2. 51 A; 7 Heliod, ro, 28, Arr, An, I. 8, 13, etc. II. to pass completely out, Arist. Probl. 14. 14.—In Luc. V. H. 1. 30 duefEwaucer is the true reading. StexmAéw, fut. -rrAedcopat: Ion. —1rAd@, aor. -émAwoa:—to sail out through, roy ‘EAXjorovrov Hdt. 7.147; Tas Kvavéas 4. 89; zh Sihpuxa 7.122; oxoivous Suddexa 2. 29; also, ‘HpaxAéwy ornréow 4. 42: absol. fo sail out, Ib. 43. II. in naval tactics, to break the enemy's line by sailing through it, so as to be able to charge their ships in flank or rear, Hdt. 6. 15, Thuc. 1. 50., 7. 363 cf. duéemAous. * BiékrrAoos, contr. SvékmAous, 6, a sailing across or through, passing across or through, Hdt. 7.36; Trav Bpaxéwy through the shallows, 1d..4. 179, ef. Plat. Criti. 115 E. II. a breaking the enemy's line ina sea-fight, Hdt. 6. 12, Thuc. 1. 49, ubi v. Amold3 cf. foreg. SuexmAdw, v.s. uexmréw. Stexmvéw, to blow forth continually, of winds, Arist. Mund. 4, 15. Svexnvon, 7, a breathing out, exhalation, Theophr. C. P. 4,12, 12, Brextopevopar, Dep. to go out through, Dion. H. g. 26, II, intr. 367 dvexmrbw, fut. -rrvcw, to spit all about, Philostr. 848. dtéxmTwots, ews, %, a getting out through, escape, Galen. diéxpoos, 5, a passage for the stream to escape, Hdt. 7. 129. Sdiéxriicts, ews, H, a stretching, 5. nad xacpai Clem. Al. 219. diexrelves, to stretch out, extend, Hipp. Mochl. 863 (v. |. Set éxr-). StexréAAw, to arise, grow from, Nic. ap. Ath. 683 E. Stextépve, to cut, divide through the midst, Joseph, B. J. 3. 10, 7 Sréxtpyois, ews, 77, a hole quite through, Galen. Siexaive, strengthd. for éepaivw, Eust. 1538. 17, etc. Siexhépw, strengthd. for éxpépw, Hesych. s. v. iefayayn! Srexpevyw, strengthd. for expevyw, Plut. Camill. 27; dite wérpas >. Ap. Rh, 2. 616. diexxéw, strengthd. for éexéw, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 5. SiéAdiors, ews, }, a driving through, HjAov Plut. 2. 659 D. @ charge or exercise of cavalry, like diimmacia, Xen, Eq. Mag. 3, 4. SreAatves, fut. KeAdow, Att. 5eAG: aor. 1 duprdoa. To drive through or across, Tappo.o Sindace povuxas twmous Il. 10. 564, cf. 12. 120, Eur. Supp. 676. 2. to thrust through, Aawapyns be dijdace XaAxeov yxos Il. 16. 318, cf. 13. 161; mapa Tv dxavOay gddov ..6., of impaling, Hdt. 4. 72. 3. 5) rv Adyx7p to thrust one through with a lance, Plut. Marc. 29, cf. Luc. D. Mort. 14. 3. II. intr. (sub. inov) to ride through, Xen. An. 1. 5, 12, etc.: to charge through, Ib. I. 10, 7., 2. 3, 19, cf. Id. Eq. Mag. 3, 6 and 11 :—e. acc. cogn., 5° 686y Id. Cyr. 4. 4, 4. 2. on H5e o° Hyépa Sindace Eur. Heracl. 788, v. Elmsl. ad 1. 3. ris dprobdpns Sindodyny (syncop. for —jacapny, vy. jAgaro), Simon, Iamb. 15. , SreAtyxo, fo refute utterly, Plat. Gorg. 457 E, Arist. Fr. 85. diehivuw, to cease entirely from labour or exercise, Hipp. Acut. 391. SieAloow, Att. —rrw, to unfold, expose, Plut. 2. 411 B. SveAxuopds, 7), ¢ dragging about, Dion. H. de Comp. 20 med. dteAkvorivda waifev, or madd, a game like our boys’ game of ‘French and English,’ Poll. 9.112; cf. ypappyq. t BiéAkw, fut. eeAndow: aor. -e/Axiioa Ar. Pl. 1036, Plat. Rep. 440 A: —to tear asunder, widen, rods dpOadpovs Plat. l.c.; 7d orépa Diog. L. 7. 20. II. to pull through, 5:0. SaxrvAtov Ar. |. c. 2. to haul ships across an isthmus, Diod. 4. 56. IIL. of Time, to protract, Polyb. 31. 26, 4; 5. Biov to drag on life, Plut. 2. 1033 D. IV. to continue drinking, Ar.Pax 1131 (where others supply ror Biov), cf. Fr. 163. BSiepat, Pass. to speed, immo wediovo Sievrat speed over the plain, Il. 23.4753 ov.. wéuove .. dtecOar he is not minded to hasten away, 12. 304; v. dampacow. II. to fear, c. inf., Aesch. Pers. 7o1 (re< stored by Herm. for Sefoua: of the Med. Ms). | (From an obsol. dinut, still found in évdinye: v. sub Siw.) : SrepPadAw, to put in through, LXX (Num. 4. 6, al.), Galen. Srépevos, v. sub diinpe. Steppévo, fut. —peve, to last throughout, Galen, 12. p. 501. Siépmtdos, ov, well-capped, well-hatted, xepady Luc. Lexiph. 13. StepripmAnpt, to fill completely, Lxx, (2 Macc. 4. 40), Hesych. Stepminrw, to fall quite into, eis re Polyb. 38. 1, 4. SteproAde, to sell to different buyers, or sell in lots, Lat. divendere, Eur. Bacch, 512; éymopied xpnuara 8. Ar. Ach. 973. 2. metaph., Ti pe .. KeuwoAG Ad-youst mpds oé; what bargain is he driving ? Soph. Ph. 579; of a mercenary marriage, dOovped ew kal Sieuwoddpeba Id, Fr. 517. 7. Stepdaive, to shew through, dpPadrpor .. yopyov dieu. Luc. Alex. 3. dvendavifw, to let a thing be seen, Aristaen. 2. 16, Srevéynat, Ion. —evetkar, v. sub duapépw. ‘ SreverAéw, to involve, Ad-yos SvevetAnuévos Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 1. Svevelpyw, to shut quite up, Galen., in Pass. Steverréov, verb. Adj. of duapépw, one must excel, Luc. Astrol. 1. Stevepyéw, strengthd. for évepyéw, Crito ap. Stob. 44. 12. SrevOipéopar, Dep. to consider, reflect, Eccl. Stevrauti£w, to live out the year, Hdt. 4. 7. Steviorapar, Med. to maintain in opposition, Byz.: v. Lob. Phryn. 154. Si-evos, ov, two-year-old, Lat. biennis, Theophr. H. P. 7. 5, 5. SrevoxAéw, o annoy much, Dion. H. §.9; Tws Joseph. A. J. 9. 3, I, etc. Stevoxymrw, to break out furiously, of storms, Byz. Sievrépeupa, 7d, (evrepov) a looking through entrails, Comic word for sharp-sightedness, coined by Ar. Nub, 166, Brék, v. dex. Srefdyw, to bring to an end, Polyb. 5. 1, 5, etc.: to manage, conduct, Id. I. , 6, etc.: to treat so and so, Id. 3. 77, 4. II. 5. Bloy to sup- port life, Id. 1. 71, 1; and so, absol., Plut. rogo B. Siebiyoyh, 7, a bringing toan end, issue, Polyb. 5.102, 3, etc. II. 4. tod Biov a way of living, Diod. 4.30; and so, absol.,Sext.Emp.M.7.435- SieEatpéw, strengthd. for éfa:péw, Dem. Phal. 323. Suefdioow, Att. -drtw, fo rush forth, Theocr. 13. 23, Arist. Mund. 4, I0., 5, 12. SreEape(Bopar, Pass. fo be passed, of life, Epigr. Gr. 208. 12. avbitw, to variegate with flowers, Eubul. Srep. 4. Setaarw, to inflame violently, Byz. SieEarpilw, strengthd. for ¢arpitw, Hipp. 506. 27. Sietdrrw, v. duefaioow. SreFerpr, (efye ibo) to go out through, duefipevar wediovde Il. 6. 393; ef avans és .. Hdt. 2. 148 :—to go through, pass through a country, 6 Ta dvw Hadt. 2. 25; rv MiAnoiny 5. 29; & Evpémns 2. 36, etc. pa Se in counting or recounting, to go through in detail, recount in full, relate circumstantially, Hdt. 1. 116., 7.77, Plat. Phaedo 84 C, etc.; wepi twos Isocr. 83 A, Plat. Prot. 361 E, ete. : to go through, by way of examining, ** II. } Eur, Hipp. 1024. Cf, dle, Siépxopar, dreEpxopar. 368 editors, €w8, #, =BéAaois, Plut. Sull. 18, Heliod. g. 18. SrefeAarv, fut. -eddow, Att. -eA@ :—intr. (cf. €Aavvw), to drive, ride, march through, absol., Hdt. 1.187; c. acc. loci; 5. riv dvvdpoy 3. 11; tas mUAas 5. 52, etc.; also, kara 7d 7 cov 3, 86; 8. émt dpparos - 100; 3. im rdv morapdy Plut. Popl. 1g; also c. gen. loci, 5. ris Papns Id. Cam, 7. éyxe, to refute utterly, Luc. Alex. 61. SreEeAcvors, ews, 7), =d:éfo50s, Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 1573. eXicow, Att. -rrw, fut. fw, fo unroll, untie, Hdt. 4. 67. epyafopa., Dep. to work out, effect, Plat. Legg. 798 D. to make away with, Dion. H. 6. 35. SretepEopar, to learn by close questioning, gut radra ll. 10. 432. epevvdw, to examine or survey closely, Pind. N. 3. 41: so in Med., Plat. Legg. 763 A, Phil. 58 D. éptra, to ereep out, Arist. Mund. 6, 20; fut. d&efepricet, Ib. 16. _ - Brebepxopar, fut. -eAetoouar, = dréferpe:—to go through, pass through, 70 xwpiov Hat. 2. 29, cf. 5. 29, etc. 2. to go through, go com- pletely through, vépov tov dphtoy Id. 1. 24; mavras pidous Eur. Ale. 15; Thy dd6v Plat. Legg. 822 A; Thy dieny Ib. 856A; 8. mévovs, Lat. exhaurire labores, Soph. Ph. 1419: also c. part., 5. mwkéwv to be done selling, Hdt. 1. 196; cf. d&éfodos 1, 4. 8. with the Prep. 5:4, to go through in succession, 5:0 ravrav 6. rev Traldwy, i.e. killing them one after another, Hdt. 3. 11; dd r&v déxa Id.5.92,3; dd macdv Tov Cywav trying one after another, Thuc. 3. 45; bid r&v méAewy Plat. Prot. 315 A. 4. to go through in detail, recount in full, relate circumstan- tially, rt Hat. 3. 75., 7. 18, Plat. Legg. 893 A, etc.; also, 5. mept rivos Ib. 857 E. b. 6. 7 pds abréy to go over it in one’s mind, Id. Theaet. 189 E. II. intr. to be past, gone by, of time, Hdt. 2. 52, cf. Buttm. Ind. Dem. Mid, 2. to be gone through, related fully, mavra 8 H5n defeAnAvVOec Dem. 541. 22. diekerdlw, strengthd, for éfera{w, Greg. Nyss. Sre—nyéopar, strengthd. for ééyyéouar, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 12. SreEinpr, strengthd. for fins, to let pass through, duefjuav adrods dd Tijs wéAews Hat. 5. 29. II. intr. (sub. abrév), of a river, 4o empty itself, és OdAaccav Thuc. 2. 102; cf. éinue, Exdidwpe. SteEueveopar, Dep. to arrive at, els ténov Polyb. 10. 29, 3- Srefimalopar, to ride out through, Polyaen. 5. 16, 5. Stefvoropéw, Zo narrate in detail, Joseph. Genes. 16 A. Suektréov, verb. Adj. one must go through, Plat. Tim. 44 D. Svefodevw, to have a way out, escape, Hipp. 1027 D. to go through, Adyov Sext. Emp. P. 1. 202, in Pass. Srefodicds, 4, dv, fit for going through: 7 5. the vent, Arist. H. A. 1. pees II. detailed, icropia Plut. Fab. 16: Adv. —K@s, in full, copiously, Galen. Si-Eob0s, 4}, a way out through, an outlet, passage, channel, dmoxe- KAnipévov rod Ydaros ris 5. Hdt. 1.117, cf. 4.140; diégodn ddav passage-ways, Id. 1.199; Stay mActpow pi) kabapds mapéxy Tas 5. Plat. Tim. 84 D, etc. 2. a pathway, orbit, of the sun, Hdt. 2. 24, cf. Eur. Andr. 1086; so, 5. darpav Arist. Mund. 6,17; dvépar défod0 their several ways, Soph. Fr. 424; Tas Tov mvedparos 5. Plat. Tim. 91 C, cf. 84 D: metaph., woAAds ppoyridwy 5. Henioch. Tpox. 1. 5. 3. the passage of the excrement, Hipp. Progn, 39, etc. 4. a way out, and so an issue, event, rav Bovdeupdray Hat. 3.156; épywv Polyb. 2. I, 3, etc. 5. a means of escape, aoas 5, diefedOeiv Plat. Rep. 405 Cc. IZ. ‘in Plat. often of detailed narrative or description, % Tov Adyou 8. the course of the narrative or argument, Criti. 109 A, Prot. 361 D; % 8a ororxetov 5. description by resolving into elements, Theaet. 207.C: exposition, discussion, Legg. 768 D, 812 A, Tim. 480; 5. kal érawot narratives, tales, Prot. 326 A, etc. iit. a military evo- lution, 8. rautiwat Legg. 813 E: generally, an expedition, Phaedr. 247 A. otyvupt, Zo lay quite open, mrevpa duefwitey Q. Sm. 13. 41, — or —€w, to a meer te 734. , strengthd, for éfoupéw, Hipp. 539. 39- Bcbudaivu, to eave to the end, finish the web, Plat. Rom. 2. Sreoprdlw, to keep the feast throughout, 7a ToO pia beoprdca Thue. 8. 9; plapf. dkewprdxe Dio C. 47. 20:—Pass., Tavra Svewptaceyn these fes- tivities were kept, be oui Stem , V. sub de @. — yi fevasins for émpwoxw, Dion. H. 9. 63; prob. f.1, for émp-, caused by #5 going before. . SiémpaOov, Sempabopny, v. sub diamépbw. Bvémraro, v. sub darérapat. f Brérrw, fut. yw, to manage an affair, sway, order, arrange, 70 mAéiov morépoo Il. 1.165; otpardy 2. 207; exaora 11. 706; oxynraviy dlen dvépas drove them away, 24. 247; so in Pind., 5. wéAuw O. 6, 1573 and Hadt., 8. 72 mpiyypara, Tov dyava 3. 53. 5. 22, etc.; but rare in good Att., as Aesch. Pers, 106, Eum. 931. II. in Med. to be ever en- gaged in, yoo dub. 1. Eur. El. 146. , Dep. to love passionately, c. gen., Plat. Ax. 370 B. Brepdw, to strain through,Plut.2.692C:—Brépapa,rd,a strainer 1b.1088E, ato fut. dcopar: Dep.:—to work thoroughly, cultivate, but used by Theophr. only in pf. with pass. sense, 7} detpyacpévn C. P. 5. 13, 10, etc.; so in aor., drepyacbév (of wool), Arist. Probl.22.11. 2. to work out, Lat. elaborare, Isocr. 219 D; waka 6. to work mischief, Polyb. 3- 73+ 7+ II. ¢o make an end of, kill, destroy, Lat. con- JSwere, Hat. 1, 213, etc.5 pI. moh duepyaon Soph. O. C, 1417 :—plapf. in pass. sense, drepyao7o 7a mpaypata, actum erat de rebus, Hat. 7. 10, 33 so in aor., punyarer ay Eur. Heracl. 174. Brépya, v. sub dieipyw. Brepeiw, to provoke greatly, Polyb. 9. 18, 9. aI. TEAC; .acc. dueEeAaots — dieots. Srepéb.opa, 74, vehement excitement, App. Civ. 5. 53- SrepelSu, fut. ow, to prop up, Plut. 2. 529 C. II. Med. to Jean upon, Twr Eur. Hec. 66:—c. acc., sxpa Baxrnpig 5. to lean one’s body on.., Ar. Eccl, 150. 2. 5. mpds rT to set oneself firmly, struggle against .., Polyb. 22. 7, 14, Plut. Philop. 17; wept twos for a thing, Polyb. 5. 84, 3- t Srepeixw, aor. —hptxov, to cleave, split, Euphor. 40. diéperopa, 74, a support, C. I. 150. § 6, p. 235. ‘ Stepécow: fut. -epéow: aor. —hpera, post. —ypecoa:—to row about, xepot 5. to swim, Od. 12. 444., 14. 351. 2. c. acc., 5. Tas xépas to swing them about, Eur. Tro. 1258. Stepevvdw, to search through, examine closely, Plat. Soph. 24? B, etc. : often also in Med., Id. Phaedo 78 A, Rep. 368 C, etc. i Svepevvnréov, verb. Adj. one must trace out, Plat. Soph. 260 E. Stepeuvyr is, od, 6, a scout or vidette, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 4., 6. 3, 2. Srepéw, (Siepds) to wet, moisten, v.1. Arist. Probl. 25. 11. Stepifw, fut. iow, to strive with one another, Epigr. in A. Gell. 3. 11:— Med. #0 contend with, Twi Plut. Cato Ma. 15. Sreppyvevors, ews, 7), on interpretation, Plat. Tim. 19 C. Stepunveurhs, of, 6, an interpreter, v.1. 1 Ep. Cor. 14. 28, Eccl. Sreppyvevw, fo interpret, expound, Lxx (2 Macc, 1. 36), Philo 1. 226, N. T., etc. :—verb. Adj. —réov, Philo 1. 481. Srépopar, Ep. Stelpopar, Med. to ask or question closely, Ti pe Tavra Steipeat; Od. 4. 492; pi Tadra dieipeo Il, 1.550, etc.; aor. inf., duepeo- Oar Epwrnaw Plat. Phileb. 42 E. Stepds, d, dv, used twice by Hom. (in Od.) in the sense of vegetus, od« a0’ otros dvipp d:epds Bpords there exists not the mortal man alive and quick, 6, 201; d:ep@ obi with nimble foot, 9. 43; Sepp paAoryé Diog. L. 8. 75+ II. after Hom. = liquidus, wet, liquid, téart depdv Pind. Fr. 74. 113 alua 7d 5. Aesch. Eum. 263; 70 5., opp. to énpév, Anaxag. 6; of the air, opp. to Aazmpds, Hipp. Aér. 290; of birds, which float through the air, Ar, Nub. 337, cf. depovnyns; 5. wéAea of the nightingale’s notes, Lat. liguidae voces, Id. Av. 213; 5. wat Bapeta yj Theophr. C. P. 3. 23, 2; 5. KéAevOos, of the sea, Ap. Rh. 1. 184; 5. méyow of one drowned in the sea, Anth, P. 6. 316; 5. wdpos death by drowning, Opp. H. 5. 345- (Properly, acc. to Arist. Gen, et Corr. 2. 2, 8, duepdv pév eons 7d éxov GdAorpiay bypirnra émmodjs, opp. to BeBpeypevor, soaked through. This explanation points to the same Root as 6:-aivw: but the Homeric usage connects it with di-w, to run, flee; v. Curt. no. 268.) Sveprrifwo, =sq., Opp. H. 2. 261, Heliod. 6. 1. Biéptw, to creep or pass through, mip 5., of the ordeal of fire, Soph. Ant. 265; 8:4 rivos Plut. 2. 516 F. Steppyspévas, Ady. in a scattered way, Lat. sparsim, Polyb. 3. 58, 3. Siéppwya, v. sub diappiyyvupe. Siepors, ews, , a drawing through, restored in Arist. Probl, 16. 8, 9, for dratpécer, cf. Galen, Lex. p. 552. &i-EpvOpos, ov, shot with red, like ddAevxos, Diosc. SEK Stepixw [i], to keep off, Arat. 299: to hinder, dyipaxlay Plut. Lyc. 2. Sreptw, v. sub duerpdw. Stépxopar: fut. erAcdoopar (but dieu is used in Att. as fut., and depew as impf.) aor. 5:7A@ov: Dep. To go through, pass through, absol., drip 5 BipAVe Bédros Il. 23. 876, etc. :—c. gen., Paro..eyxos pea diedcvoecba . . Alveiao 20. 263, cf. 20. 100; opayav dra ids Soph. Tr. 717; so, 5. dia ris vicov Hat. 6. 31 :—c. acc., 5. mad dor” Il. 3: 108., 6. 392; dmavra Ar. Av. 182; Tv moAeutay Thue, 5. 64; Tpeis oTapovs Xen, An, 3. 3, 8. 2. to pass through, complete, 7d meunrov pépos ris d500 Hat. 3. 25; Tov Bloy Plat. Rep. 365 B, etc. ; madetav Xen. Cyr. 1. 5, 1. 3. of reports, Bagis SA” "Axatods Soph. Aj. 999; and absol,, Adyos djAOe went abroad, spread, Thue. 6. 46, Xen. An. I. 4, 7. 4. of pain, to shoot through one, Soph. Ph. 7433 of poison, Id. Tr. 717; of passion, tuepos 8. ‘HpaxAj Ib. 477; cf. Ph. 256; éué dAGE ms a thought shot through me, Eur. Supp: 288. 5. to pass through and teach, to arrive at, 7d Biov Tédos Pind. I. 4. 7 (3. 23). 8. to go through in detail, tell all through, Adyov Id. N. 4. 1173; xpnopdv Aesch. Pr. 874; & dHAOoy the details IT have gone through, Thuc, 1, 21; OAtya SeAOwy after a short state- ment, Plat. Prot. 344 B; also, 3. mepi rivos Isocr. 54 A, 191 C, Plat. Prot. 347 A; bmép twos Polyb. 1. 13, 10; also, 5. 7t werd ppecty h. Hom. Ven. 277; mpds abréy Isocr. 230 C; 8. ris modrreia . . cuppépet Arist. Pol. 4. 12, 1. IL. intr. of Time, to pass, elapse, xpdvov ou TOAD dreAObvross Hat. 1. 8, cf. 3. 152, Dem. 670. 21, etc.; so, onovday diehBovodv Thuc. 4. 115; but, deAOdy és Bpaxiv .. xpévov having waited, Eur, H. F..957. Cf. bégerue, Siep@ serving as fut., Stetpyea as pf., of diaryopedao (Seftor, q. v., being the aor.) ito say fully, distinctly, expressly, Plat. Legg. 809 E, etc. ; dielpyev 4 vopos, Dem. 465. 20, cf. 644. 5 :—Pass., aor. dceppyOny Plat. Legs: — pf. diefpnyat Ib, 813 A, etc, ; dvecpyuévor an express order, po eee cross-question, twa Plat. Apol, 22 B, Gorg. 458 A, etc. ; . Twa Tt Id, Prot. 315 C, II. to ask constantly or continually, ol bepwrravres bpas .. rt BovrcaHe ; Dem, 34. 22: SteoPar, inf. of diova, Hom. ; but of Kepar, Il, 12. 304. SrerPia, fut.—E50ua1: aor. dépiiyor :—to eat through, 8. rhyv whrpav, of young vipers, Hdt. 3. 109, Arist. H. A. 5. 34, 2. II. 4 consume, oe L. 5. 76, Plut. 2.170C: metaph., Thv youxy Philo 2. 541. pst a, ov, (Biers 111) consisting of guarter-tones, Aristid. Quint. Sleors, ews, %, (Silqn) a sending through, di iqui ‘ / gh, discharge, esp. of a liquid, oie. , < +3), to indicate vv. ll., rejected verses, etc., and, in dramatic poetry, a new speaker ; v. Hephaest. 15.1, Schol. Ar. Pl. 253, Cic, Att. 8. 2, 4. II. a dance, Poll. 4. 105, Hesych.; cf. Ar. Thesm. 982. Sumdq, Adv. twice, twice over, Soph. Ant. 725, Eur. Ion 760. II. twice as much, opp. to dmAp, C.1. 71; followed by 7, Plat. Rep. 530 C. SimAnyis, fos, 6, =derdAois, Poll. 7. 47. Si-TA NOs, €s, twice filled, Nic. Al. 153 (v. 1. SemAHpys). SumAqoros, 7, ov, Ion. for dimAdouos. Simdo-eiparos, ov, with double cloak, Cercid. ap. Diog. L. 6. 76. SimASn, H, a fold, doubling, rod xirdvos Pisid. ap. Suid.: the overlap- ping of the bones in the skull, Hipp. V. C. 896, v. Foés. Oecon.: a junction, as of two plates of iron welded together, a flaw, Plat. Soph. 267 E, cf. Plut. 2. 802 B; ai 8. ris yuyxqs Ib. 715 F, v. Ruhnk. Tim. II. metaph. duplicity, Plut. 2. 441 D: ambiguity, Ib. 407 Cc. III. the sting of the scorpion with its sheath, Ael. N. A. 9. 4. SemAS-OprE, 5, 4, with double spines, of a pine, Opp. Ix. 1. 23. Simdoilo, =durracrd(w, Aesch, Ag. 835; cf. émdumdoltw. Sumdois, f5os, 4, a double cloak, like dimkag, Anth. P. 7. 65; the usu. costume of the Cynics, cf. Hor. Ep. 1.17, 25: Dim. SvmAotBvov, Poll. 7. 4 II. ditAdy I, Hipp. 469. 10. SumAéos, 7, ov, contr. SvmAo%s, 7, ov, Ion. fem. demdén is given by all the Mss. in Hat. 3. 42, but derAay 5. 90; Sumdds 3, 28: the contr. form always in Trag., except S:mAdor in Aesch. Fr. 33: (cf. dmAdos) :— twofold, double, of cloaks and articles of dress, yAaiva dimAf = dimAag or dimdots, Il. 10. 134, Od. 17. 226; 861 .. SimAdos Hv Tero Owpné where the cuirass met [the buckle] so as to be double, Il. 4.1333 THY ermpida mrvgas dumA jy having folded it double, i.e. so as to be double, Apollod. Car. in Meineke Fr. 4. 440; cf. &smAdw :—then in various relations, 5:mAdos @avaros Hdt. 6. 104; maicov bimdjy [sc. wApyhy, cf. dvraios}, Soph. El. 1416; 5. olxid:oy of two stories, Lys. 92. 28; SimAH dxavOa spine bent double by age, Eur. El. 492, ubi v. Seidl. (487); cf. Virgil’s dupli- cato poplite. 2. ditAp Xept Oaveiv by mutual slaughter, Soph. Ant. 143 cf. dueparjs. 3. di7AG dvéuara compound words, Arist. Rhet. 3. 2, 5, etc, II. sometimes used as a Comp., like S:mAdctos, twice as much, twice as long, large, etc., Bios Plat. Tim. 75 B; dien Id, Legg. 865 C: 5.%).., twice as much as.., (v. sub bear: or rgen., Id. Tim. 35 C; also, dumdody Sov .. ap. Dem. 629. 22: SMG, = Sif, Plat. Legg. 722 B. III. in pl.,=d¥o, Aesch. Pr. 950, Cho. 761, Soph. Aj. 970, O. T. 20, Ant. 51. IV. double, doubtful, ob yopq Simddav Oéro Bovaday, cf. dedviexa pepyhpgev, Pind. N. to. rae ) ike treacherous, Lat. duplex, opp. to dmAovs ex), Plat. Rep. i D; od i f 2 4. ‘ . geri 3 P- 397 D, 554 D; oddty 5. Xen. Hell. 4. 1, 32. Cf. Sumdés, 7, dv, post. for dumrdos (cf. dmdds), Opp. C. 2. 449, Anth. P. 10. Lor: Comp. derAdrepos, = BirAdovos, App. praef. 10, Ev. Matth.23.15. SumAo-ovjpavros, ov, with double meaning, Schol. Ar. Nub. 225. Bimdbw, (durAd0s) to double, Arist. An. Post, 2, 4, 2, etc.; TpiBwra 6., of philosophers, Diog. L. 6.22 :—Pass., é3¢5¢rAwro > padayf Xen. Hell. 6. 5,19; of swords, to be bent double, Plut, Camill. 41. II. to repay twofold, ra épya Apoc. 18. 6, ditAwors — dierorxos. 18. Il. a folded , a letter of recommendation or introduc- tion, Cic. Fam. 6, 12, etc. :—later, letters of licence or privilege granted by the Emperor or by magistrates, a diploma, Plut. Galb. 8, cf. Suet. Octay. 50. 2. a duplicate, counterpart, C.1. 3276. III. a double pot (like our glue-pots) for boiling unguents, etc., Galen, di-mAwors, ews, 7, a compounding of words, Arist. Rhet. 3. 3, I. Si-mvoos, ov, with two breathing apertures, Galen, Su-1OSys, €s, two feet long, broad, etc., Xen, Occ. 19, 3. Sirobla, , a being two-footed, two-footedness, Arist. P. A.1. 3, 4. II. a Lacedaemonian dance, Cratin. TAour. 5. III. a combination of two feet in one metre, as in iambics, Longin. Fr. 3. 7, etc. Simobidlo, fut. dgw, to dance the Laced. d:mobia, Ar. Lys. 1243. Surobtaios, a, ov, =durddys, dub. |. Xen. Oec. 19, 4. Aiméheva or AuréAia, 74, contr. from Aci, an ancient festival of Zeus at Athens, Ar. Pax 420, Antipho 120. 10.—The Mss. and Gramm. mostly give the uncontr. form Aum-; but the contr. Ac- is preserved by Choerob., in An. Ox. 2. 192, A. B. 91. The form Avrédca is required by the metre in Ar. l.c.; but AcmoAudédns is necessary in Nub. 984. StaroAnts, dos, %, of or through two cities, phn Manetho 4. 376. St-roAts, ews, 6, 7%, of or divided into two cities, Strabo 160, 656. SitroAlrys, ov, 6, citizen of two cities, Manetho 5. 291. Airodwsins, es, like the feast of Dipolia, i.e. out of date, Ar. Nub. 984. Simodos, ov, (moddw) twice-ploughed, Procl, ad Hes. Op. 462 (460 Gaisf.). II. =derAdos, Aesch. Fr. 207. 5i-ropos, ov, with two roads or openings, Eur. Tro. 1097. St-rétdpos, ov, between two rivers, téAcs Eur. Supp.621; cf. &bdAagaos. Si-movs, wod0s, 6, %, two-footed, Lat. bipes, Aesch. Ag. 1258, cf. Supp. 895, Plat., etc. :—dimoda, ra, two-footed animals, Plut. 2.636 E. 2. dimous, 6, a Libyan animal of the mouse kind, ¢he jerboa, which springs Srom its two hind feet, like the kangaroo, Hdt. 4. 192. Il. two feet long, Lat. bipedalis, Plat. Meno 83 D, Polit. 266 B. Si-mpdawmos, ov, two-faced, Hdn. 1. 16, 6:—ambiguous, Luc. Jup. Trag. 43- 2. denoting two persons, Apoll. de Pron. p. 401. di-mpupvos, ov, v. sq. Si-mpepos, ov, vais 5. xal dimpupvos a ship double-prowed and double- sterned, i.e. a twin ship, Callix. ap. Ath. 204 E, cf. 489 B; different therefore from dyupi-mpqpos. Si-mtepos, ov, with two wings, opp. to Terpdmrepos, Arist. H. A. I. 5, 12, al. II. 65. (sc. vads), atemple with double peristyle, Vitruv. 3.1, 21. Si-mrépvyos, ov, =dimrepos, Anth. P. 5. 151, cf. 9. 570. II. &rr., 76, a mantle with two wrepa (cf. mrepév II. 10), C. 1. 155. 40. Surrixis, és,=dirrvxos, Arist. H. A, 3.5, 4. Simrixos, ov, (wrvcow) double-folded, doubled, dinrvxov apd’ dpoow éxov .. Admny Od. 13. 224 (so, dimrvxa Adny, metaph. acc. as if from dimrvé, Ap. Rh. 2.32); 5. deAriov a pair of tablets, Hdt. 7. 239 (in late Greek birrvxa, 74, diptychs):—in the Homeric phrase dimrvxa Toth- saves [thy xvicay], dimrvxa is best taken with the Schol. Ven. as an Adv., having doubled the fat, i.e. putting one layer of fat under the thighs (uypot) and another over them, Il. 1. 461., 2. 424, etc. II. twofold, Lat. geminus, 5. 5@pov Eur. lon 1010; “yAw@oaa Id. Tro, 286: and in pl.=é:a00l, two, 5. d5var Soph. Fr. 164; veaviae Eur. I. T. 242, ef. Or. 633, Andr. 578, Ar. Fr. 471. Si-rrwtos, ov, with a double-case-ending, Apoll. de Pron. p. 116, Si-ridos, ov, double-gated, with two entrances, Soph. Ph. 295. “i dimvdov, 76, a name for the @pidorar m/Aat at Athens, Polyb. 16. 25, 7, Plut. Pericl. 30; at Rome for the temple of Janus, Plut. 2. 322 B. Staripyvos, ov, (niphy) with two kernels or two nobs, Galen. Si-mripirys (sc. dpros), 6, twice-baked bread, biscuit, Hipp. 546. 13. Si-miipos, ov, twice put in the Sire, 5. dpros, =dinvpirns, Eubul. Pav. 2 ; “or Bimvpos alone, Alex. Mavv. 1. 10. II. in Ar. Ran. 1351, dimdpous dvéxovoa Aapmddas .. “Exdra Hecaté holding up two flaming torches, cf. dypiaupos. : Sip-paBbos, ov, with two stripes, Arist. Fr. 278. Sip-pu9pos, ov, = diverpos, Schol. Ar. Eq. 613, etc. Sippipta, %, a double pole, Aesch. Fr. 334. Sip-pipos, ov, with two poles, i.e. three horses, Aesch. Pers. 47. Sis (for duis, from d¥o, q.v.), Adv. twice, doubly, Lat. bis (v. €AevOepos sub fin.), with Nouns, dts réccov twice as much, Od. 9. 491; GAnOys 6 Adyos ws Sis mats -yépwy Cratin. in Meineke Fr. 5. 16; dls. waides of -yé- povres Paroemiogr. ; oftener with Verbs, dis Todro é-yévero Hdt. 8. 104 ; Sis ppdcar Aesch. Pers. 173, cf. Ag. 1384; dts aid¢ew xal rpis Soph. Aj. 432; Sts xal rpls pact xaddv eivat ra Kadd Aye Plat. Gorg. 498 E, cf. Phileb. 59 E; Sis Be@vaz twice over, Menand. Ocop. 1.4; Semveiv -. dls ris Hpépas Plat. Com. Incert. 44; és dis. App. Mithr. 78.—In compos., before a conson. (except before ¢ 0 7 4 7 x) s.is, dropped. —&ts, inseparable Suffix, signifying motion to a place, like -Se, but only used in a few words, as dAAviis, otxadts,. xapddts. *Ais, an old nom. for Zevs, which appears in the oblique cases Avds, Ait, Aia (pl. Ales, Aias Plut. 2. 425 E), and the Lat. Dis, Diespiter, Djovis: the contr. dat. Af occurs in C. I. 16, Pind. N. 1. 1114; the apocop. acc, Ai in vndi; v. Zeds. (V. sub dios.) SicaBos [1], ov, Dor. for dianBos; twice young, Anth, P. 15. 26. Slo-apmiyos, ov, twice ravished, Lyc. 513. Sic-exros, ov, the 24th of February, reckoned twice over in leap-year, Lat. bis sextus (dies ante Kal. Mart.). Sic-euvos, ov, with two wives, Anth. P. 15. 26. Si-ocnpos, ov, of doubtful quantity, Lat. anceps, A.B. 801. Sie-Oavis, és, twice dead, Od. 12. 22. 5i-cxadpos, ov, two-oared, neAjriov Synes. 167 A; cf. rpicxaApos. Sioxevpa, aros, 76, (Sicxevo) the cast of a quoit, Tzetz. ‘ 213, 8; «pt0r) 5. two-row barley, Theophr. H. 377 StoKevrys, 00, 5, one who pitches quoits, Thom. M. 81. Sioxetw, =dicxéw, Sosith. ap. Herm. Opusc. 1. 59: Pass. to be pitched or thrown, Eur. Ion 1268, Anth. P. 9. 14. Sickéw, to pitch the quoit (Sicxos), dicxoy .. or:Bapwrepov ob« dAtyov mep i) olg .. ediaxeov GAAHAOLow much more massive than that which they used in playing with each other, Od. 8.188; paxpd dioxnoas having ig a long throw, Pind. I. 2. 51:—Pass. to be pitched, of a person, Anth, 9. 227. Sloxnpa, 7d, a thing thrown, Eur. Tro. 1121. Soph. Fr. 69. Si-oxymrpos, ov, two-sceptred, of the Atridae, Aesch. Ag. 43; cf. dt- Opovos, dixparhs. NE to pitch the quoit, Hesych. :—to throw down like a quoit, C. 1. 3588. 6. ewe Bikes, 6, the quoit-thrower, a famous statue by Myron, Luc. Phi- lops. 18; a picture by Naucydes, Plin. 34. 19, 19; v. Miiller Archiol. d. Kunst § 122. 3. SioKo-adis, és, quoit-shaped, Diosc. 2. 186, Plut. 2. 891 C. StoKdopar, Pass. to be made in the form of a disc, Jo. Lyd. de Ost. 6. II. a quoit-throw, _ Btoxos, 6, (Sucetv) a sort of quoit, Il. 2.774, Eur., ete.; orig. of stone, Od. 8. 186 comp. with 190; A:Oivos éy 3, Pind. I. 1. 34. It had a hole in the middle for a wooden helve, or leathern strap, to swing it by, whereas the addos was a solid piece of metal, Ammon. p. 40. Pitching the dicxos was a very ancient Grecian game, egp: at Sparta. In Hom. there is no mark to aim at: the trial being simply who can pitch furthest, as in the North-country game of puttin’ at the stane, cf. dicxéw, Sioxovpa, and y. Nitzsch Od. 8. 192: a déoxos of Lycurgus was preserved at Olympia, Arist. Fr. 490. II. anything quoit-shaped, a dish, trencher, Anth. P. 11. 371 :—a round mirror, Ib. 6. 18: the sun’s dise, Alex. Aphr. 2. 46, Plut. 2. 890 F. SicKoupa, 7d, (odpos) a quoit’s cast, asa measure of distance, és dickoupa AéAexrro Il. 23. 523; resolved into dicxou obpa, Ib. 431; cf. odpor. SioKo-pépos, ov, bringing the discus, Luc. Philops. 18. Sic-pipt-avBpos méAus a city of 20,000 inhabitants, Strabo 570. Sio-ppror [0], at, a, twenty thousand, Hdt. 1. 32, Plat. lon 535 D: sing. ducpvpios, a, ov, with collective nouns, immos doppia Luc, Zeux. 8. St-onlOapatos, a, ov,=sq., Diosc. 2.174. ; Si-orlOapos, ov, of two spans’ length, Diosc. 3. 84. St-orrdvber0s, ov, a double spondee, Hephaest. 3. 3. St-crropéw, (ondpos) to sow twice, Strabo 768. Siocdkis, post. -1, Adv. twice over, Arat. 968, Q. Sm. 2. 56. dioc-dpxys, ov, 6, a partner in sway, joint-ruling, doodpxat Baoirets Soph. Aj. 390. Siocaxi, Adv. in two places, Arist. de An. 1. 3, 14. Siecaxod or Surr-, Adv., =foreg., Theophr. Lap. 25. Sieco-yovew, to bear doubly, i.e. to be both viviparous and oviparous, Arist. G. A. I. 11, 4. Siocro-ypidetrat, Att. Surr-, it is written two ways; 7d dirroypapov- pevov a double reading, Gramm. BiowoAoyéw, Att. Sirr-, /o say éwice, repeat, as in phrases like orepdvy orepavaoat, Schol. Ar. Pl. 585. Siccohoyta, %, repetition of words, Epiphan. Sieco-hbyos, ov, speaking two languages, Manetho 5, 291. Bicco-ro1ds, dv, making doubtful, perplexing, Schol. Soph. El. 645. Suads, Att. Surtés, Ion. Sié6s, 7, dv, (Sis) :—twofold, double, Hat. 2. 44., 7. 70, Plat. Theaet. 198 D, etc.:—Adv. dirras, opp. to dmAds, doubly, in two ways, 5. Xéyec@at Arist. Eth. N. 1. 4, 5, al. II. in pl. ¢wo, Pind. N. 1. 67, Hdt. 5. 40, 52, Aesch. Pr. 957, Soph. Aj. 57, etc, III. metaph. divided, disagreeing in mind, Ahpact diacovs (Dind, suggests Aja icovs) Aesch. Ag. 122. 2. doubtful, am- biguous, dvetpor Soph. El. 645 ; also, 7d birrév ambiguity, Arist. Pol. 2. 3, 3:—Adv. dirras, Id. Soph. Elench. 24, Io. Sicc0-rbkos, ov, bearing twice, Nonn. D. 5. 199. bucadroKos, ov, twice-born, of Bacchus, Id. 1. 4. Sieao-purs, és, of double nature, Nonn. D, 14. 97, etc. SiecvAAaBos, v. sub diotAAaBos. Svoraypos, 6, (Stord(w) doubt, uncertainty, Plut. 2. 214 E. St-ordbv0s, ov, two stadia long, i.e. 1215} feet, the length of the double stadium or diavAos, App. Hann. 37. g dierdfw, fut. dow, (Sis) to doubt, be in doubt, hesitate, absol., Plat. Theaet. 190 A, etc.; 5. Ore..., Id. Ion 534 E; 6. el .., Legg. 897 B; pvH--, Soph. 235 A;. m@s..., Arist. Eth. N. 3. 3,8; mérepoy.., Id. Metaph. 13. 3, 153; mepi re Id. Eth. N. 3. 3, 93 wept rivos Plut. 2.62 A. —bora(spevos doubting, uncertain, Diod. 17.9. Cf. d0a¢w. Sictaxricés, 7, dv, expressive of doubt, Apollon. de Constr. p. 261. Ady. —«@s, Schol. Eur, Or. 632. Stotdovos, ov, of twice the weight or value, Plat. Hipparch. 231 D. Sirtacpés, 6, =d:oraypds, Schol. Od. 2. 276. Sv-oreyia, 4, the second story, Poll. 4.130; ¢f. Seppns I. 5i-creyos, ov, of two stories, Strabo 730. 2. of two chambers on the same floor, Joseph. B. J. 5.5, 4. : &t-orixla, 7), a double line, as of ships, Schol. Il. 14. 31: a distich, Schol. Ar. Nub. 1345. II. in Medic. the growth of a second row of eyelashes, Galen. St-orixos, ov, with two rows, xpiOat Plut. 2.906 B. 2. of two at éxiypappa Anth. P. 9. 369: diettxov, 746, a distich, Anth. P. . 329. ccc %, a double row, Theophr. H. P. 4.8, 6, Ael. N. A. 9. 40. St-crorxos, ov, in two rows, ddd6vres Arist. H. A. “ 1,52; Bpayxia Ib. P. 8. 4, 2. II. proparox. 378 Bi-orodos, ov, in pairs, two together, ddedpat Soph. O. C. 1055 ; cf. povdarodos. Si-cropos, ov, (o76ua) double-mouthed, with two entrances, wérpa Soph. | Ph. 16; dicropor d50i double-branching roads, Id. O. C. 3 so of rivers, Polyb. 34. I0, 5. IL. of a weapon, two-edged, gipos Eur. Hel. 983 ; meAéxews yévus Id. Fr. 534. 53 cf. dixdoTopos. 8 éw, to be of two syllables, Hdn. 7. pov. Ae. 3. 6. to use as a disyllable, Apoll. Pron. 373 B. SicvAAaPia, %, a pair of syllables, Schol. Ar. Av. 903, etc. Sv-ctAAaBos, of two syllables, Dion. H. de Comp. 11, Luc, Gall. 29. b , ov, double-plaited, orépavos Philox. ap. Ath. 685 D. Sic-Uraros, 46, twice consul, Plut. 2. 777 B. SioxitSqs, és, (7xi{w) cloven-footed, of cows and the like, opp. to modvoxidns, Arist, H. A. 2. 1, 30. 2. cloven, wodérns Id. P. A. I. 3, 2 :—divided, parted, xbun Callistr. Stat. 7; d8és A. B. 35. StoxtS6v, Adv. of foreg., divisim, A. B. 1171. Si0-xfAror [7], at, a, two thousand, Hdt. 2. 44, etc.; poét., drxidors avipanddecowv Epigr. Gr. 26. 7 :—sing., doxiAros, a, ov, with collective nouns, e. g. tos Hdt. 7. 158. ‘ Si-cyowos, ov, two cxoivor (i. e. G0 stades) long, Strabo 558. Si-caparos, ov, double-bodied, Diod. 4.12, Orph. H. 70.5: with two chambers, C.1.2842:—so, St-cwpos, ov, applied to certain constella- tions, Sext. Emp, M. 5. 6. A , 76, contr. for Atio=, the temple of Zeds SwrHp on the Acropolis at Athens, A. B. 91, cf. Coraés Lycurg. p. 48. Si-rdAavros, ov, worth or weighing two talents, Hdt.1.50., 2.96; 5. elxes épavov Dem. 329. 17. BStroKéw, to bear two at a birth, opp. to povoroxéw, moAvToKéw, Arist. H. A. 6.1, 4, G. A. 3. 1, 14, al. :—also Suroketw, Nic. ap. Ath. 395 C. 8t-réKos, ov, having borne two at a birth, Anacr. 142; opp. to povo- roicos, Arist. G. A. 4.6, I. Btrovéw, to have a double accent, Apoll, de Constr. p. 302 :—8trovifw, to accentuate in two ways, Schol. Soph. Aj. 733- Sirovatos, a, ov,=sq., Mus, Vett. Si-rovos, ov, of two tones: dirovoy, 74, (acc. to Chappell) the ancient major third, Plut. 2. 430A, 1021 F. Bt-rpixidw, to have double rows of hair (cf. duartxia), Galen. St-rpoxatos, 6, a double trochee, Hephaest. 3. 3. dirtés, etc., v. sub d:o0-. Si-ridos, ov, with two humps or bunches, kayndor Dind. 2. 54. Siiyratve, to be healthy throughout, Plut. 2. 135 C. ea to soak thoroughly, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 3:—Pass., Hipp. Aph. 1260. : Shigpas: ov, thoroughly wetted: diluted, Hipp. 537. 25, etc.: the passage, Aesch. Theb. 985, is corrupt. 2. of a melting glance, Anth. P. 12. 68, cf. ae IL. 5. II. liquid, moist, Arist. Probl. 8. 4. Sivbpos, ov, (HSwp) full of water, Hipp. 546. 43. SwAdfo, (fry) only found in Plat. Tim. 69 A, 7a tv alriov -yévn SwAacpéva prepared as timber or material, v. Stallb. BwAtlo, to strain or filter thoroughly, refine, Diosc. 5. 82:—Pass., Bwriopévos olvos LXx (Amos 6. 6); metaph., bwrcpéva dpera Archyt. ap. Stob. 13. 40, ef. Clem. Al. 117. II. to strain off, 7 Ev. Matth. 23. 24. SwAtors, ews, 4, a filtering, refining, purifying, Suid. BwAropa, 76, filtered or clarified liquor, Galen. SwAcopds, of, 6, =dWAcous, Clem. Al. 117. SwArorhp, pos, 6, a filter, strainer, Epiphan. BiwAords, 7, dv, strained through, Galen. Swwrvife, (irvos) to awake from sleep, trans., Acl. N. A. 7. 45: intr., Luc. Ocyp. 108; so also in Pass., Anth. P. 9. 378. Swpatve, to fill up by weaving, Luc. V. H. 1. 15 :—to interweave, Acl. N.A. 9. 17, in Pass. : hamhayyeoros, ov, 6, leader of a dupadraryyia, Suid, :—Bipidayy- xia, , his command, Ael, Tact. 40, Arr. Tact. 13. “be paAayyla, %, a double phalanx, Polyb. 2. 66, 9, etc. Sidadéos, a, ov, (Sipdw) searching, sagacious, Epigr. Gr. 1028. 10. Sidas, 7}, a kind of t, aig a 3: - Tos) =5:Aoyia, Hesy: tne 5 As Ion. Adj., used much like SimAdovos, two-fold, double, Lat. bifarius, Hat. 2. 36., 3. 122, al. II. in pl. =8vo, Id. 1. 18., 2. 17, al. ih Si-iairos, ov, twice saii esych. : Sipdw, only used in pres., to search after, TH0ea Supa movry ev ix- Ovderre Il. 16.7473 a bupGoa Kadcqy Hes. Op. 372; év otipeoe wavra Aayody SupG Call. Ep. 33, cf. Fr. 165; Spay 7a Kaddppara to search them well, Theophr. Char. 10 :—Ion. Stéw, Anth. P. 9. 559. 2 Bidhrwp, opos, 5, a searcher, Buddy Suphropes Opp. H. 2. 4353 Xpuood duppropes after gold, Anth. P. 8. 230. bh0¢pa, Hy ( ) a prepared hide, skin, piece of leather, Hat. 1. 194, al.; dupOépac are expressly opp. to déppets (hides), Thuc. 2. 75 — - were used for writing-material in ancient times, before papyrus came in, and the name was retained when the material was changed, rds BuProvs BipGepas kadéovor amd Tod madawod of “Iwves Hdt. 5.58; 5. pedreyypapeis Eur. Fr, 629; so Ctesias calls the Persian records 6. Baotdixal, Diod. 2. 32; 6. lepai, at Carthage, Plut. 2. 942 C; and ‘even yadkaé 5., Ib, 297 A; cf. Schol. Il, 1. 175% proverb., dpxato- repa THs SupOepas A€yets Paroemiogr.; wepiBdAre AiBrla SupOépg Luc. Indoct. 16. II. Sage 4 made of leather, a leathern gar- ment such as peasants wore, Ar. Nub. 72, Plat. Crito 53 D, Luc. Tim. 6 and 38, Arr. An, 7.9, etc.; properly of goatskin, II. as opp. to pmrarrh, J disroAos —- dixa. Ammon. 2. a wallet, bag, Xen, An. 5. 2, 12. 3. in pl. skins used as tents, like Lat. pelles, Ib. 1.5, 10, Phylarch. ap. Ath. 539C, cf. Hdt. 7.77. SipOep-dAordos, 6, Cyprian word for a schoolmaster, Hesych. Bipeptas, ov, 5, clad in a leather frock; the dress of old men in Tra- gedy, of boors in Comedy, Posidipp. ap. Ath. 414 E, Luc. Tim. 8, cf. Varro R. R. 2. 11. BidOépwwos, 7, ov, of tanned leather, Xen. An. 2. 4, 38, Strabo 155. BipGepis, f5os, },=dpOépa, Anth. P. 9. 546. BipOepiris, sdos, fem. of ipOepias, Poll. 4.137. SipSepdopar, Pass. to be clad in leather, Strabo 831; cf. xarad-. SibVepo-mHAns, ov, 6, a leather-seller, Nicoph. Xespoy. 1. Bi-pOoyyos, ov, with two sounds: dipboyyos, 4, and dipboyyor, 6, a diphihong ; hence 8pGoyyife, SipSoyyo-ypahéw, to spell, write with a dipkthong, Gramm. St-hopéw, to bear double, esp. of fruit, Theophr. C. P.1. 14,1. Pass. to be written or pronounced in two ways, E. M. 197. 51. Sipdpysis, ews, }, a double mode of writing, Eust. 74. 1. 5{-opos, ov, bearing fruit twice in the year, Lat. biferus, Ar. Eccl. 708, Pherecr. Kpam. 11, Antiph. S«Anp. I. Sidpak, dios, 77, post. for Sidpos, a seat, chair, Ep. Hom. 15. 8, Theocr. 14.41.—A form 8idpas, ddos, %, in Vit. Hom. 33. Sippela, 7, (Suppevw) chariot-driving, Xen, Cyr. 6. 1, 16. Sipp-cAdreipa, 7, pecul. fem. of duppyAarns, Anth. Plan. 4. 359. Sidpevors, ews, 7, = duppeia, Synes. 58 B. Sippeurhs, of, 6, a charioteer, Soph. Aj. 857. SippevtiKy, %, = dippeia, Ephor. ap. Steph. Byz. s/ v. Bowwria. Sidpetw, (Sippos) to drive a chariot, Eur. Andr. 108, 2. c. acc. to drive over, 5. ddcov wédavyos Ib. 1011; VdE .. vOra dippevtoua’ aildepos Eur. ap. Ar. Thesm. 1067. 3. c, acc. cogn., avyAay édi:ppev’ “Adtos -. kat aiépa Eur. Supp. 991; ef. Archestr. ap. Ath. 326 B. SippnAdota, 4}, chariot-driving, Pind. O. 3. 67. SippynAdréw, to drive a chariot, rov obpaydy 5, of the Sun (cf, Sippetar 2), Soph. Aj. 845; 8. irmovs Eur. Rhes. 781. Sidpp-nAdrys [a], ov, 6, a charioteer, Pind, P. 9.143, Aesch. Eum. 156, Soph. El. 753, etc. Only poét. : Sip-HAdros, ov, car-borne, Eur. ap. Argum. Rhes. Sidpplov, 76, Dim. of dippos, Tim. Lex. Sidpros, a, ov, of a chariot: neut. pl. as Adv., dippia ovpdpevos dragged at the chariot wheels, Anth. P. 7, 152. Sidpiokos, 6, Dim. of dippos, Ar. Nub. 31. 5i-dpovtis, idos, 6, 4, divided in mind, doubting, Aesch. Cho. 196. Sippo-mnyia, 7), coach-building, Theophr. H. P. 5. 7, 6. Sidpos, 6; in Call. Dian. 135, with heterog, pl. dippa, 7a: (syncop. for d:pdpos) :—the chariot-board, on which two could stand, the driver (jvioxos) and the combatant (mapa:Barns), v. Il. 5. 160., 11. 748, Hes. Sc. 61: metaph., éorneey ev 7@ dippw ths wéAews Plat. Rep. 566 D. 2. the war-chariot itself, Il. 10. 305, al., Hes. Se. 61, Pind., etc.; éimhéery ei Bippy Il. 23. 335:—in Od. 3. 328, @ travelling- chariot ; later, a sort of litter, Dio C. 60. 2. II. a seat, couch, stool, Il. 3. 424., 6. 354, and often in Od. ; so in Ar. Eq. 1164, Plat., etc. : Sippos @erradixds Eupol. AbroA, 6, cf. d*Aadids :—in Polyb. 6. 53, 9, etc., the Roman sella curulis:—a night-stool, Aristid. 1. 314. SippovAkéw, (€Axw) to draw a chariot, Anth. P.g. 285. Suppoupyia, 7, (*épyw) = duppomnyia, Theophr. H. P. 3. ro, I. Sippodxos, ov, (€xw) with a seat, dpua Melanipp. 1 Bgk. _Buppodopéw, to carry in a chair or litter, Dio C. 47. 10 :—Pass. to travel in one, ot Sippopopovpevor, of the Persian princes, Hdt. 3. 146, cf. Dio C. 60, 2. , _ IL. to carry a camp-stool (cf. sq.), Ar. Av. 1552. Sippo-hopos, ov, carrying a camp-stool ; esp. of the female pérorxor, who had to carry seats for the use of the avnpépor (v. foreg.), Ar. Eccl. 734, Hermipp. @eof 2, Nicoph. Xeip. 3, Strattis “ATaA, 43 also, 6 BaatAéws 6. Ath, 5 14 B. IL. carrying another upon a dippos, Plut. Anton. II. Sippiyys, és, (ppv-yw) twice roasted : dippvyés, TO, some compound of copper, Diosc. 5. 120. Si-purs, és: neut. pl. dipu, but Spva Arist, P. A. 3.7, 1:—of double nature-or form, opp. to povouns, éxibva pugordpOevos 5. Hdt. 4.9; of Centaurs, Soph, Tr. 1095, cf. Valck. Phoen. 1030; of Pan, Plat. Crat. 408 D; 5. Kexpoy, of double sex (Suid.), or of double race (Egyptian and Greek), Diod. 1. 28 :—8. “Epas sexual intercourse, Orph. Arg, 14. 2. generally, twofold, double, bipartite, xdpar Ion 10 Bgk. ; Oppues Arist. H, A. 1.9, 1; o7700s duputs paorois Ib. 1, 12, 2; 4) TOV pUETHpwY dvvapyus Id. P. A. 2. 10, 18; cf. povopyts, ToAupuns. diduia, %, bipartition, Trav k@dwy Arist. P. A. 3Be Xie Bi-uros [T]}, ov, =dipurs, Antagoras ap. Diog. L. 4. 27. II. = duo, Aesch. Ag. 1468.—pviw is Acol. for pia, E. M. 254.17; cf, Sexdpwos. Bi-avos, ov, speaking two languages, Philist. Fr. 62, Diod, 17. 110. bixa [tr], (dis), I. Adv. in two, asunder, apart, diya wavras .. 7piOpeov Od. 10, 203; dixa mévra BédacTat 1 5. 412; 8. dacrqvac Hat. 4. 180; wAeupokoniiy 5. dvepphryvy Soph. Aj. 236; 6. mpioayres Thue. 4. 100; réuvev 5, Plat. Soph. 265 E; 8. iadapBavey Id. Theaet. 147 E:—generally, apart, aloof, separate, diaoriva Hdt. 4. 180; xetoOar Pind. P. 5.125; oixeiv Soph. O. C. 602; 8. moveiy Xen. An. 6. 4, 11; 5. rv Bivapwy AaBely to catch it divided, Thuc, 6, 10. 2. metaph. at two, two ways, whether with others or oneself, at variance or in doubt, oftenin Hom.; dixa 5€ odior Hvbave Bovdy Il. 18.510; dixa Cupdv éxovres 20. 325 diya de ov ert dpeot Ouuds dnro 21. 386; Biya Bupds ev pect pepunpite Od. 16. 73; dixa Ovpds dpdperar To. 524; dix’ éBaco- bev 3.1275 so, 6. éxew vdov Theogn. ot, etc.; eyivoyro 8. al yvapat Hat. 6. 409 3 dbga 5 €xtper dixa Eur. Hec. 119; pabhoera bcov 767 apxew Kat TO Sovdevew dixa differ, Aesch. Pr. 927, cf. Ag. 1369; 6. II. diya — dw, ¥npulecOat on different sides, Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 8: cf. xopis. II. Prep. with gen. apart from, without, Aesch. Theb. 25, Ag. 861; dv@pd- mov 5. Soph. Ph. 31; ofos ’Arpeid@v 5. Id. Aj. 750; povn .. pacyavov 5. Id, Tr. 1063; also, é« mavrav 8. Id. Ant. 164. 2. differently from, unlike, 5. d\dav Aesch. Ag. 7573; ofs 5. yvepns A€éyw Soph. El. 547; [6 repos] 5. mépume rod érépou is different from .., Thuc. 4. 61. 3, médAews 5. like dvev, against the will of, Soph. O. C. 48, cf. Aj. 768. 4. besides, except, like xwpls, 5. ye Avés Aesch, Pr. 162 ; Tov Aeheypévwr 5. Id. Cho. 778.—As a Prep. it commonly follows its -case, but it precedes in Aesch, Pr. 1. c., Soph. Ph. 195,840, Aj. 768, Eur. 1. T. 185.—Cf. diy, dexod. Six4, Dor. for dx7. Sixdde, Adv., =dixa, Plat. Symp. 215 B. Sixabaa, =dixa, Theognost. Can. 164. 26. Sixdlw, fut. dow, to divide in two, Plat. Polit. 264 D. 2. 5. ra kara Twos to divide one against another, Ev. Matth. 10. 35. If. intr. to be divided, d:xaCovons huépas, at mid-day, Suid.: in Xen. An. 4. 8, 18, Schneid, restored d:ayafovras. Sixaiw, =dxa(w, diya Arat. 495, 807. Si-xaAxov, 7d, a double chalcos, a copper coin, =} of an obol, Anth. P. 11.165, Poll. 9. 65; as a weight, Diosc. 4. 155. SixaAos, Dor. for déxnAos, q. v. Sixdperpos, ov, to explain diaperpos, Arist. Probl. 15. 2. Sixds, ados, 4, the half, middle, Arat. 807. Sixdors, ews, 9, division, half, Arat. 737. dixaoris, od, 6, a divider, to explain dueaorhs, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 4, 9. Stxacripes dddvres, oi, the incisors, Poll. 2. 91. Stxdw, post. for d:xd¢w, Arat. 512,605; also in Med., 856;—cf. d:xaiw. Sixf, Adv. = dixa, in two, asunder, Aesch. Supp. 544, Plat., etc. 2. in two ways, 5, érovopacbjvat Plat. Rep. 445 D; dx7n BonOnréov Dem. 14. 6. SixnA€w, daArjv 8. to divide the hoof, Lxx (Levit. 11. 2 sq.), Philo 1. 320 :—so BixnAevw, Clem. Al. 298, 677. 5i-xnAos, ov, cloven-hoofed, Hdt. 2. 71, Eur. Bacch. 740; mostly in Dor. form 8txGAos, even in Att. writers, as Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 31, etc., v. Indic. s.v., and cf. Lob, Phryn. 639. II. SixnAov, 76, a forceps, pincers, Anth.P.6.92,cf. 6.196. 2. dixnha. deta pigs’ feet, Luc. Lex. 6. Sixtpys, es, dividing in twain, kv«dos .. unvds bexnpys, of the moon, Eur. Ion 1156. 5x04, Adv., Ep. for dixa, as rprxOd for rptya, 5. dedaiarar they are ape in twain, Od, 1. 23; 5. 5€ wor xpadin pepove my heart is divided, 16. 435. 5ixOdb.os, a, ov, twofold, double, divided, Il. 9. 411., 14. 21; 5. kara «@doy in either leg, Anth. Plan. 1. 15. 5tx0ds, ados, 7, pecul. fem. of foreg., Musae. 298. 5i-xlrwv [xt], wvos, 6, }, with two tunics, Byz. Six6-Bovdos, ov, of different counsel, adverse, Néweois Pind. O. 8. 114. Stxoyvopovéw, to differ in opinion, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 21, Dio C. 5ix6-yvwpos, ov, ambiguous, Schol. Eur. Or. 8go. Stxoyvwporwn, %, discord, Poll. 8. 153. Stxo-yvapov, 6, 9, divided bet two opinions, Plut. 2. 11 C. Sixdbev, Adv. from both sides, both ways, Aesch. Pers. 76, Ar. Pax 477, Thue. 2. 44, etc. ‘ Sixé-Dipos, ov, wavering, v. 1. Pittacus ap. Diog. L. 1. 78. Bt-xoivikos, ov, holding 2 xolvies, i.e. near 3 pints, Ar. Nub. 640. Bi-xodos, ov, with double gall, Ael. N. A. 11. 29. II. 5. yva- pat, =didpopor, Achae. ap. Hesych., q. v. 5t-xéAwros, ov, doubly furious, f.1. for Tpexddwros, in Anth. P. 9. 168. Six6-pyy, nvos, 6, 7, = dexdunvos, Arat. 78, 736. Sixé-pyves, cos, 6, 7, =sq., Myva Pind. O. 3. 35; 5. éowépae evenings at the full of the moon, Id. 1. 8 (7). 93; which were lucky for marriages, Eur. I. A. 716 sq. II. 5., 7, the Lat. Idus, Dion. H. 1. 38, etc. Stxopnvos, ov, (unv) dividing the month, i.e. at or of the full moon, éonepin h. Hom. 32. 11; 8. veAnvn Plut. Flamin. 4; so dexdpnvos, %, Arat. 808 :—also Stxopyvia, 7, Lxx (Sirach. 39. 15); 9 veAnvn Sexopn- viay 7yyev Plut. Dio. 23: and &ixopnvata (sc. juépa), the Rom. Idus, Suid. Six 6-p 00s, ov, double-speaking, vénua Pittacusap. Diog.L. 1.78; yA@ooa Solon ibid. 61; A€éyev 5:xdpv0a to speak ambiguously, Eur. Or. 890. Sixovotw, = Syoyvwpovew, Poll. 2. 228. Sixdvora, 7), discord, disagreement, Plat. Alc. 1.126 C, Plut. 2. 70 C, etc. Six46-voos, ov, contr. -vous, ovv, double-minded, Philo 2. 269. 8i-xopSos, ov, éwo-stringed, mxris Ath. 183 B:—dixopdoy, 76, Euphro *"AdeAG. I. 34. Si-xdperos mous, 6, a ditrochaeus, Longin. 41.1. St-xopla, 4, a division of a chorus into two parts, Gramm. Sixoppayns, és, (Any) broken in twain, Eur. H. F. 1009. Sixdp-potros, ov, oscillating, A.B. 37. Adv. —ms, waveringly, doubt- Fully, only used by Aesch., and always with a negat., od or pi) 6. Ag. 349, 815, 1272, Supp. 605, 982. Sixooricta, 7, a standing apart, di: 3- 37, Theogn. 78. Bixoortaréw, (arfvat) to stand apart, disagree, dxoorat&v Ad-yos Aesch, Ag. 323, Eum. 386; 5. mpés twa Eur. Med. 15, Plat. Rep. 465 B. II. to feel doubts, Alex. Aphr. Six6-cropos, ov, =dSicropos 11, Soph. Fr. 164. Btxotopéw, to cut in two, cut in twain, Plat. Polit. 302 E, Arist. Probl. 16. 4, etc. 2. to punish with the last severity, Ev. Matth. 24. 51. 8. to divide into two (logically), Arist. P. A. I. 3, I., I. 4, 9. Sixorépypa, 74, the half of a thing cut in two: any portion of a thing cut up, LXx (Ex. 29. 17, Lev. 1. 8). Bixorépyeis, ews, 7, =sq., Sext. Emp. M. 9. 284. , Hdt. 5. 75: sedition, Solon 379 Stxoropta, 7, a cutting in two, Arist. G. A. 4. 10, 6. II. divi- sion into two parts (logically), dichotomy, Id. P.. A. 1. 3, 21, cf. Simplic, in Phys. fol. 30. , Sixo-répos, ov, cutting in two, Ammon. p. 43: but, II, pro- parox, d:xdéropos, ov, cut in half, divided equally, puerhp Arist. H. A. 1. 11,8; 5. ceAnvy the half-moon, Id. Probl. 15. 7, 1. Bixod, Adv., =dixa, 5. opéas eAdvres Hdt, 4. 120. 8i-xous, ovv, holding two xées, Posidon. ap. Ath. 495 A; dixouv, 74, cited from Diosc.: v,. sub xods. Bixo-popéw, =sq., Plut. 2. 447 C. Btxodpovéw, to hold different opinions, Plut. 2. 763 E. Stxodpoctvn, 7, discord, faction, Plut. 2. 824 E, etc. Stxddpav, ov, gen. ovos, (ppyv) at variance, Lat. discors, wéTpos 5. a destiny full of discord, Aesch. Theb. 899. Sixo-puia, 7, a disease of the hair, when it splits, Galen, 19. 430. Btxo-pavia, 7, (pavy) discord, Iambl. V. Pyth. 7 (34). 8i-xpova, 7, double colour, Arist. G. A. 3. 1, 30 sq. Sixpovo-ypadyréoy, as if verb. Adj. of d:xoypapéw, one must write a syllable with a common vowel, Boiss. Anecdi 2. 355. &{-xpovos, ov, in Metre, of two quantiti ps, Sext. Emp. M. I. loo. 8i-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, ouv, two-coloured, Arist. H. A. 1.5, 5, G. A. 3.1, 30:—sodixpus, wy, Id. H.A.6. 10, 3; and&i-ypwpos, ov, Luc. Prom. 4. S&ix@s, Adv. like diya, doubly, in two ways, Aesch, Cho. 915, Arist. Poét. 20, 13, etc. Sia, ns, 7, thirst, Sapa re kai Atuds Il. 19. 166; wetva Kai 5. Plat. Rep. 585A; bivp fuvéxeo@ar Thuc. 2. 49, etc.; of trees, Antiph. Incert. to:—in pl., Arist. Eth. N. 7. 14, 5. 2. c. gen. thirst for, morov Plat. Rep. 437 D; metaph., dodayv 6. Pind. P.9. 180. Cf. di~os.—The Ion. form Sty occurs in Opp. C. 4. 3 39 and in Mss. of Aesch. Cho. 756, where for din ris Wellauer proposed dapnors, Buttm. diy’ ef ris: cf. wetva. Sipaxos, 6, prob. a kind of diabetes, attended with violent thirst, Galen, II. the teasel, a plant used by wool-carders, dipsacus Sullonum, Diosc. 3. 13. SupaAéos, a, ov, =dixnos, thirsty, Batr. 9; 5. Opvaddtbiov wanting oil, Luc, Tim. 14 :—dddvn 6. the pain of thirst, Id. Dips. 6:—dry, parched, dnp Call, Jov. 27, Ap. Rh. 4. 678. Supds, ddos, used as fem, of Sifos, Opp. C. 4. 322, Anth. P. 7. 172, etc. II. as Subst., a venomous serpent, whose bite caused intense thirst, Nic. Th. 334, Ael. N. A. 6. 51; 5. éxt6va C. I. 1152. 2.a kind of thorn, Euphor. Ep..1, Theophr. H. P. 4. 7, 1, ubi v. Schneid. Supdw, Ion. —éw, Archil. 62; contr. 3 sing. 5pp Pind. N. 3. 10, Plat., inf. dapjv Hdt. 2. 24, Soph. Fr. 7or, Ar., etc.: impf. 3 sing. edi Hipp. Epid. 1063, 1067 (the regul. contr. das, -G, —Gy only in late writers, Anth, Plan, 137, Plat. Axioch. 366 A, Lxx): fut. -jaw Xen.: aor. é6¢- Wyoa Plat. Rep. 562 C: pf. 5e5a/nxa Hipp., Plut,:—Med., v. infr. To thirst, oredro 5 Supdow [4] Od. 11. 584, etc.: and of the ground, fo be thirsty, parched, Hdt. 2. 24; 5. tmd kavparos Alcae. 39. 2; of trees, Theophr. C. P. 3. 22, 5:—so in Med., dupepe0a Hermipp. Ocol 1. 2. metaph., 5. tivos to thirst after a thing, like Lat. sitire, Pind. N. 3. 10; édevbepias Plat. Rep. 562 C: later also c. acc., 8. xidva Teles ap. Stob. 69. 24; pévov Anth, Plan. 4.137; deacoodyny Ev. Matth. 5. 6; also, 3. mpos tov Oedv LXX (Ps. 41. 2); c. dat., edfyqoav bare Ib. :—c. inf., Spo yapicecOar dpiv Xen. Cyr. 4. 6, fin.; dxparas edly oivou mivew Ael. V. H. 2. 41, etc. Supnpos, a, dv, =diyx0s, Hipp. Aér. 283, Arist. H. A. 10, 2, 9 :—also SupnAds, Eumath, 5.11; and Supapys, es, Nic. Th. pit. Sinors, ews, 7, a thirst, longing, Ath. 10 B; cf. diva 2. provoking thirst, , Lat. Supyriucds, 7, dv, thirsty, Arist. P. A. 3.8, 2. Diosc, 1. 183, in Comp. -wrepos. Bios, a, ov, also os, ov Aesch. Cho. 185, Nic. Th. 147: (8ip~a) :— thirsty, athirst, and of things, thirsty, dry, parched, dupia novis Aesch. Ag. 495, Soph. Ant. 246, 249; x@dv Eur. Alc. 563:—in Aesch. Cho. 185, ef éppdrow 8 Siyror mirovet ataryéves may be explained from Ag. 887 (cf. Blomf.adl. and v. roAvdiifios), while Herm. explains it plenae desiderii, rrobewat. II. causing thirst, 5. ah Nic. Th. 147, cf. dupas 11; and diynos is cited as=BAaBepds from Soph. (Fr. 279). Supo-mords, dv, provoking thirst, Schol. Theocr. 7. 66. Slwos, eos, 76,=Sipa, Thuc. 4. 35, Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 36, Plat. Rep. 437 D, etc.; also as v. 1. for diva in Aesch., Ar., etc. —biva seems to be the older Att. form, v. W. Dind. in Steph. Thes. - Supootvy, 4, =dip~a, Orac. ap. Eus. P. E. 237 A. Supdxéw, to be perplexed, hesitate, Clem. Ep. 1. 23. Supixta, %, uncertainty, indecision, Byz. Bi-pixos, ov, =diOvpos, double-minded, Philo 2. 663, Ep. Jacob. 1. 8, Bupsdys, es, (ef50s) thirsty, Hipp. Aph. 1251, Plut. 2. 129 B; 7d 6. thirst for a thing, Ib. 555 E. II. exciting thirst, Hipp. Acut. 392. Siw [7], Ep. Verb (used also by Aesch. in lyric passages, v. sub fin.), only found in pres. and impf.: for déd:a, etc., v. sub deldw. (From WALI come also dé-dra, Si-enat, del-5w, dé-os, Set-Ads, Set-vds, perth. also di-epds: cf. Skt. di, di-yami (fugio); Lat. di-rus:-cf.also diem.) I. in Act. diw, always intr., 1. to run away, take to flight, fee, like dievar, rps wept dorv .. Stor Il. 22. 251. 2. to be afraid, die To- pen AaaV phre WaOD 5.556; v. sub mepidio. II. in Med. (of which Hom. has subj. diwpat, dinrat, diwvrat, opt. Siocro Od. 17. 317, but most often inf. Séec@ar) :—Causal,=dianw, to frighten or scare away, chase, put to flight, 8ytovs mport dorv BiecOat ul, 12. 2763 [unrépa] dd peydporo diecOar Od. 20. 343; HH Ge. . dypdvde Siwpat, BadAwv Xeppadiows: 21. 371; ws & bre veBpoy .. KUay . . dinrar 22. } 189; éxel x’ dwd vaidr paxny .. dinrat 16. 246; rarely in the simple 380 sense of driving horses, Sor’. .tmmous mort dory Sinrat Il. 15. 681 :— also used by Aesch., driera Sidpevar AdxN pursuing a dishonoured office, Eum, 385; and intr. foll. by a Prep. to give chase, hunt, ént tov .. didpevar Ib. 357; perd pe Spdporor didpevor Supp. 819. 2. in Aesch. Pers. 700, prob. an error for dieuat, to fear. os SwPeAla, 4}, (GBodrds) at Athens, the daily allowance of two obols to each citizen during the festivals, to pay for their seats in the theatre, Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 2 (where L. Dind. restores dimBeAtas for Aexedclas), Arist. Pol. 2. 7, 19 (ubi male d:wBodta), C. 1. 147. 22., 148. 12: cf. Gewpixds, and v. Bockh P. E. 1. 296. St-wBoAvatos, a, ov, weighing or worth two obols, Galen. St-GBodAov, 76, a double obol, Ar. Fr. 111, Alex. Hoy. 1. 6. Stwypa, 7d, (Bidnw) a pursuit, chase, Aesch, Eum. 139, in pl.; 5. miAav=Tods Si@Kovras mwAous Eur. Or.988; tm’ derod 5. pevyav= im’ derod dimxGeis Id. Hel. 20; 5. fupoxrdvoy i.e. the sword, Ib. 354; 7a wAOUTOU Birypara eager pursuit of wealth, Plat. Polit. 310 B. II. that which is chased, as in old Engl. the deer was called ‘ the chase,’ Xen. Cyn. 3, 9. IIT. a secret rite in the Thesmophoria, from which men were driven away, Hesych. . 00, 6, a mounted courier, C. 1. 3831 a® (addend.). Stwypds, 4, the chase, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 21, etc. II. pursuit, per- secution, harassing, in pl., Aesch. Supp. 148, 1046, Eur., etc. , ov, (4d0vn) with thrilling anguish, onapaypes Soph. Tr. 777. Siw0éw, fut. S.w9HTw and diow:—to push asunder, tear away, [wreA€n] ex prlewy epemovoa xpnuvor . . doe the elm as it fell uprooted ¢ore the bank away, Il. 21. 244; didaas. . éxOpovs Eur. Heracl. 995. 2. to stop up, bar, Tas Sed5ous Plat. Tim. 67 E. 8. to thrust through, 7 bia 7 Polyb. 22.11, 17, cf. Plut. Brut, 52. II. more often in Med. to push asunder for oneself, force one's way through, break through, Ta yéppa Hat. 9. 102; rdv dxAov Xen. Cyr. 7. 5,39; TAs Tages Polyb. II. I, 12; 8. rv HAN”, of roots, Theophr. H. P. 8. 11, 8; Tv Oddar- tay, of a river, Polyb. 4. 41, 4:—absol., diw0efoAar mpds 7 Plut. Aemil. I, ete. 2. to push from oneself, push away, Tois névrois 5ixPodvro they began to push one another away, of seamen keeping ships from collision, Thuc. 2. 84:—to repulse, drive back, orpardv tdupaxin Hat. 4. 102; ols [wérpots] .. Simoet otpardv Aesch. Fr. 196.9; 5. ras TUXas Eur. H. F. 315; evd9 Adyov nat aveopayriay to repel it, Dem. 555. 18; riv émBovdny Id. 1342. 20:—absol. to get rid of danger, Hat. 9. 88. 8. to reject, Lat. respuere, Thy ebvorav Id. 7.104; 5 pi) epievrar Thuc. 4. 108; tiv éms«oupiay Arist. Eth. N. 8. 14, 4 :—absol. to refuse, Hadt. 6. 86,2; Bgk. reads pf. pass. d@opar in this sense, Theogn. 1311. SiwOife, fut. (ow, =foreg., App. Civ. 2. 117. Siwbiopes, 6, a pushing about, a scuffle, Plat. Cam. 29, in pl. SvwKd0w [a], a pres. assumed by the Gramm. as lengthd. form of didxw : but all forms of this kind belong to an aor. StwkaQetv (Elmsl. Eur. Med. 86, 995, Heracl. 272, Dind. Soph, El. 396), Eur. Fr. 364. 25, Ar. Nub. 1482, Plat. Gorg. 483 A, etc.: v. dpuvdde, eixdda, etc. Swxréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of dix, to be pursued, Hat. 9. 58, Ar. Ach, 221. 2. of objects, to be pursued, Plat., etc. II. Siwmnréov, one must pursue, Plat. Gorg. 507 D, al. Fy ip, Hpos, 6, a pursuer, Babr. 6 :—also SuoKrys, ov, 6, N. T., Eccl. Sines, h, bv, to be pursued or banished, Soph. Fr. 870. 2. of objects, to be pursued, Chrysipp. ap. Ath. 8 D, Arist. Eth. N. 1.7, 4, al. , Sidk #, fem. of d:axrhp, Schol. Aesch. Eum. 206, Eccl. Siwxtus, vos, 7, Ion. for diwfts, persecution, Call. Dian. 194. SidK wp, opos, 6,=diwerp, prob. 1. Anth. P. 10. 104. BidKw, Ep. inf. Sioxéuevat, -Evev: fut. fw, Pind. O. 3, fin., Xen. Cyr. 6, 3, 13, An. 1. 4, 8, Dem. 989. 11; but Sim@gopar Ar. Eq. 368, Ach. 278 (and Elmsl. restores dihtet, for -es, in Eq. 969, Nub. 1296, Thesm. 1224), Plat. Theaet. 168 A: aor, éBimfa: aor. 2 €dideaBor (v. diaxddw) : pf. Sediwxa Hyperid. Lyc. 13 :—Med. (v. infr.):—Pass., fut. dw 67- copa: Diod. 19.95; but didwopar in pass. sense, Dion. H. 3. 20: aor. 28hXOnv Antipho (ér-, kar-), Thuc.: pf. dediaypar N. T. (The ALOK is prob. seaptie’, from o/AI (vy. die), cf. twxy, didnovos, didn- Twp, and v. Curt. p. 608.) To make to run, set in quick motion, opp. to pevya: 1. to pursue a person, for the purpose of catching, ¢o chase, hunt, in war or hunting, IL, etc.; pevyovra Simnew 22. 199; absol., medioo Stioxéuer Hd PeBecOa 5. 223, cf. Hdt. g. 11:—so in Med., dimxecOal Twa Tediovo, 5dpo10 to chase one over or across.., Il. 21. 602, Od. 18. 8. b. to be a follower of a person, attach oneself to him, Lat. sectari, Xen. Mem. 2. 8, 6, Plat. Theaet. 168 A. 2. to pursue an object, seek after, dxixnra Biaeew Od. 17. 75; often in Att., oov popov 8. Soph. Aj. 997; Tyas 5. Thuc. 2. 63; jdovqv, Ta Kadd Plat. Phaedr. 251 A, Gorg. 480 C, etc.; AaSpatay Kimpw Eubul. Navy. 1.8; proverb., 7@ merdpeva 8. Arist. Metaph. 3. 5, 15:—of plants, 5. robs Eqpods zémovs to prefer them, Theophr. H. P. 1. 4, 2:—8. 74 ovpBdvra to follow or wait for the event, Dem. 51. 20., 137. 4, etc. :—in Med., BideeoOar Td mAgov Exew Dion. H. 1. 87; potpa diwgapévn [adbrovs] Epigr. Gr. 478. 4. 8. fo pursue an argument, Plat. Soph. 251 A: also fo describe, Lat. persequi, tpvy dperas Pind. I. 4. 6 (3. 20); Thy maidevory Xen. Mem, 2. I, 34. . to drive or chase away, Biden otrw’ eyorye I don’t force any one away, Od. 18. 409; &« yijs Hat. 9. 77; and absol. ¢o banish, Id. 5. 92, 5 —metaph., didxes pH parson’ eyasapadny you push or press me .., Eur. Supp. 1 56. III. of the wind, to drive a ship, Od, 5. 3325.0f rowers, to impel, speed on her way, piupa Sidwovres (sc. vfja), 12. 182; and in Pass., vis piupa Biakopévn 13. 162; so of a chariot, Zupupyevis dppa diiKav driving it, Orac. ap. Hdt. 7. 140, cf. Aesch. Pers. 84; drpurov 6. méda Aesch, Eum. 403, cf. Theb. 371. 2. seemingly intr. to drive, drive on, ll. 23. 344, 424: to gallop, speed, run, ctc., Aesch, & SiwBerLa — duwis. Theb. 91; dvamndnoavres édiwxov Xen. An. 7. 2, 20. 38. to urge, impel, Bédos xept Pind. 1. 8 (7). 733 péppeyya wAderpy Id. N. 5. 4435 5. pédos Simon. 36:—Pass., dp’ Hoovns SwKopar.. adv Tae porety Soph. El. 871. IV. as law-term, fo prosecute, bring an action against a man, 6 didKow the prosecutor (opp. to i pevyov the defendant), Hat. 6. 82, Aesch. Eum. 583, etc.; 5 diwxav rod Ynpioparos he who impeaches the words of the decree, etc., Dem. 245.1 —ypagny 3. [rd] to indict him, Antipho 115. 24, Dem. 1368. 8; 5. eioayyeAiav Hyperid. Euxen, 24: c. gen. poenae, @avarou or mept Oavarou 5. Twa, Lat. capitis accusare, Xen. Apol. 21, Hell. 7. 3, 6: but c. gen. criminis, to accuse of .., to prosecute for.., 5. Twa tupavvidos Hdt. 6, 104; deAias Ar, Eq. 368; tapavépor Andoc. 4. 10; Pévov Plat. Euthyphro 15 D; peu- dopaprupiay Dem. 848. 17, etc.; also, 5. dmarns eivexey Hat. 6. 136; mept twos Dem. 228. 6; but, pdvoy rivds 5. to avenge another’s murder, Eur. Or. 1534, Arist. Pol. 2. 8, 20:—di«ny 5. to pursue one’s rights at law, Lys. 208, Dem. 1270. 3; v. sub din fin, :—c. acc. et inf. to accuse one of doing, App. Civ. 4. 50:—Pass., 6 d:axdpevos Antipho 115. 22; and in Ar. Ach. 698 sq. there is a pun on the two senses of pursuing an enemy, and being pursued or prosecuted in court. V. later, like €ropat, to attend another, esp. on a journey, Thom. M. p. 244. St-wAévios, ov, Anth. P. 7,711; also a, ov Arat. 202 :—with stretched- out arms, Arat.l.c. * SiwAvyros, ov, interpr. by Hesych., }xodv émt woAv, péya Kal apodpdr, darerapevoy, by Suid. péeya wal éxt Todd Siqxov :—the general sense of excessive, immense, enormous is the only one occurring in Plat., when Siwrvyia Legg. 890 E; paxpd..xai 5. pdAvapia Theaet. 161 D; often so in Neo-Platonists, cf. Ruhnk. Tim.; so also, dua 6. Call. Fr. 111: in Anth. P. 7. 641, veda 5. (of the sound of the flute) perh, expresses the first sense given by Hesych., far-sounding; so in Charito 3. 3, 5. dveBénoev. (The origin of the word is unknown.) Siwpocta, 7, an oath taken by both parties at the avaxprors before the trial came on, Antipho 139. 41, Lys. 117. 13: cf. dvrwpogia. Sudpotos, ov, (Siduvups) sworn, bound by oath, Lat. juratus, c. inf., Soph, Ph. 593. : Avayn, 7), Dioné, mother of Aphrodité by Zeus, Il. 5. 370, Hes. Th. 17: —in Epirus of Hera, Strabo 329. II. later, as a Metronymic, daughter of Dioné, i.e. Aphrodité, Theocr. 7. 116, Bion 1. 93 :—Adj. Avwvaios, a, ov, Kimps A, Theocr, 15.106; or A:wvain alone, Dion. P. 853. (Formed from Atds, as “Arpurwyn from arpuros.) Siovipta, 7, a pair of names, Manetho 4. 376. Sidvipos, ov, (Sis, 6vupa, dvopa) with two names, or, of two persons, named together, Eur. Phoen. 683. II. (5:4) far-famed, Plut. Timol. 30, App. Civ. 4. 54. Atwvucu , od, 6, v. sub Biacos. Aavioos, etc., Ep. for Avov-. Siwtt-KéAevPos, ov, urging on the way, xévrpa Anth. P. 6. 246. dtHE-v1Tos, ov, horse-driving, Kupava Pind. P.9.4; pvwy Anth. P.6. 233. Siwkts, ews, 7, (SidKw) chase, pursuit, of persons, esp. of soldiers or ships, Thuc. 3. 33, etc.; 3. moretaOau Id. 8. 102. 2. pursuit of an object, joined with émé6vyia, Plat. Symp. 192 E; opp. to pvyq, Arist. Eth, N. 6. 2, 2; 8. rv nada Plut. 2. 550 E. II, as law-term, prosecution, 5. moveto@ar Antipho 142. 8, Dem, 1116. fin.; 8, Ta@v déi- xovvrwy Plut, Pericl. Io, Swwpta, %, (Spa) a couple of hours, Byz. II. (Gpos) a fixed space ‘or interval, an appointed time, Joseph. B. J. 5. 9, iy Swpiopévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. of diopi¢w, definitely, distinctly, sepa- rately, Arist. H. A. 3. 19, 8. Siapodos, ov, (Spopos) with two roofs or stories, App. Pun. 95. Swwopiyn, 7, v. |. for diwpuy7. Srapuyos, ov, =didpyuos, Xen. Cyn. 2, 6: cf. dexd&puyos. StGpv—, vxos (and perhaps in later Gr. Hyos, v. Lob. Phryn. 230), 4: —a trench, conduit, canal, Hdt. 1. 75, Hipp. Aér. 290, Thuc. 1. 109, etc. ; xpumri) 5, an underground passage, Hdt. 3. 146. Siopix 7, }, a digging or cutting through, 4 provncov Dem. 86. 17, ef. Plut. Fab, 1:—8topuyn, —wpvy7 are incorrect forms, Lob. Phryn. 231. Slwors, ews, }, a pushing asunder, repulsion, Arist. Probl. 34.8. ax. a pushing off, delaying, dixns Id. Rhet. 1. 12, 8. Stwopos, J, =diwors, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 3. Swornp, jpos, 6, a surgical instrument to extract things from wounds, Paul. Aeg. 6. 88. II. a pole running through rings, for carrying the ark, Lxx (Ex. 38. 11 =37. 5). Siwros, ov, (obs, wrés) ¢wo-eared ; of vessels, two-handled, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 288 D, Ath. 473 C, C, I. 2852. 57: cf. Horace’s diota. Sioxs, és, (Exw) that will hold two, dippos Pherecr. Aya. 3, Paus. ap. Eust. 882. 12, ubi male didx7s. Spndets, SunOiyrw, v. sub dapdcw. Spjjors, ews, %, (Gapatw) a taming, breaking, trmow Il. 17. 476. dpq Pp, 7ipos, 6, a tamer, immev h. Hom. 21. 5, Alcman ap. Schol. Pind. :—fem., vig 5unreipa Gedy Il. 14. 259. Spqros, %, dv, tamed, Hesych, : Spor, %, (8apde) properly, a female slave taken in war, dycial 3, ds Axideds Antscaro (cf. duds) Il. 18. 28, cf. 9. 658., 24. 643 :—then, generally, a female slave, serving-woman, Lat. ancilla, often in Hom., who only has the pl., and that mostly joined with yuvates; so too in Trag., Suda Aesch. Ag. 908, Soph. Aj. 1189; 8. -yuvaixes Aesch. Cho. 84; Very rare in Prose, as Xen, Cyr. 5. 1, 6 :—of things, 5uaiy ..”Aidos ++ HakeAAay Epigr. Gr. 1046. 84. Spords, ddos, 7,304, Q. Sm. 3. 684., 9. 341. Spdvos, ov, in servile condition, Bpépos Anth. P. 9. 407. Bpwis, los, 9, Sua, Aesch, Theb. 363, Supp, 334, Eur. Bacch. 514. Ouas — doxéw. Spas, wds, 6, (Sapyaw) a slave taken in war, 5udav, ods .. Antooaro dios *Odvaceds (cf. Suen) Od. 1. 398 :—then, generally, a slave, Ted Suds els dvipayv ; Od. 24. 256; but mostly in pl., erjow épiy dyads te Il. 19. 333, and often in Od., with or without dvdpes; dat. pl. 3uweoor Od. 6. 71, etc.; also in Soph. Ant. 578, and freq. in Eur., but not found in Prose: —also SpGos, 6, Hes. Op. 428. SvoTraAifw, fut. fw, to shake violently, fling down, dvijp dvbp’ thvond- Augev Il. 4. 472; Ta od pdxea Svomadéfes ‘wrap thy old cloak about thee,’ Od. 14. 512.—Pass., yuia dvomadiCerat, of the polypus, its tendrils wave about, Opp. H. 2. 295. (Akin to dovéw.) Bvodepss, a, dv, dark, dusk, murky, vig Od. 13. 269; bdwp Il. 9. 15; also in Theogn, 243, and Trag.; metaph., 5v. x@dos Pind. P. 4. 200; tévOos Aesch. Pers. 536:—a poet. word; but 7d dvopepdy, gloom, occurs in Hipp. 308. ro. Svodésets, eaoa, ev, = 5vopepds, Emped. 124. Svodsopat or yvod-, Pass. to be darkened, Nilus. Svédgos, 6, darkness, dusk, gloom, Simon. 44; and in pl., Aesch. Cho. 52:—poét. word, though its collat. form yvd@os occurs in later Prose, Arist. Mund. 2, 13, Luc, Peregr. 43, etc. SvopHbdys, es, = dvopepés, Eur. Tro. 79 (as Dind. for -yvoph5n), Hipp. 308. 22; later yvoo-, Plut. 2. 949 A, etc. (On the relation of dydos, woos, to kvédas, (dos, but not to védos, v. Curt. p. 657.) Sodv, Dor. for Spy (q. v.), Aleman. 127 Bgk. S0dccaro, Homeric aor. form with impers. sense, = Att. 2dofe, it seemed, always in phrase ®de 5€ (or ds dpa) of ppovéovri Sodccato Képdiov elvat so it seemed to him to be best, Il. 13. 458, Od. 5. 474, al. ;—except in Il. 23. 339, ws av oot mAnuvn ye Sodacera: dxpov ixécOa (Ep. for dodcanrat) till the nave appear even to graze.—The supposed impf. deixédtos dar’ elvar, Od. 6. 242, has been altered since Wolf into 5éa7’, v. 5éaro, (Its relation to doxeiv is assumed by Buttm. Lexil. y. 5éarac: but Curt. connects it with 4/AEF, AIF, dios.) II. for doacca, dodacaro, as used by Ap. Rh., belongs to Sord¢w. Séypa, 7d, (Soxéw) that which seems to one, an opinion, esp. a phi- losophie dogma, Lat. placitum, Plat. Rep. 538 C, etc. 2. a public decree, ordinance, Andoc. 29. 30, Plat. Legg. 644 D; 7a trav’ Augixrvd- vow 5. Dem. 62. 4., 278. 17, etc.; ddyya moetoGat, c, inf., Xen. An. 3. 3, 5:—not used of decrees made by the Athenian é««Anola, which were Pndicpuara. Soyparias, ov, 6, a writer who abounds in déyparta, Philostr. 502. Soyparifw, to lay down as an opinion, Diog. L. 3.52, Nemes. N. H. 2. 50 :—Pass., Clem. Al. 324. 2. to decree by ordinance, c. inf., Diod. 4. 83, Lxx (1 Esdr. 6. 33); 5. teva Kadjy to declare her beautiful, Anth. P. 9. 576:—Pass., Ta doypariobévra C. 1. 2485. 47, cf. 5785. 13. 3. in Pass., of persons, to submit to ordinances, Ep. Coloss. 2. 20. Soyparikés, 7, dv, of or for opinions, didactic, didAoyou Quintil. 2. 15, 26. II. of persons, 5. iarpol physicians who go by general prin- ciples, opp. to éumerpixot, Galen. Soypariorys, of, 6, one who maintains déypara, Eccl. Soyparo-Aoyia, %, the expounding of a déypa, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 367. Soyparo-rrovew, to make a decree, Polyb. 1. 81, 4. Soyparorrovia, 7), maintenance of déyuara, Aristob. ap. Eus. P. E. 664 B. Bode , vos, 6, a small abscess, boil, Lat. furunculus, Hipp. 51. 39, etc., Hermipp. @eoi 4, Ar. Vesp. 1172, Teleclid, Incert. 5. SoOtnvikdv, 74, a remedy for boils, Paul. Aeg. Sordfw or Sodfw, (v. sub fin.):—zo consider in two ways (cf. Homer's Sidviixa pepphptfe), Bovdds doialecke was hesitating between .., Ap. Rh, 3.819; érére dotrov .. Sodccat (poet. aor. opt.) when she imagined a noise, 1b. 955;—also in Med., 50agaaro she doubted, Ib. 770; dorafovro Aevooew imagined they saw, Id. 4. 576. (From dvo, dorol, to be at two, to doubt, and not related to Homer’s dodocaro; prob. Ap. Rh. formed the Verb from the older form évdord¢w.) So.biKo-rords, 6, a pestle-maker, Plut. Phoc. 4. SordtK0-h6Ba, 7, pestle-fearing, Luc. Trag. 201. Soibvk, Dios, 6, a pestle, Ar. Eq. 984, etc. Sou, 4, doubt, perplexity, év dorp Il. g. 230, Call. Jov. 5. (V. sub v0.) Sovol, ai, 4, Ep. for dv0, two, both, Il. 5. 206, Hes. Op. 430, etc.: neut. dora as Adv, in two ways, in two points, Od. a. 46. 2. sing. Sods, h, dv, like dic0ds, two-fold, double, Call. Ep. 1. 3, Anth. P. 9. 46, etc.— Ep. word, used by Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2.9 and 11. Cf. dom, Sor0-réKos, ov, bearing twins, Anth, P. 7. 742 (Jacobs d:acor—). So1w, =So10f (of which it is properly the dual), =dv¥o, indecl., Hom. ; commonly masc., Il. 3. 236, etc.; but neut. in Il. 24. 648. Soxdlw, fut. dow, to wait for, Sophron ap. Dem. Phal. 151. Soxava, 74, (Soxds) at Sparta, a hieroglyphic of the Dioscuri, being two upright parallel bars joined towards each end (as in the astronom, figure of the constellation Gemini), Plut. 2. 478 A; v. Dict. of Antt. deickin, , (86«n, 5€xopat) a receptacle, Hesych. IL. =orarg, the forked pole on which hunting nets are fixed, Id. *Soxdw, assumed as pres. of Sedoxnuévos: but v. sub déxopat. Soxevw, (Séxouar) to keep an eye upon, watch narrowly, éucodpevdy te boxever [the hound] watches [the boar] turning to bay, Il. 8. 340; so Odwva peracrpepbevra doxevoas having watched for his turning round, 13. 5453 “Auguxrov epopundévra Soxevoas 6, 313; Tov mpodxovrTa Soxever watches him that is before [in the race], 23. 325 ; of the'Great Bear, 77’ .. ’Mplava doxeve watches the hunter Orion, Il, 18..488,:Od. 5. 274; Adxparor 6. to lie in.wait for [them] in .. , Pind. O. 10. 36 (9. 30); vv .. Oerat Soxevovra will see him playing the spy, Eur. Bacch. 984; & pn Oépus ode EddKevoa sought not for, Epigr. Gr. 615. 5.—Later, to observe, see, freq, in Nonn., and Anth. ; also to think, Herm. Orph. p. 823. ‘Borgo, Il, 7,192, Att. impf, éddcouv; the fut. and other tenses are J, 381 twofold, 1. from *8éew, fut. Sdgw and aor. 1 €50fa h. Hom. Merc. 208, Pind. and Att.; pf. 5€50xa only inferred from plapf. é5¢dd- xeoay in Dio C. 44. 26:—Pass., aor. €5dx6nv Polyb., etc., (*aT-) Antipho 116. 32: pf. déd0ypyar Hdt., Att. 2. the regul. forms, hardly used but by Poets and in late Prose, fut. doxfjow Aesch. Pr. 386, Ar. Nub. 562, etc. (also in Hdt. 4. 74); Dor. d0«n0@ or -do® Theocr. 1. 150; aor, é5dxnoa, Ep. dd«-, Od. 10. 415, Pind., Trag., Ar. Ran. 1485: pf. de5éenxa Aesch. Eum. 309 :—Pass., aor. éd0x70nv Eur. Med. 1417, Alc, 1161, Bacch. 1390: pf. Seddenuar Pind. N. 5. 36, Eur. Med. 763, Ar. Vesp. 726, also in Hdt. 7. 16 (unless 5€50x7a1 be restored) ; but de- Soxnpévos (q.v.) belongs to déxopat. (From 4/AOK come also d0x-n, 5df-a, etc. ; cf. Skt. dagas (fama); Lat. dec-us, dec-or, dec-et.) I. of the action of the Mind itself, videor mihi, to think, suppose, imagine, expect (opp. to ppovéw, Soph. Aj. 942, Pherecr, Xep. 7), Hom., etc. 1. c, acc. et inf., doxéw veenoépev “Exropa Il. 7. 192; ov oe Soxéw meiOecOar Hat. 1. 8, cf. 11. 27, al., Antipho 121. 24, etc.; rarely with the inf. omitted, dox@ .. oddtv pjua ..kaxdy [elvac] Soph. El. 61; tovrous Tt Soxetre [eivar] Xen. An. 5. 7, 26:—often used of persons re- lating a dream or vision, Texeiv Spaxovr’ edogev she thought a serpent bare young ones, Aesch. Cho. 527; édéxouv derov .. pépew methought an eagle was bearing, Ar. Vesp. 15; but the acc. is mostly omitted, 50g” ideiv, Lat. visus sum videre, methought I saw, Eur. Or. 408; é50g’ axov- oa Plat. Prot. 315 E; eof’ év trv .. oixetv &y “Apye Eur. I. T. 44 (sometimes also, as in signf. 11, éd0garnv pot podeiv Svo -yuvaixes Aesch, Pers, 181; év T@ oradiw.. wé Tis eddnee oTepavody Alex. Incert. 2):— also to think to do, purpose, drav & deldewv .. box Aesch. Ag. 16. 2. absol. to have or form an opinion, wept twos Hdt. 9. 65; but more com- monly, like Lat. opinor, in parenthetic phrases, ws d0n@ Trag.; 50K alone, Plat. Parmen. 126 B; m@s doxeis: to call attention to something remarked, rodroy, m@s Soxeis; xabvBpicev Eur. Hipp. 446, cf. Hec. 1160, Diphil. Incert. 8, etc. ; cf. m@s m1. 5. 3. don@ po in Att., just like boxe? por (infr.), as Lat. videor mihi for videtur mihi, I seem to myself, methinks, c. inf., éy@ por doKéw Kkaravocay Tovro Hat. 2. 93, etc.; ov pot Sox@ I think not .., Plat. Theaet. 158 E:—but d0%@ pou, also, J am determined, resolved, c. inf. praes., Ar. Vesp. 177, etc.; c. inf. fut., Id. Plut. 1186, etc.: c. inf. aor., Ar. Av. 671, etc.: rarely without po, dray & deldew .. 50x@ whenever J think fit, Aesch, Ag. 16; yO tiva méprew Soxeis Id. Theb. 650. 4. like rpoorocotpat, c. inf., to seem or pre- tend to be doing, Lat. simulo, or with a negat. to seem or pretend not to be doing, Lat. dissimulo, édpéav piv ovdéev, Soxéay Se [épar] Aleman 76; ovre éd0fe padéew Hdt. 1. 10; ovde yyvwonew Soxav Pherecr. Incert. 30; Ta pev moeiy, 7a 5é Soxeiv Arist. Pol. 5.11, 19; HKoved Tov AéyovTos, ob SoxGv xAvew Eur. Med. 67; wécous Soxeis . . dpavras .. pi Soxeiv Spay Id. Hipp. 462; cf. Ar. Eq. 1146, Xen. Hell. 4. 5, 6. II. of the action of an Object on the Mind, videor, to seem, c. dat. pers. et inf. praes., doxéers 5€ por ok amatooeay Od. 5. 342: Bénnoe 8 dpa ohicr Gupds ds Epev ws ei... , their heart seemed just as if.., felt as though .., Od. 10. 415; c. inf. fut. to seem likely, Boxée 5é pot Wbe Awiov écoecOae Il. 6. 338; c. inf. aor., never in Hom., but often in Att.: ri 3° dv Sone? cor Tpiapos (sc. woroat) Aesch. Ag. 935: to seem or be thought to have done, esp. of suspected persons, Thuc. 2. 21., 5. 16. 2. absol. fo seem, as opp. to reality, 7d Soxely wat Thy GAd- Oevav Biara Simon. 76; od Soxeiv, GAN elvat O€dAee Aesch. Theb. 592, cf. Plat. Gorg. 527 B:—in full, 7d dometv elvac Aesch. Ag. 788. 3. to seem good, be resolved on, Lat. placere, ei Soxet oor Tava Aesch, Ag. 9443 Toad eSofe rHde Kadpeiwy réA@ Id. Theb. 1025. 4. often impers. 5oxef wor much in the same sense as d0x@ por (supr. I. 3), it seems to me, meseems, methinks, &s por doxel Sucypimoros, ov, very grasping, cited from Liban. SucSaipovéw, to be wretched, Longin. 7. 9. SvcSapovia, 4, misery, Eur. I. T. 1120, Andoc, 20. 27. SvcSaipwv, ov, of ill fortune, unhappy, Trag., esp. Eur.; Svedaipove poipa Soph. O. T. 1302; tx Plat. Legg. go5 C: Comp. — ov, hard to land on, having few ports, Polyb. 1.37, : 3. dwéBaors a difficult landing, Diod. 1. 31. “tes ; ~ 5, 5, etc. :—esp. as opp. to ‘EAAqvuiarhs, a Jew who used the Hebrew (Aramaic) language :—Adj. EBpaikés, 7, 6v, Hebrew, ypaupara N. T.; pecul. fem, “Epais, Sos, S:aAexros, Ib.:—Verb EBpatlw, Yo speak Hebrew, Joseph. B. J. 6. 2, 1; or="Iovbat{w, Eccl.:—Adv. “EBpaieri, in the Hebrew tongue, N.T.; ‘EBpaeariv C. I. go6o. €y, for é« in compos. before y « x ¢, and in Inscrr. before cases of Nouns beginning with those letters, éyyatos, a, ov, more commonly éyyeos, ov: (yata, yi) :—in or of the land, native, Lat. indigena, Aesch. Pers. 922; tis .. olwvonéAwy éyydios; (so the metre requires) Id. Supp. 57. 2. within the land, opp. to. brepdépios, eThpata Xen, Symp. 4, 31. II. of property, in land, consisting of land, éyyetos ovcia Lys. Fr. 59, Dem. 945. 253 eTHoes éyyeto wat otxiae C. 1. 1770, cf. 2056, al.; 7a eyyera the fixtures of a farm, Dem; 872. 12; oupBddaov éyyeor (v. cupBddaoy 11), Id. 893.15; oraripas davecdpevos éyyelav Tréxov on mortgage, Id. 914. 10; (the older and more correct form appears to be éyyvos téxos, from uns, v. Lys. 902. 3 Reisk.; so émiyyvos for émiyetos, Inscrr. and Mss, in Béckh Urkunden iiber d. S. , p. 162), III. in or of the earth, éyyea plants, opp. to (a, Plat. Rep. 491 D; purdy eyyaov obt ovpdnoy Id. Tim. 90 A; AlOwv ra éyyara pépy Plut. 2. 701C. IV, in or below the earth, of éyyeo= xOdviot, Anth, P. 7, 480, cf. Plut. 2. 953 A. iyadyvtto, fut. tow, to be calm, to live quietly, Diog. L. 10. 37. éyyaAos, ov, (yada) giving milk, in milk, Hesych. éyyapéw, to marry into a family, Hesych. éyyapife, fut. iow, to give in marriage, Hesych. éyyapuos, ov, (yapuos) married, Procl. Hymn, 4. 9. €yySpos, ov, married, Eccl, eyyaortpl-payris, 5, 7, one that prophesies from the belly, Poll. 2. 168, Suid.: cf. éyyaorptyvdos. éyyaorpt-paxatpa, 7, comic name of a glutton in Hippon. Fr. 56, one who makes havoc with his belly. éyyaorpl-pi0os, ov, a ventriloguist, mostly used of women who de- livered oracles by this means, and so =éyyaorplpavris, Hipp. 1156 G, Philochor. Fr. 192, LXx; cf. Luc. Lexiph. 20, Plut. 2, 414 E:—poét, éyyaorepipuvbos, Or. Sib. 3. 226. €yyaorpvos, ov, in the womb, Manetho 1. 189. éyyéyaa, Ep. pf. of éyytyvoua. a éyyetvwvrat, 3 pl. aor. 1 subj. in causal sense (no pres, éy~yelvopar being , found), ya) uviae edAds eyyeivawrar lest the flies breed maggots in [the wounds], Il. 19. 26. ‘ . OV, (yéa, 7), V. sub éyyatos, éyyerd-rokos or éyyed-, ov, growing in the earth, as a truffle, Theophr. H. P. 1. 6, 13, Ath, 62 A. dyyeré-uddos, ov, having leaves close to the ground, Theophr. H.P.6.6, 4. éyyelowpa, 7d, a fracture of the skull, such that one piece slips under the bone /ike a cornice (yetsov), Galen. eyy , od, 6, a mocker, scorner, Eur. Hipp. tooo. éyyeAdo, fnt. doouat [], to laugh in the face, laugh at, mock, Lat. irridere, tTwt Soph. El. 277, Eur. Med. 1355; in tmesi, yeA@r’ & cot yed@ Soph. Ant. 551; xara Twos Id. O. C. 1339 (cf. émeyyeAdw) ; but the dat. is often omitted, Id. El. 807, Eur, Med. 1362. II. to laugh in or among, atpa kipaow éyyedA@oa Sosicr. Ad, I. éyyevérns, ov, 6, inborn, native, Ap. Rh. 4. 1549. éyyevis, és, inborn, native, Lat. indigena, Hdt. 2. 47; opp. to pérottos, éyy. OnBatos Soph. O. T. 452; Oeods rods éyyeveis gods of the race or country, Aesch. Theb. 582, etc., cf. Soph. Ant. 199, El. 428. 2. born of the same race, kindred, Soph. O. T. 1168, etc. (in 1506, Dind. suggests éxyeveis); eyyevis endela connexion with a kinsman, Eur. Supp. 134 :— Ady. -va@s, =-yvyolws, or like kinsmen, Soph, O. T. 1225. It. of qualities, inborn, innate, vods Soph. El. 1328; opiow eyyevis éupev dyadots 'tis in their race to be good, Pind. N. 10. 95; so, movos éyy. in the family, Aesch. Cho, 466; rdyyev} axa Soph. O. T. 1430. éyyevvdw, to generate or produce in, Tit Plut. 2. 132 E, etc. éyyévyats, ews, 4, a birth-place, Plat. Legg. 776 A. éyye6roxos, ov, v, sub éyyerdroxos. éyyevopar, Pass. to taste of, Twos Polyb. 7. 13, 7- éyyipapa, 7d, a comfort or employment for old age, Plt. Cato 24, Cic. Att. 12. 25, 2. éyynpdcke, fut. dcouar [a], v. infr.:—to grow old in, wi Hipp. Aph. 1246; éyy. Bacireias Pave: 6. 7} 4,etc. 2. absol. fo grow old in one, decay, Thy émornunv eyynpacedba: Thuc, 6. 18. Dd 2 402 €yynpotpodpéw, = ynporpopéw, Poll. 2. 13. . €yylyvopat, Ion. and later éyylvopar [7]: fut. dyyerfoopa: 3 pl. Ep. pf. éyyeyadior (the only tense used by Hom.): Dep. To be born in, Tol "Tig éyyeyaaawy Il. 6. 493, cf. Od. 13. 233; of vermin, fo be bred in the skin, Hdt. 2. 37; of fruit, év 7@ wddAvae evry. Ib. 92. 2. of qualities, to be in by nature, to be innate, boa év dvOpwTov iat .. eyy. Hdt. 8. 83 ; alcOnua m1 wav vnmios ye .. yy. Eur. 1. A. 1244, etc. 3. of events and the like, to take place or happen in or among, Tit Hat. 5. 3, cf. 3.1; so, xetua apddpov éyy. Plat. Ax. 371 D, and, IT. to come in, intervene, pass, of Conversation, Hdt. 2. 121, 4; but of Time, xpévov eyywopévou, eyyevopévov Id. 1. 190, Thuc. 1. 113, etc.; iva Hot xpdvos éyyévnra TH oxé~e Plat. Prot. 339 E, cf. Symp. 184 A. III. éyyiyvera:, impers. it is allowed or possible, like éfeort, c, inf., Hdt. 1. 132., 6. 38, Andoc. 18. 26; wore pr eyyevécOar por motjoa Antipho 131. 25: éyyevdpuevor Hyir, like éfdv, when it was in our power, Isae. 52. r- IV. for aor. éyyelvacOat, v. éyyelvevrat. LYVe , Ion. éyytv—, to acknowledge, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1.5. éyyilo, fut. tow: aor. Hypa: (éyyis) :—to bring near, bring up to, twvi tt Polyb. 8. 6, 7. II. mostly intr. to come near, approach, Arist. Mirab, 144, etc.; Twi Polyb. 17. 4, 1; and (like éyyts) rivds Id. 4. 62, 5, etc.; eis and mpdés, Lxx. éyylwv, ov, €yyoros, 7, ov, C. I. 2166. 34:—Comp. and Sup. Adj., formed from Ady, éyyus, nearer, nearest: neut. éyyov, éyyora, as Adv., Hipp. 356. 32., 352. 36, etc.; é¢ eyylovos App. B. C. 4.108; rods éyyiora Ths Arrikns Tomovs Dem. 282. 28; of éyyora the next of kin, Antipho 129. 14. éyyAautos, ov, blueish, Diod. 1. 12. éyyAtKatva, to sweeten, soften, Eus. H. E. 5. 1. €yyAvkos, ov, sweetish, Diosc. 5. 10. éyyAuppa, 7d, carved work, Themist. 62 B. éyyAvoow, to have a sweet taste, Hat. 2. 92. éyyAvoe [0], fut. yw, to cut in, carve, (Ga ev AtOow Hdt. 2.4; (da eyyeyAuppeva Ib. 124; aipacey éyyeyAuppévn Turoi Ib. 138. €yyAwrro-yaorwp, opos, 6, },=yAwoooydorwp, Ar. Av. 1695. éyyAwrro-ritéw, to talk loudly of, Ar. Eq. 782. éy-yvaprra, fut. Yo, to bend in, év 5& ydvu yvaper, i.e. caught the back of the knee with his foot so asto trip him up and throw him, I!. 33. 730. _ €yyonretw, Zo bring on by charms, trvov eyy. Twi Philostr. Too. éyyopdde, to nail or fix in, Galen, éyyopowors, ews, }, a nailing in: a fixing in of teeth, Galen. €yyovos, 6, properly, a grandson, ‘Bion. H. 6, 37, etc.: éyydvn, H, a granddaughter, C. I. 3953 /, 4207, 4346, Artemid. 4.69; also yyovos, %, Plut. Pericl. 3. 2. simply =€«-yovos, a descendant, Plat. Rep. 364 E, etc. ; though in most places €yovos-is now restored from Mss., as in Dem. 73. 13., 356.8; in Arist. Pol. 7. 16, 6, a comparison of § 16 shows that éy«- is the true form, = . éyypépparos, ov, written, opp. to spoken, Def. Plat. 414 D; par Sext. Emp. M. 1. 100. II. containing letters, descriptive of letters, pajows Ath. 454 D. : ypamros, ov, =€yypacpos, Polyb. 3. 24, 6, etc. éyypavAis, f5os, 7, Apes ah ae walle éyxpacixoros, Ael, N.A. 8, 3 a pl. éyypavAes in Opp. H. 4. 470. pan, 7, a registering, registration, especially of persons on the list of their demos, Dem. 996. 2; or on the list of disfranchisement, Id. 778. 18., 968. 9, cf. Arist. Pol. 6. 5, 5. : éyypahos, ov, in writing, written, Arist. Fr. 415, Polyb. 3. 21, 4, etc.: —Ady. —pas, Clem, Al. 564. II. registered, C. 1.171. 11, 23. éyypadw [a], fut. yw, to make incisions into, 7d orédXexos Theophr. BLY. 6-7; 2. 2. to mark in or on, to paint on, (Ga és Ti éoO7jra éyy. Hdt. 1. 203; opp. to éfarelpa, Plat. Rep. 501 B. 3. to en- grave, inscribe, write in or on, ypappara ornAn or ev o77jAD Hat. 4. 91., 2. 102; éyyp. ydpous Lys, 183. 16:—Med., Hv éyypapou od pvjpoow éAros ppevav Aesch. Pr. 789 :—Pass. to be written in, éveyéypamro 5é Tad ev airy [7H émorodAp] Thuc. 1.128; abrdv ebpev eyyeypappevov kreivey found it written in the letter to kill himself, Ib. 132; éyyeypay- pévos Tt having something written on it (so Virg., flores inscripti nomina), Soph. Tr. 157. 4. metaph., ef péAAovor Toradrar didvora &yypa- phveaBas dvOpmmos Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 52. II. to enter in the public register, esp. of one’s demos or phratria, és 7d Kowa ypappareia Isae. 63. 43-80, éyypdpew Tov vidy els dvdpas Dem. 412. 25; eis Tovs pparepas Id. 995.28; els rods EphAovs Plat. Ax. 366 E; éyyp. eis robs dripous, Lat. in aerarios referre, Plut. Them. 6; also, iepdy éyyp. Tiv ovatay Alex. Incert. 6 :—Pass., eis rods Snudras eyypapavat Dem. 314. 4 (cf. Angcapxuxds) ; Mavrideos éveyeypdypyny by the name of M., Id. 995. 29, cf. 996. 2; Tobs unmw did Hruciay éyyeypaypévous Arist. Pol. 3.1, 53 mplv éyypaphvat wat AaBeiv 7d xAapviiov Antid. Mpwr. 1:—(Aesch. Cho. 699 is yet unexplained ; the Schol. seems to have read dmovcay for rapovoar). 2. to enter on the judge's list, to indict, Ar. Pax 1180, Dem. 973. 25; éyypdpeoOar Aroragiov to be indicted for desertion, Aeschin. 48. 1. 3. of state-debtors, to enter their names, Plat. Legg. 784D; éyyp. Tots mpdxropow Dem. 1074. fin. ; eyye- ypappévos év dxporbde registered among the state-debtors, Dem. 771. 6; y. sub mpocodeira. éyyvaAlfe, fut. fa: (ydadov) :—properly, to put into the palm of the hand, put into the hand, éebva, boca of eyyvddiga Od. 8. 319; &yH BE roe eyyvarléa I will put him into your hands, 16. 66; 6 5° abr’ éyot Aigev [sc. Tods twmovs] Il. 23. 278:—often of the gods, Kal ror eyyuarite criirrpiy 7 75% O€moras Il. 9. 98; ae «+ Opedrgy ew ey ynpotpopéew — eyyes. éréovow Kdbos .. eyyvadlén 15. 491, etc—Ep. word, used by Pind. 1. 8 (7). 92, Hegem. ap. Ath. 698 D. éyyudo: impf. yyyiwy (wap-) Soph. O. C. 94, Eur. Supp. 700, Xen, etc.: aor. Hyyinoa Eur. I, A. 703, Dem. 858. 21, etc.: pf. ayydnxa Dio C.: plqpf. #yyinne Isae. 43. 41:—Med., fut. -7oopar Dem. 715. 13: aor. Wyyunoapnv Andoc. 7. 5., 10. 16, Dem., etc. :-—Pass., aor. 7jy- yunony (e-, war—) Lys. 167. 30, Dem. 1361. fin.: pf. Hyyenpae (d-), Thuc. 3. 70.—But in Mss. the Verb is often treated as a compd., and we find impf. éveytwy Isae. 42. 24., Dem. 1032. 25; éveyinoa Isae. 4. 30., 43. 11; pf. éyyeyunea Ib. 42. 6, Dem. 1363. 13: Pass. impf. éve- yuaro Ib. 45. 6; pf. &yyeyunuar Dem. goo. 15; plapf. éveyeydnro Isae. 43. 26: recent Edd. for the most part discard these incorrect forms: cf. b-, &f-, kar-eyyudw: (&yyn). To give or hand over as a pledge, Lat. spondere; and in Med. to have a thing pledged to one, accept as a surety, dechat ror Sadr@y ye Kal eyydar eyyvdacba Od. 8. 351 (nowhere else in Hom.); éyyta* mapa 8 dra give a pledge, and evil is at hand, i.e. beware of giving pledges, Thales ap. Plat. Charm. 165 A, Arist. Fr. 6, C. I. (addend.) 6059 6; cf. eyyvn. 2. esp. of a father giving his daughter in marriage, to plight, betroth, @vyarépa éyyuay ti Hat. 6. 57 (v. infr.) ; Zeds #yyinoe Kat didwo’ Eur. I. A. 703 :—Med. to have a woman plighted or betrothed to one, to accept as one’s plighted spouse, c, acc,, Dem. 1311. 20; we have the Act, and Med. opposed in Hdt. 6. 130, where the father says éyyu® oor Hv éuhv maida, and the man re- plies éyyv®pat :—Pass., of the man, #o be betrothed, Ov'yarpt tivos Plat. begs. 923 D. II. Med. also to pledge oneself, give a security, mpos 70 Snpdorov Andoc. 10. 16; éwi riot Lys. 167. 20; eyy. Tun Ort Plat. Euthyd. 274 B: also, éyytnv éyyvdo@at to give a security, Andoc. Io. 16, Plat. Legg. 953 E. 2. c. acc. et inf. fut. to promise or engage that .., Pind. O. 11. 16, Ar. Pl. 1202, Xen, An. 7. 4, 13, Plat., ete. ; éyyvdoba [avrods] mapéfew Lys. 132.2; eyyuwpévn doe Babr. 58. Io. 8..c. acc, rei, to answer for, éyyvac@a Ta péAAOvTA Dem. 292. 6, cf. 713. 3; so c. acc. pers., Plat. Legg. 855 B; eyyudoGal ria mvt to give surety for him to another, Dem. gol. 14; so, éyyunv eyyu- GoGai ria mpés Twa Heind. Plat. Phaedo 115 D. éyyvy, not éyyva, 7, (é, yv-adoyr, cf. éyyvadifw) :—a pledge put into one’s hand: generally, surety, security, bail, whether received or given, Lat. vadimonium, Od. 8. 351 (v. éyyudw 1); eyytnv riOévar Twi Aesch. Eum, 898 ; éyyvas drorivew tnép twos Antipho 117. 34; éyyuny éy- yuaoat (v. éyyvdw 11); drodiSdvar Dem. 1255. 2; THS eyyvns THs ent tiv tpameCav Dem, 895.16; eyytas dra ’or: Ovyarnp, éyyta dt (apias Epich. 150 Ahr.; cf. éyyudw I. 1. 2. a betrothal, Plat. Legg. 774 E, Isae. 40. 39. [¥ in Anth. P. 9. 366.] eyytnots, ews, 7, security, C. I. 2953 b. 38, v. 1. Dem. 724. 6. a betrothal, Isae, 43. 16. éyyunris, ov, 6, one who gives security, a surety, &yyunriy Kabioravat Hdt. 1.196, Antipho 131. 23, Lys. 132. 5, C. I. 82, al.; mapéxeu Plat. Legg. 871 E; AapBavew Dem. 894.17; eiopepew C.1. 2737 b; Sidévan Polyb. 12. 16, 3, etc.; én” éyyunra@y under securities, Xen. Vect. 3, 14; eyy. Tod dpyuptov dgidxpews for the money, Plat. Apol. 38 B; of éyy. THs Tpamé(ns those who had given security for the bank (and were liable in case of its failure), Dem. 895. 18; 6 vopos yy. Tots dAAHAOS TOY ducaiwy Arist. Pol. 3..9,8; 7d vdmiopa olov eyy. itp ris GdAayis Id. Eth. N. 5. 5, 14. €yyunros, 7, dv, always of a wife, plighted, wedded, éyyuyri yur, opp. to an éralpa, Isae. 45. 40 sq., Dem. 1365. 18. éyyiev [0], Adv. (éyyus) from nigh at hand, yy. éAdeiv to approach, Il. 5.723 €yy. oxomeiv Soph, Ph. 467; so in Plat., etc. 2. with Verbs of rest, hard by, nigh at hand, éyy. ioracOat Il. 10. 508, etc.; elvat or mrapeivat Od. 6, 279, Aesch. Cho. 852, etc. 8. c. dat., éyyvder rivi hard by him, I. 17. 554, etc.; éret pdvos eyyiOev abrG 18. 133, cf. 19- 409; also c, gen., éyy. “Aphvns 11. 723, cf. Aesch. 1. c. eyyv-O7Kn, 7, and in Luc, éyyvo0-:—a chest or case to keep things in, Luc. Lexiph. 2. II. a stand for vessels, tripods, etc., Lat. incitega, Ath, 210 B; cf. Lys. Fr. 18, Miiller Arch. d. Kunst § 299. 9. éyyobr [¥], Adv. hard by, near, like éyyds, in Hom. mostly c. gen., as Il. 6. 3173 seldom c. dat., 22. 300; sometimes absol., 7. 341, Hes. Op. 286. II. of Time, nigh at hand, &yyie 8 Has Il. 10. 251. 2 pee to stretch the limbs upon, y.1. for cvvéxapper, LXx (4 Regg. 4. 35)- . éyyupvate, fut. dow, to exercise in, Ti yoxiv Ocapaow eyy. Luc. Salt. 6 :—more often in Med., év go} éyyupvacépevos to practise upon you, Plat. Phaedr. 228 E: practise oneself in .. , wod€pors Plut. Caes. 28. eyyupvacréoy, verb. Adj. one must practise oneself in, Themist. 51 B. eyyvos, ov: (éyyun, but y. sub dytyvos):—secured, under good securily, pvds .. &yyvous én rénw dedaveccpévas Lys. 902. 3. II. as Subst., =éyyuyrhs, Xen. Vect. 4, 20, Arist. Oec. 2, 23; 1 ea mapé= xew rwvés Theogn. 286; éyy. rijs mpogevias giving security for .., C. I. 1771-3 :—also fem. yyos in Aeschin, Epist. 11. Cf, raAarriatos, €yyvos, ov, (ins), v. sub éyyatos. éyyts [0], Adv.: Comp. éyyurépw, Sup. dyyurérw or -drara, (first in Hipp., and Att.); also éyyiov, éyyora (v. éyylov),—the latter in Antipho 129. 14. (For the Root, v. d&yxi, dyxq) : I. of Place, near, nigh, at hand: very freq. in Hom., who uses it either absol. or c. gen. hard by, near to; so, Avras éyyurépw nearer to grief, Soph. O. C. 1216: later also c. dat., Eur. Heracl, 37 (for which construct. Il. 11. 340 is sometimes quoted): mostly with Verbs of rest, éyyis éordvat, etc., Avsch, Pers. 686, Eum. 65; but, éyyis xwpeiy Id, Theb. 59 :—cf. eyyvt Bev, eyyvO. II. of Time, nigh at hand, Il. 22. 453, Od. 10. 86, Xen. Cyr, 2. 3, 2. IIL. of Numbers, etc., nearly, éreat eyyds elicoat II. *Ortpmtos @yyvadigar 1. 353; Tore of updros eyyvarlgw 11. 192; Thuc, 6.5; eyyis énavrod Xen, Hell. 3-1, 28; 008 eyyds not nearly, °’ , bd , eyyuTaros — eyxaduT Tw. i.e. not by a great deal, nothing like it, Plat. Symp. 198 B; odx otrws ++, 005° &yyds not so.., nor yet nearly so, Dem. 524. 2; od« énolouv TovTO, od eyys 1d. 524. 2; (so, ob58 woAAOD Sel, Id. 463. 7, ubi v. Wolf.). IV. of Qualities, coming near, éyybs 71 i} wapamAjo.oy Plat. Gorg. 520A; éyytrara rod viv tpérov Thuc. 1. 23; 81 éyyi- tara Toure Id. 7.86; xowh d& maow oddels &yyvrépw Dem. 321. 29: with part., éyybs tupAay nearly blind, Plat. Rep. 508 C:—éyyos eivat, c. inf., as, éyyds rod reOvdvar very nearly dead, Plat. Phaedo 65 A; Tod mabeiv éyydrata Dem. 555. Io. V. of Relationship, akin to, of Znvos éyyds Aesch, Fr. 155; eyyurépw yéver or yévous Plat. Apol. 30 A, Isae. 45.153 @yyUrara yévous Aesch. Supp. 388, Lys. Fr. 25, Plat., etc. ; &yyurarw yévous Ar. Av. 1666. €yyvratos, 7, ov, Sup, Adj., & éyyurdrou=éyyvrdrw,Thuc. 8, 96. éyyirns [0], nros, 4, nearness, neighbourhood, Poll. 4. 155. éyyovdt, to keep in corners, keep hidden, Eust. Opusc. 250. 24. éyyovios, ov, (yavos) Males an angle, esp. a right angle, oxjjua Hipp. Art. 795 ; Alor év roph eyydrioe cut square, Thuc. 1.93. an. cut into angles, of ivy-leaves, Theophr, H. P. 3. 15, 4. éyyovo-edqs, és, =foreg., Theophr. H.P. 3. 12, 5. €yyovov, 76, an angular piece of land, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5775-107. éySoumnoay, v. sub ySouréw. eyetpdppav, ov, gen. ovos (ppv), rousing the mind, E. M. 20. 47. éye(pw, Ep. impf. éye:pov, Hom. Att. :—fut. yep@ Plat. Eleg. 25 Bgk. (cf. ég-, é—-): aor. dyepa. Ep. éy-, Hom., etc.: pf. éy7yepxa Philostr. Epist. 16, Joseph.: plqpf. éynyépxew Dio C. 42. 48:—Pass., Plat., etc.: fut. éyep9jcouae Babr. 49.3; (also fut. med. éyepoduat Polyaen. I. 30, 4): aor. 2 iyyépOny Plat., etc., Ep. 3 pl. éyepOer Il. 23. 287; (also poet. aor. med. éyeiparo Or. Sib. 3. 159) :—pf. éytyyepuae Thuc. 7.51: plapf. eyiryepro Luc. Alex. 19; #yepro Joseph.—Besides these, we have in pass. sense, poét. syncop. aor. ayypdunv (éf-) Ar. Ran. 51; 3 sing. €ypero, imperat. éypeo, Hom.; 2 sing. subj. éypp Ar. Vesp. 7743 opt. éyporro Od. 6. 113; inf. éypécOax (often written éypecOar, as if from a pres. eypopat, cf. €ypw), Od. 13.124; part. éypdpevos Od. :—also intr. Pf. éyprryopa (as pres.) Ar., Plat., etc. ; plapf. éypyydpn or —etv (as impf.) Ar. Eccl. 32, Pl. 744; 3 sing. éypyryopet Xen. Cyr. 14. 20; Ep. 3 pl. €ypyyép9act (an anomalous form, for which Donaldson would read eypryopai re) Il. 10. 419; imperat. éypiyyopOe (v. infr. 11); infin. eypiryopOat Il. 10.67 (not eypyydp0az, Spitan. ad 1.): cf. éypnyopdov, yPnNyopéw. (From 4/EYPEIP or EPEP, for the Skt. is gar, ga- gar-mi (vigilo); cf. éyep-o1s, ~yep-EOopat, etc.) I. Act. to awaken, wake up, rouse, stir, éy. Twa ée€ bnvov Il. 5. 413, etc.; Tods 3... imvd- ovras éyelpe 24. 344; &y. Twa ebvas Eur. H. F. 1050; and simply, éy. twa Aesch. Eum. 140, etc. 2. to rouse, stir up, Il. 5. 208: éwet puv Eyeipe Ards vdos 15. 242; eyelpew “Apna to stir the fight, 2. 440, etc. ; ey. haxny, gpvromy, etc., (cf. dyelpw), 13. 778., 5. 490, etc. ; Tpwerorv Ovpdy ey. (v. 1. dyeipar) 5.510; ey. Twa ent Epyov Hes. Op. 20; éx5oxiv rousod mupds ey. to wake up the bale-sfire, Aesch. Ag. 299 ; Aapndda ey. Ar. Ran. 340; and often metaph., éy. dorddv, Avpay, péAos, Opivov Pind. P. 9. 18, N. to. 39, Cratin. Tpop. I0, Soph. O. C. 1779. 3. to raise from the dead, often in N.T.; or from a sick bed, Ep. Jacob. 5. 15. 4, to raise or erect a building, Call. Ap.63, Hyperid. ap. Poll. 7. 125, N. T. II. Pass., with the pf. act. éyp7j- ‘yopa to wake, Od. 20. 100, Hdt. 4.9, etc.; éypero & ef tmvov Il. 2. 41; in aor. also to keep watch or vigil, duct mupiy .. eypero dads 7. 434: —in pf. zo be awake, éypnydpbact 10. 419; eyphyop0e be awake, 7. 371., 18. 299, (whereas éypeo is wake up, awake, Od. 15. 46); eypiyopas #) kaBevdes; Plat. Prot. 310 B; (@ca nal éypryopuia Id. Legg. 809 D; kat éppdver'eat eypyyépe Xen. Cyr. I. 4, 20, etc.:—so not of persons, éyerpouévov Xepdvos arising, Hdt. 7. 49, 1, cf. 148; &ypnyopds opd- vnpa Aesch. Eum. 706; éyp. rd mia Id. Ag. 346, etc. 2. to rouse or stir oneself, be excited by passion, etc., Hes. Sc. 176, Dem. 439. I: c, inf, éypyeppévor Hoav pr dviévar Td “AOnvalaw they were en- couraged to prevent the departure of the Athenians, Thuc. 7. 51. éyevro, v. sub yiryvopat. eyepor-Bons, ov, 6, raising the cry, loud-voiced, Epigr. Gr. 928. 4. éyepat-Bonros, ov, waking one by crowing, Nonn. Jo. 13. 160. éyepot-Bporos, ov, awakening men, Procl. H. 18. abe hits wros, 6, 4, laughter-stirring, Anth. P. 11. 60. Zyepot-Oéarpos, ov, exciting the theatre, Anth. Plan. 361. éyepot-payas, ov, 6, battle-stirring, Anth.P. 7.424; fem.—yq, 6, 122. €yepat-po00s, ov, =foreg., Opp. C. 1. 207, Nonn. D. 3. 39. éyépotpos, ov, from which one wakes, trvos, opp. to the sleep of death, Theocr. 24. 7; so, &yepros mas Umvos Arist. Somn. 1, 12. éyepat-voos, ov, contr. —vous, ovy, soul-stirring, Nonn. Jo. 4. 184. €yepors, ews, 9, a waking from sleep, Hipp. Coac. 129; so, 7 Tov Ovpov @y. Plat. Tim. 70 C, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 8, to:—awaking from death, Ev. Matth. 27. 53. 2. a raising, building up, recxiow Hdn, 8.5, cf. Joseph. A. J. 8. 5, 3. éyepot-pars, és, light-stirring, ey. AOos the flint, Anth. P. 6. 5. éyepot-xopos, ov, leading the dance, Opp.C. 4. 236. éyepréov, verb. Adj. one must raise, Eur. Rhes. 690. éyeprnptov, 7d, an excitement, Ael. V. H. 2. 44. éyeprt [1], Adv. eagerly, busily, Soph. Ant, 413 : wakefully, Eur. Rhes. 524. éyeprixés, 4, dv, waking, stirring, twos Plat. Rep. 523 E, 524 D. IT. in Gramm. éyeprixa are enclitics, which change the grave accent of the preceding word into the acute, A, B, 1147. éyeprés, 7, &, v. sub éyépatpos, . éynyeppat, v. sub eye/po. éynpa, v. sub -yypacra. éynabappota, fut. dow, to fit in, Ar, Lys. 682. 403 éyxaPopar, fut. -eSoduar: Dep.:—éo sit or settle oneself in, Ar. Eccl. 23; els @axoy Ar. Ran. 1523 :—to encamp in a place, Thuc. 3. I., 4. 2. —V. sub xadélopa. éyxabe(pyw and —yvipr, fut. fw, to shut up, enclose, Plut. 2.951 B. éykdberos, ov, (éyxabinut) put in secretly, suborned, Plat. Ax. 368 E, Polyb. 13.5, 1:—Adv. -rws, Diod. 16. 68. II. of a child, eio- moinrés, Hyperid. ap. Phryn. 333. éykabevSa, fut. -evdjow, to sleep among, Arist. H. A. 9. 3,3 (Schneid: ovyk-). 2. generally, to lie abed, Ar. Lys. 614. éyxabew, to boil in anything, Hipp. 651. 48. éykaOnBdo, fut. now, to pass one’s youth in, Eur. Hipp..1096. éykdOnpat, Dep. to sit in or on, Xen. Eq. 1, 11: to lie in ambush, Ar. Ach. 343, Thesm, 600, Aeschin., etc.; of garrisons, fo lie in a place, Polyb. 17. 11,6: to lie couched in, as the men in the Trojan horse, Plat. Theaet. 184 D; éyx. peragd .. Id. Parm. 156 D. ) éykaiSpte, fut. vow [0], fo erect or set up in, dyadpa eyx. xOovt Eur. I. T. 978 :—Pass., Philox. in Com. Gr. 3. p. 636, Arist. Mund. 6, 5. éykaife, Ion. -Katife, fut. Att. 1@, to seat in or upon, els Opdvoy Plat. Rep. 553. C; éy«. orparidy ev xwpiy tivi to station a force in a place, Polyb. 16. 37, 4:—so.in aor. I med., vadv éyxaOeicaro (vulg. éyxabicaro, as Joseph. B. J. 5.1, 2, éyxa@todpevor Ta Orda) founded a temple there, Eur. Hipp. 31. II. intr. ¢o sit in or upon, Opdv Pind. P. 4. 272; but (in Med.), éyariec@ar eis Opdvor to take one’s seat on.., Hdt. 5. 26. éykaGinpr, to let down, eis rowoy Ar. Lys. 308: to send in as a garti- son, eis THy méAuy Plut. Pyrrh. 11. II. to commit, entrust, Zebs éyxabier (for -inor) Aogia Geomicpara Aesch. Fr. 82. - ykdOopa, 76, a sitting in, esp. in a vapour-bath, Diosc. 3.127. II, dwelling on a syllable in pronunciation, Dion, H. de Comp. 20, 22, fin. éykabtopés, 6, a lying in wait, Eccl. II. =foreg. 11, Dion. H. de Dem. 43. éyxabiornpt, fut.-orhow, to place or establish in, as king or chief, o% .. Muehvas éyxaragriow médw Eur. 1. T. 982; eyx. teva tyyeudva Thuc. 1. 4, Dem. 214. 20: also to place as a garrison in a place, Dem. 114. Ig, etc.: of institutions, éy«. Syuoxpariay Arr. An. I. 18, 3. II. Pass., with aor, 2, pf. and plqpf. act., to be established as tyrant in a place, Lys. 196. 9, cf. Thuc. 1.122; so, adAnrav voum eyabecturwv Id. 5. 70. éykaPopdw, to look closely into, Twos TH mpoowmy Plut. Demetr. 38 ; absol., Plat. Epin. ggo E. IL. to remark something in a person or thing, Plut. Brut. 16. éykafoppifopar, Med. to run into harbour, come to anchor, airéceé Thuc. 4.1, cf. Dio C, 48. 49; so aor. pass., Arr. An. 2. 20, 8. éyka0dppiots, ews, 7, a putting into harbour, Arr. An. 1. 18, 9. eynaSuppito, to riot or revel in, rpupais Eur. Tro. 957. éykatvia, 74, (xarvds) a feast of renovation or consecration, LXX (Dan. 3. 2): esp. that established by Judas Macc. at the re-consecration of the Temple, Ev. Jo. 10. 22, cf. éyxaunopds. II. a name for Easter, Eccl. - éykowwife, to innovate, Eust. Opusc. 277. 84. II. to renovate; consecrate, inaugurate, LXX (1 Regg. 11.14, al.) :—Pass., Ep. Hebr. 9. 18; so éyxauwtaCoua, C. 1. 8660. . éykawiopos, 6, consecration, Lxx (1 Macc. 4. 56, cf. éyxalma): also éycatvors, %, and éykatvuopa, 7d, LXXx. II. spiritual renewal, Basil. €yxatpla, %, of dimes, opp. to dxaipia, Plat. Polit. 305 D. éykatpos, ov, in fit time, seasonable, Plat. Polit. 282 E, Legg. 928 A. : éykalo, fut.—xavow, to burn or heat in, 6Bedot &yxexavpeévor mpi Bur. Cycl. 393. 2. to paint in encaustic, i.e. with colours mixed with wax, Lat. Mcausta pingere, Lxx (2 Macc. 2. 29), cf. Plin. 35, 39 sq., Dict. of Antiqq. p. 685. II. to make a fire in, wip Plut. Alex. 243 olor éyeadpevor heated chambers, Luc. V. H. 2. 11. éykaixée, to behave badly in a thing, évexdenoay 7d wépmey they culpa- bly omitted to send, Polyb. 4. 19, 10; often in Lxx; cf. éxkakéw, éykiihéw, fut. éyxadéow: pf. &yxéxAnka:—to call in, &yx. xpéos to call in a debt, Isocr. 402 C, cf. 367 C, Xen. An. 7. 7, 33, Dem, 877. 21., 949. I:—generally, to d d as one’s due, Lys. 98. 37. 2. to bring a charge or accusation against a person:—Construct,: c. dat. pers. et acc. rei, to bring as an accusation against one, charge something upon one, pdvoy yx. tut Soph. El. 778, Plat. Apol. 26 C, etc. ; aye. &yxAnua mit Hyperid. Lyc. 14, Euxen. 35; also, xéAov kar’ abra&y éyx. Soph. Ph, 328 ;—foll. by a relat. clause, éy«. Tut S7t.. Xen. An. 7.5, 73 ce inf., évexdAer- Tots "AOnvators mapaBaivey Thuc. 4. 123; ¢. part., éyx. avrois dueAotow Plat. Prot. 346 A; often also c. dat. pers. only, Zo accuse, Antipho 126. 8, Plat. Crito 50 C, etc. :—c. acc, rei only, zo bring as a charge, ei 5é Tt GAAO évexddouv Thue. 5. 46, cf. 6. 53; 70 veixos éynaheiv to throw the blame of quarrel on another, Soph, O. T. 702: absol., of &yxadéoavres Arist. Rhet. Al. 30, 11 :—rarely c. gen. rei, THs Bpaddryros abrots évexdder Plut. Aristid. 10:—Pass., éyadetrat 7H TUXD a charge is brought against.., Arist. Eth. N. 4. 1, 21: cf. éy«An- pa. 8. as law-term, ¢o prosecute, Dem. 907. 6; éyx. dixny tit Id. 1014. 8; éyx. rit rept twos Isocr. 48 C. 4, in Med. like Act. to accuse, Twi Arist, Eth. N, 4. 1, 2: to sey | a charge, mpés Twa Eur. Melanipp. 9. IL. ¢o call in, Strabo 649. éykaAivSéopat, Pass. to roll about in, 7H Yappw Aretae, Cur. M. Ac. 1. 2: to be busied among, rats Arxvetais Ath. 262 B. tyxadAwmiLopat, Pass. to take pride or pleasure in, ois aiaxpots Plut. Ant. 36, cf. Ael. V. H. 9. 35 :—for Dion. H. de Dem. 4, v. sub éyoAmi{a, éykadAd , 76, an ornament, decoration, Thuc. 2. 62. éy-kado-oxeAys, 5, having his legs in the stocks, Com. ap. Hesych. éykaduppes, 6, a covering, wrapping up, Ar. Av. 1496. éykddAunripta, 74, the veiling-feast, opp.to dvaxadumrnpia, Philostr.611. éykdAvmre, fut. yw, to veil in, hide closely, Trag. ap. Stob, Ecl. 1, 120: to wrap up, Ar, Ran. g11:—Pass. to be veiled or or baat Ar. Pl. 714, 2 7 . 404 Plat. Phaedr. 243 B:-to be wrapt up (as for sleep), Xen. An. 4. 5, 19; eyrexahuupévos Aéyos, a noted fallacy in Diog. L. 7. 82. il. Med. to hide oneself, hide one’s face, caput obvolvere, Ar. Pl. 707, etc. ; éyxadumropevos Kadevdew Andoc. 3.26; of persons at the point of death, Xen. Cyr. 8. 7, 26, Plat. Phaedo 118 A, etc. 2. as a mark of shame, Ib. 117 C, Dem. 1485.9; éyxadvpacGat éni run Acschin, 42. 10 :—hence, c. acc. pers., to feel shame before a person, Ocods éyxadur- Tépevos Gv éueddc Spacew App. Civ. 1. 16. éydAuipis, ews, %, a hiding one’s face in shame, cited from Strabo, éykduve, fut. —xapodpat, to grow weary in or at a thing, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1.15; revi Joseph. B. J. 3. 10, 2. éykdprrrw, fat. ~w, to bend in, bend, Xen. Eq. 1, 8. éykiivaocw, to pour in wine, éykdvagov Eur. Cycl. 152, Ar. Eq. 105. €yxdivixdouar, Dep, to make a sound on a thing, éyx. nbxAw to blow on a conch, Theocr. 9, 27. €ykavOls, 7), a tumour in the inner corner of the eye, Galen. éykdrrw, fut. yw: pf. eyeextipa :—to gulp in greedily, snap up, Ar. Pax 7, Stratt. Anuy. 2; ef the Athenian dicasts, who Aept the small coin in which their fee was paid in their mouth, Ar. Vesp. 791, Eccl. 815, cf. Hermipp. @cot 2, Alex. AcByr. 1. 73 yx. aidépa yvdas to hold one’s breath, Eur, Cycl. 629 :—cf. éyicaqos. éykapSiatos, a, ov, =sq., Iambl. Myst, 2. 7. €ydpBvos, ov, in the heart, &yxdpd.ov tori (or ylyverat) rh por it goes to my heart, Democr. ap. Stob. 310. 40, cf. Diod. 1. 45. II. éy- kdpdiov, 76, the heart or core of wood, Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 5. ykapos, 6, (xdp, xdpa) the brain, like éyxépados, Alcac. in Anth, P. 9. 519, 3, Lyc. 1104. éykapmife, to put one in enjoyment of, twds Synes. 135 B. éykdpmuos, ov, of fruit, containing seed within it, Hipp. 360. 11. éykaptos, ov, containing fruit, rddufw &yxdpros x8ovds Soph. O. T. 25: fruitful, oméppara Plat. Phaedr. 276 B; by TéAn éyxapma, in Soph. Tr. 238, is prob. meant a tithe of the produce of the réuevos to be paid to Zeus, cf. v. 754. 2. fruitful, useful, Plut. 776 B. II. €yxapra, 74, festoons of fruit on friezes or the capitals of columns, Lat. encarpa, Vitruv. 4. I. Poros, a, ov, cross, athwart, oblique, Lat. transversus, Thuc. 2. 76., 6. 99; of the ecliptic, Arist. Mund. 2, 7:—Adv. -ws, Eccl. V. émucdp- ‘aos sub fin. éykaprepéw, fut. fow, co persevere or persist in a thing, wx Xen. Mem, 2. 6,22; éyeaprepeiy [rovros] & éyywre Thuc. 2.61; mpds 7 Plut. 2. 987 E. 2. :c, acc, to await stedfastly, Odvaroy Eur. H. F. 1351, Andr, 262. 3. absol. to hold out, remain firm under sufferings, Plut. Ages. II, etc. €yxds, Adv. deep in, prob. 1. Hipp. V. C. 899, cf. Galen. Lex. p. 466, eykdira, 74, (ev) the inwards, entrails, bowels, also évrepa, Lat. ixites- tina, Hom., always in acc., except dat. éy«aot in Il. 11, 438 :—a nom. sing. éyxarov in Luc. Lexiph. 3. . , éykataBatve, to go down into, put oneself in, c. acc,, KpokwToy omdp- yavov éyxaréBa Pind. N. 1.583 c. dat., Diod, 14. 28. éyk 3, to throw down into, divp Ap. Rh, 1. 1239, ef. Il. 12. 206. éykataBidw, to pass one’s life in, Plut. 2. 783 D, Longin. 44. 11. éyka: éxw, to wet or soak with, Geop. 13.1, 7. €éykay adopat, Pass. to penetrate deeply, Democr. ap. Plut. 2. 735 A. éykataynpacke, fut. doouat,=eyynpdckw, to grow old in, & mevig Plut. Phoc. 30: to become inveterate in, Dinarch. 105. 20. éykaraypade, to write down among, Acl. ap. Suid. II, to mark in or upon, Nilus ap. Phot. Bibl. p. 514. éykardyopat, Pass, to put up at a place, Poll. 1. 73. ; éykatadapdtw, fo overpower: Pass., tnd Kova &yxaradapacbcis Hipp. 1229 E. éykataSap0dve, to sleep in, Plut. 2. 647 F. a thing, émt rut Ib. 688 E. éykaradéw, fut. -dow, to bind fast in, Tw Plat. Phaedo 84 A. : éykaraduve, aor. —xaréduv, of the sun, to set upon a place (which, of course, has a westerly aspect), Hipp. Aér. 283: fo creep into, vdaow Anth. P. 7. 532; puxév Opp. H. 1.153. r ‘ éykaraled , to associate with, adapt to, véas BovAds véooww éy- rarafevéas tpéros Soph. Aj. 736: _éykar w, fut, -Otivovpat, to die in, Ap. Rh, 2. 834. éykarakate, fut. -Kavow, to burn in, Luc. Pisc. 52. , Pass. to lie in, c. dat., Theogn. 1191. bed, sleep, mapa rim Ar. Pl. 742. d “enim thai fut. ek to mix in ot among, cited from Eust. éykaraxAeirréov, verb. Adj. one must shut up in, Geop. 19. 3, I. é ‘0s, ov, shut up in a place, Epiphan, — : éykarakhelw, to shut up in, enclose, rwa 7G ve@ Alex. Arist. Probl. 24. 13 :—Pass., Hipp. Acut. 385, Arist. Meteor. 3. 6, 10, al, : éykataxAlyw [7], Zo to ‘bed in a place, Ar. Pl. 62 1:—Pass. to lie down in, Id. Av. 122; {ee acheaea, eis 70 iepdy Hyperid. Euxen. 27. éycarakoupdopar, = &yxorpdopat, Hat. 8. 134. ; _éycaraxpove, fo hammer in, jAovs Clem.-Al. 240. 2. éyx. Xopelay rots potas to tread a measure among them, Ar. Ran. 330. imrw, to hide in, Ti Tu Lyc. 1231; Twa BvOois in thedepths : ve, Epigr. Gr. 863. bind aree ee fut. 1 Ta to catch in a place, to hem in, Thue. | 4. 116, cf. 3. 333 eye. Twa pros to confine or trammel by oaths, édy Aoypiopds &yxaradapBavy airév Aeschin. 62. 17 :—Pass., Arist. Probl. | 20. 34. ee éycatahéyo, fut. fw, to build in, a built into a wall, Thuc. 1.93 (cf. Aéyw U, Aoyds, Aoyadqv). II. to sleep over 2. 40 lie in moAAal oTjAa éykaTedeynoav were 2. 4 - +; So ae o éyeahuis — eyxaréxo. to count or reckon among’, Luc. Paras. 3: ¢o enlist soldiers, Anth, P. 11. 265. II. Pass. ¢o lie in or on, Ep. aor. éyeaTéAexTo Ap. Rh. 4. 431. éykaréAcppa, 76, aremnant, residue, Arist.Fr.2, Epicur.ap.Diog.L. 10.50. éykarakeimw, fut. yw, to leave behind, matba Hes, Op. 376; éyx, ppoupay év rH vow Thuc, 3.51; éy«. 7d wéyTpoy, of a bee, Plat. Phaedo 91 C; hence of Pericles, 73 kevrpoy éyxarédure Tots dxpowpevors Eupol. Any. 6; eyx. riv paxatpay TH opayy Antipho 137. 28. 2. to leave in the lurch, Lat. derelinquere, Thuc. 4. 44, Plat. Symp. 179 A, Lycurg. 148. 7, etc. 38. to leave out, omit, Hdt. 3. 119. _ _ XT. Pass. to be left behind in a race, Id. 8. 59. 2. to fall short, fail, Hipp. 1 169 C. éycat-ireldw, fut. Yo, to mix in an ointment, Atmos Hipp. 402. 28. éykardAeupis, ews, 7, a forsaking, leaving behind, Eccl. II, the fact of something being left behind, v. sq. éykaraAnus, ews, , a catching or being caught in a place, a being hemmed in, interception, Thuc. 5. 72: suppression of urine, Hipp, 1169 E (where however the context requires éyardAeufis). éykataditrdéve, =éyxaradeinw, Hipp. Aph. 1244, Arist, Rhet. I. 10, 4. éykarahoyiLoua, Dep. to reckon in or among, Isae. 88. 36. éykatapéve, to remain in, Theophr. H. P. 1. 3, 4, etc. éykataptyvupat, Pass. to be mixed in or with, éyxatapeyvipervos véart Hipp. Aér. 283; éyratapeprypéva Tois Aeyouévars Isocr. 312 B, éyxatavatw, aor. I -evacca, fo make to dwell in, obpay@ twa Ap. Rh. 3. 116, Moero ap. Ath. 491 C. éykatavrAéw, fo wash over with a thing, Hippiatr. éykatavrAnots, ews, , a washing over with water, Hipp. Praec. 24. éyxaratrailw, to mock at, Twi Eus. H. E. 2. 13 fin,, Cyril, éykaramdéhAopat, Ep. aor. 2 éyxarémadto: Pass. fo leap down into, Opp. H. 4. 661. éykaramqyvupt, fut. -myifw, to thrust firmly in, fipos .. kovde@ ey- warénng Od. 11. 98 ; év 5¢ oxddonas karénnger planted or fixed them in, Il. 9. 350; Tiv Kepadiy Sédpart ey. having fixed it on, Hdn. 1.13. éykaratipmpnpt, fut. —zphow, to set on fire, Phalar. Ep. 5. p. 28. éykatamtvopar, Pass. to be swallowed up as by a flood, Philo 2. 300, etc. éykaramimr, poét. aor. évinanmecor, to fall or throw oneself upon, A€xrpos Ap. Rh, 3. 655, Anth. P. g. 82. éykaratAéKkw, fut. -rAétw, to interweave, entwine, Xen. Cyn. 9, 12. éykaramoots, a drinking, swallowing up, Philo 1,116. €ykar-ptOpéopar, Pass. fo be counted in or among, Arist. Soph, Elench. 5, 11, Clem. Al. 263. éykatappdmre, fut. yw, to sew in, Xen. Cyn. 6, 1. éyxatappinre, to throw down into, prob. |, Heliod. 9. 5. éykaracBévvupr or Uw, fo quench in a thing, Plut. 2.975 B. éykatacymopat, Pass. fo grow rotten or corrupt in, Stob. 237. 58. éykarackevat, to prepare in a place, év rais wéAeot mpodéras Diod, 16. 54; but the Prep, éy oft. has little force, Id. 2. 24., 14. QI. éykardoxevos, ov, artificially wrought, of style, opp. to dmAods, Dion. H. de Comp. 118. Adv. -ws, Sext. Emp. M. 2. 56 éykatackymre, fut. yw, fo fall upon, of lightning, eis twa Dio C. 49- 15: of epidemics, to break out among, Thuc. 2. 47. II. trans. to hurl down among or upon, properly of lightning, éynardoxnpor Bédos Soph, Tr, 1087; wax@v, & Mepoas éyxarécunyer Beds Aesch, Pers, 514. eykardonnipis, ews, 7, a sudden attack, Diosc. 7. 4. éykatackippoopat, Pass. fo be engrained in, Hipparch. ap, Stob. 575. 1. eykataonelpw, to disperse in or among, Plut. Thes. 3, etc. éykatacmopa, 7), sowing among, Clem. Al. 902. eykaraorpite, fut. {w, to fix firmly in, Cornut. N. D. 6, in Pass. éykaracroixerda, fut. dow, to implant as a principle in (cf. éupvawa), mii Tt Plut. Lyc. 13., 2. 353 E. éyxaraotpépopar, Pass. to turn and run emended by Meineke, eykatacharre, to slaughter in, rov vidy 7® xdATw Plot, Dem. 31. éykatacydle, to cut a slit in, cited from Diosc. éykatarapicow, to throw into confusion, Plut. 2. 592 B. éykatardoow, Att. -rrw, fut. éw, to arrange or place in, Longin. 10. 7, etc. II. to approve, sanction, Clem. Al. 227. éykatarépve, to cut up the foetus in the womb, Hipp. 914 C. to cut up among a number, Plat. Rep. 565 D, éykatarlOnur, fut. -Ojow, to lay or put in, *EpixOinoy .. vhw eyxaréOnie Epigr. Gr. 1046. only in Med., indvra réq eyndrOeo néAm@ put the band upon or round thy waist, Il. 14. 219, cf. 223; argv &@ eyxdrOero Oup® stored up, de- vised mischief in his heart, like BaéAAecOat év? gpect, Od, 23. 223; TeAa- pdva & eyedrOero réxvy stored up the belt in his art, designed it by. his art, Od. 11. 614; od radr’ énérOco Buus store it up in thy heart, Hes. Op, 27; orépvos éynaréGevro Simon. 85; Gea ppecty éyxaTaborro BovAay Theocr. 17. 14; yAupidas .. évucdrOero veupy Ap. Rh. 3. 282: —Cf, eioxararibnu. j éykaraTopy, 7), a cutting up of the foetus in the womb, Hipp. 914 sq. éykararpiBopat [@], to be practised in, év mpaypacw Syinae ae ar eykaradAcya, fut. fw, to burn in, rémw Geop. 9. 6, 2. éykatapucde, to blow up, Hippiatr. p. 87. > eykaradiretw, to sow, plant in, ti 7: Clem, Al. 13. éykaraxéw, fut. 6%, fo pour out besides, Anth, P. append. 285. éykaraxpiv, to smear over, Diosc. Parab, 1. 1 24. €ykataX@wipt, fo overwhelm, rid tu Dion. H. g. 21, etc. €ykaraxwpifw, fut. Att. 1, to place in, Origen. éyraretAéo at, Pass. to be cooped up in, Arist. Mund, 4, 29. eykareddAAopar, fut. -adodua, Dep. to leap into, Opp. C. 3. 120. €ykarexw, to contain within, cpa képns .. TouBos 6S éyx. Epigr. Gr. 324. 2 :—Pass. to be so contained, Plut. 2. 6g F. back, Antiph, Incert. 7, 2s ai. twi 7 Orph. H. 24. 6; go. II. Hom. eycaTi\rAw — eykrive. éykaridAw, =éeyxareAéw, Hipp. 672. 6. éykaTiAhorre, fut. Yo, to scoff at, bpiv éyxariAAdyas péya Aesch. Eum. 113, cf. Fr. 225. éykiiréets, eooa, ev, (€yxara) containing or enclosing intestines, expt~ pados Nic. Ther. 580. éykaroucéw, fo dwell in, Hdt. 4. 204; ddpors Eur. Fr. 188, éykarouclfo, fut. (cc, to settle or place in or on, Luc. Asin. 25 :—metaph. to implant, Plut. 2. 779 F. éykaroucoSopéw, to build in a place, Thuc. 3. 18. II. to build in, immure, eis Epnpov oixiay Aeschin. 26, 8 :—metaph, in Pass., 6 dap éy rois doi éyxatwxoddunrat Arist. de An. 2. 8, 9. éykdroukos, ov, dwelling therein, indwelling, Schol. Il. 2.125. éykatov, v. sub éyxara, 4 éykarorrpifonar, Med. to look at oneself in, Aexdvy Artemid. 3. 30. éykaropvoce, Att. -trw, fo bury in, Dion. H. de Rhet. 6. 5. éykaroxéw, (xdéroxos) to be possessed, 0e@ by a god, C. I. 3163. éyxatriw, to stitch into the shoe-sole, Alex. “Icoar. 1.8. éykatabns, es, (eldos) like the entrails, Schol. Ar. Eq. 1176. éykavdéw, to be in stalk, Arist. Probl. 20. 30, Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 2. éyxaupa, 74, (yxalw) a mark burnt in, brand, Plat. Tim. 26C: a sore From burning, Luc. D. Deor. 13. 2. II. an encaustic picture (cf. éyxaiw), Dicaearch, in Creuzer’s Mel. 3. p. 186, Plut. 2. 759 C. IIt. Jire-wood, kindlings, Soph, Fr. 218. éykavois, ews, , encaustic painting, C. 1. 2297. Il. inflam- mation, Diosc. 5. 21, Plut. 2. 127 B. éykavoris, ov, 6, an encaustic painter (cf. éyxaiw), Plut. 2. 348 E; dyadparorowds éyx, C. I. 6351:—also éykaurhs, Ib. (addend.) 4958 c. éykavoriés, 9, dv, of or for burning in: &yr. (sc..téxvn) the art of encaustic painting (cf. éycalw), Plin. H. N. 35. 39. éykaverros, ov, (€yxalw) burnt in, painted in encaustic, Martial. 4. 47: 7) éykavaorov an encaustic picture, Plin. H. N. 35. 40. ai. éyxavorov, 76, purple ink, with which the Roman emperors signed their edicts, Lat. encaustum, Cod. Justin. éykavxdopar, Dep. to pride oneself in, év rut LXX (Ps. 73. 4), Aesop. €ykahos, ov, (yxdntw) a mouthful, morsel, Eupol. Incert. 53. éykaipixiSados, ov, (Kidadov) onion-eating, Luc. Lexiph. 10; but prob. f. 1. for éyxayumnSados, v. kaymndados. €ywetpar, fut. —ceivouar: used as Pass. of évrlOnue: T. to lie in, be wrapped in, énet od eyxeicea abrois [rots eipagt] Il, 22. 513; so Hdt. 2. 73 (v.1. éoxeuévov) ; simply fo be in, dpOadpos ees évéxerto peramy Hes, Th. 145. 2. eyxeoOai rt to be involved in, Lat. versari in .., 760 Archil. 77; BAdBats Soph. Ph. 1318; pdxOors Eur. Ion 181; woAAais guppopais Id. Hel. 269 :—c. acc., pedcd@vas Eyxerpat I have cares laid on me, Ap. Rh. 2. 627. 3. absol. zo be inserted, Plat. Crat. 402 E, Rep. 616 D. II. 4o press upon, esp. of troops pressing upon a defeated or retreating enemy, Lat. urgere, instare, Thuc. I. 49, 144, etc.: then of opponents in politics or argument, évésetvro TO TlepiwAet Id. 2. 59, cf. 5. 43, etc. :—often with an Adj. or Adv., moAAds évexerto A€yov was very urgent, Hdt. 7. 158, cf. Thuc. 4. 22; odds Tois cupBeBnkdar eyxerrat he insists much upon .. , Dem. 294. 23; ayav éyx. Twi to be vehement against one, Ar. Ach. 309; ioxupds éyx. Thuc. 1.69; Bapds éyxeOar Dion. H. 6. 62; bros &yxecOai Tit fo be all devoted to one, in love with him, Theocr. 3. 33. III. to be upon, 6 5€ of rept rogot .. évéxerro, of a sandal, C. I. 1046. 26. éykelpw, only once, in pf. pass: part., @ykexapuév@ xapa with shorn head, Eur. El. 108; v. Schiaf. Mel. p. 78. éyKéAdBos, ov, buzzing, like BoyBvAuos, Schol. Ar. Nub. 159, etc. éykéAeupa, or -evopa, 76, an encouragement, cheer, Xen. Cyn. 6, 24, Cic. Att. 6. 1, 8. Pe ews, }, =foreg., Themist. 232 B; é¢ éyx. by command, C. 1. 5892. éykeAevopds, 6,=foreg., Arr. An. 2. 21, 14. éykehevortixés, 4, dv, encouraging, Max. Tyr. Diss. 23. éykéAevoros, ov, urged on, bidden, commanded, Xen. An. 1. 3, 13- éykeAevw, to urge on, cheer on, Aesch. Pr. 72; yx. xvot Xen. Cyn. 9 7:—so also in Med., Tim. Locr, 104 A, Dion. H. 3. 20, etc.; 7d moAepucdv éyxeAeveo@at to sound a charge, Plut. Arist. 21, cf. Pomp. 7o. 2. in Med. also, to command, C. I. 2060, 23. éykéAAw, fo fit into, as a socket, Hipp. Fract. 771. éykévrpta, Ta, (xévrpov) spurs, Hesych. éykevrptfw, to goad or spur on, LXXx (Sap. 16, 11) in Pass. II. of plants, to inoculate, ingraft, Theophr. H. P. 2. 2,5, etc.; also éykevréw, Eust. 1308. 62. éyxevtpis, (os, 7, (xévrpov) a sting, Ar. Vesp. 427. 2. a goad, Xen. Cyn. 6, 1, Plat. Com. ‘Eopr. 14: also, a spur, Pherecr. Aovaod. Io. 3. a pointed stile for writing, cited from Poll. 4. a spike worn on the leg for climbing, wepiOépevor .. éyxevrpidas dvadpapeiy eis Tovs Toixous Arist. Fr. 73, cf. Aristaen, Ep. 1. 20. éykévtpiots, ews, %), the inoculation or grafting of trees, Julian. p. 34: ‘so, €ykevtptopés, 6, Arist. Plant. 1. 6, 2, Geop. 4, 12. éykevtpos, ov, furnished with a point or sting, Arist. H. A. 9. 41, 11. éykevtpow, fo thrust in a sting: to fix firmly in, Hesych. éykepavvipt or —vw: fut. dow [a]:—to mix in, mix, esp. wine, ofvdy 7 éykepacaca meiy Il. 8.189; rpels udvous kparhpas éyrepavyve Eubul. Beperd. 1. I (cf. eyxipynuc); eye. Te eis Te Plat. Crat. 427 C :—Med. to mix for oneself, and metaph. fo concoct, mpryypara péyada Hdt. 5. 124; eyxepacacba wadidy to mix in a little amusement, Plat, Polit. 268 D. €yképactos, ov, mixed, blended, Plut. 2. 660 C. éykeptopéw, fo abuse, mock at, Twi Eur. I. A. 1006. ‘€yképxva, to make hoarse, Hipp. Acut. 393. 405 éyxedaXis, (Sos, }, the cerebellum, Galen.: cf. mapeyrepaXis. éykedadirys, ov, 6, of the brain, pvedds Galen, 4. p. 486. éyképaidos, ov, (kepadnh) within the head: as Subst., éyxé¢:ados (sub. puedés), 6, I. the brain, Il. 3. 300, Od. 9. 458, etc.; Tov eyné- gpadov oeceicbat At. Nub. 1276; 6 eye. éorw 6 rds alabhoes mapéxov Tod dxovew KTA. Plat. Phaedo 96 B, cf. Arist. de Sens. 2, 20, al., cf. éyapos. IL. the edible pith of young palm-shoots, Xen. An. 2. 3, 10. III. Ards éyxépados, proverb. of rare and costly food, Ephipp. Kv6. 2, cf. Ath. 529 D. éykéxoba, v. sub éyy ew. eykexprpevos, v. sub éyxpdo. éykndSevw, to bury in a place, Lxx (4 Macc. 17. 9), Joseph. A. J.9.5, 3. éyknpdw, to wax over, rub with wax, Lat. incerare, Geop. 10. 21, 5. éyKtWipifo, fut. low, to play the harp among, tit h. Hom. Ap. 201; péow tuart at mid-day, Id. Merc. 17. éykixpnpt, =éyxepdvvuys, in the Dor. imperat. éy«txpa, quoted from Sophron in E, M, 423, and Hesych. éynrAucifa, (KiAf) to play the Cicilian to one, tuvt, i.e. to cheat, Pherecr, Incert. 42 :—Dep. éyxtAixetopat, Suid. s. v. KeAixos tparyos. éy«ivéopat, Med. to disturb, trouble, rive Ar. Fr. 56. éynivijpor, Pass. to be disturbed, Q. Sm. 13. 245. éykipvnpt, post. for éyxepayvups, to mix by pouring in, xpnrnpa Pind. N. 9. 120; év 8% xipvais olvoy (Aeol. for &ysipvas) Alcae. 34: Pass., év 3 éxipvaro olvos Com. in Meineke 4. p. 676. ; éyxippos, oy, pale-yellow, Diosc. 1. 12. éykioode, to have yearnings like one pregnant, LXx (Gen. 30. 39). c. ace. to conceive, ppévnpa Epiphan.; ¢@dvov Method. ap. Phot. éykiooevopat, Pass. fo ¢wine like ivy round, tee Hipp. 278. 26. éykioonots, ews, %, impregnation, Zonar. 602: vulg. éyxioowots. éykAaotpibia, wy, 7a, ear-rings, Poll. 5. 97. éykAdo, v. évixAde. ‘eykAciopos, 6, a shutting up, keeping close, Eust. 1391. 63. éykAeroréov, verb. Adj. one must shut up, Geop. 14. 7, 18. éykAelw, Ion. —KAniw, Att. -«Aq@, Ep. évukAelw Ap. Rh. 2. 1029 :—/#o shut in, close, bkaws Tas wiAas &yxAnloce Hat. 4.78; Odpa eyeexAnpevn Plat. Prot. 314 D. II. to shut or confine within, épxéav &yKe- KAnuévos (for évrds Epxéoy kexAzpevos), Soph, Aj.1274; Sépmors eyxe- «Anpévos Id. Tr. 5'79:—generally to shut up, confine, yA@ooay &ykAgjoas éxet Id. Ant. 180; ef pi) yA@ooar eyxArjor PdBos Ib. 505 ; o7dpa EKA. Eur. Hec. 1284. III. Med. to shut oneself up in, Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 9- 2. to shut up with oneself, Luc. Alex. 41. éyAnpa, 7d, (yadéw) an accusation, charge, complaint, Soph. Ph. 323, Tr. 361, Antipho 122. 11, etc.; éyeAnuata exe tTivbs =eyxareiv aim, Thuc. 1. 26; éyxA. motetv tt to make a thing matter of complaint, Id. 3. 433 €yeAqwara moetoOae to bring accusations, Id. 1.126; rd eykaA. Ta és TIVE complaints respecting one, Ib. 79 ; év eyeAnpate yiyve- oOa Dem. 311. 2; yiyverat or éart éyxAnua pot mpds Twa Ihave ground of complaint respecting him, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 6, Lys. 118. 10; Avewy &y- «Anya to clear away a charge, Polyb. 2. 52, 4; @yeAjpara BiadvecPac Thue. I. 140. Il. a written complaint, brought by the plaintiff to a magistrate; generally of complaints which were to lead to private or personal actions (8ieac), not public actions (ypapat); freq. in all Oratt.; y«Anua Aayxdvew Tivi to file such a complaint against .. , Dem, 912. 2, cf. 950. 21., 973. I., 1006. 16. byickipartte. =éyxadew, Joseph. Genes. 8 B, and other Byz. éyxAnparixés, 4, dv, given to accusation, litigious, Arist. Eth. N. 8.13, 4, Pol. 7.16, 3. Adv. -«@s, Eccl. éykAnpardopat, Pass. fo shoot into twigs; v. sub éiAnp-. éykAqpoy, ov, censorious, dub. in Anth. P. 5. 188. éykAnpéopat, Pass. to be assigned or planted by lot, Aci, V.H.8. ¥. éykAnpos, ov, having a lot or share in... , c. gen., 006 dpevaiwy eur, Soph. Ant. 814; Aayxely eyxAnpd Ti to have an egual share with .. , Ib. 837. 2. having a share of an inheritance, an heir, heiress, = énixdy- pos, Eur. I. T. 682; @yAnpos etvy a marriage which brings wealth, Id. Hipp. 1011; @yx«. media land possessed as an inheritance, Id, H. F. 468. éykAqots, ews, 7, accusation, Clem. Al. 145, Manetho 1. 221. ; éykAnréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be blamed, Plut. 2. 1051 C. zykAnros, ov, to be accused, Plut. 2. 1051 C, etc.: cf. ExKAnTos 2. éykAq, Att. for éyirci. : éykAtSov, Adv. leaning, bent down, h. Hom, 22; &y«Addv doce Badetv aslant or askance, Ap. Rh. 3. 1008; cf, Anth. P. 5. 250. éy«Atpa, 76, a slope, Polyb. 9. 21, 8. II. the turning, i.e. rout, of an army, Id. 1. 19, 11, Diod. 20. 12 (vulg. éexAnpa). III. in Gramm. an enclitic, Apollon. de Pron. 115. éykXive [7]: fut. -«Atva@: pf. pass. éyxéxAtuat:—to bend in or inwards, thy Kvnpny Arist. Mech. 30, 3 :—Pass., oéAn puxpov eyxexAtpeva Xen. Cyn. 5, 30; 7a éyxAbevra, opp. to Td éxnexdAtpévov, Hipp. Art. 803. 2. to make to incline, Tt els defid Plat. Rep. 436 E: Pass., eyed, els 7a Segia Arist. Physiogn. 6, 47. 8. Pass. to lean on, lean, rest. or weigh upon one, Xen. Symp. 3, 13; metaph., wévos ype eyne- «derat labour lies upon you, Il. 6, 78. 4. éyedivew variv Tin to turn one’s back towards another, Eur. Hec. 739. 5. to turn or put to flight, Lat. inclinare in fugam, Polyb. 1. 57, 8., 14. 8, 8, Ap. Rh. 1. 62 (v. 1. dyedivat).—Pass. to give way, tretxer wat Oedov &yedlverac Soph. Fr. 607. 6. in Gramm. fo throw back the accent upon the word before, Lat. inclinare, and in Pass. to be enclitic :—also to be in- lected, Dion. H. de Comp. 5. II. intr. fo incline towards, kapdia puxpov &ynr, els Tov dprotepoy paordy Arist. H. A. 1.17, 33 7) wodcreia eyed. mpos thy dAvyapxtay Id. Pol. 2. 6, 18, cf. 5. 7, 7. 2. absol. 5 to give way, flee, Xen, Hell. 7. 2, 14, etc.; also, yA. rivi to give way 406 to him, Dion. H. 5. 54;-and the sense requires rovros for rovrous in Xen. Cyr, 3. 3, 65. 3. to decline, become worse, Plut. Sull. 1, etc. éy«Ators, ws, 9, inclination, yd. AaBeiv, of the earth, Anaxag. ap. Diog. L. 2. 9; of the ecliptic (5 Aogds xdmAos), Arist. Gen. et Corr. 2. 10, 6; of ground, éyeduow éxew mpds €w Id, Pol. 7. 11, 2; eyeAloes Tis Kepadns els 7a Befia Id. Physiogn. 3, 9. 2. the inclination or slope, as of a wave, kard tiv eyed. oxvacOijvat Id, Color. 2, 4. 3. in medic. sense, displacement, Hipp. Fract. 776. II. in Gramm., 1. the mood of a verb, Dion. H. de Comp. 6, etc. 2. _ the throwing back of the accent, Lat. inclinatio, Eust. 1351. 47- €ykAtréov, verb. Adj. of @yxAive, one must use as enclitic, Schol. Hom. €yeAtrixés, 4, dv, of a word which leans (@yAlver) its accent upon the one before, enclitic, Eust. 1407. 54 :—Ady. -«@s, E. M. 124. 9. €yAovéopat, Pass. fo force one’s way or rush in, Hipp. 590. 1. eyrAvBSaLopar, Pass. to swell like waves, Hipp. 451. 49. é , €ws, 7, a swelling like waves, Democr. ap. Galen. 7. p. 441. eywAtBacrixéds, 4, év, swelling like waves, Hipp. Acut. 394. _ ytAvle, fut. vow, to rinse the inside of a thing, olve with wine, Diod. 1. or. 2. to treat by clysters, Twa Diosc. 4, 158:—Pass. to be ad- ministered as a clyster, Id. 1. 10t, etc. éycAvopa, 76, an injection, clyster, cited from Diosc. €ykAd8w, to spin or fasten to, Schol. rec. Soph. O. T. 1264. _ €yviOw, fut. ow, fo scrape or grate in, Nic. Th. 911, Al. 368. éyxvicpa, 74, a piece of meat, Argive word in Plut. 2. 296F. dyxviccw, to sleep in, Mosch, 2. 6, in poét. form évucv-. éyxotAatve, to hollow or scoop out, Hdt. 2. 73, Theophr. H. P. 5. 2, 4. éyotdvos, ov, (KorAia) in the belly:—as Subst., éyxotAca, 7a, 16 the intestines, Diod. 1. 2. the ribs of a ship, belly-timbers, Lat. inter 3 phr. H, P. 4. 2, 8, Ath, 206F. €ykoudos, ov, sinking in hollows, hollow, dpOadpoi Hipp. Progn. 37, Arist. H. A. 8. 24, 2; 7a éyoiha THs ys Plat. Phaedo 111 C. éykoupdopat, Pass. with fut. med. ¢o sleep in a place, év ommdaly Arist. Mirab. 101 ; esp. to sleep in a temple, Lat. incubare, to seek prophetic dreams or to obtain divine cure for a disease, Strabo 508, 761, Plut. 2. tog C; cf. éyearaxotudopua, éyxaraxAivm, Valck. Hat. 8. 134. 2. to sleep upon or after a meal, Hipp. Acut. 388. éykolunors, ews, 4, a sleeping in a temple (v. foreg.), Diod. 1. 53. éykoipnripios, a, ov, for sleeping on, Poll. 6, 11. éykolpatpov, 74, a counterpane, Ammon, p. 146. Perth fut. iow, to lull to sleep in .., Anth. P. 7. 260. " €yKkouctipsopat, Pass. to be luxurious as Coesyra (a female name in the Alcmaeonid family), éyxexorcupwpévn Ar. Nub. 48. _ €ykourds, ddos, , serving for a bed, Anth. P. 7. 626. éyKouréw, to sleep in or on, tivt Dio C. 65. 8. , TO, anything engraven, v.1. in LXX, éykoAamrés, dv, engraven, sculptured, Ath. 781 E, C. 1.2905 D. 11.* - éykokdtrw, fut. yw, to cut or carve upon stone Gimplying rougher work than éyyAvqwy), ey. ypdupara és tov Tapov Hdt. 1. 187; ypappara ey rérpyot, év AlOw eyxexoAapupéva Id. 2, 106, 136, al. ; emt rpirocr Id. ‘5. 593 él wivaxos Anth, P. app. 311 (in titulo); «is 7d pérwmor Plut. Pericl. 21; xara tivos Liban. éykoAnBalw, in Ar. Eq. 264, prob. to fall heavily upon, cf. Donalds. Pind. P. 8, 81 (115); though it is commonly explained to gulp down, ‘swallow up, v. Schol. ad 1, There are several v. Il. irene to glue on or to, join to, LXX (Zach. 14.5), Hero in Math. Vett. p. 265. ; Syione ov, (kédAa) adhering, fitting, Philo 1. 610. éykoAmias dvepos, a local wind blowing in a bay, Arist. Mund. 4, Io. éykoAmifa, fut. tow, to form a bay, qidy eyxoAntfovca Strabo 243. 2. to go into or follow the bay, Ib. 443. II. Med. c. pf. pass. ¢o take in one's bosom, Plut. 2.508 D: to embrace, Philo 1. 425; mepiodos moAAods Gykavas &yokmCopevy a period embracing many turns of expression, Dion, H. de Dem. 4 (vulg. éyxadAwmCopévn) ; ixO0s ey. Thi caynvy to catch fish in the belly of the net, Alciphro 1. 18. : Sethe: ov, in or on the bosom, Eccl,; éyxdAmov, 76, an ornament worn there, Byz. éyoAmé, fut. dow, to make full and round, like the folds of a robe, Orph. Arg. 1181:—Pass., &yxexoAm@a0au to be curved into a bay or bays, Lat. sinuari, Arist. Mund. 3, 9:—Med. to put in the fold of one’s robe, Dio C. 48.52: but also to have folded round one, xtrava Id. 62. 2. éycopBdopar, Med. (xduBos) to bind a thing on oneself, wear it con- stantly, Apoll. Caryst. ap. Suid., 1 Ep. Petr. §. 5, cf. omnino Phot. Epist. 156. II, Pass., =Séopat, éverkodpar (Hesych.), Epich. 4 Ahr. : DobaBua. 76, a sort of frock or apron, worn esp. by slaves to keep the éfats clean, Longus 2. 33, Eust. Opusc. 263. 57; cf. Varro ap. Non. 14. 38. Spehis i 76, a hindrance, Hesych., Euseb., etc. ‘ éykovéw, fo be quick and active, esp. in service, Hom., who uses only the part, pres., with another Verb (cf. rormvtw), eet ordpecay A€xos &yIc0- véovoat in haste, Od. 7. 340., 23. 201, Il. 24.648 :—later mostly in imperat. eyndver make haste, Soph. Aj. 988, Ar. Ach. 1088 ; éyov@pey Ib. 811; éyxovetre Trach, 1255, Eur. H. F. 5213 so, ob Oarrov eynovnoeas ; Ar. Ay. 1324:—c. acc. cogn., KéAevOov ijvmep HASes eyedver médwy hasten back the way by which thou camest, Aesch, Pr. 962 :—c. inf., Opp. H. 4.103. Rare in Prose, Luc. Gymn. 4. éycovytl, Adv. actively, vigorously, Pind. N. 3. 61. ani ‘ , Med. («oviw) to sprinkle sand over oneself after anointing, before wrestling, Xen. Symp. 3, 8, Luc. Amor. 45. , tos, }, a maid-servant, Suid.; cf. duaxovos. és, 6, a tool for cutting stone, chisel, Luc. Somn. 3. 35, 91, C. 1. 2360. 13. eycuats ~— eyxpovw. éyxomn, 7, an incision, Eust. 1404. 56, Galen. : IE. a hindrence, 1 Ep. Cor. 9. 12: an interruption, THs dppovias Dion, H. de Comp. 22; wat éyxonas confusedly, Longin. 41. éykomtdw, to labour without ceasing, C. I. 2059. 21. ; éykorros, ov, wearied, Anth. P. 6. 33, Lxx (Job 19. 2, Isai. 43. 23). II. wearisome, Lxx (Eccl. 1. 8). éyxonruxés, 4, dv, hindering, interrupting, Eust. 1216. 52, éykérrra, fut. Yu, to knock in, rarradov Theophr. SP; 3.950. II. to make an incision into, Hipp. 28. 35. III. to hinder, thwart, throw obstacles in the way of, Ti Polyb. 24.1, 12:—Pass., Ep. Rom. 15. 22. éykopdvAéw, to wrap up in coverlets, Ar. Nub. 10; for which eyKop- SvAi¢@ (Synes. p. 16 A) is f. 1. éyxopitre, to butt at, éyx. rwt mAnyny Lyc. 558. éykoopéw, fo arrange in, éykoopeire 7a. revxe .. vnt Od. 15. 218. éyKdoptos, ov, in the world, mundane, Eccl. II. orderly :— Ady. —ws, Basil. éyxoréw, to be indignant at, rt Aesch. Cho. 41, Soph. Fr. 871. éyko7npa, aros, 7d, =sq., Hesych. : éykorH O18, ews, 7, anger at one, hatred, LXX. éyxoros, ov, bearing a grudge, spiteful, malignant, arvyos Aesch. Cho. 392; of the ae ce Ib. 924, 1054: Adv., éyxérws éxew Philo 2. 520. II. Hat. uses éyxoros, 6, like «dros, as Subst., a grudge, hatred, éyxoroy éxew Twi to bear a grudge against one, 3. 59., 9. 110; twos for a thing,8.29; 5471 6.73, cf. 133 —so €yxorov, 70, Dion, H.9. 7. éyxotvAn, 7, an Athenian game, the victor in which was carried about kneeling on the palms of the other players’ hands (korvAat), Ath. 479 A, Paus. ap. Eust. 1282.55. The game was also called éy«pixddeca (Adv.), v. Hesych., Theogn. Can. p. 164. 27. éykoupds, ados, 7), a painting on the ceiling, Aesch. Fr. 139, cf. Miiller Archiiol. § 320. 4. éyxpdfe, fut. -«pdgoua: aor. évéxpiyov :—to cry aloud at one, esp. in anger, Twi Ar. Pl. 428; émi twa Thuc. 8.84; poveiy o¢d Kal éyxe- kpayés Arist. Physiogn. 6, 51. €ykpaidde, to be drunk at or with a thing, tw Hdn, 2. 10. éyxpaviov, 7d, the cerebellum, Galen. éykpaors, ews, 4, a mixing in, Theol. Arithm. p. 9. éykpaat-xodos, 6, a small fish (cf. éyypavais), Arist. H. A. 6. 15, 9. éykpareaa, 7, (&yxpirhs) mastery over, &yxp. éavrod self-control, Plat. Rep. 390 B;, éyxp. Hbovav kal émbvjudv control over them, Ib. 430E ; also, éyip. mpds 7 Isocr. 6 C, Xen. Mem. 2.1, 1; wept 7 Arist. Eth. N. 7. 4, 6. II. absol. self-control, Lat. continentia, Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 1, etc., cf. Arist. Eth. N. 7. 4. éykpdrevpa, 76, an instance of self-control, Iambl. Pyth. 17 (72). éykpireviopat, Dep. to exercise self-control, Arist. Eth. E. 2. 7, 6. €ykptiréw, to be master of, Metop. ap. Stob. 7. 38. 3 éykparyjs, és, (xpdros) in possession of power, Soph. O. T. 94. II. holding fast, xeip &yxpareardrn a hand with the firmest hold, Xen. Eq. 7, 8. 2. stout, strong, éykparel oOéver Aesch. Pr. 55; Tov &yxpa- téararov atinpov Soph. Ant. 474; &yxp. c@pa Xen. Hell. 7.1, 23. Ii. c. gen. rei, having possession of a thing, master of it, Lat. compos rei, Hdt. 8. 49., 9. 106, Soph. Ph. 75, etc.; vads éyxparh 1éda the sheet that controls the ship, Id. Ant. 715; €yxp. éavrovd master of oneself, Plat. Phaedr. 256 B, al.; eyxp. appodiciav, yaatpés, otvov, etc., Xen. Mem. I, 2, I, Oec. 12, 16. 2. absol. master of oneself, self-con- trolling, Def. Plat. 415 D ; self-disciplined, Lat. continens, Arist. Eth, N. 7-4,4,¢tc. |= IV. Adv. -rds, with a strong hand, by force, dpxew Thue, 1. 76; éyxp. éxew riv dpyhy Arist. Pol. 3. 13; 9. 2. with self-control, temperately, Plat. Legg. 710A. e€ykparyors, ews, , a holding in the breath, Diog. L. 6. 77. éykpepawipar, Pass. fo be hung up in, Geop. II. to be de- pendent upon, twds Auct, ap. Eus. P. E. 809 C. eykpi8o-nbAns, ov, 6, a dealer in &yxpldes, Ar. Fr. 252, Nicoph. Xe. 1: éyepucdSera, v. sub éyeorvan. eykptkda, to enclose as in a ring, bind as in a hoop, Hipp. 279. 54. fyeplve {a fut. —Kptvai:—to reckon in or among: to reckon as, tiv’ avip apirrov eykpivaev dv; Eur. H. F. 183 :—to admit as chosen or selected, eis Thy atpeow Plat. Legg. 755 D; els rv yepovotay Dem. 489. 19; els 7d orddiov Xen. Hell. 4. 1, 40. 2. to admit, accept, opp. to droxplyw, Plat. Legg. 936 A; év rots grdcadpos Id. Rep. 486 D, cf. Legg. 952 A, al., and v. éyxpréov :—to regard as genuine, admit, poet. ee: ; anther as classical, Suid. €yKpts, Ldos, 7, a cake made wit i if i 4; Nicoph, Xap. 8, ete. with oil and honey, also rarynvias, Stesich. €ykptors, ews, 4, (ey plve) an approval, judgment, C.1. . 17. admission of athletes to the phat tie ae Tighe 4 aria Rita % emi rods unpods yep. Alciphro 1. 30- Pack isk ov a5 es: admit, eis dptOudv twa, opp. to droxp-, éykpirnptos, a, ov, of or for admission : athletes were examined before they were I zor 2. ; Setecte, eds Ono Legs. 966 D. ; Matec Patter Sich the tok ¢ ground, eis &y wedos eyeporéoveat mocciv ae a n et to one tune, Lat. plaudere pedibus, Theocr. 18. 7 (Bgk. dyxporéovar) :—Med., rvypad 8 hoav &yxporovpevac the fists were dashing one against the other, Eur, I.'T. 1 368 II. Pass to be Sastened by nails, Philostr. 71. : : ; : Aa tan pono . knock ot hammer in, marrddous els roy Tot xov Ar. 195 i‘ : I Pra pet togat mrépuyas, of the locust, Anth. P. 7. 1954 : ace, like éyxporéw and éyxataxpovm, Ar, Ran. 374- 2. Il. a éyxp. otxot rooms where the admitted as candidates, C. I. eykpuBba — eyxadwow. €yxptBo, late form of éyxptimrw, Diod. 1. 80, Hesych. €ykpuppa, 7d, anything led, an ambuscade, Eust. 932. 17. éykpumro, fut. Yow: aor. 1 évéxpuya: aor. 2 part. fem. éyxptBodoa Apoll. 3. 13, 6:—to hide or conceal in, daddy omodiy evéxpupe pedalyp Od. 5. 488; 70 gdv é& 5éppare Aaywod Arist. H. A. 9. 33; Te ets Te Apollod. 1, 5, I, ete. 2. wdp &y«p. to keep it concealed, Ar. Av. 841. €yepipiala, intr. to keep oneself hidden, act underhand, Ar. Eq. $22, —with a play on éyxpu¢ias. éy«ptdias dpros, 6, a loaf baked in the ashes, Hipp. 356. 14, Nicostr. “Iepop. 1, Luc. D. Mort. 20. 4, etc.; cf. orodirns. éykpudros, ov, =sq., Anth, P. 5. 124. Eykpihos, ov, (xpi) hidden, concealed in, Nonn. D. 28, 295. €yxpuipis, ews, 7), a hiding in something, Arist. de Juvent. 5, 6. €ykrdopat, Dep. to acguire possessions in a foreign country, rod év Opyixy Hat. 5.23; of €ynexrnuévor foreigners who possess property ina country, opp. to dyudérat, Dem, 1208.:27. éywrepeife, to perform funeral rites upon, ryuBw Ap. Rh. 1. 1060. éy«Tmpa, 76, land held in a deme or other district by a person not be- longing to it, Andoc. 25. 20, Dem. 87. 7. €y«tyots, Dor. éyxtaois, ews, 4, tenure of land in a deme or district by a person not belonging to it, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 19:—the right of hold- ing such property, often granted as a privilege or reward to foreigners, éyxracw Sovva Decret. Byz. ap. Dem. 256. 7, cf. C. I. 1334, 1335, al. 5 civat 8 ab7@ olxias éyerHow C.1. 90, 92; cf. érepyacia ad bona th 70, a land-tax paid for the right of holding such property, C. 1. 101. 27. €ykrnTOs, 7, ov, possessed in a foreign country, Lxx (Lev. 14. 34, al.). éyxtilw, to found, build in or upon, Plut. 2. 328 E. _€ykvBepvdw, fo steer or guide in a place, Diog. L. 9. I. éyciqors, ews, 4, =eyxvors, Theophr. C. P. 1. 6, 3. éykitixdw, to mix up in, Ar. Ach. 939, in Med. éyxurcAgopat, Pass. ¢o roll or rotate in the sockets, of the joints, Hipp. eye II. in Comic sense, ¢o be taken in, obi of5° bmn eyxeKvn- Anoat Ar. Vesp. 699.—Cf. éxxveréw. éykuK«AnOpov, 7d, in Eust. 976. 15, should prob. be é*mduAnOpov, = éx- rveAnua. éykuxAnua, 76, (v. sub éxxdicAnua): but, in Arist. Oec. 2. 1, 8, seem to be personal property. éyKvKAvos, ov, also 7, ov Orph. Arg. 984: («v«Aos):—cireular, rounded, round, xopot Eur. I. T. 429, Aeschin. 2. 23; 7d éy«. o@pa Arist. Cael. 2. 3, 23 éyx. Klvnots, popd motion in a circle, Ib. 2. 12, 15.5 14, 3. Il. revolving in a cycle, periodical : at Athens, Aecroupyiat éy«. public services required regularly every year, opp. to those required at uncertain times (like the tpimpapxia), Dem. 463. 13, v. Wolf prolog. Lept. Ixxxvisq.; €yx. dixa:a rights common to all citizens, Dem. 792. 16. III. general, ordinary, every-day, Lat. quotidianus, év rots éyxurdrtos nal rots Kad’ jyépay yyvouévots Isocr. 176 C, cf. Arist. Pol. 2.9, 93 &yx. Biaxoviar every-day duties, Ib. 2. 5, 4, cf. 1.7, 23 7) &yx. diotenars C. 1. 2347 ¢. 56. 2. in Arist. also, 7a éyx. gidooophyata or Ta éyx. seem to have been the same as a éfwrepixd, Cael. 1. 9, 16, Eth. N.1.5,6; cf. éwrepucds: and 8. éyxdedwos mardeta was the circle of arts and sciences, the general education, which every free-born youth in Greece went through before applying to professional studies, Plut. 2. 1135 E; of wepl ra yx, mardevrai Id, Alex. 7; 7a eye. maidevpara Id. 2.7C; cf. Ath. 184 B, Luc. Amor. 45, Vitruv. 1. 6, Quintil. Inst. 1. 10, 1; also, éyx. dyoyh instruction in general knowledge, Strabo 13: v. Schol. cit. in Gaisf. Suid. s. v. ; éyxurdorratbeia, f. 1. for éyxvedros madela, Spald. Quintil. 1. 10, 1, cf. Plin, H. N. praef.: hence the modern Encyclopedia,—a mere barbarism. éykundos, ov, circular, round, Matro ap. Ath. 137 B, Arist. de Xeno- phane 2. 14. IL, éyrvedov, 76, a woman's upper garment, Ar. Thesm. 261, Lys. 113, C. I. 155. 50. éycuKdda, fut. dow, to move round ina circle, dpOadpédyv Eur. I. T. 76: —Pass. to form a circle, Plut. 2. 50 D. II. Pass. to encompass, encircle, xO6v' aidépos éyxuedoupévou Pseudo-Eur, Bacch. 292; pavy pé mis éykexvKAwrat a voice has echoed around me, Ar. Vesp. 395; often in late Prose, o wander or roam about, éyxuehwOfvat Sucedlay Diod. 4. 23, etc.; so in Med. éyxuxAwoacbat, Plut. Marcell. 6, etc. 2, in strictly pass. sense, to be surrounded, Dio C. 56, 12. éyxvkhwors, ews, 7, a surrounding, passing, Strabo 88. éyxvAlSwros, ov, Mss. of Hipp. 623. 3; but Galen. rightly read dyx-. _€yktAlvinots, ews, 7, a rolling among, Plut. Otho 2. éyxtAtvbe, fut. -cvAiow [7] :—to roll or wrap up in, moddois éuavrov éyxvAiocat mpdypacw Pherecr. Xetp. 7; Pass. éyevAtopat, C. 1. 150 B. 31. II. metaph. in Pass. to be involved in, eis Epwras éyxvArobels Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 22; eis rds moduTixds mpdges Dion. H. 11. 36: so in aor. med, éyxvAicac@a, Luc. Hipp. 6. éyxipatvopat, Pass. to rage like the waves, Clem. Al. 179. _€ykipovéw, to become pregnant, Geop. 14. 26, 2; twa of a child, Apollod. 1. 2, 6; 70 éyxupovpevor the child, Dion. H.1. 70. €ykdpovyots, ews, 7, impregnation, Pseudo-Arist. Plant. 1. 2, 11. 3. pregnancy, Epiphan., etc. éykUpov, ov, gen. ovos, (Kdpua B) pregnant, big with young, Xen. Cyn. 7, 2, Arist. H. A. 5. 14, 273 ex. yeveoOar tnd twos Id. Fr. 66; tnmos éye. Tevxéwy big with arms, of the Trojan horse, Eur. Tro. 11; €yx. Gpudos Plat. Com. a, 2. 8 :—metaph., of the mind, Plat. Symp. 209 B, Theaet. 148 E. = €ykvos, ov, («tw) =foreg., Hdt. 1. 5., 6.131, Hipp. Aph. 1254 ; m@Xos jouxlys Eyxvos, of the Trojan horse, Anth, P. 9. 156; yaorpos dmaca- Hévav pépoy éyxvor, of one dying in child-birth, Epigr. Gr. 238, 2. II. 7a éyrukAnuara of plants, Arist, H, A. 8. 8, 1. g 407 éycitrrw, fut. yw, to stoop down and peep in, kara ras Oupidas Plat, Rep. 359D; éye. eis tt to look closely into, Hdt. 7. 152:—absol., éyxe- xupéres stooping to the ground, Ar. Nub. 191, Thuc. 4. 4:—for Ar. Thesm. 236, v. dvaxtmrw :—cf. also éxxtmrw. éykupéw, v. sub éyxiipw. éyxupnors [i], ews, 7, a meeting with or happening’, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 37. éykupoeto, = éyxupéw, Heraclit. ap. Clem. Al. 432. ; éykuptia, Td, the passages into the kipros or fishing-basket (nassa): to which Plat. compares the throat, Tim. 78 B-D; v. Stallb. éykuptos, ov, curved, arched, Hipp. Mochl. 841, Arist. Fhyao@y 3. 5 éykvpw ; impf. évéedpoy : fut. éyxupow: aor. évéxupoa: Pass. éykupo- :—the forms éykupéw, aor. t évextpyoa are less common, y. infr. To" fall in with, light upon, meet with, c. dat., Lat. incidere in, évéxupae parayée Il. 13.145; €yedpoas drow Hes. Op. 214; dmolos éyxupéwour €pyvact Archil. 65; éyxvpoas (Dor. aor, I part.) éxarovraered Biorad Pind. P. 4. 502, cf. I. fin.; orpar@ évéxupoe duporépnar Thor poippoe Hdt. 4. 125; évextpnoav orpar@ Id. 7, 218 :—in Hadt. 7. 208 c. gen., ddoyins évéxupoe ToAAAs, (here Valck. proposed éxdpnoe, which has been received by Bekk., etc.; others suggest dAoyinat) :—c. acc. "Away éynipoavres GAdumerov Epigr. Gr. 241.—An Ion. word, rarely used in Att., éyxdpoa: Soph. El. 863; éy«uphoae Cratin. AnA. 12. éyxiira, 7a, Lacon. for éyxara, Hesych. éykirt [7], Adv. («tros) to the skin, éyxurt xexappévos close shaven, like év xp@ xexappévos, Archil. 34. éykoptdto: impf. évexwplaoy Aeschin. 66. 7: fut. -dow Plat. Gorg. 518 D, 519 A, Isocr. 255 D, but —dcouae Plat. Symp. 198 C, D, Aeschin. 18. 4: pf. éyxexwplaxa Plat. Legg. 629 C, Isocr. 154 C:—Pass., aor. éyeapacbeis Hdt. 5.5: pf. éyxexwplaopat Plat. Symp. 177 C: (the tenses being formed as if the Verb were a compound of év and x@pn, and not derived directly from éyxapuos ; cf. éxxAnoraw). To praise, laud, extol, Twa tt one for a thing, Plat. Rep. 363D; twa én codig Id. Euthyphro 9 B; «ara rodro Id. Lach. 191 B; dryabdv dvipa éyx. Tivd to praise him as a good man, Id. Theaet. 142 B :—Pass. to be praised, Hdt. 5. 5, Plat. Symp. 181 A, etc. éykopiacris, ob, 6, a praiser, panegyrist, Eccl. éykwptacrikds, 7, dv, panegyrical, Arist. Rhet. Al. 4, 1, Polyb. 8. 13, 2. éykwpiacrés, 7, dv, to be praised, Philo 1. 453. éykopto-ypados, 6, a panegyric-writer, Artemid. 1.56, C. I. 1585, al. €éyKwpto-Aoytcdv (sc. moinua), 76, a laudatory ode, C. 1. 1587. éykaptov, 74, v. sq. II. 2. éykapuos, ov, (x&pn) in the village, hence native, common, much like éyxwpios, Hes. Op. 342; cf. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. p. 84. II. («@pos) belonging to a Bacchic revel, in which the victor was led home in pro- cession with music, dancing, and merriment :—Pind. uses éy«@peos and émindpuos of everything belonging to the praise or reward of a conqueror, yx. HEAD, Upvot, etc., O. 2. 85, P. 10. 82; eye. aut rpdrov Id. O. 10 (11). 933 oTepaven &yxwpmos TeOpuds-the law of praise (i.e. due praise) for prizes won, Ib. 13. 39. 2, eyedpuov (sc. émos), 76, was a laudatory ode to a conqueror, as were many of Pindar’s, see Fragmm. 83-86, Béckh C. I. 1 385 :—hence, generally, an eulogy or panegyric on a living person, Ar. Nub. 1205, Plat., Dem. 297. 5, etc.; distinguished from émawvos (1d éyx. Tav épywv, 6 enawos THs dperas), Arist. Eth. N. 1. 12, 6, Rhet. 1. 9, 33- éykwtrov, 70, the part of the ship between the foremost and hindmost oars, Ath, 204 B. 8 . ros, a, ov, of or belonging to Egnatia (in Apulia), ‘Eyvartia odds the continuation of the Appian road through Apulia, and also across the sea from Apollonia Eastward, Strabo 322. éyvev, v. sub yeyvwonw; Pind. has éyvov, cf. gov. , éykéw, fut. -téom, to scratch or scrape, Eur. Fr. 300 (vulg. éyévcar). eyEnpatve, to dry in, Hipp. 636. 11. éyfvo [0], =eyéew, Hipp. 555. 40, Theophr. H. P. 9. 13, 3. éype-Kvdouzos, ov, rousing the din of war, strife-stirring, epith. of Pallas, Hes. Th. 925, Lamprocles 1. €ype-paxns, ov, 6, exciting, rousing the fight, Soph. O. C. 1054:—fem, éypeuaxn, epith. of Pallas, h, Hom. Cer. 424. ‘ypé-000s, ov, stirring strife, Nonn. D. 20. 291, etc. €ypeo, eypero, v. sub éyelpw, éypeci-Kwpos, ov, stirring up to revelry, Anth. P. 9. 524, 6. éypyopa, éypiyople, -Oar, —Oacr, v. sub éyelpw, éypnyopéw, a form introduced by the Copyists even into correct authors, as Xen. Ven. 5, 11, Arist. H. A. 4. 10, 1, etc., but now generally corrected from Mss. ; v. Dind. Steph. Thes. éypnyoptkds, 7), dv, wakeful, waking, mpdges, xuwjoes Arist. Somn, 2, 19, etc. : €ypnyopérws, Adv. part. of éypiyopa, waking, Plut. 2. 32A. éypnyopéwv, Ep. part., as if from a pres. éypyyopdw (v. sub éyeipw), watching, awake, Od. 20. 6. eyeny , ov, keeping awake, Pherecr. Incert. 9. €yphyopets, ews, 7), a waking, Hipp. 49. 23, Arist. H. A. 4. 10, I, al.; Arist. wrote a treatise wept tmvov wal éypnyépoews. éypnyoprt fl, Adv. awake, watching, Il. 10. 182. éypncow, (éyelpw) to watch, be awake or watchful, Ul. 11: 551, Od. 20. 33, 53, Ap. Rh. 2. 308, etc. A ypu, later form of éyelpm, imper. éypérw, Sopat. ap. Ath. 175 C; €ypere Eur. Rhes. 532 :—Pass., €yperat Opp. H. 5. 2413 @ypovrat Eur. Phaéth. 5. 29, &ypero Opp. C, 3. 421. *éyxatvw, v. sub éyydonw. éyxdAda, fut. dow, to relax, Plut. 2. 690 A. : eyXdAtvow, fut. dow, to put a bit in the mouth of, immov Babr. 76. 14: 408 Hadt. 3. 14, cf. Xen. An. 7. 2, 21. 2. roy Shuoy éyrexadwwpévoy 7H bdryapxia held in check by the oligarchy, Plut. Lys. 21. €yxaAkevw, fo impress or design on brass, Schol. Ven. Il. 18. 468. €yxaAkos, ov, in or with brass: moneyed, rick, Anth. P. 11, 425. Jor sale, Ath. 584 E. éyxavdys, v. sub edxyavdis. €yxGpayy, 4, an incision, Apollod. Poliorc. 43. 20. €yxdpaypa, 76, anything engraven, a cleft or channel, of a tunnel, like xapddpa, Polyb. 12. 20, 4. éyxipanréov, verb. Adj. one must make incisions in, rt Theoph. Nonn. I. p. 372. éyxdpatis, ews, 7, an engraving in metal, C. I. 2155; scarification, len. II. an incision, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 413. eyxGpdoow, Att.—rrw: fut.—fa:—/o engrave, Twi upon a thing, Dion. H. 2. 55; eis rd tepdv C. 1. 1710 B, cf. Plut. Pericl. 21, etc.; xara Tivos Id. Them. 9:—to make an incision into a thing, Geop. 5. 38, 2. €yxtpifopat, Dep., = xapifoua: Anth. P. 9.114: but L. Dind. proposes éy Kexapioro for éyxex-. éyxdoke, fut. @yxavodpat: aor. éyxaveiv (as if from éyxalyw, which does not occur) :—literally, to gape, mpds Tv ceAHvny Luc. Icarom. 13: éyx. Twi to gape for it, Alciphro 1. 22, II. to grin or scoff at one, éyxdoxev oot Ar. Vesp. 721; éyxavetrar rats guats tuxauct Id. Ach, 11973 éyxaveirat ri méAe Eq. 1313: c. part. wi) yap éyxavy more .. Expuywv let him not taunt {us} with his having escaped, Ach. 221. éyxéw, fut. —xéow or —xeoodpa: pf. éyeéxoda :—Lat. incacare, Ar. Ran. 479: c. acc, to be in a horrid fright at one, Id. Vesp. 627. éyxet-Bpdpos, ov, thundering with the spear, Pind. O. 7. 78. éyxeln, 4, Ep. form of éyxos, a spear, lance, Hom., esp. in Il.; gen. pl. eyxecdwv, 5.167; eyxeln éxéxacro he excelled all in the spear, 2.530. Roan. Ep. 3 sing. pres. subj. of éyxéw, Od. g. 10. éyxet-Képauvos, ov, hurling the thunderbolt, Pind. P. 4. 345, etc. €yx ‘o, fut. dow, to pass the winter in, Julian, Ep. 53, Poll. 1. 62. éyxet-papyos, ov, =éyxeatipapyos, E. M. 313. 14. €yxetpéw, fut. now, (xelp) to put one’s hand in or to a thing, to wnder- take, attempt, c. dat. rei, Eur. Med. 377, Thuc., etc.; c. inf., Plat. Prot. 310 C, Xen, Mem. 2. 3, 12, etc.; Tov éyxetppoavra oveopayreiv Hyperid. Euxen. 44: absol. to make an attempt or beginning, Soph. El. 1026, Thuc. 4. 4, etc. 2. to lay hands on, attack, assail, rie Thuc. 4. 121, Xen. Hell. 4. 5, 16; mpdés twa Polyb. 2. 22, 11. 8. to put hand toa case requiring medical treatment, tive Hipp. 3. 27., 8. 9. 4. to try one’s hand in argument, eis Exarepov Plut. Cic. 21: Pass. to be discussed, Id. 2. 687 E. II. in late Poets, to take in hand, c. acc., €pyov Epigr. Gr. 1038. 36.— Emtxecpéw is more in use: cf. éyxpdw sub fin. ‘yxetpypa, 76, an undertaking, attempt, Soph. O. T. 540, Plat. Polit. 290 D, etc. xeipnows, ews, 4, a taking in hand, undertaking, Thuc. 6. 83, Plut. fons “ Tt. =tyxepla, Galen. éyxetpyréov, verb. Adj. one must undertake, Xen. Ages. 1, 1, Plat. Polit. 04 A. “sears, od, 6, one who undertakes, an adventurer, Ar. Av. 257. eyxet 6s, 1, dv, enterprising, adventurous, Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 22. Adv. -as, adventurously, Archyt. ap. Stob. 589. 6. éyxeipta, 7), manipulation, Hipp. Art. 802. éyxerptBros, ov, (xelp) in the hand, ixerdv nAd5o Aesch.Supp.22. IT. as Subst., éyxetptdtov, 74, a hand-knife, dagger, Hdt. 1. 12, 214, etc., Thue. 3. 70; éyxeipidiy wAnrrev Lys. Ir, 13, etc. 2. a handle, hilt, Theophr, H. P. 4. 3, 3, Ath. 204 A. 3. a manual, hand-book, name of a work by Epict. [-tdvov, Meineke Menand. p. 160.] i éyxetpifo, fut. Att. 1: pf. éyxexelpixa. Plut. Phoc. 34:—to put into one’s hands, entrust, ri Te or Td Tit Hat. I. ITI., 5. 92, 3, Thuc. 2. 67; Tas dpxds ey. rivi Hat. 5. 71, cf. Arist. Pol. 5. 5,8; so, éyx- revi alone (dpxqy being omitted), Ib. 5. 6,12; eyx. euavrdv TH aruxig Antipho 119. 20; and freq. in Att. :—Pass. to be entrusted, tii to one, Polyb. 5..44,1; but, éyxetpifeo@al rt to be entrusted with a thing, Luc. Prom. 3, Amor. 39, etc.; soc, inf., deoumely Ta Tis Gpxijs ynexeipicpeba we have been intrusted with the administration of the government, Hdn. 8. 7,12:—Med. to take in hand, encounter, xwdvvous Thuc. 5.108, DioC., etc. éyxetpt-Oeros, ov, put into one’s hands, éyx. Twa mapadiddvat Hat. 5. 106. éyxetptov, 74, a towel, Eccl. i éyxetpo-ydorrwp, opos, 6, =*yaorpdxetp, Ath. 4 D. éyxetporovéw, to elect, eis imaretay Dio C. 41. 39; cf. Poll. 2. 150. éyxetpoupyéw, to produce as by manual labour, Eccl. éyxeto, Ep. for éyxéw, Hom. : éyxéActov, 74, Dim. of éyxeAus, in sing., Ar. Fr. 302. 7. Antiph. dA. I. 4: but mostly in pl. éyyéAeca, Pherecr. Mer. 1. 12, Callias Kuea. 1. 2, Posidipp. Aoxp. 1; émrare rdyxéAeta Ar. Ach. 1043 :—in all these places éyxéActa may be neut. pl. of éyxéActos (sub. xpéa or TeHax7) ; indeed in Pherecr. Aova. 1 we find rénayxos éyxéAciov, cf. Eust. 1231. 36. éyxeAccv or —veov, Ovos, 5, an eel-basket, eel-trunk, Arist. H. A. 8 «4534037: éyxeAvbrov [0], 74, Dim. of yxeAus, Amphis Aer, 1, Ephipp.’OBeA.r. 6. éyxeAvo-rpddos, ov, keeping eels, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 34. éyxeAus or éyxédus (v. Ind. Arist.), 7, later also 6 (Luc, Anach. 1, etc.): gen. ews or vos: pl. éyxéAets, —ves or —us, gen. —twy or -vwv, dat. -ect or -vot, y. Ind. Arist. ; but &yxéAews, -ets, are the true Att. forms, v. Ind, Comm. Gr. s.v.: (v. sub xis):—an eel, &yxédvés Te kal ty@ves Tl. 21. 203, 3533 often dressed with beet (v,:revrAov) ; those from Lake Copais were in high repute, Ar. Ach. 880, Pax 1005 ; yx. Bordyreat Antiph. Incert. 11:—proverb., ¢yxéAeis OnpaaGat i. e, to be fond of fishing in troubled waters, Ar. Eq. 864, cf. Nub. 559. ‘ iI. eyyxadkeveo — éyx pie. —Pass., 74 ordpara eyxexadrivapévous having the bit in their mouths, | éyxeAuav, v. éyxedewr. éyxeAv-wrds, dv, eel-faced, Luc. V. H.1. 35. éyxeot-papyos, ov, raging with the spear, E. M. 313. 6, Hesych. éyxect-pwpos, ov, fighting with the spear, ll. 2. 692, etc., Od. 3. 188.— On the composition, v. sub léuwpos. éyxeot-xerp, 6, living by war (cf. yaorpéxetp), Orph. m. Sarpy, 18. éyXéomaAos, ov, (waddw) wielding the spear, Il. 2. 131, ete. éyxeo-opos, ov, spear-bearing, Pind. N. 3. 107. éyxéw: fut. xed (v. xéw), late éyxtow Hero Math. Vett. 186.12: aor, évéxea, Ep. évéxeva, but 3 pl. évéxear in tmesi Od. 8. 436; subj. éyxén, Ep. éyxelp (v. infr.): pf. pass. éyeéxd pac. To pour in, &y & oivoy éxevev Od. 3. 40., 6.77; HéOv .. &yxeln Serdeoot 9.10; olvoy és niAua Hat. 4. 70; dfos 7 ddcipa 7 eyxéas TaiT@ oxdpe Aesch. Ag. 322; nay SO pot pi) “yxijs ob meiy Ar. Vesp. 616; and éyxeiy alone, to Jill the cup, rots veavickos éyxeiv éxédeve Xen. An. 4. 3, 13, cf. Plat. Symp. 214 A, and ‘oft. in Com. ;—also, éyxeiv onoviny to pour in wine for a libation, Ar. Pax 1102, cf. Antipho 113. 25 :—Med., téwp 8 éve- xevaro mova (with no med. sense), Od. 19. 387; but in strict sense of Med. to pour in wine for oneself, fill one’s cup, Ar. Vesp. 617; &yxeioOac els rv xeipa meiv to pour [wine] into one’s own hand, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3,9; morov éyxeioba: Id. Symp. 2, 26. 2. of dry things, to pour in, shoot in, év 5€ por GAdira xedov Od. 2. 354. II. sometimes with acc. of the cup, fo fill by pouring in, éyxeiv Kpnrijpa, giddnv Sophron Fr. 149, Xen. Symp. 2, 23; €yxeov.. Ads ye rivde owripos Alex. Tox. 3; éyxéaca .. d-ya0od baipovos (sc. xdAuca) Nicostr. Mavdp. Es IIT, éyyxeiv viwp rivi (v. eAepddpa), Dem. 407. 17, cf. 1052. 21; Pass., éyxeirat 7d mp@rov Hdwp Aeschin. 82. 13 sq. éyxP6vios, ov, in the earth, crodi) Kepévy &yx9. Epigr. Gr. 298. of the country, wddigé Anth. Plan. 235. éyxAatvéopat, Pass. to be clothed, éo0jra Lyc. 974, cf. 1347. éyxAto [7], to deal wantonly with, insult,"EAAnow Aesch. Supp. 914, cf. Cho. 137. éyxAodw, to be of a greenish hue, Nic. Th. 154. éyxAoos, ov, =sq., Nic. Th. 536; metaph. acc. éyxAoa, Ib. 676. éyxAwpos, ov, of a pale or yellow green, Theophr. H. P. 3. 12, 5, etc. €yxvoos, oy, contr. —xvous, ovy, downy, Nic. Th. 762. éyxovipilw, to form into grains, Archig. ap. Galen. xara rérovs I. 3. éyxovbpos, ov, in small bits, Lat. grumosus, Diosc. 1. 83. €yxopdos, ov, (xop5n) stringed, with strings, Poll. 4. 58. éyxopeve, to dance in, év Ivdia Plut. 2. 332 B. éyxos, 76, a spear, lance, often in Hom., consisting of two parts, alyuh and dépu, head and shaft, Il. 6. 319, where its length is eleven cubits: the shaft is usually ashen, pelAwvoy éyyxos, freq. in Il.; cf. also oradaios, émo8oBpi6ys.—It served both for throwing and thrusting, but from its weight was only used by the stoutest men, and when near the enemy: hence the most honourable weapon. II. any weapon, a sword, often in Soph., as Aj. 287, 658, 907, etc.; mrepwra éyxn arrows, Eur. H. F. 1098: even a ball, of Nausicaa, 7d 8 éyxos éy wooly xvdivierat Soph. Fr. 872 :—metaph., ppovridos éyxos Soph. O. T. 170. (Acc. to Curt., akin to deh, dxwy, aiyuh.) éyxovea, 4, Att. for dyxovca, the plant anchusa, alkanet, the root of which yields a red dye, Ar. Lys. 48, Xen. Occ. 10, 2; dyxovoa in Theophr. H. P. 7. 8, 3, v.1. Ar. Fr. 309. 3. eyxovolfa, =dyxovci{w, ap. E. M. 313. 38. €yxpaw and éyxpate, like éyypiumrw, to dash against, Lat. impingere, évéxpavev és 70 mpdcamov 7d oxqrrpov Valck. Hat. 6. 75. il. a Pass. occurs in Hdt. 7. 145, €oay 5& mpds twas Kal GAdous &yKexpy- pévot [sc. wéAepor] there were wars undertaken ..; but this is prob. f. 1. for éyxexeipnpyévor (from eyyecpéw). eyxpeperi£e, fut. iow, to neigh in, Poll. 10. 56. €yxpeppa, 74, a spitting at, Plut. 2. 82 B. eyxpeprrropar, Dep. to expectorate, Luc. Gall. 10. eyxpyse, fo want, have need, eis 71 Geop. 20. 19 :—7a eyxprovra necessaries, Luc. de Hist. Conscr. 22. €yxplyate or éyxpiaro (Wessel. Hdt. 2.60): aor. évéxpepya Il., Hdt.: —Pass., Il.,etc.: fut. med. —xpippopa Ap. Rh. 4. 939: aor. pass. éve- xplupOny Il.: (v. xpiumrw), To bring near to, with collat. notion ot force, to strike or dash against, r@ [réppart] od par’ &yxpiupas edday ax«50v Gpya drive the chariot close so as almost to touch the post, Il. 23. 3343 (s0, év v¥con 5é rot trmos .. &yxpippOnrw let him almost touch the post, Ib. 338); eyxp. rijv Bapw 7H yp to bring the boat elose to land, Hat. 2.60; éyxp. (sc. riy vaiv) 7G alyare 1d. 9.98; eyxp. Tov immov TH Onden Id. 3. 85. IT. intr. 20 approach, tivi Soph. El. 898 :— but the Pass, is more regular in this sense, éyyprppOels having come near to assauit one, Il. 13. 1463 évexpippbévra miAnow 17. 405; aixph dorép eyxpinpocioa the point driven to the very bone, 5. 662; domid’ (i.e. domid:) evixptupOels dashed against his shield, 7.272; vwdepues &yxpip- MTOVTO they pressed unceasing on, 17. 4133; so later, to keep close to, éyxp. (sc. 7H 7), of fish, Hat. 2. 933 &yxp. yuvatt, like wAnordtw 11. 3, Id. 4. 113, v. supr.; EAdous &yyxpymropeva pursuing them, Eur. Hipp. 218 ;—of serpents, to attack, rwi Nic. Th. 330, cf. Ap. Rh. 4.15123 of elephants, Opp. C. 2. 535: so also of disease, fo attack a particular part, Hipp. 654. 25.—The word belongs chiefly to Ep. poetry, Ion. Prose, and late Prose, as App. and Philostr., y. Ruhnk. Tim. s. v. Eyxpiors, cos, 7, (&yxplar) an anointing, rubbing in, Hipp. 24.13. a slight wound, scratch, bite, Ael. N. A. 3. 22. eyxptopa, 74, an ointment, Hipp. 48. 25. A €yXpioros, ov, rubbed in as an ointment, Theocr, 11. 2 Hous Arist. G. A. 2,.7,18; ef: Blomf. Aesch. Pr. 488. g éyxplo [7], to rub, anoint, ti with a thing, Ath. 542 D, cf, Anth. P. a2; II. 3 els robs d¢Oard- éyxpoviCw — edvov. It, 107: metaph., Pevdnydpors pnyats &yxplew en Lyc. 1455 :-—Med. to anoint oneself, tiwés with a thing, Strabo 699, etc. :—Pass., ids éyxpi- Gels poison injected by a sting, Ael. N. A. 1. 54. II. to stick in, 70 Kévtpoy Ib. 6. 20. III. to sting, prick, rwi Plat. Phaedr, 251D: v. xpi 111. éyxpovite, fut. Att. 1&:—to be long about a thing, to delay, Thuc. 3. 27; wept rowov Hipp. Acut. 392; éyxpovicas after long delay, Epigr. Gr. 815.73 &yxp. mpds Tov yapoy Arist. Rhet. 3.10, 7; 7iwi in a thing, Polyb. 15. 36, 6; év témp Dio C. 44. 46:—so in Pass., Ep. Plat. 362 A. II. to become chronic, éyxpoviter 75 éuminua Hipp. Progn, aC 35 i—so in Pass., ¢yxpomobev 7d véonpa Plat. Gorg. 480 A, cf. Arist. Ae Bee, X. éyxpovicpiés, 6, delay in doing a thing, Oribas., Aét. €yxpovos, ov, lasting for a time, Zonar. Adv. -vws, Eccl. €yxpioos, ov, golden, dmrov C. 1. 3524. 353; oToAH Philostr. 7963 mpocoyrs Diod. 3. 39. €yxpefopar, Pass. with pf. éyeéxpwopat, to be engrained, Arist. de Xenophane 4, 6 :—metaph, to be amalgamated with, waos eyxexpwo- pévov TO Biy Id. Eth. N. 2. 3,8; vdpoy rots émerndevpact tay todrav éyxpuec@a: Sef Archyt. ap. Stob. p. 269. 56. €yxvAifo, fo convert into juice (by pressing), Theophr. C. P. 6. 11, 14. €yxvAucpa, 76, conversion into juice, Diosc. 1.133, with v.1. xvAtcpa. €yxDAos, ov, juicy, succulent, Theophr. C. P. 6. 11, 15 :—savory, Alex. AeB. 5.12. Adv. —Aws, Archig. ap. Galen. 8. p. 156. éyxipa, 74, an infusion, Galen. éyxtparile, fut. tow, to make an infusion of, 71 Geop. 4. 7, 33 cited | also from Diosc. :—verb. Adj. -tietéov, one must infuse, make an infu- sion, Geop. 18. 17, I. II. éyx. ria to treat by infusions, Hippiatr. éyxtpariopés, 6, an infusion, Hippiatr. éyxdpos, ov, moistened, éyxuvpa yup@ Hipp. Offic. 744 C: juicy, suc- culent, odpé Plat. Tim. 74D, cf. Arist. de Sens. 5, 1. €yxtpoors [0], 4, distribution of juices through the body, Hipp. Epid. 2. 1037 :—v. €exUp-. éyxuve, late form of éyxéw, Luc. Imag. 29, etc.; Lob. Phryn. 726. EyxXtors, ews, 7, (eyxéw) a pouring in, Plut. 2. 38 E. éyxtros, ov, poured in, infused, Hipp. 603. 25, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 2. 3- II. éyxvuros (sc. tAaxods), 6, a cake cast into a shape, Lat. en- chytus, Hippon. Fr. 21, Menand. Wevd. 1. 9, cf. Ath. 644 C, sq. 2. éyxutov, 76,=%yxupa, Hippon. 28, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 10. éyxutpifw, like xaraxurpi{w, xurpi{w, to expose children in an earthenware vessel, Piers. Moer. p. 138: hence, to make an end of (cf. our slang phrases ‘ ¢o dish,’ ‘to go to pot,’), Ar. Vesp. 289. éyxutpiorpia, 7, a woman who gathered the bones from a funeral pile into an urn, Plat. Minos 315 D, v. Bickh., ad 1. II. a woman who exposed children (cf. éyxurpi{e), Schol. Ar. Vesp. 289. €yxopa, 76, the deposit or bar of a river, Polyb. 4. 39, 9- -€yxavvipt or Uw: fut. —ywow:—to fill up by depositing earth, of rivers, Polyb. 4. 40, 43; @yx- Tappov App. Civ. 5. 36. II. to throw in earth, eis Tappov Ib. 2. 75, cf. Diod. 17. 42. éyxwpéw, to give room to do a thing, to allow, 6 xpévos ob« &yxupel, c. inf., Lys. 175. 33, Xen. Eq. 12, 13; absol., dcov 9 Sexarn évexwpec so far as the money allowed him to go, Hdt. 2.135; édv éyxwpy 7d bdwp (i.e. the water-clock eAey~v5pa), Dem. 1094. 3. 2. eyxwpel, impers. there is time, it is possible or allowable, c. dat. pers. et inf., éyx. avr@ eidévae Antipho 112. 18, cf. 140, 12, Plat, Prot. 321 D, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 16, etc.; ofs éyx. bBpiorais eivar Lys. 169. 35 :—also absol., Ere éyxopel there is yet time, Plat. Phaedo 116 E; obxér’ &yxwpet Dem. 52. 7; often in Arist. =évdéyeras :—so, éyxwpodv éori Paus. 3. 24, II. éyxaptos, ov, also 7 or a, ov Hat. 6. 35, Pind. O. 5. 25: Cxdspa) — in ot of the country, écOns &yxwpin Hat. l.c.; e@yxwpia Aiwva Pind. lc; yx. Geol, daipoves, Hpwes Aesch. Theb. 14, Ag. 810, Soph. Tr. 183, Thuc. 2.74; «dpra 8 éo7’ éyx. a true-born Theban, Aesch, Theb. 4133 &yx. Tupol, opp. to éwefcaxror Arist. Mirab. 82; of winds, local, Theophr. C. P. 5. 12, 11. 2. as Subst. a dweller in the land, éyx. rijode ys inhabitants, Soph. O. C. 871, cf. Eur. Ion 1167; of éyx. Arist. P. A. 3. 10, 10. 8. 70 &yxmpioy as Adv. according to the custom of the country, Thuc. 4. 78. II. of or for the country, rustic, v. 1, Hes. Op. 342. €yxwpos, ov, (xwpa) =foreg., Soph. Ph. 692, O. C, 125. éyxwors, ews, 7, a filling up of a channel with silt, Arist. Meteor. I. 14, 22, Polyb. 4. 39, 10, etc. éyxworhptos, ov, useful for filling up, App. Civ. 5. 36. éyo, I: Pron. of the first person :—Ep. éyav before vowels (and so in Dor., before consonants, Epich. 64 Ahr., Sophron 39, Ar. Ach. 748, 754, but in Aeol. @ywy parox., Apoll. de Pron. p. 64), very rare in Att., Aesch. Pers. 931 :—strengthd. éywye, Lat. eguidem, I at least, for my part, in- deed, for myself; but this is much more freq. in Att. than in Hom.: Dor, éyeya, éyavya, Aleman 65, Ar. Ach. 736, Lys. 986: Boedt. idvya, idya Ar. Ach, 898: Lacon. and Tarent. éyavq Hesych., Apoll. in A. B. 524. II. a different root ME appears in the oblique cases, viz. Gen, éuo8, enclit. wov; Ion. and Ep. ééo, ped, pev, also énédey Il. 1. 525, Eur. Hel. 177 (lyric); éuefo Epit. in C. I. 956, 1027, al.; Hebéy Sophron 46 Ahr.; Dor. éuéos, éueds, Epich. ap. Apoll. de Pron. Pp. 305; Boedt. éuods Corinn. 33; also épelw, épelws, €uas Apoll. 1. c.:— Dat. uot, enclit. poi; Dor. éuiv Epich. 94. 9 Ahr., Ar. Ach. 733, Theocr. 4. 30; Tarent. éyivy Rhinthon ap. Apoll. 104 B:—Acc. eué, enclit. pe. III. Dual, nom. and acc., v@t (cf. Lat. nos), we two, Hom. and Ion.; Att. vw, which however is found in Od. 15. 475+ 16. 306; va@e Antimach. ; gen. and dat. voiv, Att. vov; vOiv=Hpiv 409 in Mss, of Hdt., is denied by Dind. de Dial. Hdt. p. xx); Acol. dppes, Od. 9. 363, Alcae. 18, Pind. P. 4.256; Dor. des Epich. 94. 6, Ar. Lys, 168 :—Gen., judy, Ion. jyéwv, juetov (Od. 24.170); Acol. dupéov Alcae. 93; Dor. duéwy Alcman 50, du@v Epich. 147, Ar. Lys. 168, Theocr. 2. 158 :—Dat. jyiv, in Att. Poets also july (t) metri grat., (or, as some Gramm, wrote it, 4m), once in Aesch. (Eum. 347), never in Eur., not unfreq. in Soph., but rare in Com., Dind. Ar. Av. 386; Aeol. and Dor. dupty, appt, Od. 1. 384, Alcae. 12, 19, 76, Pind. P. 4. 275, Aesch. Theb, 156; Dor. also duiv Alcman 66, Aesch, Eum. 347, Ar. Lys. 1081; with 7, Ar. Ach. 821, Theocr., but not to be written dyiv, Ahr. D. Dor. p. 260:—Acc. pas (also jpuds, Od. 16. 372); Ion. Apéas; Acol. dupe Il. 1. 59, Sappho 115, Theocr. 8. 25 ; Dor. dué Epich. 97 Ahr., Ar. Ach. 759, Lys. 95, 1099.—On these dialectic varieties, v. Apollon. de Pron. pp. 324-387, Ahr. D. Aeol. p. 123 sq., D. Dor. 247 sq. (Cf. Skt. aham (éywv), Lat. ego; Goth. ik, O. Norse ek, A. S. ic, etc.: and with é-yé, pe, cf. Skt. mdm, ma; Goth. and O. Norse mik, A. S. mec; etc.) big 2 often in answers, as an affirmative, esp. in form éywye, Soph. Tr. 1248, Plat., etc. ; obros éyw, Lat. ille ego, here am I, Pind. O. 4. 37; 88 éxeivos éyh Soph. O. C. 138; rarely with Art., rdv éué my- self, Plat. Theaet. 166 A, Soph. 239 A, Phil. 20 B; ris dv otros 6 eye Tuyxavw; Plut. 2. 1119 A :—ri rod7’ enol; Hyiv ri todr’ éo7’; Lat. quid mea hoc refert? Ar. Thesm. 498, etc.; cf. av. iygc., éydpat, Att. crasis for &y@ of5a, ya ofpat. éyav, éyavya, éyavy, dialectic forms of éyw, &yarye, q. V- €ddqv, 7s, 7, aor. 2 of *5¢w, Hom. €5apunv, 7s, 7, Ep. aor. 2 pass. of dapde, Il. ivés, 4, dv, eatable: édavdv, 7d, food, Aesch. Ag. 1407. avis, 7, dv, as epith. of oil, Il. 14. 172, h. Hom. Ven. 63, where the best Gramm. connect it with 43s, dopa, dvddvw (q. v.), sweet, v. Heyne 6. p. 557, Curt. 252; but Buttm. (Lexil. s. v. éavds) with éds, excellent. Bapilw, fut. Att. 1B, to beat level and firm like a threshing-floor or pavement, Theophr. H. P. 9. 3, 1 :—Pass., Id. C. P. 4. 8, 2. II. to dash to the ground, Ev. Luc. 19. 44, cf. LXx (Ps. 136. 9). €ddrov, 7d, Dim. of é5apos, Eust. 1532. 6 €Sados, eos, rd: (v. sub ddds, 686s, ovdas) —the bottom, foundation, base of anything, Thuc. 1. 10; édagos vnds the bottom, hold of a ship, O. 5. 249; €. mAolov Dem. 883. 22, cf. Pherecr. “Ayp. 6; €. rorapod, Oahdrrns Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 18, Arist. H. A. 4. 8, 18; mornptiov Pherecr. Tupavy, 1. 2. 2. the ground-floor, pavement, oixov Hat. 8. 1373 wabatpeiv eis 7d daos to rase to the ground, Thuc. 3. 68. 3. ground, soil, rept rod THs marpidos é5dpous dyoviCerPar for our country’s soil, Aeschin. 72. 41, cf. Dem. 803. fin.; €xOpds 7@ ris réAEws edaet, of a mortal foe, Dem. 99. 19., 134. 14:—also soil, viewed in regard to its quality, Theophr. C. P. 4. 11, 8, etc. :—pl., €dapn, lands or ground (as property), Isae. 88. 22, cf. Dem. 803. fin., C. I. 162. 17. metaph. the original text, original, Galen. €Séarpos, 6, among the Persians, one who tasted first, and named the order of dishes,=@aXriapxos, the seneschal, Phylarch. Fr. 43, cf. E. M. 315. 37, Suid. s. v.: cf. Sacrpés. €Séypny, v. sub déxopar. €5eS€aro, v. sub dé fo bind. eSpyjaro, v. sub déuw. €5é0Avov, 76, = Z5e0Aov, Call. Ap. 62, Ap. Rh. 4. 630. €eOAov, 74, =e5aos, Antim. Fr. 87, Ap. Rh. 4. 331; 765 vdow &6. C. I. 4923. 93 Ta xpvodracra & ee0Aa should be read (with Auratus) in Aesch. Ag. 776 for éc0Ad. : elStpev, —Btcav, v. sub defSw. exro, v. sub 5éxopar. Beopa, 75, (€5w) meat, food, Plat. Tim.:73 A, Antiph. “AA. I. Lo: pl. eatables, meats, Batr. 31, Plat. Rep. 559 B:—Dim, éSeopéttov, 7d, Procl. ad Hes. Op, 41. 2 aid OE & HE Seopato-Ojey, , a larder, paniry, Poll. 10. 93, Schol. Od. 6. 76. Heoréov, verb. Adj. one vals eat, Plat. Crito 47 B, Prot. 314 A. &Seorhs, od, 6, an eater, Hdt. 3. 99, Antiph. “AA. 1. 15. &eords, 7, dv, eatable, good for food, ¢@or Arist. Pol. 7.2, 15: 7a é5. eatables, meats, Eur. Fr. 475. 19, Plat. Tim. 72 E. TI. eaten, Soph. Ant, 206: consumed, Id. Tr. 677. €HSoKxa, E5ySeopar, SySorar, eSnShs, v. sub dw, eoOia. Sy dav, dvos, 7), =payédawa, Hesych. €yr7vs, vos, 4, meat, food, in Hom. always néatos Kat &Syrvos & Epov eo Il. 1. 469, etc.; except in Od. 6. 250, dnpdv yap ébnrUos Rev draaros. €pevat, v. sub dw. éSvdopar, v. sub édydw. €Svi0s, a, ov, bridal, nuptial, xird@v Hesych. €Svov, 74, Pind. O. 9. 16, Call. Fr. 193, Anth. P. app. 298, Orph. Arg..876; elsewhere only in pl. €va, ée5va :—Ep. word, signifying the wedding-gifts, presented by the suitor to the bride or her parents after the fashion of the Homeric times, @epv® being the bride’s portion (cf. the old Norse custom, Dasent Burnt Njal, xxvii) ; druce, topdv darepelora €5va Il. 16.178; qydyero.. , éret mépe pipia Ebva Ib. 190; cf, 22. 4723 pvdo0w eédvorrw diChuevos Od. 16. 391., 21. 161; elod«e por +. marhp drodhice ee5va 8. 318; v. sub dvdedvos; rare in Att., edvors a@yaryes ‘Howdvay mOav Sdpapra Aesch, Pr. 560. II. in Od, 1. 277., 2- 196, the ZeSva seem to be wedding-gifts made to the bride by those of her own household, for of 5€ in these places cannot be the suitors, v. Nitzsch ad4.; so in Eur. Andr. 2, ef. Pind. O. 9. 16: but, IIT. in Pind. P. 3. 167, Orph. 1. c., etc., wedding presents to a wedded pair by their guests. (Anciently it had the digamma, éFedva, Fédva, avdf ebvos 5 so that the Root was prob. the same as that of #5vs, dvddvw ; cf. petra 3+ + Q. Sm. 1, 213, etc, IV. Pl, nom. #peis (an Ion. form Hyées, as J. | from péAr: y. Curt, no. 252.) \ 410 Svo-opéw, to bring wedding-presents, Eust. 1414. 49. vow, fut. dow, (Zévoy) to promise for wedding-presents, to betroth, dpi t5vace Od-yarpas Theocr. 22. 147; so the Med. in Hom. of a father who portions off his daughter, ds x’ atrds éedydaairo Ovyarpa Od. 2. 53; ébvmoopat re Ovyarép’ (so Herm. for é5vécopna), Eur. Hel. 933- II. in Med. also, to marry, yuvaixa Anth. P. 7. 648. 6 » 9, @ bride betrothed for é5va, Hesych. & , Ep. éeSv-—, od, 5, a father who portions a bride, ot ror ée5verrat kaxol eipér Il, 13. 382. Sopar, fut. of €oGiw, Hom. Sov, Ep. and Dor. 3 pl. aor. 2 of SiSapu. II. impf. of é5w. 50s, cos, 75: Ep. dat. pl, ééeoor Epigr. Gr. 1046. 78: (€Copat) :— a sitting-place : 1. a seat, stool, ll. 1. 534, 581., 9. 194, etc. 2. a seat, abode, dwelling-place, esp. of the gods, és “OAuyumov.., iv” dbavarow eos éori Il, 5. 360; ixovro Gedy Ed0s, aimdy “OAvpmov Ib. 367; also, periphr., €50s OvAvumoto for “OAvpmos, Il. 24. 144, Pind. O. 2. 24; but often also of the abodes of men, O7Bys Eos Il. 4. 406; "Todnns . Od. 13. 3443; €80s Mdxapos the abode of Macar, Il. 24. 544; so in Pind. and ne :—later €5n specially of temples, Plat. Phaedo 111 B, cf. Soph. O. T. 886, El. 1374, where however see Wunder’s note ; also, €rotxov €5os, periphr. for érorxiar, Aesch. Pr. 411. 3. the sitting statue of a god, C.I. 155. 25 (ubi v. Béckh.), 491, Dion. H. 1. 47, Ruhnk. Tim. ; and it may have this sense in Isocr. 310 B, Xen. Hell. 1. 4,5, Plut. Pericl. 13, Paus. 8. 46, 2, though more prob. it means a temple. —tThe sense of temple or statue is the only one found in Prose, €dpa being generally used in the sense of seat, 4. a foundation, base, Hes, Th. 117, Anth. P. append. 373. 6. II. the act of sitting, ody E50s éoti ’tis no time to sit idle, Il, 11. 647., 23. 205: cf. €dpa 11. €Sodpat, fut. of €foua. €5pa, Ep. and Ion, €5py, 7): (€50s) : I. a sitting-place : A a seat, a chair, stool, bench, Il. 19. 77, Od. 3. 7; dyopat re nal Spa Od. 8.16, cf. 3..31: seat of honour, wept pév ce Tiov .. dp Te Kpéaciv te Il. 8. 162., 12. 311; so, €dpars ~yepaipew rivd Xen. Cyr. 8.1, 59; tipiav eSpav éxev Aesch. Eum, 854: a throne, éxBadeiv Spas Kpdvoy Id, Pr, 201; Oaxeiy mayxpareis €dpas to sit on an almighty throne, Ib. 389, cf. Pers. 466. 2. a seat, abode, often in pl., Pind. O. 7. 140, P. 11. 95, etc.: esp. of the gods, a sanctuary, temple, Pind. I. 7 (6). 61, Aesch. Ag. 596, etc. ; cf. 0s :—véorxos dpa a station for ships, Pind. O. 5. 19; vavAoxor €5par Soph. Aj. 460: periphr., Mapyycod edpac for Mapvnods, Aesch. Eum. 11, cf. Eur. Tro. 557; Bdepdpww €dpa the eye, Eur. Rhes..8; épparos €. 554. 3. the seat or place of anything, €£ €dpas out of its right place, Eur. Bacch. 928; iv Tov Hraros é., Tov onhdyxvou, etc,, Plat. Tim. 67 B, 72 C, etc.; é« 7Hs €. WOciv Ib. 79 B; éxew Spay to keep its place, Arist. Meteor. 2. 2, 20; Spay orpéepey vivi to trip one up, Theophr. Char. 27; v. édpoorpépos:—a bottom, foundation, base, Plut. Demetr. 21. 4. % 5pa rov immov the back of the horse, on which the rider sits, Xen. Eq. 5, 5., 12, 9, Eq. Mag. 4, 1: cf. €5patos I. 2. 5. are the quarters of the sky in which omens appear, Aesch. Ag. 117 (ubi v. Herm,), Eur. H. F. 596; cf. Hdt. 7.37,6 fros éxhimdy tiv .. Edpyy. 6. ihe seat of a disease, Medic. II. a sitting, fipav éxew to be seated, Aesch. Eum. 41; of suppliants, Soph. O. T. 13 (cf. @oa{w), O. C. 112. 2. a sitting still, Hipp. Aér. 292: hence, inactivity, delay, like €50s 11, mepinpéxree Th €5py Hat. 9. 41; dxPopevar 7H Epa Thuc. 5.7; ody edpas dip Soph. Aj. 811; obx €5pas dydv Bacchyl. 21; ov« épyoy €dpas' Eur. Or. 1291. 3. of a position, -yovumerets €6par kneeling, Eur. Phoen. 293 ; Bédeos €5pn the place where a weapon fixes itself in the bone, so as to make a clean hole without splintering, Hipp. V. C. goo. 4. the sitting or session of a’council, etc., ev0bs éf €dpas when he rose from the sitting, Soph. Aj. 780, of. 749, (but, éf €dpas dviorara Ib. 788, means from quietude); @dpav moveiy to hold a sitting, Andoc. 15. 9- III. the seat, breech, fundament, Hdt. 2. 87, Hipp. Aph. 1253, etc.:—of birds, the rump, Arist. H. A. 9. 49 B, fin. i palo, fut. dow: aor. Hpace Or. Sib. 1. 9:—to make to sit, place, emt atXevpas Dion. H. de Comp. 6; GAAvirs Anth. P. 15. 24 :—Med. or Pass. to be seated or fixed, Arist. Plant. 2. 4, 2, Callix, ap. Ath. 204 D. pi0ov, es, e, post. aor. 2 of daphaver. Spardopar, Pass. to become or be stable, Arcad. p. 163. 18, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 16, and other late writers. . - patos, a, ov, also os, ov, sitting, sedentary, of persons or their occupa- tions, épyov Hipp. Art. 820; of moAAol raw rds réxvas éxdvraw Edpacoi elat Xen. Lac. 1, 3; 5p. dpxai, opp. to orparetat, Plat. Rep. 407 B; 5p. Bios Anth. P. 11. 42. 2. éSpaia paxis the horse’s back on which the rider sits, Eur. Rhes. 7833 cf. €pa 1. 4. II. sitting fast, steady, steadfast, ndOno’ éSpaia Eur. Andr. 266; é5p. Baoes Plat. Tim. 59D; édp. ivos sound sleep, Hipp. 1180 E ; of a cup, Ath. 496 A. ESpardrys, 770s, #, firmness, fixedness, Clem. Al. 859. Spatwpa, 76, a foundation, base, Ep. 1 Tim. 3. 15. ZWpiixov, aor. 2 of Sépropat. €5papov, aor. 2 of Tpéxe. Zpav, Ep. 3 pl. aor. 2 of 5idpdonw. s Wpavov, 74, post. form of Spa, a seat, abode, dwelling, Hes. Fr. 18, Orph. H. 17. 7:—mostly in pl., Aesch, Pers. 4, Supp. 102, Soph. O. C. 176, 223; GAN’ dva éf édpdvaw rise from thy rest or idleness, Soph. Aj. 194. II. a stay, support, said of an anchor, in sing., Anth. P. 6, 28. , 75, = €8pa, Eur. Fr, 307, Philo 1. 336. pacréov, verb. Adj. of éSpaw, one must place, Geop. 6. 2, 2. II, of €SpaCopar, one must sit, Schol. Il. 23. 205. F %, Ep. and Ion. for édpa, Hom., Hdt, Hes, egoa, ev,=édpaios, Hesych. d edvopopéw — EComat. €Spyea, Ion. aor. 1 of paw. : Sprdw, to seat or set :—Pass. ¢o sit, only in Ep. forms edpidwvrat Hes, Th. 388; é5pidev7o Il. 10. 198, Od. 7.98; EdpraacPa Od. 3. 35. II. intr, in Act. ¢o sit, Theocr. 17. 19, Ap. Rh. 3. 170. } Spicds, 7, dv, belonging to the seat or the bowels, Medic. €Sprov, 76, Dim. of é5pa, Hesych. Spirns (7), 6, a suppliant sitting on the hearth, Suid.; cf. txérns. &Spo-StagroAevs, éws, 6, an instrument for widening the passage of the anus, Paul. Aeg. p. 205. ; &Spo-orpodos, 4, a wrestler who throws his adversary, Argive fashion, by a cross-buttock, Theocr. 24. 109. Biv, I sing., but €Sv (Il. 4. 222) Ep. and Dor. 3 pl., aor. 2 of dq. €w, old Ep. pres., for which in Att. éo0iw is used, Ep, inf. épevas: impf, €50v, Ion. 3 sing. édecxe, Il. 22. 501: fut. @opac 18. 271, Od. 9. 369: pf. part. é5n5ws :—Pass., pf. é5/507a« Od. :—for the Att. forms v. sub éo8iw: cf, also @a0w. (From 4/EA come also ¢3-wdy, é5-nrus, é5-eopa, €ld-ap, €00-w, éa0-iw; cf. Skt. ad, ad-mi (edo), ad-akas (edax), Lat. ed-o, es-t, ess-e, es-us, es-urio, es-ca; Goth. it-an, A.S. ef-an; O. H, G. iz-an, G. essen.) To eat, as opp. to mivw, Hom.: also of beasts, Zo eat, devour, Hom., esp. in Il.; elw0dres €5pevac abd5ny Il. 5- 203 ; boca pev éxmérora Kai 25ndora Od, 22. 56: of worms, fo gnaw, Il. 22. 509, Od. 21. 395 :—rare in Att., Alcae, Com, Incert. 1, Eubul. Avov, 4. IL. to eat up, devour, esp. in phrases, Blorov, ofxov, KTHhuaTa, xphpara Edovor Od.; Hpérepoy Kaparov . . €dovor Od. 14. 417. III. metaph., xayarw re wat GAyeoe Oupdy edovres Q. 75, ef, 10..379, Il. 24. 129, Simon, Iamb, 1. 24. 054, 7, food, meat, victuals, Il. 19. 167, Od. 3.70, etc.; also in Prose, Hipp. Acut. 392; €3. xal méats Plat. Rep. 350 A, Legg. 782 E, al.; pl, Tay... wepl edwdds A5ovav Id. Rep. 389 E, cf. 519 B. 2. forage, fodder for cattle, Il. 8. 504. 3. a bait for fish, Theocr. 21. 43. II. the act of eating, dx@dpevos rH 5. Arist. H. A. 6. 6,1; dddvras exe .. €bwdRs xapw Id. P. A. 4.6, 10; TH €5. Tod Bods [xaipet] 6 Aéov Id. Eth. N. 3. 10, 13. 2. a meal, émt pias 265, Id, H. A. 8. 9, 1. €55ip0s, ov Theophr.C.P.6. 11, 10.,6.12,12, 7, ov Hdt. 2.92 :—eatable, Hat. l.c., Thuc. 3. 108, etc.: 7a €5d:pa eatables, provisions, Id. 7. 39, etc. és, dv, given to eating (more than drinking), Hipp. Aér. 284. Gwdralo, fut. dow, to furnish the audience with seats, Lycurg. ap. Harp., Poll. 4.121; cf. Inscrr. of Brit. Mus. p. 23. II. to form a floor, Suid. €Sadtov, 74, (@50s) a seat, mostly in pl., like €5pava, abodes, Aesch. Theb, 455, Cho. 71, Soph. El. 1393; Com. phrase, xpiBavay €6. Ar. Fr. 199. II. in a ship, é5wAra are expl. the rowing-benches, Lat. transtra, Eust., Hesych., etc.; but in Hdt. 1. 24, where Arion plays standing éy roiot éSwAtoro1, it must be a kind of half-deck; the phrase dxpa. é5a indicates the same thing, Soph. Aj. 1277; Helen also sits év pécous €5., Eur. Hel. 1571; and a man bound hand and foot is placed és Od8wd1a vyds, Id. Cycl. 238. 2. in sing. the socket of the mast, Lat. calx mali, Arist. Mechan. 6. IIT. in a theatre, a semicircle of benches, Lat. fori, Poll. 4. 132. Aros or rather €SwArds (Lob. Pathol. p. 135), 6, a bird in Schol. Ar. Ay. 884, Hesych.; perhaps only v. 1. for épddtos. €5wdov, 76, = ESwAL0v, Lyc. 1320. €e, post. for €, him, acc. of o¥, €eBva, écBvow, eeSvwtis, Ep. for éSy-. éetxordBowos, éeixoor, -Kdcopos, —koorés, Ep. for elxoo-. éetAeov, v. sub eiAw. éeto, Ep. for «fo, Ap. Rh. 1. 1032. €evra, €evrrov, Ep. for elma, efor. ees, Ep. for efs, Hes. Th. 145, C. I. (addend.) 4935 5. éacdpny, part. €ecaduevos, Ep. aor. of etSojat, v. sub *ei5a. écioao, €eicaro, 2 and 3 sing. Ep. aor. of elpe (ibo), Il. 9. 645, 15. 415 :—€eodoOny, 2 dual, 15. 544. ae ay €é\Swp, Ep. for €A5-. €Apeda, éeApévos, v. sub etAw. ééATropat, Ep. for €Amopat. ééAoat, v. sub claw. cepydde, eepye, eepypévos, eépyvupt, épyw, Ep. for elpy-. écppévos, €epro, y. sub eipw. éépon, ‘eponers, Ep. for épo-. éépxaro, v. sub eipya. é€ooaro, Ep. 3 sing. aor. 1 med, of ifm; v. sub épitw I. €ocaro, Ep. 3 sing. aor. med. of €vvupe. ferro, Ep. 3 sing. plqpf. pass. of évvup. opar: impf. and aor. 2 é(éuny: the aor. pass. €oOnv (read in Soph. O. C. 195 by Br., etc.) is not Att., v. Luc, Soloec. 11, Phryn. 269, and eabeCopa. (From 4/EA come also i{-w, efo-a, €6-0s, €8-pa, 15-pta, cf. (aédas = Kabédpas Hesych.); cf. Skt. sad, sid-dmi (sido, sedeo), sad-ayami (colloco), sad-as (sedes), Lat. sed-eo, sed-o, sol-ium; Goth. sit-a, O. H.G. sitz-u (sitzen), sat-al, (sedile, settle, saddle): cf. Hua.) To seat oneself, sit, Hom., who however only uses pres. and impf.; mostly with év, as eCecOar év Aer py, etc. ; ent didpw Tl. 6. 3543 kata kdcpovs Od. 3. 389; wort Bapoy 22. 335, 379; émi Badpov Soph. O. C. 100, cf. Ar. Ran. 6825 rarely, &. els rémoy Mimnerm; g; aut reve Eur. Phoen. 1516 :—also c, acc. only, 748° ero payreiov Aesch. Eum. 33 elpecias (vyov éCouevos Soph, Aj. 249 (v. sub xabiw 11) —émt xOovl . . ECéoOnv they sank to the earth, of a pair of scales, Il. 8, 74:—used once by Hdt. 8. 22 (€« Tod pécou Hpiv eeoGe), and in late Prose; but in Att. Prose kabéCopar was always used. II. there is no such Act. as (a, 40 set, place; though, as if from it, we have the trans, tenses loa, med. cicapny, fut. med, eigopat, pf. pass, eluat, (v. efoa) :—the Causal Verb p is (Cw or tSpvar, €4 — €Ovikos. &, fem. for éds, his, éq, exclam., v. sub é. €ny, 3 sing. Ep. impf. of efi (sum), Hom.: as first pers. only in Il. 11. 762 (v. Buttm. Ausf. Gr. § 108 Anm. 16), where Spitzn. gov. éqvbave, Ep. 3 sing. impf. act of dvddvw. éjos, gen. masc. of és (q. v.); not éfos, as if from éds. ys, Ep. gen. of ds, who, Il. 16. 208: but és, gen. of ds, Ais. €qo0a, 2 sing. Ep. impf. of eiul (sum). €yor, 3 sing. Ep. subj. pres. of etyé (sum). €0ds, ados, 6, }, (€00s) cust “y, t éo0a: tds Thuc. 2. 44, cf. Plut. Otho 5; also 307. 46, Opp. H. 5. 499. zame, Themist. 273 D. @epa, 7, hair, post. Noun, used by Hom. only in Il, and always in pl., either of a horse’s mane, 8. 42; or of the horsehair crest on helmets, 16. 795. 19. 382 ;—in sing. of the hair of the head, Pind. I. 5 (4). 11, Aesch. Pers. 1062, Eur., etc.; (but also in pl., Aesch. Cho. 175, Eur. Hel. 632, C. 1. r012); then of a lion’s mane, Theocr. 25. 244; a boat's bristles, Opp. C. 3. 395; a bird’s plumage, Ib. 123: also a tufted flower, as of the crocus, Mosch, 2. 68. Mapdto, fut. dow, to have long hair, Theocr. 1. 34. “eipds, ddos, 7), = eerpa, an old reading in Od. 16. 176, for yeverddes, vy. Schol. Theocr. 1. 34. eipw, once in Hom., Il. 21. 347, yalpe dé puv (sc. ddwhv) bors 2eipy he rejoices, whoso fends the field: in Orph. Arg. 932 we have the Pass., xpuoéais podideoow eelperac he is decked with golden scales, eh-dorrevos, or, aiming at fashion, conceited, Heliod. 7. 10. éh-exOpos, ov, bearing one a grudge, Cratin, Incert. 103, Philo 2. 269: —Ady., €0eAéxOpws Exew mpds Tva Dem. 1005.15; Tiwi Paus. 4. 4, 4. Hens, dv, willing, voluntary, Hes. Op. 118, Call. Dian. 31. MeAtpov, ov, gen. ovos, =foreg., Plat. Crat. 406 A. ehnrés, 7, dv, voluntary, a conject. of Herm. in Soph. O. C. 527, for abOaiperor, which violates the metre. €cAoSovActa (fa only in Suid.), 4, willing slavery, Plat. Symp. 184 C:—€ehodovhéw, to be or become a slave willingly, Dio C. 45. 35. €eA6-Boudos, ov, a willing slave, serving voluntarily, Plat. Rep. 362 D: —Ady., @edodovAws Exew Plut. Arat. 25. €edo-Opnoxeia, 1, will-worship, self-chosen service, Ep. Col. 2. 23. €0eho-Opyaketw, to choose a mode of worship for oneself, Eccl. @BeoKiKew, to be GeAdKaxos; of soldiers who let themselves be beaten, to be slack in duty, play the coward purposely, Hdt. 1.127., 5.78., 9-67, Polyb. 4. 38, 6, etc. MedoKdxyars, ews, }, wilful neglect of duty, Polyb. 3. 68, 10; els 20. aye to refer a thing to malice prepense, Id. 27. 13, 13:—also, in Suid., @edoxakia, 7 &eb-KaKos, ov, wilfully bad, cowardly, of soldiers :—Adv. -«ws, App. ap. Suid. s. v. €eho-kivSivos, ov, courting danger, fool-hardy, Poll. 3. 134 :—Adv. ~vas, App. Pun. 120. CedoKwptw, to affect deafness, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 202, Strabo 36, €eAb-Kados, ov, pretending deafness, unwilling to hear, Suid, @ehovrndév, Adv. voluntarily, spontaneously, Thuc. 8. 9, Polyb. 6.31, 2. eovray, Ady. voluntarily, Hdt. 1. 5. €ehovrnp, pos, 6, a volunteer, Od. 2. 292; cf. sq. €ehovrys, ov, 6, prose form of foreg,, (used however by Soph. Aj. 24), Hdt. 5. 104, 110, Thuc. 1. 60, Andoc. 1.14; €0. pidos Xen. An. 1.6, 9; Tay behovTay .. Tpinpapx@v Dem. 259. 12 :—cf. Lob. Phryn. 4. eXovri, Adv., = eGeAovrnddv, Thuc. 8. 2, Diod. 18. 53. edovris, i5os, 1), fem. of éeAovrHs, Synes. 141 C. @eorrovia, 7, love of work, prob. |, for piAowovia in Xen. Oec. 21, 6. €0eX6-trovos, ov, willing to work, Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 22, Ael. N. A. 4. 43. €0eA6-tropvos, ov, a voluntary prostitute, Anacr. 19. €0eho-mpogfevos, ov, one who voluntarily charges himself with the office of mpdgevos (q. v.) to a foreigner or foreign state, a sort of honorary con- sul, Thue. 3. 70. @edo-ceBera, 7), =eVeA0Ppnaxeia, Hesych. Behooodta, %, would-be-wisdom, Epiph @eo-codos, ov, would-be-wise, Id. €0eA6-cuxvos, ov, fond of repetition, a bore, Crates Incert. 8. €eXb-rpeTr0s, ov, given to change, Eccl. @eAoupyéw, to work freely, indefatigably, Ael.N. A. 7. 13. ehoupyla, 7), willingness to work, Eccl. @edoupyés, dv, (*€pyw) willing to work, indefakigable, Xen. Eq. 10, 17, Ael. N. A. 4. 43.5 7-13. Adv. —y@s, Poll. 3. 121. MeXovoros, a, ov, voluntary, Xen. Cyr. 4.2, 11, Symp. 8, 13. II. of things, optional, 7d épav eBedovordy éort love is a matter of free choice, Id. Cyr. 5.1, 10. Ady. —iws, Id, Hier. 11, 12. / &eAo-ptddcopos, ov, a would-be philosopher, E. M. 722. 17. @éAw or OAw; Ep. subj. Awe Il. I. 549., mg 397 :—impf. 70cdov Il. 14. 120, al., Hdt., Att.; Ep: also é@eAoy Il. 6, 336; Ion. €0éAeoxov 13. 106, Hdt. 6. 12 :—fut. é@eAjow Hom., Hdt., Att.; OeAnow Att. :— aor. I #0éAnoa Hdt., Att., Ep. ¢0éAnoa Il. 18. 396; imper. O€Anooy Aesch, Pr. 783; subj. OeAjon Ib. 1028, Xen., etc.; opt, PeAnoacpe Soph. O. C, 1133; inf. eAjoat (v. 1. €-) Thuc. 5. 72, etc. :—part. PeAnoas Soph. O. T. 649, Isae. 69. 42 :—pf. 70éAnea Xen., etc. ; Te#éAnta Sext. Emp. M. 2. 37, Moschio, Lxx.—The use of the two forms in Poets depends to some extent on metrical reasons: the pres. form 6éAw however never occurs in Hom, (unless with La Roche we return to the reading 6 77 OéAorev in Od. 15. 317), or Hes.; and is rare in all Ep. and Eleg. d, Hipp. 597. 2; €0. yev- c. dat., Hipp. Morb. Sacr. II. ordinary, Hipp. 645. 32. .onm I. pp. 30, 958- Poets (@¢Act occurs in H. Hom. Ap. 46, OéAe in Solon 27. 12): vg 411 Interpp. ad Il. 1. 277: reversely, €9éAw is never used in Trag. dialogue, except in the augm, tenses #@¢eAov, 70€Anoa: in Ar. Vesp. 291, Pax 852, we have the fut. €@eAjoea: Pind. follows the Homeric usa e, Bockh y, 1. P. 1. 62., 10. 5: the other Lyr. have both forms, ééAw being naturally most common in anapaestics: in Hdt. the Mss. vary, but he seems to have preferred é@éAw: in Att. Prose the form eéAw prevails, except in the phrases ei @éAes, Av Oeds OéAy, and the like, Lob. Phryn. 7; hence in Att. Prose the only impf. and aor. ind. are #eAov, 7,0éAnoa, regul. formed from é0éAw. To wish, be fain, implying purpose or design, whereas BovAouar denotes mere willingness or desire (A€gat 0éde cor, mply Oaveiv, & BovAopa: Eur. Alc, 281); but in Od, 3. 324, it is used much like BovAopat, to prefer, ei 5 e0édrcts, weCds if thou hadst rather, on foot :—Construct. :—absol., esp. in part., €0éAwy é0éAou- av dviyaryev Od. 3. 272; el od ye OG Sup e0édas Il. 23. 8q4 ; EbéAEt pot Ovyds Il. 17. 702, Od. 11. 566 :—often foll. by inf. of pres. or aor., fo wish to .., Il. 7. 364, and Att. ; c. acc. et inf. 4o wish that .., Il. 19. 274, Hdt. 1. 3; rarely foll. by dare, Eur. Hipp. 1327 :—but it is not used c. acc, only, except when an inf. is easily supplied from the context, evxnAos Ta ppdceat, doo’ 2édAnaba (sc. ppdgerbat) Il. 1.554, cf. 9. 397. 7. 182s Od. 14. 1723 ovréovrat 5¢ ob baa e€Aovor (sc. oiréeaGat), Hdt. 1. 71, cf. Thuc. 5. 50; 7é 57) O€Amv (sc. mpafar); with what intent? Aesch. Pr. 118, etc. 2. with a negat., almost =dvvaya, as pipvew odk é0éAecKov évavriov they cared not to make a stand, i.e. they were unable, Il. 13. 106; ob8'.. #0eA€ Oupds Tepopévors éErdpoow dpuvepev 17. 7033; and, by a poetic figure, of a stream, ob3 Oe mpopéeiv GAN’ tcxero would not run on, but stopped, 21. 366, cf. Od. 8. 223, 316, h. Cer. 453 so, 7a 5évdpa oddéy p’ €0éder dddoxew Plat. Phaedr. 230 Dz. 3. part. é9éAwy or Pédow as Adv. like éxwy, willingly, gladly, Od. 3. 272, and Att. Poets, cf. Soph. O. T. 649; ot e0éAwy, =dexwy, Il. 4. 300:—but é@éAwy or 6 OéAwy, like 6 BovAduevos, whoever will, i.e. any one, Lat. guivis, Soph. Ph. 619, Aj. 1146, Plat. Gorg. 508 C:—rd Oédov =TodTO d OéA Tis, Soph. O. C. 1219. 4. yun @Oere, c. inf., . like Lat. noli, do not, Il. 1. 277.5 2. 247. 5. ei O€Aas if you please, Soph. O. T. 343. 6. foll. by subj., ri cor OéAets dqr’ cixdOw; in what wilt thou that I give way to thee, Ib. 650, cf. El. 80. II. of inanimate things, 1. much like péAAw, merely to express a future event, like our will or shall as a sign of the fut. tense, el OeAnoe dvaBhva % tvpavvis Hdt. 1. 109; df [5 morapds] eAnoe txerpapar 7d péeOpoy Id. 2. 11; ef eOéAEL Tor pndiy avTigooy elvat Id. 7. 49; cf. Plat. Rep. 370 B, 423 B, 436 B, 503 C, etc.:—in this sense, very rarely of persons, ob dodvar OéAer=ovde dv doin, Aesch. Eum, 429; eimep.. obrés o° @0éXee kparfjoa Ar, Vesp. 536; cf. Pind. N. 7. 132, Plat. Rep. 375 A. 2. like wépuna, to be naturally disposed, to be wont or accustomed, c. inf., cvpBdoas icxvpal ob €€Aovoer ouppéver Hdt. 1.74; peyada mphypata peyadotor nv dvvo.ct édovar KaratpéecOa Id. 7. 50, 2; ove eOéAovow ai ywGpar .. dpotar eivat Thuc. 2.89; Todr’ évdedexés COéder yiyvecOar Arist. Meteor. I. 9, 5, cf. Metaph. 4. 2, 8, al.; ob OcdAec (Hv, of premature births, Id. H. A. G..a07, 2: 3. in Hdt. and Att. Prose, often in phrases, ré €0éAe 70 tépas, 70 émos; Lat. quid sibi vult? French que veut-il dire? what means it..? Hdt. 1. 78., 6. 37; in full ri é@€Ae A€yerv; Id. 2. 13, cf. 4. 131. ev, Ep. and Att. poét. gen. for 0, o3, masc. and fem, his, ker, of him, of her, Hom., etc.: Aeol. yéBev, v. sub diyappa. Oneiro, Cynetipeba, Cneivro, eOnhocavro, Ion. forms, v. sub Pedopat. Onpo-hoyéw, to gather customarily, Anth. P. 9. 551. eOnp eOnpootvn, #, custom, Hesych., Suid. eOipov, ov, gen. ovos, tomed : ’ : well-k , Musae, 312. €Onv, aor. I pass. of igus: but €Ony, aor. 2 act. of riOnye. ito, post. 0- Pyth. C. Aur. 35: fut. Att. 0a Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 53: aor. e(@ica Dem. 477. 21: pf. €f0:a Plat. Meno 70 B, Xen. Hell. 6. 1, 15:—Pass., fut. €0:cOjcopa Dion. H. 4. 11: aor. €lBicOny Ar. Vesp. 512, Plat.: pf. efOcopar Eur., etc., #Otopae C. I. (addend.) 2 a4] ke IA: plqpf. et@caro Xen. Ages. 11, 2: (€00s). To accustom, use, €0. Tid mroveiy 71 Plat. Gorg. 510 D, etc.; sometimes e0ifew rd 7d moreiy Xen. Mem. 2.1, 2, etc.;—c. acc. cogn., €0n 6. ra Plat. Legg. 706 D; €0. 7wa tabra Xen. Hell.6. 1,15; €0. Tuva mpés te Luc. Anach, 20:— Pass. to be or become accustomed or used to do, c. inf., Hipp. Art. 807, Thuc. 1. 77, etc.; ei@icpévos dvayxuvreitvy Andoc. 20. 16; c, acc. cogn., €ifecBar eos Plat. Legg. 681 B; éiCecOar abv ee revi Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 333 e0ifec@at mpds Te Arist. Eth. N. 3. 12, 2, al.; 7e Ib. 4. 1, 31, al.; 7wt Theophr. C. P. 5.9, 11 :—in Plut. Lycurg. 12, Bekk. restores «ldifovro for the intr. act. et@cCov. Ouxds, 4, dv, of, arising from use or custom, Plut. 2. 3 A. . pos, ov, accustomed, usual, €Otpudv [orl] poe Diod. Excerpt. 577. 43: Ta éOtua customs, Ath. 151E. Ady, —pws, Apollon. de Pron. 101 A. @Huopa, 76, (26i{w) a custom, habit, Plat. Legg. 793 D. é 6s, 6, an ing, habituation, Arist. Eth, N. 1. 7, 21, al.: pl. customs, usages, Id. Pol. 7. 13, 12. uoréov, verb. Adj. one must accustom, c. acc. et inf., 28, Plat. Rep. 396 A, etc. herds, 7, ov, to be acquired by habit, dperh Arist. Eth. N. 1. 9, 1, al. 2. acquired by habit, Id. Rhet. 1, 10, 18. vapxns, ov, 6, an ethnarch, Luc. Macrob.17, 2Ep. Cor. 11.32. EX, a captain of Roman auxiliaries, Byz. vapyta, 7, rule over a nation, Byz. - €0vndev, Adv. by nations, as a whole nation, Joseph. Macc. 3.4. e€vés, 4, dv, of or for a nation, national, Polyb. 30. 10, 6, Diod. 18. 13. II. almost =BdpBapos, foreign, heathen, gentile, N. Th | and Eccl.; @0vin@ .. év copia Epigr. Gr. 430. 6, so Ady. ~xas, N.'T. 4, Xen. Mem. 2. Ms 412 virys, ov, 5, of the same nation, Eust. 901. 9, Suid.; in Hesych. é0vi- arns must be corrected. vos, eos, 7d: (from 4/FEO, v. Il, 2. 87.. 7. 845, al.) :—a number of people living together, a company, body of men, érapwy Ovos, eOvos éraipwy a band of comrades, Il. 3. 32., 7. 115, etc.; €Ovos Aa@y a host of men, Il. 13. 495; and of particular tribes, Auxtwy péya €. 12. 330; *Axat@y €. 17. §52: in pl, €0vea me(@v 1%. 724, cf. 2. OI; eOvea vexpav Od. 10. 526; and of animals, é6vea pudwy, pedcooawy, dpviOwv swarms, flocks, etc., Il. 2.87, 459, 409; so, €0vn Onpa@y Soph. Ph. 1147, Ant. 344:—Pind. has also é@vos pepérwy, dvépwy, yuvaikdy, a race, family, tribe, O. 1. 106, P. 4. 448; €. 765e, of the Erinyes, Aesch. Eum. 66. 2. after Hom., a nation, people, rd Mndixdy vos Hat. 1. tor, cf. Aesch. Pers. 43, 56, etc.; yévos being a subdivision of éOvos, Hdt. 1. 56, cf. yévos 11. 1. c. b. in N, T. and Eccl. ra €0vn the nations, Gentiles, i.e. all except Jews and Christians; cf. Bdp- Bapos. 3. a peculiar class of men, a caste, tribe, Td OeTTAAdy . . meveotixoy €. Plat. Legg. 776 D; e0vos unpuxixdy, payday Id. Polit. 290C, Xen. Symp. 3, 6, cf. Plat. Gorg. 455 B, Arist. Fr. 347:—also a class in respect to rank or station, ob mpds TodTo BAémovres .. , Stas. . &y ri bvos darar diapepdyrws evdarpov Plat. Rep. 420 D, cf. 421 C, 519 E. 4. sex, 70 OAV €Ovos Xen. Occ. 7, 26. 5. a part, number, Hipp. 408. 333; cf. duoebvia. II. of a single person, a relation, Pind. N. 5.80; cf. yévos 11. jov, aor. 2 of Opwoxw, Hom, uw, eos, 74, (€0w) custom, habit, 200s 7d mpdabe ToKhwv (where it nearly =7j00s, nature, disposition), Aesch. Ag. 728; 70 ovvndes €. Soph. Ph. 894; then very freq. in Plat., Arist., etc., both in sing. and pl.; év €0ec eivat to be in the habit, Thuc. 2. 64; 00s éoriv ri, c. inf., Cratin. Min. Tap. 1, Alex. :A. 1; Gos Zxev, c. inf., Plut. Them. 4; @e by habit, habitually, opp. to pucet, Arist. Eth. N. 10. 9, 6; 8: eos, 7.14, 43 €€ ous 2.1, 1; ey Oe Id. Fr. 119. Cpicev, v. sub Oepica, 0, (v. sub fin.) :-—to be accustomed, to be wont : the pres. is only used in partic. with a finite Verb, much in the same construction as Aadéy and ruxdv, ard 7éAX’ Epdeoxey €ov much ill he wrought by custom, i, €, was accustomed to work, Il. 9.540; obs mates épidyatywov eOovres 16, 260:—the pf. eiw6a, Ion, wa (both in Hom.) is used as a pres., and the plqpf. ei@Perv, Ion. éoOea, as impf.:—to be wont or accustomed, be in the habit, mostly c. inf., as Il. 5. 766, Hdt. 3. 36, Thuc. 1. 99, etc.: impers., Homep eiwOer (sc. -yeréoOat), Plut. Sull. 9, etc.:—the part. stands absol. of persons, tomed, te -y, usual, Avidxq elwOdre Il. 5. 231; bpiv .. Tots eidPoow who are used [to hear me], Soph. Ph. 939; ov éwOds praeter morem, Hdt. 1.111; and of things, 7d éwOdra von- para Id. 3. 80; év 7@ clwOdrt tpérw Plat. Apol. 27 B, etc.; often in neut., kara 7d elwds according to custom, Thuc, 4.17; mapa 70 elaOds Ib. 55; 7a elwOéra ordinary things, Ar. Ran, 1, Thuc. 2. 51, etc. :— Archipp. Incert. 10, Araros Incert. 2, have éw0dus :—Ady. elwOdrws, more solito, Soph. El. 1456. (To the same Root belong 00s, 900s, 7)0¢zos, 20i¢«:—this Root is FEO, as appears from Skt. svadh-a (voluntas, vis), Lat. sue-sco, sue-tus; cf, Goth. sid-us (700s), O. H. G. sit-u (sitte).) et, Dor. for 7, where, C. I. 5594. IL. 393 cf. mee. ei, Ep. and Dor. also ai, Lat. si, a conjunctive Particle, used both in conditions, if, and in indirect questions, whether, In the former use its regular negative is y7; in the latter, ov. A. In ConpiTIons. I. with Inprc., 1. with the present, perfect, and past tenses, to state simply a present or past condition, with nothing implied as to its fulfilment, @ 8 orw todr’ éoriv, Euol pédrc pirov eivat but if this is so, it will be.., Il. 1. 564: any form of the Verb can stand in apodosi, so that it correspond in point of time with the tense in protasi, et Oeot 7: dpaow aloxpév, ode elaly Ocol Eur. Fr. 294. 73; el Boxe’, tA€wpev Soph. Ph. 526; ef batdpor d-yvod, kai euav- Tov émA€Anopat Plat. Phaedr. 228 A; wdsor’ Gaodotuny (true optative), HavOlay el pa) pid@ Ar. Ran. 579, cf. Od. 17. 4755 ef Oe0d jy, ode qv alaxpoxepdis" el 3° aloxponepons, ob iy Ocov Plat. Rep. 408 C; Taira rAéyav Kiapbeipw rods véous, Tadr’ dy ein BraBepa this would be, softened for ¢his is, Plat. Apol. 30 B, cf. 25 B; ef obra dp0as dwéarnoay, ipeis dv od xpedy Gpxorre if these were right in their revolt, (it would follow that) you rule when you have no right, Thuc. 3. 40 t—for the fut. to express a present condition, v. infr. 3. b. 2. with the his- torical tenses, implying that the condition has not been or was not ful- filled, answered by an histor. tense with dy in apodosi, (v. dv, B. I. 1. a): a. the impf. with ef refers to present time or to continued or repeated action in past time (in Hom. always the latter): radra om dy édvvavro roteiy, et pi) diatrp perpig ExpOvro they would not be able to do this (as they do), if they did not live an abstemious life, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 16, cf. Plat. Rep. 489 B; ob dv vncov eepare, et py Tt Kal vavrindy elyev he (Agamemnon) would not have been master of islands, if he had not had also some naval force, Thuc.1. 9; «f joav dvbpes dyadot .. , ob dv more Tadra énacxov if they had been good men, they would never have suffered as they did, Plat. Gorg. 516 E, cf. Xen. Mem. 1.1, 5; el yap éyw rade qe’ .. od« dv buegepvye if I had known this.., IL. 8. 366. b. S Mio aan Hog ae Past an el ph igi Bere, erro; 6a dy émt Baoiréa if you not come, we shou pie be on re .., Xen, An. 2.1, 43 Kat tows dy dméOavor, el pi) 4} id raxéov karedvOn had not the government soon been broken up, Plat, Ap. 32 D, cf. Il. 5. 679, Od. 4. 363, Dem. 41. 18., 833. 12. c. the plqpf. (which is rare) with ef refers to action Jinished in past or time, Aourdy 8 dy iv Huty ere wept rips médews dahex- Ojvat, ‘d mporépa Tay dAdwv Ti elphyny éneroinro if she had not , ° eOvirns — et. aor, is commonly used to express the sense of the plqpf. 3. with the future: a. to express a future supposition in the most emphatic form, the apod. also denoting future time, ef ¢@dgopev Tods TodeEpious katakaivoyres, ovdels Hua droOavetra Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 19; € pt) Bon-- Onoere, ob mepiecra Taxet Thuc. 6.91. In these future conditions éay with the subj. (v. infr. 1.1) is much more common; but ¢ with the fut, is freq. in Trag., especially when a threat or warning, or a strong ap- peal to the feelings, is intended, ef p?) xabégets yA@ooar, ora gor kaka Eur. Fr. 5, cf. Dem. 842. 15. b. the future with ef sometimes ex- presses a present intention, expectation, or necessity, where wéAAw c. inf, is more common, alpe mAj«Tpov, ei paxet if you intend to fight, Ar. Av. 761; yd pey ote dvip.., «i tadr dvarel rHde Keloera kparn, i.e. if this is 4o pass unpunished, Soph. Ant. 484, cf. Il. 1. 61, Eur. Hec: 863 :—such conditions belong properly to I, 1, for the Verb in apod. may be present, and the subj. cannot here be used in place of the fut. (as in a). ce. for ei used instead of a causal Particle after @avpaca, etc., v. infr, V. II. with Subsuner., ¢ is regularly joined with ay (Ep. xe, xev), and forms a compd. word éay, contr. #v, dy [@]; but Hom. not seldom omits dy (xe, ev), e.g. Od. 5. 221., 14. 372,—a liberty sometimes taken by the Attic poets, but never by Attic prose-writers: it occurs, however, in later Prose: y, dy A. I: 1. when the apod. is future, éay c. subj. expresses a future condition (if he go=if he shall go) more distinctly and vividly than éi c. opt. (if he should go), but less so than ef c. fut. ind. (supr. I. 3. a); ef 5€ Kev ds ep£ys Kat Tor TelOwvrac "Axaol, yvwon éred’..if thou do thus.., thou shalt know, Il. 2. 304, cf. 1.128., 3. 281, Od. 17. 549; av 5€ Tis dvOorATa, ody ipiv metpagépeda xepodoba Xen. An. 7. 3, 11; dy pa) viv eédAaper exet ToAEpely abT@, EvOGS tows avarykacOnadpeba TovTO Toteiy if we be not now willing, Dem. 54. 20 (¢i pi) viv @0€Aopev would be, if we are not now willing’); cf, Xen, Cyr. 3. 2, 13. 5. 35 27+. 5+ 4, 305 5+ 5, 13, Plat, Rep. 473 D. 2. when the apod. is present, denoting customary or re~ peated action, the subj. in protasi expresses a general condition, if this ever happen (which in modern languages, as generally in Latin, is expressed by the pres. indic.), #v wore dacpds ixnrat, cot 7d yépas word petCoy (sc. éort) if ever a division come, your prize is (always) greater, Il. 1. 166; so with dy omitted, eimep yap Te xdAov .. kaTanépp, GAAG.. Exe KéTov 1. 81; jy eyyds EAOn Odvaros, obdels BovAerac OvfaoKew if death come near, Eur. Alc. 671 :—sometimes, especially in Poets, this general con- dition is expressed by the pres. indic. (never by the fut.), e ris 00 4 xat mAclovs tis tyutpas AoyiCerar, pdraids éorw if any one (ever) counts upon... , Soph. Tr. 944. III. with Oprative ei never takes dv, and is used, 1. when the apod. has the opt. with dy (v. dv B. III. a), ei c, opt. in protasi generally expresses a future condition less definitely and vividly than édy c. subj., differing as in Engl. if he should go or if he were to go is less definite than if he shall go or if he go, } kev yhoo Tpiapos Tprdpord re maides .. , ef opaw rdde mayta mv00iaro Hapvapéevouy surely they would exult, if they should hear .., H. 1. 255, cf, 7. 28, Od. 3. 223; etn popyrds ode dv, el mpdaoos nadrds if you were to be in prosperity, Aesch. Prom, 979; o¥de yap dy pe éwacvoin, el efedavvorpe Tods ebepyéras Xen. An. 7. 7,11; olos 8 avrds, el pOoy- viv AaBor, sapéorar’ dv défeter, if it were to find a voice, Aesch. Ag. 37: so, regularly, in Att. Prose: but in Hom, the pres. opt. is sometimes used in protasi, like the impf. indic. in Attic, to express an unfulfilled present condition (v. dy B, 111. a), ef vov én’ dAAw dOAcvorper, H 7” dy eyo +» Pepotuny if we were now contending, etc., Il. 23. 274; and the Att, Poets occasionally follow this Homeric usage, el pa Kvior (el pr) eevee), Eur. Med. 568 (v. dy B, 111, a), 2. when the apod. is past, denoting customary or repeated action, the opt. in prot. expresses a general condition in past time, if this ever happened, corresponding to the use of the subj. in present time (v. supr. 11, 2), ef 8¢ Twas BopuBov- pévous aigboro .. , xaracBevvivar Thy Tapaxiy éreparo if he should see (if he ever saw) any troops in confusion (or whenever he saw them), he (always) tried, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 55, cf. An. 4. 5,13, Mem. 4. 2, 40; ef Tis dvreimot, evOds TebvAKEL if any one made objection, he was a dead man at once, Thuc. 8. 66; dd’ ef re wi) péporper, erpuver pepe Eur. Alc. 755. This opt. is rare in Hom., but v. Il. 3- 453-, 24. 768. Here (as supr. II, 2) the condition is occasionally expressed by the indic., ef Tis TL Ennpwra, drrexpivoyro if any one asked anything, they constantly replied, Thuc, 7. 10. _ 3. in oratio obliqua after past tenses, ef c. opt. often represents what is expressed in oratio recta by édv c. subj. or by ef with a primary (never an historical) tense of the indic., édoyi¢ovro ds, ei pi} pdxowro, droaricowro al rédes (the direct form being édy ju) Haxapeba, drocrhaovrat) Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 6, cf. Dem. 548. 20, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 2; €&eyey Sri, et BAaBepd mempaxws ein, Sixacos ein Cnucod- oOa (the direct form being e BraBepd rémpaxe, dixatds tort) Ib. 5. 2, 32, cf. An. 6. 6, 25; ef 5€ Twa pedyovra Anpouro, mporydspever Sr ws wae Xpygotro (the direct form being ef Tia Appopat, xpHoopar), ate i) Gites the apod. is not expressed in any form of oratio Py ined Md implied in the leadin, clause, ov« Fv ToD moAg pou mépas y, el pi) OnBaiovs.. €xXOpovs mojoee 7H mode, i.e. Philip thought there would be no end to the war, unless he should make%. (his thought having been édy pi moimow), Dem. 276.1; eBotrovro yap peach et Twa AGBorev, bmdpxey dvrt rev evior, iv dpa tixwoi TwWes pd gd (Ay TéxXet might have been ef réxouev, and ei AaBorer, Hv wot), Thuc, 2. 5. 4. when ei takes the opt. with dy, the clause Serves as an apod. as well as a prot.; ef. Plat. Prot. 329 B, Dem. 44. 30, Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 3 (v. dv B. UL d). IV. in a few cases Hdt. uses el in oratio obliqua with an inf., the finite Verb being understood, ck yap di detv mévras mepwWeivar GdXo Téw Thy Bactdniny, [én] Succud- fvat, el pi i Gs wee ge made the peace before the rest, Isocr, 93 C; but the 4 Tepov etvat, ete. (for el def or el &éor), Hat, 1, 129, cf. 2. 64, 172 3+ me * +6 » ae 6p ia ee cla — efBo. 05, 108. V. after Verbs denoting wonder, delight, indignation, disappointment, contentment, and similar emotions, Oavpd{w, dyana, aloxvvopa, Bapéws pépw, Sevdv tort, Oavpacrdy éort, AumEt pe, pep~ popa, 7 giv ear, cxeTdidlw, pOova, etc., ei c. indic. is used, where we should expect 7, to express the object of the feeling in a less positive form, Oavpatw ei pydels tpdv phr’ evOvpetrar phr’ opyicera, ép@v .. I wonder that no one of you is either concerned or angry when he sees.., Dem. 52.17; od dyanG ei pr Sieny dédanev, GAN ei ph wal xpvo@ orepavy orepaywOnoerar dyavaxrel Aesch. 74. 28:—after past tenses the principle of oratio obliqua allows the indic. to be changed to the opt., @0avpace & et ms dperiy émayyedAdpevos dpytpiov mpar- otro he wondered ¢hat any one should demand money, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 7 (cf. @avpace & ei pr) pavepdy éorw Ib. 1.1, 13); éxatpoy dyanady Sf oe aa Mise a eipyvy. dyopedey Bovrerar; Ar. Ach. 45, etc.; and still more so in compds., v. Plat. Rep. 580 B, C, and cf. cvvermeiv, cvvnybpos.) V. Imper. elré is sometimes used, like aye, in addressing several persons, Ar. Ach, 328, Av. 366, Dem. 43. 7, etc. elrros, 6, =Zi7o0s, Call. Fr. 233. eimrote or et tore, if ever, Lat. si-quando, Il. 1. 39; strengthd. etore 5h, Ib. 503: used in asking a favour of any one, to call something to his mind :—elzor’ énv ye, Hom. phrase, to express a painful recollection or rather a correction, dayp adr’ yds Eoxe Kuvimidos, eimor’ env ye if ever he was really so, if ever I could call him so, Il. 3.180. But the Ancients differed in the meaning of this phrase: cf. Wolf adJ., Herm. Vig. Append. xz, and v. Il. 11. 762., 24. 426, Od. 15. 268., 10. 315., 24. 289. On the elliptic use of etzore, v. sub ¢i A. VI. 4. €. II. indirect, if or whether ever, Il. 2. 97, etc. eimov or éi arov, if anywhere, if at all, Lat. si-cubi, Hom., etc.; also, ad zi mov, ef rod ye, el ph mov 71, el 54 ov: ef ri Tov éoriv if it is any way possible, Od. 4. 193. ITI, indirect, whether any where. Eipadiarys, ov, 6, epith. of Bacchus, h. Hom, 26. 2, Alcae, 87, Dion. P. 576: cf. Welcker Nachtr, z. Trilogie, h. 187, 195. cipyaleiv, v. sub épyadeiy. cipypos, later eipypds, 5, (cipyw) a cage, prison, Plat. Rep. 495 D, Phaedo 82 E. II. a shutting up, shutting in, Plat..2. 84 F. eipypo-pvAak [0], dixos, 6, 7, a gaoler, Xen, Hell. 5. 4, 8. elpyvip or vw, =elpyw, to shut in or up, the former in Od. Io. 238 (in Ep. form éepyvv) ; the latter in Andoc. 32. 36. eipyw or eipyw, Att. for the earlier form Epyo, q. v. eipéa, 7, v. sub efpn. eipéarat, Ion. 3 pl. pf. pass. of épa. eipepos, 6, bondage, slavery, eipepov eloavaryouar Od.8.529; (v.subeipw). eipecia, Ion. -ty, 4, (épéoow) a rowing, oarage, mp&Ta piv , 7 ELNVLKOS er et shipped at Athens from 449 B.C., Plut. Cim. 13. (It is doubtful whether it is derived from eipw (sero) to join; or eipw to say.) elpnvixds, 7, dv, of or for peace, Aéyos Isocr. 82 C; xpela Arist. Pol. 1. 6, Io. 2. of or in peace, peaceful, Bios, mpafis, Epa, etc., Plat. Legg. 829 A, al. :—Adv. -K@s, peaceably, opp. to moAcuixs, Isocr. 91 C, Xen. Oec. 1, 17, etc. eipyvo-Sixar [Tt], dv, of, the Roman Fefiales, Dion. H. 2. 72. cipnvotoréw, to make peace, Lxx: Med., Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 984. cipyvotroinots, ews, %, a peace-making, Clem. Al. 581. eipnvo-mords, 5, a peace-maker, Xen. Hell. 6. 3, 4, Plut. Nic. 11. TX: in pl. for the Rom. Fetiales, Plut. 2. 279 B. eipnvopiAdKéw, to be a guardian of peace, Philo 2. 209. : cipnvo-puAas, tixos, b, }, a guardian of peace, Xen. Vect. 5, 1. II. in pl., like eipnvodixa:, the Rom. Fetiales, Plut. Num. 12. cipiveos, eiprov, v. sub épiveos, Eprov. eipts, cos, %, worse form for Zpis. eipkréov, verb. Adj. of eipyw, one must prevent, Soph. Aj. 1250. cipkry, Ion. épxrh, 7, (cipyw) an inclosure, prison, Hdt. 4. 146, 148, Thue, I, 131, Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 19, etc.:—in pl., Eur. Bacch. 497 :—also the inner part of the house, the women’s apartments, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 5. eipxtopiAuKéw, fo be a gaoler, Philo 1. 290. cipro-pvaAak, dxos, 5, %, a gaoler, turnkey, Philo 1. 289., 2. 53. cippos, 6, a train, series, Arist. Probl. 17. 3, Philo 1. 6, 14, 31, etc. (From eipw to join, as Lat. series from sero.) eipo-Kédpos, ov, dressing wool, Il. 3. 387, Anth. P. 6. 160. eipopat, Ion. for gpopat, to ask; v. sub elpw to say. eipo-méKos, ov, wool-fleeced, woolly, eipomdxas dtecow Il. 5.137; €lpo- réxov dtov Od. 9. 443. eipo-mévos, ov, working in wool, Suid. eipos, 7d, wool, Od. 4. 135., 9. 426: cf. Eptov, elpiov, evepos. eipo-xapis, és, delighting in wool, raddapos Anth. P. 6. 39. eipowp, oros, 6, Boeot. name for the pépoy, q. v. eipvarat, eiptpevar [0], v. sub épdw, eipviotpov [0], 7d, Ep. for épvorpov, Nic. ciptw, elpvopar, post. for épvw, Epvopat. eipw (A): aor. elpa (v. infr.), alsoépaa (v. dteipw):—Pass., pf. part. éppévos (év-) Hat. 4. 190; Ep. éeppévos, v. infr.:—the simple Verb is rare, cf. dv-, 5, év-, &-, avv-eipw: (for the Root, v. sub d-elpw). To fasten together in rows, to string, used by Hom. only in Ep. pf. pass., jAéx- Tpo.oww éeppévos a necklace strung with pieces of electron, Od. 18. 296; and plqpf. pass., wera 8 HA€KTpoow €epro Od. 15. 460; so, wept oTH- Oeoatv éepto [pirpn] Ap. Rh. 3. 868. II. after Hom. in Act., arepavous eip., Lat. coronas nectere, Pind. N. 7. 113; «ip. 7a Octa Plut. 2. 1029 C: to fasten, eis Bpdxov cipas Tov Tpaxndov Zaleuc. ap. Stob. 280. 39 :—Pass., elpopévn Aegis a continuous, running style, i.e. not antithetic or with balanced periods, Arist. Rhet. 3.9, 2: cf. cvvetpw 11. eipw (B): to say, speak, tell; the Act. is used by Hom. only in the Od., and in first pers., pynorijpow & .. rade etpw 2. 162, cf. 13.7; rade Tot vnuepréa eipw 11. 137:—he also has the impf. med. in same sense, xat elpero Sevrepov avis Il. 1. 513; etpovro St nde’ Exacros Od. 11. 542; —but in other places of Hom. (v. stb épopat, érefpopac), as in Ion. Prose, the Med. means to cause to be told to one, i.e. to ask, like the Att. épod- pat :—Pass. 3 sing. eiperat, is said, Arat. 172, 261. (Though the pres. is rare, the Root is common enough in the fut. épéw, ép@, pf. elpnea, qq. v.:—notwithstanding what Plat. says (Crat. 398 D, 70 efpew A€ ye éoTi, and the comparison of Lat. sermo with sertum, from sero), the Root of this eipw (4/ FEP)is distinct from that of efpw sero (cep): v.sub deipw and épa.) eipwv, wvos, 6, a dissembler, one who says less than he thinks, Lat. dis- simulator, opp. to dAnOys, by Arist. Eth. N. 4. 7,3; and to dAa¢wy, Ib. 2. 7,12; ddwmné eipwy 7H pice Philem. Incert. 3.6; e/pwv ev rots Adyos Luc. Anach. 18: cf. Cic. Off, 1. 30. cipwveta, 4, dissimulation, i.e. ignorance purposely affected to provoke or confound an antagonist, irony, a mode of argument used by Socrates against the Sophists, Plat. Rep. 337 A, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 4. 7, Cic. de Or. 2.67; opp. to dAaCovela, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 7, 12; cf. mpoomoinats sub fin. II. any assumed appearance, a pretence, assumption, when a person at first appears willing, but then draws back, Dem. 42. 7; THv juerépay Bpaburqra Kal elpwveiay (vulg. pabvpiay) Id. 50. 27. eipwvevopat, Dep. to dissemble, i.e. feign ignorance, so as to perplex, Plat. Apol. 38 A, Arist. Rhet. 2. 2, 24, Pol. 3. 2, 2; mpds twa Plat. Crat. 384A: generally, 4o dissemble, shuffle, Ar. Av. 1311, Dem. 1394.13: cf. elpwveia. cipwveutis, od, 6, =«lpav, Timo ap. Diog. L. 2. 19. cipwveutiKos, 7, 6v,=sq., Schol. Ap. Rh. 1, 486. eipwvitw, =cipwvetopat, Philostr. 487 (v. 1. eipwvudy). cipwvikos, 7, dv, dissembling, putting on a feigned ignorance, Plat. Soph, 268 A; 70 eipowixdy =cipwweia, Id. Legg. go8E. Adv. -«@s, Ar. Vesp. 174, Plat. Symp. 218 D, etc. eipwrdw, Ep., and eipwréw, Ion., for épwrdo. eis or és, PREP. WITH ACC. ONLY. Notwithstanding the inconsistencies of the Mss., it may be observed that Ion, and Dor. writers (with Thuc. among the Att.) always prefer és, except that Poets use eis before vowels when the metre requires a long syll. The Trag. and Com, Poets seem to make a rule of using és before consonants, and eis before vowels except that the Trag. admit és before vowels, when a short syll. is required, a liberty never taken by the Com., except in imitation of the Trag. style; Pors. praef. Hec. p. lili. In Att. Prose (except in Thuc.) eis prevails before both consonants and vowels. But in the phrases és «épaxas (whence the Verb cxopaxi{w), és waxapiav, the short form was always 421 (The Aeol. used éy, like Lat. in, for both in and into, v. Pind, O. 7. 9., 10 (11). 90, P. 2, 21, N. 7. 46, Inscrr. Boeot. in C. I. 1569 ¢, 1571, al., v. Ahrens D, Acol. p. 213: so also in Dor., Ahrens D. Dor. p. 359. The orig. form was prob. évs, Lat. in (the two senses being subsequently divided between és (eis) and éy), cf. éopl eit, TiWev7s TiOevot, etc.) Radical sense, into, and then more loosely ¢o: I. oF PLACE, the oldest and commonest usage, els GAa, révrov, O4Aaccay into or to the sea, Hom. ; also, eis GAade, Od. 10. 351; often of places, els EvBorav Od. 3.174; és Atyumrov, év Zdpdas, és Mépoas, etc., Hdt., etc,; els dpyara Balvey to step into .., Il. 8.115; eis éAdrqv dvaBFvat 14. 287: —properly opposed to é«, hence such phrases. as é« vedryros és yijpas 14. 86; és wédas éx Kepadas, és opupdy ex mrépyns from head to foot, top to toe, 22. 397., 23. 169; &« mérov és oxomiy 20. 137; és puxdy é€ obd00 Od. 7. 87; els éros é& ereos from year to year, Theocr, 18. 15 :—then, with all Verbs implying motion or direction, as Verbs of looking, ideiy eis odpardy Ul. 3. 364; els Gra ldéc0at to look in the face, 9. 373, etc.; els Ga orev he is like in face, where idévre may be supplied, 3. 158, etc.; els dp@adpods édOeiv twi to come before another's eyes, 24. 204; és dyw dmnécbar tds Hdt. 1. 136; «adécar twa és dy Id. 5. 106, etc.; és ravrdy Frew come fo the same point, agree, Eur. Hipp. 273:—more rare after a Subst., d5ds és Aavpyy Od. 22. 128; 7d és MadAqvyy reixos facing Pallené, Thuc. 1. 56. b. in Ep, and Ion. also ¢, acc. pers., where the Att. use ds, mpds, mapa, Il. 7. 312., 15. 402, Od. 14. 127, Hdt. 4. 147; v. Spitzn. Excurs. xxxv and Il.; but with pl. names the Att. also use els. 2. with Verbs which express rest in a place, when a previous motion info or fo it is implied, as és wé-yapov kareOnke he put it ix the house (i.e. he brought it into the house, and put it ¢here), Od. 20. 96; és Opdvous €{ovro they sat them down upon the seats, 4. 51, cf. I. 130; épdvy Ais eis 686y the lion appeared in the path, Il. 15. 376: so too in Att. and Prose phrases, efva: or yiyveoOar és témoy Hat. 1. 21., 5. 38; mapaylyveoOac or mapeivar és témoy Id, 1. 185., 6.1; é Sdpous pévety Soph. Aj. 80; xarakdeiav és tiv vicov Thuc. I. 109, cf, Hdt. 3. 13; dmoBaivew or dréBaow moeioba és.., Thuc., etc. > v. sub fornut, nabiornu, ifw, nabifw, xpimrw, etc.:—in later writers eis came to be used quite like év, olxeiv eis Ta“Yrara Luc. Asin. 1; els "ExBarava dnofaveiy Ael. V. H. 7. 8.—For the reverse usage of év with Verbs of motion, v. év I. 8. 3. with Verbs of saying or speaking, eis relates to the persons ¢o or before whom one speaks, elzeiv} avbav, A€yerv, Ad-yous moretaOat els 7d TAOS, etc. to come before the people and speak, Hdt. 8. 26, Soph. O. T. 93, Thuc., etc.; Aéyerr els 70 pécov tay ragiapxov Xen. Cyr. 3. 3,73 al és 70 pavepdy Acyd- pevat airtar Thuc. 1. 23; so with other Verbs, els robs “EAAnvas aitrdy cogiativ mapéxov Plat. Prot. 312 A, cf. Thuc. 7. 56; érax67y eivar és Tovs ToAAoUs Id. 6.54; SaBeBARoOa eis Twa Plat. Rep. 539 C. 4, elliptical usages of eis, a. after Verbs which have no sense of motion to or into a place, riy modu e€édrrov els xwploy dxupdy they quitted the city for a strong position, i.e. to seek a strong position, Xen. An. I. 2,24; dAloxecOa eis AGnvas to be taken prisoner [and sent] ¢o Athens, Id. Hell. 1. 1, 23; cf. Eur. Heracl. 59, Plat. Phaedo 116 A. b. participles signifying motion are often omitted with els, rois orparnyois Tots els SixeAtay (sc. dmoderxOetow) Andoc. 2. 30, cf. Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 29. c. c. gen., mostly of proper names, as eis “AfSao, Att. eis “Acdov [ddpous], Il. 21. 48; és “A@nvains [iepdv] to the temple of Athena, Il. 6. 3793 és Tpidpyoro [olkor] 24. 160, cf. 309; els Alydmroo [pdov] Od. 4. 581;—so in Att., els "“AoxAnmod, es AméAAwvos, és Anunrpos, és Atoviaov, as in Lat. ad Apollinis, ad Castoris, ad Opis, Ar. Pl. 411, etc. ;—also with appellatives, dvdpés és dpvetov to a rich man’s, Il. 24. 482; és marpds Od. 2. 195; els qrdoadqou, cis SidacKdAwy porray to go to the philosopher's, ¢o the teacher's, Att.; és éwavrod, geavrod, éav- tod to my own house, Hdt. 1, 108., 9. 108, and Att.; in Hom. és #pé- Tepov, Od. 2. 55, ete. II. or True, 1, to denote a certain point or limit of time, fo, up to, until, és 7H (in Att. eis THy Ew) Od. II. 3753 &s HeAvov Karaduvra till sun-set, 2 161 (but also fowards or near sun-set, 3. 138); és yfpas Il. 14. 86; és ué up to my time, Hdt. 1.92 :—so with Advs., els ote (cf. és re) against the time when .. , Od. 2.99; so, els wére; until when? how long? Soph. Aj. 1185 (cf. eixooe) ; els Store Aeschin. 67. 40; és Ti; like eis mére; Il. 5. 465; és 8 until, Hdt. 1. 93, etc. ; also, és ob 1. 67., 3.31, etc.; és ré8€ 7.29, etc. 2. to determine a period, eis éviavréy for a year, i.e. a whole year, Il. 19. 2, Od, 4. 495; within the year, 4. 86; also, els pas 9.135; és O€pos ; és érd@pny for the summer, i.e. throughout it, 14.384; % eis évravréy daravn eis Tov wiva damavaGra the expenditure for a year is expended in a month, Xen. Occ. 7, 36; eis éowépav Hew to come at even, Ar. Pl. 998; «ls tpirny hpépay or eis rpirny alone, on the third day, in three days, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 268 B, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 27; few és rihy baorepatay Id. An, 2. 3, 25; és TéAos at last, Hdt. 3. 40; és xatpdv in season, Id. 4.139; ov« és avaBodds with no delay, Id. 8. 21, Eur., etc.: és rére at this time, Od. 7. 317; és terepov or eis 7d torepoy 12.126, Thuc. 2. 20;—so with Advs., és avpiov Il. 8. 538, Plat. Legg. 858 B; és ep dricaw Od. 20. 199; és adOis or toads Thuc. 4. 63; és abtixa Ar. Pax 367; els émecra Soph. Aj. 35, Thuc.; eis dyé Id, 8. 23; eds Gna, v. sub eiodmag ; eis Eri, v. elaért, els bre, v. eigdre, etc. i IIt. to express MEASURE oR Limrr generally, without reference to Time, és dioxoupa AéAcr70 was left behind as far as a quoit’s throw, Il. 23. 523; és Spdxpnv drédaxe paid them as much asa drachma, Thue. 8, 29; so, és rd padtora to the greatest degree, Hdt. 1. 20, etc. ; és rogovro ddi- xécOat, Hew, etc., Thuc., etc.; és & so far as, Id. 5. 66; és 7d éoxarov Hat. 7. 229, etc. 2. so, often, with Numerals, és rpea~ retained. Cf, Gramm, in An, Ox. 1.172, Hellad, in Phot, Bibl. 533. 20. ¢ xddas déxa vady Aesch, Pers. 339; vabs és Tas Terpakogious, uakogious - 422 to the number of 400, étc., Thuc. 1. 74, 100, etc.; eis éva, eis dvo, els résoapas, one, two deep, etc., Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 21, etc. ;—so with Advs., és tpis or éorpis thrice, Pind. O. 2. 124, Hdt. 1. 86:—then, of round numbers, at most, about, Blomf. Aesch. Pers. 345, Xen. An.1.1,10, IV. to express RELATION /o or towards, duapravew or éapapravew els Twa Aesch. Pr. 945, etc.; dudprnua «is twa, alria eis tiva Isocr. 178 D, Thuc. 1. 66; dvecdos dvediferv és Twa Soph. Ph. 522; €xOpa, grdia és twa Hat. 6. 65, Thuc. 2.9; Aéyev, yvepnv dmodexviva és.., Hdt. I. 86., 4. 98. 2. in regard to, mp@ros els etyuxiav Aesch. Pers. 326; oxwmrey eis Ta pda Ar. Pax 740, cf. Eq. 90; daBdddew twa eis rt Thuc. 8.88; airia émpepopévy és padaxiay 1d. 5.75; péupecdar eis guAiay Xen. An. 2. 6, 30, cf. Hell. 7. 4, 30:—often just like Lat. quod attinet ad.., edvruxeiv és réxva Eur. Or. 542, cf. Plat. Apol. 29 D, 35 A, etc.; és 7d AAG Thuc. 1. 1; els davra Soph. Tr. 489; és 7a mav@’ Aesch. Pr. 736; eis wey radra Plat. Lys. 210A; 767 «is éavrdv, 7d els éué Soph. O. T. 706, Eur. I. T. 691 :—also, és dAlyous ras dpxds moeiv Thuc. 8. 53; és mA€ovas oixeivy Id. 2. 37:—hence the phrases Tedeiv és "EXAnvas, Botwrovs, dvdpas, etc., v. sub TeAéw. 38. of Manner, eis rov adrdv Adyov Plat. Rep. 353 D; eis xphyara (npsodobat Id. Legg. 774 B, cf. Dem. 610, 7; eis @v pédAos Theocr. 18. 7 ;—often periphr. for Advs., és xowédv =xowdas, Aesch. Pr. 844, Eum. 408; és 70 mav =rdvrws Id. Ag. 682; els raxos=taxéws, Ar. Ach. 686; els edré- Aeay =ebTEAGs, Id. Av. 805; és Tapxatoy Id, Nub. 593; «ls Kaddv Soph. El. 403, Plat. Phaedo 76 E. V. of an END, épxea@at, dmoockhnrey, TedevTav és .., to end in.., Hdt. 1. 120., 3. 125, etc. ; karagatvew és powiida to cut into red rags, Ar. Ach. 320; els dvdpa redevTay, yeverdy Plat. Theaet. 173 B, Theocr. 14. 28: hence, in later Greek, dye eis yuvaika to marry as or for a wife, etc. 2. of an End considered as a Purpose or Object, elmeiv eis dyaOdv, meicera els éyadv for good, for his good, Il. 9. 102., 11. 789; els deyaba pudetoPat 23. 305; és méAeuor Ouphtopat 8. 376, cf. Hdt. 7. 29, etc.; és pdBov to cause fear, Il. 15. 310; & dmodnpara, és Cavqv 5eddc0a Hat. 2. 98; xéopos 6 els Eopras Xen. Occ. g, 6; emrhbetos, edmpenys, adpapopos és m Hdt. 1. 115., 2. 116., 8. 60; eis edAdos (Hv to live for show, Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 33, cf. Ages. 9, I. B. Position. Eis is sometimes parted from its acc. by several words, els duporépw Acopndeos dppara Byrnv Il. 8.115; the most remarkable instance is Solon Fr. 18: seldom (only in Poets) put after its case, Il. 15. 59, Od. 3- 137. 15- 541, Soph. O. C. 127 (lyr.) :—after an Ady., aipiov és ripos 8... (vulg. atpov® és ripos 8...) Od. 7. 318. eis, pid, év (uly only in later Ion. Prose); gen. évds, pedis, évds:—Ep. lengthd. fas Hes. Th. 145, Anth. P. 7. 341 :—Dor. js, Rhinthon ap. An. Ox. 1. 171, C.1. 5774. 88:—Ep. fem. i@, Il. 13. 354, gen. js Il. 16. 175., 24. 490; dat. if 9. 319., 11. 174, etc.; a neut. dat. (iG xiov part) also occurs in 6, 422. [In Com. od8é (unde) cfs, ob5€ (unde) &, occur, mostly at the end of a senarian, without elision, Cratin. Incert. 23, Ar. Ran. 927, Pl. 37, 138, al.] (The orig. form was prob. évs (as évri for eiat, etc.), cf, Lat. unus, Old Lat. oinos, Goth. ains, O. Norse einn, A. S. dn. The fem. pla points to a second Root, cf. ofos, povos.) 1. as a Numeral, Hom., etc.; strengthd., els ofos, pia otn a single one, one alone, Hom.; pia podvn Od. 23. ae¢ eis povos Hat. 1.119, Ar. Pl. 1053, etc.; later, efs nat pdvos, pévos els Dion. H. 1. 74., 3.64; €is.dv Soph. O. T. 247, Eur., etc.: opp. to modus, pla Tas moAAds puxas ddécaca Aesch. Ag. 1456, cf. 1465, Cho. 299, etc. b. emphatically with a Sup., es dproros Il. 12. 243, etc.: esp. in Att. phrases, like Lat. unus omnium maxime, els dvip metoror . . révov mapacxiv Aesch. Pers. 327; mAcioras dvijp els .. Eynue Soph. Tr. 460; Kaddar’ dvip els 1d, O. T. 1380; Eva pibev7' dproroy Id. Ph. 1344; so in Prose, én? wAeiarov &) xALdqs els dvnp dalixero Hat. 6. 127, cf. Thuc. 8, 68; MirvAnvalous pddicra 5) play médw Id. 3. 40; Tavtov cis avip Trav peylorwy airwos Kady Dem. 275.15 :—also without a Sup., els xara mréduv bpvorr’ dv Aesch. Theb. 6; or with efs omitted, rAcior’ dvijp ém gévns HOAnoa Soph. O. C. 563; Cavdy .. edddor’ dvnp Eur. Hec. 310: v. Elmsl. Heracl. 8. ¢. in oppos., made emphatic by the Art., 6 els, 4 pia Il. 20. 272, Od. 20. 110, Plat. Crito 48 A, Arist. Pol. 3. 16, 9, Theocr. 6. 22. d. with a negat., els obdels:nullus unus, no single man, Hat, 1. 32, Thue. ; om éy ddd évi ye xepiy in no other single country, Id. 1. 80; ovy fs, i.e. more than one, Aesch. Theb. 103, Eur.; ¢ls od .., els wy .., emphatic for oddeis, wydeis Ar. Thesm. 549, Xen. An. 5.6, 12; and still more emphatic, od8€ eis, pnde «is, v. sub ovdels, pndels. e. els éxacros each one, each by himself, Lat. unusquisque, Hdt. 1. 123, Plat. Prot. 332, ete.; alaOqous pla évds (sc. “yévous) one of each, Arist. Metaph. 3. 2, 5. f. often with xara, nad’ év éxaorov each singly, piece by piece, Hdt. 1.9, etc.; so, xaé’ éva, Kae” éy one by one, Plat. Soph. 217 A, etc.; “a0" va éxacrov hpiy dmoorepeiv to deprive each of us singly, Dem. 560. fin. ; play pilav =xara play, Soph. Fr. 201 :—but, a6’ ey elvar to be united, Xen. Hell. 5. 2,16. _ g. with other Preps., év dv6 évds above all, Plat. Rep. 331 B, Phil. 63 C :— én play éxdorny paBbov r0évres Oeorifovar one by one, separately, Hat, 4. 67; émt évds Plat. Theaet. 157 A; ev ép’ évé Id. Soph. 229 B, Legg. 758 B:—tv mpos é, in comparisons, Hat. 4. 50, Plat. Legg. 647 B; els mpds éva Dem. 557.27 :—map’ éva alternately, Luc. Salt. 12 :— els tv cuvdryew, etc., Lat. in unum, together, Eur. Or. 1640; els év és play Bovdeve Il. 2. 379; in full, és play Bovdjy Thuc. 5. 111; «ls play voeiv Acl. N. A. 5.6; also, piay (sc. 2. one, i.e. the same, so, eis kal 6 Perict. ap. Stob. 7. 3; 6 og oF €lg —— elo ayw. 3. 15, 2, etc.; $0, 6 pev.., els d&.., eis 8 ad.., Od. 5. 421 sq., cf. Plat. Rep. 369D; els uév.., repos 5é.., Xen. Hell. 1. 7, 23. 4. inde- finitely, efs tis, some one, Lat. unus aligquis, Soph, O. T. 118, Plat., etc. ; rarely 71s eis, Soph. Ant. 269; «is 71s yap fjv Exaaros each single one was suspected, Ib. 262; efs dorsaody Arist. Pol. 7. 3, fin. ; eis 6 mp@ros, Germ. der erste der beste, Isae. 72. 28; évt 7@ mpwrw Dem. 11. 20, cf. Luc, Hermot. 61 ;—then alone, like our indef. Art. a, an, (as unus pater- familias Cic., faber unus Horat.), Eur. Bacch. 917, Ar. Av. 1292, cf. Thuc. 4.50, Plat. Legg. 855 D, and freq. in Lxx, e. g. 2 Regg. 2. 18. 5. obbe fs of5% Sv0 not one or two only, Dem. 848. 11; cf. Tus indef. 1.15: proverb., «fs dvijp ovdels dvpp one man’s no man, Paroemiogr. 6. pl. éva, units, Arist. Metaph. 9. 6, 4., 12. 8, 5, Phys. 3. 7, 2» etoa, v. sub ie I. eiodyav, Adv., strengthd. for dyav, Byz. eloayyeAevs, éws, 5, one who announces, a sort of gentleman-usher at the Persian court, Hdt. 3. 84, Diod. 16. 47, Plut. Alex. 46, etc.; cf. Philol. Mus. 1. 373 sq. II. an accuser, Suid. eioayyeAla, %, information, news, Polyb. 9. 9, 7: II. at Athens, a@ state prosecution ot impeachment, brought in the first instance before the Senate of 500, or (sometimes) the éxxAnoia, who, if they admitted the impeachment (é5¢favro 77 eic.), generally referred it to a Heliastic court for trial under the ordinary forms, sometimes appointing advocates (avvfyyopot) to conduct it. Occasionally the Assembly constituted itself the Court to hear the impeachment, as in the case of the generals after the battle of Arginusae, Xen. Hell. 1. 7, Hyperid., Euxen. 22 sq., cites the vépos eloayyeAtixds, which allows an elcayyeAla in cases, (a) of treason against the democracy, (b) of betrayal of a town or any military or naval force, (c) of an orator’s corruptly misleading the people. arp. (s. v) says it was employed against the highest public offences, which ad- mitted of no delay, and against crimes for which the ordinary legal process of ypady seemed inadequate.—See Andoc. 6. 40, Lys. 185. 22, Isocr. 185 C; eioayyeAiay 5édwxas imép twos Hyperid. Lyc. 10; eioay- yedia @500n cis riy Bovdry bimtp ’Apiordpxou Dem. 554. 11; «lo. eigayyéAAew Arist. Frr. 378, 394. 2. another process called eiaay- “yedia was brought before the chief Archon, to punish Kaxwots (q. V.) or maltreatment of parents by children, of émixAnpot by their husbands, or of wards by their guardians, Isae. 42. 27; cf. Dem. 980, 4; and still another was employed against unfaithful arbiters, Harp. eioayyéAdw, fut. eA®, fo go in and announce a person (cf. éoaryyedevs), the business of a ruAwpds or Oupwpds, Hdt. 3. 118, Eur. Bacch. 173, Lys. 93. 32, etc.; mpds rwva Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 20; eioaryyeAels els Tov apxovTa Isae. 44. 16; cf. eicaryyedcds. 2. to announce, report a thing, Td égaryyeAAbpeva Thuc, 6. 41; of the senses, elo. oAAds Siadopds Arist. Sens. 1, 8, cf. Insomn. 3, 7:—Pass., éoayyeA@évrwy Ort .. information II, in ’ , ° , eirayoryeus — eiaypapw. 1g; ¥. omnino 940. 10sq.). —_—b. elo. Tw, of the Aoporai, to bring forward the case of an officer at the e¥@vvar (q. v.), Dem. 266. 8 :—also, simply, fo bring him into court, prosecute, Plat. Apol. 24D, 25 C, al.; in full, eo, eis S:aaorhpioy Ib. 29 A, Gorg. 521 C; eis 7d 8, Id. Legg. gto D, al. IIL. in Eccl., of eicaryopevor are the catechumens. eiodywyevs, éws, 6, one who brings in, an introducer, Plat. Legg. 765 A. II. at Athens, eloayoryei’s was a name given to any of the ordinary magistrates who received complaints that fell within their juris- diction and brought the cases into court, Dem. 976. 15 sq., Arist. Fr. 414. cioadywyn, 9, a bringing in, introduction, as of heirs by adoption, Isae. 80. II. 2. importation of goods, Plat. Legg. 847 D, Arist. Rhet. I. 4, Il. II. as law-term, a bringing causes into court (v. eiaayn II. 3), Plat. Legg. 855 D, cf. Isae. 47. 32. IIT. in Rhet. an ele- mentary treatise, introduction, Plut. 2. 43 F, ubi v. Wyttenb. cictiywyikés, 4, dv, of or for importation, cia. én import duties, opp. to éaywyind, Strabo 798. IL. introductory, elementary, Eccl. elc&yayipos, ov, that can or may be imported, opp. to eayuyimos, Arist. Rhet, 1. 4, 11; 7a elo. imports, Id. Pol. 3. 9, 73 Téxvn elo. re- quiring to be imported, foreign, Plat. Legg. 847 D; owrnpiar.. cic. AaBeiv brought in, not found at home, Eur. Fr. 974; eioay. todas, of colonies, as opp. to the abréx@oves of Athens, Ib. 362. 10. II. as law-term, of a suit, that may be brought into court, ph eloaywyipov eivat Thy dixny that the suit was not within the jurisdiction of the court, Dem. 893. 16., 939. 12, cf. Lys. 167. 1, Dinarch. 96. 7; eo. xphuata matters that may be brought before the court, within the scope of the suit, Dem. 888. 19: v. diapxaprupia, mapaypapn. doaywyés, 5, =cicaywyevs, C. 1. 2932. eloacl, for eis det, for ever, Aesch. Pr. 732, Soph. Aj. 570 [with @] ; éodet Aesch. Eum. 836. cicaetpopat, Med. to take to oneself, Theogn. 976. eicabpéw, to look at, descry, et rou éoadpnceev “Adé~avSpor Il. 3. 450, cf. Theocr. 25.2153; elxdva thvd éodOpe C.1. 2592; dorépas elaabpeis Plat. Eleg. 14 Bgk. :—metaph., ioropiny éoaOpyoas Epitaph. in C. I. 380. —Poét. Verb. eloalpw, to bring or carry in, rpame{ay Ar. Ran. 518. cicdtoow, contr. -goow, Att. -grtw, to dart in or into, Ar. Nub. 543. eivato, opt. aor. med. of *efSw, Il. 2. 215. s cicatw, poét. for eicaxovw, to listen or hearken to, c. gen., Theocr. 7. 88, Ap. Rh. 1. 764;°c. acc., Anth. P. 9. 180, Call. Jov. 54. cicaxon, 7, a listening, hearkening, Philo 1. 593. ciodxovrife, fut. Att. .@, to throw or hurl javelins at, rwa Hat. 1. 43., 9: 49; «is TA yupva Thue. 3. 23; c. acc., THY xlpatpay eionkovTiKws Epinic. ‘Yo. 1. 1o. 2. absol. to dart or spout, of blood, Eur. Hel. 1588. ciodxovw, fut. couat, to hearken or give ear to one, ds épat’ ov8 éadkove .. Odvaceds Il. 8. 97; c. acc., paviy écaxovoay h, Cer. 285, and so in Att.; also c. gen. pers., Soph. Aj. 789, Eur. I. A. 1368, etc. 2. in Poets, simply, fo hear, rovrov A€éyovTos elohkoua’ eyw, ds.., Soph. Tr. 351; Tivos Bporay Adyov révd’ eic.; Id. El. 884, cf. Aj. 318; (@v7’ eicaxovoas ratéa Eur. El. 416. II. c. dat. pers. to hearken or listen to, give heed to, Hdt. 1. 214, etc. ; éoar. Twi Tt in a thing, Id. 9.60: absol., Id. 4. 133, al. III. the Pass, in strict sense, éfwOev eis Tds oixias eicaxoverar pGddrov 7) ecwbev Efw Arist. Probl. 37. eloaxtéov, verb. Adj. one must bring into court (v. eladyw 11. 3), Ar. Vesp. 840, Xen. Eq. Mag. 1, 10. elo&Aethw, to smear or rub in, Hipp. 566. 14. eiodhAopat, fut. elo Aod pat: aor. 2 (with form of plqpf. pass.) €oGAro : Dep. :—to spring or rush into, éofdato teixos “Axaay Il, 12. 438; mudas Kal Telxos éoGAro 13. 679, cf. 12. 466, Pind. O. 8. 50; later, éadAAd. és 7d mip to leap into it, Hdt. 2.66; elo. eis ra relyn v.1. Xen. Cyr. 7. 4, 4, cf. Soph. Fr. 695 ; els doxdv upon a bladder, Eubul. Aap. 1; émt kpart pot wérpos elojdaro Soph. Ant. 1345: cf. évdAAopat. ciotipelBw, to go into, enter, Aesch. Theb. 558. ciodpny, Ep. aor. of ete (ibo), q. v., Il. II. Ep. aor. med. of *eidw (v. signf. I). III. cicapny, aor. med. of tw, I set or placed, v. iw 1. elcavaBaive, fut. —Bicopat, to go up to or into, “Ikiov elcavéBnoav ll. 6. 74; eicavaBao’ imepGa Od. 16. 449; @s 8 trep’ dvaBaca 19. 602; so, Aéxos, deriv eicavaBalvey Il. 8. 291., 24.97; axpérarov eicavapac’ cies (aizos being added by Arndt, who compares aimdy éAeOpov) Soph. O. T. 876. clodvaykdlw, fut. dow, to force one thing into another, Hipp. Art. 814. 2. to constrain, twa Aesch. Pr. 290; ¢. inf., Plat. Tim. 49 A. cloavayo, fut. fw, to lead up into, etpepov into slavery, Od. 8. 529; Yuyiy obpavoy eic. Anth. Plan, 201 ; Tid mpéds Tuva Polyb. 1. 82, 2. cicavadloKw, to expend upon, tT eis avtdy Antiph. Srpar. 1. Io. cicavdpéa, to fill with men, Ap. Rh. 1.874. eloaveiSov, to look up to, obpavdy eicaviduy Il. 16, 232, cf. 24. 307. elodverpt, to go up into, 7)éAuos ..obpavov eloavidy ll. 7.423, Hes. Th. 761. cloavéxw, fut. éfc, intr. fo rise above, c. gen., Ap. Rh. 1. 1360, ef. 4. 291; c. acc., réAayos elcavéxer yatav Ib. 1578. eicavopove, fo rush up to, oipaviy Q. Sm. 2. 658. cloavra, Ady. right opposite; Hom. joins éoavra iSéy looking in the Face, ll. 17. 3343 ety Od. 11, 142 ; ldéoOar §. 217. elaavrhéw, to draw into, fill in, Clearch. ap. Ath. 416 B. eiodrav, should prob. be read divisim eis dav. elodmak, for eis drag, at once, once for all, Hdt. 6. 125, Aesch. Pr. 750, Thue. 5.85, etc. cicarroBatve, to go from..to,.,¢. acc., Ap, Rh. 4, 650, ete. 423 eioatroKAelw, to shut up in, Sever. in Gale’s Rhet. Select. p. 229. eloarooréAAw, fut. A@, to send in or to, Anton. Lib. 41. cloipdoow, Att. -rrw; fut. f:—to dash or force into, tiv tmmov eicap. to drive the enemy’s horse in upon his foot, Hdt. 4. 128; rods Aownods és rds véas Id. 5.116; cf. DioC. 51. 26. cioapmdte, to tear or hurry into, Lys. 94. 16., 97. 25. eloaprtile, fut. ftw, to join or fit into, els rs Hipp. 471. 48. dogrre, Att. for cicatocw, q. v. eicavyatw, to look at, view, Anth. P. 5. 106. eloatbis, for els ats, hereafter, afterwards, at another time, Plat. Prot. 357 B, etc.; opp. to airixa, 6 8 airix’ Hdds..cicadis EBay’ Eur. Supp. 415; of wév ray’, of 8 eicad&is, of 5 Hin Bpordy Ib. 551; cic. dvaBaddea0at, bwepBddAAcoOat to put off to another time, Plat. Symp. 174E, Phaedr, 254 D. eloatptov, for eis atiproy, on the morrow, Ar. Eq. 661. eicavrtixa, strengthd. for abrixa, Ar. Pax 367; in Thuc. 5.16, ésTd atrixa. eioadtis, Dor. and Ion. for eicadOs. ciodacpa, 7d, a touch, grasp, Aesch. Fr. 199. eoiiddcow, to feel in, écapaccay Tov SaxTvdov to feel by putting in the finger, Hipp. 566. 50., 577. 24; but, éo. 7@ SaxTvAw Id. 577. 32., 578. 11; cf. mapapacow. eioilnpr, fut. now, to let in, admit, Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 14, Strabo 707. eloaidixdvw [a], =sq., marépa Od. 22.99; Sdpov Hes. Sc. 45. cioadicvéopat, Ion. éoamuvéopat, fut. fouat, Dep. to come into or to, reach or arrive at, c. acc., “IAcov eicaquxéoOar Il. 22.17; ovBe&rny cigap. to go into his house, Od. 13. 404., 15. 383 so in Att., Secpjvas ap. Soph. Fr. 407; ‘EAAdda Eur. Andr. 13; xarayaya Xen. Vect. 3, 12; also, &s twa eicap. Isocr. 49 E; éoan. és rémov Hat. 1, 2; also c. dat., Id. 1. 1., 9.100; absol. #o arrive, Id.g. 101, and Att. ccaidtoow, to draw into, Ap. Rh. 4. 1692, in Med. eloBaive, fut. —Byoopa, to go into a ship, mostly absol. fo go on board ship, embark, Od. 9. 103, etc.; also, éoB. és vaiv Hdt. 3.41; and c. acc., ela8. oxdpos Eur. Tro, 681 (cf. éuBaivw). 2. generally, to go into, enter, mpds Képns vuppetov elcB. Soph, Ant. 1205 ; Sépuous Eur, Med. 41, 380, al.; eio8. xaxd to come into miseries, Soph. O, C. 997; arns dBvacov rédayos Aesch, Supp. 470; and reversely, nol wep olxros .. eicéBn Soph. Tr. 298. 8. to come in, be imported, eicé- Bawoy icxades Alex, KuBepv. 2. II. Causal in aor. 1 €Bnoa, fo make to go into, to put into, és 8 éxarépBnv Bijoe Oe@ (sc. és va) Il. I. 310; cf. Eur, Alc. 1055, Bacch. 466. cioBéddw, fut. —BaAG, to throw into, dvdpa eis pen Soph. Aj. 60; els mijua Aesch. Pr. 1075; pappaxa eis ppéata Thuc. 2.48; éo8. orparidy és MiAnrov to throw an army into the Milesian territory, Hdt. 1. 143 éoB. tas és ras dpovpas Id. 2. 14, cf. Eur. El. 79: also c. dupl. acc., Bots révrov eiceBaddopev were driving them Zo the sea, Id. I. T. 261: —Med., to put on board one’s ship, és Tiv vadv Hat. 1. 1., 6.95; absol., Thue. 8. 31. Il. cio. orpaviay eis. ., of an invasion, Hdt. 1. 17: but usually without orparidy, to throw oneself into, make an inroad into, els xupay Hat. 1. 15, 16, Ar. Ach. 762, Thuc. 2.47, etc. ; elaBar- dew els Tods dtAiras to fall upon them, Id. 6.70; mpds médAw elo- Bdddew to make an assault upon it, Id..4. 25; of fever, to attack a person, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 1:—also simply to enter a country, els ténov Theophr. H. P. 9. 7, 1 :—poét. c. acc., x@poy elo. Eur. Hipp. 1198; Aémas Id. Bacch. 1045; to come upon, fall in with, Bpoptov méduv govypev elaBadeiv Id. Cycl. 99 :—absol., Hpprov, elaéBaddov inmxat mvoat the horse’s breath was foaming, was close upon them, Soph. El. 719. 2. of rivers, to empty themselves into, fall into, Hdt. 1. 75., 4. 48, al., Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 41; 70 féeOpor is expressed in Hdt. 1.179; cf. elodiSwpu, ExdlSaut, 8. absol. to begin, Schol. Pind. N. 7.1; kara 7d éap ela BGAAov Galen. cio Pdors, ews, 4, an entrance, ciaBaoas pnxavdpevor devising ways of entrance, Eur. 1. T. 101: embarkation, Thuc. 7.30, Dio C, 41. 42. cloBarés, 7, dv, accessible, rh TéAup Thuc. 2. 41. cio BS4AAw, to suck in, Galen. 4. p. 374. eloBidfopar, Dep. to force one’s way into, els oikov Plut. Num, 1; mpés Twa Diod. 14.9; én tov Béoropov Dio C. 42. 47. 2. to force oneself in, 5 wev yap dv obk dords eicBidfera Ar. Av. 32; Tov atrods eloBiaCouévov .. roreic@ar who force [others] to adopt them into a family, Dem. 1004. 18; cf. C. I. 2685, al. elo BiBafo, Att. fut. —6:8@ :—Causal of eicBaivw, to put on board ship, Tov orpardv és ras véas Hat. 6. 95, cf. Thuc. 7. 60, etc. ; Tous tévous .. vadras eiaB. to impress them, Isocr. 169 A. 2. generally, to make to go into, és réwov Hat. 7.60; & dpya Id, 1. 60. eioBAétw, to look at, look upon, mostly with eis, Hdt. 7. 147., 8. 77 Xen. Cyn. 10,12; but c, acc., Eur. Or. 105; absol., Xen. Symp. 4, 3- eloBodw, to cry out at a thing, Greg. Nyss. Sopot, %, (eloBadAdw 11) an inroad, invasion, attack, Hat. 6. 92, Eur., etc.; 8d Thy és Sdpdus *cBorHy Hat. 7.1; éoB. rovetoOar 7H mbAee Thuc. 8.31; ofan illness, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 12, Cur. M.Ac.1.1. 2. an entrance, pass, ¢oB. & obpéow orewav és 7d mediov Hat. 2. 753 9 €oB. } Odupmuch the pass of Mount Olympus, Id. 7.173, v. Arnold Thue. 3. 112; EupmAnyddov éoBodrH Eur. Med. 1264 :—so in pl., of Thermo- pylae, Hdt. 1.176, cf. 1. 185., 2. 141. b, in pl. also, the mouth of a river, Id. 7. 182, Polyb. 4. 40,9: cf. «Body. 3, an entering into a thing, a beginning, kawds éoBodds dp@ Aéyav Eur. Supp. 92; eoB. orevayparov Id. lon 677; copiopdrwy Ar. Ran. 1104; @ proem, pre- face, of a play, Antiph. Torq. 1. 20, cf. Dion. H. de Lys. elo-ypay, 7, a writing in or among, DioC. 59.2. ‘ eioypade, fut. yw, to write in, inscribe, Twa els tabs pidovs DioC. & 36. 36:—Med,, és Tas orovids elarypaipacat to have oneself written or 424 . received into the league, Thuc. 1. 31, ubiv. Poppo: also simply to write | down, pavreia Soph. Tr. 1167 (Elmsl. éeypayapny, coll. Ar. Av. 982). eiadaveifo, to gain by lending upon interest, Plat. Rep. 555 C. eiodépkopat, Dep., with aor. act. eioédpaixor, pf. elodéd0pra :—to look at or upon, vijcov éaédpaxov dpOadrpoiow Od. 9. 146; etipcioon dyrnv Il, 24. 223; ri p’ eiadédopxey ; Eur. El. 558, cf. Andr. 615. eiodéxopar, Ion. éoSék-, fut. —défopar: Dep.:—to take into, admit, és 7 ipdv Hdt. 1. 144, cf. 206; c. acc., ob« eloedéfar’ olkov Eur. Supp. 876; c. dat., dvrpos elodéfacOai ria to receive him in the cave, Id. Cycl. 35; rarely c. gen., révd civedéfw Trexéov=Teaxéow eiow edégw (as the Schol.), Eur. Phoen. 451; absol., Soph, O. T, 238:—c. acc. dupl., ‘elodégar T1vd ovvowioripa admit him as a fellow-colonist, Pind. Fr. 185 ; iad, twa indoreyor Soph. Tr. 376, cf. El. 1128. 2. c. acc, tei, ciod. ebvopiay Plat. Rep. 425A; eiod. mpopdces to admit excuses, Id. Crat. 421 D, 3. of certain animals, to take in their young after birth, Arist, H. A. 6.12, 4, cf. G. A. 3. 3, 2; aor. I elodexOAvar in pass. sense, Luc, Toxar. 30, Merc. Cond. Io. elo S{Sapt, used intr, like eloBdAAw 11. 2, of rivers, to flow into, els .., ‘Hat. 4. 49, 50. II. Pass. to be given in, handed in, C. 1.5785. 12. - elaBoxetov, 74, a place of entertainment, Arr. Peripl. p. 157. eiadoxh, 7), reception, elodoxat Sépov a hospitable house, Eur. El. 396. eloSpopy, 7, an inroad, onslaught, assault, Eur. Rhes. 604; of one who throws himself into a besieged place, Thuc. 2. 25. eioStve, and as Dep. eiodvopat (v. Siw): fut. -Sdcopat, with aor. 2 —édbv, pf. -3éddxa. To get into, ra 8 és redxea SUvTe Od. 22. 201; és rov Onoavpéy Hdt. 2.121, 2; els GAAo (Gov eicdvera Id. 2.123; elacdiovro eis rods médas of ipnavres the thongs entered into their feet, Xen. An. 4. 5,14; els ry “Apixrvoviay elodedundes having made his way into the League, Dem. 153. 14. 2. c. acc. to go into, enter, Lat. subire, dxovrisrby éodicen Il. 23. 622; 6 Yhy rv Badavoy éodv- vow Hdt. 1. 193; dkaxov .. tpémoy elodis having put on.., Anaxil. Incert. 1. 3. foll. by a relat., ob efdey ov yas eloédu saw not into what part of the earth she entered, Eur. I. A. 1583. II. of feelings, devdv rt éo€duve oir great fear came upon them, Lat. subiit animum, Hdt. 6.138; «icédv pe.. olorpnua Kat pyhpn Kkaxayv Soph. O.T. 1317; so, [1 dAjdea] els ras Yuxas elcdverat Polyb. 12. 5, 5. € us, €ws, 9, an entrance, Simon. 49 Bgk., Arist. ap, Plut. 2,115 A. iced, fut. dow [a], to let in, Geop. 15. 2, 27. - eloeyyife, fut. iow, to approach, dub.1. Polyb, 12. 9, 6, where prob. éyyiovra or (with Reiske) cuveyyi{ovra should be restored. ciceiSov, Ep. eictéov and in med. form elotédpny, v. sub elcopdw. eloeupr, inf. -cévai, serving as fut. to eloépxopar: impf. etogecy :-—to £0 into, ob« "AxtAjos dpOadpods eloerpe T will not come before Achilles’ eyes, Il. 24. 463 :—more commonly with a Prep., ob« eioetpe per’ dvépas Od. 18.184; mapa Baothéa Hdt. 1. 99; but mostly with «is, Ib. 65, etc.; mpés twa Soph. Ph. 651, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 5; elorévar eis orovbas to enter into a treaty, Thuc. 5. 30: absol., rdv elowdyra pijva Andoc. 6. 39- II. of the Chorus or of actors, to come upon the stage, to ‘enter, Plat. Legg. 664 C; 70 Tods rupavvous .. elovévat to take the part of king, Dem. 418. 13. ITI. as Att. law-term, of public speakers, io come into the assembly or into court, els d-yopay Dem. 719. 25, cf. Thuc. 4. 118; so of judges, to come into court, Dem. 298. 8. 2. of the parties to a lawsuit, to come before the court, Antipho 138. 41, etc.; elo. wept rvos Dem. 407. 2. 8. also of the charges or actions, ai Bicat eloiacw Isae. 52. 22; dtenv elovevae to enter upon an action, Dem. 840. 26. 4. to come upon the stage, Plat. Legg. 664 ‘C; to enter on an office, eis dpxjv Dem. 1369. 19; absol., Id. 1267. 6; 6 éody the new king, Hadt. 6. 59. IV. metaph. fo come into one's mind, dvayvaots éoje avrév Hdt. 1.116; Katroe p’ éoqer Setua Eur, Or. 1668; édeos lazer pe Plat. Phaedo 58 E; also c. dat., Gdyos eiorjer ppevi Eur. 1. A. 1580, cf. Soph. Tr. 1199, Plat. Phaedo 59 A; déos clover mepi Tivos Id. Rep. 330 D. 2. impers., eloqex avrovs dmws .., it came into their minds that .., Xen. An. 5. 9,17; c. inf., clover por pOovety Dem, 683. 18; cf. eiaépxopat V. V. rarely ‘of things, 7a eiotdvra what enters into one, food, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 17. cioéAdots, ews, 4, a driving into or in, Plut. Artox. 7. eicehactixés, 7, dv, fit for marching in, dyaves «ic., Lat. ludi iselas- tici, games held on a triumphant entry, C. 1. 2932, 3426, cf. Plin. Ep. Io, Tig. ihbedGi; Ep. -eAdw: fut. eAdow [Hi], Att. -eA@:—to drive in, moiphy elceddav [rh moluyny] Od. 10, 83; trmous 3 eloeAdoavres Il. 15. 385 :—elocAavvew ria ets 71 to oe? him to the point, Aeschin. 25. ‘11., 83. 26. II. as if intr., v0’ of eicéAacay [ri vadv] that way they rowed in, Od. 13. 1133 éret elatjdacev els tiv TéAWw [rov immoy] when he in.., Xen. An. I. 2, 26, etc.; so c. ace. loci, eigeA, Atpéva Ap. Rh. 2.672, cf. 1267:—to enter in triumphal procession, Plut. Marcell. 8; so c.-acc, cogn., elgedavvev OpiapBov, Id. Mar. 12, Cato Mi. 31. eioéXevors, %), an entrance, Hesych. s. v. #vwp, Thom. M. 712. eiaékw, to draw, haul, drag in or into, Xenarch, Mevr. 1, 13: aor, ~etAxvoa, Hdt. 2.175, Ar. Ach. 379. “alf eicepBatve, to go on board, Anth. P. 7. 374, nisi leg. eicavéBny. eloepropevopat, Pass. fo travel to as a merchant, Hesych. eloevrtOnpr, to place in, elvevéOnxe Epigr. Gr. 517. 8. : eloémevra, Adv. for hereafter, Ta .. wapds 74 7 ic. Soph. Aj. 35, etc. dicemdnpéo, to come or go to as a stranger, Plat. Legg. 952 D. cigépyvip, fo shut up in (a mummy-case), tov vexpiv Hat. 2. 86. dcépme, aor. elcelpriica, fo go into, Hipp. 343, etc., Plut. Cleom, 8. to, get in: pf. elojppyea Ar. Thesm. 1075; aor. _ eloéppw, fo ge in ree cis daveiCw — cic Opackw, eicepats, ews, 4, (eipa to tie) a binding in or to, Schol. Thue. 1, 6. civepvw, fo draw into, Lat. subducere, |vja] Kothov onéos elaepioavres Od. 12, 317. eioépxopar, fut. -eAedoouar: aor. —AvGoy, —7AOov: but the Att. fut. is supplied by etoespu, and the impf. by elope: Dep. To go in or into, enter, in Hom. and Poets mostly c. acc., ®puyinv elajAvOoy Il. 3. 184; GAA’ eiaépxeo Tetxos 22. 56; €loHdO’ éxaropBas invaded the hecatombs, 2, 321:—but in Prose mostly, ei. eds otxnpa or otxade Xen, Hell. 5. 4, 28; «io. els rds amovdds to come into the treaty, Thuc. 5. 36; «is roy wéAepov Xen. An. 7.1, 27; ela. els Tods éphBovs to enter the Ephebi, Id. Cyr. 1. 5, 1; also, eia. mpés Twa to enter his house, visit him, Ib. 3. 3,13; elo. émt defrvoy Id. An, 7. 3, 21: absol. of money, etc., fo come in, mpdcodo eiaHAOov Id. Vect. 5, 12. II. of the Chorus or of actors, to come upon the stage, to enter, Plat. Rep. 580 B, Xen. An, 6.1, 9, etc. :—to enter the lists, to contest the prize, Soph. El, 700, cf. Dem. 331. 5, and y.s. €tgodos 11. IIL. as Att. law- term, of the accuser, to come into court, els TO Sucacrhpioy Plat. Gorg. 522 B, Dem. 571. 25; «ls rods dteaords Id. 1345. 2; of the judges, Id. 318, 21. 2. of the parties, c. acc., elo. THY ypapny to enter upon the charge, Id. 261.8; «io. rov dyava Id, 260. 20; elo. dtenv Id. 841.9; (so also, eio. rv xaraxeporoviay Id. 516.8). 3. of the accused, ¢o come before the court, Plat. Apol. 29 C, Dem. 260. 19; so prob. in Arist. Rhet. 3. 9, 8, eiaeA@dvres & eis buds should be re- stored, 4. of the cause, ¢o be brought in, mod ovv det TavTnv eiceOeiv riv dixny ; Dem. 940. 21. IV. to enter on an office, Antipho 146. 25; «io. els tiv imareiay Dio C. 41. 39. metaph., [yévos] dvdpas éoépyerar courage enters into the men, Il. 17. 157; melvn 3 ovrore Shuov écépxerar famine comes upon the people, Od. 15. 407; so, Kpotcoy yéAws ciofdGe Hdt. 6.125; &s pe ToAr’ eloépxerat .. dAyn Aesch, Pers. 845; mdOos p’ eloépxerar Eur. I. A. I4I1; eloHAOE vey rade Ib. 57 :—also c, dat., eloHAe Toiv TpicabAtov épis Soph. O. C. 372; épws eicépyerar piv Lydd .. yéver Id. Fr. 678. 95 Sé0s elo. reve epi Tivos Plat. Rep. 330 D; bmoyia cio. reve Id. Lys. 218 C:—also to come into one's mind, Kpoiow éond0e TO Tod SdAwvos Hdt. 1. 86, cf. 1. 24., 3.14, Plat. Theaet. 147 C. 2. impers., c. inf., Tov 5e éoHAGe Oeiov Goat 70 mpiyyyua it came into his head that .. , Hdt. 3. 42; éoHA0é pe warourefpar Id. 7. 46; elonrde 54 pe .. poBy- Ojvae Plat. Legg. 835 D; also, tov 52 éomAGE chs ein Tépas Hdt. 8. 137; eigeABérw oe pnd’, ds.. Aesch. Pr. 1002.—Cf. cigerps IV, éxépxo- pat l, 2. eioén, Adv., still yet, Theocr. 27. 18, etc. cicevmopéw, to procure in plenty, xphyata Th mide Diod. 16. 40. cinéxa, fut. fw, used intr. by Hdt., to stretch into, xdAmos x THs Bopnins Gaddcons écéxav ént Aidtonins a bay running in from the north sea towards Ethiopia, Hdt. 2. 11; 7) d@pug éoéxer és morapdy Id. 1.193; iv Oddapos écéxov és tov dvdpedva the chamber opened into the men's apartment, Id. 3. 78; és rov toy éaéxov 6 HAcos the sun shining into the house, Id.8.137:—absol., é Tod NeiAou dupuxes éo€xovat (sc.és THY Viv) Id. 2. 138. IT. in pictures, 7d éo€yov is the retiring part, the part in shade, opp. to éféxov (the part that stands out in light), Philostr. 72. elonyeopar, Dor, eioay-—: fut. yoopxar: Dep.:—to bring in, intro- duce, dovdds Simon, 127 ; Tv Ovainv Hdt. 2. 49. 2. to introduce, advise, propose, move, Thy meipay Thuc. 3. 20; ys dvadacpdr Plat. Legg. 684 D; vépor Diphil. ’Evay. 1 :—also, elony. wept Twos to make a proposition on a subject, Isocr. 76C: c. inf. to propose or move, ela. Thy avAnrpiba xatpety éGy to let her go, Plat. Symp. 176 E, cf. Crito 48 A; rovro 70 pana, Ste Kaddv etn Id. Lach. 179 D; elo, dros... Plut. Them. 20:—freq. in such forms as elonyouuévov twés at his pro- posal, on his motion, Thuc. 4. 76, C.I. 1318, al. 8. elanyetabai Tit to represent to a person, éonyetrat .. Tois év 7éAer ovaLy, ds od xpeay .. Thuc. 7.73: hence to advise, instruct, Isocr. 2D; ela. rots Torepios & xpi) moveiv Lys. 143. 5. 4. to relate, narrate, explain, Twi 7 Plat, Symp. 189 D; Adyov mvt Id. Tim, 20 D. elonynpe, 76, a motion, Aeschin. 12. 3. elonyyots, ews, Hj, a bringing in, moving, Thuc. 5. 30. motion, Lat. rogatio, Dio C, 30. 21. elonynréov, verb. Adj. one must move, Thuc. 6. go. elonyqris, 00, 6, one who brings in, a mover, author, kak@yv Twt Thue. 8. 48; cf. Aeschin, 24. 29, etc. clonynrixés, of, fit for bringing in, twés Clem, Al. 22. élonVew, to inject by a syringe, Hdt. 2. 87. Stone, to have come in, Ar. Vesp. 606:—in fut. to be about to come in, €otev .. tongey Aesch. Ag. 1181; els tiv olxiay Dio C. 37. 32. elondvota, 4, a coming in, entrance, Anth. P. g. 625. elon Avorn (sc. lepd), 74, = eiorrhpia, C. 1. 3173 (ubi io—). elonAtors, ews, 7), entrance, right of entrance, C. 1. 3278. elo9a, Acol. and Ep. 2 sing, of ele (tbo), Il. 10. 450, Od. 19. 69. » doOat, pf. pass. inf. of inue. cioPedopat, Dep. to contemplate, Trag. ap. Eus. P.E. 440 C. cioGears, €ws, 7, a putting in, Philo 1, 278. II. an introduc- tion, beginning, Schol. Ar. Pl. 253, Ach. 565. etoGew, fut. -Pevcopat, 0 run into or in, Dio C. 62. 16, etc.: elodéew mpos Twa run up to him, Ar. Av. 1169. cobAdors, cicOhdw, v. sub elapa-. eioOAiBw [7], fo squeeze into, found in two passages (Plut. 2. 688 B, Themist. Or. 197 A), in both of which é@AiBw would better suit the sense: so, €e@Aus seems to be required in Matthaei Med. p. 58. eicOpdokw, aor, —0opor : - 5 SCP ONe ne , aor, pov :—to leap into or in, 6 8 dp’ EaOope ppatdipzos Exrap Il. 12, 46a, cf. 21, 18; 81d Twos Acl, N. A. 14.243 ¢. acc., mpiv p epoy eaBopeiv ddnov Aesch, Theb. 454. IIa LW. ’ , ect — ELTON aw. cic, eloiv, 3 pl. of iui (sum). eat, elo, 3 sing. of clue (ibo). eiciSeiv, Ep. eiordéecv, inf. aor. of eloefSorv: v. eloopdw. elotSpvw, to build in, éotépurat age” Apnos ipév Hat. 4. 62. eioifopar, Med. to sit down in, éoifecOar Adxov dvbpay Il. 13. 285. cloinpt, fut. now, to send into, Lat. intromittere, és tiv [Aluvny] «ic. 7d Udwp, of rivers, Hdt. 7. 109; «io. rods Mépaas és 7d Teixos to let them in, Id. 3. 158; 7iv Kedpiny (sc. és THY sAlnv) Id. 2. 87 :—Med., Tovs modeptous Epn eicécOat said he had let them in, Xen. Hell. 1. 3, 19. II. Hom. has it once in recipr. sense of Med., adAw éotépevat betaking themselves into, entering it, Od. 22. 470. ciolOun, 7), (eloerpue) an entrance, Od. 6. 264, Opp. H. 1. 738. eiouxvéopat, fut. -i¢ouar: Dep.:—to go into, c. acc. loci, Hermesian. 5. 23. II. to penetrate, Hdt. 3. 108; elowevoupevov Béde piercing her with a shaft, Aesch. Supp. 557. cioimmet, to ride into, Diod. 17. 12, Dio C. 44. Io. eicimrapat, late form for eloméropat, q. v. cictrnptos, ov, (elven) belonging to entrance :—elowrnpia (sc. iepd), 7d, a sacrifice at the beginning of a year or entrance on an office, Dem. 400. 24; elovrnpia trép tHs Bovdts iepororfoa Id. 552.3, cf. C. 1. 1245 ;—s0, elorrppioe Ovoiar Heliod. 7. 2: cf. elanddora. cicitraréov, verb. Adj. of eloepu, one must go in, Luc. Herm. 73. —— H, bv, (€ioetpys) accessible, Greg. Naz. eicxafopdw, to look down upon, médw éoxaropgs (Ion, form), as Bgk. restores in Anacr. 1.6 for éyxaropas. eloxdAdpdopar (xdAapos I. 2) Dep. to haul in, as an angler the fish which he has hooked, Ar. Vesp. 381. ciokddéw, fut. ow, to call in, rods wdprupas Ar. Vesp. 936; Tva mpds éavrév Xen. Cyr, 8. 3, 1; so in Dem., etc. :—Med, to have another called in, Polyb. 22.5, 2; inrpév Hipp. Progn. 36. cioxataBatve, fo go down into, c. acc., opxatov Od. 24. 222; ddpov Orac. ap. Hdt, 5. 92. eiokatadive, = foreg., Timo ap. Diog. L. 4. 42. cigkatapphyvupt, fo break into pieces:—Pass., éoxarappnyvucbat poypfot Hipp. V. C. gto. cioxaratiOnpt, to put down into :—Med., &jv éoxarbero vijbvuy Hes. Th. 487, 890 (restored by Wolf from one MS. for éy«d70er70). eiokeipat, as Pass. of eloriOnut, to be put on board ship, Thuc. 6. 32: cf. €ywetwat I. 1, and v. els I. 2. ciokédAw, fut. -KéAcw, intr. to put to land, molay 3% xwpav eice- xédgapev onaper; Ar. Thesm. 877. cicknpioow, Att. —rrw, fut. fw, 0 summon by public crier, Ar. Ach. 135: to call into the lists for combat, Soph. El. 690, cf. Dio C. 61. 20. elor Avo, f. 1. for éxxdvca, q. v. eioxAvw, post. for eiraxotw, rev éaéxdvov advdjncavros C. I. 4738, cf. Opp. H, 2. 107. eioxodupBae, to swim into, Schol. Thuc. 4. 26. eloxopidn, 7%), importation of supplies, 4 éoxopud?) tev éemrniclwy Thue, 7. 4; so, ai €oxopdai Ib. 24. eloxopife, fut. Att.1@, to carry into the house, carry in, Hes, Op. 604, Aesch. Ag. 951, etc. —Med. fo bring in for oneself, 7a ef dypav éoKo- pifec@ae Thuc. 2. 13: to import, Id. 1. 117 :—Pass., eloxopicecdar eis rénov to get into a place for shelter, Id. 2. 100. eioxpivopar, Pass. to enter into, Diog. L. 1. 7, Philo 2. 604. cioxptots, ews, , an entering in, Plut. 2. gol A, etc. eioxpove, to strike or beat in, Pherecr. Anp. 7. eloxtdopat, Dep. to acquire, etxAecav Eur. Fr. 240. cloxu«déw, esp. in a theatre, fo turn a thing inwards by machinery, and so withdraw it from the eyes of the spectators (vy. éxcudéw), Ar. Thesm. 265, cf. Luc. Lexiph. 8:—metaph., daipov mpdypara eloxendndnner eis tiv oixlay some spirit has wheeled ill luck into the house, Ar. Vesp. 1475, cf. Ath. 270 E. eioxiKAnpa, 76, the mechanismon which theéxnvernua turns, Poll. 4.128. eioktAtvbe, fut.—xvAicw [7], to roll into, [yjaous| &yAvoce Kal eicend- Awe Oaddooy Call. Del. 33; in Com. phrase, els of’ éuavrov eivexvAioa ampaypata what trouble I’ve rolled myself into, Ar. Thesm. 651. eioxitrra, fo pop in, of a snail’s eyes, Teucer ap. Ath. 455 E. étoxw, Ep. Verb, only used in pres. and impf.: (from the same Root as *elxw, Eouca, cf. dit-eiv, dieKx-os):—to make like (cf. toxw), airor.. hioxey béxrn he made him like a beggar, Od. 4. 247, cf. 13. 313 :— Pass., déuas Vor éioxerd Tit he became like, Nonn. D. 4. 72, ef. C. I. 8749. IL. to deem like, liken, rade vurri éioxe Od. 20. 362, ef. Il, 5. 181; "Apréusdi oe .. icone I compare thee to her, Od. 6. 152, cf. Il. 3.197; ob ce danpove part éioxw I do not deem thee like, i.e. take thee for, a wise man, Od. 8. 159. 2. c. acc. et inf., to deem, suppose, ot ce éloxoper .. imeponqa éuev 11. 363, cf. Il. 13. 446; dvra oédev yap HavOov ..jlcxopey eivar 21. 332, cf. Theocr. 25. 199. 3. absol., ds od édoxes as thou deemest, Od. 4. 148; cf. Buttm, Lexil.s. v. ciokapate, fut. dow, to burst in like a party of revellers (v. n@pos): generally, to burst in upon, rivi Luc. Lexiph.g; eis rémoy Aristid. 1. 353; c. ace. loci, Lyc. 1355: metaph., eloexwpacev 6 dpyvpos money came in like a flood, Ath. 231 E. eloAdpme, to shine in, Theophr. C. P. 2. 7, 4, Plut, 2. 929 B. eichevoow, to look into, Soph. Aj. 260. , éxarépwley — exBaxyevo. tev xeipav Diod. 4. Io :—as nom. to a pl. Verb, sometimes in pl., esp. when each party is in pl., @ducalevy Exarepor Hat. 1.c., Plat. Rep. 348 A, etc.; sometimes like Lat. wzergue, in sing. with Verb in pl., ratra eimdyres dmfpdOov éxdrepos émt ra mpoojkovra Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 22, cf. 6. 1, 19 :— sometimes repeated in reference to each of two parties, édy Exarepot éxa- Tépwv Tépvwaww dypous Plat. Rep. 470 D, cf. 348 A :—with Particles and Preps., ws éxdrepor Thuc. 3.74; ép’ Exdrepa, both ways, Id. 5.733 ad’ éxdrepa Xen. An. 5.6, 7; €€ éxarépov Luc. Amor. 14. &xdirépwOev, Adv. on each side, on either hand, like the poét. &xdrepOev, Hat. 3.102, Thuc, 2. 75; c. gen., €«, rs woAews Id. 3.6; 7d ex. pépos Plat. Phaedo 112E. 2. on both sides, by father and mother, Arist. Fr. 374. cirépwh, Adv, on each side, Pind. O. 2. 124, Hdt. 2. 19, 106, Arist. éxitépws, Adv. in each way, Plat. Legg. 895 E. éxdtépwoe, Adv. to each side, each way, Xen. An. 1. 8, 14, Plat. Gorg. 523C. 2. both ways, Id. Phaedo 112 E, Rep. 619 A. ‘Exary, 4, (€xiiros) Hecdté, the Far-darter, daughter of Perses (or Persaeus) and Asteria, granddaughter of Coeus and Phoebé, who had power from Zeus in heaven, earth, and sea; she presided over purifying and atoning rites; was giver of riches, honour, victory, and fair voyages ; protectress of new-born babes, Hes. Th. 411 sq., h. Hom, Cer. 25. 52, where she is represented with a torch, ‘Ex. pwoddpos Ar. Fr. 535 :—later she was identified sometimes with Artemis (cf. €¢aros), sometimes with Demeter and Rhea, sometimes with Persephoné, v. Dict. of Antt. II. “Exarns Setrvoy Hecaté’s dinner, a meal set out by rich persons at the foot of her statue év rpiddos on the 30th day of each month, when it became a sort of dole for beggars and paupers, Ar. Pl. 594 et Schol. ad1.: it seems to have been connected with purificatory rites, Plut. 2. 280 B, 290 D, 708 F, A. B. 247, E. M. 626. 24; and, as it consisted generally of offal or other miserable food, ‘Exarata xarec@ieww is used to denote a worthless wretch, Dem. 1269. 10: cf. Hemst. Luc. D. Mort. 1.1. éxdrnBedérns, ov, 6, =sq., Il. 1. 75, Hes. Sc. 100, h. Apoll. 157. exirnBodos, ov, (Exds, BadAw) far-shooting, epith. of Apollo, Hom. and Hes. ; as Subst. the Far-darter, Il. 15. 231.—Cf. éxnBdados. ‘Exairjovov, 74, ="Exaraoy, Plut. 2. 193 E. II. ‘Exarjoia, 74, a feast of Hecaté, Poll. 1. 37. £xGrt, Dor. and Att. for €nrt, Pors. Or. 26. éxdiréy-yutos, ov, with a hundred limbs or bodies, xopay éxaréyyuos dyéda a band of 100 maidens, Pind. Fr. 87. 12. &xGtoy-Kdpavos, ov, =sq., Aesch, Pr. 353. éxdroy-KepaAas, gen. a, 6, hundred-headed, Pind. O. 4.11: so &katoy- xépahos, ov, Eur. H. F. 882, Ar. Ran. 473. éxaitéy-Kpavos, ov, =foreg., Pind. P. 8. 20. &kdroy-Kpymts, 6, 4, with a hundredfold base, Julian, Epist. 24. éxadroy-xepos, ov, hundred-handed, of Briareus, Il. 1. 402 :—éxatoy- xetp, 6, %, Plut. Marcell. 17, etc. The éxardyyxetpes were Briareus, Gyges or Gyas, and Cottus, sons of Odpavds and Tata, Apollod. 1. 1, 1. éxdr6-Liyos, ov, with 100 benches for rowers, Il. 20. 247. éxdropBatos, a, ov, epith. of several gods, to whom hecatombs were offered, Hesych.:—éxarépBaa, Ta, =éxardpBoa, Inscr. Delph, in C. I. 1715. II. écaropBarav, Bvos, 6, the month Hecatombaeon, in which the éxarépBaa were offered, the first of the Att. year, answering to the last half of our July and the first half of August, Antipho 146. 25, etc., cf. Plut. Thes.12; called at Sparta éxaropBevs, Hesych. &xdropBn, , (Ecardv, Bods) properly an offering of a hundred oxen,— but even in Hom. the word has lost its etymol. sense, and come to sig- nify a great public sacrifice :—thus, in Il. 6. 93, 115 we find a hecatomb of twelve oxen, in Od. 3. 59 of eighty-one: nor does Hom. confine it to oxen, for kecatombs of oxen and rams occur, Il. 1. 315, Od. 1. 25; nay we find hecatombs of jiffy rams without oxen, Il. 23. 147, cf. 864: Hadt. (4. 179) reckons even the votive gifts under the hecatomb; but in 6. 129, he says of Cleisthenes,—@vcas Bods éxardéy, which shews that Homer's reAjecoar ExardéuBat were really offered. , exmeTpynois — exrraio. die, Byz.:—mostly in Med. zo measure dorpos ..éeperpovpevos xOdva in 8 the stars (for he was an exile), Soph. O. T. 795: to take éxeivov 8mda Xen. Cyr. 6. 4, 2. expérpyats, ews, 7, measurement, Polyb. 5. 98, 10. Tpos, ov, out of measure, measureless, 6ABos Soph, Fr. 324, cf. mous 111.—Opp. to ¢uperpos. éxpnkuve, strengthd. for uneive, Dion. H. 6. 83. ékpnvio, strengthd, for zyviw, Hesych. €x-pqvos, ov, of six months, half-yearly, éxphvous xpévous (so Pors. for €upnvovs),Soph.O.T.1137; Bios Arist.H. A. 5.33, 4:—as Subst., 2epyvos, 6, a six-month, half-year, Plat. Legg.911 B, DioC. 59.6; éxp. (sc.dpx7), 9, Polyb.6. 34, 3. II. six-months old, of an animal, Arist. H.A.6. 4,6. ecpnviw, to inform of, betray, Plut. Pelop. g, Poll. 5. 154. €kpnpvopar, Dep. to wind out like a ball of thread: of an army, to make it defile out, rs xapddpas Polyb. 3. 53, 53 8a orevijs Oupidos. . Expnpvopevos airéy Plut, Aemil, 26. II. intr., of the army, zo defile, Xen. An. 6. 5, 22, Polyb. 3. 51, 2. exptatver, to pollute thoroughly, defile, Opp. H. 4. 663 :—Pass., efflucu seminis pollui, Hipp. 265. 14, Soph. Fr. 913, Ar. Ran. 753. expipeopar, Dep, to imitate faithfully, represent exactly, Eur. H. F.1298, Ar. Av. 1285, Xen. Mem. 3. Io, 1. éxptoéw, to hate much, Plut. Philop. 12. €xpicos, ov, =drdp080s, Harp., Hesych. s. v. drdpucdos. €xpicOde, /o let out for hire, rwvi 71 Xen, Vect. 3,14; Tt Lys. 108. 35; c. inf., ep. twa Eraipeiv Aeschin. 2. 41:—Med. to hire, Themist. 53 A. éxplodwors, ews, 4, a letting out for hire, Eccl. expoAcsiy, inf. of aor. 2 €féuorov, Ep. 3 sing. éxpode, to go out, go forth, Il, 11. 604; ég€uode Ap. Rh. 1. 845.—For the pres., v. BAd@one. Saiki. to express in form, Plut. 2. 537 D. II. to complete the form of a thing, Ael. N. A. 2. 19. €kpovode, strengthd. for povsdw, to teach fully, rw& 7 Eur. Bacch. 825 :—Pass., EepovowOfvat re Ael. V, H. 14. 34. éxpoxPéw, to work out with toil, Lat. elaborare, Képeiow mérdovs Eur. El. 307. 2. to struggle through, révous Id. 1. T. 1455, cf. Aesch. Pr. 825. 3. to win by labour, achieve, “EXévny xp. Sopi Eur. Tro. 8733 €xy0x0av Bia cdcdeay Id. H. F. 1369. 4. to struggle out of, Tas Tay Bed Txas Ib. 309. expoxAcvw, to lift out with a lever, Hipp. Art. 834, and in Med., 837; midas éxp. to force them open with crow-bars, Ar. Lys. 430: generally, to force, compel, tiv picw Plut. 2. 662 C. éxpticA ilo, to suck the marrow out of, deprive of strength, LXx(Num.24.8). expulaw, to squeeze out, aly éxputqoas Il. 4. 218, cf. Luc. Tim. 8; of the Sun, Arist. Plant. 1. 5, 4. éxputnOpds, 6,=sq., Galen. expilyors, ews, 3, a sucking out, Diosc. Ther. prooem, éxp.606w, to make into a piGos or fable, Philostr. 767. expixdopar, Dep. to bellow aloud, ras ddopUpoets Phalar. p. 26. éxpuxrnpile, to hold in derision, mock at, LXX (Ps. 2.4), Ev. Luc. 16.14. éxpucdrropar, Dep. to abominate, Philo 2. 303. éxpicow, fut. fw, to wipe out: in Med., Diosc. Parab. 1. 63. éxvapkdw, to become quite torpid or sluggish, Plut. Cor. 31. éxvavePAbw, to cast on shore, Lyc. 726, in Pass. éxvedlw, to grow up afresh, ondpos kar’ éros éxved(ow Luc. Amor. 33. éxveaOpds, § a renewal, Simplic. éxvépopat, Med. with aor. eveuqOnv :—to feed off or on, Lat. depasci, tt Theophr. H. P.. 9. 16, 1; Adags riv bulviiey eveuotvar lac: Amor, 25. II. to go forth to feed: inciaph., tevépertm abba lo turn away one’s foot, Soph. Aj. 369, cf. Pind N. 5. 27. éxveortevw, fo hatch, Arist. Mirab, 126. éxveupif, (vedpov) to cut the sinews, Plut. 2. 457 D:—txvereepiopdvor, broken down, unnerved, Dem, 37. 3, cf. Piut. 2. 765 ©. éx-veupdkavdos, ov, strengthd, for vevpdsaurer, v. 1. tur leveup-. éxvevots, ews, }, a turning the head aside, tending down fo shun a blow, Plat. Legg.815 A. -2._Exv. Tis 6500 a deviation, Schol. At. Ren. its. éxvetw, fut. cw, aor. tévevoa (cf. éevéai) >—f0 teen the head ond of ie natural position, of a horse, xv. dvw to toss the head, Nea. Ts 4: 99 wepary éxvedaas by a side-movement wit), the Yeas, of (ve wild boar, 1) Cyn. Io, 12. 2. c. acc, fo shun, avoid, rp. Arg. 486; fide ap, Dion. H.de Comp. 18; mAnyqy Diod.17. 100. Eur. Phoen. 1151; eis Oavarov Ib.1268; éxv. xpds 71 to turn aside, Philo 1. 297. III. 40 motion away, é¢éveuc’ émoarjvat mpéae Eur. 1. T. 1330. éxvéhedos, ov, bursting forth from clouds, Theophr. H. P. 8. 10, 3. éxvedlas (sc. dveuos), 6, a hurricane, d by cloud: ting and bursting, Alex. Any. 1, cf. Arist. Meteor. 2.6, 23., 3. 1,8; so, véros éxv, Diod. 20. 88. 2. éxv, duBpos rain with sunshine, Hipp. ap. Galen. éxvedopat, Pass. to become a cloud, Theophr. Vent. 7. €xvéw, fut. -vevoouat: aor. I é¢évevoa:—to swim out, swim to land, Eur. Hipp. 823, cf. Cycl. 577: to escape by swimming, Thuc. 2. 90: generally, to escape, get safely through, Pind. O. 13. 163, Eur. Hipp. 470, ubi v. Valck., ; T. 1186. Me éevyte 1, Pass. fo become a child, Philostr. 199. deryorretes, to continue fasting, Hipp. 481. 15, Plut. 2. 686 E. €xvida, fut. Yo, to sleep off a drunken fit, become sober again, Lynceus ap. Ath. 130 B, Anth. P. 5.135; metaph., of mental intoxication, Plut. Demosth. 20. ékvyXopar, fut. gowar: Dep.:=éxvéw, to swim out or away, eis rémov Arist. Mund. 6, Luc. D. Mar. 8.1; mpds twa Apollod. 1. 9, 25. Exvyipis, ews, 1), a becoming sober or calm, LXx. exvilor, tut. -viber, to wash out, purge away, Lat, eluere, diluere, povov Sor oneself, to 7, leads: its p measure of, Ta Anes: measure out, tion b \ Ei. to fall-headtongy és obbas : g 439 pov Eur. I, T. 1224; of crimes, Ep. Plat. 352 C:—Med. to wash off Srom oneself, obdénore éxviy 7a mempaypéva, Lat. diluere crimina, Dem. 274. 23; ayos pévov Paus. 3,17, 73 70 Ovnrdy Plut. 2.499C.' ‘II.. to wash clean, purify, Anth. P. 14. 74 :—Pass., éxvevippervn, of a cup, Eubul, Ku. 1. cvixdw, fut. how, to achieve by force, Lat. evincere, Eur. Ion 629: to carry one's point that .., c. acc. et inf., Plut. Anton. 63. 2. c. ace. pets. fo win over, Ael, V. H. 10. 1. II. intr. to win a complete victory, Polyb. 15. 3, 6. 2. metaph. to gain the upper hand, come into vogue, prevail, émact among all, Thuc. 1. 3; ém 7d pud@des Exvert- knkévat to have won its way to the fabulous, Ib, 21 (like evalescere in.” suspicionem, in crimen, in tumultum, Tac. Hist. 1. 80); so, kaxdv els Touppaves éevinnae Luc. Abdic. 6, Suid. s. v. Mdpas. éxvieenpa [7], 74, that which is achieved, Bust. Opusc. 189. 11, etc. ékvixnors [7], ews, %, an achieving, Eccl. éxvurpdw, to cleanse with vizpov, raxmmpar’ .. éxvevirpwpéva Getvat Alex. "Aya, 2 :—éxvirpwors, 7, Oribas. eevues, ews, 7%, (evicw) a washing out, Hesych. éxvitpo, fut. of éxvicw. éxvoéw, fut. How, to think out, contrive, cited from Dio C. €xvoua, 7), (€xvoos) loss of one’s senses, Arist. Somn, 2, 8., 3, 23. éxvopyh, }, a grazing, pasture, in Dion. H. 1. 39, f.1. for yout. éxvéptos, ov, unusual, marvellous, Pind. N. 1.86, Orph, Fr. 8.29. Adv. ~iws, Ar. Pl. 981; Sup. éxvoyudsrara Ib. 992. ékvopos, ov, outlawed, Lat. exlex, Aesch. Eum. 92. II. =foreg., Orph. Arg. 59; unlawful, monstrous, Lat. nefastus, Tipwpiac Diod. 14. 112: opp. to évvopos. III. Adv. —pws, in Aesch, Ag. 1473, prob. means out of tune, discordantly. kvoos, ov, contr, vous, ovr, senseless, Lat. amens, Plut. C. Gracch. 19. éxvooéw, fut. naw, to be all diseased, v.1. Arist. G. A. 5. 45 2. ‘ éxvoonAevw, to cure completely, Philo 1. 631. exvoopifopar, Dep. to take for one’s own, Anth, P. 15. 24. éxEtASopar, Pass. to become all wood, Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 7. éxovrnSov, Adv., =éxovri, Apoll. in A.B. 497, 611. &k v, Adv.,=foreg., Theogn. Can. p. 161. 24, Arrian. ap. Suid., Inscr. Bosp. in C. I. 2059. 20.—The remark of Phryn. p. 4 (Exorvrijy ob Xp?) A€éyerv, GAN’ eehovrhy) refers not to this Adv., but to a Noun éxov- THs, od, 6, used by Epictet. Fr. 88, and some late authors. éxovri, Adv. willingly, Pseudo-Phocyl. 14, Plut. Comp. Sert.c.Eum., ete. ; sometimes introduced into correct writers for éévre (dat.), Lob. Phryn. 5. txouordLopat, Dep. fo offer freely, LXX (1 Macc. 2. 42), Eust., etc. txovoracpés, 6, a free-will offering, LXx (2 Esdr. 7. 16). F xovoros, a, ov, Soph. Tr. 727, 1123, etc.; also os, ov, Soph, Ph. 1318, Eur. Supp. 151, Antipho 116. 37, Thuc. 6. 44, etc.: (éxdév) :—of actions, voluntary, BA&By Soph. Ph. l.c.; @vyh Eur. l.c.; dudprnza Antipho 140. 20, ctc.; gupBodaia Plat. Rep. 556A; mpdges Ib. 603 C, al.; dduefjpara Id. Legg. 860 E, al., etc.:—rd éeovo.a voluntary acts, opp. to 7a dxovow, Xen. Mem, 2.1,8, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 1:—éxotordy éort 7m, c. inf., if he is willing to do, Dion. H. 10. 27. 2. rarely, like éxdiv, of persons, willing, acting of free will, jpaprey ovx éxovata Soph. Tr. 1123; €x. dmoOaveiy Thuc. 1. 138. II. Ady. -iws, Eur, Tr. 1037, etc.; so also, éxovoly rpémw Eur. Med. 751; é€ éxoucias (sc. yvwpns) Soph. Tr. 727; xa6’ éxoviay Thuc. 8.27; but éxovotg is dub., Buttm. Dem. Mid. 527. 27. écrrayAéopat, Pass. to be struck witk amazement, to wonder greatly, only used in part., nal pu éredelevvcay éxmaryAcdpuevor Hdt. 7. 181, cf. 8.92; éemayAcduevos ds .., Id. g. 48. II. to wonder at, admire exceedingly, ¢. ace., Aesch, Chu. 257, Eur. Of. S90, Tr60929 7 tareineys Prose, Dion. H. 1, 40. €emaydos, ov, old Ep. word, prob.-(as Bust. explains it) metath: for éxwdaryos (from. kerAjuMw), terrible: I. of persons, ad diem, édv, of Achilles, Il. 21- 589; éwrev demayActar’ dvbpav, also of Achilies, 1, 146,, TR. 1703 of other heroes, 20, 389., 21. 452- - sometimes of things, as, xeraw EewayAos Od. 14, 5225 dremtirphows eng-- coor li. 15. 198, Od. 8. 773 23dqurer ryan tury Foorpnel! & 448, of. 17, 216. 3. mostly as Ady., terribly, vehemently, exceed~ ingly, duemcyaws Arékeroay Ui. 1. 268; xorkovro 2.223; Wire oiedvie véeqhai fb. 3574 Halwero: 9. 238; witour’ dy. Od, 5. 3405 ANPnpE Il. 437) dduperar 15. 354:-—aleo in neut, as Adv., éxermyAor érevdgare li. 13. 443, ote. $ ob yp: tydyo? dew, deo 22. 2567 and in-pl, SemaryAr prety to love beyond ail measure, li. 3. 415., 5. 423. XE. in later Poets, the word often piece merely marvellous, wondrous, dvijp ex. Pind. P, 4.140; oOévet éxmaydos I. 7 (6). 30; ev movors exaaydos I. 6 (5). 80 :—not freq. in Att. Poets, éym. xaxdév, répas Aesch. Ag. 862, Cho. 548; delrvow dpphrav exnaydr’ &xOn Soph. El. 204; Adv. éemayra marvellously, Soph. O, C. 716, and (ace. to Dind.) Ant, 11373 in Att. Prose only once, érAa 7a. éemayAbrara Xen, Hier, 11, 3 :—cf. emayAcopat, écrGPaivopar, Pass. to be vehemently affected, wept tt Clem, Al. 231. éxmdGera, 7, violent passion, Longin. 38. 3. i as exraOhs, és, (wabos) very passionate, transported with passion, furious, Polyb. 16. 23, 5, etc. ; tal rut Id, 1.7, 8; een. mpds 7 passionately eager for a thing, Id, 1.1, 6, etc.:—Adv. -0@s, Ath. 443 D. IT. out of harm, unhurt, Suid. . éxrralSeupa, 76, a nursling, a child, Eur. Cycl. 6or. éxrarSevw, to bring up from childhood, Eur. Cycl. 276: to educate completely, Plat. Crito 45 D; cf. éembtopas HI, to teack one a thing, 71vd tt Dio C. 45. 2: but, IIT. éxm. tii te to impress on one by education, Lat. ingenerare, Eur. Fr. 53. 5. &crarpdcow, to rusk madly to the fray, ll. . 803. exrrato, fut, marjoo: aor, éférarca i—like Eparke, io throw or cast ~ on _-€emeptépxopat, Dep., =foreg., Polyb. 10. 31, 3, Luc, Asin. 18. — eemeplifis, ews, = Pi idee 440 out of a thing, ddéns pi’ &émaucay édnibes they have dashed me from my s , * éxmrudat — exrivo, éxarepwoorew, to wander dil round, Just. M. 1.54, Synes. 240C, expectations, Eur. H. F. 460, cf. 780. II. intr. ¢o dash out, escape, Anaxil. Neorr, 1.17, ubi v. Meineke :—so in Med., Plut. Brut. 51.—Cf. éurraio, _ &emitdar, Adv. for é¢ mada, for a long time, Plut. 2. 548 D, etc. ‘xmiAdatw, to transgress the laws of wrestling, Philostr. 772. &crGAéw, of a joint, to start out of the socket, Hipp. Fract. 777, Art. 822. &xmaAns, és, out of joint, Hesych. ékmddnows [a], ews, 4, dislocation, Hipp. Fract. 777. terddAw, to shake out :—Pass. to spring or spurt out, puedds . . opov- dvAtwy exmadro (syncop. Ep. aor. med. as pass.) Il. 20. 483. Apis Ad strengthd. for mavoupyéw, Schol. Ar. Eq. 270. écmatmoopat, Pass. to have a tuft or topping (mdmmos), as the pine- apple, Theophr. H. P. 3. 16, 6. extrapSevevo, (mapOévos) to deflower, Schol. Luc, D. Mar. 7.1. exmraita&yéw, to deafen with noise, Themist. p. 253 C. &enitdoow, fut. fw, to strike, afflict, wd xaxoior Eur. H. F. 888: metaph., like éxmAnoow, ypniv ..egerarage péBos Anth. P.:g. 309 :— Pass., ppévas exmemaraypévos stricken in mind, Od, 18. 327. éxraitéw, to retire from the road, withdraw, Diog. L. 1. 112. écematios [a], a, ov, (maros) out of the path: Aesch. Ag. 50, ubi alii aliter. Adv. —iws, Erotian. écrraupa, 76, total rest, Hesych. &crravw, strengthd. for tavw, to set quite at rest, put an end to, p6xOous Eur. Ion 144 :—Med, to take one’s rest, Thuc. 5. 75. éxrrapAdtw, to boil or bubble over, Arist. Probl. 24. 9, 1. éxrrahAacpos, 5, a boiling over, Arist. Probl. 24. 9, 2. écraxtve, strengthd, for tayxvvw, Theophr. C. P. 4. I, 4. &xrrelfw, to persuade completely, over-persuade, Soph. O. T.1024, Tr. 1141, Eur. H. F, 469. : &: ‘, fut. dow, to tempt, c. acc., I Ep. Cor. Io. 9. éxrretpdopar, fut, dooua: [4], aor. egerecpadnv [4] :—to make trial of, prove, tempt, c. gen. pers., Hdt. 3.135; c. inf., éemetpG Aéyetv ; art thou tempting me to speak? Soph. O. T. 360; foll. by a relat., ndgeeipadny «., lov orépecOa yiyvera: Eur, Supp. 1089; éxm. el... Ep. Plat. 362 E. 2. to inquire, ask of another, ri twos Ar. Eq. 1234. -éeméXer, impers., = efeort, "tis permitted or allowed, Soph. Ant. 478. éxtreAexdw, ¢o cut away with an axe, Theophr. H. P. 9. 2, 7 €erréprro, fut, Yo: I. of persons, ¢o send out or forth from, ¢. gen. loci, Smws Mplapov.. vndv exréupee Il. 24. 681; bo7s oe .. Bdiparos tkméuppor Od. 18. 336, cf. Aesch. Ag. 281, Soph, El, 1128; also, gem. é«.., Isocr.131 B, Plat., etc.:—Med., ddnou exwéupacbe Odpate Od. 20. 361, cf. Soph. Aj, 612, etc. 2. .to bring out by calling, call or fetch out, rwa éxrds mudA@y Soph. Ant.19; so in Med., O. T. 951:—Pass. to go forth, depart, O. C. 1664. 38..t0 send forth, dispatch, olxhropas, mpécBes, orparidy Thuc. 6. 6, etc.; éxm. aupmpeo- Bevrds rods éx@povs Arist. Pol. 2..9, 30; é¢m. dmotkias, .olov opqvy pedurrav Plat. Polit. 293 D, cf, Arist. Pol. 2, 11, 15. 4, to send away, Ta. els témov Hat.1. 160; éem. Twa adripor Soph. O. T..789; wabappad’ as is éenéppasAesch. Cho. 98; in Prose, to divorce a wife, éem. -yuvaika Hdt.1. 59, Lys. 142. 9, Dem. 1364. 3:—also in Med., yas puyddas exméppacba Soph.-O. T. 309, .cf. Plat. Legg. 956 D. II. of things, .o send out, send abroad, keaphdra wohAa Kat tc0Ad. ., iva wep TA5€ Tor oa pipyy Il. 24. 381; Sapa reve Hat. 1. 136; oiréy Tw Thue. 4. 16. 2. to export, éxm, dv érdeévafoy Arist. Pol. 1.9, 73 and in Med., 7a mAcovd{ovra Trav yryvopévew éxrémpacbar to export the surplus of the productions, Ib. 7. 6, 4. 3. to send forth, give out, cédas Aesch, Ag. 281; mvetpa, bypoy, ete., Arist. P. A. B- 3» 1, al.; Svcocpiay Alciphro 3. 28. Z Zcmepiprs, ews, %, a sending out or forth, orparias Thuc. 4. 85. éxretratvw, to make quite ripe or mellow, Theophr. H. P. 5. 1, I. dxmetAnypévos, Adv., ex. SiaxeioOar to be in a state of panic fear, Dem, 1447. 17. temémorat. 3 sing. pf. pass. of éxmivw, Od, 22. 56. ews; ft nye: extravagantly, Xen, Cyt. 8. 7, 7. KnéToo. pg? éxrérrw, later form o écrepalvw, fut. dvd, to finish ive, dd-yea ish off, Aesch. Fr. 72; Blorov Eur, HH. F. 428 :—Pass, of oracles, 40 be fulfilled, Eur. lon 785, Cycl..696; of works, ¢o be accomplished, Xen. An. 5. 1, 13- ecmépapa, 7d, a coming out of, dwpdrwv Aesch. Cho. 655. : fut. dow [a], Ion. how :—to go out over, pass beyond, Aairpa per exmepiwow Od. 7. 353 Ar Hat peya Aairpa.g. 3233 xOdva Aesch. Pr. 7135 abAdva Ib. 731; xepody Kai Oddaccay Id. Eum. 240; éxr. Biov to go tonage life, Eur. 1.A. 19, cf. éxmepaiva; kdpa cvppopas Id. Hipp. 824. . absol. of an arrow, fo pass through, pierce, diaTds dvripd .. im daréov eerépyoer Il. 13. 652, cf, 16. 346, etc. ; of persons, to go forth, Xen. Cyn. 6, 18; “Ahvas to Athens, Eubul. *Avrion.2. 3. e. gen, fo go or come out of, peddOpow Eur. Cycl./512; ta ddpuow Id. I. A. 1533. II. to carry out or away, LxxX (Num. II. 31). exrrepdixile, to escape like a partridge, Ar. Av. 768; cf. draepd-. &crépw, fut. -répow, to destroy utterly, lay waste, sack, plunder, of cities, I]. 1. 19, etc. (never in Od.), Aesch. Theb. 427, etc.; also, riy Aids rupavvid’ een. Biq Id. Pr. 357: metaph., pi) Hyiv.. Tov Ziporldnv tenépoy Plat. Prot. 340 A. Cf. demopbéw. e [&], to lead out round, Polyb. 3. 83, 3. TED to go out and round, go all round, nixhw Xen. Cyn. 6, 0, _ etc.; éxm. 7d dp Luc. Rhet. Praec. 5. %, detailed discourse, Synes. 29 D. ivw, 40 encompass on all sides, Eccl. bss J > a Hom. only in Od., in Ep. aor., » éxrreptodevw, to go quite round, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 188, Plut. 2. 705 D. éxrepimAéw, fut. —rAcvoopuat, to sail out round, so as to attack in flank, Polyb. 1. 23,9; vais vavoti Plut. Aemil. 15; cf. éumepurdéw :— Ion. —tAdo, Arr. Ind, 20. 1. éxtreptomacpés, 6, an evolution consisting of a right-about-face (wept- onacpes) followed by a right face, Polyb. 10. 21, 3, cf. Arr. Tact. 30. éxmeptoos, Adv. more exceedingly, Ev. Marc. 14. 31 Lachm, éxmrepitpexw, to run all about, Aristaen. 1. 27. éxrrepovaw, to put out with a buckle-pin, prick out, Byz. éxrépvar, Adv. more’ than a year ago, Luc. Soloec. 7. éxrrécow, Att.-rrw: fut. -ré~w :—to cook thoroughly: hence, 1. of animals, to digest or concoct food thoroughly, Hipp. Vet. Med. 18 :— Pass., of the food, Arist. 2. of plants, to mature, ripen, Theophr. H, P. 2.2,:4. 8. of eggs, to hatch, Arist. H. A. 5. 28, 2. exmrérGidos, ov,-oul-spread, flat, Ath. 501 A, etc. éxreravvipn, fut. —rerdow :—to spread out, of a sail, Eur. I. T. 11343 of wings, Anth. P. 5. 179, 10; 7a dra, domep oxtddeov Ar. Eq. 13.483 of a net, 7d 62 Siervoy éxmewéracrat Orac. ap. Hdt. 1.62; orépos efené- tagce scattered it to the winds, Bion 1. 88. 2. metaph., ém? n@pov éxmeragbels wholly given up to the revel, Eur. Cycl. 497; cf. éxmenrapévas. éxmrétGors, ews, 7), a spreading out, Plut. 2. 564 B. éxrrétacpa, 76, that which is spread out or unfolded: the title of a work by Democritus, Diog. L. 9. 48. ecreTHouros, ov, ready to fly out of the nest, just fledged, Ar. Av. 1355, Ael. N. A. 2.43: metaph. of a marriageable girl, Ar. Fr. 500. ecméropar or —mérapat (Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 6., 5.22, 12): fut. -777- gopat, Eur. El. 944, Ar. Vesp. 208: aor. eferréuny or —auny Ar. Av. 788, but also in act. form éfémrny, Hes. Op. 98, Batr. 215: for aor. éf- eneraoOny v. méropat :—to fly out or away. éxrevopar, =exnuvOdvopa, Aesch. Pers. 954; but v. Herm. Exrrepiviar, part. pf..of éxpiw. ‘ Exrreips, ews, 1), acooking thoroughly: ofplants, aripening, Arist.Col.5,23- éxarqyvipr or—v, fut. -rhitw, to make stiff or torpid, Plut. 2.978 C: esp. of frost, to congeal, freeze, Theophr. C. P. 5. 14, 2:—-Pass. to become stiff, to congeql, Strabo 317: to be frozen, frost-bitten, Theophr. H. P. 5. 13, 2. exrnSd, fut. —rnijcouat Luc. Zeux. 8, and jaw App. Hisp. 20:—/o leap out, és Ti @ddagoav Hat. 1. 24., 8. 118 (where the best Mss. éxmndéew for —mn dav); ent rwa Lys. 97. 27. 2. to make a sally, Lat. excurrere, Xen, An. 7. 4,16; éxm. é« THs médews to escape from .., Menand. Tep. 3; metaph., éxm. éx trav texvav els tiv ddocodpiay Plat. Rep. 495 D. 3. to leap up, start, evdovcay éxm. Soph. Tr. 175: to.throb, Aristaen. 2. 5. II. fo start out of place, amdvivdos een. Hipp. Art. 811: to burst out, escape, Polyb. 1. 43, I. exrpoypa, 7d, a leap out, twos xpetcoov éxnndnparos a height too great for out-leap, Aesch. Ag. 1376. exmrmdqors, €ws, 9, a leaping forth, év te Plat..Legg. 815 A. exarnercds, 7, dv, freezing, ap Theophr..C. P. 5. 14, 7- tempvibopar, fut. coipar, to spin along thread, of dpaxvar pepdpevor ind Tod dvépou odd éxr, Arist. Probl. 26. 61 :—metaph., of an advocate, avrou éxmveirat Tatra will wind these things out of him, Ar. Ran. 578. exrrnéts, €0)5,7), a stiffening, freezing, Theophr.C.P.5.14,1; cf. maryerés. €K-TXUS, V, six cubits long; better &anxus, Phryn. 412. eemato, éxmiagpa, 7d, late forms for éxméCw, éxmlespa, Hesych. exntbvopar [¥], Dep. to gush forth, Aesch. Pers. 815, as Schiitz for eumadeverat, is growing up, waxing, (Schol, abgerat). éxmelor, fut. €om, to squeeze out, ondyyos & USaros éxremecpévos Hipp. Acut. 387: zo éarust or Force out, rods mpocBaddovtas Polyb. 18. 15, 3:—Pass. to be squeezed out, Arist. Mund. 5, 10; EAxos éxmemeo pevov a sore that protrudes out of theskin, Hipp.Fract.767. In late authors éema¢w. EKTLEGIS, EWS, 7), a squeezing out, Arist. P, A. 4. 10, 25. éxnieopa, 76, that which is squeezed out, juice, Diosc. 4. 160. éxmeopss, 6, =éxniects, Arist. Mund. 4, 6, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 101. écme tov (sc. dpyavoy), 74, a press, Poll. 10. 135. éxmeoros, 4, dv, squeezed out: km. Evra logs cleft by the wedge and wallet, Arist. Probl. 16. 8, 9. &emucpdlopar, Pass., = exmupdsopar, Hipp. 601. 3. éxmucpatvopat, Pass, to be embittered, mpés 7 Dion. H. Excerpt. 17. 8 ; éni run Ath, 351 D, etc. exmucpdopat, Pass. o become very bitter, 4. 29, Theophr. éxriKpos, ov, very bitter, Arist. Probl. 4. 29. eemiprAnpn, fut. Ajo, fo fill up, kpatijpa, Eur. Cycl. 388; én. xpa- Thpas Spboou to fill them full of .. , 1d, Ion 1194. 2. to satiate, oppor’ éeniumdrapey Eur. Andr. 1087; éemAfoa Thy prdovetiay Thuc. 3- 82 Bekk. (al. éuw-): Pass., cbs éerAnabn [1 vdécos] Soph. Ph. Hipp. Aph. 1249, Arist. Probl. 759. II. to fulfil, ¢émAnce poipay tiv éwvrod fulfilled his af Hdt. 3.1425 em. rod éveipou tiv phuny Id. 1. 433 eer. Tov épov to Q satisfy the requirements of the law, Id. 1. 199., 4. 1173 mEuT TOD “yovéos duaprada eféndnoe paid the full penalty of the sin of Gyges, Id. 1.91} dpds.. ower éxemAjoat Oeds Eur. Phoen.1426. III. to accomplish, évavrov &€émdnoev Soph. Tr. 253; ipa 7’ efenlymracav Eur. Supp. 7223 éxmd. mARO0s Kaxav to narrate in full, Aesch. Pers. 4303 Hoxjuara, xivduvoy, dpduov, Blov, etc., Eur. Hel. 735, etc.; TavTaxov yap dorews (nrdv uv eémrnoal have finished seeking her in every part, Eur. Jon r108, cf. Pors. Or. 54. IV. to fill up or complete a number, éemd. 7d éddecmoy Xen. Cyr. 4.5, 39; 7d tmucdv Ib. 6. 1, 26. skmipmpypr, to set on fire, burn up, Theod. Prodr. p. 2. éemivea [7]: fut. -riouae [v. sub iva] :—to drink out or off, quaff liquor, [wordy] éemtev 9.353; exmov [oivor] ro. J id ’ , exmumpackw — exrrodav. 237; and in pf. pass., S000 ror txmémorar 22. 563 the last also in Hadt. 4- 199; also, éxmivovo’ det yuy7js.. ala Soph. El. 785, cf. Ant. 532; 6¢ aipar’ éxmobévd’ ind xBovds Aesch, Cho. 66; éxnivew iordrny méow Antipho 113. 30; also of bugs, ticks and the like, ry Yuxiy éxm. Ar. Nub. 712; 70 afya Arist. Rhet. 2. 20, 6. 2. to drain a cup dry, mAjjpes Ex. xépas Soph, Fr. 429; ph kmeiv GAd’ H play (sc. KvALKa) Pherecr. Tupavy. I. 9; 6Anv pdoas éxmve Antiph. ’Ayp. 4; and often in Com, ; also, ds éxudva pw’ é¢émwves Soph. Ant. 532. 8. metaph., ter. OABoyv Eur. Hipp. 626; ra xpnpara Plat. Com. ai dg’ lep. 1; €xm. &ypéy Alciphro Fr. 6. éxmumpaokw, fo sell out, sell off, Dem. 121. 6, Poll. 7. 9. éxrrimra, fut.—mecodpar: aor. éféregov: pf.tenénraxa. To fallout of, dippou, immav Hom. ; dvréywv do Eur. Phoen. 1193, etc.; also c. dat. pers., Téfov 5€ of Exmece xepds Il. 15. 465; Oadrepdy 5€ of Exmeve ddxpu fell from his eyes, 2. 266:—absol. to fall out, 23. 467: to fall down, of trees, Theophr, H. P. g. 2, 7.—After Hom., in various relations, often serving as Pass. of é*BdAAo: 1. of seafaring men, zo be thrown ashore, Lat. ejici, é« 8 érecov Oupnyepéow Od. 7. 283; éxr. vnuot Hat. 3. 138, cf. 8.13; e€wecor és yhv rhvde Eur. Hel. 409, cf. 5395 xm. mpos xmpay Plat. Legg. 866 D; also of things, to suffer shipwreck, Xen. An, 7.5, 133 of fish, to be thrown on shore, Arist. H. A. 8. 19, 5: cf. €eBadAw I. 1. 2. to fall from a thing, i. e. be deprived of it, Lat. excidere, ée ra&v evra Hat. 3. 14, cf. Lys. Fr. 2. 25 €« THs oixeias Isocr. 305 C; tupavvidos, dpxijs, eparous Aesch. Pr. 756, 757, 948; ard rdv éAmldwy Thue. 8. 81.: 3. to be driven out, [ée Tis dxponddAcos] Hdt. 5.72; esp. of persons banished, gem. é« rijs waTpidos, Lat. excidere patria, Id. 1. 150, cf. 6. 121; é«m. xGovds Soph. O.C. 706, cf.Aj.1177; éxm. wokéum 4 ordce Thuc. 1.2; yuuvds Odpag’ étéregoyv Ar. Pl, 244; i26 twos by a person, é« TMeAorovyjcov id Mjdov Hdt. 8. 141, cf. Thuc. 4. 66; mpds tivos Aesch. Pr. 948, Soph. Ant, 679 :—in Thuc. 7. 50, the prep. és seems to be corrupt: cf. éxBadAw 1.2. 4. of limbs, to fall from the socket, be dislocated, Hipp. Art. 784, etc.; of flesh, to mortify and separate itself, Id. Fract. 769; so, éxm, d8dvres, mrepa Arist. G. A. 2.6, 55, H. A. 3. 12, 5, ete. 5. to go out or forth, sally out, Hdt. 9.74; é« Tod oravpwparos Xen. Hell. 4-4, 11; absol., Id. An. 5. 2, 17. 6. to come out, of votes, Id. Symp. 5, Io. 7. to escape, Thuc. 6. 95. 8. of oracles issuing from the sanctuary, xpyopos éxnimrer por an oracle is imparted to me, Luc. Alex. 43, etc.: to be published, become known, Ep. Plat. 314 A, Polyb. 31. 8, Io. 9. to depart from, &« rijs 6500 Xen. An. 5. 2,31; &« Tod émery- devparos Plat. Rep. 495 A: to digress, Isocr. 250. fin.; €xm. é Tov Ad-you Aeschin, 32. 42. 10. of things, éféwecé pe it escaped me unawares, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 1, 17. 11. to fall off, degenerate, eis dAAbrpiov €tdos Plat. Rep. 497 B; eis rv Ppuyort dppoviay Arist. Pol. 8. 7, 11: absol. to come to naught, Ep. Rom. 9. 6. 12. of actors or dramatic pieces, fo he hissed off the stage, Lat. explodi, Dem. 315. 10, Arist. Poét. 24,7; so of orators, Plat. Gorg. 517 A, cf. Phileb. 13 D: cf. é«BadAw Iv, cupifw. éxnitvw, =éxrinrw, Opdvew Aesch. Pr. 912. éxmAdyys, és, (ExmAncow) panic-stricken, Polyb. 1. 76, 7, etc. éktAdoow, to form completely, Hippiatr. excOpifo, to run round and round, in a course which narrows every time, Galen de San. tuend. 2. Io. &x-wAcOpos, ov, six plethra long, éxmd. dyav =ordbov Eur. El. 883 ; «mh. Spdpos Id. Med. 1181. On the form, v. Lob. Phryn, 414. éxmAcovalw, strengthd. form of rAeovd{w, Arist. Probl. 5. 14, 3- éxmAeos, pott. éxmAeios, a, ov, Att. €xmAews, av ;—quite full of a thing. c. gen., dards, Bopas Eur. Cycl. 247, 416. 2. complete, entire, of a number of soldiers, immeis €xmAew .. is Tovs puploys Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 7: abundant, copious, Ib. 1. 6, 7. éx-mAeupos, ov, six-sided, Phryn. 412. extrAéw, fut. -rAedoopar: Ion. ékmAdw, aor. -érdwca, To sail out, sail away, weigh anchor, Hat. 6. 5, etc., Trag., etc. ; THa5' éemA. xBovds Soph. Ph. 1375; é# rhode vhs Ib. 577; éxmda. els.. Hat. 6. 22, etc. ; xara 7 in search of .., Id. 2. 44,1523 én twa against . .\, Thuc. 1. 37: —of fish, éxmA. és riv Oddaccay Hat. 2. 93. 2. metaph., é«mAeiv Tod vou, Ta ppevay to go out of one's mind, lose one’s senses, Id. 3. 155. II. rarely c. acc. loci, to sail out past, 7d €0ve3s rdv ‘IxOvo- payor Arr. Ind. 29. 7, cf. Lyc. 1084, Ap. Rh. 2. 645 ;—but for Hat. 5. 103, V. fw I. I. Cc. 2. c. acc. cogn., éemd, Tov tarepov mAovy Dem, 1186. 12. IIT. trans., gerd. eis rH edpyywpiay ras TeV moAeuiov vats to outsail them into the open sea, Thuc, 8,102. Cf. efopuaw, éemordopar. €xtrAews, wy, Att. for éxmAeos. éxAHySqy, Adv. terribly, Suid.; prob. f.1. for éumAnyonv. exrdnyvipt, =exraAjoow, Thue. 4.125. éxrAnutixos, 7, dv, striking with ing, 6dpuB Thue. 8. 92; é«emA. rois éxOpots Xen. Eq. Mag. 8, 18; éemArwrurd- tepov more calculated to cause consternation, Arist. Poét. 25,8. Adv. —K@s, in amazement, Polyb. 10. 5, 2: terribly, Diod. 14. 25: Sup.-wrara, Ael. N. A. 11. 32. éxtAnkr0s, ov, terror-stricken, amazed, Lat. percussus, Luc. Hermot.18: —Adv. —rws, Ael, N. A. 3. 22. II. astounding, Orph. H. 35. 10. éxrrAnppipés, to gush out and overflow, Philostr. 868. ; €xrrAngts, ews, , (exmAncow) panic fear, consternation, Hipp. Aér. 290, Plat., etc.; gemA. xaxdv terror caused by misfortunes, Aesch. Pers, 606 (vesub dpacia) ; gerd. mapéxetv, els eemd. xabiordvac Antipho 130. 5, Thuc, 4. 55., 6. 36; éemA. éumoreiy wl Id. 4. 34. IL. any vehe- ment passion, lust, Polyb. 3. 81, 6. éemAnpow, =ExmipmAnu, to fill quite up, ts with.., Eur. Phoen. 1135. ¥ 4, Japrettiicet), Akmaikh 441 pupiddas éxeivyot Hdt. 7.186; &emdnpotro 7d vaurindy és ras .. Tpin- xooias vais Id. 8. 82; déarov éxnAnpov Sxov making up the number of ten chariots, Soph. El. 708 ; éxmA. rods immets els Bio yiAlovs Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 24. 3. to man completely, vats Hat. 7. 186, Arist. Pol. 7. 6, 8. 4. to fulfil, imédcxeow, xapw Hat. 5. 35., 8.144. 5. to pay in full, 70 xpéos Plat. Legg. 958 B. II. éxmd, Atpeva mAdrn to make one's way over, Lat. emetiri, Eur. Or. 54 (v. Pors.). éxmrAjpopa, 76, a filling up, umd. motetv Tod KotAov Hipp. Art. 785: a jis or cushion to fill up, @vOels pao xan éxmd. Id. Mochl. 848. kmAnpwots, ews, }, a filling up, completion, Aresas in Stob. Phys. I. 850, Diosc. 1.69: satisfaction, Trav émOupuay Dion. H. 6. 86. exAnpwrijs, ov, 6, one who fills up, Dio C. 38. 24. éxrdjoow, Att. —rrw: fut. fa :—to strike out of, drive away from, tx & rdngé pov rihy ald® Aesch. Pr. 134; ds (sc. Kepavvds) abroy été- mAnte THY .. Kopmacpnatev Ib. 360, cf. Eur. lon 635 :—absol. to drive away, 4 Tépyus éxmAnaoe 7d Avmnpdy Thuc. 2. 38; PéBos pyfhuny umd. Ib. 87. II. to drive out of one’s senses by a sudden shock, to amaze, astound, Od. 18. 231, in tmesi; 6 péBos éxmAnoowy .. Antipho 115. 30; 5 pf éemAhooe Aéyew frightens me in speaking, Eur. Or. 549: —in this sense most used in aor. 2 pass., Ep. éfewAnryny (v. infr.), Att. eLemAdynv [a]; but also aor. 1 éfewANjxOnv Soph. Tr. 386, Eur. Tro. 183; pf. part. éxmemAnypévos Aesch. Pers. 290, Soph., etc.:—to be panic- struck, amazed, . by fear, ée yap mAnyn ppévas Il. 16. 403, cf. 13. 3943 vioxo: éxmAnyev 18. 225; c. part., éememAnypévoy Keivov Brémovtes Soph. O. T. 922, cf. Ant. 433, etc.; éemAayqvat tur to be astonished at a thing, Hdt. 1. 116, etc.; dé twos Id. 3.64; bd Te Thuc. 7. 21; énl rue Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 27; mpés re Plut. Thes. 19, etc.: but also, éxtdayfvai ria to be struck with panic fear of .., Soph. Ph. 226, El. 10453 Huas 8 dy..pddiora éxwenAnypéevor elev Thuc. 6. 11, cf. 3. 82. 2. generally, of any sudden, overpowering passion, o be struck with desire, Ar. Pl.673; with love, Eur. Hipp. 38, Med. 8; with joy, Aesch. Cho. 233, cf. Soph. Tr. 629; with admiration, Aeschin. 19. 4, etc.; c. acc. rei, éemAayévra Ta mpoxeipeva dyabd Hat. 9. 82, cf. 3. 148. 8. fs 71 €xwdHTTEW to frighten one into a thing, Polyb. 24. 4, 11. extrAwbevw, to take out bricks or tiles, Isae. ap. Harpocr. éxmAlooopat, Pass, to open, gape, of a wound, Hipp. Fract. 767, Art. 789. écrrAoKy, 7, an unravelling : metaph. escape, Artemid. 4. 59. éxmAoos, contr. -tAous, 6, a sailing out, leaving port, Aesch. Pers. 385 ; moretoOar Exmr. =ExmAciv, Thuc, 1. 65, etc., cf. €emAéw1; Bidleo- Oat Tov éxmd, to force one’s way out, Id. 7. 70; etomAous kat exmd. the right of using a port, C. 1, 2675 a. II. a passage out, entrance of a harbour, Aesch. Pers. 367, Xen. Hell. r. 6, 18. éerdtve [7], fo wash out, esp. to wash out colours from cloths, iva. . pi) abray éxndvva tiv Bapny Plat. Rep. 430A; éxmddvarras thy olomd- tv having washed out the grease and dirt, Ar. Lys. 575 :—Pass., Ta 5& (Ga ode éxmdbvecGa the pattern is not washed out, Hat. 1. 203. 22 to wash out, i.e. wash clean, dvaco pevrdy ef tis éxmddveré ce Ar. Pl. 1062; Tov camépdny Id. Fr. 546; so in Med., Hdt. 4. 73. éxrdtors, ews, 7), a washing out, Hesych. éxmAtros, ov, to be washed out, of colours, Plat. Rep. 429 E, C. I. 155. 23:—metaph. washed out, placpa 8 exmd. wéAe phe Eum. 281; éxmA, 7d pravOér Plat. Legg. 872 E. éxtrAdw, Ion. for émAéw. éxtrvetw, Ep. for éxmvéw. exrveuparow, to turn into vapour or gas, Arist. Probl. 1. 53, Theophr. ap. Plut. 2. 292 D:—Pass. to be so turned, Arist. Probl. 10. 54., 26..33.5 33-15, al. II. to discharge like air from a bladder, Plut. 2. 39 D. IIT. in Pass. to be inflated, Theophr. C. P. 4. 9, 3- exrrveupatwors, 7, a breathing out, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 114. éxmvevous, ews, 7), an expiration, opp. to elamy-, Arist. H. A. I. 9, 4, al. éxrvéw, Ep. -mvelw: fut. -rvevcouat or -odpat:—to breathe out or. forth, mvedpa éxny., opp. to dvanvéw, Plat. Phaedo 112 B, Arist. H. A, 1. 11, 6,al.; xepauvds éxnveav prdya Aesch. Pr. 359 ; éxmv. dpds Tw Eur. Phoen. 876; éxmv. @uvpdv Id, Bacch. 620, cf. Rhes. 786. 2. Biov éxnv. to breathe one's last, expire, Aesch. Ag. 1493, Eur. Hel. 142; éemv. youxny Eur. Or. 1163; and alone, ip’ ob povéws dp’ éfémvevoas Soph. Aj. 1026 ; mpés rwvos Eur. H. F, 885 :—also to lose breath, of a runner, Arist. Rhet. 3. 9, 2. II. absol. to cease blowing, to become calm, [6 Sfp0s] tows dv éxmvedocae Eur. Or, 700; Ta Kara Tov médrEHov éK- ménveune kal AeAdp>nKev Schol. Ar. Pax 942. 2. to blow out or outwards, of a wind, éowOev éxmv. Hdt. 7. 36; é« Tod xéAwov Thue, 2. 84, cf. 6. 104: to burst out, opiKpod vépous . . exmvedoas péyas Xetpav Soph. Aj. 1148. éxrrvon, 7), a breathing out, expiring, opp. to dvamvon, Plat. Tim. 78 E, Arist. Sens. 1, 3; elomvoy, Arist. de Resp. 2, 3; Savdoipor éxmvoal Eur. Hipp. 1438. . IL. an air, breeze, Arist. Mund. 4, 10. €«trvoos, ov, contr. —tvous, our, breathless, lifeless, Strabo 650. II. breathing out, exhaling, Hipp. 1190 A; exmv. twos smelling of a thing, Posidipp. ap. Ath. 596 C. éxrodav, Adv. (é« 7odav) opp. to ¢umoddv, away from the feet, i.e. out of the way, away, éxm. dwadAdooecGa: to depart and get away, Hat. 8. 76; tm. orabjvat to stand aside, Aesch. Cho. 20; aroorivat Eur. Hel. 1023, etc.; éem. elvar Hdt. 5. 35; yiyvecOat, amévat, otxecOat, etc., Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 38, etc.; éem. éyew, Gyew twa Aesch, Pr. 344, Soph. Ant. 1321; éav Ar, Ach. 305; dmaye ceavroy éem. Id. Ran. 853; absol., éxrobdav out of the way! Id. Ach. 240, Vesp. 1341 :—c. dat., Ee. xwpeiv rit to get out of his way, Eur. Hec. 52, etc.; em. arhval rie Thue. tr, 40; éxrodav civac véois Eur. Supp. 1113, ef. Andoc. 17. 37 :—éemoddy noteiaOai Twa or Tt to put ont of the way, Xen. Cyt. 3. 1, 3, Isocr. 76E, 2. to make up to a certain number, éemAnpotat tas vas pete: éxm. A€yew to declare away or removed, Aesch. Eum. 453 :—c. 442 gen., é¢m. xOdvos far from it, Eur, Phoen, 978; én. eivat or éxev tuwvds to be or keep free from a thing, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 34, Eur. I. T. 1226; 70 pev adv éxm. €o7w dé-you be thou banished from my words, Id. Med. 1222. cmobev, Adv. from some place or other, c. gen., Ap. Rh. 3. 262: &- mo0e, Q. Sm. 9. 420., 14. 74. eetrovéw, to put out: 1. to put out a child, i.e. give him to be adopted by another, Lat. dare adoptivum, opp. to cicmoew, Dio C. 60. 33 :— Pass. to be adopted, dv exo Isae. 66. 4, cf. Dio C. 38.12: v. &x- moinros. 2. to alienate, sell, Pherecr. Inv. 3. 3. semen emitto, Arist. H. A, to. 5, 2. 4. in Med. to produce, bring forth, Ar. Ach. 255, cf. Pax’ 708. II. to make complete, finish, Jinish off, like dmepyafopar, Hdt. 2. 125, 1753 Tas ddovs -yepupais éxm. to furnish them with.., Dio C. 68. 15 :—c. gen. materiae, Tapiov Ai@ov ra ép- mpoobe éénmoinaay they made all the front of Parian marble, Hdt. 5. 62; cf, éemovéw I. IIL. intr. to be sufficient, to suit, Theophr. C. P. 1.14, 2:—impers., éxmove?, it is sufficient, it is fit, Hipp. Prorrh. 84, Lys. ap. Poll. 9. 154. OLS, ews, }, a putting forth: emissio seminis, Hdt. 3.109. aE. a giving out a child in adoption, Poll. 6. 178. éeroinros mais, a child given to be adopted by another, eum. eis oindv twos Isae. 65. 41, cf. Aeschin. 56. 41.—The child was so called in rela- tion to its natural, eioqot7ros in relation to its adopted father. 2. alienated from twés Isae. 66. 3; kaxias Plut. 2. 562 E. écrroucthAw, strengthd. for mouiAAw, Max. Tyr. Io. 2. éxroxtfo, fut. Att. 1%@, to pull out wool or hair, Ar. Thesm. 567. éxrroAepéw, like €xrodeudw, to excite to war, iv’ éemoAcunocte TOUS “AOn- vaious mpds Tovs Aaxedarpovlous Xen. Hell. 5.4, 20 without v.1.; and Harp. cites this passage to shew that the form in —€w was preferred by theGramm. : whence Dind. restored éwoAeuAoat (for -Boar) from one MS. in Dem. ll. citand. to excite to war, make hostile, ra mpés twa Dem. 11. 1., 30. 20: —this may also be the sense in Thuc. 6. 91, Td évOdde xpi)... ExTode- peiv, or (it may be) ¢o carry on the war in these parts. II. to go to war with, ddAnAous Polyb. 15. 6, 6. éxrroAensw, to make hostile, to involve in war, Hdt. 4.120; Twa mpés awa Thuc. 6. 77:—Pass., fut. med. -woopar (Joseph. B. J. 7. 10, 2), to become an enemy to, be set at feud with, Tr Hat. 3. 66., 5. 73; absol., Thue. 8.57. Cf. éemorcuew. écmoAguwors, ews, 7, a making hostile, Plut. Aemil. 13. €xtroAtle, to join to the city, Aristid. 1. p. 198. &cro\vopKéw, to force a besieged town to surrender, force to capitulate, Thuc. 1. 94, 134, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 3, etc.:—Pass. to be forced to surrender, Thuc. 1.117; é¢ Bu{ayriov éxmodopxnOjvac Ib. 131. &krroAtrevw, to change the constitution of a state, to make it degenerate, Lxx (4 Mace. 4. 19). écrrop.meto, to walk in state, to strut, Luc. Dom. 11, al. to make a show of, make infamous, gibbet, Dio C. 77. 5. 2 éxropwh, , a sending out or forth, Aporav Thuc. 3. 51; dmoundv Plat. Legg. 740 E. IL. a divorce, Antipho ap. Stob. 422. 2. _ éetrovéw, to work out, finish off, Lat. elaborare, Sappho 99, Pind. P. 4. 421, Ar. Av. 379 :—also fo form by instruction, as Chiron did Achilles, Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 209; xijpe padbandy eendvace odapew wrought me soft-hearted from iron-hearted, Theocr. 29. 24; em. Twa mémAovow to deck him out, Eur. Hipp. 632 :—Pass. to be wrought out, brought to per- fection, 7d vautixdy peyddas Sandvais éxrovnbéy Thue. 6. 31; éxme- movnuévos otros corn fully prepared for use, Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 5; bmda txremovnpéva és xdcpov Id. Hell. 4. 2, 7; cf. Plat. Rep. 529 E. 2. fo practise, rd mpds médepov Xen. Cyr. 5. I, 30; so in Med., Plat. Legg. 834 D:—Pass., of persons, éewemovfjOar 7a ompara to be in good training ox practice, Xen, Cyr. 3. 3,573 eememovnpévor, ws dy kpariorot elev Id. Hell. 6. 4, 28. 8. to work through, execute, Tavera péva Eur. Hipp. 1648; gem. dé@dous to finish hard tasks, Theocr. Ep. 20. 5 ; so in Med., Eur. Med, 241 :—Pass., tatra dvoiv év grow... porus éfe- sov7On Cratin. Xecp. 22. 4. to labour for, provide by labour, earn, den Aesch. Supp. 3673; o@rnpiay Eur. Fr. 729; Aiov Id. Hipp. 467, ef. I. A. 367; éem. Sms .., Id. Or. 683 :—c. ace. et inf., rods Oeods exer. pace to prevail on the gods to tell, Id. Ion 375. 5. absol. to work hard, Id. Or. 653, Supp. 318; én. odpacw Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, II. 6. to work out by searching, to search out, Eur. lon 1355, cf. Andr. 1052: to seek ee Sor, Id. Hel. 1514. 7. of food, to digest by labour, Xen. . 1. 2, 4, Cyr. 1. 2, 16; absol., Id. Occ. 11, 12. 8. to labour to shield off from, ri twos Eur. H. F. 581. 9. to work at, work well, dypovs, etc., Theocr. 16. 94 ; HAnyv Piut. Pericl. 12. 10. in Pass. to be worn out, Lat. confici, Strabo 249; ppovriow éxrovetaba Plut. Otho 9. Socs. 3 é vw, to ipt, vitiate, . Ep. 114. alone: +b, po cri 4). the procession of the Holy Ghost, Eccl. éxmopevw, fo make to go out, fetch out, Eur. Phoen. 1068, H. F. 723: —Med., with fut. med. and aor. pass., fo go out or forth, march out, Xen. An. 5. 1, 8, etc.; els rémov ex, to march out to a place ..., Polyb. 11. 9, 43 also c, acc. loci, éem. 7d Bovdrevrhpoyv Ib. 8. exmopbéw, = ure pOer, to pillage, Eur. Tro. 95, Lys. 127.42, ¢tc.:—Pass., of a person, to be undone, in’ drys éenendpOnyar radas Soph. Tr. 1104, cf. Eur. Tro. 142. II. to carry off as plunder, ra. tvévra Thue. 4. 57. eed ékrop! II. trans. ois, ews, #), a sacking, wasting, Strabo 396. p, opos, 6, a waster, destroyer, Eur. Supp. 1223. wo, to carry away by sea :—Eur; has pf. pass. in pass. sense, [Eady] eemendp9pevrat x9ovds Hel, 1179; but in med. sense, MevéAaos &k7o0ev — xT wma. tvppépor Exdory Plat. Rep. 341 Ds dem. Smws .., Id. Lys. 427. il. to provide, furnish, oréyn ..mdv7’ éem. Soph. Ph. 299; apyupioy dyiv Andoc. 21.42; émAa rx Thue. 6, 72; Bloy Ar. Vesp. 11135 Xphyara, pua@bv Xen. Cyr. 3.1, 30, An. 5.6, 19; 70 guppépoy éxdory Plat. Rep. 341 D, etc. :—Med. to provide for oneself, procure, tt Thuc. 1. 82, 125, Plat. Gorg. 492 A, al. &erropvevw, to commit fornication, LXx (Exod. 34. 15), Ep. Jud. 7:—~ Pass. in same sense, Poll. 6. 126, Eccl. &ctrordopat, Ion, —€opat,=éxréropat, Dep.:—to fly out or forth, of snow-flakes, Ards éxmoréoyrat Il. 19. 3573; of a ghost, wed’ duatpay vexvov éxrenorauéva Sappho 73: metaph., 7a tds ppévas éxnenéracat ; =quae te dementia cepit? Theocr. 11. 72, ef. 2. 19. €xrrous, 6, 7, =éfamous, C. I, 1606. 11 and 54. €xmpatis, ews, 7), an exacting, demanding, Diod. 1. 79. exrpdcow, Att, -rrw, fut. fa, to do completely, to bring about, achieve, Lat. efficere, te Aesch. Ag. 582, etc.; 760° eémpatey wore. . Id. Pers. 723; ws..Soph. Ant. 303; déAcov edyhy éfémpag’ Eur. Hel. 20; roy KadAlvinoy .. eLempagare és yoov ye have made the hymn of triumph end in wailing, Id. Bacch, 1161. II. to make an end of, kill, destroy, Lat. conficere, like depyd¢opa, Aesch, Ag. 1275, Soph. O. C. 1659, Eur. Hec. 515. III. to exact, levy, xpeos Aesch. Supp. 472; aiparos dteny Eur. H. F. 43; ¢nuiay Plat. Legg. 774E; also c. dupl. acc., xpq- para éenp, rwa Thuc. 8. 108; robs rapias éxmp. [71] Plat. Legg. 774 E:—Pass, to have to pay, Paus, 7. 12, 1. 2. to exact punishment for a thing, to avenge, Soph. O. T. 377, Eur. Med. 1305 :—so in Med., éxmpdooecOa tov Aopiéws povoy Hdt. 7. 158; éxmp. Tov povov mpds twos to require it at his hands, Ib.:—Pass., eempaxOnop 0° empagas Or. Sib. 8. 128. éxmpiive, strengthd. for zpaivw, Paul. Sil. Therm. 154, Plut, 2. 74 D.. &kmpepvitw, to root out, Dem. 1073. 27, Philostr. Jun. 869. éxmpétera,, 7), excellence, lambl. V. Pyth. § 23. exmpemns, és, distinguished out of all, pretminent, remarkable, év od- Avior Il. 2. 483; pla éxmp. vina Pind. P. 7.13; peyeOee Exmpeneorara Aesch, Pers. 184 ; evyévecay éxmpemeis Ib. 442; elds éxmpeneorarn Eur. Alc. 3333 é«mp. yevéoOar Plat. Phaedr. 238 A; éxmperéorepa (da Arist. Physiogn. 5, 12:—Adv. mas, eminently, Polyb. 5. 59, 8, etc. II. in bad sense, =é{w Tod mpémovros, unseemly, monstrous, Thuc. 3.85: so Adv. —mOs, without reasonable grounds, ld. 1.38 ;Sup.—€orara, Xen. Symp. 8, 31. exmpemvrws, Adv, =éxmpends, Dio C, 74. 1. éxmpéma, to be excellent in a thing, rue Eur. Heracl. 597. exnpysts, €ws, 7}, a setting on fire, inflaming, Plut. Lysand, 12. éxmpnopds, f. 1. for &Bpacpds, Schol. Ar, Ay, 1243. €empyocow, Ion, for éempacow. eemplacbar, aor. 2 (y. sub *mpiayer), to buy off, xpnpact .. Kivduvoy cemp. Antipho 136. 36, cf. Lys. 178.16; éxmp. robs arnyépous Id. 159. 20; Exmp. TL mapa Tivos Isocr. 31 B. éxmpilor, = exemplar, Geop. 9. 11, 7. ekmptots, ews, 7}, a sawing out, Paul, Aeg. 6. 84. exmpiopa, 76, that which is sawn out, Arist. Gen. et Corr. 1. 2,1 5. éxrrpla, to saw out, Thuc. 7. 25: of trepanning,, Hipp. V. C. 912. exmpoderpéw, to be later than the appointed day, Schol. Dem. 540. 21. exmpobecpos, ov, beyond the appointed day, Tod dpAhparos for the debt, Luc. Hermot, 80; emp. ray érrd. ijpepav seven days too late, Id. Saturn. 2; éxmp. TOU dyvos past the time of, i.e. too old for, the games, Id. Anach, 395 ekmp. pidotihyara honours deferred till too late, Id. Navig. 0; mévOos Philo 2. 169. extrpo0paokw, to spring out or forth, Orph. 3 i BF in, aor. part. Dehtenton Pah A ee éxmpodupéopat, strengthd. for mpoOvpéoxa, Eur. Phoen. 1678. texpotys, to send forth, dévaov mayday éxmpoieioat Eur. lon 119. exmpouxtto, fo portion off, Phalar. p. 404. fempoxithéopar, Med. to call forth to oneself, éxmpoxadeooapévn peya- pay Od. 2.400; &« peydpoo h. Hom, Ap. 111; cf. Ap. Rh. 4. 354- éxmpoxpivea, 40 choose out, médAcos éxmpoxpiOeioa Eur. Phoen. 214. éxmpoAcirra, to forsake, kothov Adxov exnpodimdyres Od. 8. 515, cf. Theogn. 1136; aidva C.1. 3627. II. to leave, spare, Pseudo- Phoc. 80. éempopodciv, aor. 2 (v. BAdcxw), to go forth from, Ap. Rh. 4. 1587. éexrpomlare, to fall down from, inpédev eis yatay Orph. Lith. 319. exmpopte, to flow forth from, Anth. P. 9. 669, Orph. Lith. 201. exmpoowmen, to depart from one’s character, Eust. Opusce. 218. 24, etc. exmpotipdw, 40 honour above all, Soph. Ant. 913. ekmpogatvw, do shew forth, Orph. H. zo. 7, in aor. 2 éempopavovca. eempopépa, to bring forth, corrupt in Manetho 6. 733- exrpopetyo, fut. —pevgopai, to lee away from, tiwds Heliod. 8.11: to il Bot Lith. 391, Anth, P. 6, 218. KTpoXew, fut.—yew, to pour forth, Orph. Arg. ; éemp. iaxdy Anth. P, 7. 2015, mhoxdyous Ib. 22 (ree Sdxpvoy Bee, Gr. bm . éxmrrepdopar, Pass. to be furnished with wings, Hipp. 347-19; v.). exmupoupeva, which seems required by the sense. eemrepioconat, Dep. to spread the wings, Luc. Musc. Enc. I. — fo scare out of, oikow pe é¢érragas (Dor.) Eur. Hec. 180. Ca ge es Tzetz, ‘Pass. to be struck with admiration, Eur. yel. 185, Polyb. 5. 36, 3; rds puyds eenrénvro were greatly excited, éxrrvapa, 7d, spittle, Or. Sib. 8, 280 (v.1, éumrdopara). {®], Anth. P. 5. 197. To spit = Seadoo: Od. 5, 322, cf. Mel. |. c.:—to spit or a) out, amoppnra Acl.N. A. 4. 44:—of an abortion, Ib, 12.17. II. to 2:—1o spit at, abominate, Ep. Gal. 4.14. p. Art. 796, + x : EKT TOOLS —— EKTTACIS, xrracrs, ews, 7), a falling out, breaking forth, escape, Tov Oeppov Arist. Meteor. 2. 9, 15, cf. H. A. 10. 5, 12, Resp. 20, 43 2 TOV opew xr. the rays that come from the sun, Id. Probl. 15. 6. 2. banishment, Polyb. 4. 1, 8, Diod. 13. 65. 3. a falling from one’s hopes, a dis- appointment, Cebes 7: a falling off, mpos 7d xéipor Strabo 467. II. the dislocation of a joint, Hipp. Fract. 749; gent. rav borepéwy the expulsion of the after-birth, Id. Aph. 1255: decay of flesh, ‘sinews, etc., as result of erysipelas, Id. Epid. 3. 1082; t@v éoxapav xr. detachment of the eschars, Id. Art. 788. exmiéw, to suppurate, Hipp. Epid. 1. 956, cf. Progn. 41. 40, 1002 C: —so in Med., Id. Aph. 1257. Hence ékainpa, 76, a sore that has sup- purated, Id. Vet. Med, 17, Progn. 41; éetdnors, %), suppuration, Id. Aph, 1259, etc.; ékmunricés, 4, dv, bringing to suppuration, Ib, 1253. éxrrutoxopat, Pass. =éervéw, Hipp. Progn. 41. 41., 44.53. , éxruvOdvopar, fut. -redoopat : Dep. :—to search out, make enquiry, Il. 10. 320; &« re mvPéa0ar HE . . Ib. 308 (in Il. 20. 129, read Gedy ex mev- cera: bupijs); iv’ &emv@dpeba, mé9ev .. Eur. Cycl. 4, etc. 3c. acc, 4o enquire about, hear of, learn, Soph. Aj. 215 ; é«7. rt twos to learn Jrom.., Eur. H. F. 529, Ar. Eccl. 752; dem. twos to make inguiry of him, Ar. Pl. 60: c, part., éem, twa dpvypévoy Eur. Hel. 817. Cf. éemedopat. éxtruéw, to cause to suppurate, cited from Diosc. prighs 4 59 Se (xuphy) to squeeze out the kernel, and generally, to squeeze out, ra évévra Arist. Phys. 4. 7, 6 :—Pass., Alex. Aphr., etc. €krripiviots, ews, 7), a squeezing or forcing out, Eust. Opusc, 203. IT. eenipyvicpa, rd, an outburst, Byz. éxrripidw, to heat, Hipp. Aph. 1255, in Pass. expos, ov, (wip) burning hot, Theophr. C. P. 2. 19, 4, Strabo 697, etc.:—neut. pl. as Adv., ri w &xmupa Aovers; Anth. P. 5. 82. €xtrUpbw, to burn to ashes, consume utterly, Eur. I. A. 1070, H. F. 421: —to set on fire, Arist. Meteor. I. 3, 21. II. Pass. to catch fire, Ib. 1.5, 2: a term used in the Heraclitean philos. to express the tendency of all things to pass into Jire (cf. dvafupiacts), Diog. L. 9.8, cf. Plut. 2. 877 D, and v. xpyorpoctvn :—to be burnt up, Kapmacw Kepavviats Eur. Bacch. 244:—to be much heated, Hipp. Aph. 1257, cf. éemrepdopat: to be red hot, of iron, Polyb. 12. 25, 2. a exrupoevw, fo set on fire, inflame, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 179, in Pass. S II. to give signals by a beacon-light, Joseph. B. J. 4.10, 5. éxrripwots [0], ews, }, a burning utterly, conflagration, Strabo 579, Diog. L. to. tor, 102, Luc. Vit. Auct. 14. Il. a catching fire, Arist. Meteor. 1. 5, 2; cf. éemvpéw 11:—in Ath. 629 E, a hind of dance. exrrucros, ov, heard of, discovered, in the phrase mplv éemvorov ‘yevé- o6at, Thuc, 3. 30., 4. 70., 8. 42. exrrbrifw, fut. low, to spit out, Alex, Mavép. I. 12. éxropa, 7d, a drinking-cup, beaker, Hat. 9. 41, 80, Soph. Ph. 35, etc. : —Dim. -drtov, 74, Diphil. "AoA. 3, Strabo 758. exrwparo-rods, 6, a cup-maker, name of a play by Alexis. ekrrwtdopar, post. for éexordopat, Babr. 12. 1. éxpdavOey, v. sub xpaiva. éxpaPbSitw, to flog out, drive out with a rod, Ar. Lys. 576. expiyy, 7}, as an explan. of éepyéis in Suid. s.v..—prob. f. 1. for epavyn, as in Zonar. Lex. p. 657. éxpdOny [a], v. sub cepdvvupe. ékpatve, zo scatter out of, make to fall in drops from, kus pveddy exp. Soph. Tr. 781; eyxépador étéppave Eur. Cycl. 402. expat, to destroy utterly, Orph. Lith. 598, in tmesi. éxpéuw, v. sub xpépapar, éxpéw, fut.—pevoouar: pf. -epptnea: aor. pass. e¢eppuny in act. sense, Plat. Rep. 452 D:—to flow out or forth, ée 8 alpa péday pee Il. 21. 119; €« Tivos Plat. Phaedo 112 A; of streams, éxp. és Oddacoay Hat. 2. 20; exp. éfw Ib. 149. 2. of feathers, to fall off, e¢eppinxe ra mrepa Ar. Av. 104; of hair, Arist. H. A. 3. 11, 9. 3. metaph. to melt or fall away, disappear, Lat. effluere, Plat. Rep. 452 D, Theag. 130 E; e¢epptnoav of Ocprarowdéous Adyou T@v ‘EAAjvow they fell from their memory, Plut. Them. 12. II. c. acc. cogn., to shed, let fall, xépw Anth. P. 11. 374. éxpyypa, aros, 74, a piece torn off, éxpyyuata tpvxlev Hipp. Art. 837. 2. the broken bed of a torrent, a ravine, Polyb. 12. 20, 4. Il. a breaking forth of a stream, bdérwv Theophr. C. P.1. 5, 2:—an eruption, Hipp. 1211 E. &xphyvipe: fut. —pyéw:—to break'off, snap asunder, vevpiy 8 &€éppnte vedatpopoy Il. 15. 469; c. gen., dwp eéppytev ddot0 the water broke off a piece of the road, Il, 23. 421 :—Pass. to break or snap asunder, of bows, «i roy mavra xpdvov éevrerapéva ein, exparyein dv Hat. 2. 173; of clothes, fo be rent asunder, Chaerem, ap. Ath, 608 B. If. c, acc. cogn., to let break forth, break out with, vepédrn OuBpov expnget Plut. Fab. 12; éxp. dpyqv Luc. Calumn. 23 :—Pass. to break out, of an ulcer, Hdt. 3. 133, cf. Hipp. Aph. 1252; évOev éxpaynoovrat .. rorapot aupdés Aesch. Pr. 367; of a quarrel, és pécov éfeppayn it broke out in public, Hdt. 8. 74; of persons, to break out into passionate words, €xpaynvat eis Twa Id. 6. 129. III. sometimes also intr. in Act., ov mor éxpnter paxn Soph. Aj. 775; éxphéas dvepnos Arist. Meteor. 2.8, 14. éxpngiis, ews, 7, a breaking out, violent discharge, Hipp. 675. 493 éxp. Ths myns Schol. Theocr. 7. 5: cf. éxpayy. II. a breaking asunder, Tod vépous Arist. Mund. 4, 18. &xphoow, = exphyvuui, Theano Epist. 3. &xpilow, fo root out, Ev. Matth. 13. 29, Achmes Onir. 202, 206:— Pass., Babr. 36.8, etc.; in a form of execration, éxpi(wOjcerar mavyevel C. 1. 916. 8, II. to produce from the root, Pallad. explloors, 7, a plucking out by the roots, yAwooav Eust. Opusc. 204.86. expiloris, ov, 5, a rooter out, a destroyer, Joseph. Macc, 3. } Exotics, eas, }, (eflornp) any displ 443 exptv, ivos, 6, 7, with high, prominent nose, Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 2.1 3- éxptvéw, to file away, consume, ri kapdiay Alciphro 3. 33. éxpivite: fut. Att. 1@: to snuff out, Pseudo-Luc. Philop. 22. éxptmite, fut. iow, to fan the flame, light up, Arist. Meteor. 1. 8, 14: —metaph. /o stir up, rouse, Theopomp. Hist. 239, Plut. Pomp. 8. exptmopés, 6, a lighting up, Epicur. ap. Diog. L, 10. 101. éxpurréw, =sq., Plut. 2.654 D. explar, fut. Yo, to cast forth, ew pe [ys] .. expipare Soph. O. T. 1412; érq (cf. dwoppimrw 111) Aesch. Pr. 932 :—Pass., dippaw expipOeis Soph. El. 512; of an actor, like éemimrw, Lat. explodi, Aeschin. 48. 40. xpulis, ews, }, a throwing out or away, Gloss. ékpon, 7%, (€epéw)=Expoos 1, Plat. Gorg. 494 C, al. II.= éxpoos 11, Hipp. 1004 H, Plat. Phaedo 112 D, al.; wept ras éxpods the places of efflux, in the human body, Arist. P. A. 4. 10, 42. expoBSéw, to empty by gulping down, xparijpa Mnesim. ‘Inn. 1. 17. xpoos, contr. -pous, 6, a flowing out, outflow, outfall, issue, éxpoov éxev és O4Aaccay, of rivers, Hdt. 7. 129, cf. Arr. An. 4. 3, 2. 5 a way for outflow, place of issue, Arist. Meteor. 1.13, 27: a means of escape, Hipp. 562. 41., 1002 B. expodéw, to drink out, gulp down, Ar. Eq. 701, Plat. Com. Supp. 4: metaph., éxp. Tov puaOdy Ar. Vesp. 1118. éxpuOpos, ov, out of tune, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 186, Philostr. 352. éxptopar, fut. -pdcopat, to deliver, Eur. Bacch. 258, Ap. Rh. 4. 83. expUmrw, to wash or rinse out, Poll. 1. 44., 7. 39:—Med., éxpdnreoOac 70 Gduov Philo 1. 613. é€kptors, ews, %,=Expoos It, Arist. Meteor. 1. 13, 26, Polyb. 4. 39, 8. II. an efflux, flooding, differing from tpwopds (miscarriage), Hipp. 257. 19, Arist. G. A. 3. 9, 3, cf. H. A. 7. 3, 3 and 7. Tit. xp. tptx@v loss of hair, Theophr. H. P. 7.14, I. &xodynvetw, to extricate from the toils, Plut. 2. 52 Cv rane pinto to shake violently, Anth. P. 5.235: é«cadevw, Hesych. éxotiédw, Ep. for éxow(w, tecdwoer diduevov OavéecOar Il. 4.12; ee- odace Oadrdoons Od. 4.501; Yvyxiy 8 éf. Archil. in Ar. Pax 1301. ékoapkifopat, Pass. to have the flesh stript off, LXX (Ezek. 24. 4). éxoapkée, fo make grow to flesh: Pass. to grow to flesh; metaph., of olives, Theophr. C. P. 1.19, 5. II. intr.,=Pass., Diosc. Parab. 1.79. exotipse, to'sweep out, Eust. 725. 35. éxoelw, to shake out or off, rhs kepadfs exo. [7d dépya] Hat. 4. 64; éxo. Tiv éa0%j7a to shake out one’s clothes, Plut. Anton. 79 :—Pass., é«aé- cetorat (sc. 6 rptBey) Ar. Ach. 343. IL. to drive out or forth, Lat. excutere, Tov Aoyopav exo. Tad Plut. Anton. 14; éxo. Tiv doAo~ yiav to reject it, Diod. 18. 66. éxcepvive, strengthd. for ceuvivw, Ath. 661 E. éxoevopat, Pass.: pf. éécodpar: plapf. &écctro with sense of impf. (Od. 9. 373), though this form is commonly an aor. (v. infr.): aor. I efeavOnv [0]. Yo rush out or burst forth from, muddv eéaavro Il. 7. 1; pdpvyos 8 eéaavro oivos Od. g. 373; BrAehapw eécavro vydupos imvos sleep fled away from his eyelids, Il. 12. 366 :—absol. to rush out, é« 8 éaovro Aads 8. 58; vopovd eéoovro.. phda Od. ba! 438; aixpi 8 éeovdn the point burst out, Il. 5. 293; eéoovra dvOpamos éé dvOp@mov Democr. ap. Stob, 82. 25. éxonpatve, to disclose, indicate, Soph. El. 1191. & pat, Pass, to be or become quite rotten, Theophr. C. P. 5. 16, 2. éxatydopat, Pass. to be put to utter silence, éxovyabels Anth. P. 7. 182. exotpavilw, to empty by a siphon: te drain, Lxx. exovwmdw, to put to silence, Polyb. 28. 4, 13. . quite silent, Arr. An. 6. 4, 9- &xondAevw, to rake out, pull away, Ar. Lys. 1028. &xoxdmrrw, to dig out, Galen. 12. p. 261. éxoxeSdwipt, to scatter to the wind, ri eipnyny efeckedacas Ar. Eq: 795- éxoxevalw, to disfurnish of tools and implements, yewpyia teoxeva- on Dem. 872, 11 :—Med. éo carry away with one, xphyara eis Zovca ~ Strabo 730. Exokevos, ov, without equipment, without mask, Schol. Ar. Av. 95: Ta exon. the attendants on the stage, Hesych., Poll. 4. 141. Exoxnvos, ov, out of the tent: out of the sphere or influence of, Alou éxoxnvos, astron. phrase, Sext. Emp. M. 9. 73. ; ekoko , OV, erp? abroad, vie am 383 D. &kopdw, to wipe out, Ta rornpta Hat. 3. 148. éxooBéw, fo scare away, Menand, "Emad. 6, Auth. P. 6, 167; vdov éx orépvaw Ib. 5. 260. &conacréov, verb, Adj. one must draw out, Geop. 9. 11, 3. ekorde, fut. dow, to draw out, e&éonace peidwvor éyxos Il. 6.65; and so, Med., éxomacoapévw 56d’ eyxea having drawn out their spears, Il. 7 2553 tv éxonaowpat Bédov Eur. El. 582 :—Pass., tpixes Exomavrae Arist. Probl. 10. 22. 2. to tear down, Polyb. 18. 1, 14. éxomrévbw, fut.—cmeiow, fo pour out as a libation, Eur. lon 1193, Eubul. *Obvec. I. : éxorrepparif, semen emitto, éxom. oréppa, of a woman, to conceive, Lxx (Num, §. 28); cf. owepparicw.. ee Pass. to run to seed, Theophtr. H. P. 7. 1, 7- éxoreviw, to hasten out or forth, Ar. Thesm. 277. exomoyyile, to wipe off with a sponge, Eubul. Map. 4. éxomovbos, ov, =a Trav cnovdav, out of the treaty, not a party thereto, excluded from it, Thuc. 3. 68, Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 32, Dem. 355- 6; kom. Tav ouvOnkav Polyb, 22. 13, 5- IL. contrary to a treaty, violating it, Dion. H. 2. 72. ‘ éxorrovbvA lw or éxorpov8-, to break the vertebrae, LXX (4 Macc. 11.18), éx-ord8vos, ov, six stades long, Luc. Navig. 39. 1 from the II. intr. to be Mi or rei 444 proper place, Arist. G. A. 4. 3, 133 ai 8¢ éxordoes elaiv (sc. al kaxiar) Id. Phys. i: 3» 6. II, (from Pass.) a standing aside, Id. Rhet. I. 5, 93 Exar. ris picews degeneracy, Theophr. C. P. 3.1, 6. 2. alienation or distraction of mind, esp. from terror or astonishment, Hipp. Aph. 1258, cf. 93 B, etc.; éxar. ovyoa Ib. 126 G, 195 D; exo. pavt- Arist. aes 8,17; éxor. T&v Aoyopev Plut. Solon 8; 7a pndbe mpoodokwpev exaracw pépe Menand. *Eyx. 1. 3. entrancement, astonishment, Ev. Luc. 5. 26, Marc. 5. 42, Longin. 1. 4. 4. a trance, Act. Ap. 10. I0., 22.17. ékoriitixés, 4, dv, inclined ’to depart from, rod Aoyopod Arist. Eth. N. 7. 1,6; and absol. unstable, opp. to éupeverixds 7H Sd¢p, Ib. 7.8, 5, chee, 7. 2. out of one’s senses, distraught, éxor. dd Tov Ovpdv Id. P. A. 2. 4,53 of Ajax, Id. Probl. 30. 1, 3:—Adyv. —x@s, Plut. Dion. 55. II. act. able to displace or remove, twos Plut. 2.951 D: mad- dening, distracting, Theophr. H. P. 9. 13, 4. ow to fit out, equip, mepovas.., alow eearédAdero Soph. O. . 1269. ecoréhw, fut. Yu, to take off the crown: to empty a fall cup, opp. to émorépa (q.v.), Paus. ap. Eust. 1402. 61. II. to deck with gar- tands, Eur. Alc. 171; esp. of suppliants, xpa@ras teoreupévor Id. H. F. 526; but, fxrnpios eAddoow ekeoreppevor with garlands on the sup- pliant olive-branches, Soph. O. T. 3, cf. 19, and v. Il. 1.14, Aesch. Eum. 43; cf. also oréupa. IIL. eféorepe OdAagcay he poured it all round dike a garland, Opp. H. 2. 33. éxornbila, 25 oma Eust. 974. 10. tcorriAfios, ov, very bright, Heliod. Chrysop. (in Fabr. B. Gr. 8. p. 221) 103; and ékortABw, fo shine forth, Ib. 130. -éxotpayyilw, to squeeze or strain out, v.1. Diose. 4. 155. exortpirela, 7, a going out on service, Luc. Somn. 25, etc. &corpdrevpa, 7d, ax expeditionary force, Memn, in Phot. Bibl. 227.6. éxorpirevoipos, 7, ov, fit to take the field, Schol. Thuc. 6. 30. -€kotpiirevo, to march out, és Aederpa Thuc. 5. 54, Xen. Ages. 7, 7: éxorp. Twa to march him out, Dion. H. de Rhet. 9. 5, 6. II. in Med., absol. to take the field, Hdt. 1. 190., 4. 159, etc. ; so pf. pass. to be in the field, Thuc. 2. 12; émt rots dpiois Andoc. 7. 11. 2. to have ended the campaign, Thuc. 5. 55. ékotpiromeSevopnor, Dep. with pf. pass. to encamp outside, Thuc. 4. 129, Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 1 :—the Act. in Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 5- exorpépw, fut. yw, to turn out of, BoOpov 7 eearpepe [SévSpor] rooted up a tree from the trench it stood in, Il. 17. 58. II. to turn inside out, rd. BA€papa Ar.P), 721: metaph. to change or alter entirely, Tovs tpémous Ar. Nub, 88; rods ‘Imméas Ib. 554:—Pass., wooiv éfe- orpappévos Arist. Physiogn. 6, 14. &kotpopt, 7}, dislocation, Tav daxTiAwy Alciphro 3. 54; Adyou Plut. 2. 1072 C. : éxatpopéw, to force a door from its hinges, Hesych. &cotpryysopat, Pass., of an abscess., to discharge itself by a fistulous opening, Hipp. Coac. 180. koipiocw, Att. —rrw, to hiss off the stage, Lat. explodere, rwd Dem. 449.19; and Pass., Antiph. Moo. 1. 21 :—to hiss loudly, Dio C. 51.17. éxovpw [0], to drag out, Anth. P. 9.56, in aor. pass. ¢eovpy [0]. éxodevSovaw, to throw as from a sling, Eumath. 8. 4. bevSovilw, =foreg., cited from Heliod. bovSuAilew, v. s. Exomovd-. éxoppayiLopatr, Pass. to be shut out from, xanped” Eur. H. F. 53. x &coppdytopa, 7d, an impression, copy, radrns THs énvypapijs C. I. 3276, -81, -82, al. éxoryile, to cleave asunder: Pass. to be severed, Arist. Mund. 6, 33. éxoalo, Ep. ékoade, (q.v.): fut. cow :—to preserve from danger, heep safe, Hat. 9. 107, Soph. Aj. 1128, etc. ; &ea. Tuva Tivos to save one from another, Eur. El. 28; exo. twa és pdos vexpav mapa to bring him ” ‘safe .., 1d. H.F. 1222; td é¢ xvdvvaw Plat. Gorg. 486 B :—Med. to save oneself, Hdt. 2. 107; or to save for oneself, ws .. Blorov éxowaotaro Aesch. Pers. 360; «davas ds teow Cerar [dévdpa] Soph. Ant. 713 :— Pass., Srav .. vagov exam olaro when they fled for safety to the island, Aesch, Pers. 451; so, éfeowOns Eur. Supp. 751- éxowpevo, fo heap or pile up, Eur. Phoen. 1195. era, Cerapev, exrav, v. sub ereivw. : , }, (€erdoow) a dole, the Lat. sportula, Ducang. Gloss. teak, [a], Adv. (éeretvw) outstretched, ext. keiOa: to lie out- stretched, i. e. dead, Eur. Phoen. 1698, Luc. D. Mott. 7.2. &crdéSios [a], 7, ov, also os, ov Opp. C. 3. 276: (éxreivw) :—out- stretched, xhatvay .. bimAjy, neat: double, with ample folds, Il. 10. 1345 ter. Onda Orph. Arg. 357; ovpea Dion. P. 643. exraddv, Adv., =é«rddnv, Liban. 1. 343, Agath. Hist. 5. 12. _&eriidev, v. sub a ecraOjoropar, v. sub éxreivar. : &xraios, a, OV, (€) on the sixth day, Hipp. Aph. 1250, Xen. An. 6. 6, 38. II. =xros, Anth. P. 14. 119. xriavréopat, Pass. to be stript of money, teradavrabels Sopater ap. Ath. 230 a length, Scho éxripa, 70, extent, a ‘ol. éxtapvo, Ion. for éxrépva, 0 éerivviw, fut. vow, =é«reivw: Hom. has this form only, in the sense ¢o stretch out (on the ground), lay low, ¢ferdviac’ ént yaly Il. 17. 58:— Pass, éo lie outstretched, 5 8 trios eeravicOn 7. 271; eeravic0n | Gimedos it spread out all ways, in h. Bacch. 38. 2. fo stretch tight, te 8 érdvvaca ipdvra Bods Od. 23, 201; Sépya Pind. P. 4. én yap topparyicpeévor Sbpov ‘ ~ 8. to extend, terdvvacas d5dv Fpigr. Gr. 1078. 4. For Soph. + , . , EKOTATIKOS — EKTEMYO. O. C 1562, v. sub avda.—Poetic word, used by Hipp. Fract. 778. [@ usu., but 0 Anacreont. 8.] txratus, ews, %, array of battle, €xr. toeicOat Polyb. 2. 33, 7 éxr&mewvdw, strengthd, for ravenvdw, Plut. 2. 165 B. éxr&paxticds, 7, dv, calculated to disturb, Hipp. 404. 53- exrdpatis, ews, %, a troubling, agitation, Hipp. 54. 5- éxripdcow, Att. rw: fut. fa:—Zo throw into great trouble, to agitate, tov djpov Plut. Cor. 19:—Pass. to be greatly troubled, be confounded, Isocr. 311 B; id twos Ath. 552 F; mpds 7 Luc. Somn. 16. II. in Pass. also, to have a bowel-complaint, xo.Nta éxr. Hipp. Aph. 1251, Bpid. 1. 951. éxrapBéw, strengthd. for rapBew, Hesych. €craptxevopat, Pass., metaph. to be shrunk up, starved, Byz. éxraprdopar, v. sub Taprdopat. xriiots, ews, 4, (éxrelva) extension, Hipp. Art. 794; oKéAous, kway Arist. Incess, An. 12, 4, al.; ger. wal xapnf Plat. Legg. 795 E; xr. nat cvvayaryh Id. Rep. 526 D. II. the lengthening of a short syllable, Gramm. éxracow, Att. —rre, to draw out in battle-order, of the officers, Polyb. 3- 112, 1, Diod. 17. 53 :—Med., to draw themselves out, of the soldiers, Xen. An. 5. 4, 12, etc.; so in Pass., Polyb. 5. 83, 1. éxrairéov, verb, Adj. one must pronounce long, Gramm. &xrarés, }, dv, capable of extension, Plat. Tim. 44 E. éxtahpevw, to dig trenches, Hesych., dub. in Joseph. B. J. 5. 2, 2. écréato, Ion. 3 pl. plqpf. of «raopat. éxretvo, fut. —rev® :—to stretch out, xetpa Aesch. Cho. 9; Tv x. Ar. Eccl, 782; émi rt for something, Polyb. 1. 3, 6; mpds Tuva, in sign of friendship, Id. 2. 47, 2 :—mpds xevrpa-xG@dov Aesch. Pr. 323; maidas ént Thy mipny Hdt. 2.107; éxeioe xdneto’ donid éxr, Eur. Andr. 1131; éfer. eis rap fidos Id. Phoen. 1421; Ta yévara éxr. to straighten the knees, Ar. Vesp. 1212; €xr. 7a oxéAn Xen. An. 5. 8, 14:—Exr. very (cf. €xraviw) Eur. Hipp. 786; év ydp éxrevel o° émos will lay thee prostrate, Id. Med. 585 :—Pass. to be outstretched, lie at length, of sleepers, Soph. Ph. 858, Xen, An, 1.5, 2, etc.; also of the dead, Valck. Phoen, 1691; of countries, fo extend, Xen. Vect. 4, 3, Dion. P. 40. 2. to stretch or ‘spread out a net, Aesch. Cho. 983: to extend the line of an army, Eur. Heracl. 801 ; Aadv éxreivovr’ avw (sc. Eavrdy) Id. Supp. 654, cf. Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 19:—Pass. to be unfolded, smoothed, ds dy .. petTwmov éxra$jj xapa Soph. Fr. 768. II. to stretch out, spin out, prolong, mhedva dé-yov Hat. 7.5%; ppotsuov Oeois Aesch. Ag. 829, cf. 916; éxr. wRxos Adyou Id. Eum, 201; peiCova Adyor Soph. Tr. 679, etc.; Bioy Eur. Supp. 1109; rods mepimarovs Xen. Mem. 3. 13, 5:—Pass., Adyos éxrabels Plat. Legg. 887 A; of Time, wodds éxré- Tatat xpévos Soph, Aj. 1402. III. zo put to the full stretch, trmov éxr., cf. Fr. ventre a terre, Xen.Cyr.5.4,5; xT. Tavra kadwy (v. sub KdAws); macay mpoOupinv éxr. to put forth all one’s zeal, Hdt. 7. 10; Oupdy Andoc. 27. 25:—metaph. in Pass. to be on the stretch, on the rack, éxrérapat poBepday ppéva Soph. O. T. 153. IV. to lengthen a short syllable, Gramm.—Cf. éxrarvdo. exrerxile, fut. Att. 1®, to fortify completely, Thuc, 7. 26, Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 10, etc.; Texos xr. to build it from the ground, Ar. Ay. 1165. ékraxiopes, 6, fortification, Arr. An. 6. 20, 2. oer Pass. to be made out by guessing, Orac. ap. Eus. P. » 215 A. éxrexvow, fo generate, engender, ma0ea Hipp. Acut. 391 :—Med., naidas éxrexvovcGat Eur. Ion 438. exe, to spring from, rwds Emped. 70, 155. exreAclwors, €w, 7), consummation, Theophr. C. P. I. 9, 3. éxreAcéu, to bring to perfection, Theophr. C.P. 4.1, 5, etc., (v. 1. -eda). : exreAcurde, to bring quite to an end, accomplish, Pind. P. 12.553 ¢. inf., éxr. yevéoOat to bring it at last to be, Ib. 4. 333 éxT. waKos xpd- vou Aesch. Pr. 1020:—Pass, fo be quite the end of, rwés Soph. Tr. 169. II. intr. in Act. to come to an end, Aesch. Supp. 411. éxreAéw, Ep. impf. éferédcioy Il. 9. 493, Od. 4. 7: fut. -reAéow Il. 2. 286., 10. 105 :—fut. med. in pass. sense, v. fin. To bring quite to an end, to accomplish, achieve, éeredécas péya épyov Od. 3.2753 ds... &x- Terécesev GéOdous 8. 22; S5dv tereAéoavTes 10. 41, etc.: 10 accomplish a promise, etc., obd Tx éxreAgovow imdcxeow Il. 2. 286; ph of daretAds Exredéowar Oeot 9. 245; od Onv “Exrop: mavra vonpara .. Zeds éxred€et 10. 105, etc.; emOvpinv Hat. 1. 32; absol., Aapetou éxredeoas (sc. 70 Epyov) kara vod Epigr. ap. Hdt. 4. 88 :—Pass., Hde ydp éxredé- eo0at dtopat will be accomplished, Il. 12. 217, cf. 7. 3533 €xTEeAOCTO On 7a xpyord Aesch, Pers, 228, 2. of Time, Hes, Op. 562, Hdt. 6. 69, Pind. P. 4.1855 so in Pass., pijvés re kat tuepac éferédevvro Od, 11. 294. éxredijs, és, (réAos) brought to an end, perfect, dryaba Aesch, Pers. 218; of corn, ripe, deri) Anunrepos Hes. Op. 464: also of persons, 457 mepukor exred7 veaviay Eur. Ion 780; cf. évreAgs I. EKTELVO, Ep. and Ion, ékrdpvw (as always in Hom.): fut. -reu@: a tare fut. 3 éxrerpqoecOov Plat. Rep. 5640. To cut out, pnpods eé- Tapoy (v. pypia sub fin.) Il. 1. 460, etc. ; diordy éerduvew pnpov to cut an arrow from the thigh, 11. 820, cf. 515; é«r. yA@ooay Hat. 9. 112; eer. Tov Adpuyya Twos Ar, Nub. 5753 of a surgeon, to cut ou a diseased part, Plat. Rep. 564 C. 2. to cut trees out of a wood, cut down, Il. 12. 149, ef. Soph. Tr. 1196; also of planks, etc., fo hew out, hew into shape, 6s pa re téxvy viiov éurdpypow (Ep. for -réur7) Il. 3. 62, cf. 4. 486; é«r. 7d mpéuva to cut them off, Lys. 110. 6, 3. xr. tvas, to cut away the sinews, and so, like Lat. nervos incidere, to weaken, Pind, 1. 8 (7).1133 xr. Gowep vedpa te rijs yvyis Plat. Rep. 411 B; podoy eer. pifns Epigr. Gr. 570. 4; metaph., éAmidas éférapes Anth. P. append, 306. II. 40 castrate, rods matdas Hat. 6. 32., 8. 105 3 Opxets €xr. Soph, Fr. 549; of &ererpnuévor eunuchs, Arist. H. A. 3. 11, . , eKTEvEeLa — EKTOPMED, 93 cf. éxropias, IIL. to divide, yijv éxr. to divide the earth by zones, Arist. Meteor. 2. 5, 12; but also=«elpew jv, Dion. H. 9. 57. IV. éxrépvecbar prravOpwmia to be disarmed and deceived by kindness, Polyb. 31.6, 8, ubi v. Schweigh. éxréveta, 7), zeal, assiduousness, Ath. 141 E, Cic, Att. 10. 17; y éx- reveig =turevas, Act. Ap. 26.7, cf. LXx (Judith 4.9); perd maons éxr. Ib. (2 Mace. 14. 38). II. abundance, fvAwy Hdn. 7. 2, cf. 8. 2. éxrevijs, és, strained: hence of persons, warmly attached, friendly, Lat. prolixus, Polyb. 22. 5, 4, cf. Diod. Excerpt. 600. 75 :—of acts, earnest, instant, vehement, evxy Act. Ap. 12.5. II. Ady. -v@s, earnestly, zealously, dyamao0ac Macho ap. Ath. 579 E; zovety 7 Arist. M. Mor. 2. 11, 28; dyovifecda C. I. 2270. 15: Sup. -éorara, Diod. Excerpt. 620. 11. 2. in Adv, also, eagerly, freely, splendidly, mpocbégacbat twa Polyb, 8. 21, 1, cf. Diod, 2. 24, etc.; of public duties, Aaumpas ral éxr. reredexira C. 1. 2771.0. 14; Comp., todvred@s cat terevéorepov Tav G\Awy Agatharch. ap. Ath. 527 C.—A late word, so that éxreveis idous in Aesch, Supp. 983 is very dub. ; Heath suggested éyyeveis. éxrefts, ews, 4), child-birth, Arist. Mirab. 177, Sext. Emp. M. 5. 55. éxréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of éxw, to be held, Ar. Ach. 259. It. &kréov, one must have, xapw tii Plat. Gorg. 490 C, Xen. Mem, 3. 11, 2. éxrevaypévos, Adv, in set order, Schol, Ap. Rh. 1. 567. éxret&pévos, Adv. lengthened, of a short syllable, Ath. 105 E, and Gramm. éxrevs, ews, 5, (eros) the sixth part (sextarius) of the wéd.pvos, Inscr, Vet. in C. I. 9, Ar. Eccl. 547, Menand. Bor. 4. éxrevxw, to work out, produce, Hipp. Epist. 1289.54. éxreppbw, to burn to ashes, calcine, Strabo 248, Plut. 2. 696 B. Exréppwors, ews, 7), a burning to ashes, Strabo 247. éxrexvaopar, Dep.to devise a plan, rodvde 71 eerexvqjcavro Thuc.6.46. cry, 7%, a silver coin, the sixth of a stater, C. 1. 130. 41 and 43. éxrykw, fut. go: aor. eéraixov. To melt out, Kvcdwmos dppar’ éxr. mupi Eur. Cycl. 459; 7a ypaupar éxr. to melt out the letters written on wax, Ar, Nub. 772. 2. metaph. ¢o let melt away, let pine or waste away, dppa daxpvors Eur, Or. 134, cf. 529; Saxpvoe xpda Id. Hel. 1419; Tov Oupdy Plat. Rep. 411 B; Afots & ext. pynuootynv mpamtday Critias ap. Ath. 432 E; ry brdpxoucay éxr. xpaow Plut. Lycurg. 53 €xr. Twa eis Saxpva Id. Brut. 23. II. Pass., with pf. éxrernma, aor. éfe- taxny [a], to melt and ooze out, Hipp. Coac. 221; 7d éxrernnds a flabby condition, Id. Aph. 1245. 2. metaph. to melt, pine or waste away, éxrérnxa xupdiawy Eur. Hec. 443; eernxdunv ydos Id. Or. 860, etc. ; Tas dpdoas éxrernevia tnd tay Saxpdwv Dion. H. 8. 45 :—dAAd pot 765 Eupévor kat phot’ éxraxein may it never melt from my remem- brance, Aesch. Pr. 535, cf. Criti. supr. cit. éxry-poprot, of, =7d Exrov Tay yyvouévey TedovvTes, those who paid a sixth of the produce as rent, Plut. Sol. 13; also éernpdpor, Arist. Fr. 35I- II. éxrnpdpioy, 76, a sixth part, Sext. Emp. M. 10. 140; as a liquid measure, Poll. 4. 165. xrnpopirns, 6,=éernpudpov, Galen, 2. p. 312. ex kis, ews, 7), melting away, exhaustion, pAeBOv Hipp. Aér. 287. €xTWdcetw, strengthd, for rWacedw, Poll. 4. 28. EcriOypt, fut. 040m :—1o set out, place outside, évOa of exOetoat muxivov Aéxos Od. 23. 179: to expose on a desert island, Soph. Ph, 5; to expose a new-born child, Hdt. 1. 112, Ar. Nub. 530; Tov maid’ .. €£€0nke Bw- varev Eur. Ion 344; so in Pass., réOvne .. Onpaly éxreBeis Ib. g51: —Med., éxriGecbar relay cis BiOdvous to export it thither, Plut. Alc. II. to set up, propose for a prize, XéByras Soph. Fr. 68, | 29. ce Polyb. 15. 9, 4. 2. to set up in public, exhibit publicly, vdpous mpos Tovs éravipous Decret. ap. Andoc. 11, 28, cf. Dem. 707. 13, ete. 3. to set out for sale, Dio C. 46. 14. III. to set Sorth, expound, Lat. 2, Tiv mpdbecw, Tas airias Arist. Rhet. Al. 30, 21, Plant. 2. 2, 1. 2. in logical sense, to explain by means of abstraction, 1d, Metaph. 12. 9, 23, al.; and very freq. in Med., Ib. 2. 6, fin., al.; Gmodeifar 7G éxOécOu Id. An. Pr. 1. 6, 3, cf. 1. 8, 3, al.; ve Scholl. Metaph. p. 992 6. 10, and cf. éx@eats. éxtiOnvéw, to rear up, foster, Plut. 2. 1070C, in Med. éxricds, 4, dv, (ets) habitual, Arr. Epict. 2. 18, 4 :—Adv. -K@s, Diod. 3. 4, Plut. 2. 808 F. II. hectic, consumptive, Arist. Probl. 18. 37, Galen. éxtixtw, to bring forth, Plat. Theaet. 210 B, often in Arist.: of fish, to spawn, Id. H. A. 5. 15, 5-5 9- 37, 15- éxtiAdw, ¢o ease oneself, Lat. cacare, Schol. Ar. Av. 792. xtiddw, fut. -rTIAG, to pluck out, tpixas Arist. H. A. 8. 21, 5, al.; arepéy Ib. 3. 12, 5:—Pass., of a person, xéuny éxreriApévos Anacr. Ig. II. to pluck, strip bare, rv tpayny Hippon. Fr. 81 ; riv podwriady Dem, 1251. 28. 2. to strip the leaves off, dpiyavoy, xpéupvoy Arist. Mirab, 11, H. A. 9. 6, 7. extipdw, to honour highly, Soph. El. 64, Polyb. 30. 17, 3, etc.: to honour too highly, Arist. Oec. 2. 34, 5, Longin. 44. 7. II. to estimate, Ep. Plat. 347 B. €xripyors, ews, %, high esteem: estimation, Strabo 641. éctipntpa, Dor. -arpa, 7d, penalties, Inscr. Cnid. in Newton no. 18. ektipos, ov, (ru) without honour, yovéow éeripous trxovea yoo . . Trépvyas restraining them so that they shew not the honour due to parents, Soph. El. 242. 2. highly honoured, Hesych. II. liable to pay, Eeripot .. pvav X’ SeXedxyw Inscr. Delph. in C. 1. 1706. 13. éxrivaypos, 6, a shaking out, violent shaking, Philo 1. 415. éxtivatis, ews, 7, =foreg., E. M. 281. £9. éxtivdcow, fut. fw, to shake out, expel, Lat. excutere, €ApuvOas Diphil. Siphn, ap. Ath. 51 F:—Pass., é« 8 érivayev dddvres Il. 16. 348, cf. Phat. Cato Ma. 14. 2. to shake off, eer. Tov konoprov &e Tay Today Ev. Matth. 10. 14, etc.; so in Med., Act. Ap. 13. 51. II. intr. to be greatly moved, make a disturbance, Hipp. 1170. i f 445 éxtivipr, =éxrivw, Diod, 16. 29, and later. éxrive [I], fut. -ricw [7, v. sub rivw]:—to pay off, pay in full, Cypiay ext, xikta Taédavra Hat. 6.92; exer. edepyeciny Id. 3. 473 “Apye d éxtivey tpopas making a return for bringing one up, Aesch. Theb. 548; xdpy Eur. Or. 453, etc.; tpopeia Plat. Rep. 520 B:—8ixny er. to pay full penalty, Eur. El. 260, Lys. 167. 42; twdés for a thing, Hdt. 9. 943 ob éxrivee Sienv Eur. Andr. 53; so, riow éer. rwi Hdt. 6. 72; arowa Ib. 793 éxr. BAGBnv to make it good, Plat. Legg. 936 E, cf. Aesch. Ag. 1562, 1582; 76 BAaBos Dem. 528. 2. IL. Med. to exact full payment for a thing, avenge, like droricac@a:, iBpiy Soph. Aj. 34, cf. Eur. H. F. 547: to take vengeance on, twa Id. Med. 267.—Cf. éxria. extiots, ews, }, a paying off, payment in full, Plat. Legg. 855 A; % €er. jw émt ris evarns mpuraveias Andoc. 10. 17; Twos for a thing, Dem. 1025. 25 €«r. moretoOar =exrivew, Id. 834. 27. éxtispa, 76, that which is paid, esp. as a penalty, a fine, Plat. Legg. 868 B, Dion. H. 10. 52. Z $ eee a exrit0evw, = éxriOnvéw, to rear by suckling, Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 8. éxritpdw, fut.—rphow, to bore through: Pass., éxrerpdpevos, Oribas. Pp. 105. 29 Cochl.; pf. éererpnyévos, Poll. 2. 20. exritphokw, fut. -rpdow, to bring forth untimely, Bpépos Diod. 3- 64., 4. 2. 2. absol. to miscarry, Hdt. 3. 32, Hipp. Aph. 1247, Arist. H. A. 7. 4, 20. €xTpNHO,70, a section, segment, THs yijs tet phwara, of the zones, Arist. Meteor. 2. 5, 12. éxtpyots, ews, 4, castration, Arist. Probl. 10. 37. éxtpyréov, verb. Adj. one must cut out, Max. Tyr. 13. 7. xrobev, Adv., (éerds) Ep. for efwbev,=éxroabev, from without, out- side, c. gen., éxrobev GAAav pynoThpwy outside their circle, apart from them, Od. 1. 132; Aluvas éer. Aesch. Pers. 871; mipyov 8 éxr. Baddv having struck them from the wall, Id. Theb. 629; é«r. €pwros Anth. P. 5. 302. 2. absol. outside, without, ob8 dm’ dAAwy ext, Aesch. Cho. 4733 &er. Body Soph. El. 802; éer. -yapeiy to marry from an alien house, Eur. Andr. 795; 7a éxr. things abroad, Theocr. 10. 9 ;—in Od. 9g. 239, the sense requires us to read éxroOev avAF outside in the court (unless avAjjs can be taken as=avbAf), or else to accept Rumpf's conjecture éy- Tobev avAgs inside the court.—V. éxrogbey fin, €x7O0ev, for é« Té0ev, v. TéOev. t éxrobt, Ep. Adv. (é«rés) out of, outside, far from, like é, c. gen., Il. 15. 391., 22. 439. 2. absol. outside, Ap. Rh. 3. 255. €xTouxwptxéw, to break into a house and rob it: generally, to pillage, Tovs Biovs Polyb. 4, 18, 8: to steal, tiv Bactd , LJ , expoirygis — exXpwovvupe. i.e, to snore loudly, Theocr. 24.47. III. intr. to snort, Lyc, 743: to burst forth, padyes Expvonoacat Arist. Mund. 6, &ptonpa, 76, a pustule, Poll. 4.190: a hill thrown up by volcanic action, Schol. Ap. Rh, 3. 41. ixptonors, ews, %, emission of the breath, Galen. 2. 675. Expiordw, post. for éxputdw, Aesch. Ag. 1389. Exhiors, ews, 7}, (Expdw) a growing out or forth: growth, increase, Arist. P, A. 2.14, 6, Theophr, H. P. 8.1, 5; ép. dperijs Plat. Legg. - 777 E. II. an outgrowth, Aesch. Fr. 248, Plat. Phaedr. 251 B: a bony projection, Hipp. Art. 810. 2. a shoot, sprout, sucker, Theophr. H. P. 7. 4, 3, Polyb. 18. 1, 6. &xpitevo, to plant out: to graft, eis ovejy Arist. Probl. 20, 18: to plant land, Heraclid. Pont. 11, Philostr. in Phot. Bibl. 332. 26. &xpva, fut. Yow, to generate from the female, to engender, beget, of the male, Soph. O. T. 437. 827, etc.; ds &épuoey “Aepdans AEKTpov dro ’Ayapépvov’ Eur. Hel. 391; cf. éxrpépw. 2. rarely of the female, to bear, Soph. O. C. 984, cf. Pors. Phoen. 34; so also, % 9 éx- vet mavra Arist, Mund, 5,11; exp. xepara Id, H. A. 9. 5, 7:—absol., of seed, to produce a plant, Dem. 748. 15. II. Pass., with pf. and aor. 2 act., 20 be engendered, to be born from, xepadat rpeis évds avxévos €xnepuviat (Ep. part. pf.) Il. 11. 40; marpds, untpds éxpdvac Soph. Aj. 487, 1295, Eur. Ion 542; AdAnpa éxmepuxds a tattler by birth or nature, Soph. Ant, 320, [On the quantity, v. pvw.] éxwvéw, to cry out, Plut. Caes. 66. II. to pronounce, Id. 2, toto A, Dion. Thrax in A. B. 810, etc. éxbovnpa, 74, a thing called out: a sermon, Eccl. Exhavyors, ews, , Pronunciation, Apollon, de Constr. 14: an exclama- tion, Plut. 2.111 D. II. the ending of the sermon, Eccl. &ckgwriLopa, Pass. to be illuminated, Clem. Al. 662. &xxGAdo, fut. dow [a], to let go from, ti Twos Anth, P. 11. 354. II. intr. 20 become loose or slack, Hipp. 255. 12. €xxaAtvow, to unbridie, Plut. Pelopid. 33. €kxaAkevw, to work from brass, Joseph. A. J. 3. 7, 6. &kxGpadpde, strengthd. for xapadpéw, Polyb. 4. 41, 9. ékxtipdoow, Att. —rrw, to erase, Plut. 2. 873 D. éxxdpuBSilw, to swallow like Charybdis, Pherecrat. Kpam. 17. exxavvow, fo stuff out, to make vain and arrogant, [nédw] éexavvar Adyors Eur. Supp. 412; éex. Tov woddv bxAov to make them gape and stare, Hipp. Art. 808. €«xélw, Lat. ecacare, Com. ap. Dem. Phal. 126. ékxevw, =sq., Nic. ap. Ath. 683 E. exxéw, fut. —xe (v. x€w): aor. 1 &éxea, Ep. xxeva, med. éxyeud- pay. To pour out, properly of liquids, olvoy (v. sub xparhp) Il. 3. 296; aly’ éxxéas wédp Aesch. Eum. 654; ayds Eur. H.F. 941; dd«pva Plat, Symp. 215 E: metaph., (in Med.) raxéas 8 éxyevar’ diorovs he poured Jorth his arrows, Od. 22. 3., 24.178; ool.. daipoves .. ddnlbas eéyeav Plat. Eleg. 7 Bgk. b. to pour out, i.e. to empty, a vessel, moddvin- tpov Ar. Fr. 290; tov xo@ Menand, Incert. 461. 2. of words, Aesch, Ag. 1029, Ar. Thesm. 554; HoAmds Eur, Supp. 773; moAAiy yA@aocay éxxéas Soph. Fr. 668. 3. to pour out like water, throw away, squander, waste, 6ABov Aesch, Pers. 826; 7a mévra Id. Cho. 520, cf. Soph. Ph. 13, El. 1291; mAodroy éféxeev els Samavas Anth, P. 9. 367; eux. 74 Te airov kal éavrdy Plat, Rep. 553 B. 4. to spread out, Aiva, d0dvas Ap. Rh, 2. 902, Luc. Amor. 6, IT. Pass., used by Hom. mostly in plqpf. &exéxvyro, as also in 3 sing. Ep. syncop. aor. &€éxiro or Exxiro, part. &xvpevos [¥]:—to pour out, stream out or Sorth, Properly of liquids, Il. 21. 300, Od, 19. 504, etc.; é 8° dpa macat xvvTo Xapal XoAddes 4. 525 :—metaph., of persons, opjxecaww eoixdres &fexéovro Il. 16. 259; tarmdbev exxdpevor pouring from the [wooden] horse, Od. 8.515; éxxubévres ex Tod teixeos Hat. 3. 13 :—generally, #0 be spread out, rodAA BE [Sécpara] . . &exéxvvro Od. 8. 279; cf. eexav= yup. ; 2.-to be poured out like water, thrown away, forgotten, éxré- xurat pidorns Theogn. 110; al duodoyia éxxexupévat elaly Plat. Crito 49 A; cf. Valck. Hipp. 1062. 3. to give oneself up to any passion, like Lat. effundi in .. , to be overjoyed, Ar. Vesp. 1469 ; éxx. els Tuva, ets tt to give oneself up to a person or thing, Polyb. 5.106, 7., 32. 11, 43 €kX. ‘yeA@v to burst out laughing, Anth, P. 12. 156. 4. to lie languidly, Anth. P. 5. 55. eeXxtAbw, to cover all over with grass (xtAds) ; yj txwexiAmpévn land that bears nothing but grass, Paus. ap. Eust. 773. 1. : éexAcvdte, strengthd. for yAevd(w, Liban. 4.699, Symm. V. T. €cxhordo ar, Pass. to be oregrow sallow, Hipp. Coac. 196. _eexouprr Opa, Pass.: eckexorprdwpévy without an atom of Choerilus in it, Cratin. Incert. 66, et ibi Meineke. ince to make bilious: to enrage, Geop. 14. 19, 3- @, (xév5pos) to make into cartilage, Galen. aay A ? IL. to suffice, ovx eEexpnTe opt % tuépa Hat. 8. 70:—impers., like dmoxpa, c. inf, nas tavra Baotdéi éexphoe mepwBpicbai; how will it suffice him, how will &expéprropat, Dep. to cough up, bring up, Hipp. 469. 36. ecxpyparifopar, Dep. to squeeze money from, levy contributions on, . . exxunlCoo — éhacas. exxdAlfw, to squeeze out the juice or liquor, Hipp. 608. 25: to suck out, ve Arist, H. A. 8, 11, 1. éxxDAdopat, Pass. to be squeezed out, Galen, 13. p. 186. éxxtpa, 76, that which is poured out; aipatos éirx. blood-shed, Or. Sib. 3. 320, whence 11. 106 must be emended. xx vpevos, v. sub éxxéw. &xxtpilo, = xxvaAiw, Arist. H. A. 8. 4, 3. &xtpoopar, Pass., of the small arteries, to shed the blood and leave it extravasated under the skin, Hipp. Fract. 759 :—éxxtpopa, 74, éxxvpo- ois, %, ecchymosis, Hipp. Fract. 760, Art. 817, 840. éxxUve, collat. form of éexéw, Luc, Pseudol. 29. €xxtors, 3, a pouring out, Arist. Meteor. 2.1, 12, Theophr. Vent. 49. &cxtrys [0], ov, 6, a spendthrift, Luc. Vit. Auct. 24. €kxiiTo, v. sub Exxéw. . &xxiros, ov, (exxéw) poured forth, unconfined, xépn Anth. P. 9. 669: outstretched, éxxuros trv Ketro Ib. 5. 275. 2. immoderate, Lat, effusus, -yéAws ap. Suid. II. as Subst. €exvrov,.7d, drink, Anth, P. 9. 395; sed legend. éyxvrov. éxxwvetw, to melt down, coin anew, Dio C. 68. 15. ékxavvipar, Pass., to be raised on a bank or mound, ris méAtos éx- kexwopéevns tod Hdt. 2. 138; padcora BovBaorr wid eexhobn mounds were raised highest at B., Ib. 137. II. of a bay, to be Jilled up by the deposit of a river, Ib. 11. éxxwopéw, to go out and away, depart, éx rémov Hadt., etc.: to leave a country, emigrate, Id, 1. 56, Hecatae. 353 :—metaph., éxx. é« Tod Civ Polyb, 2. 21, 2; and absol., Id. 7. 2,1. 2. to slip out of, darpayados éfexcpnoev ef dp9pay Hat. 3. 129. 8. to give way, Eur.I. A. 367, Dem. 1029.17; é«x. 71 to make place for, Hipp. Jusj.1; xemmdves exxwpotow evxapmy Oépe Soph. Aj. 676 :—éxx. Tivi Tivos to give way to a person in a thing, Polyb. 22. 3, I, cf. 32. 14, 3. II. trans, to give up, cede, Twi Tt C. 1. 2454, 2664 :—Pass., Ib. 4268. exXapyors, ews, H, a going out, Plut. 2. go3 D. II. a concession, C.T. 3394. &pnypa, 7d, (YnxXw) a particle, Clem. Al. 241. €xipoxo [0], fat. fw, to give up the ghost, expire, Hipp. 447.51, N. T. é«w, barbarism for éxyw, in Ar. Thesm, 1197, 1220. éxav, Exotica, éxdv: (Vv. sub Exndros) :—willing, willingly, of free will, with good will, readily, Hom., etc.; frequently repeated, éxay déxovti ye Oup® Il. 4. 43; Ov yap Tis pe Bin ye Exdv Géxovra Binrat 7. 197; éxév0’ ExdvTt cuuwapacrareiv Aesch. Pr. 218; mdpeyu 5 deav obx éxodaty Soph. Ant. 276; éxévra pyr deovra Id. Ph. 771; Bia re Koby éxwy Id. O.C. 935; Exdv map’ éxdvros AapBave i.e. by mutual consent, Dem. 528. 15. 2. wittingly, purposely, éxav 8 iydprave purds Il. £0. 372, and Att.; opddp’ éxdy .. d-yvoeiv mpoomorotvpevos Dem. 848. 15. 8. in Prose, éxdy efvar or éxwv, as far as depends on my will, as far as concerns me, mostly with a negat., as Hdt. 7. 104., 8. 116, Plat. Apol. 37 A, al. ; or in a sentence implying a negat., as @avud(oipev dy, et... Tis Exdy .. dduxvetrat Id. Rep. 646 B:—very rarely affirm., éxdv eivat.. otxero Hdt. 7. 164. II. rarely, like éxodacos, of things, v. dekwy Il. ka, imperat. of €Adw: v. sub @Aatvw. éhda, Att. for éAaia. €\dav, Ep. inf. pres. of dda, éavvw, Hom.; but fut. in IL. 17. 496. €Adbtov [4], 76, Dim. of Ada a young olive-tree, Alciphro 3. 13. II. a iittle oil, Sotad. ’EyeAet. 1.7, Archedic. Onoavp. I. II. édatia, Att. €Ada [y. sub fin.], %, the olive-tree, Hom., esp. in Od., as II. 590; sacred to Athena, who is said to have planted the first at Colonos, Soph. O. C. 7or sq., cf. Hdt. 5.82; or (acc. to others) in the Acropolis of Athens (y. sub popia); and we have it called fep? éAaly as early as Od, 13. 372: brought by Hercules, acc. to an old legend, from the land of the Hyperboreans, Pind. O. 3. 24sq., Paus. 5.7, 7: on the Attic legend, that the olive was produced by Athena in her contest with Poseidon, vy. Hdt. 8. 55, Apollod. 3. 14, etc.:—puépn éAain, Lat. felix oliva, Hdt. 5. 82° (opp. to dypia éA, or xérivos): its epithets are xpucéa, fav0y Pind. O. 11 (10). 13, Aesch. Pers. 617 (Virgil’s flava oliva); and above all yAaven, v. sub yAaueds: its branches were used by suppliants, v. esp. Aesch, Eum. 43, Soph. O. T. 3, etc.; pépecOat éxrds Tov hay to run beyond the olives, which stood at the end-of the Athenian race- course, i.e. to go too far, Ar. Ran. 995, ubi v. Schol. II, the fruit of the olive-tree, an olive, Ar. Ach. §50.—Acc. to the Gramm. éAda was the proper form in this sense, €Aafa in the first; but éAda is simply the Att. form, v. C. I. 93. 41 sq., 123. 21. [In éAda, the penult. is long, Eur. Fr. 362. 46, Ar. Ach. 550, Pax 578, Av. 617, etc., and Dind. restores this form in Aesch. and Soph.; but éAd@y in Alex. Incert. 1 (where perhaps €\@y—a form acknowledged by Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 1944. 8— should be restored), and & in éAdy, Anth. P. 4.2.,6,102.] (The Root seems to exist in Skt. 4//i (liguefacere), Curt. no. 528:—from éAaia, €Aatoy prob. come all the existing forms, Lat. o/ea, oliva, oleum, olivum; Goth. alev, O. Norse olea or olia, A.S. ei (oil); O. H. G. olei (62); etc.) é€\al-ayvos or €Aé-ayvos, 6, a Boeotian marsh-plant, perhaps myrica, sweet gale (diff. from pupixn), Theophr. H. P. 4. 10, 2. €Aarders [a], Att. for éAarqes. €Aat-iKdvn, 7}, a whetstone used with oil, Lat. cos olearia, opp. to cos uaria, Paul. Aeg. p. 245. 52. €Aatlw, to cultivate olives, Ar. Fr. 167. ITI. to be olive-green, Hesych. €Aaiyers, Att. -des, eooa, ev, of the olive-tree, Nic. Th. 676, etc.: planted with olives, ¢davjevres Gpovpar Anth. P. append. 51. at, oily, Soph. Fr. 405: full of oil, Nonn. D. 5. 226. éAarnpés, 4, dv, oily, of oil, dyyeta Hipp. 640. 12; eféos Plat. Tim. 60 A; éA. Spécosi.e. oil, Anth. P. 5. 4; €A. €v medi@ oil-producing, Epigr. BS 449° Gr. 641. 2. in Pind, Fr. 88, of bees, Aonied; cf. Anth, P. ap- pend. 323. éhaikés, 7, év, like an olive. Adv. —K@s, Arr. Epiet. 2. 20, 18. éAdiveos, a, ov, =sq., pémadoy Od. 9. 320; pdxAos Ib. 394. éXdivos, 7, ov, of olive-wood, thaivw dugl medéenp Il. 13. 612; oreiAcov Od. 5. 236. €Aato-Badrs, és, dipped in oil, Hesych. éhato-Bpaxijs, és, Paul. Aeg. 3. 39; and -Bpexys, és, Galen,, =sq. éatd-Bpoxos, ov, soaked in oil, Ath. 393 B. Xard-Seutos, ov, =foreg., Suid., Zonar. €Aaro-5é6kos or -86x0s, ov, holding oil, Hdn. Epim. 78, Suid., etc. édato-erdys, és, = €Aaihdns, Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 2. 6. €hato-Bécrov, 74, the oiling-room at the baths, Vitruy. 5. 11, 2. €AaroPeréw, to provide oil at the baths, C. I. 4025. €ard-OnAos, ov, nurturing olives, vapa C. 1. 6856. éAaté-Operros, ov, oil-fed, Method. ap. Phot. Bibl. 309. 19. €Xavo-KdarmAos [i], 6, an oil-man, Liban. 4. 139. €Aato-Kopéw, to cultivate olives, Poll. 7. 141, etc. €AavoKopia, 1, the cultivation of olives, Poll. 7. 140. éhatokopikés, 4, dv, belonging to édacoxouia, Poll. 7. 140. €Aatoxdptov, 76, an olive-yard, C.1. 5594. 71. éAato-Kopos, ov, rearing olives, A. B. 248: but, KOMOS, ov, (6p) olive-clad, Mapaduv Nonn. D. 13. 184. €\ato-Kovia, 7, a powder made from olives, Lat. maltha, Eust. 382. 37. €Xato-oyéw, to pick olives, LXx (Deut. 24. 20), Philo 2. 390. paps Att.€Aaoddyos, ov, (Aéyw) an olive-gatherer, At. Vesp. 712. EAatd-peAt, eros, 7d, sweet gum from the olive-tree, Diosc. 1. 38. €Aato-perpéw, to measure out oil, C. 1. 3616-17. Xatov, 76, (€Aaia) olive-oil, Lat. oleum, olivum, in Hom. mostly anointing-oil, used after the bath, Aocecoapevm kat GAewaperw Abr éAaiy (v. Aiwa) Il. 10. 577, cf. 14. 171., 18. 350, ete.; or before wrestling and some other gymnastic exercises (v. dAerm7s) ; €A. Ocivar to provide oil at the baths, C. I. 1122, 1123; éAatov cev, proverb of those who frequented the palaestra: never in Hom. as an article of food:—the Hom, epithets are eb@des Od. 2.339; fodder (rose-scented) Il. 23. 186, cf, Hices. ap. Ath. 689 B; €A. fddivor occurs often in Hipp., 653. 42, etc,s also €A, Aevxdy Ib. 55, etc.; Tod AevKordrou mavTwy ed. Sajuaxod Antiph. Incert.19. ° II. any oily substance, €d. xhvecoy Hipp. 668. 30, etc. i, dad cedaxay like our ‘cods-liver oil,” €d. dad ydAaKros butter, Hecatae. p. 62. III. at Athens, the oil-market, dvapev@ ce .. mpos tovAatov Menand. Incert, 339; cf. pupov, ixOds. Aato-nivis, és, stained with or soaked in oil, Hipp. 338. 15. €Aavo-rrovta, 4, the making of oil, Polyb. 7. 147. €Aard-mpepos, ov, like an olive at top, Arist. Phys. 2.8, 12. €Aaro-THAns, ov, 5, an oil-man, oil-merchant, Dem. 784. 18. €Xavo-rbduov, 74, an oil-shop: in Gloss. —mwAetov. €atos, 6,=Kérwvos, the wild olive, Lat. oleaster, éyptos €X. Pind. Fr. 21, Soph. Tr. 1197; v. sub &ppyv, and cf. Theophr. H, P. 2. 2, 12. II. éAarés (oxyt.), 6, a bird, Alex. Mynd. ap. Ath. 65 B (where the Mss. €datoy, perhaps f. 1. for éAeas). 2. Rhodian for ¢appaxevs, Hesych. €Aaré-orrovba (sc. lepd), 74, drink-offerings of oil, Porph. Abst. 2. 20: cf. olvdanovéa, bdpdamovia, €Aavo-ordudos, 6, a vine grafted on an olive, Geop. 9. 14. éXato-rpiBetov, 74, an olive-press, oil-mill, Eccl. éXato-rpomukés, 7, dv, for pressing olives, dppeva C, I. 2694 6. €Xato-rpémov, 76, =foreg., Geop. 6. I. €har6-tpityov, 74, lees of oil; elsewhere dudpyn, amurca, Hesych, éAatoupyetov (not -tov), 74, (pyov) an oil-press, oil-mill, Arist. Pol. I, II, 9, Diog. L. 1. 26. €Aaro-pidoddyos, ov, fond of eating olives, xcxjAat Epich. 108 Ahr. éXaro-édpos, ov, olive-bearing, Eur. H. F. 1178; xwpa @a. land fit for olives, Theophr. C. P. 2. 4, 4. €daro-purs, és, olive-planted, méyos Eur. lon 1470. €Aaré-pvdAov, 76, Bpvwyria, Diosc. 3. 130. éAaro-pirela, 4, a planting of olives, Steph. B. s.v. peAdevs. €haté-hiros, ov, olive-planted, Aesch. Pers, 884, Strab. 570; EA. dév- Bpect set with olive-trees, Id. 809. II. éradpuror, 74, an olive- yard, Lat. olivetum, Plut. 2. 524 A. €Aato-xpiorta, 7, an anointing with oil, restored by Budaeus in Diog. L. 5. 71 (where the Mss. Aatoxpnoria, the use of oil); so theese ptov, 76, a vessel for such purpose, Keil Inscrr. p. 73. éatb-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, our, olive-coloured, Hesych. éXato-xutéw, to anoint with oil, Paul. Aeg. 6. jt até, fo ofl; only used in Pass. fo be oiled, Arist. H. A. 8. 27, 3: to glisten as with oil, Pind, Fr, 274, Soph. Fr. 556. II. to gather olives, Poll. 7. 146. eats, fos, 4, an olive-tree: Att. pl. éAGSes Ar. Ach. 998. ehaiorip, jpos, -erHs, 00, 5, an olive-gatherer, Poll. 7. 146., 10. 130. ehaioripiov, 76, an olive-press, C. I. 2694 b. €hardys, €s, (el5os) like an olive: oily, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1093: olive- green, Diosc, I. 92. éXarav, Gvos, 5, an olive-yard, Lat. olivetum, Lxx (Ex. 23. 11, al.). II. the Mount of Olives, Olivet, N.T., cf. Joseph. A. J. 20. 8, 6. éAawrés, 4, dv, (€Aatéw) oiled, Hesych. €\-av8pos, ov, man-destroying, epith. of Helen, Aesch. Ag. 689. €Advy or EX€vy, 7), a torch of reeds, Ath. 699 D, 7o1 A; cf. €An. eAaoddyos, éAaodépos, ¥. sub éAaio-. éAanpés, dv, barbarism for éhagpds, Ar. Thesm, 1180. éXtioa, EAdoacKe, éXacatato, v. sub ZAatyw. €Aacas, 5, an unknown bird, Ar, Av. 886. II. dad- Gg 450 Xaioelw, (€Aavvw) Desiderat. to wish fo march, Luc. Charon 9. éAaoia, 7}, = éAagis: riding, Xen. Eq. Mag. 4, 4: a march, Joseph. Aido2.30,.2. éAdot-Bpovros, ov, thunder-hurling, Pind. Fr. 108. like thunder, érn éX. Ar. Eq. 626. é\dovos, a, ov, driving away the epilepsy, Plut. 2. 296 F. 0s, ov, horse-driving, horse-riding, knightly, Pind. P. 5.114; of the sun, Orph. H. 8.18; cf. immeAdrns. . €AGots, ews, j, a driving away, banishing, Thuc. 1. 139; €A. Bookn- parav a driving them away as booty, Plut. Rom. 7. 2. (sub. arparov), a march, expedition, Hdt. 4. 1, al.; €Aaow moreecOat Id. 7. 37: also a procession, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 34 :—(sub. trrov) a riding, Id. Eq. 9, 6, Eq. Mag. 8, 2: a@ charge of horse, Dion. H. 6.12. act-,xOwv, ovos, 6, earth-striking, Mooedwv Pind. Fr. 281 Bgk. €Aacpa, 76, metal beaten out, a metal-plate, Niosc. 5. 96, Paus. Io. 16,1. II. =édaais, Georg. Pis., Eust. 1306. 55. \acpatiov, 74, Dim. of foreg., Diosc. Parab, 2. 164, Galen. €\acpés, 6, =édacyua 11, Dio C. 46. 36. II =éAaois, Hippiatr. €\acoa, Ep. aor. 1 of éAatyw, Hom. flacaévws, Adv. of éAdoowy, Hipp. 352.23; €A. 7) ear’ dgtay Antipho 128. 38. é\accdéw, Att. -rtdw: aor. HAAdTTwoa Lys. 130. 31, Polyb.: pf. HA- Adrroxa Dion. H., etc.:—Pass., fut. -w4copat Thuc. 5. 34, Dem, 536. 5, but fut. med. in same sense, Hdt. 6, 11, Thuc. 5. 104, 105: aor. jAac- owOny, —rTwOny Id. 1.77, Dem. 140. 11: pf. #AAaTT@paAL Polyb. To make less or smaller, to lessen, diminish, lower, tiv modu Lys. 130. 31, Isocr. 162 C: c. gen. to detract from, pi) mpoariBévar Tipny, GAAA HB} éAaccobdv rijs brapxovons Thuc. 3. 42. II. Pass, ae absol. fo become smaller, be lessened, suffer loss, be worse off, be depre- ciated, Thuc. 2. 62., 4. 59. 5. 34,43 :—also to take less than one’s due, waive one’s rights ox privileges, Id, 1.77, Dem, 1287. 16: to fall short of one’s professions, act dishonestly, Isocr. 12 D :—év Kéopy jAarTmpévy in an imperfect state, Arist. Plant. 1. 2, 19. 2. c. dat. rei, to have the worst of it, in a thing, 7@ woAéum Thuc. 1. 115; to be inferior, m7 éumeipia Id. 5.72; woddAais vavot Xen, Hell. 1. 5, 153 mace rovros Ib. 6. 2, 28; jAarrwpévos rots dupact of a one-eyed man, Polyb. 17. 4; 3- 8. c. gen. pers. to be at a disadvantage with a person, TOMA pev obveyay éharrodpat kard rovrovi ov dyava Aicxlvov Dem. 226.13; AarrodcGai rwds Tit Plat. Alc. 1.121 B, cf. Gorg. 459C. Cf. foodopat. €\doowy, Att. -rrwv, ov, gen. ovos; Sup. éAdxuaTos (q. v.) :—smaller, less, formed from éAax¥s (q. v.), but serving as Comp. to puipds, opp. to pelfav, Soupnvexés, # Kal dacaor Il. 10. 357; eAagaoy éxew to have the worse, be worse of awi in a thing, Theogn, 269 Bgk., Hdt. 9, 102, Dem. 575.14; so, €Adrrw yiyveoOar Ar. Eq. 441, Dem. 36. 23; ov éaAdooova mécxev Aesch. Pers. 813; eAdrTw vopicas Thy apxhy 7) Kara tiv abrod piow elvar too small for.., Isocr. 223 D; cf. éAac- ova. 2. c. gen. pers. worse than, inferior to, Thuc., etc.; but c. gen. rei, like foowv, giving way to, subservient to, xXpnuarwv, orion Xen. Lac. 5, 8. 3. in neut. with Preps., wept €Adaaovos moreiobac to consider of Jess t, Hdt. 6. 6; év éAdrrom riPecOa Polyb. 4. 6, 12; map édarroy wyeioOa Plat. Rep. 546 D; éa’ &darroy elva Id. Phaedo 93 B; &’ éAdrrovos at less distance, Thuc. 7. 4. II. of Number, fewer, of éddocoves the smaller number, Hat. 3. 121; édao- Il. hurled coves apiOudy Id. 8. 66; dA. rAHO0s Thuc. 1. 49. III. of Time, shorter, Plat. Pol. 255 C, etc. IV. of worth or rank, of éAdo- coves the meaner sort, Isocr. 17 C, Alex. KuBepy. 1.12. V. neut. Zaacaoy, as Ady., 2A. # pndév Aesch. Pr. 938, cf. Soph. El. 598, Plat. Rep. 564 D, etc.; €A. diroGev less far off, Thuc. 4. 67 (v. infr. 3); neut. 1. as Adv.,=éAarrovdss, Plat. Crito 53 A; but reg. Adv., éAacodvas 5 kar dgiav Antipho 128. 37. VI. with indecl. Numerals, the # of Comparison is often omitted, ob« éAarrous dySojxovra Diod, 14. 8; esp. in Ady. édagoov, as, @d. déa ern (as in Lat. plus decem annos), Plat. Legg. 856 D, al.—Cf. éAdxuoos. (The orig. form must have been édaxiwy or —yav, v. Kpeicowv.) éo, Ep. and Ion. for Aavvw, moAAot 8’ dporijpes .. Cevyea duved- ovres éAdarpeov they drove the teams, Il. 18. 543; kar’ dGpagiroy iv HAdorpets Theogn. 600; €d. Tiva to drive about, of the Furies, Eur. I. T. 971, cf. Dion, H. 1. 23 :—Pass., of ships, to be rowed, Hat. 2.158., 7. 24. [@], fut. of édadvw. @Adreipa, fem. of Aarip, immay éd., of Artemis, Pind. Fr. 59. edaréov, verb. Adj. one must ride, Xen. Eq. Mag. 2, 7. éhdry [a], 9, the silver fir, pinus picea, described as bYqry Il. 5. 560; mepiunneros 14. 286; obdpavophens Od. 5. 239; used as a mast (v. Adrivos) :—distinguished by Theophr. as €A. dppyy and OnA«a, perh, pinus abies and p. picea, H. P. 3. 9,6; but v. Daubeny ‘Trees of the Ancients,’ pp. 26 sqq. II. an oar, as made of pine-wood, rev- xawvov HSwp gearhs eAdrgow Od. 12. 172, cf. Il. 7. 53 later also a ship or boat, like Lat. abies, Eur. Phoen. 208, Alc. 444. IIL. the young bud of the palm, elsewhere an46n, Diosc. 1.150; ef. Epich. 112 ‘Abr. (Perhaps from éAavvw, from its high, straight growth.) ‘is, tB0s, %, like the pine, Nic. Al. 624. harp, fipos, 5, (Aavve) a driver, esp. of horses, a charioteer, Il. 4. 145., II. 702, etc.; inmov 2. Aesch. Pers. 32; €A. Bpovrijs hurler of thunder, Pind. O. 4. 1; @. Adpas striker of the lyre, Anth. P. 7. 18. Il. one that drives away, Call. Jov. 3, Opp. Cyn. 1. 119g. III. a sort of broad, flat cake, Ar. Ach, 246, Eq. 1183, Callias Incert. 2; cf. Suid. we - a ov, driving, driving away, c. gen., Kadappototy dray eX. ch. se A aa. Bcipite (sc. Pappaxov), 74, an opening e Hipp. Acut. 383: a drug given to women in childbirth, Th. 685. g 17K: , éXacelw — éAavvw. éhdrys [a], ov, 5, =edaryp, Eur. Fr. 775. 26. éharixés, 4, dv, of or for driving, Schol. Ar. Ran, 182; €A. wives hounds, Hesych. €Aativy, 7, a kind of toad-flax, Diosc. 4. 40. dtwos [a], 7, ov, also os, ov Anax, Neorr. 1. 17: Ep. etAdrwos, 7, ov, as also Eur, Hel. 1461, Hec. 632 (in lyrics) :—of the fir, Lat. abieg- nus, O¢ot eld. Il. 14. 289, cf. Eur. Bacch, 1070; #Ay eid. Id. Hec, 632 :—of Jir or pine-wood, iords cid, Od. 2. 414; mAdrac Eur, Hel. 1461, cf. Anaxil. lig II. of the palm-bud, e. g. €kacov Diosc. 1. 54; cf. Ader II. €arés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of Aatvw, of metal, ductile, Arist. Meteor. 3. 6,12, al.; on the éA. xaAxés, v. Miiller Archiiol, d. Kunst, § 306. 4. éAatpevs, éws, 5, thrice-forged iron, Hesych.: v. Aavyw II. I. é\arrovanis, Adv. fewer times, multiplied by a less number, opp. to pecCovdms, mAcovanis, Plat. Theaet. 148 A, Arist. Probl. 5. 22. é\atrovéw, to receive less, LXX (Ex. 16. 18). éAarrovéopar, Pass. to be diminished, Lxx (Gen. 8. 3., 18. 28). éAarrovorys, 7), @ being smaller or less, opp. to wetovdrns, Iambl. in Nicom. Ar, p. 45. éAdtrwopa, 74, an inferiority, disadvantage, Dem. 306, 12. a loss, defeat, C. 1. 2058 B. 15, Polyb. 1. 32, 2, etc. 3.4 kara rhv oy. Dion, H. 5. 23. éharrwv, EAatréw, Att. for ékaco-. Adrrwors, ews, 4, a making smaller or less, lessening, Arist. Top. 6. 3, 7, Def. Plat. 412 B. II. a defeat, Arist. Rhet. Al. 37, 4, Polyb. 2. 30, 6, al. III. a fault, defect, Plut. 2. 2 C. &arrarids, 4, bv, inclined to take less, not insisting on his full rights, Arist. Eth. N. 5.9, 9., 5. 10,8; €A. éavrod M. Anton. 5. 15. éAatvw: Ion. impf. €Aavvecxoy (an-) Hdt. 7. 119:—fut. éddow [a] (é{—) Hipp. 423.14., 571.3; Ep. €Adcow (wap-, cvy—) Hom.; Att. eda, Gs, a, inf. €Xav, so also Hdt. 1. 207, etc., and so even Hom, in the re- solved form éAdw, Il. 13. 315, Od. 7. 319; inf. €Aday (though this is also inf. pres., v. infr,) Il. 17. 496, Od. 5. 290:—aor. 1 #Adoa, Ep. €Adoa Il. 5. 80, Aagoa 18. 564, Ion. 3 sing. éAdoacKey 2. 119 :—pf. éAmAdna (da-, é£-) Xen., Ar.: plqpf. €AnAaceay (éf-) Hdt.:—Med., infr. 1. 3: fut. €Adgopa: Arr. An. 3. 30, (but in pass. sense, Or. Sib, 1. 385) :—aor. jAaoayny Il. 11. 682, rare in Att., as Plat. Gorg. 484 B; sync. 3 sing. idcaro Ibyc. 48; Ep. éAdcaio, -aiaro, -accdpevos Il. :—Pass., fut. Edacdjgopa (da-, éf-) Dion. H.:—aor. #Ad@ny [&] Eur. Heracl. 430, Ar. Eccl. 4; later 7jAdo@nv Anth. P. 7. 278, Diod. 20. 51, etc. (in Hdt. the Mss. vary between the two forms, v. d7-, éf-eAavvw) :—pf. €AjAapat Od. 7. 113, Hdt., Att.: €jAacpa: Hipp. 697, and late: plqpf. 7AnAaTO Il. 5. 400; poét. also éAjAaTo 4.135; 3 pl. HAMAavTO Hes. Sc. 143, also €AnAédar7’ (as Bekk., vulg. éAnAddar’) Od. 7. 86.—The pres. Ado is rare and almost exclus. in Poets, Pind. I. 5 (4). 48, Aesch. Fr. 330, Eur, H. F. 819, Fr. 779, Canthar. My. 4, also in Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 32; but inf. éAday as Ep. inf. pres. is freq. in Hom., v. infr. 1. 2:—impf. 3 pl. fAov Od, 4. 2, 3 sing. €Aaevy Ap. Rh. 3. 872; compd. in dwéAa Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 32; but da-7Aaor in Ar. Lys. 1001 is prob. an error for —Aaar, Dor. for -jAacay (as épyaoy for —qaov, 1247). (The 4/EA is perh. akin to Skt. ar, iy-ar-mi, to move, drive,v. Curt. nos.529,661.) Radic. sense : To drive, drive on, set in motion, esp. of driving flocks, Hom. ; eis ebpd onéos HAace pda Od. g. 237: waxods 8 és péocov édaccev Il. 4. 299; he also uses aor. med. #Aacdpnv, in act. sense, 10. 537., 11.682 :—freq. of horses, chariots, ships, #o drive, €A. .. dppa kal imous 23. 3345 €8 Ti dyopiy 70 Cedyos Hdt.1.59; also, €A. trmoy to ride it, Id. 4. 64, al.; wéAnras nal dpyara @d. to ride and drive, Id. 7. 86; &A. vija. to row it, Od. 12. 109, etc.; so, ozpardv éd. Pind. O. Io (11). 79, Hdt. 1. 176., 4. oI, etc. This usage became so common, that, b. the acc. was omitted, as with ayw, and the Verb became intr, 40 go in a chariot, to drive, paorigev 8 éddav [sc. immous] he whipped them on, Il. 5. 366, etc., cf. Soph. El. 734, 7393 BA & éAdav én Kipara he drove on over the waves, Il. 13. 27; 8a vdera éAaav to travel the night through, Od.15.50; és 70 dorv éA, to drive into the city, Hdt. 1, 60, cf. 99, etc.; ént Cevyéaw ed, Id. 1. 1993140 ride, Id. 7. 88, Xen. Eq. Mag. 3,9, etc.; Ady és Opytany marching .., Hat. 9.89, etc.;—to row, pada, apodpais eAday Od. 12.124; mwapeg Tiv vAGov ehau- vew to row past the island, Ib. 276 ; €Aavvovres the rowers,13.22. in this intr. sense, it sometimes took an acc. loci, -yaAqvay éAavvew to sail the calm sea, i.e, over it, Od. 7. 319; so, rd €omepa var’ éd. Eur, El. 371; (but wévrov éddrais tradvew, v. infr. 11. 1); so also, €Aatvvew Spd pov to run a course, Ar, Nub. 28, d. Pass., [vats] éAavyopevn a ship under way, Od. 13.155; 7a xardvrn éhadvecGa, of horses, to be ridden on steep ground, Xen. Eq. Mag. 8, 3. 2. to drive away, carry off, like dwe\avvw, Lat. abigere, in Hom. always of stolen cattle, Bods Od. 12. 353; tmmovs Il. 5. 236; éd. & 71 Sdvawro Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 18:—so in Med,, Od. 4. 637., 20. 51; por’ édavvdpevos Il. 11. 674, etc. 8. to drive away, expel, €d. Tid ex Shou Il. 6. 158; dvbpas én Olvdvas Pind, N. §. 29; and often in Trag., éA. ra “ys Eur. Med. 79; HuGoS, plagpa éd. Aesch. Cho. 967, Eum, 283; ayos A. =dynda- Teo, Thuc, 1. 126; &. Agords Ar. Ach, 1188, etc. —yiv mpd yas Aatvopat Aesch. Pr. 682. 4. to drive (to extremities), of yey Ginv Edéwor .. TORE LoL who will Aarass him till he has had enough of war, IL.13. 315 5 €re pe ply nus adyv @dday xaxdryros | think I shall persecute him till he has had enough, Od, 5. 290 :—then often in Att. ¢o persecute, attack, €X. Aotpds réAw Soph. O.T. 28, ete, jad 8 dretAeis maou, éAauves mayTas Dem. 559. 33 Avmp, xaxois ékatvecba Soph. Aj. 2755 Eur. Andr. 31; tm dvayens Kat oigrpou Plat, Phaedr. 240 D; éAavvo- pevey kat bBpiCopévav Dem, 241. fin.; y. sub mepradéw. 5.=Bwéw, like Lat. agito, subagito, Ar. Eccl. 39, cf. Plat. Com. ’Adav. I. 6. p intr, in expressions like &s rogotroy HAacayv, they drove it so fat (where 2. defect, \ =) éhacperos — éeyxTéov. mpa@ypva must be supplied), Hdt.5.50; és wacay Kaxdrnra Id. 2.124; els xdpov éhatvew to push matters till disgust ensued, Tyrtae. 8. 10, cf. signf. 2:—hence, to push on, go on, éyyis paviay Eur. Heracl. 904; a rod ppoveiv Id. Bacch. 853; mpdow A. Twés to go far in a thing, Plat. Euthyphro “4 B, Gorg. 486 A, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 39; v. supr. signf. 5. II. to strike, hatnow mévrov édavvovtes, cf. Lat. remis impellere, Il.'7. 6 ; xOapav Eur. H. F, 351. 2. to strike with a weapon, but never with a missile, roy cxnatpm EAdoacner Il. 2.199 ; fier HAace «dponv 5. 584; Kdépvbos padrov jAacey 13. 614; cf. eiAw I:—c. dupl. acc., Tov wey peradpouddny dag’ @pov him he struck on.. , Il. 5. 80:— Pass. c. acc., v@rov oma8’ alypp Soupds €AnAapévos Tyrtae. 8.20:—x0dva 3 jAace mav7i per&my struck earth with his forehead, of a falling man, Od. 22. 94 :—also c. acc, cogn. to inflict a wound, obAiy Tv more pe obs HAace 21. 219; and, ddévras éA. to knock out, Ap. Rh. 2. 785. 3. to strike one thing against another, mpds -yhv €A. apn Od. 17. 237; of weapons, to drive through, iampd xadnov €daace 22.295; ddpu did or7- Oeopw édaace Il. 5. 57, cf. 20. 269; and in Pass. to go through, 4.135., 13-595: to be fixed in, diards dpm évt ariBapG 7HANAaTO 5. 400, cf. Plat. Rep. 616 E. III. in various metaph. senses: 1. to beat with a hammer, Lat, ducere, to beat out metal, forge, domiéa .. iv dpa xaAxeds HAacer Il. 12. 296; mévre mrixas jAace beat out five plates, 20.170; wept & épxos eAkagce Kacotrépov make a fence of beaten tin (with a play on signf. 2), 18. 564; dv) éAnAapévn xpucod a bed of beaten gold, Mimnerm, 6; oiSnpos éAnA. Plut. Camill. 31. 2. to draw a line of wall, trench, etc., like Lat. ducere murum, dupt 8 radppov jaacay Il. 7. 450; audi 8% retxos ZAagce mA Od. 6. 9; oTavpods & eros CAagoe 14.11; Totxor Andédar’ 7. 86; often in Hdt., as, re?xos és rdv morapdy rods dyx@vas éAjAara: the wall has its angles carried down to the river, 1. 180, cf. 185, 191; éAyAapévae wept mupydv having a wall built round, Aesch, Pers.871:—so, dypov éAavvey to work one’s way down a ridge or swathe in reaping or mowing, Il. 11. 68; éA. atAaxa Hes. Op. 441; dpxov dumedldos éd. to draw a line of vines, i.e. plant them in line, Ar. Ach. 995: hence, generally, to plant, produce, éAq récoapas dperds aidy Pind, N. 3. 129. 3. Kodwdv edavveyv to prolong, keep up the brawl, Il. 1. 575. 4, & doco és yaiav éd. Sdxpu Eur. Supp. 96. €Addevos, ov, of a stag or hart, Lat. cervinus, xépas Arist. H. A. 4.8, 27; €\. xpéa venison, Xen. An. 1. 5, 2. 2. deer-like, cowardly, E. M. 326. to. bo ig hecamy %, @ shooting of deer, Call. Dian. 262; in pl., Soph. Aj. 176. €aGn-BdAra (sc. lepa), 7d, a festival of Artemis, Plut. 2. 660 D. é joALdv, Gvos, 6, the ninth month of the Attic year, in which the Elaphebolia were held (at Elis called pijy "EAaduos, Paus. 5. 13, 11), an- swering to the last half of March and first of April, Thuc. 4. 118; next before Movvuvxidy, Aeschin. 40. 20. €LAGy-Boros, ov, shooting deer, Il. 18.319; of Artemis, h. Hom. Dian. 2, and (Dor, éAapaB-) Soph. Tr. 214. éAagicdv, 76, =eAapdBockor, Diosc. Noth. 3. 80. €dudivys, ov, 6, a young deer, fawn, Aquila V.T., Hesych. €Adgrov, 76, Dim. of ZAados, Geop. 2. 18, 5. €Aadios, ov, = éAadnBoriwy, q. v. &hibd-Bockov, 74, a plant eaten by deer as an antidote against the bite of snakes, Pastinaca sativa, Diosc. 3. 80, Plin. N. H. 22. 22 (37). €hado-yevijs, és, born of a deer, Hesych. €hido-adys, és, deer-like, Polyb. ap. Strabo 208. €XGho-Kpavos, ov, deer-headed, Strabo 710. €hado-Krévos, ov, deer-hilling, Eur. I. T. 1113. €hado-rrous, 7od0s, 5, %, deer-footed, Hippiatr. Eidos, 6 and %, a deer, Cervus elaphus (still called Adgt in Greece), whether male, a Aart or stag, Il. 3. 24, al.; or female, a hind, 11. 113, al.; the fawn was veBpds, Od. 19. 228; the Hom. epithets are xepads, tixepws Il. 11. 475, Od. Io. 158; so, €A. xepodooa Soph. Fr. 110; A. Bqdrai Eur. Hipp. 218 :—xpadiny erdgoro [éxav] with heart of deer, i.e. a coward, Il. 1. 225; so, pulaxwys éAdadorsw eoixecay 13. 102. As*a generic term, the Att. always use it in fem., as Soph., Eur. ll. c., and often in Xen. II. xépas éddou hartshorn, Geop. 13.8, 2. (Akin to édagpés, and to Lat. lepus leporis, acc. to Pott Et. Forsch. 1. 233: but Curt. considers —os a mere termin., as in €pi-pos and Skt. yisha-bhas (taurus): he compares éAAds, éAAds, Lith. elnis, Slav. jeleni.) éhado-cxdbpodoy, 74, a kind of garlic, Diosc. 2. 182. hapoocoia, 7, (cedw) deer-hunting, Anth. P. 6. 253. eadpia, %, lightness: levity, 2 Ep. Cor. 1. 17. Aretae, Cur. M. Diut. 2. 2. III. Uittleness, Suid. édadpilw, to lighten, make light, lift up, Mosch. 2. 126, etc.; éA. éavrov iyod Ael. N. A. 9. 52; mrepots Plut. 2. 317 E:—to alleviate, Synes. 139 D. II. intr. to be light and nimble, Eur. Fr. 534. 8, Call. Del. 115. ehadpoyeros, ov, (yéa, 7) of light soil, Geop. 3. 3, 11. €hadps-voos, ov, light-minded, Phocyl. 9g. ! €Aadpé-mrous, 6, 7), light-footed, Poéta ap. Dion, H. de Comp. 25 ubi legend. éAagpa today. 3 she te adpés, 4, dv, and in Pind. N. 5. 38 ds, dv: (v. Gays) :—light in weight, Lat. levis, opp. to Bapus, Tov of éd. EOnxe (sc. Aday) Il. 12. 450; fvAov éragpérepa Hat. 3. 23; and in Att., as Plat. Tim. 63C, etc.; in Epitaphs, -yafav ¢xos tdagpay ‘sit tibi terra levis,’ Epigr. Gr. 195 -— Adv., ra (sc. fUAa) of wAdorev EAadpiis Od. 5. 240. 2. light to bear, not burdensome, easy, kat kev éhappérepos TéAE MOS TpwEeaar yevorro Il. 22. 287; ovppopdy érapporépay xataorhoa Antipho 124. 3; éAa- II. alleviation, pov [éort] ’tis light, easy, Pind. N, 7. 113, Aesch, Pr. 263, etc. ; LD 451 EhagpS moeiobai ri to make light of a thing, Hdt. 3.154; ob« év eA. m. Lat. graviter ferre, 1d. 1.118; ob év éAagp@ no light matter, Theocr. 22. 212 :—Ady., éhagpas pépew Cuydv to bear it lightly, Pind. P. 2, 171. 3. light of digestion, Plut. 2. 137 A. II. light in moving, nimble, Lat. agilis, yuia 5 €Onxev édagdpa Il. 5. 122; 7 par’ éA. dvfp 16. 745; éAappds moat 23. 749; xeipes .. enatocovra: éA. 23.628; Kipkos .. Ekappéraros merenvav 22. 139, cf. Od. 13.87; [trmor] €dappdraror Oeiety 3. 370; eAadpais wrepi-yav fuvais Aesch, Pr, 125; Aap modi Ib. 279; EAappa HAtcia the age of active youth, Xen. Mem. 3+ 5, 27:—but, of €A. light troops, Lat. levis armatura, Id. An. 4. 2, 27: —metaph., roAlas Ofjxev éAadpporépas made them easier in condition, Epigr. Gr. go5. III, metaph., also, light-minded, unsteady, thoughtless, Polyb. 6. 56, 11; Avoca éX. light-headed madness, Eur. Bacch, 851 :—also, gentle, mild, Isocr. 239 B, Ep. Plat. 360 C. 2. small, Lat. tenuis, worapds Polyb. 16.17, 7: of small power or strength, modes Id. 5. 62, 6. ehahpérys, 770s, 4, =eragpia, lightness, Plat. Legg. 795 E. Aadpive, to make light, lighten, Babr. 111.6, in Pass. €AGHaSys, es, = eAapoed}s, Phot. €Aaxtordkis, Adv. fewest times, most seldom, Hipp. Fract. 777. ehaxtoros [4], 7, ov, Sup. of tAaxds, Comp. éAdcowv (q. v.), the smallest, least, opp. to wéyoros, esp. with a negat., od« éA. h, Hom. Merc. 573, Hdt. 7. 168, etc.; éAaxiorov Adyou of least account, Id. 1.143; €Aaxlorov ebénoe diapOeipar narrowly missed destroying them, Thuc. 1.77; mept €Adxicrou moretcOat Plat. Apol. 30 A; so, map’ éAd~ Xtorov énoince abtovs dpaipeOfjvar Dem. 217. 27. 2. of Time, shortest, 5 édaxtorov [sc. xpévov] Thuc, 3. 39; 5 éAaxlorns BovAjs with shortest deliberation, Id. 1. 138. 3. of Number, fewest, Plat. Rep. 378 A; éA. rdv dpiOpdv Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 27; év @Aaxloros duct between two at least, Id. Eth. N. 5. 3, 3. II. 7d &AdXioTov, TodAG- xtorov, at the least, Hdt. 2.13, Xen. An. 5. 7, 8, Dem, 46. 3; also €Adxiora Thue, 1. 70, Plat. Phaedo 63 D. IIT. from éAaxioros came a new Comp. éAaxtorérepos, less than the least, Ep. Eph. 3.8; Sup. €raxioréraros, very least of all, Sext. Emp. M. 3. 51. €\axos, ov, =éAaxus, Call. Fr. 349. ehixu-mréput, vyos, 6, 9, short-winged, short-finned, of the dolphin, Pind. P. 4. 29. éhaxts, éAaxea (not -efa, Arcad, p. 95. 23, Theogn. Can. p. 99. 14), éraxv :—small, short, low, mean, little: old Ep. Positive, whence éAdo- owv, éhdxsoros are formed: it remains only in h, Hom, Ap. 197, v. 1. Od. 9. 116., 10, 509, and there only as fem.; adopted by Nic. Th. 324, Opp. C. 3. 480, etc. (Cf. Adxeta, éAdoowy, éAdyeoros, Skt. laghus, O.H. G. liht (light); Slav. liguku :—Curt. believes that é-Aag-pés, Lat. lév-is, belong to the same Root.) , Ion. €Adw, poét. pres. for EAadyw: v. éAadva init. €AaGdv, Gros, 6, =éAardv, Gloss. €ASopar and €ASopar, Ep. Dep., only used in pres. and impf. fo wish, long, c. inf., Il. 13. 638, Od. 4. 162, so also Pind. O. 1. 6:—c. gen. ta long for, civ Gdoxov, THs ality &éAdeat Od. 5. 210; eAddpevar mrediovo (of mules) eager to reach it, Il. 23.122: also c, acc. to desire, éov abrod xpetos eAdduevos Od, 1. 409, cf. Il. 5. 481; absol., voornoas eeAdope- vost par’ Hpuiv Od. 24. 400 :—as Pass. only once, viv Ta eeAdéoOw 16- Aeuos be war now welcome to thee, Il. 16.494. (The form ééAdopat, ééAdwp must be referred to 4/EA, prob. the same as 4/BOA, BovAopat, etc., Lat. VEL-LE. €\Swp, only found in Ep. forin ééABSwp, 74, a wish, longing, desire, Il. 1. 41, etc., Hes. Sc, 36 :—also as fem., Ibyc, (17 Bgk.) ap. Hdn. m. pov. Aeg. p- 24. 32; but there can be little doubt that Schneidewin (Frr. 44, 45) is right in restoring a fem. form éeAdw. Aga, 4, a kind of reed-warbler, Calamodyta, Arist. H. A. 9. 16. éXéayvos, v. éAaia-yvos. é€Aeatpw, lengthd. form of éAcéw, to take pity on, Tid Il. 6. 407, Od. 10. 399, etc.:—Ep. word, used by Ar. Eq. 793, Luc. Trag. 305. éXeds, 5, a hind of owl, Ar. Ay. 304, cf. dreds 11. éXéarpos, 6, (éAcds) a manager of the table, taster, Ath. 171 B. €Xedw, later form of éAeéw, E. M. 327. 29. €Xeyalve, to be wrathful, wanton, violent, E. M. 152. 51. éXeyela, v. sub édeyetov. €deyerakés, 7, dv, elegiac, mevrdperpoy Dion. H. de Comp. 25 : written in distichs, Ath. 144 E, etc. - . ; eXeyetva, = Edeyaivw, Suid. éXeyero-ypados [a], 5, a writer of elegies, Anth. P. 9. 248, in titulo. éXeyetov, 70, a distich isting of h ter and pentameter, the metre of the elegy, Critias 3. 3, Thuc. 1. 132, Arist. Poét. 1, 9. II. in pl., éAeyeta, 74, an elegiac poem, merely in reference to the metre, not to the subject, Plat. Rep. 368 A, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 13, al.; (later, @ lament, elegy, Paus. 107. 5, Luc. Tim. 46) :—so in sing,, Dion. H. 1. 49, Plut. Them, 8, etc.: so also éAeyeta, 7), Strabo 604, Plut. Solon 8, etc. ; cf, Miiller Literat. of Greece, Io. 2. III. a single line in an elegiac inscription, properly the pentameter, Plut. 2. 1141 A, Draco, He- phaest. :—pl. an inscription or epigram in elegiac lines, Lycurg. 168. 10. Dem, 1378. 13; or even in two hexameters, Pherecr. or , Vit. Hom. 36.—Properly neut, of éAeyefos, sub. wérpoy in signf. 1, émos in signf. 11, Francke Callin. pp. 53, 58. eheyeto-rrornt ys, ov, 6, =sq., Montfauc. Bibl. Coisl. p. 597. éAcyero-mrods, 6, an elegiac poet, Arist. Poét. 1, 10, Ath, 632 D. éeyetos, a, ov, elegiac, Siar:xov Ael. V. H. 1. 17. éXeyivou, of, a kind of fish, Arist. H. A. 9. 2, I. éXeynréov, verb. Adj. of édéyxw, one must refute, Plat. Legg.’ 905 : 2. also éAeyuréos, ov, to be refuted, aug 88. ; g2 452 éXeykrhp, fpos, 5, one who convicts or detects, Tav dmoxrevdvTav Antipho 119. 32 (al. €Aeyer7s). éXeyxrucds, 7, dv, of persons, fond of cross-questioning or examining, Plat. Soph, 216 B, etc.; 6 €A. éxeivos that cross-guestioner, Id. Theaet. 200 A:—/fond of reproving, tivds Arist. Rhet. 2. 4, 12:—Adv. -«@s, Xen. Symp. 4, 2. 2. refutative, of indirect modes of proof such as the reductio ad absurdum, Arist. Rhet. 2. 22, 14. édeyerés, 7, dv, verb, Adj. of éd€yxw, fit to be refuted, Hesych. eypés, 6, =eAcyéis, LXx (Ps. 149. 7), 2 Tim. 3. 16 Lachm. éAeyki-yapos, ov, proving a wife's fidelity, Auth. P. 9. 125. €Xeykivos, 6, the wrangler, pun on the name of the philosopher Alex- inus, in Diog. L. 2. 109. €heykts, ews, }, =6 edAeyxos, a refuting, reproving, LXx (Job 21. 4, al.), Philostr. 74 :—conviction, mapavopias 2 Ep, Petr. 2. 16. eyos, 0, a song of mourning, a lament: at first without reference to metrical form, so that €Aeyor were ascribed to the nightingale and halcyon, Ar. Av. 218, cf. Eur. I. T. 1091, (where ol#rpdy €Acyor is the prob. l., v. Dind. ad 1.) :—orig. accompanied by the flute, whence Eur. speaks of the Gdupos édeyos, Hel. 185, 1.T.146. But, since the distich consisting of h ter and pentameter was mostly used in these songs, this distich got the name of the elegiac metre, (though constantly used for poems of far different character); and so in later times €Aeyos was taken to mean a Nhe in distichs, Call. Fr. 121; and we even find iAapol éd., Anth. P. ro. 9; y. omnino Francke's Callinus (who thinks that the word arose at Athens in Simonides’ time, though Mimnermus gives the earliest example of the thing); esp. pp. 41, 50, 58: cf. €Aeyetov. (Commonly derived from’ é @ Aéyewv, to cry wod! woe! Eur, I. T. 146.) édeyxely, 7), reproach, disgrace, Il. 22. 100, etc. éeyxijs, és, worthy of reproof; of men, cowardly, deyxées (cf. édey- xos), IL. 4. 242., 24. 239 :—lrreg. Sup. &AéyxioTOos, Il. 2. 285, etc. éXeyxo-etdyjs, és, like a refutation, Arist. Soph. Elench. 15, 6., 17, 2. Aeyxos, 76, a reproach, disgrace, dishonour, 5) yap éAeyxXos Eocerat, eixev vias €An KopvOaiodos “Exrmp Il. 11. 314; hyiv 8 dy éréyxea zadra yévorro Od. 21.329: of men, the abstr. being put for the con- crete, xan’ édéyxea base roriaee to your name, Il. 2. 235, al., Hes. Th. 26, Pind. N. 3. 24; éAéyxea alone, Il. 24. 260; cf. eeyxjs. €deyxXos, 6, an argument of disproof or refutation, first in Parmen, ap. Diog. L. 9. 22; used in the form of reductio ad impossibile by Zeno of Elea and Socrates, v. Grote’s Plato I, 97 sq., 241 sq.; 6 €A. ovvayary?) Tov dvrimetpévoy éoriv Id. Rhet. 3.9, 8; €A. 58 ovAdoyopos per’ dytipagews TOD cvpmepdoparos Id, Soph. Elench. 1, 4, cf. An, Pr. 2. 22, cf, ékeyxw Il. 3. II. generally, a cross-examining, testing, scrutiny, esp. for purposes of disproof or refutation, ox exer édeyxov does not admit of disproof, Hdt. 2. 23; r@vd éAeyxov, absol., as a test of this, Soph. O. T. 603; 7a evdg Edeyxov exer Thuc. 3. 53; EA. mapadoovai Tit to give him an opportunity of refuting, Plat. Phaedr. 273 C; dovvat 7: és EA. to submit it to scrutiny, Pind. N.8. 55; dperjjs 2A. Sodvae a proof or test of it, Andoc. 19.30; €A. iddvar tov Bicv to give an account of one’s life, Plat. Apol. 39 C, cf. Isae. 48. 35; 70 mpaypa Tov €d, Bwoer Dem. 44.15; EA. movety Tevds to Zest it, Ar. Ran, 786: ér, moveioOa Tay menpaypevwv Antipho 112. 17; €A. AayBdvew awés to make trial of it, Ib. 40; @Aéyxous dmobéxec@ar to admit tests, Lys. 152. 26; éAéyxous mpoopépew to allege them, Ar. Lys. 484:—of persons, didmeipa €A. Bpordy Pind. O. 4. 303 ovde EA. mapacxav o¥8t Bacavoy Antipho 120. 2; éA, S:ddyar Andoc. 20. 15 ; els 2A. aire to be convicted, Eur, Hipp. 1310,-cf. H. F. 73; eis é. xetpos .. podev Soph. O. C. 1297; els EA. eftévat, to proceed to the proof, to put men to the test, Id. Ph. 98, or to be put to the proof, Id. Fr. 92; els X. lévax wept Twos Plat. Phaedr. 278 C; els €A. EpxeoOat tivos Philem. Incert. 8; caraorfvat els €A. Kal Adyor Isocr. 264 A; EA. pevyery Antipho 134.2; of wept Ilavgaviay €A. the evidence on which he was convicted, Thuc. 1. 135. III. a catalogue, inventory, in Plin. and Suet. éhéyxo Hom., etc.: fut. @Aéyéw Ar. Nub. 1043, etc.: aor, #Areyéa Hom., Att.:—Pass., @deyxfoopat Antipho 120. 21, Xen.: aor. jAeyXOnv Eur. Hel. 885, Antipho I. c., Plat. : pf. éAjAeypas Plat. Legg. 805 C; cf. etedéyxw. Todisgrace, put to shame, piov ér. to treat a speech with contempt, Il. 9. 522; &A. Twa to put one to shame, Od, 21. 424.—This usage is only Homeric, cf. €deyxos (74), @Aeyxts. | IL. 40 cross- examine, question, for the purpose of convincing, convicting, or refuting, disproving ot reproving, to censure, accuse, Hadt. 2. 115; p2) “Aeyxe Tov novotvra Aesch. Cho. 919; pvaag éhéyxov pidasa Soph. Ant. 260; ri radr’ éhéyyes ; Id. O. T. 333, cf. 7833 eAeyx’, Aéyxov Ar. Ran. 857; eA Td eal twos 1d. Pl. 574; évexd twos Antiph, Tpavp. 1. 10; Twa 7 Plat. Lys. 222 D;.c. acc. et inf, fo aceuse one of doing, Eur. Alc. 1058 ; with a relat., 2A. Twa el .. Aesch. Cho. 851, Ar. Eq. 12325 @A. Twa ds od wads A€yet Plat. Soph. 259 A, cf. Gorg. 470 C:—Pass. to be convicted, Hat. 1. 24,1173 @deyxdpevor, ef Te mepryévorra Tov XpnuaTay Dem. 935-11, cf. Plat. Prot. 331 C and D; with part., ereyxGels Siad-beipas Antipho 119. 2, cf. 120. 17; €AeyxOjoerat yehotos éy Xen. Mem. 1. 7, 2. 2. of arguments, to bring to the proof, 70 mpayy éA. Aesch. Ag. 1351: to disprove, confute, Dem. 836. 10; and so, to reject, Luc. Nigr. 43 xpuads «Anibas ehéyxet proves that they avail not, Anth, P. 5. 217:— absol. to bring convincing proof, &s dvdyxn théyxe Hat. 2. 22; wepi zwos Dem. 516. 1; and then generally to prove, Lat. arguere, Thuc. 6. 86, cf. Aesch. Ag. 13515 72 mpayy’ eAeyxOer Ar, Eccl. 485. , 2 in the Logic of Arist. to prove by a reductio ad impossibile, boa gor dmodeitas, ear? nat eddytar tov O€pevoy Ti dytipacw rod ddndois oph. Elench. 9, I. 4. generally, fo conquer, orparidy axvrate nd. P. 11. 74, cf. Dion. P. 750. te ae : le goby: éheyKTIjp — €AcALx Owv. fAcSqnas, corrupt reading of the Mss. in Aesch. Theb. 83; v. mediomAOKTuTOS. EAeSavy, 3, a hind of polypus, Arist. H. A. 4. 1, 27, Henioch. Toa, 1. €déewv, Ep. resolved form of éAciv, inf. aor. 2 of aipéw, Hom. éXectvo-Acyéopat, Dep. to speak piteously, Hermog. €Acewodoyia, 7), a piteous appeal, éd..xai Selvwors Plat. Phaedr. 272 A, €Xcewds, 7, dv, in Att. Poets €Aewwds (Pors. praef. Hec. p. viii), and so in h. Hom. Cer. 285: (€Aeos) :—jinding pity, pitied, 5és pw’ és "AXiAATjos pidov edOciy 78 edrcavdy Il. 24. 309:—moving pity, pitiable, piteous, Hom., etc.; éAevds elaopay piteous to behold, Aesch. Pr. 246; €Aavdy dpas thon lookest piteous, Soph. Ph. 1130; éo07' ¢Aewny Ar, Ach. 413; iv Ghevol trois dvOpdras gaivovr’ evar Id. Ran. 1063; éAcevol elce Lysias 178. 41; mov éavrdy ds édAcewérarov Dem. 574. 253 €A. Tie to be pitied by one, Plat. Legg. 729 E. 2. shewing pity, pitying, éd. Saxpvoy a tear of pily, Od. 8. 531., 16.219; ovdev éAcewvdy no feeling of pity, Plat. Phaedo 59 A, cf. Rep. 606 B. II. Ady. éAcevas, in Att. Poets éAewds, pitiably, Soph. Ph. 870, Ar. Thesm. 1063; €Acevais diaxeioOar Dem. 366. 23 ; neut. pl. éAcewva as Ady., Il. 2. 314. éheewvorns, 770s, 7), =€Aeos, Schol. Eur. Or. 960: misery, Eccl. é€Xeéo, impf. 7A€ouy Apollod, Aap. 1: fut. fow: aor, 7Aéqoa:—Pass., pf. #)Aénuat Menand. Incert, 472: (éAeos). Like éAeaipw, to have pity on, shew mercy upon, 6 8 épvaaro nai p’ édénoev Od. 14. 279; and so in Att., od p’ €X€nooy Soph. Ph. 501, cf. 608; éAénoov abrav tiv ira Ar. Pax 400; €A, [riva] émt rots dxovoios Antipho 114.17; €A. Tia twos to pity one for a thing, cited from Xen, Ephes.:—Pass. to te pitied, have pity or mercy shewn one, Plat. Apol. 34.C, Rep. 337 A; 70 eAcovpevov the object of pity, Id. Ax. 368 D; iva ..frrov i’ bya ércotunv Dem, 830. 12. 2. absol. to feel pity, Ar. Ach. 706. éenpovixos, 7, dv, =édAentiucds, Olympiod. éAenpooivy, 7, pity, mercy, Call. Del. 152. (which is a corruption of the word, cf, Germ. Al Diog. L. 5.17, N. T., etc. éXefpov, ov, gen. ovos, pitiful, merciful, compassionate, Od. 5. 191, Dem. 547. 153; ¢. gen., Ar. Pax 425.—Comp. and Sup. éAenpovéore- pos, —ravos, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 7, Lys. 168. 40. eXentixés, 7, dv, merciful, compassionate, Arist. Rhet. 2.12, 15. €Xenrus, vos, 7, Ion. for Edcos, pity, mercy, Od. 17. 451. “Edevat, al, (€Aos) meadow-nymphs, like Actpoviddes, Acipaxides, b. Hom. Cer. 23, acc. to Ilgen’s prob. conjecture. *EdclOura, 7, pott. for ElAcidua. éXetv, v. sub aipéw, éhewés, 7), dv, in Att. Poets for édcewds. Siaags gga [@], ov, 6, walking the marsh, marsh-dwelling, Aesch. ers. 39. evo-yevijs, és, marsh-born : 7d @\.=tputa, Hesych. evo-Biaxros, 6, a conduit for draining marshes, C.1. 2782.40; v. Bockh. Xeto-vép.os, oy, dwelling in the marsh or meadow, Nébpdat Ap. Rh. 2. 821 ; woln Orph. Arg. 1052: situate there, Ib. 158. _fAetos, ov, and in Ar. Av. 244, ox: (€Aos) :—of the marsh or meadow, €A, bwp marsh-water, Hipp. Aér. 287; €A. ddmedov the surface of the meads, Ar. Ran. 351. 2. growing or dwelling in the marsh, dévak Aesch. Pers. 4943 tav Alyurriav oi €Xeror Thuc. 1. 110; Blos €Ad, Arist. PLA. 4.12; (a €d, Ib. 3.14, 10; for Ar. Av, 244, V. avAdy :—cf.”EAerat. éhetés or €Aetds, 6, a kind of dormouse, Myoxus glis, Arist. H. A. 8. 17, 4, Artemid, 3. 65. éheto-aéAivov, 74, prob. wild-celery, smallage, Apium graveolens, Theophr. H. P. 7.6, 3, Diosc. 3. 75. Eeard-tpodos, ov, bred in the marsh, Archestr. ap. Ath. 305 F. éAerd-xpugos, = EXixpuaos, Theophr. H. P. 6. 8, I. ; €hexro, Ep. syncop. aor. pass. of Aéyw, he lay down, Od. 19. 50. éAched, or doubled édeAed eAcAed, like GAaAd, a war-cry, raised by the general and taken up by the soldiers, Ar. Av. 364, ubi v. Schol. : generally any cry, of pain, Aesch, Pr. 877; of joy, Plut. Thes. 22. €AcAnPce, Ion. 3 sing. plapf. of AavOdva. \cXito (A), Ep. lengthd. form of éAicow (Buttm. Lexil. s. y.), tare in pres., as h. Hom. 28. 9, Pind.: mostly in aor. :—sync, aor. pass. €A€ALKTO Il. 13. 558. To whirl round, wept oxediqv erérugev [7d «Opal Od. 5. 314; 98 AcdlxOn [7 vats] 12. 416, 2. in Il. of an army, fo rally it, opéas dx’ ehedigev Aas 17. 278; in Pass., of 5° édedlyOnoay 5: 497-5 6. 106. 3. generally, to make to tremble or quake, weyav d eredikey “Oduymor, of Zeus, Il. 1. 530; pdpyryya ed. to make its strings quiver, Pind, O. 9. 21; (so, pdppuyg éheacCouévn P. 1.7); dore- poway erehigais Id. N. 9. 453 and in Med., irmoy .. dryaviy édedcQb- Bevos modi Simon. 36:—Pass. to quake, tremble, quiver, yuia hedlxOn Il. 22. 448; €A€Aurro, of a brandished sword, 13.558; €AeAlCero wémdos h. Hom. Cer. 183. ‘ II. Med. and Pass. to move in coils or spires, of a serpent, éAcAi¢duevos wrépvyos AaBéy Il. 2. 316; &Adducro Spaxav II. 39, cf. Ap. Rh. 4.143; omelpas dpewv edcArCopévn Ar. Fr. 426. éXe) ‘fo (B): aor. #AeAa Xen., Ep. €A— Call. :—to cry édeAed, and so, like dkadd(w, to raise the battle-cry, 7® ‘Evvadiy Xen. An, 1.8, 18; generally, to raise a loud cry, Eur, Phoen. 1 514; of a shield, ¢o ring, Call. Del. 137 :—in Med., of the nightingale, to trill her lay of sorrow, rage i LIL; ¢. acc., “Iryy heacCopevn trilling her lament for Itys, . Av. 213, Aehropairys ofvos [7], wine flavoured wi, i 71. adeAlebicor’ fe 2 ee # os ith sage, Diosc. 5. 71 fAchopiikos, 5, a kind of sage (apaxos), Theophr. H. P. 6. 1, 4. ehedtxOnua, 74, (@Achi{w A) a violent shaking, Hesych. EXeAlyPav, ov, (eXcAilw A) earth-shaking, terpaopia Pind. P. 2. 8; 2. a charity, alms, » Scotch Ys EAtArxGor, i. e, Poseidon, Ib, 6, 50:—in Soph. Ant. 153 Bacchus is eNeADy Kew — ehehayTdrnyus. called 6 OnBas édcrixOuv because the ground shook beneath the feet of his dancing bands, cf. Call. Apoll. 1, et Spanh. ad 1. éAeAbyxeuv, v. sub Aayxdve, éhé-vaus, #, ship-destroying, epith. of Helen, cf. €avSpos, Aesch. Ag. 689 (so Elmsl. and others for éAévas, for no such form as vés =vais is known). €dévy, or EXdvy, 7), a torch, Hesych. II. a wicker basket, to carry the sacred utensils at the feast of the Brauronian Artemis, Poll. 10. 191 : hence of éhevyopotvres the basket-carriers, name of a piay of Diphilus, v. Casaub. Ath. 223 A:—rd €Xevynddpia the feast itself, Poll. 1. c III. as prop. n. Helen, the Destroyer, cf. €davdpos, éA€évaus. “Edéna (sc. fepd), 74, @ feast in honour of Helen, Hesych. €hévwov, 76, a plant, perhaps elecampane, Chaerem. ap. Ath. 608 C. “Edevo-hévrys, ov, 6, slayer of Helen, Schol. Eur. Or. 1140. €Aco-5urms [0], 6, name of a cook, Ath. 173 A. €Ac6Openros, ov, (dos) marsh-bred, cédwoy Il. 2. 776. €Acév, Adv., like éAcewdv, piteously, only in Hes. Op. 207. éXcés, 6, a hitchen-table, a board on which meat was cut up, a dresser, Il. 9. 215, Od. 14. 432; cf. Ath. 173 A:—also éAeév, 7d, Ar. Eq. 152, 169. II. a kind of ow/, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 3. -heos, 6, pity, mercy, compassion, Il. 22. 44, and freq. in Att.; also in pl., Plat. Rep. 606 C, Dem. 794. 27; €A. Tivos pity for.., Eur. 1. A. 491; éAcov moretoOar ent Tr Dem. 735.1; éA€ov Tvxeiv Antipho 114. 21:—in Lxx and N. T, also éAeos, 7d, pl. €Aén Epiphan. 2. p. 284.— At Athens, “EAeos was worshipped, Schol. Soph. O. C. 261; “EAcos émekhs Oeds Timocl. Suvép 1. II. an object of compassion, a piteous thing, Eur. Or. 832. éde0-c'éXivov, 7d, = EAccoédwov. éhé-roAts, post. EAé-aroMts, «, ews, city-destroying, epith. of Helen (cf. €Aavdpos), Aesch. Ag. 689; of Iphigenia, Eur. I. A. 1476, 1511. II. as fem. Subst. an engine for sieges, invented by Demetrius Poliorcetes, Diod. 20. 48, Plut. Demetr. 21 (called éA. zyxavy by Dion, H. g. 68) ; described by Amm, Marcell. 23. 4, Io. &Xeoris, ‘dos, },=€Aos, marsh-lands, a meadow, Ap. Rh. 1. 1266. éXerés, 7, dv, (EAciv) that can be taken or caught, Il. 9. 409. €Acvbepia, Ion. -(y, %, freedom, liberty, Pind. P. 1. 119, Hdt. 1. 62, 95, Aesch. Cho. 809, 863, etc.; 5 éAevBepias pdrus EfFAGes, i.e. pdALs €devbepvOns, Soph. El. 1509; bmapyxew éAcvOepias TH ‘EAAGS Andoc. 18. 34: freedom from a thing, dié twos Plat. Legg. 698 A; twds Rep. 329 Cc. 2. licence, drodacta rat éd. Id. Gorg. 492 C. 3. later= éreuBepidns. 4. the name of a dance, ap. Sext. Emp. M. 1. 293. €AevGépia (sc. lepd), 7a, the feast of Liberty, held, every five years at Plataea, in memory of the battle there, Posidipp. Incert. 3, Diod. 11. 29, Paus. 9. 2, 6, etc.; at Syracuse, in memory of the restoration. of the re- public, Diod. 11. 72; at Samos, in honour of Eros, Ath. 562 A; generally, €A. Ove Henioch. Incert. 1. 10. éAevPeprdf, to speak or act like a freeman, Plat. Legg. 7o1 E, Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 13; €A. rots Adyos Plut. 2.6E; éAevOepuigavras (Dor. aor.) ap. Diog, L. 1. 113. €Aevdepikds, 7, dv, free, modcrefa Plat. Legg. yor E; 7d édevdepixov «al 7d dvedcUdepor Ib. 919 E. €Aev¥éptos, ov, also a, ov, Xen. Symp. 8, 16 :—speaking or acting like a freeman, free-spirited, frank, related to éAevOepos as Lat. liberalis to liber, Plat. Gorg. 485 B, al.; dvdpefor nai éd. Id, Legg. 635 C; opp. to SovAomperys, Xen. Mem, 2. 8, 4: of certain animals, as the lion, éA. Kat dvipeia wal edyevj Arist. H. A. 1. 1, 321. b. esp. freely giving, bountiful, liberal, €d. els xphyara Id. Symp. 4, 15, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 4. Teoh 2. of pursuits, etc., 7 for a freeman, liberal, wrnv@yv Onpas -- pws ob opddpa éd. Plat. Legg. 823 E; émoriya: Id. Ax. 369 B; Blos Menand. MAox. 7; diaywyt Arist. Pol. 8.5, 8; macdela Ib. 8. 3, 10; mpagis, €pya Ib. 2. 5,10; 7d ehevdéprov = edevdepidrys, Xen. Mem. 3. 10, 5; proverb., tdwp mio édrevépiov, i.e. may I become free, because slaves set free at Argos were then first allowed to drink of the spring Ku- vddpa, Antiph. ’AAecrp. 1. 4, cf. Meineke ad 1. 3. of appearance, free, noble, ebmpenns te léeiv nat éX. Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 22, cf, Eq. 10, 17, Arist. H. A. 1. 1, 32. II. the Ady. -fws, Comp. -«dwrepov, Sup. —twrara, appears in all the above senses, Xen. Mem. 4. 8, 1, etc. Til. Zebs EA. Zeus the Deliverer, Pind. O. 12. 1, Simon. 144, Hat. 3. 142. edevOepidrys, 770s, %, the character of an edevOépios, esp. freeness in giving, liberality, Plat. Rep. 402 C, Arist. Eth. N. 4, 1, 1; % t@v xpn- parow &h, Plat. Theaet. 144 D. €Aevdepd-rrats, 6, %, having free children, i.e..a free man, Anth., Plan, 33 evdepo-rrovés, dv, making free, Arr. Epict. 4. 1,176. éAevdepo-mpatia, #, freeness in acting, licence, Or. Sib. 2. p. 190. éevBepo-mpaciov dixn, 4, a prosecution for selling a freeman as a slave, Poll. 3. 78; cf. Att. Process 229. €hevOepo-mpémera, 4}, the disposition of a fr it oxdnpdr. €hevPepo-mpenns, és, worthy of a freeman, Plat. Alc. 1.135 C. Adv. —m@s, Ib. €eW0epos, a, ov, but os, ov Aesch. Ag. 328, Eur. El. 868 :—/ree, opp. to 3000s: Hom. has the word only in Il. in two phrases, éAev@epov jap the day of freedom, i.e. freedom, Il. 6. 455., 16. 831, al.; and xpyrijp €ed0epos the cup drunk ¢o freedom, 6. 528 :—of pences Hdt. 1. 6, Aesch. Pr. 50, Soph. Aj. 1020, Thuc. 8. 15, etc.:—rd éA. freedom, Hat. 7. 103, etc.; TovAevepov Eur. Supp. 438 :—c. gen. free or freed from a thing, pévov, mnydray, péBov Aesch. Eum, 603, Cho. 1060, Eur. Hec. 869; é{w airias éX. Soph. Ant. 445; €A. da’ GAAnAwy independent, Xen. Cyr. 3. 2s 23, Plat, Legg. 832 D. 2. of things, free, open to all, dyopa Xen, Cyr. 1, 3, 33 @A. pudann, Lat, libera custodia, Diod. 4. 46; , Poll. 3.119, who calls g 453° mepiony Ael.N. A. 15.53 xpyyara &dA. unencumbered property, Dem. 930. 4. IT, like éAcvOépios, fit for a freeman, free, frank, éXev- Gepwrépy induprors Hdt. 1. 116; ededdepa Bacew Aesch. Pers. 593; & pndev dyes pnd er. ppovav Soph. Ph. 1006 ;. dovAn pév, elpneev 8 éd, Adyow Id. Tr. 63, cf. El. 1256; Bdoavor eA, tortures such as might be used to a freeman, Plat. Legg, 946 C; 70 éA, Id. Menex. 245 C :—often in Adv., €AevOépas eimeiv Hat. 5. 93, al.; xatpe .. eal yeAav A, Soph. El. 1300; tpépeaOae Isocr. 148 C; €A. SovAeve, SodAos ob« oer Menand. Incert. 279 ; éAevPepor EAevOepws free and like free men, Plat. Legg. 919 E. (It is difficult not to identify é-Aedep-os with Lat. liber, € being prefixed, as in €-Aag-pés, Jev-is; and an exactly parallel case both of € prefixed and. standing for @ occurs in é-pu9-pds, rub-er. Curtius however returns to the old deriv. mapa 7d éAcd@ev mov épa, E. M. 329. 44.) éhevepooropéw, to be free of speech, Aesch. Pr. 180, Eur. Andr. 153; cf. éfeAevOepdw. A ehevdepooropta, %, freedom of speech, Dion. H. 6. 72. éhevbepd-c-ropos, ov, free-spoken, Aesch. Supp. 948. thaipevey es: ov, (*€pyw) bearing himself freely or nobly; of the horse, en. Eq. 10, 17. yee eevOepda, to free, set free, Tas AOhvas Hat. 5. 62, cf. 4. 1373 eAev- Gepodre marpida Aesch. Pers. 403, Cho. 1046; édevOepGoat tiv wéAw Dem. 561. 18; éA. roy gomAour to set the entrance free, clear it, Thuc. _ 3- 31: to release a debtor, Hdt. 6. 59: 76 7 eis éavrdy may eAevOepor” ordpa he keeps his-tongue altogether free, i.e. does not commit himself by speech, Soph. O. T. 706: to free from blame, acquit, tiva Xen. Hell. I. 7, 26:—Pass, to be set free, Hdt. 1.95, 127, al.: to indulge in licence, Plat. Rep. 575 A. 2. c. gen. to set free, loose or release from, pévov Eur. Hipp. 1449; xpe@v Plat. Rep. 566E; so, hevOepodvres éx Spacpav moda, i.e. ceasing to flee, Eur. H. F. 1010:—Pass,, ravde trav rémwy er. Plat. Phaedo 114 B; dad ray mAovotwy Id, Rep. 569 A. ehevPipwors, ews, 4, a freeing, setting free, Hdt. 9. 45; amd rTivos Thuc. 3. 10; dovAwy éA, moretoOax Arist. Pol. 5. 12, 32. I licence, Plat. Rep. 561 A. ~ AevPepwréov, verb. Adj. one must set free, quoted from Polyb. Ratigeris, ov, 6, a liberator, Luc. Vit. Auct. 8, Dio C, 41. 57. *Edev0o, dos contr. ofs, ,=ElAciOua, Pind. O. 6. 1. ; *Ekevoinos, a, ov, of Eleusis, h. Hom. Cer. 266, Hdt., etc. ; esp. as epith. of Demeter and Cora. II, “Endevainor, 74, their temple at Eleusis, Andoc. 15.1, Inscrr. of Brit. Mus. 11. III. ’EAcvoina, — 7d, their festivals, Paus. 4. 33, 5; of these there were two, the greater and the less, Dict, of Antiqq. [at, except in h. Hom, 1. c., Soph. Ant, 1120.] *Edevots, ivos, 7), Eleusis, an old city of Aitica, sacred to Demeter and Cora (Proserpine), first in h. Hom. Cer.: the form *EAevoiy only occurs in late Mss., as in Strabo 395, but “EAevais in 397 (bis); so SaAaply is a late form for SaAapis. II. Advs., "EXevotv at Eleusis, Andoc. 15. 6, Lys. 103. 24, Xen., etc. (in late and incorrect writers, év "EA, Vv. Cobet. V. LL. p. 201): "Edevoivade, Adv. to Eleusis, Lys. 125.6, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 24: "EXevowvd0ev, from Eleusis, Andoc. 15. 4, Lys. 107. 12. éhevats, ews, 4}, a coming, arrival, Dion. H. 3. 59. 2. the Advent of our LORD, N.T. : éActoopat, fut. of épyouat, Hom. €Xevoréov, verb. Adj. of épyopat, one must come, LXx (2 Macc. 6. 17). €Aehatpopat, old Ep. Dep. (of dub. origin), to cheat with empty hopes, said of the false dreams that come through the ivory gate, of wév « €dAOwar bid Tprorod edrépayTos, of p’ éAepaipovras Od. 19. 565, (where observe the play of words between éAdpas, éAepalpopat, as between xépas, xpaivey, in speaking of the érue dreams which’ come through the horn gate, of 62 bid feoray Kepdwy edOwor Ovpage, of fp’ Ervpa Kpaivovar) -— generally, to cheat, overreach, éXepnpdpevos .. TvdetSny Il. 23. 388. II. in Hes., of the Nemean lion, tangiinens Pon dvpwmov he used to destroy them, Th, 330. ehavt-dywyéds, 5, an elephant-driver, Poll. 1. 140. €Aehavr-dpxys, ov, 6, the commander of a squadron of elephants with the men upon them, Phylarch, 29, Plut. Demetr. 25, ehehavrapxla, %, the office of the thepavrépyys, Ael. Tact. 22. éXehdvrevos, ov, of an elephant, Opp. C. 2. 500. édehavridors, ews, 7), a cutaneous disease, esp. in Egypt, so called from its likeness to elephant’s hide, Plut. 2. 731 Asq., Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2.13:—also é\ehayriacpés, 6, E. M. 561. 4:—éAchavridw, fo suffer from elephantiasis, Diosc, 1. 105, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 214. éXehavtiveos, a, ov,=sq., Anth. P. append. 209. éXehdvrivos, 7,.0v, of ivory, ivory, Lat. eburneus, Aleae. 33, Ar. Eq. 1169, Pl. 815, al.; Sippos éd. the Lat. sella curulis, Polyb. 5. 53, 9, al.5 olxot A, LXX (Amos 3.5): 70 €A. the substance of ivory, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 290 C. 2. white as ivory, pérwmoy, etc., Anacreont. 15.12; Tapt- xos Crates Sap. 1. &dehavriokiov, 7d, Dim. of édéas, a young elephant, Ael, N. A. 8. 27. éhehavtiorys, of, 6, an elephant-driver, Arist. H. A. 2. 1,6. II. a shield of elephant-hide, Apy, Pun. 46. €Aehavr6-Bortos, ov, feeding elephants, yata Nonn. D, 39,,26. €ehavrd-Seros, ov, inlaid with ivory, Sdpor Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 583: poppeyé Ar. Av. 218. €hehavro-Oipas, ov, 5, an elephant-hunter, Agatharch. ap. Phot. €Aehavro-KéAAnTOos, ov, inlaid with ivory, Clem, Al. 188. €Aehavto-Kopia, 7), care of elephants, Acl. N. A. 6. 8. &rehavrs-Kwtos, ov, ivory-hilied, guponaxaipa Theopomp. Com. Ka- mar. 2; gin Luc. Somn. 26. édehavro-paxta, %, a battle of elephants, Plut. Pomp. 52. €Xehavto-paxos, ov, fighting with elephants, Strabo 775 ia- €Achavré-myxus, 6, %, tvory-armed, Max. Tyr. 14. 6. 454 hehavrs-mrous, 4, }, ivory-footed, kdivn Plat. Com. Incert. 8.; rpéweca Luc. Somn. 14. €hehavro-répos, ov, an ivory-cutter, Opp. C. 2. 514. EXehavroupyuxy (sc. réxv7), 9, the art of ivory-working, Byz. €heq “whoa 2 ba év, (*épyw) working in ivory, Philostr. 203. hehavro-hayos, 4, an elephant-eater, Agatharch. ap. Phot., Strabo 771. ehehavradys, es, like an elephant, Gra Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 13. €héhas, avros, 6, the elephant, first mentioned by Hdt. as a native of Africa, 3. 114., 4. 191; whereas Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 45 treats only of Elephas Indicus, cf. 9. 1, 30, etc., though the African is mentioned by him in Cael. 2.14, 19:—not generally known in Greece till the time of Alexander, Paus. I. 12,4. II. known to Hom. only as the name for the elephant's tusk, ivory, Il, 5. 582, and so Hes. and Pind,; for ivory was brought by Phoenician traffic to Greece long before the animal was known to Greek travellers; Hdt. calls the tusks more accurately €AépayTos ddovres, 3. 971:—Hom. brings false dreams through an ivory gate, v. sub éAepat- popat, IIL. =ehavriaais, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2. 13, C. L. 16. IV. a precious stone, Theophr. Lap. 37. Via ind of cup, Ath. 468 F. (Pott and others refer to the Hebr. Eleph (ox), and compare bos Lucas, the old Lat. name of the elephant, Lucret. 5. 1301; as Paus. (9. 21, 2) calls a rhinoceros raipos Ai@tomxds. On the other hand the Hebr. name for the animal, ib@A, recalls the Skt. ibhas, which is identical with the latter part of €A-épas, and the first part of the Lat. eb-ur, whence iv-oire, etc.) éAedutis or éAepyrtis, 6, a fish, corrupt in Hipp. 357. 45: dApnorns is proposed by Coraés ad Xenocr. p. 92. ééwrpis, dos, %, a fish of the Nile, Ath. 312 B. €Ay, 9, =elAn, ddéa, Eust. 667. 22., 1573.45. (Cf. cetpros.) Aq, Anat, v. sub aipéw. Anhixa, €AjAapar, AnAeSaro or -dBaro, v. sub éAadve, éAmAcypat, v. sub édéyxo. EhpArypat, v. sub érloow. €AnA’Wa, eiAnAovda, EAOeiv, EAPEpev, EAPEpevar, v. sub épyopar. €Meréov, = éAcvoréov, Matth. Medic. p- rt ae re éAlySyv, Adv. (€Aloow) whirling, rolling, Aesch. Pr. 882. EArypa, 76, a fold, wrapping, inavroy éXtypaot, of straps bound round the leg, Ephipp. Navay 1. 9; otpov@wrd éd. Sophr. 68 Ahr. II. a curl, lock of hair, Anth. P. 6, 211. III. a bending of the bone without fracture, also @Adopa, Soran. p. 47 Cocch. Aryparabdys, es, =édrcoedys, twisted, Lex. de Spir. p. 217. €Arypos, 6, a winding, convolution, as of the Labyrinth, Hdt. 2. 148; moddovs EX. dvw Kal Kare mAavGo0a Xen, Cyr. 1. 3, 4; of the bowels, &\. éxet Arist. H. A. 4. 7, 11, cf. 3.1, 22; of a snake, Nic. Th. 159; of dancers’ feet, Orph. H. 37. 12; generally, a rotatory motion, Plut.2.404F: in pl. the plies of a knot, Plut. Alex. 18; pevydrwy édvypol Id. Caes. 19. €Xtk-dparvk, vicos, 6, 7, wreathed with a circlet, Pind. Fr. 45. 18. EXix-avyns, és, with circling rays, HAvos Orph. Fr. 7. 25. Alen [1], 7}, (Ae) a winding ; hence, I. the constellation of the Great Bear, from its revolving round the pole, Arat. 37, Ap. Rh. 3- 1195. II. the convolution of a spiral shell, as of snails, whelks, etc., Arist. H. A. 4.1, 18, P. A. 4. 5, 30, al.; of the bowels, Id. P. A. 4.5, 58, cf. H.A. 4. 2, 26; of the ear, Id.G. A. 5. 2, 8. III. in Arcadia, the willow, from its pliant nature, Theophr. H. P. 3. 13, fin.; cf. Lat. salix. éXtenddv, Adv. =éAlyiny, spirally, Theophr. H. P. 3. 13, 1. EXikias, ov, 6, forked lightning, Arist. Mund. 4, 20. EXtico-BAépipos, ov, with ever-moving eyelids, quick-glancing, epith. of Aphrodité, h. Hom. 5. 19, Hes. Th. 16, Pind. Fr. 88; of Leda, Pind. P. 4. 304: cf. éAlwonp. EXiko-Boorpixos, ov, with curling hair, Ar. Fr. 314. EXiko-ypapéw, to describe a winding lane, Agathem. 2. To. EXtko-Bpbpos, ov, running in curves, twisting, Orph.H. 8.10: circular, Eur. Bacch. 1067 (as restored by Reisk. for Axe dpdpov). EXiko-crdys, post. elAuc-, és, of winding or spiral form, Plut, Num, 13; évrepov Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 3.3. Adv. -5as, v. sub ddAvedijs. €Xikdp-poos, ov, with winding stream, Orac. ap. Paus. 4. 20, I. éXixés, 4, dv, of water, eddying, Call. Fr. 290; of the dance, Epigr. Gr. 1028. 65. €Aucrap, fpos, 6, anything twisted: an armlet, earring, Ar. Fr. 309, Lysias 121. 44. : ' ékucrés, 4, dv, (éAloow) rolled, twisted, wreathed, Bots kepdecow éduerat h. Hom. Merc. 192; Spdxwv Soph. Tr. 12; «ods Eur. Phoen. 651; orépavos Chaerem. ap. Ath. 679 F; Béorpuxos Theodect. ap. Ath. 454 E; «Atuag é\. a winding staircase, Ath. 209 B; éA. eros a wheeled atk, Eur. Ion 403; éAuerdy kpovery 7éda, of dancers (cf. éAicow 1), Id. El. 180; odpeyé wep) xeiAos EAuerd Theocr. 1.129; éAuerd, or pi) éduerd, of insects that can roll or double themselves up, Arist. P. A. 4.6, Gard. It, 07. II. metaph. tortuous, not straightforward, Eur. Andr. 448: obscure Lyc. 1466. ; EAKaBS, €5, = EAceoedhs, Plut. 2. 648 F, Nonn. D. 1. 370, etc. éXlkwv, wros, 5, the thread spun from the distaff to the spindle, He- sych. II. éXtkdv, Gvos, 6, a nine-stringed instrument, Aristid. Quint. 3, p. 187, Meib. ENkav, dvos, 6, Helicon, a hill in Boeotia, famous since Hes. Op. 637, Th. 2, 7, 23, as the chief seat of the Muses. EXix Ses (sc. mapdévor), ai, the dwellers on Helicon, the Muses, Hes, Op. 656, Th. 1; Modoa ‘EA. G. 1. 3067. 19:—so, Nodppar "EdAucavides Soph. O. T. 1109; Motoa: Eur. H. F. 791, C. 1.3212. Se ‘EXtxdvios, a, ov, Heliconian, of Helicon, Pind. I. 7 (8). 127. 2 _ epith. of Poseidon, Il. 20. 204; acc. to old Interpp., from Helieé in Achaia, __ where he was especially honoured, Il. 8. 203; but v. h, Hom. 21. 3. ¢ eepayrorous —éXioow. EXtkwrds, dv, =sq., Orph. H. 5. 9. €Xix-wrp, wos, 6, %, fem. EAs, Sos, with rolling’ eyes, quick-glanc- ing, as a mark of youth and spirits, éA‘wwmes ’Axatol Il, 1. 389, ete. ; Eucdms Kovpy Il. 1. 98; vdppy Hes. Th. 298; “Appodiry Pind. P. 6. 1. Neither form occurs in Od. EXivos, 6, (EAloow) a vine-tendril, Philet. 43. Al, 181; also fem., Opp. C. 4. 262. éXivé-tpomos, ov, like vine-tendrils, Epigr. Gr. 1028. 18. éXivies, ai, days of rest, holidays: in Polyb. 21. 1, 1, for the Roman supplicatio: cf. édtvda. éXtviw, Hdt., Hipp., Aesch.: impf. édévvoy Hdt, 8.71, 4A— App. Mithr. 43, Ion. éAwwdecxoy Ap. Rh. 1. 589: fut. -vow [0] Pind. N. 5. 2, I. 2. 67: aor. éAlvtoa Hdt. 7. 56, Aesch. Pr. 530, etc. Ion. Verb, used also now and then in Att. Poets and in late Prose, to keep holiday, to take rest, be at rest, repose, keep quiet, often in Hipp., as 7. 32., 392. 43 #} edwiew Hat. 1.67; 8:€8n 6 orpards .. €Acvdcas oddéva xpdvov without * any cessation, Id. 7.56; €Awtcovra..dydApata to stand unmoved on their pedestals, Pind. N. 5. 2, cf. I. 2.67; éAwvovra mpoadépxeabai Twva to see him standing idle, resting from work, Aesch. Pr. 53; ob« éhudew éxpiv Ar. Thesm. 598; €A. ulay tuépay Orac. ap. Dem, 531. 28. 2. c. gen. rei, to rest from, tAnGceos Bpwpyns Hipp. 392.6; épywv Dion. H. I. 33. 3. part. to rest or cease from doing, €Aivvoy obdéva xpdvov .. €pyatopevor Hat. 8. 71, cf. Aesch. Pr. 530, Call. Cer. 48, Fr. 248. [v of the impf. short in Ap. Rh. 1. 862, long in 589, indeterminate in Att. The later form éA.vydw arose from ignorance that « was long by nature, Schaf. Greg. p. 502.] Atk, tos, 6, %, as Adj. twisted, curved: in Hom. and Hes., as in Soph. Aj. 375, Theocr. 25. 127, epith. of oxen, commonly understood of their twisted, crumpled horns, like kepdecow édcxtai in h. Hom. Merc. 192; others take it Of the movement of their bodies as they walk, rolling, so that it is properly conjoined with etAious as the more general term, acc. to a common usage in Hom., vy, Il. 9. 466, etc.; another version is black :—later of various objects, €Auea dvd xAday on the tangled grass, Eur. Hel. 181 (cf. sq. 11); €A. wAdxapos Christod. Ecphr. 282; dpdpos Nonn, D. 2. 263; oeipn Tryph. 322. EAE, post. etAuk, Tos, , (EAicow) anything which assumes a spiral shape; in Hom. only once, Il. 18. 401, yvaprrds @ €drkas, of arm- lets or earrings, like éAucrap, cf, h. Hom. Ven, 87, Arist. Mirab. 110:— afterwards in various relations. II. a twist, whirl, convolution, ehixes oTepomijs flashes of forked lightning, Aesch. Pr. 1083, cf. éAcklas ; of circular or spiral motion, at kvhoes nal EdXcees TO ovpavod Arist. Metaph. 2. 2, 27, cf. Tim. Locr.g7 C; of wreathing smoke, Ap. Rh. 1. 438. III. the tendril of the vine, Theophr. C. P. 2.18, 2; Booxdy ebpdddov Edixwy Eur, Hel. 1331; Bérpvos €A. the clustering’ grape, Ar. Ran. 1321. 2. the tendril of ivy, Ar. Thesm. 1000; also a kind of ivy, hedera helix, Eur. Bacch, 1171, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 6. 3. a curl or lock of hair, Anth, P. 10, 19., 12. 10. 4. the coil or spire of a serpent, Eur. H. F. 399: in pl. the feelers of the polypus, Anth. P. 9. 14. 5. the volute on the capital of a column, Ath. 206 B, Vitruv. IV. the convolution of a spiral shell (cf. €Atxn 11), Arist. H. A. 5. 15, 13 :—in pl. the convolutions of the bowels, Arist. P. A. 3. 14, 23, G.A.1. 4,4; in sing., the colon, Id. P. A. 3. 14, 22 ;—also of the ear, Id. de An. 2. 8, 9. V. a spiral running round a staff, Ael. V. H. 9. 11, Ath. 543 C, cf. Ap. Rh. 139: the spiral strip folded round the scytalé, Plut. Lys. 19:—a spiral, a screw, Hermesian. ap. Ath. 599 A, Hero in Math, Vett., etc. 2. the helix, a screw-windlass, employed in launching ships, invented by Archimedes, Moschio ap. Ath. 207 2. the vine, Nic. A. 3. a treadmill used to raise water, cited from Philo. Vi. of involved sentences, Dion. H, de Thuc. 48. €Arkts, ews, 7), the roll of a bandage, Hipp. Offic. 743. 2. a convo- lution of the bowels, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2. 6. eALb6-Kepos, wros, 6, }, with crumpled horns, xpiés Anth. P. 9. 240. éAr§o-rropos, ov, going round and round, Procl. h. Sol. 48. icow, Ep. inf. -éuev Il. 23. 309; Ion. etAloow Hadt.: fut. éAfgw Eur. Phoen. 711: aor. eiAcga Plat. Tim. 73 A, part. éAigas Il. 23. 466, Ion. eidifas Hat. 4. 34:—Med., Hom,: fut. éA/goua: Il. 17. 728: aor. Aigd- pay 12. 467., 17. 283 :—Pass., fut. €Acyfoopae Lxx (Isai. 34. 4): aor. eidixOny Eur., part. édcxels Il. 12.74: pf. efAvypat, éAMArypac Paus. 10. 17, 12, Ion. 3 pl. iAiyaro Hat. 7. go: plqpf. efAckro Eur. H. F.927.— The Ion, form is used by Trag. (metri grat.), and is found once or twice in MSs. of Plat. (Phileb. 15 E, cf. dvefAcéis), but never occurs in Hom. (For the etymol., v. sub eiAw), To turn round or about: the Act. in Hom, always of turning a chariot round the doubling-post, olo@a yap €3 rept réppad’ éioaéuev [imous] Il. 23. 309, etc. 2. generally, ¢o roll, éX. Biou mépov to roll life’s stream along, Pind. I. 7 (8). 29: so of the chariot of Day, €A. ddos Aesch. Pr, 1092; Atos .. eiAlooov pdrdya Eur. Phoen. 3; éA, kéviv to roll the eddying dust, Aesch. Pr. 1085 ; éX. divas of the Euripus, Eur. I. T. 7, cf. 1103; éA. xépas BAépapa Id. H. F. 868, Or. 1266. 3. of any rapid. motion, esp. of a circular kind, Gdtov .. &h. tharay to ply it swiftly, Soph, Aj. 357; of the dance, éA. 1é6a to move the swift foot, Eur. Or. 171, cf. 1. A, 215; €A. Ocagous to lead the dancing bands, Id. 1. T. 1145; €A. xopovs Strattis Incert. 1; and, absol. to dance, Eur. Phoen, 235, cf, Or, 1292; (whence, €A. 774 to dance in honour of .., 1d. H.F. 60, I. A.1480); @A. Bopdy to dance round it, Call. Del. 321; mAdray éd. to ply the rapid oar, Soph. Aj. 358. 4, to roll or wind round, rAdkapov wept drpakrov Hat. 4. 34, cf. 2. 385 Alvoy jAaxdra ed. Eur. Or. 14323 xetpas dupt ydvy EA. to clasp them round .., Id. Phoen. 1622. 5. metaph. fo turn in one's mind, revolve, To.add’ éX. Soph. Ant. 231; €A. Adyous to speak wily words, Eur, Or, 892. 6. xoATovus €A. to form winding reaches, EXitpoxos — eAkwpmarixds. of rivers, Dion, P. 630, cf. 979. II. Pass. and Med. to turn oneself round or about, turn quick round, é\txOévrwv bm ’Axady when they turned to face the foe, Il. 12. 74, cf. 408; so of a wild boar, €Auéapevos having turned to bay, 17. 283, cf. 728, and v. sub doxedw; of a serpent, to coil himself, Ekicadpevos mept XetH 22.953; 7) dé 0 EXtogopévn wéTeTAL (sc. xaAadpoy) the shepherd’s staff flies spinning through the air, 23. 846; Kvion .. EXiccopévyn Tept amv rolling with the smoke, 1. 317; Ehicadpevor wept Sivas whirled round in the eddies, 21. 11; so of rivers, to run eddying as they go, Hes. Th. 791; of the waves, rd éAtoadpevov det xvpdroy Pind, N. 6.94; of ocean, éAiccecOat epi xOdva Aesch. Pr. 138; pat édioodpevar the circling hours, Pind. O. 4. 5. 2. to turn hither and thither, go about, dv’ Suidov Il. 12. 49; Kad’ Gpirov Ib. 467, cf. 17. 728; éAlocero évOa Kat évOa turned himself hither and thither, doubting what to do, Od. 20. 24 :—also, like Lat. versari, to be constantly in or about a thing, wept picas Il. 18. 372, cf. Plat. Theaet. 194 B; of bees, éAtcoec@ar peéde70s to be busy about it, Arat, 1030. 3. to whirl in the dance, Eur. Bacch. 570, I. A. 1055. 4. Med. in Act. sense, xe 5¢ yey Gpatpyddy éEdAcgapevos he threw it with a whirl, like a sling, Il. 13. 204. 5. tas Kepadds elAixaro pitppot have their heads rolled round with turbans, Hdt. 7. go. mee ov, (éAicow) whirling the wheel round, odpyyyes €X. Aesch. heb, 205. /rpOev, Acol. for ZcipOnoav, 3 pl. aor. 1 pass. of Aira. eXixptoos, 5, a creeping plant with yellow flower or fruit, Alcman 29, Ibyc. 7, Cratin. MaA9. 1; éAtxpicou favOorépa Theocr. 2. 78. €Akatvw, (€Axos) to fester, Aesch. Cho. 843 (where pévy TO mpdaber, as Paley remarks, is the dat. after éAxaivovrt kal dednypEevy). €Akaivov, 74, =€Axos, a wound, only in Hesych., who also has €AxavOoa =éAxalvovea. €Akeot-mem)os, ov, trailing the robe, with long train, of Trojan ladies in Il. enero ov, drawing the hand after it, rptwava Philipp. in Anth. - 6. 103. éAke-rpiBav [1], 6, cloak-trailer, nickname of a Laconian, Plat. Com. Tpeo8. 2. Axe-xlrov [1], wvos, 5, trailing the tunic, with a long tunic, epith. of the Tonians, Il. 13. 685 ; cf. wodnpys. kéw, fut. now, strengthd. for €Axw, to drag about, tear asunder, in impf., véxuv .. €Aneov aupdrepor Il. 17. 3953 in fut. and aor., eves éA- «howow Ib. 558 (al. Axvowow) ; ot perv KUves 79 olwvol EAxhoovT’ 22. 336; Anrd yap HAxnoe he attempted violence to Leto, Od. 11. 580; so in Pass., Anndeicas te Ov-yarpas Il. 22. 62 :—cf. €Axqrov. €Axndov, Ady. by dragging or pulling, hE Te kat édnnbdv (i. e. mGAn) Hes. Sc. 302, cf. Il. 23. 715. €Akqets, ecoa, ev, full of wounds, Manetho I. 162. fAxnOpds, 6, a being carried off, violence suffered, as Te Bots gov O €rAKnOpoto mubécOar Il. 6. 465. €AxnPpov, 75, part of the plough, Theophr. H. P. 5. 7,6; cf. €Avya. €Acnpa, 76, that which is torn in pieces, a prey, kvvav €Ax. Eur.H. F.568. €AcnHp, Hpos, 6, one that drags, eréves Ehunrijpes of a harrow, Phanias in Anth. P. 6. 297. Z €Axnrov, taken as 3 dual impf. of €Axw, for efAxérnv, Od. 13. 32.—But as such a form is against analogy, it is better to regard it as pres. subj., or to write €Axfjroy from éAKéw. €\ko-trovéw, to make wounds or sores: metaph. ¢o rip up old sores, Lat. vulnus refricare, Aeschin. 83. 37. édko-rrords, dv, having power to wound, Aesch. Theb. 398. €Axos, eos, 76, (v. sub €Ana) :—a wound, Il. 4. 190, al. (never in Od.), Pind., and Att. 2. a festering wound, sore, ulcer, €dxos BSpou the Sestering bite of a serpent, Il. 2.723; of plague-ulcers, Thuc. 2. 49, cf. Xen. Eq. 5, I, etc. II. metaph. a wound, loss, Solon ap. Dem. 422. 13, Aesch. Ag. 640, Soph. Ant, 652, al.; iroxdpdtov €. Theocr. 11. 15. €Ak6w, to wound sorely, lacerate, Eur. Hec. 405; éAx. dvugw Arist. H.A. 9. 44, 8, etc.:—Pass., Ib. ro. 6, 8. 2. to ulcerate, cause to suppurate, 7a BrXépapa Hipp. Vet. Med. 15, al. :—Pass., of persons, to suffer from wounds or sores, Com. Anon. 16,8; of sores, to suppurate, Xen. Eq. 5, a; II. metaph., éAx. ppévas, otxovs Eur. Alc. 878, Supp. 223. EAkréov, verb. Adj. of EAxw, one must drag, Plat. Rep. 365 C. EAxrixés, 4, év, fit for drawing, attractive, Plat. Rep. 523 A, Ael. N. A. 17. 6. bibs. h, év, that can be drawn, Arist. G. A. 2.6, 25. EAxvSprov, 76, Dim. of EAxos, a slight sore, Hipp. Art. 829, Ar. Eq. 907. @&xvOp6s, 4, later form of éAxnOpos, Tryphiod. 21. ZAkiiots, ews, ), a drawing in, absorption, rs rpopis Arist. Plant. 1. 1, 21. 2. attraction, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 10. €Axvopa, 76, that which is drawn, i.e. spun wool, Hesych. 2. booty, Manetho 4. 200. 3.=oxwpla, the dross of silver, because drawn off with a hook, Diosc. 5. 101. Exvops, 5, =éAxnOpds Philo 1. 151, Plut, 2. goo E, : €Axvordlw, Frequentat. of €Axw, to drag about, iva ph puv arodpiqa eAcvard tow Il. 23. 187., 24. 213 cf. puorato. éXxvoréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be dragged, Xen. Ages. 9, 4: &kvorhp, jpos, 6, an instrument for drawing: the midwife's forceps, Hipp. 618. 16: a rein, Gramm. II. as Adj. drawing, Opp. H. 5. 20, Axvoricés, 7, 6v, drawing, of drugs, Diosc, 2, 106. 2. attractive, édnvorindy 7 Exe mpos prdtay Ath. 185 C. : éAxverivda, Adv., =deAxvorivéa, Eust. 1111. 24. f&Axvorés, 4, dv, drawn, to be drawn, Hesych, refined, fine-drawn oil, C.1. 2719. 21. Aww (Avo only in Tzetz.): impf. efAov, Aesch, Fr. 33, etc., Ep. II. éAk. EAaov 455 éAxdow [0] Hipp. 751 D, Philem. Incert. 81 :—aor. eiAxvoa Pind. N. 7. 152 and always in Att.; #A«voa Inscrr. Aeg. in C. I. 4993, 5006; later eidga, post. €Aga, Anth, P. 9. 370, Orph. Arg. 260, Galen. :—pf. eiAxcixa («a6—) Dem, 60, 8:—Med., fut. -voopva: Orib.: aor. efAxvoduny (ép-) Ar. Ach. 1120, (4p-) Hipp. 787 H; rarely efAgduny Galen. :—Pass., fut. éAxvoOjcopa ({vyxab—) Aesch. Theb. 614, cf. Lyc. 358, AxOjgopat Galen. : aor. eiAxdoOnv Hdt. 1, 140, Hipp. 1123 A, (€—) Ar. Eccl. 688 ; later, efAx@nv Philostr. 359, Diog. L. 6. 91: pf. eiAxvopzac Hipp. 262. 9, Eur, Rhes. 576, («a0—-) Thuc. 6. 50; €Axvopar (dv—) Hat. 9. os plapf. eiAxvoro Hipp. 1134 B.—It will be seen that in the best Att., Amw, Agw were alone used in pres. and fut.; while the other tenses were formed from éAxdw: in Ep. we have a collat. form éAxéw (q. v.); frequentat. éAxvoragw.—In Hom., Aristarch, rejected the augm. (From 4/EAK come also éAKH, dAKds, EAxvoTalw, GAog, abdAag, etc.; cf. Lat. suleus:— os, Lat. ulcus, are from a diff. source.) To draw, drag, with collat. notion of force or exertion, ds eimay modds eAxe began to dra, [the dead body] by the foot, Il. 13. 383; qvmep .. modav EAxwor OUpace Od. 16. 276; [“Exropa] wept ofjy’ éraporo Edxet Il. 24.52; todrag away a prisoner, 22. 65 ; ¢o draw ships down to the sea, 2. 152, etc.; to draw ia 3 a felled tree, 17. 743; of mules, to draw a chariot, 24. 324; €Anépevar vetoio .. mxrdov dporpor to draw the plough through the field, 10. 353, cf. 23.518; EA. Tiva emt xvdpov Hdt. 1.92; mepiBaddvras oxowia Ax. to haul at them, Id. 5. 85. 2. to draw after one, é&v & Exec’ ’OneavG .,pdos Hedrtovo, Edxov vixra pédavay Il, 8. 486; médas €dx. to trail fetters after one, Hdt. 3.129; €Ax. xAavida to let one’s cloak trail behind, Ephipp. WeAr. 1; @orparioy Archipp. Incert. 3; cf. éAxectmemdos, édrexirov, Edis, cUppa. 3. to tear in pieces (used by Hom. only in the form éAxéw), dvixecot papedy Eur. Tro. 280: to worry, Tas Kdvas dAapos Axor Theocr, 1.135; éAxvoOjvae ond kuvav Hdt. 1. 140:—metaph. to carp at, Lat. vellico, Pind. N. 7. 152. 4. to draw a bow, édxe.. yAupldas re AaBdy Kal vedpa Béea Il. 4. 122, cf. Od. 21. 419, Hdt. 3. 21, Xen. An. 4. 2, 28, etc. - 5. to draw a ite, Soph. Ant. 1233, cf. Eur. Rhes. 576; and in Med., €Axero 8’ é« xoAcoio .. gipos Il. 1. 194. 6. Ak. ioria to hoist or haul up the sails, Od. 2. 426, cf. h Hom, Bacch. 32. 7. to hold up scales, so as to poise or balance them, €Ane 52 péooa AaBov Il. 8. 72., 22. 212; v. infr. 1. 9. II. after Hom., in many ways: 1. to pull an oar, Hat. 1. 194. 2. to tow a ship, Thue. 2. 90, etc. 8. to drag into court, Edw oe KAnTevoovTa Ar. Nub, 1218, cf 1004: ¢o drag about, esp. with lewd violence, Acer Kat Bidferar Dem, 563. 14; pydéva edgew pnd’ dBpreiv Ib. 585.16; edrew yuvaira Lys. 92. 41; cf. EAnéw, potato, 4. to draw or suck up, [Atos] EAxer 7d Vdwp én’ Ewurdy Hdt. 2. 25; Ax. Tov dépa to draw it in, breathe it, Hipp. Aér. 292, Tim. Locr. 101 D; and so without dépa, to breathe, Philyll. Incert. 1 :—esp. of persons drinking, to drink in long draughts, quaff, wé0v Eur. lon 1200; dpvore Id. Cycl. 4173 Thy -- TOU Tpapviov | arovinv] Ar. Eq. 107; olvoy é« ..Aenagrhs Teleclid. ‘ 2; dmvevori Antiph. Tay. 2. 14, etc. ;—so with acc. of the cup, 5éras peorov Edxovot .. yvdOors aravarots Id. Incert. 15, cf. Eubul. Kv. 1, al. ; so, Ax. paordy to suck it, Eur. Phoen. 987. 5. to pluck by the cloak, Dem. 583. 22. 6. €Ax. Biorov, Cony to drag out a weary life, Eur. Or. 207, Phoen. 1535; mpopdotas €Ax. to keep making excuses, Hat. 6. 86; macas re mpopaces .. €Axovor Ar. Lys. 727; €AK. xpdvous to make long, in prosody, Longin. Fr. 3. 5 :—hence intr., ént Tocovro A€yerat EAxdoa Thy otoraow..that the conflict dragged on, lasted, Hdt. 7. 167 (though it may be taken trans.,.. that they prolonged the conflict). 7.€A. xépSaxa, ox7jpa éAndoa to dance in long, measured steps, Lat. pedem trahere, Ar. Nub. 540, Pax 328. 8. to draw to oneself, attract, Hdt, 2. 25; esp. of the magnet, Eur. Fr. 571; 7ivd mort b@pua Theocr. 2. 17, cf. Xen. Mem. 3. 11, 18; mei@ev xai é. Plat. Rep. 458D; éx@pods é~’ éavrdy Dem. & I. 10:—to draw on, ént jdovds Plat. Phaedr. 238 A; els rupavvidas €. rds wodrteias Id, Rep. 568 C:— Pass, to be drawn on as by a spell, tvyye Frop ~AkeoOar Pind. N. 4. 3 €. mpos pidocopiay Plat. Rep. 494 E. 9. of things weighed, €A«. oraOpov to draw down the balance, i.e. to weigh so much, Hat. 1. 50; absol., 7d 3 av éAxdon whatever it weigh, Id. 2.65; Ame wAciov it weighs more, Plat. Minos 316 A: v. supr. I. 7. 10. to draw or derive from a source, évredOev eiAxvoer emt Thy .. TEexvnY Td Tpdapopov avry id. Phaedr. 270 A; 70 yévos dmé rivos Strabo 515: to assume, pel(o payvractay Polyb. 32. 20, 5; 6 dpros Axe xp@pa KaAdorTov Ath. 113 C. 11. éAxdoat TAivOous, like Lat. ducere, to make bricks, Hadt. 1,179; so, €A«. Adyavov Chrysipp. Tyan. ap. Ath, 647 E. 12. % Oupis €Axec the window makes a draught, Theophr. Vent. 29. 13. €An. éavrév, expressing some kind of athletic exercise, Plat. Parm. 135 D. B. Med., €d«. xairas é« xepadijs to tear one's hair, Il. 10. 15; docorépw tupos €Axero Sippov drew his chair nearer to the fire, Od. 19. 506. 2. to draw to oneself, scrape up, amass, Timas, dpevos €AxecOar Theogn. 30. 3. EAceoOa ardOpas mepiocas, in Pind. P. 2. 167, means literally to drag at too great a line, i.e. to get more than one’s due ;—but whence the metaphor is taken remains unexplained. C. Pass. to be drawn or wrenched, v@ra.. édxdpeva arepeds, of wrestlers, Il, 23. 715, cf. €Axnddv: to be twisted, of certain phenomena in the pith of trees, Theophr. H. P. 5. 5, 2. 2. to be drawn or to flow at a place, of streams, Lyc. 702, Dion, P. 1086. : EAkoSys, €s, (ef50s) like a wound or sore, ulcerous, ulcerated, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1085; xpws Eur. Hipp. 1359; «vjpat Arist. Probl. to. 42. II. metaph. irritable, Polyb, Exc. Vat. p. 441, Plut. 2. 454 B. éAxapa, 76, (EAxde) a sore, ulcer, Hipp. Epid. 3. 1085. at. the part wounded, Theophr. H. P. 9. 2, I. Anov Hom. (never «iAxvov):—fut. Xf Aesch. Supp. 909, etc., rarely ¢, fAxoparixés, 4. bv, causing sores, ulcerating, Diosc. 5. 106. 456 Axwors, ews, %, ulceration, Hipp. Aph; 1248, Thuc. 2. 49. Axwrikés, 7, dv, =éAxwpatirds, Diosc. 1.183: metaph. exasperating, Plut. 2. 854 C. €AAG, , Lacon, for Spa, Lat. sella, Hesych. - “EdAa5-dpxns, 4, chief of Hellas, an officer mentioned in Pelop. Inscrr., C. I. 1124, 1318, 1396; also at Delphi, 1718 ;—so “EAAabapxéw, at Ancyra, 4021: cf. “EAAnvdpxns. ‘EdAabixés, 7, bv, Hellenic, Epigr. Gr. 926. 3. = ’ vonar, Med. to seize hold of, tds Diosc. 4.184, Joseph. . J. 6. 7, 5. €\Aapmptvopat, Pass. fo gain distinction, iia EAA.7H Ths TOAEwS KLVdUV@ Thuc. 6, 12: to pride oneself, Luc. Dom. 1; tit on a thing, Dio C. 73. 10. ” Dddprra, fut. Yo, o shine upon, Archil. 55: to shine or be reflected in, tut Plut. 2. 40D. II. trans. ¢o illuminate, €\Adumovca del EA- Adpmwerat Plotin. 2. 9, 2:—metaph. in Med, fo distinguish oneself, gain glory in or with, [7@ inmud] éereiye EAAGpYecOar Hdt. 1. 80, cf.,8. 74. us, ews, }, a shining in or on, Plut. 2. 893 E, etc. “EdAdvos, Dor. for ‘EAAAi0s. “EAAGvo-Sixat, Ov, oi, the chief judges at the Olympic games, Pind. O. 3- 21 (in sing.), Paus. 5.9, 4,8q.; also at the Nemean games, C. 1.1126, ubi v. Béckh. II. at Sparta, a kind of court-martial to try causes arising among the allied troops, Xen, Lac. 13,11.—The Dor. form is always used in Att., but“EAAnvodiras is quoted by Hesych.s.v.et s. Atapxor. ‘EAAGvoSikéw, to be a judge at the games, Paus. 6.1, 5-, 24. 3, Epigr. Gr, praef. p. xxiii. “EdAavobtkewv, Gros, 6, the place where the “EhAavodixat held their meetings, Paus. 6. 24, I (in Mss, male —d:nawy). ; ‘EAAGs, ddos, 4}, Hellas, a city of Thessaly, founded by Hellen, of & elxov P0inv wat “EAAdéa Il. 2. 683, y. Eust. ad 1. 2. all that part of Thessaly in which the Myrmidons dwelt, also called Phthiotis, freq. in Hom. 8. Northern Greece, as opp. to Peloponnesus, a6’ ‘EAAGSa nat pécov”Apyos Od. 1. 344., 4. 726, etc. 4. the proper name for Greece, from Peloponnesus to Epirus and Thessaly inclusively, Hes. Op. 651, Hdt. 8. 44, 47, Aesch. Pers. 50, 234, etc. :—often used collectively for “EAAnves, Eur. Or. 647, Thue. 1. 6, etc. 5. lastly, as a general name for all lands inhabited by Hellenes, including Ionia, etc., Hdt. 1. 2, Thuc. 1. 3, Xen. An. 6. 5, 23, etc.; 000’ “EAAds ob’ d-yAwaaos Soph. rt. 1060 :—hence we hear of 4) dpxata ‘EAAds, Old Greece (Plut. Timol. 3D: as opp. to 7) weyaAy “EAAds or Magna Graecia (Strabo 253).—Cf. EdAqv I. II. as Adj. with a fem. Subst. Hellenic, Greek, yA@ooa Hadt. 6. 98, al.; méAcs Id. 6. 98; xOav, aia, yq Aesch, Supp. 243, etc. ; aroAn Soph. Ph, 223, etc.; even with a masc. Subst., Id. Fr. 17; tis s, BapBapos, } trav mépobev evepyeray Erepos..; Eur. Phoen. ite cf, "EAAny I. vw > , - évaTroOpavw — evapo Cw. so in Med. 6 yopds .. évapdpevos Samdas Id. Fr. 249. II. "to hindle, set on fire, 1d, Pax 1032, in Pass. :—Med. to get oneself a light, Lys. 93. 2+ III. Med. to touch, reach, like Gwropa, Arist. Metaph. I. 7, 3, si vera I, éviipa, wy, 74 (v. évatpw), only in pl., the arms and trappings of a slain foe, spoils, Lat. spolia, év. Bporsevra pépew Il. 6. 480; or pépeca 8. 534; moAX év. Tpkav taken from them, 13. 268; so, év. Bpordevra Adravos Lo. 570:—generally, spoil, booty, Thy [pdppeyya] €rer’ é& éva- pov 9.188, cf. 6, 68, Hes. Sc. 357 :—Ep. word (used by Soph, Aj.177) for the Trag, oxdAa, Addupa. d évapaplokw: aor, I évijpoa :—to fit or fasten in, év Bt araOpods dpe Od. 21. 45. II. évdpypa, intr., to be fitted in, eb évapypds Od. 5. 236; 3 sing., Arat. 453. évipdoow, fut. fw, to dash against, Tt ént 71 Paus, 4. 13, 1:—Pass. to be dashed against, és ras wérpas App. Civ. 5. 98. évapyet, Dor. impf. of évepyéw, Theocr. évapyera, 7), clearness, distinctness, bright or vivid appearance, Plat. Polit. 277 C: in Rhet. vivid description, Dion. H. de Lys. 7. IIL. a clear view, Polyb. 3. 54, 2, etc. évapynpa, 76, a phenomenon, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. Io. 93. évapyns, és, visible, palpable, in bodily shape, properly, like éupavys, of the gods appearing in their own forms (cf. Virg. manifesto in lumine), xadrerot Se Geol paiverOa évapycis Il. 20,131; od yap mw mdvrecor Geol paivovra évapycis Od. 16. 161, cf. 3. 420., 7. 201:—often of a dream or vision, évapyés dvepoy éréaovro 4.841; dvap Aesch. Pers. 179, etc.; dpw evumviov 7G Ewivrod wa0a evapyectarny most clearly relating to.., Hdt. 5. 55, cf. 7.473 so, €vapyis Tavpos in visible form a bull, a very bull, Soph. Tr. 11; év. T1va orjoa to set him bodily be- fore one, Id. O. C. g10; év. BAepdpwy ipepos desire beaming from the eyes, Id. Ant. 795. 2. manifest to the mind’s eye, Ta5€ gor BAewey mapeor év. Id, Tr. 224; Apnorys év. the manifest robber, Id. O. T. 535, cf. Ant. 263; Tots dp@ow evapyis % UBpis paiverar Dem. 538. 5 :— Adv. —yas, visibly, manifestly, Aesch. Theb. 136, Soph. El, 838 ; ev. 9 Oebs o° émoxore? Ar. Eq. 1173. 8. of words, etc., clear, distinct, plain, manifest, of an oracle, év. Bagis AABev Aesch. Pr. 663; freq. in Prose, év. rexpnpiov, onpeiov, mapdderypa, a clear, plain proof, etc., Plat. Ion 535 C, Tim. 72 B, Dem. 326.5; «al rodro évapyes ott .. , for SjAov ér, Plat. Theaet. 150 D, cf. Ar. Vesp. 50 :—Adv., évapyéws Aéyew Hat. 8. 77; Comp. -é€orepov more clearly, eimeiy, drecSevat Plat. Tim. 49 B, Rep. 611 C; Sup. -€orara, Id. Alc. 1.132 C. Il. brilliant, splendid, Bwpés Pind. 0.7.75. (Acc. to some from dpyés, dpyhs bright ; others from év épyw real.) évapydrys, nTOos, 7), =evdpyera, Poll. 4. 97. *Evdpees (al. -apées) or “Evdpues, of, prob. a Scythian word, answering to the Greek dvdpdyuvo., a band who plundered the temple of Aphrodité Urania at Ascalon, and were smitten by the goddess with disease, Hdt. 1. 105; they asserted that she had given them prophecy in compensation, Id. 4. 67, as in the case of Teiresias ;—in Hipp. Aér. 293 sq. these people are called dvavSpets, and a full account of their malady is given; so.a Hadakia is attributed to the Scythian kings by Arist, Eth.N. 7. 7, 6. évaperos, ov, virtuous, Diog. L. 7.126, Hdn, 2. 8, 3: valiant, Joseph. B.J.6.1,8. Adv.-rws, C. I. 2771.1, 8. évipnpas, v. sub évapapioxw. éviipn-pépos, ov, wearing the spoils, Anth. Plan. 72; cf. évappédpos. €vap8pos, ov, jointed, Aretae. Caus, M. Diut. 2. 5; of speech, articu- late, opp. to mere sounds, Dion. H. de Comp. 14, Diod. 3. 17, Babr. prooem. I. 7. évapPpwors, ews, 4, a hind of jointing (i4pOpwois), when the ball is deep set in the socket, Galen. 2. 736. evapifw: Il.: impf. jvapifov Aesch. Ag. 1644: fut. fw (éé-) Il. 20. 339: aor. Ep. évdpifa 22. 323 (cf. éf-, én), later yvapita Lyc. 486, and Tapioca Anth. P. 7. 226.—Med., fut. -igonar Or. Sib. 3. 468: aor. évapif{aro Opp. C. 2, 20.—Pass., Soph.: aor. qvaploOny, pf. jvdpiopac (v. KaT-) —to strip a slain foe of his arms (évapa), Lat. spoliare, c. dupl. acc., évrea .. , 7d MarpdeAoro Biny évdpiga Il. 17. 187; GAAHAous évdpifov Ib, 413 :—hence, to slay in fight, Hes. Sc. 194; and, generally, do slay, ll. 1, 191, Pind. N. 6, 88, Aesch. Ag. 1644: in Pass., vd¢ évapt- (opévea when dying, i.e. when yielding to day, Soph. Tr. 94. Cf. évatpw. eviip pew, fo reckon in or among, Arist. Soph. Elench. 8, 4, M. Mor,2. Zt. | II. to reckon, account, obdév as nothing, Soph. O. T.1188:— Med., =év dpiOu@ movetcOan, to make account of, value, Eur. Or. 623. ‘ evapiOpros, ov, (dp.0pés) in the number, to make up the number, GAnv évinat marip évaplOmuoy iva Od. 12. 65: counted among, i.e. among, tot Theoer. 7. 86, Ap. Rh. 1.647; év. among men, in the world, Epigr. Gr. 502. 16; dypov év. ap. Diog. L. 7, 27, II. taken into ac- count, valued, Lat. in numero habitus, obre mor’ év modéum ev. ovr’ vt BovaAg Il. 2. 202. évapw.os, ov, =foreg.1, Orph, Arg. 110; 7a év.=af povddes, Arist. Me- taph.1.9, 19. IL. =foreg. 11, Plat.Soph.258C, Phil. 17 E; évfpiO poe (poét.) fi) dpvia nat Bordvar made account of, held dear, Call, Fr. 127. év-apt-Kipov, 6, 7), =dpucdpow (si vera 1.), Hipp. Aér. 283. éviiptpBpotos, ov, man-slaying, Pind. P. 6. 30, I. 8 (7). 114. &aprordw, fo make a breakfast in .. Hipp. 368. 3-5 373-31, Eupol. Tag. r. évappilo and—rrw, fo fit or fix in, éyxos apovdtAors Eur. Phoen. 1413; mAevpos BeAn Id. H. F.179, cf. Ar. Lys. 413; €vAa GAAHAas Theophr. H. P. 5. 3,53 mxes Luc. D. Deor. 7.4: in Geom. to inscribe one figure in another, 2. metaph. to fit, adapt, Awpiw pwvay év. medi Pind. O. 3.9, cf. I. 1. 21; reels 71 Plat. Legg. 819 C, Dion. H. de Isocr. 3; év. abrév to make himself popular, Plut. Alex. 32 :—Med., Tav Auport (sc. dppoviay) evapporrecOat ., Thy Avpay to tune it to the évappovos — évders. Dorian mode, Ar. Eq. 989: cf. dppogw T. 5. II. intr. to fit, suit, be convenient for, és r: Hipp. Art. 782; éy ru Ar, Ran.1202; tii Plat. Legg. 894 C. 2. c. dat. pers. to please, Plut. Them. 5. évappovios, ov, in accord or harmony, Plat. Legg. 654 A, etc.; Tut with.., Tim. Locr. 103 C; évappdviov pedaqdety Luc. D. Deor. 7. 4. II. in Gr. Music, yévos (or péAos) évappdvior or évappovixdy, or évappdévtor, 76, as Subst., the Enharmonic scale, simpler than the Chromatic and even than the Diatonic, Plut. 2, 711 C, 744 C, cf. Dion. H. de Comp. 6; €v. wéAn évfdor Arist. Probl. 19.15; v.Chappell Hist. of Gr. Music, p.xx. évdppooros, ov, (évapyd{w) fitting, neat, dub. in Joseph. Macc. 14. 3. évapporrw, vy. sub évappd cw, éviipo-«rdavtas, Dor. for —rys, 6, spoiler and slayer, of death, Aesch. Fr. 152, cf. Herm, Opusc. 5. 149 sq. évapov, 74, sing. of évapa, but not in use. év-tipos, ov, accurst, Hesych. ° évaphédpos, ov, syncop. for évapnpdpos, Hes. Sc. 192, ubi v. Gottl. évapxopat, fut. fouar: Dep.:—in sacrifices, to begin the offering, by taking the barley (odAoxUrat) from the basket (kavody), éfapyxou Kava Eur, I. A. 435, cf.1471; so, mpoxvras xépiBds 7° éfapgerar Ib. 955: —pf. in pass. sense, xavody 8 ééjperat Id. El. 1142; évqperat ta Kava Aeschin. 70. 31: cf. kardpyopat. 2. generally to begin, Polyb., etc.; c. inf, Id. 5. 1,5; €¢. rivos to make a beginning of, Id. 5. 1, 3, etc. . II. later, the Act., 1. to begin, Lxx (Sirac. 38. 16). 2. to hold office, C. I. 2350. évapxos, ov, (dpx7) in office, in authority, App. Civ. I. 14; of det é. évres Inscr. Delph. 34. 28; ovvédpous ded rods év, those who were in office at the time, C. I. 3046.13; &. dpxidinaorns 4755. 2. under authority, Stob. Ecl. 2. 56. II. in the beginning, first, Eccl. évds, d5os, 9, (év) = povds, an unit, Plat. Phileb. 15 A. ytd, agua Med., =doeBéw év .. , Themist. Epist. 14. éviceAyatvw, =dcedyaivw év .. , Diod. Excerpt. 527. 28 :—Pass. to be treated with insult in a thing, Ar. Vesp. 61 (as Dind. for dvaceAy-). évackéw, to train or practise in a thing, airév Plut. Alex. 17: Pass. with fut. med. (Luc. Vit. Auct. 3), fo be so practised, Luc. |. c., Anth. P. 11. 354:—Act. intr., like Pass., Polyb. 1. 63, 9. II. Pass., also, T® dpe évycKjacOa to be wrought in it, Joseph. A. J. 3.7, 5. évaopevifw, to take pleasure in, tii Philo 1. 36. évaomafopat, Dep. =domaopat, to welcome, Plut. 2.987 D. - . &vaoTBdopat, Pass. to fit oneself with a shield, Ar. Ach. 368. évacea, v. sub vatw I. évaotpamrrw, fut. Yo, to flash in or on, Themist. 51 D :—c. acc. cogn., ey. péyyos Tivi Philo 1. 448. évaotpos, ov, among the stars, Achae. ap. Hesych. évacxnpovéw, to behave oneself unseemly in, Babet méryan Kat aperp Luc. Icarom. 21; dpxais Plut. 2. 336 B, cf. Id. Sert. 27. évarxoAgopar, Dep. =doxoréw ev .., to be engrossed with, Eccl. évaratos, a, ov, (tvaros) on the ninth day, Hipp. Aph. 1250, Thuc. 2. 49; of recurring fevers, Hipp. Epid. 1. 961. évarevilw, to fix steadfastly on, Tas dxods tit, Iambl. V. Pyth. : II. intr. to look fixedly on one, Heliod. 7, 7 : to attend, Justin. M. 1. 41. évatpos, ov, steaming, full of vapour, Diod. 2. 49. éviiros, 7, ov, (évvéa) ninth, Lat. nonus, Il. 2. 313, 327, Hes. Op. 8; Ion. and Ep. eivaros 2. 295., 8. 266, Hdt.:—ra évara (sc. fepd), sacra ' novendialia, Isae. 73. 25, Aeschin. 86. 5. II. €vara: Movoat for évvéa, Anth, P. 2. v. 383.—The form évvaros is common in late Mss; but évaros is confirmed by the usage of Poets and by Att. Inscrr., v. C. I. 147, 148, etc.: cf. évaxis. évarrixile :—évarrixiCovat TS xopiy at dnddves the nightingales sing in this place just as in Attica, Philostr. 665. évavyatw, to light up in, mip Lyc. 71: to illumine, dxAty cited from Philo. II. intr. to shine, be seen, Ael. N. A. 1.58. évavyaopa, 74, illumination, év. Oetoy Philo 1. 88. évavbos, ov, speaking, living, Hesych. év-avhixo-hotris, , wandering in the fields, Anth, P. 6. 98. évavAcrov, 75, =évavaAos (A). 1, Eur. Hel. 1107; cf. mpocavdeios. évavAilw, intr. 4o dwell or abide in a place, Soph. Ph. 33. II. Dep. évavAilopat, Hdt., Thuc., etc. To take up one’s quarters dur- ing the night, vd«ra ovddels évavdiferar [év ro vn@] Hdt. 1. 181; ev Tavaypy vixra évavdccauevos Id. 9. 15: esp. of soldiers, to take up night-quarters, bivouac, Thuc. 3. 91., 4. 54., 8. 33, Xen., etc. IIt. metaph. of diseases, év T@ or7Oer Hipp. 230. 25. évaviAvos, a, ov, (avd?) inside the court: évavdla (sub. Pipa), H, the door leading into the house, tiv évatdov way pushing it open, Com. Anon, 305. 2. metaph. interior via pudendi muliebris, Hipp. 645. fin. évatAvopa, 74, a dwelling-place, abode, Attemid. 4. 47. évavAtariptos, ov, habitable, dvrpov Anth. P. 6. 219. €vavAov, 74, (avA7) an abode, Anth. P. 9. 102. €vavaAos, 6, (A) Subst. : I. (avAds) the bed of a stream, Taxa xev .. évaddous tAHTEav vervay Il. 16.71: a torrent, mountain-stream, bv pa 7’ Evavdos amoépon 21. 283, cf. 312. II. (addy) a dwelling, shelter: in pl. of the haunts of the country-gods, ovpea pakpa Océv xaplevras évavdous Nuppéeww Hes. Th. 129, cf. h. Hom. Ven. 74,124, Eur. Bacch. 122, H. F. 371: so Opp. calls the sea dAds évatAous, H. 1. 3053 Tlogetddwvos év., 3. 5.—Ep. word, used by Eur. in lyric passages. évavdos, ov, (B) Adj. : I. (avdds) on or to the flute, accom- panied by it, xOdpiots Ath. 637 F ; Opovs Jac. Philostr. P.7- 2. mostly metaph., Ad-yor, POdyyos év, words, voice ringing in one's ears, still heard or remembered, Plat. Menex. 235 B, Luc. Somn. 5; év. pédBos 473 in memory that .., Aeschin. 81. 18; €vavAa kal mpd duparowr Dion. H. 9. 73 &. divapus Arist. Probl, 21. 13; év. €xew Ste to have it fresh in one's mind, that .. , Plut. 2. 17 D. II. (aiaAn), =évadruos, dwell- ing in dens, Novres Eur. Phoen. 1573: in one’s den, at home, opp. to Ovpaios abroad, Soph. Ph. 158. ‘ évavhooraréw, to make a fold in a place, C. I. (add.) 2561 6. 81. évautdvw, to increase, enlarge, Xen. Cyn, 12, 9:—Pass., c. dat. to grow in .., Tpuph Hdn. 2. 10; so, évavgopar, v. 1. for dégopat, Emped. 375. Evaupos, ov, (atpa) exposed to the air, Theophr. H.,P. 8. 11, 6. aves, 7), a kindling, Plut. Cim. 10; dorpamis Critias p. 56 Bach. évavepa, 74, (evatw) =éumdpevua, a spark, (wotaww ev. that which gives life to animals, Orph. H. 5. 3. 2. a glimmer, remnant, Polyb. g. 28, 8, Plut. Fam. 11; Adyov Clem. Al. 64. 8. a stimulus, excite- ment, ro.adra éxov év. els émOupiay Hdn. 2.15; Tay dperdy év. Diod. Excerpt. 556. 84. évauxévios, ov, also 7, ov, in or on the neck, Bpdxos Anth. P. 7. 4933 édvvat Orph. Lith. 499. évato: impf. évavoy Hdt. 7.231: aor, opt. évavoee Diphil. Mapa. 3, inf. é€vatoa Plut. Phoc. 37:—Med., Cratin. Incert. 128: fut. copa Longus 3. 6: aor. évavoac@a: Plat. Ax. 371 E, etc. To kindle, év. mip 7. to light one a fire, give him a light, as was the duty of a neigh- bour, Xen. Mem. 2. 2, 12; and one who refused was execrated, Diphil. Mapa. 3, cf. Cic. Off. 1.16; but this might not be done for the @ripot, Hdt. l.c., Dinarch. 106, 12, cf. Soph. O. T. 235 sq.:—Med., wip évat- eaGa: to light oneself a fire, get a light, é rs Aitvns Luc. Tim.6; dad érépou mupés Plut. Num. 9: metaph., év. 7d @dpaos to borrow courage, Plat. l.c.; évredOev év. roy Adyor ap. Suid.; é abrod didacxaArlay ev, Ael, ap. Suid. évahivifopat, Pass. to be lost in, év Tun Strabo 49; twit Plut. 2. 489 A, etc. évaddarrw, Ion. évar-, to tie up or hang in a thing, évanirre Tiv xe- pari és tov doxdv Hat. 1. 214 (v.1. évamfxe, from evading): to adapt and fit in, Arist. Cael. 3. 2, 17. évahénpa, 76, a decoction, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. I. évahéipw, to boil down in: pf. pass. evapéynpat Hipp. 662. 19. évadinur, fut. -apfjow, to let drop into, put in, v.1. Hdt. (y. éva- pamrrw). II. to discharge in or into, Arist. H. A. 5. 22, 4, G. A. 1. 18, 27, al.; ui Artemid. 2. 26. évadpodtordtw, venerem exerceo in.., épy Aristaen. 1. 15. évyerav0i, in Ar. Thesm. 646, a comic tmesis for évrav6i ye, cf. Lob. Phryn. 414: cf. évpevrevdevi, évyévaot, i.e. 6 év yévacr xaOjpmevos, the Kneeler, a constellation in the northern hemisphere, Arat. 6 (ubi Bekk. éyyévact); Cicero keeps the Gr. name, Ovid translates it genunixus, Vitruv. ingeniculatus, Manilius ingeniclus, Firmicus ingeniculus. vbaSdopar, Pass., of a pine, to be choked by the stoppage of its resin, called by Pliny zaeda fieri, Theophr. H. P. 9. 2, 7. ; évigbos, ov, (ds) resinous, full of resin, Theophr. H. P. 3. 9, 3. évSatvupat, Pass. to feast on, 7t Ath. 277 A. évSats, acdos, or évSqs, ados, 6, 7, with lighted torch, Aesch, Eum. 1044. évSaiw, to light or kindle in: metaph., év5. w60ov tiv Pind, P. 4. 328: Med. to burn or glow in, év 5€ of dace Saierae Od. 6. 132; Bédos 5 évedaiero xovpy Ap. Rh, 3. 286. évidkv, to bite into, seize with the teeth, exibva 8 &s pé tis 168° ev- daxodo’ €xe Aesch. Supp. 896 (as restored by Paley); évd. ordpua yvdbos to take the bit between the teeth, of runaway horses, Eur, Hipp. 1223; so, évb. xadtvéy Plat. Phaedr. 254 D. 2. metaph. of sharp things, to fix themselves firm in, Thi yj Math. Vett.17:—of mustard, Nic. ap. Ath. 133 E. évBakpus, v, gen. vos, in tears, weeping, Luc. Somn. 4. évSaxptw, to weep in or with, évd5. 6upact to suffuse them with tears, Aesch. Ag. 541. ; évbGpew, éevdSapta, Dor, for évinu-. évddtrios, a, ov, native of the country, Mosch, 2.11, Coluth. 238, Anth. P. 9. 153 :—in Nicet., évdards: cf. jyedards, rodamds. (Prob. formed at once from évdoy, as GAAodamds from dAAos.) &Saevrs, v, somewhat rough, hairy, cited from Diosc. é&vbaréopat, Dep. to divide, dis .. robvop’ évdarotpevos dividing the name of Polynices (into woAd veiicos), Aesch. Theb. 578 (v. Schol.); évd. Adyous évetdiarHpas to distribute or fling about reproaches, Eur. H. F. 218. 2. c. acc. objecti, to speak of in detail, i. e., a. in bad sense, fo reproach, revile, rd Svamdpevvov A€éxrpov év5. Soph. Tr. 791 (so differre verbis in Plautus) ; or, in good sense, to commemorate, cele- brate, év’. ras éds ebmasdias Aesch. Fr. 281; BéAea OéAorp’ dv .. évd. Soph. O, T. 205 (where however others render BéAca éud., like differre tela, I would have thee scatter or shower them abroad). b. to tear in pieces, devour, Lyc. 155. II. as Pass., to be applied, only in Nic. Th. 509. évSarptAevopat, Dep. to be liberal in, Heliod. 8. 14. évbe5opévws, Adv. pf. pass. part. of évdidwpt, remissly, Phot., Suid. évSens, és: neut. pl. évdea: (évdéw) : ting or lacking in, in need of, c. gen., évd. elvat or ylyvecOai Tivos Hdt. 1. 32, Antipho 138. 25, etc.; évds por wvOos évdehs exc Eur. Hec. 835 ¢ toAAG@y év6., opp. to avrapkfs, Plat. Rep. 369 B; monrod 8 gor evdehs .. mpds 7d Em- dcigat, caret vate sacro, 1d. Symp. 195 D; opuxpod tivos évdexs eipe [rod] mavr’ éxew Id. Prot. 329 B. 2. absol. in want, in need, in- digent, Xen. Hell. 6, 1, 3, Plat., ete. b. lacking, deficient, used, like éwodeys, mostly in Comp., évdeéorepa mpaypara Hat. 7. 485 pat- verat kal oirws évdcearépa [7 oA] /Thuc. I. 10, cf. 4.65; évdeéorepos napaokevp, ovaia deficient in .., 1d. 2. 87, Isocr.62 D; but also in € Legg. 678 B; évavaoy hv naow or.. all had it fresh | Posit., obdey evdets movetoOax to leave nothing unsaid, Soph. Ph. 375 3; Ta Jresh fear, Plat, Legg. 678 B; & 474 Kpeicow undt ravdeG héyeww and not the worse, 1d..O. C.1430, cf. Elmsl. Heracl. 171; odSéy évdees Armeiv Eur, Phoen. 385; évdets palveral 7 Thue, 5. 9, cf. 7. 69., 8. 36; évdeds 7 Exe Xen. Cyr. 8.1, 40; évders tov Biov Menand. Incert. 66; rv dy Luc. D, Marin, 1. 2 :—70 évdees lack, want, defect, =évdera, Thuc. 1,77; 70 abrav évdeés their deficiency, Td. 3. 83. 3. inferior to, in Posit., ravded, opp. to Ta xpeioow, the worse, Soph. O. C. 1430; ‘yévos obSevds évSens Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 233 THs duvdpews évied mpagar to act short of your real power, Thuc. 1. 70; TovTou évbed épaivero (sc. rd mpdypara) their power was unegual to the purpose, Ib. 102; in Comp., évdeéarepds ruvos Soph. Ph. 524, Thuc. 2. II. 4. insufficient, pac 7 Plat. Prot, 322 B; évd, cuvOjKa Thuc. 8. 36. 5. Adv., évdedis, defectively, insufficiently, opp. to tkavds, Plat. Phacdo 88 E, Rep. 523 E; évd. éxetv rivds to be in want of, Eur. Fr. 890. 8, Plut. Nic. 27; ph évdeds yvavat to judge not in- sufficiently, Thuc. 2. 40:—Comp., évdeeorépas 7) pos éfovaiay less than, Id. 4. 39; évd. mpds & BovAera: Id. 2. 35; évdecarépws ~xev Plat. Phaedo 74 E. dea, 7, want, lack, Svvdyews Thuc. 4.18; Tis évayeatorarns diat- ans Id. 7. 82; xpnudrav Xen, Ath. 1, 5, Plat., etc. II. absol. deficiency, defect, opp. to brepBod, Plat. Prot. 357 B, Arist. Eth. N. 2. 2, 6, al.:—pl., Isocr. 177 B, 2. want, need, opp. to émé@vyia, Plat. Gorg. 496 D, E; in pl., af rod owparos évdecat Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 22, Plat. Eryx. 401 E, al. 3. want of means, need, poverty, Lat. egestas, det évicig fvvouos, Plat. Symp. 203 D; aigypdy re moeiv 6: Qbear Dem. 312. as etc. évBerypa, 7d, (évdelevupe) a proof, Plat. Critias 110 B; edvotas évd. a proof, token of good will, Dem, 423. 13. évSelxvipr or —vx, fut. -Seigw, to mark, point out, Lat. indicare, 7: Pind. O. 7. 60; mpiv 7 dy évdeigw ri 5pH Soph. O.C. 48; évd. 7a Gdejpara 7® Sixaornpiy Antipho 145. 40, etc.; ¢. part. to shew that a thing is, Plat. Polit. 278 B: év5. tui c. inf, to signify to a man to do.., Ib. 308 E. 2. as Att. law-term, fo inform against (v. évBegts I. 2), Plat. Apol. 32 B; év5. rais dpyais Id. Legg. 856; so in Med., Plut. Sol. 24: —mostly in Pass., xaxovpyos évbederypevos Antipho 130. 16, cf. Andoc. 2. 10, Plat. Apol. 32 B; évderx Geis Lys. 104. 343 evbexOévra SexdCeav being informed against for bribing, Dem. 573.11. II. Med. to shew forth oneself or what is one’s own, once in Hom., UnAclip évbeigo- pat I will declare myselfto Achilles, Il. 19.83; évdetxvucbae Thy ywapyv Hdt. 8. 141; apis évd. 7 to set it forth, Plat. Theaet. 158E; évd. mept tivos Polyb. 4. 28, 43; 71 Id. 5. 16, 7. 2. with a part. to shew, give proof of doing, mas 8 dy .. wadAov évdeifarrd ris wéaw mporipao'.. ; Eur, Alc. 154; cf. Bacch. 47, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 10; tiv ddvayuy KpeitTa ovgav évd, Dem. 535. fin., cf. Isocr. 375 B; so, vd. O7t.., olov.., Thue, 8. 82, Plat. Apol. 23 B, Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 21. 3. c. acc. rei, to display, exhibit, Lat. prae se ferre, imepnpavov aixpay Aesch. Pr. 405; 70 eviuxov Thuc. 4. 126; Thy edyvoay Ar, Pl. 785; TO chpare Thy eivaay, ov xphuacw obde Adyous, évedeigaro TH maTpid: Dem. 561. 25; TUmm TdAnbes évb. Arist. Eth. N. 1. 3, 4. 4. évbeinvucbai * git, Lat. ostentare or venditare se alicui, to display oneself to one, make a set at him, court him, Dem. 375. 21, Aeschin. 84. fin., etc.; €xapi{ovro mavr’ évdexvipevot Dem, 391. 19; cf. évdergis 11:—absol. to make a shew, shew off, Plat. Prot. 317 C. évSelnTns, ov, 5, an informer, complainant, Philostr. 621. . &Bexrinds, 7, dv, probative, as the Protag. of Plato, Thrasyll. ap. Diog. L. 3. 51. II. indicative, twos Galen, , aes, «ws, 4, a pointing out, Polyb. 3. 38, 5, 2. as Attic law- term, a laying information against one who discharged public functions for which he was legally disqualified, Plat. Legg. 966 B: a writ of in- dictment in such a case, Andoc. 2. 26, Dem. 524. 24, etc.; cf. évSetevups Say _ II. a demonstration, display of one's good will, 4 els AdéE- avdpov év8. Aeschin. 85. 12. év-Bexa, of, ai, 7d, indecl. eleven, Lat. undecim, Hom., etc. II. at Athens, of dena, the Eleven, the Police-Commissioners, who had charge not only of the police but of the prisons and the punishment of criminals, Ar. Vesp. 1108, Antipho 137. 35, Lys. aa 15, Plat. Phaedo 59 E, al. 2. certain officers at Delos, C. I. 2206 A. 25. &vSexa-ypdppiiros, ov, of eleven letters, v. Sexaryp-. éviexa-erns, és, eleven years old, C. 1. 2335+ 42+ evdexdfw, to keep the tenth day in a place (cf. éveopré{w), Dem, 1335. 7; cf. cuvevderariCa, évdexdxus [a], Adv. eleven times, Arist, H. A. 6. 4, 6. évSexd-«Atvos, ov, with eleven couches; kepadr év5. a head as long as eleven couches, Telecl. Incert. 6. évbexd-pyvos, ov, of eleven months, Hipp. 259. 35- évdexd-myxus, v, gen. eos, eleven cubits long, Il. 6. 319., 8. 494. E , 6, 4, mouv, 76, eleven feet long ot broad, Poll. 1. 72. ivbexds, ddos, }, the number Eleven, Plat. Legg. 771 C. évSexa-cvAAaBos, ov, eleven-syllabled, Hephaest. 14. 2. évBexaratos, a, ov, on the eleventh day, Hipp. Aph. 1250, Thuc. 2. 97; Zpapat oxédov évbexaraios nearly for eleven days, Theocr. 10. 12. é&vBéc&ros, 7, ov, the eleventh, Hom., etc, évBexd-xopBos, ov, eleven-stringed, Avpa Ion 3, Bgk.; al. dexax—. _ &yBen-Erns, es, =évbexaérys, C. I. (add.) 3846 z. 61: fem. -érs, c5os, Anth, P. 7. 164. _ évBex-hpns, €s, with eleven banks of oars, Theophr. H. P. 5. 8, 1, Ath. 203 D. , Rai. évBécopat, Ion. for évdéx-. ss HWSexrdv eori=évbéxerar, Apollon. de Constr. 181. 10., 544. 1. : Carr; - &Bed Xea, H, continuity, perpetuity, Lat. continuatio, perennitas, Teé- “Fp wy Koralve is Wdaros evoercxeiy Choeril. p. 169, ubi v, Nike ; évdcra — evdcu. mévra yap rats évdehexelas xaramoverrat mpaypara Menand, Incert, 191.—Often confounded with évreAéxera, q. v. évSehexéw, Zo hold out, last, go on, Choeril, Nike p. 173. Il. c. ace. to continue, Lxx (Sirac. 30. 1), with v. 1. -i¢w. 4 évdeAexns, és, (v. SoAcxds), continuous, continual, perpetual, punun Plat. Legg. 717 E; Aevroupyia Isocr. Antid. § 167; 7éA¢qos Plut. Pericl. 19; 70 évd, epi Te continuance, Id. Mar, 16, Ady. —x@s, Critias 15. 5, Plat. Rep. 539 D, Tim. 43 D, 58 C; also in later Com., Diod. AvA. 1, Menand. Wevd. 4, Crobyl. AmoA, 2;° freq. in late Prose.—Often con founded with évyreAex7s, as in Plat. Legg. 905 E, but v. évreAéxera. évbeexifw, =évderexéw, intr., LXX (dir. 9. 4). évdeAexiopos, 6, =évdeAexera, LxXx, cf. Joseph. A. J. 11. 4, I. évSepa, 7d, (€vdéw) a thing bound on, Gloss. évdepnw, fo wall up, Tas diaoparyds Hat. 3. 117. II. to build in a place, rpeis of moAiwy Exarovrabes évdé5unvrar Theocr. 17. 82:—Med. to build or make for oneself, xotrov Nic. Th. 419. évSefrdopar, Dep. to grasp with the right hand, Eur. I. A. 1473. évSeEvos, a, ov :—Hom. has only the neut. pl. évdéfca, towards the right hand, from left to right, mostly as Adv,, cots évdégia maow gvoxde he filled forall the gods from Jeft to right, Il. 1.5973 Setg’ évdéfia macw 7.184; BR 8 iver airnowry evdéfia Gra Exacrov Od. 17. 365. The contrary procedure was avoided as unlucky (as in Iceland ganga andselis, Scott. to go widdershins, i.e, against the course of the sun, from right to left, v. Jamieson s.v.), cf. defids: hence, évdefia oqpara propitious omens, Il. 9. 236: cf. éméfcos. 2. after Hom. without any sense of motion =6egtds, on the right, Eur. Hipp. 1360; évbéfios o@ modi on thy right, Id. Cycl. 6, II. as Adj. clever, expert, h. Hom. Merc. 454.—Ep. word, also in Eur. ll. c., but never in Prose, for in Thuc, 1. 24, etc., év defiG is now restored, as opp. to év dpiorepG. évoedvtws, Adv. deficiently, Galen. évSecrs, ews, 7), (€vdéw) a binding on: junction, rod rodds Hipp. 279. 17, cf. Polyb. 6. 23, 11. II. an entanglement (cf. Homer's arp évéénae Bapein), M. Anton. 10, 28, ubi y. Gataker. évSerpeva, fo bind to or upon, Twi or és 71 Diod. 30. 40., 20. 71. évSeopéw, =foreg., Diosc. 4, 43. évderpos, 6, a bundle, bag, Diosc. 3. 97, LXx. évbetos, ov, bound to, entangled in, rw Anth. P. 9. 372. &Bevw, Dor. for évdéw, to be wanting, Inscr. Myt. in C. I, 2166. 32. évSevw, to soak or dye in, Bappare Nic, Al. 414, in Med. év5éexopar, Ion, -Sékopar: fut. fouar: Dep. To take upon oneself, Lat. suscipere, Tadarmwplas Hdt. 6. 11; iv airiay v. 1. Dem. 352. 26. II. to give ear to, accept, admit, approve of, Lat. accipere, 7ov Adyov the proposal, Hdt. 1,60; rods Ad-yous Id. 5. 92, init., 96, al., Ar. Eq. 632, Thesm. 1129; 7d Aeydpeva Thuc. 3.82; THv cupBovdiny Hat. 7-51; daBords Id. 3.80; evd. dxécracw =rdv mept dmoardatos Ad-yor Id. 3.128; so, évd. Hy Tod "AAKiBiddou KaOobov Thuc. 8. 50. 2. in Hdt. also, often, to give ear to, believe, Lat. accipere, mostly with a hegat., Gpxiy .. ob5t evbéxopar tov Adyov 5.106; TodTO BE odK evs. SpxnV 4- 25, cf. 3. 73. 7. 237: c. inf. to believe that .., ob yap eyarye év6. “Hpidaviv twa Kadéecbat rorapdy 3. 115. 8. absol. to give ear, attend, ov 8 évdéxou Eur. Andr. 1238, cf. Plat. Legg. 834 D; zepi Tivos avd dmwoody évé, to refuse to hear a word about it, Thuc. 7. 49. III. of things, to admit, allcw of, Lat. recipere, Aoyopov evdexopeva Thuc. 4.92; peraBoriv, dddolwow évd, Plat. Phaedo 78 D; Kad’ door pious éevdexerar quantum recipit humana conditio, Id. Tim. 6g A, cf. Soph. 254 C:—c. inf., 7d vauricdv .. ob evdéxerat ee napép- “you peheraobat does not admit of being practised, Thuc. 1. 142, cf. Plat. Tim. 90 C; bow al dpyat pi) evdéxovrar dAAws exer Arist. Eth: N. 6.1, 5. 2. absol, fo be possible, & moAda évdéyerar Thuc. 4. 18; often in Arist., implying all degrees of possibility from what is necessary to what is barely possible, An. Pr. 1. 3, 3-5 I. 13, 2 sq., cf. Phys. 3. 4, 12, Pol. J. 3, 10, al.: esp. in part. évdexduevos, 7, ov, possible, éx Tay évdexopévay by all possible means, Xen. Mem. 3.9,43 af évd. Tikwpiae Lycurg. 164. 38; eis 70 év8. so far as possible, Hyperid. ap. Stob. 618. 6; and oft. in Arist.; dveAGeiv rds évd. dmopias Metaph. I. 7, 73; 70 évd. GAndés Th. 3- 5,153 Tis évd. eddacuovias Id. Pol. 7.2,173; Cans Tis évd. cpiorns Ib. 7, 8, 4, etc. ;—oft. c. inf., 7a évd, elvat kat pay evan, of contingent events, Id, G. A. 2. 1, 2,cf. Metaph. 8. 8, 16; Ta évd. GAAws exew Id. Eth, N. B+ 71 45 6.1,6; 7d ph ed, adre rpaga Ib. 6. 5,3, etc, , 3. €vdéxerat impers., it admits of being, it is possible that.., c.acc. et inf., Thue. 1. 124, 140, etc. ; elmep évedéxero (sc. ypaperv) Dem. 397-45 Kad dooy évdéxerat, Lat, quantum fieri possit, Plat. Phaedr. 271 C; els boo évB. Id. Rep. 501 C; boa &%, Arist. Rhet. 1. 1, 7, cf. G. A. 2.1, 53 wéxpes of évdéxerar Id, Rhet. 1. 1,14; Ws évdéxerar padiora Polyb. 3. 49, 1:—acc. absol., domep évdexdspevoy elvar=wanep el evié- xorro, Arist. G. A. 4.1, 29; gen. absol., évdexopéevou éxev Id. P. A. 4. 6, 13. b. c, dat. pers. it is allowed, like éfeort, Xen. Hier. 4, 9, Dem. 859. 15. évBexopévuns, Adv. of foreg,, =dcov evdévera, L vantum fieri possit, Decret. ap. Dem. 283. 5, Poly, I. 20, 4, a , Lat. gua: feeri p evbeo, fut. -8n0w, to bind in, on or to, Te &y run Od. 5. 260; eis Tt Plat. Tim. 43 A; more often, ri re Ar. Ach. 929, etc.; so in Med., &ebjoato Seay bound them fast, Theocr, 24.27; Gaonep Képapoy évbnodpevos having packed it up, Ar. Ach. 905 :-—Pass., ipd évdedeneva ty wahapn Hat. 4. 33; evbeOjva els c@pa or ty TO owpart Plat. Phaedo SLE, 92 A; évBcdenéva Gorpa fixed stars, Arist. Cael. 2. 8, oe II. metaph., Zevs pe .. arp évédnoe Bapein entangled me in it, Il. 2. 111., 9. 18, imitated by Soph. O. C. 526; so, dvayxaty évbeiv twa Hat. 1,11:—Pass,, éviedéc0ar épniors Id. 3. 19; dvayralp Id. 9.16; > évBebenevos els riati rivt, Xapiri twos Polyb, 6.17, 8., 20,11, 10; évd. évdéw — evdoryenijs. kara rds obcias i.e, in debt, Id. 13. 1, 3; evdedéo0at thy dpxty to have the government secured, Id. 9. 23, 2:—-Med. to bind to oneself, bprots roy nécw évbeiaOa Eur. Med. 163; twa els rv éavrod drdiay Polyb. 10. 34, I. ween, fut. -Senow, to be in want of, to lack, to be deficient in, Twos Eur. I. A. 41, Plat. Phaedo 74D; c. inf., tivos évd€éoper pi) ob xwpeiv; what do we lack of going? Eur. Tro. 792; Soov évdéovew .. rairda éxewv how much ¢hey lack of having, Plat. Crat. 432 D:—so in Med., dpipv- tyros évoeirat Id, Polit. 311 A, cf. Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 26, etc. ; and in Pass., oTpaparay évdendévres Ib. 6. 2, 30. 2. to be wanting or lacking, motee .., Sxws Tav cay evdenoe pndév that nothing may be wanting on your part, Hdt. 7. 18; 6 oraOpds évdef App. Mithr. 47; c. dat., evde 7. 7@ Epyy Luc. Tyrann. 10; obdtv byiv évdenoe Hdn. 2. 5; évd. tals mapayyeAias to be deficient for .., App. Civ. I. 21. 8. impers. évbel, there is need or want, there lacks, c. gen. rei, Tov toov hpiv evdet Plat. Euthyd. 292 E; woAA@y évéde air@ he had need of, was wanting in much, Xen. An. 7.1, 41; Gmavtos éviet rod mépou there is a defi- ciency of all revenue, Dem. 14. 23. €v8nXos, ov, =dAAos, visible, manifest, clear, évindka Kal caph rA€éyev Soph. Ant. 405; &5. moveity 7s Thuc. 4. 132. 2. of persons, mani- fest, discovered, known, Ar. Eq. 1277, Thuc. 4. 41., 6. 36, etc.; ri 7d brokeipevov, ove éxriv Evdndoy Arist. de An. 2. 11, 4: with a part., év- Syror Eore .. Bapuyduevor Thuc. 2. 64, cf. Plat. Phaedo 88 E, Theaet. 174 D, Dem. 578. 15. II. Adv. -Aws, Sup. -drara Thuc. 1. 139. évdnpé, Dor. évipeéw, to live at or in a place, Lys. 114, 36, C.I. 2357-6: metaph., 6 Oeds évdednunney els Thy Euty Wuxnv Charito 6, 3, cf. 2 Ep. Cor. 5. 6 and 8. évinpia, Dor. évSipta, %, a dwelling ina place, lodging, rhy v5. moet- oat Inscr. Ceia in C. I. 2356, cf. 1193, 1331, 1339- IL. in Eccl. the Incarnation. évoqyv0s, ov, =évdnuos. Opp. H. 4. 264. évonutoupyéw, = Snnoupyéew év .., Tit Plut. 2. 17 B, etc. évSnwos, ov, dwelling in a place, a native, Hes. Op. 223, Theogn. 792, etc.; év5. mapuv being here at home, Aesch. Cho. 570; évdnyudra- tos the greatest ‘stay-at-home,’ opp. to dwoSnunrhs, Thuc. 1.70. 2. of things, Bor &v5. intestine war, Aesch. Supp. 682 ; 7éAeyor Dion. H. 8. 83; 7a évinua home-affairs, opp. to ra bmepdpia, Arist. Pol. 3. 14, 13. II._of or belonging to a state or people, national, dpxat Thuc. 5.47, ap. Aeschin. 3. 34; voofyara Galen, évbiaBaAA», to calumniate in a matter, Ctes. Pers. 10, Luc. Calumn, 24. évitdyw, to pass one’s life in, f.1. in Anth. P. 5. 292, for évdidw. évSv-Gept-vepr-vyxeros, ov, Comic word, found in Ar. Pax $31, in ridicule of the Dithyrambic poets. But Dindorf’s correction is most prob., viz, €vdt-aepi-aupt-ynxérous, in-midday-airy-breezes-floating ; cf. the compd. adp:Baras (known from Aesch.), and the Adj. depoynyxels used by Ar. Nub. 336, where also the Dithyr. poets are ridiculed. év5idfw, (evd:os 1) to pass the noon, Plut. Rom. 4. éviudberos, ov, conceived and residing in the mind: évd. Ad-yos a con- ception, thought, opp. to mpoopicds A. (an expression, word), Philo 2. 154, etc., cf. Wyttenb. Plut. 2. 44 A: hence, applied to the Divine Logos by Eccl. :—Adyv., évdiadérms A€-yerv to speak from the heart, to use no vain words, Hermog. II. BiBriov évd, a canonical book, =év TH Siabhep, Eccl. €v5iddnicos, ov, =foreg. 11, BiBAos Origen. 2. 328. évdiadpumropat, Pass. to play the prude towards, rwt Theocr. 3. 36. évitavrdopat, Ion. —eopar, Dep. :—o live or dwell in a place, év 7@ ip Hat. 8. 41; mapa rit Thue. 2. 43; olxia jdiorn évd.arracGar Xen. Mem. 3. 8,85 % Sidvoa évd. jyiv Plut. 2. 608 E. évbiaitnpa, 76, a dwelling-place, Dion. H.1. 37, Plut. 2. 968 B. évoidkerpar, Pass. to be set in a thing, rwv1 Joseph. A, J. 12. 2, 9. évovakerpivas, Adv. =éviiadérws, Hermog., Eust. Opusc. 261. 49. évbtaxoopéw, = draxocpéw év .. , Ocell. Luc. 3. 1. évtahAdoow, Att.—rrw, to alter, Arist. Physiogn. I, 14. évitapévw, to remain in a place, Dion. H. 8. 62. évitampém, to be distinguished in, twit Diod. Excerpt! $33. 49. évSudoxevos Sipynots, in Rhet, an elaborate, highly wrought statement, Hermog. Adv.-ws, Eust. 177. 31. évbi:acrre{popat, Pass. to be dispersed in, rit Arist. Fr. 209. évStatécow, to draw up in, x@pos émirnderos eviiaragar (sc. Tov orpa- rév) Hdt. 7. 59. évdtaTpiBw, fut. yw: pf. -rérpipa Arist. Meteor. 2. 3, 7. To spend or consume in doing, xpévov Ar. Ran. 714, Thuc. 2, 18, 85. EL. absol. (sub. ypdévor or Biov), to spend time in a place, adré@c Dem. 893. 28; 77 xupa Polyb. 3. 88, 1, etc.; év rémm Diod. 5.44; dvOpwmianors among them, Luc. Alex, 33. 2. to waste time by staying in a place, linger there, Thuc. 5.12., 7. 81, Plat. Gorg. 484 C, ete. 3. to continue in the practice of a thing, Tots 70a01.. rots dpxators Ar. Eccl. 585, cf. Plat. Rep. 487D; éav évdtarpiBew rh dw ev Tu to let one’s eyes linger on it, Xen. Cyr. 5. 1,16; évB. Adyors wal Epyors to linger fondly on them, Luc. Nigr. 7, cf. Plut. Pericl. 2; ard 7 Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10.17; mept tuvos Arist. Metaph. 1. 8,16; mepi ze Ath. 623 E: absol. to dwell upon a point (in speaking), Aeschin. 82. 33, cf. Arist. Pol. I. 11, 5. Setitedbes iar: one must dwell upon, rivi Luc. de Hist. Conser. 6. évBtarpurtucds, 4, dv, fondly dwelling on, rw M. Anton. 1. 16. évitapbet pw, fut. ep, to destroy in, Plut. 2. 658 C: to destroy a child in the womb, Hipp. 254. 6. évSiaxepdto, fut. dow, to winter in a place, Strabo Ioo. évBtdw, (évdios) to stay in the open air; generally, to linger in or haunt a place, c. dat., Baros Anth. P. 5.292; évOa 8 dip .. evordacne 4 475 Theocr. 22. 44; metaph., Supacty éAms éviider Anth. P. 5. 270; evd, és.., Ib. 4. 4:—absol, in Med., derives évdudovrar h. Hom. 32. 6; cf. Ruhnk. Ep. Cr. 79. II. trans., motpéves pda évdidagxov shepherds (perh.) drove their sheep afield, Theocr. 16. 38. evbibtcKw, to put on, Td 1 LXX (2 Regg. 1. 24), Ev. Marc. 15. 17 (Lachm.) :—Med. ¢o put on oneself, Ev. Luc. 8. 217, etc. évbidwpr, fut. -dvow, to give in: I. to give into one’s hands, give up to, rid or tt Tie Eur. Cycl. 510, etc.; éavrdy ru Eur, Tro. 687, Ar. Pl. 781, Plat. Rep. 561B; iva rois modepios Plat. Rep. 56 A; &. wédw to surrender a city, esp. by treachery, Thuc. 4. 66, 76, 89, Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 14, etc. ; so, évb. rots A@nvatos Ta mpdypara Thuc, 7. 48, cf. 2. 65 :—Pass., r@ ‘Immoxpare 7a év Trois Bowrois évediboro Id. 4. 89; impers., obdév évedidoTo dd Tay évdoy no sign of surrender was made .., Arr. An. I. 20, 6. 2. to put in, apply to, dppace névrpov Eur. H. F. 881. II. like wapéxw, Lat. praebere, to give, lend, afford, évd:divar rivt xépa to lend him a hand, Eur. I. A. 617; évd. dpopphy to give an occasion, Id. Hec. 1239; AaBay Tu Ar. Eq. 847; mpdpaciv tun Thuc, 2.87; xatpdv Dem. 45.8; évd. iroyiay ds... to give ground for suspicion that .. , Plat. Legg. 887 E :—to cause, excite, AdyE onagpov evisbotca Thuc. 2. 49 ; 766ny, diay Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2.1, Cur. M. Ac. I. 10. III. to shew, exhibit, Sucatoovyny nat motiTnra évébwxav, dxape Bt ovdéy Hdt. 7. 52; padraxdy éviddvac obdév to shew no sign of flagging, Id. 3. 51, 105, Ar. Pl. 488; qv & évbidm re paddaxdy Eur. Hel. 508; so, iva cot ndtv évBoinv mupdv Id. Andr. 225, IV. to allow, grant, concede, Adyov Ib. 965 ; év5. obbév to make no concession, Thuc, 2.12; évd. rt to make a conces- sion, Ib. 18; év8. émogovody Id. 4. 37; wav malfwy ris co evd@ ériodv Plat. Gorg. 499 B. V. intr. 4o give in, allow, permit, baov évé- dwxay ai poipar Hdt. 1.91: to give in, give way, give up, ov mpédrEpov évédocay 7) .. Thuc, 2. 65 fin.; ds eidov abtods évdévras Ib. 81: to flag, fail, Arist. G. A. 2.7, 19; 70 évdtdodv remissness, Luc. Anach. 26:—évd. rivi to yield to.. otxrw Thuc. 3. 37; adAnAas Id. 4. 443 youn twos Dem. 1444. 2; mpés or ets Te Plut. Sull. 28, etc.; évd. mpos Tas dkadvoes to shew an inclination towards.., Plut. Flamin. 9- 2. of ailments, ¢o remit, Hipp. Progn. 43, v. Foés. Oecon. ;—in Soph. O. C. 1075, Elmsl. restored évéweetv from the Schol. 3. of trees and other elastic things, fo give way, yield, Arist. P. A. 3.3, 4, Probl, 25.1, al.; of trees, to be flexible, Theophr. H. P. §. 6,1; of the flanks and eyes, to fall in, Arist. G. A. 2. 7,19; Probl. 4. 2,1; of a funeral- pile, Theophr. H. P. 9. 3, 3; épeiopara évd, the props give way, Polyb. 5. 100, 5. VI. of a river, to disembogue, empty itself, Hdt. 3.117; cf. €xdiSap. VII. to give the key-note of a tune, to strike 7p, 7d opxnoriov pédos Arist. Fr. 541: absol., #yefro.. eis dvnp, ds évedibou gave the key-note, Dion. H. 7. 72, cf. Luc, Rhet. Praec.13, Ath. 520 D:— metaph. to give the key-note, of a speech, Arist. Rhet. 3.14, 1: cf, évSdatpos. éviuyKw, fo pervade, as the essence pervades the individuals of a class,’ ai évdineovoa év rots kara pépos xowdrnres Sext. Emp. M. 8. 41. éviunpepeto, to pass the day in, Theophr. Char. 8. : évbinpt, to chase, pursue, only in 3 pl. impf. évdiecar for évediecay, Il. 18, 584; v. sub dia, évBtkos, ov, (Sinn) : I. of pas according to right, right, just, legitimate, Pind. P. 5.138, Trag.; -yoos évd. Aesch. Cho. 330; dvetin Id, Eum. 135 ; Aéxrpa Epigr. Gr. 212 :—710 pi) ’vbucov =7d ddixov, Soph. O. T. 682; 7a aévrov éviiedrara Id. O. C. 9255 pi) Aéyor ye ToOUv- dio not speaking truth, Id. O. T. 1158. 2. legal, &vd.ucos hepa a court-day, Lat. dies fastus, Poll. 8. 25. II. of persons, righteous, just, upright, =8ixaos, Aesch, Eum. 699, Soph. Ant. 208, Plat. Legg. 915D; pds évdixors ppeciv Aesch. Ag. 996; Sijuos evducwraros Id, Fr, 198; &d. réAts a well-governed state, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 292 B; c. dat., évd. yapous favourable to them, Aesch. Supp. 81. 2. possessed of right, tis évdiewrepos; who has a better right, or more reason? Id, Theb. 673. III. Adv. -nws, right, with justice, fairly, Id. Pr. 63, Cho. 462, etc.; dp@as évd. 7’ émavvpos Id. Theb. 405; Sup. -wrara, Plat. Tim. 85 B. 2. truly, indeed, Eur. Med, 1231. 3 justly, naturally, as one has a right to expect, Aesch. Theb. 607, Soph. O. T. 135, Eur. Andr. 920. évdiva, 7d, the entrails, Lat. intestina, only in Il. 23. 806, drmdérepds xe POjow .., pavon & évbivev,—speaking of a sham fight. But as this sense far more suits a fight in earnest, the Ancients explained it of all parts inside the armour, Perhaps Heyne is right in attributing the line to some ‘truculent’ interpolator. (From éy, évdor, cf. corey évStvevw, =sq., Longus I. 23. évBtvéw, to roll inwards, évbeivnyéva Oupara Hipp. 1162 C. to revolve, go about, évdwedvre, Dor. for évdivodot, Theocr. 15. 82. évitoAKos, ov, (€\«w) attractive, Philo 1. 517 (al. evd-). ; évBtov, 74, a place of sojourn in the open air, évira wérpys, of a grotto, Opp. H. 4.371; evdroy edppocvns seat of joyousness, epith. of a wine-cask, Anth. P.11.63; oot 8 .. évdiov 7 Werdvn Epigr. Gr. 473. 6.—Only post. évBios, ov, (from év, Ards, cf, Lat. sub divo, sub Fove):—at midday, at noon, éviios 8 6 yépav HAP Od. 4. 450; Evdcoe ixdpeoOa Il. 11. 7253 motpévas évdiovs mepudaypévos Theocr. 16. 95; evdiov jyap env Ap. Rh. 4. 1312; with a Prep., és évdioy noon, Id. 1.603 ; mort rdvdtoy Call. Cer. 39. II. in the open air, Arat. 498, 9543 ef. Anth. P. 7. 703., 9. 71:, hence évSatw. —[¢ only in late Ep., v. supr.] évoidw, pf. évSediwxa, seems to mean fo be finished, Tab. Heracl. in C. 1.4774. 121. évdidpros, ov, (Bi@pos) sitting on the same seat, éxa8e(Spny evdidpros air Xen. An, 7. 2, 33, cf. 38. évBo-yevns, és, born in the house, = oleoyevys, Lat. verna, Inscrr. Delph. in C. 1. 1699, 1703, Curt. 11, 12, 13, 33, 34: cf. olxoyeryjs. IL. 476 €v5o0ev, Adv. from within, Lat. intrinsecuis, Od. 20. 101, Trag., etc. ; cf. évroaGe:—c. gen., vdobev aréyns from inside the tent, Soph. Aj. 741. 2, like otxoGev 3, of oneself, by one’s own doing, Aesch. Theb. 1943 ob7’ évdobev obre Ovpabev neither of oneself nor by help of others, Soph, Tr. ro21. II. within, c. gen., avdAjs Il. 6. 247; oixov Hes, Op. 521. 2. absol., Oupdy réprera évdo0ev Pind. P. 2.136; so in Hdt, 2. 68, and freq. in Att., of évdo0ev the domestics, Ar. Pl. 228, 964; but also, the people inside the city, Thuc. 2. 79, etc.; Td evdobev Id. 8. 71; rdvdo0ev Plat, Phaedr. 279 B. év600., Adv. within, at home, Lat. intus, Od. 5.58; 7a 7 évd0h Kal 7a OUpnpw 22. 220; od 8 evdSobr Oupodry dpvges Il. 1. 243, etc.; rare in Att., 30% pév ear Hpwraydpas Eupol. KoA. 10, cf. Posidipp. Svvzp. 2, 2. c. gen., éeApévor évd. mipyow Il. 18. 287 ; év5. vnoov Hes. Fr. 37. €vSou (not évdo?, Hdn. ap. Dind. Gr. x. p- 7), Aeol. and Dor. for évd06e, Theocr. 15. 1, 55, 773 cf, otxot, évBoudLa, aor. évedoiaca App. Mithr. 33, Luc.: (v. sub fin.). To be in doubt, at a loss, c. inf., Stay .. évdoa(n xwpiov mpocdaBeiy Thue. 1. 36: absol., of évBordCovres the waverers, Id. 6.91; pndty évdordcas Luc. Hermot. 25; év}. 77 yep Plut. Sull. g; dmép twos Id. Cato Mi. 17; mept Tivos Luc. Phal. 11. 2; évd. ef .. , Dion. H. 4, 58 :—Pass., of things, to be matter of doubt, éviovac0fjvat Thuc, 1.122; évdovaCdpevoy Dion. H. 7. 593 évedord¢ero 5 aérepov .., Luc. V. H. 2. 21:—aor. 1 also in act. sense, Parthen. 9. 4. (Formed from éy 80:9 eipi; for no Verb Borda to doubt is found in good writers.) évBordoupos, ov, doubtful, Luc. Scyth. 11, Adv., évSo.acipws éxeuw mept Tivos Joseph. A. J. 16. 10, 4. évSoiacts, }, doubt, uncertainty, Hermog.; évSovacpos, 6, Eust. 146.18. €vSouacrys, 0, 6, a doubler, Philo 2. 582. évSouarrixés, 7, dv, dubious, Hermog. Adv. —K@s, Eust. 1080. 69. évSoracrés, 7, dv, doubtful, ambiguous, Hipp. Prorh. 100. Adv. —rés, doubtfully, mpoipus, ovd ere évd. Hut. 7.174, cf. Thuc, 8.87; évd. dxpoacba dubia fide, Id. 6. 10, &vBopa, 76, (€vdidapu) a diminution of fever, Galen. évSo-paxns [a], ov, 6, Dor. -xas, fighting or bold at-home, epith. of a dunghill-cock, Pind. O. 12. 20. évSouevia or évSupevia, 7, (€vdov) Macedon. word, household stock, plenishing, Lat. supellex, Polyb. 4. 72, 1., 5. 81, 3. évSopew, to build in, évde5dunrac Hipp. 269. 17; wioves évdeSounpévor Joseph. A. J. 15. 11, 5. &vBopyors, ews, 1, a thing built in, structure, red teixovs Apocal. 21. 18 :—a mole or breakwater, Lat. moles, Joseph. A. J. 15. 9, 6. évSoptixéw, to Turk in the recesses of a house, Schol. Ar. Vesp. 970: to lie hidden, Geop. 2. 3, 9, Phot. II. trans. to keep concealed, Eust. Opusc. 12. 52. évSopiixt, Adv. in secret, Hesych. _ €56-piXos, ov, in the inmost part of a dwelling, lurking within, Soph. Ph. 1457, Call. Cer. 88, Nonn. D. 8. 329. évSov, Adv.: (év: cf. old Lat. endo- or indu- in compos.) :—in, within, in the house, at home, Lat. intus, Hom., etc.; ppéves évdov eioat, xpadiy vor bAaxret, etc., Hom.; ravbov as Ady. in one’s heart, Eur. Or. 1514: —oi éviov those of the house, the family, esp. the domestics, Soph. El. 155, Tr. 677, Plat. Symp. 213C: 1a évdov family matters, household affairs, Ib. 334, etc.; but also=oi évdoy, Eur. Hec, 1017 ; of €vdov kajpyevor the senate, Andoc. 6, 42. ' 2c. gen, Ais évbov, Zepiporo éviov in the house of Zeus, of Zephyrus, Il. 20, 13., 23. 200; pa) kevOer’ evdov xapdias Aesch. Cho. 102; oxnvijs évbov Soph. Aj. 218; ~yijs évdov Plat. Prot. 320 D. b. éviov éavrod dy master of oneself, self-possessed, Antipho 134. 373 so, cv ppevav ovt évdov dy Eur. Heracl. 709; and absol., €vdov -yevod Aesch. Cho. 233: cf. éxrds. 3. Pind. uses it c. ‘dat. as strengthd. for év, N. 3. 93., 7- 65, also Eur. Fr. 202. 4. below, in a book, évdov -yéypamras Diog. L. 5. 43 cf. évdorépa. 5. with Verbs of Motion, =eiow, Ael. N. A. 9. 61, etc., v. Lob. Phryn. 128. — 6. in one’s heart, évdov dyadAdpevos Epigr. Gr. 904. ah. Comp. évborépw, etc., q. v. évBokdfopar, Pass. to be glorified, Lxx (Exod. 33.16, al.). éy-Bokahoyéw, to speak for fame, Diog.L. 6.47: to glorify in a thing, Eccl. €vSokos, ov, (Sdfa) held in esteem or honour, of high repute, opp. to Gogos, mpds Tivos by one, Xen. Occ. 6,10; évd. mornral Id. Mem. 1. 2, 66; év5. ets 7 famous in a thing, Ib. 3. 5, 1; of EvBogor men of note or rank, Plat. Soph. 223 B; ddtyor eal évd. dvdpes Arist. Eth. N. 1. 8, 7, etc. 2. of things, notable, mpdypara Aeschin. 86. 42; glorious, taph Plut. 2. 99 F :—Adv. —fws, hence Sup., érdoférara ¢Bovdeicacbe Dem, 246. 25; and often in Inscrr. IL. resting on opinion, probable, generally admitted, évdoga 7d Soxobvra nacw 7) Tots wAciarots 3) Tots Gopois, as opp. to what is necessarily true (ra mpHTa Kal dAn67}), Arist. Top. 1.1, 3, cf. Eth, N. 7. 1,5, Rhet. 1. 1, 11, al.:—Adv., évidgws avddoyifecOa according to general opinion, opp. to dAqés, Id. Soph, Elench. 17, I. évSokbrs, %), distinction, glory, Hesych.,Eust.1279.44, Lob.Phryn. 351. évddo0u, 74, (évdov) = évréchia, LXX. f évSdouzov (sub. xpotopa), 76, that which gives the key to the tune, in music, the key-note, key to the sense (cf. évdtdwpu vil), Arist. Rhet. 3.14, 1, Mund. 6, 20, cf. Poll. 1. 210, Hesych., Wytt. Plut. 73 B. 2: metaph. the key-note of a speech, much like mpootptov, Arist. Rhet. 3.14.4, Pol. 8.5, 1; év5. rwt mapéxety to give one a hint, Plut. A}. II. yielding, giving way, Lat. facilis, like évdoruds, évddoipa A€yetv Dion. H. de Rhet. 8.15; [oiria] évd. rh wéper Plut. 2.131 C. vBoots, ews, 7), a striking of the key-note (évdéatpov), Arist. Mund. 6, 16, cf. Suid. s. y. II, a giving in, alleviation, remission, Hipp. 121, 8, Polyb. 4 : Fegetr évdobev — evdvw. évBorépw, Adv. Comp. of évbov, more within, quite within, v5. cvaréd= Activ éavrdév to draw himself within his means, Plut. Cato Ma. 5; évd. Ths xpelas mpocdyeoOat to unite into greater intimacy, Id. Arat. 433 within (a certain number), Id. 2. gog B:—c. gen., &v Tots évd. Tod Udaros Arist, Plant. 2. 4, 7; é6. reixous Joseph. A. J. 15. 11, 3;— farther on, below, in a book, Diog. L. Lo. 43, etc. 2. Sup. évdo- Tatw, quite within, Luc, Amor. 16, Plut. 2. 918 F. II. Comp. Adj. évdézrepos, Lat. interior, Arist. Plant. 2. 4, 5.,6, 7: Sup. évdéraros, Lat. intimus, Hesych., Scholl. évSortkds, 7), dv, disposed to yield, benign: Adv.—«@s, Chrysipp.ap. Galen, évSouTréw, fut. now, to fall in with a heavy sound, péoow évbovnnca Od. 12. 443; dvrAw & évbotmnoe mecovoa 15. 479. évouxta, 7, (Exw) = evdopevia, Polyb. 18. 18, 6. évSoxetov, 76, =doxelov, Hipp. Ep. 1289.18; prob. §. 1. for éx5-. évbpopéw, to run into, r1vt Maxim. 7. xatapx. 282. II. to fall upon, Twos Anth, P. 7. 395. évipopy, 7), an air played during a wrestling-maich, Plut. 2.1140D. évSpopts, tos, 7, (Spdpuos) a sort of strong high shoe, worn by Artemis in the chase, Call. Dian. 16 (ubi v. Spanh,), Anth. Plan. 253; ef. Miller Archaol. d. Kunst § 363. 6. II. as Adj. used in the foot-race, doni- Ses Inscr. Delph. in Curt, 40:—as Subst. a thick wrapper worn by runners, after exercise, for fear of cold, Juven. 3. 102., 6.145, Martial. 4. 19. €v8pojos, or, running on, hastening, C, 1. (add.) 2113 ¢. évSpomos, ov, bedewed, dewy, Aesch. Ag. 12, Strabo 260. évSptiov, 74, (Spis) the oaken peg or pin by which the yoke is fixed to the pole (iaroBoevs), being secured by a leathern strap (uéoaBov), Hes. Op. 467. évbvdlo, évSvacpés, évivacrés, f. 1. for évdor—, évBixéws, Adv. carefully, sedulously, often in Hom. (esp. in Qd.), mostly with Verbs expressing kind or friendly actions, as mewmew Od. 14. 3373 Gmonépurewy 10. 65; dpapreiv Il. 24. 4385 gudciy Od. 7. 256; Aovew kat xplev 10. 450; mapéxev Bpaiciv te moow TE 15. 491; Tie 15. 5433 tpéperv Il. 23. 90: so, évd. déxecOar Pind. P. 5. 114; pvecOa Theocr. 25. 25, etc.; tpépey Epigr. Gr. 617. II. évivcéws éobiew to eat greedily, Od. 14. 109; év5. cxiocat, of a lion tearing his prey, Hes, Sc. 427.—No Adj. évdvejs occurs: but évduxés, as Adv., is the prob. l. in Ap. Rh. 1. 883; used for ovveyés, Nic. Th. 263, 283. (Curt. refers év-5uxéws to the same Root as d-deur7s, i.e. to ~AOK, Soxéw, and takes the true sense to be reputably, creditably ;— év5dgs indeed is one interpr. given in E, M., etc.) évdtpa, 75, (@vddw) a garment, Plut. Sol. 8, Lxx, N. T. év8updria, 7d, music for dancing, at Argos, Plut. 2.1134 C. évupevia, v. évdopevia, evSuvapos, ov, mighty, Themist. 446. 25, Byz.; Lob. Phryn, 605. évdiviipsw, fo strengthen, 1 Tim. 1. 12, al.: Pass., Rom. 4. 20, al. evbivarrevw, to have power or exercise dominion in or among, TiGk Aesch. Pers. 691 ; mapa rit Plat. Rep. 516 D; év8. dy 7@ ohpars Hipp. Vet. Med. 17. II. to procure by one’s authority, évivvacreve "Ena- pewdvbas Bore ph puyadedoa Tods kpariorous Xen. Hell. 7.1, 42. évbuve [0], v. sub évdtw. €v-Suo, Ady. one-two, i.e. quickly, Menand. Epes. 4. evBiiors, ews, 9, (évddw) an entering in, entry, Plat.Crat. 419C. a putting on, 1 Petr. 3.3: a dressing, dress, Ath. 550 D, Lxx. éviuarixéw, to be unlucky in or with .. , Eur. Bacch. 508, Phoen, 727; 7h mode Plut. Comp, Perici. c. Fab. 3. evdurhp, Tpos, 6, for putting on, némdos Soph. Tr. 674. évdiriptos, a, ov, (évddw) =foreg., xesd@v Soph. Fr. 473. evBtiros, dy, put on, écOquara Aesch, Eum. 1028; orén Eur. Tro. 258; oroAat Antiph. ’Avret. 3. 2. &vbvror (sc. €oOnua), 76, a garment, dress, Simon. (?) 191 ; év5. veBpidos a dress of fawn-skin, Eur. Bacch. 111, 138; Smdwv évburd Id. I. A. 1073 :—metaph., év3. capxds the skin, Id. Bacch. 746; rotvydvroy THs Kowlas Alex. “Igoor. 1. 14. II. clad in, covered, oréupacw Eur. Ion 224, évSuw and évdtvw, with Med, évOtopa, fut. -Sdcopat, aor. 1 -edvcd- Pyy; with aor 2 act. -é5uv: I. c. aec. rei vel loci, to go into, : 1. of clothes, to put on, Lat. induere sibi, évduve xirova Il. 2.42; evbuve mept atn9ecot xirava Io. 21; xray’ evddoa 5. 736; Ocopnna évbuvouor Hdt. 3. 98; évdtyres rd BtAa Id. 1. 172, cf 423 memdov évdus Soph. Tr. 759, etc. ; Acovriy évbeduea Plat. Crat. 411 A; —so in Med., induere sibi, év 8 abrds titcaTo yadxéy Il. 2. 578., I. 16; évavecOac brAa Hat. 7. 218; evdicerar oroAnv Eur. Bacch. 853 ; in pf. evdebvua, to wear, KOGvas Auvéovs Hadt. 2. 81, cf. 7. 64., 9. 223 —metaph., évovecOar TéAunua Ar. Eccl. 288; also, Tov Tapxvviov év- BvecOar to put on (or assume) the person of T., Dion. H.11. 5; Tov kawoy dvOpamov Ep. Eph. 4. 24:—Pass, to be clothed in, have on, éo0jra evbedvobat Hipp. 379. 36, cf. Menand, ‘Pam. 9. 2. to enter, to press into, c. acc., év 8€ of Frop div’ dxos drAnrov Il. 19. 3675 dxovrioriv éviiceat thou wilt enter the contest, (where Aristarch. égdvceat), 23. 622; so, Ti Tod Cepatrov [yuxiy] miOnkov évdvopévnv Plat. Rep. 620 C; civoua evdveral rim Id. Legg. 642 B, cf. Theaet. 160 B:—also, évd, els... Ar. Vesp. 1020, Thuc. 3. 6, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 23; els THv émpérXccay évddvat to enter upon it, undertake it, Xen. Cyr. 8.1, i2 :—also c dat., év5. rais Yuyais ray dxovdyrwy to insinuate one- self into their minds, Ib. 2.1, 13; tots ravpus rdv ofatpoy évdtecBat Plut. 2. 55 E, etc.; also in pf. pass., puouats évdedupévos airias Id. 435 F :—absol. ¢o enter, Hdt. 2.121, 2, Plut. 2. 38 A, etc. Ii. Causal in pres. évddew, fut. -dtow, aor. 1 —€5vaa :—Lat. induere alicui, fo put on another, to clothe in, c. dupl. acc., iy éfapid evdtcw oe Ar. Lys. 1021; ds éue xpoxdevr’ eyébucey Id. Thesm. 1044, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. 3: 3 2. to clothe, évdvovar THyadwe, Hdt, 2.42; dv ..wevgra II. : , , , evea lw — eveTirkymTomat, yupvov &iions Philem. Incert. 83. Cf. karadvw 11: late form in the same sense. évedlw, (éveds) to strike dumb, astonish, A. B. 251, E. M. 340. 50. évedipifw, =éapitw év..,c. dat., Plut. 2. 770 B. -€veyyus, in Q. Sm. 4. 326 prob. f. 1. for éyyds, Lob. Phryn. 48. évéykat, éveyKetv, v. sub pépw. éveytyoa, irreg. aor. of éyyudw. évéSpa, 7), a sitting in: a lying in wait, an ambush, Lat. insidiae, Thuc. 5. 50, etc.; év. moreioOar Id. 3.90; KatacKeva tev Xen. Eq. Mag. 4, 10; TiWévar Diod. 19. 108; Oéc0ar Plut. Rom. 23; eis év. éuminrew Xen. Cyr. 8.5, 14; &« THs ev. dvioracOat Ib. 5. 4,43; O€ew ee THs ev. Thue 4. 67. b. the men laid in ambush, Thy év. tanorava Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 37. 2. metaph. treachery, Plat. Legg. 908 D; évédpas évexa Antiph. Kvow6. 1. 7; per’ évéSpas App. Civ. 1. 30. II. position, vapOnxawv Hipp. 764, 768. ITI. sediment, Soph. Fr. 644. évedpalw, to put or place in or on, Galen. 3. 205, Theoph. Protosp. évedpela, 7, =évédpa, Epich. in A. B. 95. éveSpeutis, ov, 6, an ensnarer, plotter, Lxx (1 Sam. 22. 8), Hesych. éveSpeuteKos, 7), Ov, fit for ambush, treacherous, Strab. 154, Philo 2. 269. éve5pevw, impf. évpipevov Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 39: fut. évedpevow Plut. Ant. 63: aor. évndpevoa Thuc. 4. 67, Xen. An. 4.1, 22, etc.:—Med., fut. —copat (in pass. sense), Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 18:—Pass., aor. évndpevOnv Dem, 836.43: pf. &v#dpevyar Luc. Calumn. 23: (évédpa). To lie in wait for, Lat. insidiari, rva Dem. 1011. 3:—Pass. to be caught in an ambush, to be ensnared, of animals, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 5: metaph., twd vopov Tods tworiras évedpevecOar Lys. 96.13; el .. wy) TO xpdvy evy- SpevOnuev if we had not been deceived by time, Dem. 836. 13. 2. absol. to lay or set an ambush, és Tov ’Evuddwoy Thuc. 4. 67, cf. Xen. An. 1.4, 2., 4.1, 22, etc.;—but in many places it is easy to supply an acc. II. to place in ambush, App. Civ. 2. 76, Joseph. A. J. 5. 8, 11:—Med., absol., to se¢ an ambush, Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 15 :—Pass. to lie in ambush in a place, often in Xen. , évedpov, 76, = evédpa 11, Lxx (Jos. 8. 2, 12), al. éveBpos, ov, (€5pa) an inmate, inhabitant, Soph. Ph. 153. évecioaro, v. sub éviCw, évefopar, fut. -eS0d pac, Dep. fo sit in or upon, Arist. Probl. 5.11. iI. to have one’s seat or abode in, c. acc. loci, 765’ év. oréyos Aesch. Pers. 140% cf. evita. évebilw, to accustom to a thing, éve@opévos twit Hdn. 6. 6, 2. évetSov, aor. 2 with no pres. in use, évopdw being used instead, fo see or observe in, Te év tut Thuc, 1. 95; Te Tee Xen. An. 7. 7, 45: absol. to observe, remark, Soph. Ph. 854; c. part., wAéoy évelSov axfhoovres Thuc. 7. 36; c. inf., & dpwyd éveiSoper . . €oecOar Ib. 62. év-etSo-popéw, of a sculptor, fo work into shape, mérpov éveidopopav Anth, P. 12.57, cf. Griife p. 56. éveikar, inf. of #verxa, Ion. for Rveyra, aor. I of Pépw, Hom. (who also uses éverkas, évene, évereay for hveas, etc.), and Hdt. There is no pres. éveixw, except in the form ovvevelxopat (q. v.):—the imperat. évexe (Od. 21.178), and inf. évewépey (Il. 19. 194) are Ep. forms of the aor. 1, like otve, d¢épev. évexovilw, fo introduce a form, Stob. Ecl. 1. 334:—Med. to have bodied forth ox portrayed in a thing, rods éavrod Adyous Tots érépaw éverxovi- (eoOa Plut. 2. 40D. Cf, eixovifw. évethéw, =éveiAAw, to wrap in, Twa Kaxotot Q. Sm. 14. 294, in Med. : —Pass. to be enwrapt, év Th yp Arist. Mund. 4, 32; 7H Aeovrp Philostr. 759. II. Pass., also, to be engaged in or with, rots ToAepios Plut. Artox. 11; dwAos Id. Brut. 45. éveiAnpa, 76, a wrapper or cover, Joseph. A. J. 12. 2, II. éveAwSéopat, Pass. to wailow in, wopvelp Joseph. B. J. 4. 9, 10, with v.\. dved., cf. Synes. Ep. 150. éveXioow, Ion. for tvedioow. évelAAw, to wrap up in, mnddv ev Taprois kaddpou Thuc. 2. 76. @v-eipev, Ep. 1 pl. of @vecpe, Il. 5.477: but eveev, 3 sing. aor. 1 of véyo. évetpr, (cpl, sum), fut. évécopat, to be in, mostly used in 3 sing. éveort, dipyupos dong éveore Od. 10.45; €vt (for veo) endea Oup@ 11.18.53; mM Tot ppéves ovd" HBarai Od. 21.288; e&.. xdAreov .. foe Hrop vein Il. 2. 590; so, et re evéor (sc. Tois xpyopotor) Hdt. 7.6; vovs bpiv eveore Soph. El. 1328; rots Adyos év. Kepdos Ib. 370; WOAX €v. 7O yhpa «axa Ar. Vesp. 441, etc. -—ordow tvéceaOat Th yvapn Thuc. 2. 20; «& oot munvirns Evert’ év TO Tpémw Ar.Eq. 1132; Evy dp .. Kav olive Ad-yos Amphis Incert. 5; d-ya0ds Baeds éveotw ev 7G mardi Diphil. Sévrp. 1:— also, éy rive €veort (or €) Hdt. 7.112, Aesch, Pr. 382, etc. b. c. dat. pl. o be among, Theogn. 1135, Hdt. 3. 81, al. ©. with an Ady. loci, olxor éveort yéos Il. 24. 240; éveoriv abréht is in this very place, Ar. Eq. 119; €vradda Id. Nub. 211, etc. 2. absol. to be there, be in abundance, Od. 9.164; 005° dvdpes vndv ex (for Everat) réxroves Ib. 126; kode vt ordois Aesch., Pers, 738, cf. Ag. 78; olrov ob évéyros as there was no corn there, Thuc. 4. 8; 7a évovra dya0a the good that is therein, Ib. 20; iepdv trav évévrow the temples that were in the place, Ib. 97; dpédrcd ris evijy Id. 5. 38; méAcpos ob évfy Plat. Polit. 271 E: —also, to be mentioned in a document, Thuc. 8. 43, cf. Ar. Av. 974 :— Evecrat xpévos time will be necessary, Thuc. 1. 80. II. to be évisdvonw is a possible, apvnots ob év, dv dmorope’s Soph. O. T. 5783 TaVvS apynas ove ey, por Id, El. 527, of. Aesch. Pers. 738; tis 3 eveeré por Adyos; what plea is possible for me [to make]? Eur. I. T. 998; ob évijv mpd- acts Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 253 ob evéorat abrG Adyos odde efs Dem. 527. 12; €f 7 dAdo evi Id. 291. 253 evodons obdeuids Err dmoorpop7s Id. 702. 26. 2. impers. (like feort, éyyiyverat), c. dat. pers. et inf. its in one’s power, one may or can, Soph. Tr. 296, Ant. 213, etc. ; 477 todd y vest elmeiv Dem. 848. 28, etc.; “ode eveort ‘tis not possible, Anaxil. Neorr.1.7; Herm. takes in this sense Soph. Ph.648, 8 ya) vews ye Tis €uas ve which it is not possible [to get] from my ship, (but perh. ém should be restored). b. é is often used alone in this sense, even in Prose, & rts xat év Hpiv mais Plat. Phaedo 77 E; év ols 7d dv ote &x Id. Parm. 158 C; & 8 & Aéyerw Dem. 19.6; & dpynv y & pou Id. 527.17, cf. 42. 20; ws &% Hdtora in the pleasantest way possible, Xen. Mem. 4.5, 9, cf. 3. 8, 4. 3. part. évdy, used absol. (like é¢dv), évav abrois cw (ec0a since it was in them, was possible for them, Hdn. 8. 3, cf. Luc. Anach. g. 4. rd évévra. all things possible, 7d wAH00s Trav evévTaw eimeiy the possible materials for a speech, Isocr. 104 D, cf. 229 E; Tov evévrow ..év 7@ mpdypart Plat. Phaedr. 235 B; trav pavopevew xat évovrew 7a “pariata édéoba Dem, 292.2; &e Tav evdvrov as well as one can under the circumstances, Id. 312. 20; so, wav 7d évdv Exdéyov Thuc. 4. 59 :—but also, b. ra évévra property, Plat. Rep. 488 C. éveipyw, aor. éveipta, to shut up in, 7G tadpw Phalar. Ep. 50. éveipw, to entwine, enwreath, rérrvyas tats Opigi Ael. V. H. 4. 22:— Pass., dvOepixav éveppévow mept cxolvous Hat. 4. 190. II. to insert, maxwy peragd twav Hipp. Art. 833; xéipas els opalpas Dionys. 3 Bek. €vexa or €vexev (the latter rare in Trag., Eur. Med. 999, 1086, 1114, and much less freq. in Prose), Ion. and poét. eivexa or éivexev: tvexe, Inscrr. Lacon, in C, I. 1347, 1404, Cyzic. ib. 3655.18: Aeol. évvexa, Ib. 2183; cf. o#vexa:—Prep. with gen., mostly after its case; but also before, as in Il, 1. 94., 2. 377, and in later writers. When it follows its case, it is sometimes separated from it by several words, as in Hdt. 1. go, Ar. Eccl. 105, 106, 1. on account of, for the sake of, because of, for, Lat. gratia, causa, Tpwov modw .. , Rs elven’ di@dopev Kaka TOAAA Il. 14. 89, etc.; UBpios elvexa rijode 1. 214; Tovd’ evexa for this, Tb. 110; dv &y. wherefore, 20. 21; Tivos év.; Aesch. Fr. 180; Tod év. Plat. Prot. 310 B (cf. obvexa); tay 5 eivexa, Skws.., or iva .. , Hat. 8. 35, 40; kohakevery evexa yucdod Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 17; 5d vdcov vera byelas by reason of sickness for the sake of health, Plat. Lys. 218 D, cf. Symp. 185 B; 7d ob évexa (never 7d ov évexev) the final cause, Arist. Phys. 2. 2, 8, Metaph. 1. 3, 1, al. 2. with regard to, as far as regards, as for, uot ye évexa as far as depends on me, Ar. Ach. 365, Dem. 461.12; Tod pvddaaovtos eivexey Hat. 1. 42; civenty ye XpnHarav as for money, Id. 3.122, etc.; tvexd-ye ptAovercias Plat. Rep. 548 D, cf. 329 B; éumepias piv dpa evexa Ib. 582 D; dpotoe rots Tuphois dv jpev vend ye Tov huerépov bpOadrpav Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 3: —cf. Exart, obvera. 3. by means of, réxvns eivexa by force of art, cited from Anth. 4. pleon., dui cotvexa Soph. Ph. 554 (Dind. cod véa) ; Scov dard Bows Evexa as far as shouting went, Thuc, 8. 92, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 31; twds xdpw évexa Plat. Legg. yor D, ef. Polit. 302 B. II. as Conjunct., for obvexa (q.v.), because, h. Hom. Ven. 200, Call. Fr. 287, cf. Bion. 2. 7. 2. = ’ eveT@ — évexupaCw. daxrddous Hipp. Art. 800; Bedos evepeabey rois doréus Plut. 2. 341 D :—4o apply, év 8 wAaTiv Wpov epacey Ap. Rh. 1. 1198:—metaph. ¢o Jix upon, tiv ty rwi Plut. 2. 586 C; rdv Oupév Oenom. ap. Eus. P. E. 230D; tiv yuxny Luc. Nigr. 7:—Med., évepecoduevos mérpa ydvu his own knee, Theocr, 7.7; cf. Orph. Arg. 1094. II. intr. to lean, lie in or on, oropaxy Diosc. 3. 26; so in Med., Ap. Rh. 1. 428, évépetots, ews, %, a forcing in, pressure, Hipp. 745 C. évepevyopar, Dep. ¢o belch on one, Nic. Th. 185 :—also in aor, 2 act., épuolye .. Tupod KaxiaTov .. evnpiryev Ar. Vesp. 913. évepevOns, és, somewhat ruddy, Polyb, 32.9, 8, Luc. Imag. 7. évepevOopar, Dep. to be somewhat ruddy, Nic. Th. 511, 871. évep8e, before a vowel —Oev; Dor. évepOa, ap. A. B. 563; also short- ened, metri grat., vépQe and -@ev: (from év, évep-c1, cf. inép, imep9e) : I. Adv., from beneath, up from below, abrdp ev. Toce- Saw érivage Il. 20.57; méppar’ evepSev Yuxry els pas Aesch., Pers, 630; THvd ereuway vepber, és dos Eur. Alc. 1139, cf. 985; v. dvaxa- Aovpevor Id. Hel. 966. 2. without sense of motion, beneath, below, év. wbbes nal xetpes brepOe Il. 13.75, cf. 78; palvovto 5: vepbe xovin [trot] 11. 282, cf. 535, etc.; mpdowna Te v. Te yoova Od, 20, 352 :— esp. of the nether world, of évepOe @eoi the gods below, Lat. dit inferi, Il. 14. 2745; Tots év. vexpots Soph. Ant. 25, cf. El. 1069; «olray eye v. Id.0.C.1707 ; also, évep6" id ys, iad yay Hes. Th. 720, Pind. P.g.142; Tos ..¥., Kam yas dvw Soph. O. T. 416 :—below, i.e. in the vale, Eur. Bacch. 752; Badr & ey, Soph. Ph. 20. II. as Prep. with gen., before or after its case, beneath, below, dyx@vos év. Il, 11. 252, cf. 234; yains v. xa... Oadrdoons 14. 204; v. ys Od. 11. 302; evepd’ ’Aldew Il, 8.16; so in Trag., ys év. és pdos Aesch, Pers. 222, Eur. Phoen. 505 ; but also y. ys, simply of one buried, Soph. Fr. 603. 2. subject to, in the power of, éxOpav ev. bvra Id. Ph. 666.—Never found in correct Att. Prose; but used by Hadt., é. rijs Aiuvns 2.13; absol., 1.91; also in Inscr. Att. in C. I. 1034, Aretae, Cur. M. Ac, 2.11, Luc, Rhet. Praec. 4. évepbis, ews, ),=eveiptis, evepypyds, E. M. 340. 2, Hesych. vepor, wy, of, Lat. inferi, those below, those beneath the earth, used alike of the dead and the gods below, évépoow dvacoow Il, 15. 188, Hes. Th. 850; dvaf évépoy Il. 20. 61, etc.; Baotdeds évépay Aesch. Pers. 629; évépwy dparyds, i.e. of the murdered Agamemnon, Eur. Or. 1391; of €vepo Plat.Rep. 387 B. (The Root is év, in, inner, whence also EvepOe, évéprepos, -raros (vép0_ véprepos), by analogy of iwép bmepbe dméprepos -raros. The Lat. inf-eri, opp. to sup-eri, presents a tempting analogy; but the f in that word puts this analogy out of the question.) évepé-xpws, wros, 6, 7, cadaverous, Alciphro I. 3. €vepors, ews, 7), (eveipw) a fitting in, fastening, evépoe xpvoav terriyay, used by the Athen. women to fasten up their hair, Thuc. 1. 6. évéptepos, a, ov, Comp. of évepot, Icwer, of the nether world, oimep ev, clot Ooi Il. 15.225; of év.=vepo, Aesch. Cho. 286: c. gen., 70a év. Oipavivew below them, Il. 5. 898.—The post-Hom. form was véprepos, q. v. évépvOpos, ov, =évepevOis, reddish, Aretae, Caus, M. Diut. 1. 6. éveoia, 7, (@vinut) a suggestion, only used in Ep, form éweoia; dat. pl., with gen. pers., xetvns évveoina: at her suggestion, ll. 5. 894; Taiys evv. Hes. Theog. 494, Ap. Rh., etc.; ia’ évvecing: Q. Sm. 3.475: gen. pl. évvecidwy, Ap, Rh. 3. 1364. éveors, ews, %, (évinut) a putting or letting in, ¢vons Hipp. Art. 815: an injecting, cited from Paul. Aeg.; cf. évena. eveoridopat, Dep. to give an entertainment in, Luc. Amor. 12. everh, 3, (éverés) =nepévn, a pin, brooch, Il. 14. 180, Call. Fr. 149. éverap, jpos, 6, (évinus) a clyster-syringe, Med.; cf. éveua. ae. an en ine of war to hurl missiles, Philo Belop. g1. everos, 7], dv, verb. Adj. of évinut, sent in, injected, Med. II, suborned, App. Civ. 1. 22, Mithr. 59, and prob. 1. Xen. An. 7. 6, 41. evevBatpovéw, Zo be happy in, Thuc, 2. 44, Diod. Exc. 601. 3. éverdrdw, to float in the clear sky, tvevdiucwy mrepvyecot Ap. Rh. 2. 935. évevSoxipéw, to gain glory in another’s ill fortune, S7w 7a THY ‘EAAq- vav druxnpara évevdoxiperv dréxerro Dem. 294. 13, cf. Plut. 2. 71 A, 2. to enjoy repute with another, Ael, V. H. 8. 12. évetSw, fut. -evdjow, to sleep in or on, xAaivay..xal kwea, Toiow éveddey Od, 20. 95, cf. 3. 350, al. eveunpepéw, to be lucky in, Tut Plut. 2. 289 D, 665 D. evevOnvéopat, Pass. to abound in, Schol, Ar. Pl. 586, Phot, évevkatpéa, to pass one's time in, d:aBodais Philo 2. 522, cf. 1. 387. _evevAoyécpar, Pass. to be blessed in, 7@ onéppact ov Act. Ap. 3. 25; €v got Ep. Gal. 3. 8. éveuvatopat, Pass. fo sleep in, Nic, Fr. 33. evevvatos, ov, (edv4) on which one sleeps, tordpecey 8 él déppa..ev- evvatoy a skin to sleep on, Od. 14. 51; xnret évevvaloy for want of bed-furniture, 16. 35 (where others take it as masc., for want of people to sleep there). _ Wve ibéw, = cimabéw ev .. , Liban. 1. 359- éveupioke, fo discover in, Joseph. B. J. 5. 13, 5;—évedpes is restored by Hartung for dy ebpes in Soph. Aj. 1144. evevotopéw, to sing sweetly in, Trois ddceat Philostr. 870. eveurxnHovéw, =evoxnuovéw év.., Hierocl. p. 46. évevoxodio, to amuse oneself in or with, Twi Luc. Amor. 35. eveutixéw, = edruxew év .., Aristid. 1, p. 111. éveudpatvopar, = edppaivoua év.., LXx (Prov. 8. 31). sveuxopat, to insert a prayer, C.1. 2448. 1, 14. eveuwxcopat, = edayéouat év.., Synes. p. 183. évexOyropar, evexOnre, evexPelnv, évex0G, évexOFvat, v. sub pépw. LCF. evepy fs. : ; Sd naga to thrust in, woxdov ». SpOadrpp tvépacav Od, g. 383; 7 evextipdbes, fut, dow, to take a pledge from one, 7wés Lex ap. Dem. 518, ’ , 4 ’ , evexupacia — evOéuer. i, cf. Plat. Ax. 367 B. 2. c, acc. rei, to take in pledge, Dem. 762. 4, Aeschin. 56. 42, Dion. H, 6.29; absol., Polyb. 6. 37, 8 (ubi male év- exupta{av) :—Pass., évexupdCouar 7a xphuuta to have one’s goods seized for debt, Ar, Nub. 241 :—Med, to have security given one, take it Sor oneself, réxov for interest, Ib. 35: to seize as a pledge, Id. Eccl. 567. évextipaota, %, a taking property in pledge, security taken, a pledge, Plat. Legg. 949 D, C.1.93.7., 104.12; €v, movefaar Dem. 1162. 12., 1163. 25. évexupacpa, 74, a pledge, thing pawned, LXx (Exod. 22. 26), Apoll. Lex. Hom. évextpagpés, 5, =évexupacia, Plut. Coriol. 5. évextpaoris, 4, dv, seizable for debt, C.1. 2448. v. 21. évextipidfo, -tacpéds, incorrect forms of évexupdtw, -acpds. évexuptos, ov, pledged, Epist. Socr. 9. évéxtipov, 75, (Exupds) a pledge, surety, security, év. dmodeuvivar and brori9évat to offer a pledge, Udt. 2. 136; évéxupa drodiddvar Andoc. 28. 27; AapBdvew Ib. 23, Xen. An. 7. 6, 23; évéxupa Big pépew Antipho 142. 35; évéxupov pépav trav yecrdvev Hermipp. Oc. 4; é&v. 7tOévat Tt to make a thing a pledge, put it in pawn, Ar. Pl. 451, cf. Eccl. 7553 €v. xetrat Plat. Legg. 820 E; én’ évexvpw Sovvar to give on security, Dem, 1185.12; &« Tay ev. Tay GpAnkdrav Tijv Sixny from the forfeited pledges, C.1. 158 A. 24.—In Att. Law, évéxupov or évéxupa were pro- perly goods which the creditor was allowed to take as security, being commonly used of movables; whereas iro8jxn properly denoted real property (but also slaves or ships) mortgaged to the creditor: v. Att. Proc. 504 sq. évéxo: fut. évégw or évaynow:—to hold or keep fast within, xdAov évéxew ivi to lay up, cherish inward wrath at one, Hdt. 1. 118., 6. 119; v. II. 2. II. Pass., with fut. and aor. med. (v. infr.), to be held, caught, feltered, entangled in, like Lat. teneri, c. dat., 7 mayn Hdt. 2. 121, 2, cf. Xen. An. 7. 4,173 €v rots rhs veds cxevect Plat. Lach. 183 E. 2. metaph., évéxec@ar dropinaw Hdt. 1.190; piAoripig Eur. I. A. 527; also, év. év dye Hdt. 6. 56; év xax@ Id. 9. 37, cf. Lys. 94. 40; &y Oodpart évécxero was seized with wonder, Hat. 7. 128. 3. to be obnoxious, liable or subject to, ov dinators Zeds évéferar Adyors Aesch. Supp. 169, as emended by Pors., cf, Andoc. 7.5; often in legal forms, émapy xn évéxovro ravrair’ eypappévy (sic) Inscr. Vet. in C. I. 11; so, éy. dpg Aids Plat. Legg. 881 D; (nyig, aizvig Ib. 935 C, Crito 52 A; évéxeoOar Emripios Dem. 1231. 15; év Tots émriplos Aeschin. 78. 41; véym Plut. Gracch, 10; év rots abrois vépors Plat. Legg. 762 D; voOeig in an imputation of bastardy, Plut. Them. 1: cf. €voxos. 4. in good sense, évéxeaOar dyyeAia to meet with a message, Pind. P. 8. 70. 5. absol. to stand still, Plat. Theaet. 147 h III. intr. to enter in, pierce, eis 71 Xen. Cyn. to, 7; kara 70 tvov Plut. Pomp. 71. 2. to press upon, be urgent against, tivi Lxx (Gen. 49. 23), Ev. Mare, 6, 19, Luc. 11. §3. évaynpa, 74, a thing boiled or infused, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. 1. éveisytéov, verb. Adj. one must boil in, infuse, Aretae. ibid, évepinpa, 74, a plaything, Nic. Al. 233. [t metri grat.] évéyw, to boil in or among, Nic. Al. 71, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. 1. évéwora, aor. I of évw0éw, Ap. Rh. evlévvipt, to boil in, mhyavov éveCécOn Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 2. évfevyvipn, fut. -Cevgw, to yoke in, bind, involve in, dvd-yeas taicd’ évéfevypat Aesch. Pr, 108; ri moré p’..évélevgas .. év mnpootvais ; (so Herm.) Ib. 578. II. to bind fast, 4p8pa Soph. O. T. 718: to yoke, évifevxOevres radpo Ap. Rh. 1. 686. évaypipéw, to paint in or on, v.1. Plat. Phileb. 40 A, Tzetz. vq, Vv. sub évos, €vy Kal véa, etc.: v. sub évos. évnBadw, to spend one’s youth in, Longus 3. 13. II. of plants, to flourish in, vara 8 dvO€pixos évnBG Cratin, Incert. 135, cf. Nic. ap. Ath. 370 A, and y. éyxa0nBaw. évnByriprov, 74, a place of amusement, Hat. 2. 133, ubi v. Valck. évnBos, ov, in the prime of youth, Schol. Theocr. 8.3: cf. pnBos. évqSopat, Pass. to rejoice in, rut Schol. Il. 8. 51, Hesych. évydovos, ov, (j50v7) full of joy, delightful, Schol. Eur. 535, etc. évy Suva, to cheer, gratify, Tas dkods Ss Philopatr. 3. evySimalew, = jbuTadéw év .., Philo 2. 326. évnein, 4, (evans) hindness, gentleness, viv ms évnelns Tarpoxdjos .. pvnodadw Il. 17. 670, cf. Opp. H. 5. 519. évijev, Ep. 3 sing. impf. of évetpe I. évyys, és, Ep. Adj. Rind, gentle, in Il. only of Patroclus (cf. évneln), éraipov ..évnéa te kparepdy Tell. 17.204; érdpoto évnéos daréa AcvKad 23. 352: so, éraipoy évnéa, of Athena, Od. 8. 200; giAdrnros évnéos Hes, Th. 651; nom. évnns, Epigr. Gr. 566. 8., 906. 5; pl. evnijes Opp. C, 2.89; évnées Id. H. 2. 644. (Cf darqvis, mpoonyns.) évnAddrov, 74, (€veAatvw) anything driven in: as Subst., evjdara (sc. fvAa), 74, I. the four beams which make the frame of a bed- stead, Lat. spondae, Soph. Fr. 295, Philo 1. 666, etc.; v. Lob. Phryn, 132. II. the rounds of a ladder, which are fixed in the poles or sides, #Aluaxos fear’ évnddrav Babpa Eur. Phoen. 1179; dxpa KArparov évpAara Id. Supp. 729. III. dgivev évqjdrara the pins driven into the axle, linchpins, Eur. Hipp. 1235- évaAtkos, ov, =sq., C. I. 1625. 51, Plut. Cato Ma. 24, etc. eval, tkos, 6, 9, of age, in the prime of manhood, Jo. Chrys. évnAAaypévos, Ady. part. pf. pass. évadAdoow, reversely, Hesych. évnAbu, ¢o nail to, Cels. ap. Orig. 6. p. 298. évmAtoros, ov, (Avotov 11) struck by lightning : évpdvora, 74, places set apart from worldly uses, because a thunderbolt has fallen there, Lat. bidentalia, Aesch, Fr.15; cf. E.M. 341.5, Hesych., Herm. Opusc, 7, 209. é ews, }, an ornamental nail, Callix. ap. Ath, 205 B. g 479 évfjpat, properly pf. of évéCopa, to be seated in, tv’ évijpeda rdvres Od, 4. 272, cf. Theocr. 22. 44; Odwos .. évqpevor Eur. Fr. 793. évnpepevo, to spend the day in, rwi Diod. 17. 70, Excerpt. 523. 72. évnppévos, 7, ov, part. pf. pass. from évdmra. évqvole, only found in compds. The word points to a Root *évé0w, to be in, as dvqvobe points to *dveOw (q. v.), fo rise up. It is in form a redupl. pf., but in sense always impf., except once in the form émevy- voGe (v. infr.): I. é2-evjvobe, in Hom. only thrice; of Thersites’ head, Webv7) éx. Adv a thin coat of downy hair grew thereon, Il. 2. 219; of a cloak, odAi) ém. Adxvn a thick pile was on it, Io. 134; ¢. acc., of the ambrosial unguent, ofa @eods ér. aity écvras such as is on the gods, Od. 8. 365, cf. h. Hom. Ven. 62; so in Nic. Al. 509, c. dat. to stick to: —in Ap. Rh, 4, 276, of Time, woAds én. aléy was thereon, i.e. had passed, II. kar-evfvobe, to be over, lie upon, only in Hes. Sc. 269, «duis kar. dpots; and h. Hom. Cer. 279, xéuat Kar. dpovs (where the Verb is in sing., as if eéuae were a noun of multitude). 1iI. trap-evivobe, fo be near, only in late Ep., juerépn Toln map. paris such was our plan therein, Ap. Rh. 1. 664; muperds map. yuiors Orph, Lith, 628, évivoxa, éviveypat, v. sub pépw. : évnpepiéw, = penew év .., Philo 2. 140, Heliod. 1. 18. évapys, €s, with oars, vais Plat, Brut. 28, Sull. 24, etc.: cf. Suppys. évijp8pos, ov, Ion. for évapipyos:—but in Call. Fr. 127, intimate, friendly, as if from dpiOpés; Hesych. has évapi0jua* pida, cvv7On. évyctxdla, fut. dow, =Hjovydtw év.., to be quiet in, Chion. Ep. 16, Philo 2. 140. évnx€w, to sound in Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 1.6: c. dat. to echo to, Plut. 2. 589 D. 2. to teach by voice, word of mouth, like xarnxéw, Eccl. évaxnpa, 76, a sound ina thing, Iambl. V. Pyth. 65: doctrine, Eccl. &vnxos, ov, sounding within, of wind-instruments, opp. to @yxopdos, Ath. 636 C; &. #5ara Philostr. 266. évOa, (év) Adv.: I. Demonstr., 1. of Place, there, Lat. ibi, Hom., etc. :—also with Verbs of motion, thither, Lat. illuc (cf, év- Gade), Il. 13. 23., 14. 340, Od. 3. 295., 6. 47., 12. 5 :—ev0a Kal evba here and there, hither and thither, thither and back, Lat. hic illic, hue illuc, 2. 213, etc.; also, # v6’ 7 évOa 10. 574:—rare in Att. Poets, as Aesch. Supp. 34; but used in Att. Prose in such phrases as év0a pey.., &vOa 52... , in one place .., in another .., Plat. Symp. 211 A. 2. of Time, thereupon, then, just then, Hom., etc.; he has also @0a 8 érara and thereupon, even then, Od. 7.196., 10.516; évOa 54 here then, here- upon, and so, Hdt. 1. 59, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 39 :—the reference to Time often disappears, as in our ¢hen, and Lat. ibi, e.g. Od. 1. 11., 2. 82. BLA Relat., 1. of Place, where, Lat. ubi, Il. 1. 610., 9.194, etc.; évOa, évOa .., Hes. Sc. 334, Theocr. 8. 45; also, évOa re Il. 2. 594., 5. 3053. évOa mep, v. sub évOamep; c. gen., yalas évOa .. in that spot of earth, in which .. , Soph. Aj. 659; év0a mnudray kup® at what point of misery I am, Eur. Tro. 680 :—with Verbs of motion, whither, Lat. guo, Soph, El. 1099; also, to the place where .. , 1d. Ph. 1466; at the place whence .., Id. El. 436, cf. Aj. 4, Tr. 237, 659, Xen. Occ. 18, 1:—rarely in indirect questions, for drov, Aly:o8ov év6’ dxnxev iorop® Soph. El. 110, 2. of Time, when, Xen. An. 5. 1, 1; éorw évOa, Lat. est ubi, sometimes, Soph. El. 1042, cf. O. T. 316; évOa rod xpévovu at which point of time, Ael. V. H. 10. 18. év0é5e, Adv.: I. of Place, thither, hither, Lat. illuc, huc, Od. 15. 492, etc., Soph. Ph. 304, 377, Thuc. 6. 36. 2. in Att. more commonly like év@a, here or there, Lat. hic, évOade abrod Ar. Vesp. 765; of évOade those here, opp. to of xarw, Pind. O. 2. 104, Aesch. Supp. 923, Soph. Ant. 75, Plat. Gorg. 525 B (cf. éxe?); also the people of this country, Soph. O. C. 42; Tots év045' avrod Ib. 78; ms Trav évOas’ adrod Eupol. Incert. I. 4:—7d évOdbe, opp. to ra exe?, Thuc, 6. 17. II. of circumstances, in this case or state, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 17; s0, evO6S row having come to this point, Soph. Ph. 377; ¢. gen., évOd5e rov maous at this stage of my suffering, Ib. 899. 2. of Time, here, now, ob7’ €v045 Spay ot7’ dxicw neither the present nor the future, Id. O. T. 488, cf, O. C. 992, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 4.—Cf. sq. évOa8i, Att. strengthd. for foreg., Ar. Pl.54, Lys. 1010, Eupol. A?y.9, etc. év0d8.0s, a, ov, on the spot, present, Byz. évOaKéw, fo sit in or on, Tois cots Opdvas Soph, El. 267, cf. O, C. 1293. évacnors [4], ews, 4, a sitting in, HAlov bidF wépectw eO. a twofold seat in the sun, i.e. both at morn and evening, Soph, Ph. 18. évOidaccetw, Att. -rrevw, fo be or live at sea, Ael. N. A. 9. 63. évOiAdootos, Att. Trios, ov, =sq., vais Soph. Fr. 379. évOadaccos, Att. -rros, ov, in or by the sea, Athenio Mach. 9. &vOGATw, to warm in, Diod. 2. 52 :—Pass. to glow with love, Soph. Fr. 421, where Valck. restores év@. (for é«0.) from A. B. 40. 20. évOavar6w, to condemn to death, Philoch. ap. Dion. H. de Dinarch. 3. évOarrep, Adv. there where, where, stronger form of év@a, ll. 13. 524, Hadt. 1. 14, Trag., ete.: whither, Soph. Ph. 515. évOamrw, to bury in a place, C, J. 2839. 10, al. :—Pass., aor. 2 évera- ony Aeschin. 14. 14, Diod. 1. 66, C. 1. 2824, al.; part, évOageis (sic) Ib. 2839. 11: fut. 2 évrapycopar Ib. 2826, Plut. Dio 43. évOatra, évOcdrev, Ion. for évradda, évredoer, evOedLw, to be inspired, Hdt. 1. 63, Luc. Alex. 13 :—also in Med., Plut. 2. 623 C, etc.: cf. évPoveralw. 3 évOcarrikés, 7, dv, inspired, dub. ap. Plat. Legg. 682 A. Adv. -Kas, Luc. Amor. 14. &vOcpa, 76, a thing put in, a graft, Theophr. C. P. 1. 6, 7. II. a sr money placed in the hands of bankers, C. I. 3599. 13. éOcparilw, to graff in, engraft, Geop. Io. 23, 4. évOepatiopés, 6, a eraping inserting, vov Clem. Al. 134. évOepev, post. aor. 2 inf. of év7lOnus, 480 evdeutov, 74, the cabin, etc. on. the poop of a ship, Poll. 1. go. évOev, (év) Adv.: I. Demonstr., Lat. inde, thence, 1. of Place, often in Hom,: also in tracing pedigrees, -yévos 3 éyot EvOev, b0ev ooi Il. 4.58; Oey piv .., érépat be. ., on the one side and the other, Od. 12. 235, cf. 59; af wey eg dporepds, ai 5 évOev Eur. Hec, 1152; évOev wat évOev on this side and on that, Lat. hinc illine, Hat, 4.1755 Plat., etc.; évOev re wat évOev Thuc. 7. 81; evOev piv.., Oey B.., on one side .., on the other .., Xen. An. 3. 5, 1p évOev piv.., ef eda~ vipow 5t.., Hdt. 1. 72; evOev pev.., éxarépwoe 5¢.., Plat. Soph. 224 A:—c. gen., évOev nal vOev trav Tpoxa&yv on both sides of .. , Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 30, cf. An. 4. 3, 28. 2. of Time, thereupon, thereafter, Il. 13.741; 7a 8 évOev what follows, Aesch. Ag. 247; 70 3’ évOev Soph. O. C. 476. 3. of occasion, thence, from that point, évOev Edo [Thy dovdin inde exorsus, Od. 8. 500, cf. Diog. L. 1. 102 (vulg. évOev . . EAOdv €pn); from that cause or circumstance, Eur. Tro. 951. as Relat., for 60ev, 1. of Place, Lat. unde, whence, 5éna, évOev émvov from which.., 19. 62, cf. 4. 220; often answering to the Ady. évOa, as, 6 pev &v0a Kabélero, evOev dvéorn ‘Eppetas in the spot From which.., 5. 195:—of origin, rd Képdos évOev olaréoy Soph. Ant. 310; évOev iv ‘yeyws (Horace, unde nil majus generatur, Virg. genus unde Latinum), Id, O. T. 1393, cf. 1485: to the place, whence, Xen. An. 2. 3,6; so, in speaking, émavepu evOev..éféBny Id. Hell. 6. 5, 1, cf. Oec.. 6, 1. 2. of occasion, whence, like Lat. unde, “Ape .., évOev €or’ éndyupos métpa mayos 7’ “Apevos Aesch. Eum. 689, cf. Eur. El. 38, etc. évOevapilo, = eyxerpew (eyyxerpi(w?), Hesych. évOévie, Adv. hence, Lat. hinc, Il. 8. 527, Od. 11. 69, and Att.: from this quarter, i.e. from people here, Soph. O.T. 125; Ta dixaa ed. AapBavewv i.e. from you, Xen. An. 7. 7,17; KaA@s Ta y évOévd' all’s well on this side, Eur. Or. 1277; opp. to éxeiOev, Plat. Phaedr. 229 B; . padjnoe évOévde Id, Polit. 289 D; év0. wobév Id. Euthyd. 275 D, Symp. 178 A; év0év8 airdbev from this very city, Ar. Ach, 116 :—with Verbs of Motion, just like évOa5e, rods évOévde Exetae wopetoar to carry those here thither, Plat. Phaedo 107 E, cf. Apol. 40 C, Xen, Cyr. 2. 4,16; 6 v0. arpards the army from this place, i.e. the Athen, army, Eur. Supp. 695. 2. of Time or Consequence from that time, Thuc. 2.1; 7d évOevie or TovvOevie, thereafter, Soph. Ph. 895, Eur. Med. 1167, I. T. QI; ravOévde what followed, the event, Soph. O. T. 1267, El. 1307, Eur. Heracl. 279; 6 @v0, Adyos Id. Tro. 931; €v0. from the following point of view, Plat. Theaet. 178 A. évOevdi, Att. strengthd, for foreg., Ar. Lys. 429. £v0eos, ov, in later Prose contr. évous (App. Hisp. 18, Philo 2. 124):— Jull of the god, inspired, possessed, év0. yuvatkes, of the Bacchantes, Soph, Ant. 964; év@eos “Apet possessed by him, Aesch. Theb. 497; é« Tavés Eur. Hipp. 141; 10 Top épwros Xen. Symp. 1, 10:—c. gen. rei, évOeos réxvns gifted of heaven with prophetic art, Aesch. Eum. 17 :— v0. mpos Gperny inspired with a love for it, Plat.Symp. 179 A. II, of divine frenzy, inspired by the god, réxvat Aesch. Ag. 1209; pavTuct Plat. Phaedr. 244 B; pavretae Id. Tim. 72 B; mofnots Arist. Rhet. 3. e 11:—10 évOeov inspiration, Plut. 2. 752 C:—Ady. év@éws, Menand. onost. 229, App. Hisp. 26. évOepifw, to spend summer in a place, Poll. 1. 62. évOeppaiva, to heat :—Pass., évreOéppavta 1é0y is heated by passion, Soph. Tr. 368: cf. évOaAmw. évOeppos, ov, hot, Hipp. 1180E, Plut.2.951E. 2. metaph. hot, fervid, didvoa Arist. Physiogn. 2, 9, cf. 3, 14:—Adv. -ws, Eust. Opusc. 4. 28. éect-Sovdos, 6, =ywpddovr0s, Com. ap. Hesych. EvOcors, ews, , (év7iOnpu) a putting in, insertion, Plat. Crat.426C: a putting into the mouth, rijs rpopis Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 4. II. that which is put in the mouth, a slice, mouthful, Ar. Eq. 404, Pherecr. MeraAA. 1. 6, Teleclid, "App. 1, Hermipp. Moip. 4, etc. 2. a graft, Geop. 10. 37, I. : évdeopos, ov, lawful, like évvopos, Plut.Nic.6. Adv.—pws, Theodoret. 5.9. évOeréov, verb. Adj. of évri@nu, one must insert, Plotin. 1. 3, 1. évOeriKés, 4, dv, fit for implanting, Twos Stob. Ecl. 2. 42. - évOeros, ov, (évriOnux) capable of being put in, «.. iv évOerov avdpt vényua Theogn. 435. ee évoerradtLopat, Dep. to.become a Thessalian, i.e. wear the large Thes- salian cloak (@erradixa mrepa), Eupol. Map. 24. évOcdrev, Ion. for évredOev, Hdt. OAK, #, @ store, capital; late word for dpopyy, Phryn. 223. &vOnAtradéw, to be effeminate, Joseph. B. J. 4.9, 10. %vOnpos, av, (4p) full of wild beasts, haunted, infested by them, dpupds Eur. Rhes. 289. II. metaph. savage, wild, rough, rievres €v0, tpixa Aesch. Ag. 562: &0. mavs, of the foot of Philoctetes (Soph. Ph. 689), not = Onpodneros, as the Schol. says, but u/cerated, or untended, undressed, cf. Onplapa and efferata corpora (Liv.) :—r0 év0. savageness, Ael. N. A. 6. 63. Opusc. 103. 35. évOnoaupife, fo treasure up, Bust. e0Naous, ews, 4, a dint peste. by pressure, Acl, N. A. 16. 22. @OAacpa, 75, =foreg., Galen. 5 évO\dw, Jon. eddie, fut. dow [a] :—to indent by pressure, Hipp. 556. 23: to press in, MOov eis 7d bévdpov Theophr. H. P. 5.2, 4: to impress (on coin), onuetov Acl. N. A. 6. 15. Ne €vOAtBw [7], fut. yo, to press in, Nic. Al. 454, 547 :—Pass., Arist. H. A. 8.15, 5, Probl. 21. 3. son évOAurrrikés, 7, dv, pressing: Adv. —K@s by pressure, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 69. ZWOAulus, ews, , a pressing in, squeezing, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 1. 6, etc. , fut. -Otivodpat, to die in, x8ovds .. ToTovTOY, wore] évOa- : oveiv Lthad Soph. O. C. 790, cf, Eur. Rhes. 869; off xept Id. Heracl. J v. . évOéutov — evOuunuarwons. 560. 2. of the hand, to grow rigid or torpid in, Twi Id. Hecy 246.—Rare in Prose, as Lys. 147. 13, Plut. 2. 357 D. : évOopos, ov, (évOopeiv) impregnated, of animals, Nic. Th. 99. évOous, ovy, contr. for éveos, q. V. évOovordlw, in Trag. always évOoverdw ; in Plat. both forms occur, v. infr, Tobe éveos, inspired or possessed by the god, be rapt, be in ecstasy, - évBovora 87) SHpa Aesch, Fr. 64.4; dowep evOovordiy Xen, Cyr. 1. 4, 8 5. 4 yux? .. &overd{ovea Plat. Ion 535 C, cf. 536 B; evOovord{ovres Id. Apol. 22 C; évOovaidvres Id. Phaedr. 253 A; évOovordoas Id. Theaet. 180 C; ind r&v Nupdar .. evOoverdow Id. Phaedr. 241 E; ig’ Hdovijs évOovera Id. Phil. 15 E; évOovordca moveiy twa Arist. Rhet. 3.7, 11 :— c. dat., évOovards Trois cavrod xaxois Eur. Tro. 1284; mept re Plut, Cato Ma, 22; ets rt Ael. N. A. 4. 31. II. c. acc. to inspire, épwras éveBovaiace Oeois Hermes ap. Stob. Ecl. 2. 930, cf. 942. évOouctacts, ews, 7, =sq., Plat. Phaedr. 249 E. évOouciacpés, 6, inspiration, enthusiasm, Plat. Tim, 71 E; produced by certain kinds of music, Arist. Pol. 8. 5, 16., 8.7, 4. éeWOovoracrhs, od, 6, a zealot, enthusiast, Eccl, évOovoractiKés, 7, dv, inspired, excited, Plat. Tim. 71 E; esp. by music, Arist. Pol. 8. 5, 16; 7 &v@. copia divination, Plut. Sol. 12: 70 év@. ex- citement, Plat. Phaedr. 263 D:—Adv., évOovoragrinas diareOévae Twa Plut. 2.433 C. II. act. inspiring, exciting, of certain kinds of music, Arist. Pol. 8.7, 4 and 6, cf. 8. 5, 16 and 22. évOovordw, v. sub évBovora lw. évOouomns, es, possessed, Plut. Lyc, 21, Pyrrh. 12, ete. Ady. -6ds, Hipp. 1280. 26. &vOpdcow, Att. —rrw, =évrapdcow, Hipp. Art. 812. évVOpnvew, = Opyvéw év .., Aristid, 1. p. 262. évOplaxros, ov, (Opid(w) inspired, Soph. Fr. 489:—Nauck. also restored évreOpiaxev (for 70 KexOapixev otov éuavredvoato), Ib. 18. &vOptow, (Opiov) to wrap in a fig-leaf: to muffle up, Ar. Lys. 664. évOpovilw, to place on a throne, Tois BactAcios Diod. Excerpt. 595.97. Eccl. (where also év@povid(w) :—Pass. to sit there, LXX (4 Macc, 2, 22). évOpovios, ov, = évOpovos, Poll. 10. 52. évOpovicpis, 6, an enthroning, inauguration, Eccl. évOpovioricds, 7, dv, inaugural, Eccl. évOpovos, ov, on a throne, belonging to it, Byz. évOpupparts, idos, 7, a sop, Anaxandr. Tpwr. 1. 43. évOputros, ov, crumbled and put into liquid: 7a évOputra sops, Dem. 314.1; cf. A.B. 250. Optra, post. év.Op-, to crumble into liquid, make sop, év iv Hipp. 339-30; yaAaxr Nic. Th. 914; és dAmnv Ib, 80:—Med., Id. Al. 266. évOpuckov, 74, v. sub dvOpvoxor. &vOpaokw, fut. -Oopodpar: aor, évéBopov, Ep. évOopov :—to leap in, on, or among, c. dat., €vOope pécow morap@ Il. 21. 233; evOop’ duidw 15. 623; ds 5& A€wv ev Bovol Bopwy 5. 161, cf. 20. 381; Oper mop év- Gopdv Pind. P. 3.67; evOpwoxe rapw Eur. El. 327:—Adg évOoper ioxig leapt with his feet against his hip, Od. 17. 233. €vOdpéopar: fut. —yooua Lys. 124. 21, later —7Oqcopat Philostr. 614, Aristid., etc.: aor. éveOuynOny Ar. Ran. 40, Thuc. 2. 62, Xen., etc.: pf. évreO¥pnuae Thuc. 1.120; plqpf. évereOvpnro Lys. 126. 29: Vv. infr. II. To lay to heart, consider well, reflect on, ponder, 7t Aesch. Eum. 222, Thuc. 2. 40., 5. 32, etc.; Ggcov EvOvpnOqvac Antipho 143. 373 mpds éuavrév Andoc. 7. 40; évOup. cat Aoyitec@at often joined in Dem., e. g. 15. 7. b. c. gen., évOupetoOat twos to think much or deeply of, Tod Oavévros Simon, Iamb. 2; rodrwy obdey évO. Hermipp. Motp. 4; Gv évOupnOévres Thuc. 1. 42, cf. Plat. Menex. 249 C, Xen. Mem. I. 1, 17; so, wept twos Plat, Rep. 595 A. ce. foll. by a~ relative, as by 67 .., to consider that .., Ar. Nub. 820, Thuc. 5. 111, etc.; by ds.., how .., Ar. Ran. 40, Xen. Mem. 4. 3, 3, etc.; by e.., Isocr. 332 C; év0. ui).., Lat. videre ne.., cavere ne.., Plat. Euthyd.. 279 C, Hipp. Ma. 300 D. d. with part., od évreOtpnrar ératpd- Hevos was not conscious that he was becoming excited, Thuc. 1. 120, cf. 6. 78, Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 19. 2. to take to heart, be concerned, hurt or angry at, tt Aesch. Eum, 222, cf. Thuc. 7.18; ei pydets pay par &Oupetrat pir’ dpyiterar Dem. 52. 17:—absol. to be in a state of passion, Hipp. 293. 26: cf. évOuptCopat, evOvpuos. 8. to think out a thing, form a plan, kpdricros évOvpnivar Thuc. 8. 68, cf. 2. 60, Antipho 130. 4. 4. to infer or conclude, ri obv &e TovTav .. evOvpeioOa del ; Dem. 532. 2; cf. évOdunua. II. the Act. form év@vyéw occurs in Aen, Tact. 37; and évOvpéopat, in pass. sense, fo be in a person's thoughts, to be desired, App. Civ. 5. 133; so in pf., rav7l pey Hyiv év- TebvpnTat Kad@s Ar. Eccl. 262; €} évreOvpnpévoy Plat. Crat. 404 A (unless we read gudoadgou .. cal eb evreOvpnpévo). évoupnpa, 7d, a thought, piece of reasoning, argument, Soph. O. C. 292, 1199, Isocr. 190 E, 191 A, Aeschin. 42. 28, etc. 2. in Aristotle's Logic, an enthymeme or rhetorical syllogism, i.e. a syllogism drawn from probable premises (& etxdrav kat onpelwv), which therefore does not pretend to be demonstrative, (much as we say a consideration), An. Pr. 2, 27, 2, cf. Rhet. 1. 1, 11., 1. 2, 8 and 20., 2. 22, sq. 2. 25, 8 :—later authors used the term in various senses (v. Cic. Top. 13, Quintil. 5- 10, etc.):—the common account that it is a syllogism with one premiss omitted is much later. See a clear account of the whole matter in Pacius ad Arist. 1. c, II. an invention, device, Xen. Hell. 4: 5» 40 5+ 45 52, An. 3. §, 12, Cyn. 13, 13. @vOipnparixés, 7, dv, skilled in the use of enthymemes, Arist. Rhet. 1.1, 9. II. consisting of enthymemes, enthymematic, Pyropeta Ib. 1.2, 10, Adv. —Kas, Ib. 3. 17,17. évODpnparrov, 76, Dim., Gloss. (expl. by sensiculus), v.1. Gell. 6. 1 b evOdpnpaTadys, es, enthymematic, Arist. Rhet, Al. 33, 3. Hipp. 22. 49, 3s 4 ‘ ei ’ , be evOdunows — evirre. ‘evOtnors [0], ews, 1}, consideration, esteem, Eur. Fr. 248, Hipp. Coac. 26, Thuc. 1.132, * _évOdpnréov, verb. Adj. one must consider, Epich. 137 Ahr.; évOup. [bpuiv] .. map’ GAAay dxovovoty Dem. 40. 18. &Odpla, }, a scruple, misgiving (cf. évOdjuos), és evOvplav twl mpo- BadrcoPat Thuc. 5.16; pera&divar roy évOvpuav Tambl. V. Pyth. 20. évOipidw, to fumigate, Synes. p, 257. ‘evOipilopar, Dep., later form of évOvuéopat, Poll. 2. 231 (quoting Thue. 5. 32, ubi évOupovpevor). II. =émévpéw, 7: App. Mithr. 120.— The Act. év@upifo in Hesych. ‘ evOupios [0], ov, (Cuyds) taken to heart, thought much of, weighing upon the heart, py co Ainv évOdpos €orw let him not lie too heavy on thy soul, take not too much thought for him, Od. 13. 421; évOdpudy of éyé- vero éumphoayre 70 ipdy he had trouble of heart for having done it, Hat. 8. 54, cf. Antipho 121.2; so in Att., 7 8 éori cor Tour’ .. évOdpuov ; what is’t that weighs upon thy heart? Soph. O. T.739; €f cot 758 éor’ év0. if this matter causes thee dny scruple, Eur. H.F. 722; év0, yiyveral pol rs Antipho 119. 7; &vOdpuov roetoOal 71, =evOvpetobat, to take to heart, to have a scruple about it, Thuc. 7. 50, Alciphro 3. 10 (cf. év6v- puords) ; also, év@. moretobal Tivos Dio C, 58. 6; évO. riBévar Th Tut to make him have ‘scruples about it, Eur. Ion 1347, cf. 39; év0. dmoAeltme- o6ai 7 Antipho 125.1; év@. edval a marriage that lies heavy on her soul, Soph. Tr. 110, &Oipiords, 7, dv, taken to heart, v0. rovetcOa to make a scruple of a thing (like év@dpuoy moveioba:), Hdt. 2.175. évOdp0s, ov, spirited, Arist. Pol. 7.7, 3. Adv. —pws, Basil. évOtcrdhew, to sacrifice in .., LXX (Sirac. 34. 7). évOw, Ev9or, évOdv, Dor. for €AOw, etc.; v. sub épxopar. ‘evOwpixifo, fut. Att. 1, to arm, equip with armour : part. pf. pass. évreOapaxiopévos mailed, Xen. An. 7. 4, 16. évl, poét. for év, both Ep. and Att., also in Ion. prose. v. sub év%. II. évi, dat. from efs. évu, for veri, v. everpe I. II. for éveort it is possible, v. €vetpe 11. évatos, a, ov, (€v) single, Diog. L.7. 353 v. Lob. Phryn. 543. évavOpds, 6, (éviatw) an abode, E. M. 342. 35. €vavoratos, a, ov, =sq. III, Arist. Categ. 6, 11, Diod. rr. 69, ete. éviatioos, a, ov, Hdt. 4. 180, Eur. Hipp. 37, Xen. Ages. 2, 1, etc.; also os, ov Thuc. 4. 117., 5. 1: (€vtaurds) :—of a year, one year old, avs Od, 16. 454, Dem. 833. 17, etc. TI. yearly, annual, year by year, Ep. Hom. 15.11; éprn Hat. 4.180; v. sub d:ad0x7 :—neut. pl. as Adv., Hes. Op. 449. IIL. for a year, lasting a year, Hipp. Aph. 1258; év. puyf a year’s exile, Eur. Hipp. 37; xpdévos Id. Hel. 775; éxexeipia, omovbal, etc., Thuc. 4. 117., 5.15; 606s Xen. l.c.; xdveavoros BeBas gone, absent for a year, Soph. Tr. 165 (where Brunck restored kaviatotov, sc. xpévov). éuautifopat, Dep. to spend a year, Plat. Com. Moujr. 1; so in Act., Schol. Eur. Or. 1645. évatrwos, a, ov, = éviavoros, Inscr. Boeot. in C. I. 1688. 44. éviaurés, 5, (évos, q. v.) properly any long period of time, a cycle, period, éros HAGE TepiTAOLeva évtavTay as times rolled on the year came, Od. I. 16, ubi vy. Nitzsch ; ypovlovs ér&v maAamy évtavrovs Ar. Ran. 347: the completion of a woman's time for being delivered, Hes. Th. 493, Sc. 87; énaurdv Twa Thue. 3. 68:—é péyas év., of a Pythagorean cycle, Eudem. ap. Theon. Smyrn, 40; also of the Metonic Cycle of 19 years, Diod. 2. 47., 12. 36; of a period of 600 years, Joseph. A. J. I. 3,9; atéios év. Apollod. 3. 4, 2. II. =€ros, a year, eivards éort Tept- Tponéow év. Il. 2. 295, cf. 8. 404., 12.15., 24. 765, Od. 2. 89 (v. Aved- Bas); Ards évravroi, because Jove ordered the course of time, Il. 2. 1343 éviaurly during a year, Od, 1. 288, cf. Thuc, 4. 118, etc.; dnvixa.. Tovvavrod at what time in the year, Ar. Fr. 476. 7; dts rod Evavrov twice a year, Plat. Criti. 118 E; rod éviavrod every year, Xen. Vect. 4, 235 €xdorov év. Id. Ath. 3, 4:—with Preps., 5: éviavrod méumrou every five years, Plat. Criti. 119 D ;—els év, for a year, Il. 21. 4443; TeAéopopov els év. 19. 32 ;—xat’ énauréy for a year, Thuc. 1.93; or every year, Diphil. "Evay. 2; xa’ &xacrov éy. Id. Incert. 4 ;—én’ éy. Plat. Legg. 945 B, etc. ;—perd roy émaurdéy at the end of the year, Thuc. 1. 138 ;— nap’ éviavrév in alternate years, Diod. 4. 65 ;—-2p0 évtavrod a year before, Plut. 2. 147 E.—On the Greek year, v. Lewis Astr. of Anc. pp. 12 sq. éviavro-paivas, és, yearly seen, Ptolem. ap. Fabr. B. Gr. 4. p. 427. éviauto-popéw, to bear fruit a year before it ripens, Theophr. H.P. 3. 4, I. éviatiw, fut.-ratow, to sleep among, tats bat Od. 15. 557, cf. 9. 187:— to sleep in, pdpeot Bion 1. 72. eviitx a], Adv. (€or) in some places, Hdt. 2. 19; ¢. gen. loci, Id, 1. 199. II. sometimes, Plat. 2. 427 E, Ath. 478 B. evaixod, Adv. (évior) in some places, Arist. H. A. 5.14, 12, al.:—here and there, now and then, opp. to Tavraxov Plat. Phaedo 71 B. évdyw [a], to shout at a thing, Nonn. Jo. 6. v. 14., I1.v. 36. &viPadrw, év.BAdtro, post. for éup-. évi-yutos, ov, joined in one body, Ibyc. 27 (ap. Ath. 58 A, where the Ms. évryvous). II. lame of one foot, Suid. éviSetv, v. sub évezSor. éudpdw, ¢o sweat in, labour hard in, Lat. insudare, Xen. Symp. 2, 18 ; 7 at a thing, Eust. Opusc. 170. 11. &udptw, fut. tow [0], fo set in a place, Plut. 2.745 C:—Med. to found or build for oneself, évi8picac0c médras, Bwpovs Hdt. 1. 94., 2. 178:— Pass. to be placed or settled in, év rémm Hat. 4. 53; c. dat. loci, Theocr. 17. 102, Epigr. Gr. 17.5, Anth. P. 10.9: to frequent, rais dpudtais rivds Alciphro r. 33. éviLdvew, to sit in or on, v.1. Il. 20. 11, Alciphro 1, 22. évigetyvipr or =tw, post. for év¢-. 2.= ivi, 5 481 evitnpa, 75, a place to sit in, seat, Clem. Al. 825. évilnors, ews, 7), a sitting in, eis Te Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. I. 4. évilw, to set in (v. i{w) :—hence Ep. aor. 1 med. éveeicaro, he placed upon, mpupvy Kotpny Ap. Rh. 4. 188. II. intr., like é(avw, to sit in or on, c. acc., Cdxous évifoveay Eur. Hel. 1108, cf. évéCopar; (the emend. of Herm., Aesch. Cho, 801, puyxdy évicere, for vopifere, is very specious) ; c. dat., c@pare nat Yuyxf .. évier “Epws Plat. Symp. 196 B: also in Med., és 7 Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 8. évifw, fut. iow, to consider as one, to teach the unity of the universe, as Xenophanes ap. Arist. Metaph. 1. 5,12; v. Schol. p. 986 Brandis. évinpt: fut.—jow, aor.—fxa, Ep.—énea: [mostly évinye in Ep., always. évinue in Trag.; but éviere Il, 12. 441]. To send in or into, ddAous & orpivovres evhoopey will send into the battle, Ul. 14. 131; GAAnY évinor warp tvapi®wov elvar Od. 12. 65. 2. to put in, implant, inspire, C. acc. rei et dat. pers., eve 5€ of pévos Hi Il. 20, 80; Kal of Odpoos évt ornbecow éevgke 17.570; Toiow Kébrov alvdy évqoas 16. 449; évels Adooay Eur. Bacch, 851. 3. reversely, c. acc. pers. et dat. rei, to plunge into, like éuBdddAev, Lat. immittere, Tov .. Leds événve mévoiot Il. 10.89; vdv puv paddov dynvoptnow evijnas plunged him in, inspired him with pride of soul, 9. 700; so, #8 5° d8ds nat paAXov dpo- Ppootvynow évqoer [sc. huads] shall bring us yet more to harmony, Od. 15. 198. 4, generally, to throw in, éret f° événxe [sc. pappaxoy otvp] Od. 4. 233, cf. Theocr. 11, 66; vnvolv éviere OeomSats mop Il. 12. 441, cf. Eur. Tro, 1262; but also, és rds wéAeis év. wOp Hat. 8. 32, ef. Thuc. 4.115 ;—of ships, to launch them into the deep, évfooper” | ebpéi mévr@ [sc. vja] Od. 2. 295, cf. 12. 293: and metaph. fo urge on, incite to do a thing, c. inf., Mosch. 2. 153. 5. to send into the assembly, employ, dAAous phropas Id. 6. 29; év, d:aBodds Polyb. 28. 4,” Io. 6. to inject poison, of spiders, Xen. Mem. 1. 3,12; idv év. mvt Ap. Rh. 5. 1508:—of clysters, Nic. Al. 197, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac.’ 1.6, etc., cf. évena. 7. to urge on, c. acc. et inf., Mosch. 2, 153. 8. in Med., of trumpets, to begin to sound, Diod: 17. 106. IT. intr. ¢o press on, Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 29: and in Med. fo: plunge into, b8d7eco1 Arat. 943. 2. like évdt6wpt, to give in, relax, Plut. 2. 437 A. ; evidvijoiw, évilpvarw, Ep. for év6-. évurd| €, évikdarmece, Ep. aor. 2 of éyxaraBdAAw, -ninra. évikdrOave, 3 sing. Ep. aor. 2 of éyxarabvijcKa. évikdrOeo, évikdrOero, Ep. aor. 2 of éykarariénu. ‘ évikAdw, post. for éyx-, to break in, break off, Lat. infringere: me-' ~ taph,, €wOev évucdGv S77 vonaw is wont to break off or frustrate what - I devise, Il. 8. 408, 422. évikdetw, Ep. for éyi-. . Evixpos, ov, (ixpds) with wet in it, humid, yf Arist. H. A. 6. 16, 4, Theophr. C. P. 1. 2, 1; of young pigs, Ar. Gramm. ap. Ath, 375 A. énikvéopat, fut.-iouar, Dep. to penetrate, Theophr. C. P. 5. 13, 1. Kv7Pw, éeviKvedoow, post. for éyx-, Nic. Th. g11, Mosch. 2.6. évixés, 7, dv, (év) single, dpiOpds évinds the singular number, opp. to dbuinds, tANOuyTinds, Gramm, Ady. -«@s, Ib. ; . évixptvw, Ep. for éye-, Ap. Rh. évidAw, to look askance, Paus. ap. Eust. 206. 32; so émAAGtrw, Clem. Al. 294, E. M., Suid.: cf. kariAA@mTw. : evioBodéw, 40 inject poison into, rt Hipp. 1279. 12. €viot, at, a, some ; never in Ep., Lyr., or Att. Poets before Menand., ex-' cept once in Ar. Pl, 867 (cf. however éviore); first used in Prose by Hdt., 1. 120., 2. 96., 8. 56 (v. 1. 7. 187), and then in Plato and Xen. ; éor pev .. €vcor Bé.., Plat. Theaet. 151 A, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 38; éveoe pev .. of 5é .. Plat. Menex, 238 E:—later, sometimes, in sing., ob waca xivnots Oeppalve, évia 5& yixe Arist. Probl. 5. 36, cf. Theophr. Fr. 8. 1; wep Wuxijs évias Oewphoa: Arist. Metaph. 5. 1, 7:—neut. pl. as Ady. =éviore, Menand. Twa. 2, ‘zo. 6. (The approved deriv. is from ém of =€o7tv oi, as éviore from éx Bre=%aTw bre, Bickh Pind. O. 10. 1:—but Curt. compares it with Skt. anyas (alius), etc.; cf. évos.) éviéxa, Dor. for sq., ap. Stob. éviore (not évére, cf. dAdore, Exdorore) :—Adyv. for & bre=torw bre, at times, sometimes, Eur. Hel. 1213, Ar. Pl. 1125, Plat, etc.; év. wav... , éy, 5é Plat. Gorg. 467 E; év. pv .. ,éo71 5 Sre Id. Theaet. 150 A; év. .. tore dé Id. Phil. 46E; év. pév .., dre be .. Arist. Meteor. 2. 4,8, cf. eviot. evimrh, }, (eviarw, v. évérw fin.) :—Ep. Noun, a rebuke, reproof, ll. 4. 402, etc.; often with an epith., eparepiy 8 dmobéc0ar évingy 5. 492; évemf dpyadén 14. 104; edderoev yap epiy Eenarydov ev. Od. 10. 448: —abuse, contumely, énioxere Oupov évenfs 20. 266; and in pl. angry threats, pevyow .. Toceddwvos évmds 5. 446, cf, h. Merc. 165 :—later, Wevdéav tind, the reproach of lying, Pind. O. ro (11). 8:—then, of all violent attacks, as of the sun’s rays, thirst, Opp. C. 1, 133, 299. évittetos, ov, Ep. for éumheos. éuTrdgjcacbat, —cOijvar, -owor, v. sub EualmAnm. évirdqoow, Ep. for éumAjoow. éwuTAw, Ep. for €umAéw, Opp. H. 1. 260. évirmdfouat, Dep. =sq., Arr. An. 2.6, 4, Plut. Mar. 25. évurmeva, to ride in, xwploy émriSeov évimmedoa: Hdt. 6. 102. évierpyoat, Ep. for éump-, v. sub éumiapnps. évemptw, Ep. for éumpiw, Opp. évenrdge, lengthd. for évinrw, Ap. Rh. 1. 492, 864; v. 1. dma go. évurriw, Ep. for éumria. 2 évirrro: fut. évivw Il. 7. 447 (cf. évémw fin.): aor. jvimime [t) Hom. ; but also évévime (which is restored for évéverre in Il. 15. 546, 552., 16. 626, Od. 18. 321, etc.; and for évémomey in Il. 23. 473). Ep. Verb, like évicaw (used once by Aesch.), to reprove, upbraid, often with words added to strengthen the sense, xader@ jvirare ene Il, 2. 2453 1 rahe 482 xarenoiow dveideot Oupdy evimre 3. 438; evévmev dveidelos enéeoow Od. 18. 326; rdv & aloxpas évévere 18. 321, cf. Il. 23.4733 or, simply, néow 8 ivinane pi0y 3. 427; Kpadiny jvimare piOw reproved his soul with words, Od. 20. 17:—without any modal word, ef ris we Kat dddos éviwrot were another to attack me, Il. 24. 768; rév p’”Extwp évévimev 15. 552, cf. 546; al ris p’ évimrwy eiwe Aesch. Ag. 590; and without an acc., Od. 18.78., 21.84., 24. 161 :—cf. the verbal Subst. even. II, after Hom., =évémw, to tell, announce, tAmidas évinrwy Pind. _ 358; cf. Wern. Tryph. p. 150, Nonn. D. 27. 59. (Prob. from 4/1, in-rw (ipa, tpas occur in Hesych.), akin to tp, tnvn, iméw: hence 7 in éverh, jwiname, évévime, The usage of évinrw for évémw seems to be incorrect ; an in their usual senses, the words are quite distinct, v. évémw sub fin. &oxdAg, éuoKqirre, évonlprrw, Ep. for évo-. évrbe, to make equal in, Geop. 8. 6,1; dub. évicrmety, v. sub évérw. ° énomeipw, Ep. for évor—. éomjow, éviomw, v. sub évéra. évicow, Ep. collat. form of évirrw, to attack, reproach, éxndydous éné- ecow énocéuev Il. 15.198; dvedeionow evicowy 22. 497; éreco’ aic- Xpotow éviocwv 24. 238; but also of all usage in deed, éweoiv re xaxotow &icooper 75% Bodjow maltreat him with words and blows, Od. 24.161: —Pass., éviaadpevos misused, 24. 163. éviornpt, Causal in pres., fut. and aor. x act., and in aor. 1 med. To put, set, place in, trmov éy AlOos errardvar Xen. Eq. Mag. 1,6; oTHAas éviarn és ras xwpas Hdt. 2. 102; #uidxov évorqoa eis airiy [riv i2 484 ‘€voucéw, to dwell in, c. dat. loci, @#Bas Eur. H. F, 1282, etc.; év romw Xen. An. 5.6, 25; kara oréyny Eur. Alc. 1051; évradda Ar. Nub. 95 ; absol., ob reap Kexrhped .. avTd (sc. 7d c@pa], wAIY evourpoat Biov .., we possess it not, save ¢o dwell in during life, Eur. Supp. 5353 [@upéar] €5ocay évorneiv to dwell in, Thuc. 4. 56. 2. metaph. to dwell upon, be engaged with, év rots pva.xois Arist. Gen, et Corr, I..2, 10; Tots ovyypappaotw Clearch. ap. Ath. 457 E. II. c. ace. loci, to in- ‘habit, Hdt. 1. 4:, 2. 178, Soph..O. C..1533, etc.; absol., of évoiotivres the inhabitants, Hdt. 2. 66, Thuc, 1. 18, 91, etc. évoukyotpos, ov, habitable, Schol. Soph. O. C. 27. évoixyors, eos, 9, a dwelling in a place, Thuc. 2. 17, Dion. H., etc. ( €vouknrhptov, 74, an abode, Poll. 1. 73. évorxtSvos, ov, or a, ov, (olxia) domestic, Clem. Al. 189, Poll. 10. 156. évorifo, fut. Att. 1@:—to settle.in a place, to plant or fix in, Aesch. Fr. 248; mapa riot Te évoue. Plat. Epin. 978 C:—Pass. to be settled in a place, to take up one's abode there, Hdt. 1.68; 7@.cwpar: Plat. Ax. 371 C; and so in Med., Thuc. 6. 2. ASyos, ov, collecting house-rent, Artemid. 3. 41. In Basilic., évoukoAdyos, v. Ducang. © évoixwos; ov, (ols), in thevhouse, keeping at home, év. dps a dunghill cock, Aesch, Eum. 866; cf. évdopzdyas. II. as Subst., cE évoinmov, 76, house-rent, Lys..Fr. 15, Isae. 58. 23, Dem. 1179. 23, Anth. P. 11. 251; 7@ compare Tere? évoixioy 4 yvxh Theophr. ap. Plut. 2. 139 E. —_&. &volxiov, 76, a dwelling, Dion. P. 668. évolkiopa, 74, a dwelling, Suid. évorxoBopéw, fo build in a place, [7H vijow] mUpyov Thuc. 3. 51; [ev Th Aaxwvixg) Telxicpa Id. 8.4 :—Pass., Id. 8.84 :—Med., év. Te?xos to build one a fort there, Id. 3. 85. II. to build up, block up, nvdida Twa. évpKodopnpevny Thuc. 6. 51,-ef. Diod. 3. 37. évoukos, ov, in-dwelling : an inhabitant, Trag., etc.; mostly c. gen. loci, inhabitant of a place, Aesch. Pr. 415, Soph. Tr. 1092, Thuc. 4. 61, etc.; also c. dat..a dweller\in a place, Plat. Criti. 113 C. 2. pass. dwelt in, TladAdbos évoixa, pédaOpa Eur. Ion 235. évoixoupéw, to keep house, év.., Dion. H. 6.3; metaph., 4 pvjun évoixovpovoa Luc. Philops. 39. : évowos, ov, full of wine, Long, 2. 1. Cret. in C. I. 2554. 85 sq., 2555.11. évowwogAtm, to prate in one’s cups, Luc. Lexiph. 14. évowoxoéw, fo pour in wine, c. acc. cogn., olvoy évo.voxoebytes Od. 3. ae véxrap éwvoxée Il. 4. 3. KAdLw, to squat upon, Tots dmoaGiots, of a dog, Philostr. 867. évoABos, ov, prosperous, wealthy, Manetho 4. 85. évodicbdve, later -alvw, to fall in, of the ground, Plut. Cim. 16: ¢o slip and fall, Id. Pomp..25. Ay.0s, ov, sitting onthe tripod, epith. of Apollo, Soph. Fr. 875. évopnpys, Thue. 4. 746.45, 96; moceiv Xen. An. 1. 2, 143 &. -yeyveras Ib. §. 3, 3+ 2. c. acc. to exceed all bounds, Plat. Legg. 644B;% eeraopes, 4, = é¢éracis, Dem, 230, 14, Plut. 2, 1060 B eLerarréov — e&jdarTOos. eracréov, verb. Adj. one must scrutinise, Plat. Rep. 599 A. e€ prov, 76, a@ test, proof, Origen. et S, OD, 6, an examiner, ingnirer into, Twos Dion. H. 2. 67, Plut. Ages. 11. 2. in some states, an auditor of public accounts, Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 16. 3. at Athens, an officer who checked the amount of pay due to the £évo. who were om service, Aeschin, 16, 7, C. I. 106 (ubi v. Bockh). eeragrixés, 7, dv, capable of examining into, Tav épyov Xen. Mem. 1.1, 7; €f. wat xpirieds Luc, Hermot. 64 :—absol. inquiring, Xen. Occ. 12,19: used in inquiry, of Dialectic, Arist. Top. I. 2, 2; in Poét. 17, 5 &xarariol seems the prob. l.:—Ady. -«@s, Dem. 215. 9. II. é. (sc. dpyptov), 76, the salary of an eeraorhs, Dem. 167. 17. eEérepor, ar, a, later form of pereférepo, Nic. Th. 412, 744. €€-érns, es, six years old, immov .. éfére’ dduhrnv Il. 23. 266, cf. 655, Pind. N. 3. 85, Ar. Nub, 862 :—also fem. éérts, werd tov éférn Kal riv éférw Plat. Legg. 794 C. IL. lasting six years, dpxh Lys. 183. 15. fer, Prep. with gen., éére rod Gre... even from the time when.., ll. 9.106; &ért marpay even from the fathers’ time, Od. 8. 245; éfére vnwutins Ap. Rh. 4. 791; éfére weiVev Call. Dian. 103: also in late Prose, éfért veov, veapod App. Civ. 2. 86, Acl. N. A. 5. 39; éér maidwv Epigr. Gr. 580. 9. evyevilo, = eiyevi(w, Origen, evdrdlw, to calm utterly, rods xepavas Tov mpayparowv Philo 2. 345. evduvw, to examine, rods dpxovras Plat. Legg. 945 D. : eEeuxpivéw, to handle with discrimination, Hipp. Fract. 763; é. Tas diapopas to treat them systematically, Polyb. 35. 2, 6. eevAdBéopat, to guard carefully against, Tt Plat. Lach. 199 E, al. ; fevd. rodro py .. Eur. Andr. 645; é. uh .., Aesch. Fr. 195. eevpiplfo, to make light or easy, cvppopds Eur. H. F. 18, cf. Babr. 46. II. Med. to prepare, Lat. expedire, Eur. H. F. 81. evpevilw, to propitiate, Eust. Opusc. 135. 61:—Med., Plut. Fab. 4, etc. :—Pass., aor. pass. —1aGeis Eus. H, E. 9. 7. II. intr. to be Rracious, beds &, C. I. 8627. €evvouxity, strengthd. for ebvovxitw, Plut. 2. 692 C. eEeumopéw, to supply abundantly, ém«ovplay rats xpetacs Plat. Legg. 18 C. II. absol. to be well prepared, wept tt Ib. 861 B.—The form éfevropi{w, in Xen. An. 5. 6, 19, is prob. an error for éxmopitm, Ecipepa, 76, =efevpnua, v. Lob. Phryn. 445. evpeors, ews, }, a searching out, search, Hat. 1. 67. 2. a finding out, invention, Id. 1. 94. 3. discovery, Plat. Minos 315 A. €euperéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be discovered, vods Ar, Nub. 728. eLeuperéov, one must find out, Plat. Rep. 380 A. efeuperids, 7, dv, inventive, ingenious, M. Anton. 1. 9. €evpnua, 74, a thing found out, an invention, Hat. 1. 53, 94, 171, Aesch. Theb. 649; é. cody Ar. Eccl. 578; Wadapndindy .. rovged- pnya Eupol. Incert. 2: a stratagem, Phryn. Com. Mor. 4. evpick, fut. -evpyow': aor. eipov:—to find out, discover, Il. 18. 322, Thuc. 8. 66, Plat. Rep. 566 B, etc.; &. éad0ev to find out from what source .., Ar. Eq. 800: ¢o invent, Hdt.1. 8, 94., 4. 61, etc.; dpOpdy, Eoxov aopioparwy, ef. Aesch. Pr. 460, cf. 469; €f. én’ Eyod Seopdy Ib. 97 :—simply ¢o find, TéAews oe owripa ef. (sc. dvra) Soph. O. T. 304; abrov é. éxOiw Bpvyav Id. Aj. 1045; mod Tov dvdpa .. eeuphooper Ar. Eq. 145; also, c. inf., @AAo Te efnuphxact .. yevécOar Hat. 1. 196; by ydp 7OAN dy éfetipor pabeiv would lead one on to learn, Soph. O. T. 120; Bapddroxov efevpée te Ar. Eq. 1194 :—Pass., Hat. 1.8, go, al.; impers., GE ope és Thy Epnow rav Kpewy efedpyrat this invention has been made .. , Id. 4. 61. 2. to seek out, search after, Hdt. 7. 119., 5. 33; 3. to find out, win, get, procure, kparos Pind. I, 8(7).8; 70 «aAAos Gdyos &€. Soph. Tr. 25; yaorpt piv ra avudpopa régov 765” éf. Id. Ph. 288; vépous ceavr@ Antipho 130.38; dvdpa éf. of a girl, Phoenix ap. Ath. 359 F :—in Med., éfevpéo@a: wadaicpara Theoer. 24. 112. II. to search a place, like éfepeetvw in Hom., Pind. I. 4. 97 (3- 74)- eEevreAiLo, strengthd. for ebreAiw, Plut. Alex. 28, Ath. 494 C. eevrehiopés, 4, strengthd. for edredcopds, Dion. H. de Thuc. 3. éEevrovéw, strengthd, for ebrovéw, Arr. Epict. 4. 1, 147. eevrperifa, strengthd, for ebrperi(w, Eur. El. 75. €evxopat, Dep. to boast aloud, proclaim, é. 7 [elvat] to boast that .., Pind. O. 13. 85, Aesch. Ag. 533; “Apyelat yévos deux Speada we boast to be Argives by race, Id. Supp. 275; also, é. -yévos to boast of it, Ib. 272. II. to pray earnestly for, & op Hees Gvaep éEqvxov Id. Cho. 215; c. acc. et inf., Eur. Med. 930. ; eehiivev, poet. for -pavneay, Pind. O. 13. 25. EédnBos, 6, one who is beyond the age of an épnBos, Censorin. Shedbinus, — Epinus :—Med. éfepiepat, to enjoin, command, c. inf., éxet- vov eipyew Tedupos efepierat Soph. Aj. 795, cf. Eur. I. T. 1468. é€ex€-Bpoyxos, ov, having the thyreoid cartilage (Adam's apple) pro- minent, Hipp. Art. 807, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 8. éexé-yNouros, ov, with prominent buttocks, Hipp. Art. 823. eexns, és, (Eféxa 11) prominent, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 8. éEéxw, to stand out or project from, tiwds Ar. Vesp. 1377. _ 2 absol. to stand out, be prominent, Hipp. V. C. 895; @£€xovra convexities, opp. to #oiAa, Plat. Rep. 602 C: cf. eloéxw I. b. of the sun, to shine out, appear, hv eéxn eidn wat’ bpOpov Ar. Vesp. 771; Efex’, @ GiX frre shine out, fair sun, Id. Fr. 346; mply &. HAcoy before sunrise, ap. Dem. 1071. 3 :—so later in Pass., Lxx (3 Regg. 7. 29). II. Med. to cling to, twos Dion. H. 1. 79, Clem. Al. 165. ep, fut. Yjow, to boil thoroughly, Hdt. 4. 61:—Pass. to be boiled out, Arist. Meteor. 4. 7, 4- €§nBos, ov, (Bn) past one’s youth (i.e., says Hesych., 35 years old), like €fwpos, Aesch. Theb. 11. II. 501 €nyfopar, fut. yoouar: Dep. To be leader of, c. gen. pers., Tav & eényeicbw Fl. 2. 806; in Andoc. 15. 28, Reiske restored Knpvxov dv, so that éfnyf, éfnyefo@ar are used in signf. 11. 3. 2. c. acc. pers. to lead, govern, often in Thuc., rds modes 1. 76; rods fuppdxous 6. 85; tiv TWeAondvyncor 1. 74; absol., 1. 95; xaden@s &., 3. 93: Vv. infr. II. 2. Il. to go first, lead the way, absol., h. Hom. Bacch. 10; €reaOar TH dy obra ft Sealy Hdt. r. 151, cf. 9. 11; dxodoudeiv T@ wyyoupévy Plat. Rep. 474 C: ef. éacréw 11. 2. 2. c. dat. pers. et acc. rei, to shew one the way, és témov Hat. 6.135; & 3 éfnyeiobe rots guppaxors Thuc. 3. 35; c. dat. pers. only, to go before, lead, juiv Soph. O. C, 1589, etc.; or c. acc. loci only, to lead the way to, x@pov Ib, 1520. 3. c. gen. rei, &f. THs mpagews Xen. Cyr. 2. I, 29. 4, é, els rhv “EAAdba to lead an army into Greece, Xen. An. 6. 6, 34. III. like Lat. praeire verbis, to prescribe or dictate a form of words, é&. rov vépov rwi Dem. 363. 18; éfnyod Oeous dictate, name them, Eur. Med. 745. 2. generally to prescribe, order, mougovot..7d dy Keivos éfnyénrar Hdt. 5. 23; # 6 vdpos eyyetrac - Plat. Rep. 604 A: of a diviner, c. inf., fo order one to do, Aesch. Eum. 5953 a & e€nyod pidos Id. Cho. 552; ols trav GAkwy Gedy of Mayo égnyotvro=Tois ddAos Oeois obs .. Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 11, cf. 4. 5, 51., 7. 3,1. 3. to prescribe the form to be observed in religious ceremonies, ti p@; didacK admepoy éfnyouuévn Aesch. Cho. 118, cf. Soph. O, C. 1284, etc.; 7 6 vdpos ef. Plat. Rep. 604 B; obros 6 eds wept 7d ro.adra..é. Ib. 427 C, cf. 469 A; morjgover roiro 7d dy ketvos éfnyénrar Hat. 5. 233 5 re xpi) moréerv, efnyéeo av Id. 4. 9, cf. 7. 2343 €. 70 otvoua Kat tiv Ovoiny to expound, interpret them, Id, 2. 49; Tov wonrhy Plat. Crat. 407 A; &”Opnpos A€ye Id. Ion 531 As 6 Tov “HpdxAecrov .. éényovpevos Antiph. Kap. 1; 7d vdptpa Dem. 1160, Io: absol., dypapor vouor Kad’ ods EtpoAmidar ényouvrat according to which they expound things, Lys. 104. 9, cf. Andoc, 15. 25: cf. éfnyn- Ths I. IV. to tell at length, relate in full, Hdt. 2. 3, Aesch. Pr. 214, 702, Thuc. 5. 26: to set forth, explain, riw €dacwy the line of march, Hdt. 3. 4., 7. 6, cf. 6.135, Thuc. 1. 138; c. acc. et inf. to explain that .. , Soph. Aj. 320; foll. by relat., é¢. rw tpémw .. , Hdt. 3. 72, etc. ; €f. mepi rivos Plat. Ion 531 A, Xen, Lac. 2, I. 2. to interpret, translate, Just. M. Tryph. 68. eéqynows, ews, , a statement, narrative, Thuc. ¥. 73; imép twos Polyb. 6. 3, I. II. explanation, interpretation, mept rods vépous Plat. Legg. 631 D; évumviow Diod. 2. 29. 2. in Gramm. a com- mentary. 3. translation, Just. M. Tryph. 724. eEnyntis, od, 5, one who leads on, an adviser, Lat. auctor, mpayyarov dyabayv Hat. 5. 31; obroot 88 .. dnavrav iv Tovraw éfny. Dem. 928. . 20. II. an expounder, interpreter, Lat. enarrator, esp. of oracles, dreams, or omens, Hdt. 1, 78; or, as at Athens, of sacred rites or customs, modes of burial, of expiation, etc., Lat. interpres religionum, a spiritual director, casuist, Plat. Euthyphro- 4 D, 9 A, Legg. 759 ©, E, 775 A, etc., Tsae. 73. 24; cf. &nyeouat 111.3, Ruhnk. Tim. p. 109, Miiller Aesch. Eum. § 74 sq.:—in Plat. Rep. 427 C, Apollo is the mazpios é. of religion; cf. mpopnrns. éEnyntikés, 7, dv, of or for narrative, A. B. 659, cf. Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 8473 explanatory, Gramm. IL. énynrixa (sc. BiBdAjia), 7a, books on the interpretation of omens, Plut. Nic. 23 :—Adv. -x@s, by way of explanation, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 28. éEnyopla, 7), a shouting, Lxx (Job. 33. 26). 2. confession, Ib. 22. 22. eendeo, to sift, filter, purify, Theophr. C. P. 6. 13, 1 :—Pass., Arist. Probl. 38. 5. &Enxov0-qpepos, ov, on the Goth day, anépOapya Hipp. 1013 E. éEqovra, of, ai, 74, indecl. sixty; Hom., etc.; v. sub €. éEqxovra-BiBAos, ov, consisting of sixty books, Suid. enxovra-érns, €s, sixty years old, Mimnerm. 6, Hipp. 1149 D, etc. eEqnovra-erta, 7), a time of sixty years, Plut. Cic. 25. eEnnovrduis [a], poet. —dur, Adv. sixty times, Pind,O. 13. 141. &Eqnovrd-KAivos, ov, with 60 couches, oikos Diod. 16. 83. eEqxovra-powpos, ov, consisting of sixty parts, cited from Schol. Arat. éEqrovra-mévte, —€f, -errd, -oxTw, —evvéa, as compds, in LXx. éEqxovrd-myxus, v, sixty cubits long, Ath. 201 E. eqxovrd-trous, 5, 7,,-rovy, 76, 60 feet, Galen. to. 33 Kiihn. eEqnovras, a5os, }, the number 60, Nicet. Eugen. II. a sixtieth part, Strabo 113. eqxovra-orddwos, ov, of sixty stades, Strabo: 268. . éEqxovra-raéAavria, 7, a set of men contributing a sum of 60 talents for the service of the state, Dem. 183. 8, 11. éEqnovrovrns, es, =éfnxovraérns, Plat. Legg. 755 A, 812 B. tEnkooratos, a, ov, on the sixtieth day, Hipp. Art. 832. eEnxoorés, 7, dv, sixtieth, Hdt. 6. 126, etc. tEnxooro-rérapros, ov, sixty-fourth, Theol. Ar. 77. hme, fut. fw, to have reached a certain point, é{jees iva pavets hast reached a point at which thou wilt shew, Soph. Tr. 1157; GAs iy” eqs Saxptov Id.O.T. 1515; dredés te wal ode etjeov éxeioe of mavra bet dpjxey Plat. Rep. 530E; Setpo é€. Id. Epin. 3°? A; eis Te Plut. 2. 833 F; etc. :—c. acc. cogn., é. d5dv Soph. El. 1318. It. of Time, to have run out or ee a over, Hat. 2. hh Stig ie 199, Lys. rog. 14, Xen. An. 6. 3, 36; amply pot potpay Kev Biov Soph. Ant. 896 > bine } dpxh, %) mpobecpia Plat. Legg. 766 C, Lex ap. Dem. I055. 4. 2. of prophecies, dreams, etc. to have come to an accomplishment, turn out true, Hdt. 1. 120., 6. 80; 7a wdvr’ dy eqoe capy Soph. O. T. 1182: ef. &épxopat iT. eqdaoa, Ep. é&fAacoa, y. sub éAatya. . éEnAdros, ov, beaten out, of metal, dorida épAarov (explained by & What follows, qv dpa xadxeds HAager) Il. 12. 295. F ' Fader of, often 502: eEAAOov, v. sub Efépyouar. : ; enAvdlw, to hang in the sun, as a kind of torture, Hesych,, Lxx (2 Sam. 21.6, 13), cf. Hdt. 3. 124 sq. €EnAtéopat, Pass. to be sunny, light, Plut. 2.929 D. é aypévos, Ady. part. pf. pass. of éadAdoow, strangely, unusu- ally, Diod. 2. 42, Plut. 2.745 F. eEnAtors, ews, 7, a way out, outlet, rod mupds ode Exovros effAvoww €« rod doreos Hdt. 5. 101; of a river, €xovros obdapy ef. 3.117; é. és Oédagoav KaThKovca 7. 130. éE-ijpap, Adv. for six days, six days long, Od. 10. 10., 14. 249. '798, 806, etc. ; rijs xupys Hdt. 1.94; €ore..AHOn pvhuns ef. Plat. Phil. 33 E; émoarnpns &. Id. Symp. 208 E. 2. a marching out, military expedi- tion, €. moetc@ar Hdt. 9. 19, 26, Thuc. 3. 5, etc., cf. Ar. Nub. 579; thy én Oavarw %€. moetoPat, of Leonidas, Hdt. 7. 223; éf. efed@ery Xen. Hell. 1.2,17; d5ous Epwev.xevds Soph. Aj. 287; iv én’ ‘OQpedv éfodov Dem. 252. 4; efod0r meCai Id. 259. 20:—also a sally, Thue. 5. Io. 3. a solemn procession, Hdt. 3. 14; esp. of women of rank with their suite, Plat. Legg. 784D, Theophr. Char. 22; é{d5ous Aapmpas écodcav Dem, 1182. 27; a law was made by Solon to regulate such €fo50t, Plut. Sol. 21: cf. éfodevw. II. @ way out, outlet, Lat. exitus, Hdt. 2.148; mvadv én’ éd5os Aesch. Theb. 33, cf. 58, 284; mpos Oupavos égdbors Soph. El. 328; of a river, &. és @4Aagcay Hat. 7. It. III. to 3. % 130; % “Apxadia ove exe efddovs Trois tbacw Arist. Probl, 26. 58. 2. the way out of a difficulty, Plat. Rep. 453 E; but, # é€. Tav Ad-yov the issue of an inquiry, Id, Prot. 361 A. 3. of orifices in the body, 9 &. Tod mweprrrw@paros of the vent or anus, Arist. P. A. 3. 14, 20., 4. 12, 16; ris rpopis Id. H. A, 2.17, 7 3 and absol., Ib. 4. 7, 11, al. ; so of other orifices in the body, Ib. 7. 8, 3, al. III. also like Lat. exitus, an end, close, éa° ebb eivat Thuc. 5. 143 én’ eddg THs dpx7s Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 43 én’ edd (vulg. -ov) rod (yy Joseph. A. J. 4. 8, 2; absol. departure, death, Ev. Luc. 9. 31, 2 Petr. 1. 15. 2. the end or issue of an argument, Plat. Prot. 361 A. 3. the end of a tragedy, i.e. all that follows the last choral ode (cf. mépodos), Arist. Poét. 12,6; éfod0v avadciv to play the chorus off the stage, their exit being led by an adAnrns, Ar. Vesp. §r ubi v. Schol. _ iV. an outgoing, payment of money, Polyb. 6. 13, 2: of. efobdw, soda (ar, &€oBos, ov, promoting the passage, twos Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 2. 4. eoStvde, strengthd. for d5uvdw, Eur. Cycl. 661, in Pass. €6L0, intr. to smell, naxdv é¢éadew (Dor.) 0 smell foully, Theoer. 20. To. II. c. gen. to smell of a thing, Theophr. Odor. 20. eo0ev, Ady. for é¢ ob (sc. xpévou), since when, Nic. Th. 318. IL tober, = ewer (cf, évdo0ev), Stesich, ap. A. B. 945 (79 Bgk.). 504 €or (not efor), Dor. for &w (cf. évSor), Heraclid. ap. Eust. 140. 15. eolyvup and ekolyw, to open, cut open, Hipp. 417.35, cf. Hermipp. Ge. 3. €ovda, -o106a, pf. in pres. sense, plqpf. é¢737 as impf., Soph. Ant. 460, 2 sing. -ydn00a Id. Tr. 988 (Cobet): (v. sub *etdw):—to know thoroughly, know well, éret ovre Oedv éx O€opara dn Il. 5.64, and so Soph., Eur., and in late Prose; with part. agreeing with the subj., fod" éxovga Soph. Tr.5; é€. dvijp dy Id. O.C. 567; of the object, éf. o€ od prov feovra Ib. 1028, cf. Ph. 79, 407; ip’ dpav oddity eedus having learnt, Id. O.T.37; ©. gen., Gv 7 av eferdahs upd, as if it were an Adj., Id. Tr. 299 ; absol., Id. El. 222, etc. 3 eae Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 1. owdéw, to swell or be swollen up, wanyais mpdowmnov .. éwdnxdra Eur. Cycl. 227; vexpds éfqSnxas Luc. D. Mort. 14. 5 :—metaph. to swell be- yond its proper size, Polyb. 6. 18, 7. €orStoxopar, Pass. = éfo.5éw, Hipp. 482. 5. ; . eoucerdw, to appropriate, éavrS 71 M. Anton. Io, 31: so in Med., Strabo 184, 250. II. Pass., €forxevodoGai rive to adapt oneself to one, Plut. 2. 649 E. e€oucéw, to emigrate, eis irepopiay Lys. 187.29; Méeyapade Dem. 845. 19. II. Pass. to be completely inhabited, Thuc. 2. 17. eouchowpos, ov, habitable, inhabited, Soph. O.C. 27. > at ae €ws, %, emigration, Plat. Legg. 704 C, 850 B. eoucta, ,=foreg., dub. in Polyaen. 4. 2, 11. eouile: fut. Att. @:—to remove one from his home, eject, banish, Thuc. 1.114., 7. 76; e@eev [pe] yapuos ofkwy Eur. Hec. 949; els GA- Anv xwpav Plat. Legg. 928 E, cf. Plut. Rom. 24; é. xpvodv rijs ZSrdprys Plut. Comp. Aristid. c. Cat. 3:—Pass. and Med. to go from home, remove, emigrate, ppovdot .. eiaw eweicpévar Ar. Pax 197; €fwxicavro Ib. 203; to quit a house or shop, opp. to elaoxe-, Aeschin. 17. 313; é€. é« rémov Plut. Ages. 15. IL. to dispeople, empty, Ajjuvoy dpeévay éf@xioay Eur. Hec. 887: to lay waste, méAes Dion. H. 5.77; so in Med., Plut. Comp. Ages. c. Pomp. 3. Eolktors, ews, 7, =sq., f. 1. for éfoienots in Plat. Legg. 704.C. €ouropos, 6, expulsion of inhabitants, cited from Philo. eorxrorréov, verb. Adj. one must eject, rd Twos Clem. Al. 195. oucrorys, od, 6, one who expels, Saiuwv Charond. ap. Stob. 291. 30. -€orkoSopéw, to build completely, finish a building, Hat. 2. 176., 5.62, Ar. Ay. 1124, etc.; metaph., Téxvnv peydAnv é. Pherecr. Kpar. 8 :— also in Med., Polyb. 1. 48, 11. 2. &£. xpnuvdv to build up a road along it, Id. 3. 55, 6. II. to unbuild, lay open, Tas mvAas Diod. II. 21, cf, Plut. Dio 50. €orcoddpyors, ews, %, a building up, retx@v Joseph. A. J. 19. 7, 2. €Eoukos, ov, away from home, removed, LXXx (Job. 6. 18). €oudle, to wail aloud, olporyds Soph. Aj. 317; “yootow Ant. 427. €owéw, (ofvos) to be tipsy, Hegesand. ap. Ath. 477 E, Poll. 6. ai; II. to sleep off drunkenness, Paul. Aeg. 1. 33- eowla, 7, drunkenness, Ath. 547 F. €owdopat, Pass. to be drunk, e{gvapévos (so Elmsl. for éfow-) drunken, Eur. Bacch. 814, Ath. 38 E. €owos, ov, drunken, Alex. Eicour. 3, Macho ap. Ath. 349 A, etc. owas, ews, 9, a bringing out, divulging, Joseph. A. J. 17. 4, 1. eourréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of éfolow (fut. of Expépw), to be brought out, Ar, Lys. 921. II. éfo.oréov, one must bring out, Eur. Phoen. 712, Plat. Parm. 128 E. e€ourrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. to be uttered, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 122. ovrrpdw or -€w, to make wild, madden, Luc. de Mar. to. 2, Ael. N. A. 15. 19. II. intr. to rave, Palaeph. Incred. 43. 1. e€ovorpyAdréopat, Pass. to be driven to madness, Pseudo-Plut. 1158 F. eoicw, fut. of xpéepw. €orxvéew, to go out or forth, éforxvetat (Ion.) Il. “2 384. e€otxopat, to have gone out, to be quite gone, ll. 6.379, 384, Soph. O. C. 867; é. Odpate Plat. Com, Aax.1.11; metaph., é« THs yaepys ef. Antipho ap. Stob. 422. 31. : erat €ovwvifopar, Dep. to avoid as ill-omened, Lat. abominari, Plut. De- mosth. 21. 2: ¢. inf. to shrink from doing, Id. 2. 289 B. é€oxéAdAa, intr., of a ship, fo run aground, drive ashore, és ras ExBodds rod Unvelov Hdt. 7.182; pds xparairewy x@dva Aesch. Ag. 666; so, Bedpives ef. eis “viv Arist.H.A.9.48,6. 2. metaph., é€. eis tpaxvrepa mpiypara Isocr. 143 C; els Adyou pikos Id. 409 C; els #Bpw Phylarch. 45; els doédyecav Polyb. 18. 38, 73 és émOvpias dvon- rovs Paus. 8. 24,9; és Tpupiy Ath. 523.C:—absol. to be ruined, Polyb. 4.48, II. II. trans. #o run (a ship) aground :—metaph. ¢o drive headlong, Twa. eis drnv Eur. Tro. 137; 6 wAodros éfaKere Tov KeKTy- pévov eis Erepov #00s Menand. Incert. 60:—Pass., metaph., dedpo 3 eéoxédXerat things are come to this pass, Aesch. Supp. 438; els xuBous é€. to drift into gambling, Plut. 5 B. eodéxw, strengthd. for dAéew, Or. Sib. 4.136. ; €oduoPdve, (never —aivw in good Att., v. ddtcOdvo): fut. -okcOnow : aor.2-Wdicbov, To glide off, slip away, « 5 of nap bAober Il. 20. 470: to glance off, as a spear-point from a hard substance, Eur. Phoen. 13833; Tivos off a thing, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 18 :—to slip out, escape, Hippon. 28, Ar. Pax 141; of things, to slip from the memory, Id. Eccl. 286; é. eis #5ovds to slip imperceptibly into .., Hdn. 1.3 ;—c. ace. to slip out of, Lat. eludere, braBodds Ar. Eq. 491. II. to slip asunder, Plut. 2. 398 A. , ews, , a slipping away, Eus. H. E. 10. 7. 4ESAAGpL and tw: fut. -odAdow, Att. —oA@: aor. 1 éfddeca: pf. éo- AwAcka. To destroy utterly, tos Zeds eforeoee Od. 17. 597, cf. Simon. 159, Eur. Hipp. 725, etc. II, Med., with pf. 2 é{édAwAa, Cate. : to perish utterly, Emped. 103, Soph. Tr. 84, Ar. Pax 366, Plat. Euthyd, b Enver). &€or — eLovouaCw. 285 A, etc.; id Tod ye Aymod..eodrwAdres Ar. Pax 483; the opt. is used in imprecations, éfoAofuny Id, Pewpy. 12 (Meineke) : é£éAo0 Alex. Kump. I. tods0pevpa, +6, utter destruction, LXx (1 Regg. 15. 21): so éEo- A0Opevors, ews, 7, I Macc. 7.7, Joseph. A. J. 11. 6, 6:—also ¢Eo- AoOpevris, of, 5, a destroyer, Athanas.; and éEoAoOpeutixes, 7, dv, destructive, Schol. Ar. Pl. 443; the Verb being eEodoOpevw, to destroy utterly, Act. Ap. 3.23, Joseph. A. J. 8.11, 1, often in Lxx. €EohoAvLw, to howl aloud, Lat, exululo, Batr. 101. €opadtlw, to make quite smooth, to smooth away, Hipp. 28. 21, Babr. 60. fin.; in Med., Strabo 709. Il. to form according to rule, Apollon. de Constr. p. 310. €opBpéa, to pour out like rain, Lxx (where éfopBp-icew, fear seem to be errors for —joev, —foar). opnpevors, 1, a demand of hostages, Plut. Rom. 29, Camill. 22. €ounpetw, to bind by taking hostages, rovs BovAous Tats Texvorottats eto. to bind slaves to one’s service by the pledges of wives and children, Arist. Occ. 1.5, fin.:—Med. to take as hostages, maidas Plut. Sert. 14: to procure by hostages, didiay Strabo 288: to bind to oneself, Diod. Excerpt. 571. 29. €Eoptr\éw, to have intercourse, live with, rw Xen. Ages. 11,4: metaph. to bear one company, orepavav ov pia xpord..7ax’ eéomdAnoe Eur. Cycl. 518. II. c. acc. to win over, to conciliate, twa Polyb. 7. 4, 6, Plut. 2. 824 D, etc. III. Med. to be away from one’s Sriends, be alone in the crowd, Eur. 1. A. 735. Spiros, ov, out of one’s own society, foreign, alien, Soph. Tr. 694. eEoppiros, ov, =efdpOarpos, Poll. 5. 69. II. without eyes, Nicet. eopparow, to open the eyes of: Pass. to be restored to sight, Soph. ap. Ar. Pl. 635, cf. Ael. N. A. 17. 20. 2. metaph. fo make clear or plain, priywra onpara twpyparwoa Aesch. Pr. 499. II. to be- reave of eyes, Lat. exoculare, Eur. Fr. 545. opparwors, ews, H, a clearing or cleansing of the eyes, Poll. 2. 48. eEopvipr and -iw: fut. éfopodmar: aor. éfdpooa, To swear in excuse, Efd@pooev TodTov appworeiv Dem. 379. 77. II.-mostly to swear in the negative, ¢fopel 7d ph eldévac; Soph. Ant. 535; paprupety i) ttopvvew Dem. 850. 10:—mostly in Med., aor. &wpoodugy, to deny or disown upon oath, swear formally that one does not know a thing, abjure, rt Dem. 1310. 2; or absol., Plat. Legg. 949 A, Isae. 76. 30, etc.; in full, fou. 7 ove eidévar Dem. 1317. 8 :—to forswear, renounce, avy- yevacay éfbuvvaGa Joseph. Macc. Io. 2. to decline or refuse an office by an oath that one has not means or health to perform it, Lat. ejurare magistratum or imperium, topdcacOa Thy mpecBelay Aeschin. 40. 30, cf. Dem. 378. 18; tiv dpxqy Arist. Pol. 4. 13, 2, Plut. Marcell. 6, 12.—This oath was called éfwpooia or dmapoaia, v. Dict. of Antt. eEopordlw, =sq., Callicratid. ap. Stob. 426. 22. eEopordw, to make quite like, to assimilate, Hdt. 3.243; abrov TH woAt- reia Plat. Gorg. 512 E; é€. robs xapmovs to produce fruit exactly like, Theophr. H. P. 2. 2, 4:—Pass. to become or be like, dvdpas yuvaigiv e€opootc0a pic Eur. Andr. 354, cf. Xen. Oec. 73 32; oxhpa éf. mpés Twa Plut. Flamin. 3 :—in Soph. Aj. 549 opootcba picw seems to be Med., to make his nature like, opolwpa, 74, a likeness, resemblance, C. 1. 4957. 52. opolwors, ews, 1), assimilation, Theophr. C. P. 4. 3, I. a becoming like, Plut. Pericl. 2, etc. opowrixés, 7, dv, fit for assimilating, rt Clem. Al. 347. eEopodoyéopar, Dep. to confess in full, Luc. Hermot. 75, Plut. Eum. 17, N. T., etc. 2. to make acknowledgments, give thanks, Ev. Matth. 11. 25, Rom. 14. 11, and often in Lxx. II. in Act. to agree, promise, Ev. Luc. 22. 6. opodsynars, ws, 1}, full confession, Plut. 2. 987 D, Eccl. Eopodoyntixds, 4, dv, giving thanks, thankful, Philo 1. 60. €opodoyoupévas, Ady. pres. part. confessedly, Clem. Al. 763. opopyvipr, fut. foudpgw :—to wipe off from, &k 7° Spopgov orduaros médavov Eur. Or. 219:—Med. to wipe off from oneself, purge away a pollution, vacpotot with water, Eur. Hipp. 653; alua eoudpfacbat memAats to wipe off blood on or with your garments, Id. H. F. 1399, cf- El. 502. II. metaph., éopudptacGat tu pwpiay to wipe off one’s folly on another, i.e. give him part of it, Id. Bacch. 344, parodied by Ar. Ach. 843. 2. =dmopdrropat, to stamp or imprint upon, & éxdary mpafis abrov ewpudptaro els ry yuyjv Plat. Gorg. 525 A, cf. Legg. 775 D, and v. Ruhnk. Tim. eEdpopéts, €ws, }, a wiping off. :—metaph. an impression, Plat. Tim. 80E. ouaAos, ov, with prominent navel, Galen. II. as Subst., edpuparos, 6, a prominent navel, Diosc. 4. 74. overdile, fut. Att. «@ :—strengthd. for dvecdi¢w: 1. c. acc. rei, to cast in one's teeth, kaxd, évedos Soph. El. 282, Eur. I. A. 305; éfo- veBiabels wand having foul reproaches cast upon one, Soph. Ph. 382 — simply, to bring forward, Lat. objicere, 7d réAunu’? lov ewveldicev Eur. Phoen. 1676. 2. c. acc, pers. to reproach, absol,, Soph. O. C. 990; Twa Diod, 5. 29; xéAaxa &. td to reproach him as being .., Alciphro 3. 63. eEovetBuorixds, h, ov, throwing reproach on, Tots dAXots M. Anton. 1.16. €overpsu, = Loveiphorrm, Hipp. 664. 33. overpwypss, 6, = bvepwyyds, Arist. H. A. 10. 6, 5, Probl. 4. 5. eoverpwxrixds, h, ov, subject to dvetpwrypot, Arist. Probl. 5.31. Eoveipdrrw, = dverpdrra, Hipp, 232. 10, Arist.G. A. 2. 4, 22, al. Po ap bag ~~ to utter aloud, announce, h. Hom, Merc. 59; and ae an in the phrase émos 7’ épar’ & 7° évéuacev he spoke ord and uttered it aloud; cf. Eur. I. A. 1066 (where Dind. égovd- II. to call by name, Plut. Cic, 40. 5 i . B57- Lew te eLovouaivw — eLovPévnua. ovopaivo, to name, speak of by name, dvdpa Il. 3. 166; aldero .. yapov éfovopjvat to name, tell it, Od. 6. 66, cf. h. Ven. 253. é£-ovo ony, Adv. (xaréw) by name, calling by name, éov. évopa- (ov Il, 22. 415, cf. 4. 278; ene de pOéyyovro kadedvres éfov. Od. 12. 250; mpoxadctaGar Critias 2. 8: cf. dvopaxdAnsnv. tovixilw, fo try a thing’s smoothness by drawing the nail over it, hence to scrutinise closely, like Lat. ad unguem exigere, Ath. 97 D, Artemid. 1. 16. II. to deprive of nails, pda (v. dvug 111. 1), Galen. €Eokivopat, Pass. to turn sour, Theophr. C. P. 6. 7, 7. eEomdlw, =éxnéurw, Hesych. oil, to squeeze out the juice, nds els Epov efomobels Arist. H. A. 3- 20, 15. DE- 10 8. one’s profession, Plat. Euthyd. 274 A, Prot. 319 A: cf. emaryyehrw 5, y 4. in pl.=Lat. comitia, Plut. 2. 276 C. érayyeAtinés, 7, dy, given to promising, érayyeArixwrepoy eieiy to make over-bold professions, Arist. Rhet. 2. 2 3, 12, cf. Plut. Aem. 8. emiiyeipw, to gather together, collect, of things, Il. 1. 126:—Pass., of men, fo assemble, mplv émt Ove’ dyelpero Od, 11. 6 31; cf. Pind. P. 9. 93. érayeppés, 6, =sq., Clem. Al, 213. emayepars, ews, 7, @ musterin p f 4 = oTparov én. moréerar Hat. re Hd Eo et Pa émdyny [ci], ¥. sub mye. tJ - * , eTayivew — ET ALVED), émtiytvéw, Ion. for érayo, to bring to, Hdt. 2. 2, Q. Sm. 6. 235. émaykvAtfopat, Pass. to be fitted with an dyxvAn, Schol. Or. 1476. éraykovopés, 6, a kind of dance, Ath. 630 A. érayAaile, fut. Att. .@, to honour or grace still more, Ar. Eccl. 575, Fr. 548, Epigr. Gr. 102. 4., 492. II. Pass. to pride oneself on a thing, glory or exult in it, ob5€ € pnyuc Snpdv éwayAaietaOat (inf. fut.) Il. 18. I 3; 2. énnyAaiopévat .. rpdme(ae dressed out, Cratin. Incert. 9. arayvup., to break, ob 7’ ént vra eae (intr. perf.) Hes. Op. 532. €maypos, ov, (dypa) in quest of prey, Arist. H. A. 9. 18, I. €maypootvn, 7}, good luckin hunting, fishing, etc., Theocr.ap. Ath, 284A. énaypumvéw, to keep awake and brood over, Lat. invigilare, rt Luc, Gall. 31, cf. Plut. Brut. 37 :—to watch for, dmwAelg twds Diod. 14. 68: —absol., Aristaen. I. 27. énaypinvyors, 7, a watching for, Aristaen. 1. 27: also émaypunvia, Tambl. V. Pyth. 3 (13). émaypunvos, ov, wakeful, sleepless, Aristaen, 1.27. Adv. -vws, Eus. V. Const. 4. 29, 66. érdya, fut. fw: aor, émqyaryor. To bring on, Lat. adducere, olov én’ Fuap aypot marhp Od. 18. 137; én. mHud Tun Hes, Op. 240, cf. Th. 176; édedOepoy jyap Bacis ap. Hdt. 8. 77; drnv én’ ary Aesch. Cho. 404, cf. Soph, Aj. 1189; xlvdvvoy, wédeydy Ti Isae. 69. 2, Aeschin. 73- 28; yijpas vécous re éndyew Plat. Tim. 33 A; ém. dixny rwi Id. Legg. 881 E, al. 2. to set on, let loose, urge on, as hunters do dogs, énaryovres éxficay [sc. xivas] Od. 19. 445, cf. Xen. Cyn. 10, 19. b. to lead on an army against the enemy, ~Apn tii Aesch. Pers. 85 ; Tv orpariny Hut. 1. 63, cf. 7. 165; 70 Seftor xépas Ar. Av. 353; oTpard- medov Thuc. 6. 69; Twa émi twa Id. 8. 46 :—seemingly intr. to march on, Polyb. 2. 19, 2, Luc., etc.; metaph., Diphil. Zwyp. I. 3. to Zead on by persuasion, influence, Lat. inducere, Od. 14. 392, Thuc. 1. 107, Eur. Hec. 1032; c. inf. to induce him to do, Ib. 260; én. tivd éni 7 Plat. Polit. 278 A:—Pass., ofs éwaxOevres tpueis Dem. 59. 19. 4, to bring in, invite as aiders or allies, roy-Tlépony Hat. g. 1, cf. 8. 112, Dem. 160.15; Mydous Ar. Thesm. 365: vy. infr. 11. 2. 5. to bring to a place, bring in, tov "Amy Hat. 3. 28; Soph. Tr. 378, Eur. Phoen. 905; dpaga.. rods AlBous éexfyov Thuc. 1. 93 :—Pass., Tpopd .. 79 Owpart émd-yerat Tim. Locr. 102 A. 6. to bring in, supply, émrh- dea Thue. 7.60; &« dv diwpixwv ér. vdpara, Lat. rivos inducere, Plat. Criti. 118 E; Alpyyy .. eis thy GApuny Ephipp. Inp. 1. 12. 7. to day on or apply to one, Lat. impingere, incutere, ém. xévtpov tmmas, of a charioteer, Eur. Hipp. 1194; ér. wAnyiy én twa Lxx (Isai. 10. 24); ér. Cnuiav, for &mrievar, Luc, Anach. 11; émaye yvd0ov lay your jaws to it, Ar, Vesp. 370; én. riv didvoidy tim to apply it, Plut. Pericl. i. 8. to bring forward, én, Wipov Trois ~vppaxos to propose a vote to them, like émynpiew és .., Thuc, 1.125, cf.87; and (in Pass.), Pipos enhxrd ri against him, Xen. An. 7. 7, 57, cf. Dem. 1147. 22., 47. 335 80, ém. Spxov rwi Paus. 4.14, 4 :—also, én. Sieny, ypapny ri, Lat. intendere litem alicui, Plat. Legg. 881 E, Dem. 277. 12., 310. 5, etc.; én. alriay twit Id. 275. 43 airiay émpyayé por povou YevdH Id. 550. 22, cf. 552.1. 9. to bring in over and above, to add, 7 Aesch. Ag. 1446, Ar. Nub. 390; tit 7 Plut. Lyc. 8, etc.; @arrova puOpdv énayew to add briskness to the time, Xen. Symp. 2, 22 :—to intercalate days in the year, like émeuBdAAw, Hdt. 2. 4; émaryduevar Hpyépar inter- calated days, Diod. 1. 50; 7d énayépevov that which follows, Gramm. ; 6 én. dydbv extra-ordinary, C. 1. 3491. 10. in Logic, to induce or argue by Induction (cf. énayaryh 4), awd T&v Kad’ Exacta ént 7d KaBdAou Arist. Top. 8. 1, 13; absol., avAAoyi(dpevoy 7 émdyovra by syllogism or by induction, id. Rhet. 1. 2, 8; 6 émaywv, opp. to dmodeaxvivai, Id. An. Post! 2.5, 3: v. infr. 11. 7, éwayory 4. ll. én. ri KoAlay to move the bowels, Diosc. 4. 157 (160). II. Med. to bring to oneself, procure or provide for oneself, x Oadacons dv Séovrat éndgovrat Thuc. 1. 81, cf. 6. 99 :—metaph., “Arda edfivy én. to devise, invent a means of shunning death, Soph. Ant. 362; SovAwaty Tivos Thuc. 3. 10; Tov .. Kak@v er. HOnv Menand. “Lp. 2. 2. of persons, to bring into one’s country, bring in or introduce as allies (v. supr. 1. 4), Hdt. 2. 108, Thuc. I. 3., 2.68., 4. 64, al.; olmor}y ém. Hdt. 6. 34, cf. 5. 67; cf. érarrés. 3. wdprupas tronras ér. to call them in as witnesses, Plat. Rep. 364C, cf. Legg. 823 A; én. oinrds év rots Ad-yots to introduce by way of quotation, Id. Prot. 347 E; rdv “Hotodov waprupa Id. Lys. 215 C; éx. papruipia to adduce testimonies, Xen. Symp. 8, 34; elxdvas én. Id. Occ. 17,15. 4. to bring upon oneself, virra Plat. Legg. 897D; pOdvoy Xen. Apol. 32; ocuppopay éuavr@ Lys. 102. 26; abrois SovAciay Dem. 424.10; mpaypara Id. 1256, 11; deondrnv én, Tdv vdpov Plat. Gorg. 492 B. 5. to bring with one, eivas Xen, Cyn. 6, 25; mpotka Nicostr. ap. Stob. 427. 46. 6. to bring over to oneself, win over, Td mAnOos Thuc. 5. 45, cf. 41; Tia els etvorav Polyb, 7. 14, 4; c.acc. et inf., én. Twas fvyxwpnoat to induce them to concede, Thuc. 5. 41. %: in Logic, to make an Induction (v. supr. 10), Arist. An. Post.1.1, 4, al.; he also uses the aor. pass. éraxOfvar in this same sense, Ib. 5, and 1. 18, 1. éraywyets, ews, 6, at Athens, the officer who called on the suits every month, Poll. 8. tor. émiywoyh, 4, a bringing on or to, Tav emrndelov Thuc. 5 82., Va 24. 2. a bringing in to one’s aid, introduction, riy Tav AOnvaian én. Id. 3. 100; ai érayaryal (sc. rv gvupaxav) Id. 3.82: introduction of food through the gullet, Arist. de Spir. 4, 7. 3. an invasion, attack, éri twa Polyb. 11. 15, 7. 4. a drawing on, alluring, like Adyos émaywyds, Dem. 144. 24 :—an evocation of the gods below, Plat. Rep. 364 C, Legg. 933 D, cf. Ruhnk, Tim., Lob, Aglaoph. 221 sq. 5. in Logic, the bringing a ber of particul iples so as to lead to an universal conclusion, the argument by Induction, 4 dnd Tav Kab? 509 An. Post. 1. 183 called inductio by Cic. Top. 1. 10; cf. émaya I. Io, ovddoyopds IT. 6. in Tactics, the bringing up one corps behind another, Arr. Tact. p. 65, cf. Suid. s.v., mapayary7 I. 2. 7. a leading away into captivity, captivity, Lxx (Deut. 32. 36): generally, distress, misery, Ib. (Sirac. 23. 11); cf. Hesych. émdywyuKés, 7, dv, inductive, tpdros Sext. Emp. P. 2. 196 :—Adv. -K@s, Id. 2. 195. II. (from Med.) attractive, cf. iraywyids. émiiyayypos, ov, imported, Plut. Lysand. 27, cf. C. I, 5641-42. énayoytov, 76, the foreskin, prepuce, Diosc. 4. 157. émiiywyés, dv, bringing on, pavias Aesch. Fr. 55; imvov Plat, Tim. 45 D. II. like époAxds, attractive, tempting, alluring, seduc- tive, Ta émarywryérata déyew Hat. 3. 53, cf. Thuc. 4. 88; dxovoavres -. érayorya kat ob« ddnOF, of ex-parte statements, Thuc. 6. 8, cf. 5. 85 ; évéparos érayaryod buvdper Kadreioda Ib. 111; én. mpds te Xen. Occ. 13, 9;—so, of dainty dishes, dYov .., é7, mavv Antiph. Incert. 28 :—c. gen., é. tivds attracting him, Dion, H. de Isocr. 2; tod Shpov Plut. Popl. 2 :—énayaryév éort, c. inf., it is a temptation to .., Xen. Mem. 2. 5, 5: 70 én. seductiveness, Plat, Phil. 44 C:—as Adv., émaywydv petdidy Luc. D. Mer. 1. 2., 6, 3. émiiywvifopar, Dep. to contend with, Tur Plut. Fab. 23, Philostr. 538. 2. c. dat. rei, to contend for a thing, C. I. 2335.19, Ep. Jud. 3; absol., Sext. Emp. M. 3. 93 :—rexpnplos émay. to contend on the strength of them, Plut. Num. ro. émiiyavios, ov, (d-ywv) helping in the contest, Aesch. Ag. 512 ;—if at least this word lies in xémayywvos: the Schol. took it for dwaydvios, Sreeing from the contest ; but one MS. has «armaywvios, whence Dobree restored xal maiwvtos. éraelSw, contr. Att, érdSw: fut. &. moreioar Kad or epi twos Plat. Phaedr. 260C; Ad-yor elrety énawdv twos a speech in praise of .., Id. Symp.177 D; ovvribels én. kara Twos Id. Phaedr. 260 B; els twa Id. Legg. 947 B. II advice, Soph. Fr. 253. ératvés, 7, dv, used by Hom. Il. 9. 457, 569, Od. 10. 491, 534+, 11. 47, and Hes, Th. 768, but only in fem. (émaw7) Mepoepdvera) as epith, of the ddess when mentioned in tion with Hades, and so in Luc. Nec. 9 with Hecaté, (for, otherwise, she is d-yavq, etc.).—Commonly taken as ‘strengthd. for aivn, exceeding awful, dread; but this Buttm, (Lexil. v. aivos 3) rejects as contrary to analogy, and reads divisim, ém' aiv7) Tep- cepévera dread Persephoné besides. Others regard it as short for émar- vern, euphem., like dudpwv, etc—No masc. or neut, is found. émawvoupévas, Adv. part. pres, pass. praiseworthily, Diod, 16. 88. * dravovd, fo bathe (trans.), Ath. 41 B:—Med. to bathe (intr.), Nic. Al, 463. émaipw, Ion. and poét. émaeipw Hdt. 1. 204 and always in Hom. : fut. éndip& :—aor. énfjpa Hat. 1. 87, Att.:—Pass,, aor. émjp@nv, part. énap- Geis. To lift up and set on, [adrdv] dpagdor érdepay lifted and set him upon .., Il. 7. 426; dBedods.. eparevtaay érdetpay 2. 214. 2. to lift, raise, xepaddy eraeipas 10. 80; Kat p’ eraipe Soph. Ph. 889; énaipov Prépapa Id, O, T. 1276; émdeipe 5épyy (lyr.) Eur. Tro. 100; éxaipe cavrév Ar. Vesp. 996; cepvas énnpxds tas dppis Amphis Acé. Be pices riv govhy Dem. 323.1; én. ioria, opp. to ipiec@at, Plut. Luc. 3 :—Med., éracipao palo didst lift and put me to thy breast, Ap. Rh. 3.7343 Adyxnv, Stra énalpecar Eur. I. T, 1484, Bacch. 789; iorovs Polyb. 1. 61, 7: metaph., tt .. ordow yAwoons ehjpagde ; Soph. O.T. 635; modAods kat Opaceis rH TéAEt érapdpevos Ad-yous Dem. 302. a3. 8. to exalt, magnify, énaclpew Twa Pind. O. 9. 31; ématpew aa marp@ov oikov Xen. Mem. 3. 6, 2. A. intr. to lift up one’s leg ‘or rise up, Hdt. 2. 162; so in Pass., Ar. ie 937: II. ¢o stir , excite, TOAAG TE puv Kal peydda 7a émaclpoyTa .. iv Hat. 1. 204; j a” émpe Sapdvov ; Soph. O. T. 1328; mépa rod xaxpod rods érépous é. Dem. 208.6; ém. Oupdy ru Eur. 1A. 125; Tord ce Yuxqy énaipe Id. Heracl. 172 :—to induce or to do, c. inf., elpwrdy «i ovre aloxtvera: éndpas Kpoivov orparevecbar Hat. 1.90; irs pe Pipe evijpe Ar. Nub. 42, cf. Ran, 1041; ém. Twa ware .. , Eur, Supp. 5815 boris pe éndpas epyov (sc. mpagat) Id. Or. 286:—Pass. to be roused, led on, ex- cited, 7G payrntw Hat. 1. go, cf. 5.915 Tots Buphyace 7. 38; TAovTY, TKD Plat. Rep. 434 A, 608 B; bd » Ar. Av. 1448; Tois Adyos Thue. 4. 121; i nab govécews Gyavi Id. 2. 37; b1d proO0d Id. 7. 13; én. & 7d vewrepifey Id. 4, 108; and inf., érnpOnv ypayar Isocr. 84 C, ef. Plat. Phaedr. 232 A. 2. in Pass:, also, to be elated at a thing, evdaipovin peydrn Hat. 5. 81; puxpH vixp 9. 49, cf. 1. 212., 4. 1305 év mm Thuc. 4. 18; éni tax Xen. Mem. I, 2, 25; mpés tt Thuc. 6, I1., 8. 2; & Twos Polyb. I. 29, 43 also, “EAAds 7H dpyf Exfjprat is on the tiptoe of expectation, Thuc. 2. 11 :—absol. to be conceited or proud, Ar. Nub. 810; passionate, Plut. Cic. 25, etc. . ‘ ErarcGavopat, fut. —arcOjcopat: Dep.:—to have a perception or feeling of, c. gen. objecti, way *Odvactws ErpaOdyny Soph. Ph. 1296; duphs ris ens Id. O. C. 1351, cf. Ant. 1183. 2. c. acc. to perceive, Aesch. Ag. 85, Soph. Aj. 553, Dem. 24, 4, etc. 5 Toy adv pépov én. to hear of it, Soph. Aj. ; ¢. part., émyober’ &e Peo Kadovpevos Id. O. C. 1629; jabévTa 8 abrdv ds érqoOdpny Eur, Cycl. 420. 3. absol. to become sensible, 1 gl one’s bass ig & 490. “gnaloOnpa, 76, a perception, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 32. 5 LoOqors ews, rraen, sense, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 52. ‘Eratoou, fe ifm: contr. Att. é “ i At syed $. + vm : Bey. Vis ye tare pd ee Cases een oe , he meow or ~TTW, fut. age: [aioow Ep., ’ ° , > ” ETAIVHL — ETUKILOS, dioow Att.]. To rush at or upon, c. gen., inmav éwattar to rush ‘at them, Il. 5. 263; ve@v 13.687; (never so in Od.). 2. c. dat. pers., Kipen émaigar to rush upon her, Od, 10. 295, 322, ef, 14. 281: in Il. only c, dat. instrumenti, éper, Soupt én. Il. 5. 584, etc. ; so, érhicady [Hor] peaAtpow Od. 14. 281. 3. c. acc. to assail, assault, “Exropa Il. 23. 64; re@xos 12. 308 (never so in Od.) :—Med., émaifacdar deProv to rush at (i.e. seize upon) the prize, Il. 23. 773- 4. but in Hom. mostly absol., of a hawk, tappé’ ératooe: makes frequent swoops, Il. 22. 142; of the wind, éwalgas . . é« vepeAdoy 2. 146, etc. :—so also in Att., Ar. Ach. 1171; éndgas és dépous Soph. Aj. 305; rare in Prose, as Plat. Theaet. 190 A, Arist. H. A. 9. 44, 5- II. later, like Baivw, with acc. of the Instrument of motion, é. 75a to move with hasty step, Eun Hec. 1071, cf. Baivw fin,; én. fipos Ap. Rh. I. 1254:—but even Hom. has Pass., xeipes éwatocovra they move lightly, Il. 23. 628. emdicros, ov, (énalw) heard of, detected, c. part., ex. &yévero épryac~ pévos Hat. 2.119; én. eyévero mpodidots 8. 128, cf.6. 74; so in 3. 15., 7. 146 a part. must be supplied from the context. ératoxis, és, (aloxos) shameful, Dio C. 56.13, Auctor ap, Suid. éraroxivopat, fut. ac xvvOncopat: Dep. :—to be ashamed at or of, tw Hat. 1. 143; 7d or 7 Xen. Hell. 4. 1, 34, Plat. Soph. 247 C:—e. inf. to be ashamed to do, Aesch. Ag. 1373; ¢- part. to be ashamed of doing or having done a thing, Hdt. 1. 90, Soph. Aj. 1307, Ph. 929, etc. ; absol. to feel shame, shew a sense of shame, Plat. Rep. 573 B, Menand. Incert. 80. émavtéw, to ask besides, ef vi kev..dddo petloy dmarqoeas Il, 23. 593; ay 8 émacreis Soph. O. T.1416: absol. 2o ask for more, paryav ér émyreev Posidipp. ap. Ath. 412 E:—so in Med., Soph, El. 1124. 2. to beg as a mendicant, dddous én. Tov Kal’ hpépay Biov Id. O. C. 1364. émairys, ov, 6, a beggar, Ath. 192 F, Dio C. 66. 8. érairyots, ews, , begging, Dion. H. de Rhet. 13. éra:tidopat, fut. dgopuat [a], Ion. yoouar: Dep.:—to bring a charge against, accuse, Td Hat. 2, 121, 2, and Att. ; 6coy én, Hipp. Aér. 293 ; én. tTwd twos to accuse one of a thing, Thuc. 6. 28, Dem. 552.1; 7 Kape yap te fvudopais énarriG ; for your mishaps (but gvadopas is the prob. 1.), Aesch, Pr. 974; also, xeivny éra:Ti@pat Tovde Bovdedaat rapov I accuse her of this burial,—that she planned it, Soph, Ant. 490 :— c. inf., dy érarriG pe Spay Id. O.T. 645; dv .. we..Tpépev pudaropa éxpridow Id. El. 604; Alowmoy..énpri@vto xdépar Ar. Vesp. 1447, etc.; so, éwar. Twa G1... Hdt. 6. 30, Thuc. 2. 7., 5. 16:—c. acc. rei, to lay the blame upon, tiv tuppopay ris puyns Id. 8, 81; 7d pijKos Tis wopeias Ep. Plat. 329 A;—but c. acc. cogn., pelCova émarimpevos bringing heavier accusations, Hdt. 1. 26; aizias éw. to allege causes, Plat. Phaedo 98 B; rodro énarri@pau, c. inf., I complain of this, viz. that .. , Id. Rep. 497 B.:—also c. dupl. acc,, & éwarre@par tavrqy the charges which J bring against her, Antipho 112. 29. ématrwos, ov, (airia) blamed for a thing, blameable, blameworthy : L of persons, oUre por dppes erairror Il, 1. 335; Twvds for a thing, Aesch. Eum. 465, Eur. Hipp. 1382: accused of a thing, Thuc. 6, 61 :—ém. mpds twa Plut. Comp. Dion, c. Brut. 2. 2. of things, dvaxdpyots Thue. 5.65; émarrwwrato trav Kwddver Lys. 111. 38. II. érainia, Ta, legal punishments, also mpooriphpara, Solon ap. Poll. 8. 22, Dem. 733. 5. érrarxpdtw, to attack, rvi Opp. C. 1. 389, as Brunck. for éroxp-. ératw, contr. érgo Eur.H.F. 772: [v.diw]. To give ear to, Oetiv ovdey éxatovres Aesch, Supp. 759, cf. Eur. l.c.: to hear, TAS povas Plut. Brut. 16. 2. to perceive, feel, 7: Pind. Fr. 45.14; Oeot évatpol re wat capkdbees kat énatoyres ctdnpiwy Hat. 3. 29; dyyparov Ael. N. A. 1.55 ¢. part., ove ématers natrayeAdpevos Ar. Vesp. 516; absol., as énnioe when he perceived it, Hdt. 9. 93. 3. to understand, c. acc., tiv BdépBapoy yap yA@acay oix éraiw Soph. Aj. 1263; esp. of persons under instruction, éraiov@’ émoiés éor: tO puOpav Kar’ évdmduov KTA. Ar, Nub. 650; én. 76 Te KaAdy xal ph Plat. Legg. 7o1 A; én. Ths Todt teia ouppépe Arist. Rhet. 1. 4,133 ém. 7 THs Pwpaley yAdwoons Luc. Laps. 13, etc. 4, to profess knowledge in any subject, to be a professor of such subjects, ods dy otwpai 71 rovrov énatew Plat. Theaet. 145 D; oi avdAnoews énatoyres Id. Prot. 327 C; 6 ératow wept Trav dinaioy Kat adixey, i, e. a moral philosopher, Id, Crito 48 A; érates obdéy mept yupvacrinhs Id, Gorg. 518 C, cf. Apol. 19 C, Rep. 598 C, Hipp. Ma, 289 E, etc.; absol., 6 émaiwy Id. Prot. 314 A, Phaedr. 275 E; ém., opp. to 78 eldévat, Arist. Metaph, 1. 1, 10. erarwpée, to keep hovering over another, crépavoy kaphyy or kaphyav Nonn. D. 5.132., 4. 456; to keep floating in, ér. mrepdv hépt TOAA® Epigr. Gr. 312.5; metaph., ér. edrvylas Blov Anth, P. 7.645. XE. Pass. to hover over or on the surface, float upon, Tea coke én, xaa- kelots Diosc. 5. 107; éAniow eracupodpevor buoyed up by .., Luc. Alex. 16 ; ématwpetcbar morgum to hang over it, conduct it remissly, Plut. Pelop. 29 :—in Hipp. Art. 836, of one who throws his whole weight upon another, during a surgical operation, 2. like Lat. imminere, to over- a eta Tut Ap, Rh, 1. 639, Plut. Pomp. 17; gépos até éx. n, 5. 2. errixavdile, tobe prickly on the surface, Theophr.H.P. 3.10, 1; v.Tapax-. émraxéopat, Med. to repair, Tov Spépov, ras yeptpas Inscr. Delph. in C, I, 1688. 37, 41 (where it is written épax-), éraxpato, fut. dow, to come to its bloom, be in its prime, Aristaen. 2.1, Heliod. 7. 8:—metaph., 40 come to its height, Luc. Abdic.17, Ath. 18 E; én. of érnotat are prevalent, Strabo 692. IX. to flourish or live after, tii Dion. H. ad Pomp. 4. ats senate ee coming to a height or crisis, opp. to mapakpactt- €makpos, oy, (dkuh) in the bloom of age, képar Dion. H, 4.28. 1 s II. pointed, duavOa Diosc, 1, 119; dots Plut. 2.966 C. ) evrakoAovbew — érarkss. tntixodovdew, fo follow close upon, follow after, pursue, rw Ar. Vesp. 1328, Plat. Apol. 23 C, al. ;—absol., Hipp. Fract. 763, Thuc. 5. 65, etc. ; err. 4 xelp TOU vexpov Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 8. 2. to pursue as an enemy, Thuc, 4, 128, Xen. An. 4. I, I, etc. 8. to follow mentally, i.e. understand, TG déyy Plat. Phaedo 107 B; rots Aeyouévors Id. Legg.861 C; tois Aéyoust Id, Soph. 243 A; KadAdoT’ Eraxodovbeis Id. Legg. 963 A, etc. 4. to follow, i.e. obey or comply with, rots 74@ear Dem. 805. 24; abrav rh mpoatpéce Philipp. ap. Dem. 284. 6; rais ray momrav Braognpiats ér. to follow them (as authorities), Isocr. 228 D. 5. to follow a pursuit, Plat. Rep. 370 C. emitxodovOnpa, 74, a consequence, Plut. Nic. 4, Clem, Al. 331. Emixodovbnors, ews, , a Sollowing, M. Anton. 6. 44: a consequence, xar’ én, by way of in erence, Plut. 2. 1015 C. éraxoAovdnréov, verb, Adj. one must follow, twit Dem. 1402. 14. éraxodoviia, %, = €raxorovenats, Philodem. de Ira 1. p. Sr. éraxddoubos, ov, following from, twéds Aristid. 2, 498. Adv. -Ows, agreeably to, éavr@v rpémw Antipat. ap. Stob. 428. 9. émdkovrife, fut. iow, to dart at a thing, Ep. Socrat. p. 66. 29. _ rixovriopés, 5, a casting of dice (BdAov dvoua), Hesych.: the player is émakovtiorijs, 6, Poll. 7. 204. €makoos, Dor. for érjxoos, Pind. émikovéds, dv, (éraxovo) attentive to, c. gen., a-yopis éraxovdy édvra Hes. Op. 29, cf. Call. Fr. 236; elsewhere éwfxoos. émakovorés, dv, to be listened to, Emped. 42. érixots, fut. -axodcopat, to listen or hearken to, to hear, c. acc. rei, bs wave’ epopa kat ndv7’ éraxovet, of the Sun, Il. 3. 277, Od. 11. 108; proverb, drmoiéy x’ efryaba eros, roidy x’ éraxovcas as thou speakest, so wilt thou be answered, Il. 20, 250; pwviy ér. Hes. Op. 418; xpn- opéy Ar. Eq. 1080; with a part. added, ofoy .. ot éraxodw Bracrdy gbrevpa Soph. O. C. 694; én. Twa BpHvra Plat. Legg. 729 B;—but also c. gen. rei, rs pwvas Hdt. 2. 70; péxOwv én. to hear of, hear tell of, Eur. Tro. 166 :—c. acc, rei et gen. pers., ros éuéOev Od. 19. 98; and c. gen. pers. only, to give ear to him, Hdt. g. 98, Soph. O. T. 708, Plat. Gorg.487C:—rarely c. dat. pers., ém. pot Id. Soph. 227C; c. dat. rei, tais edxais Dion. H.13.7. 2. absol. to give ear, hearken, Aesch. Cho. 725, Ar. Nub. 274; wy Tis TOv duunrwy enaxovy should overhear, Plat. Theaet. 155 E, cf. Ar. Thesm. 628; or simply ¢o hear, Thuc. 1. 53, etc. 8. later, like éwatw, to perceive, understand, rivds Luc. Salt. 64, Plut. Flam. ro. : II. c, gen. rei, to listen to, give ear to, i.e. to obey, Bovdjjs Il. 2.143; Tis dtens Hes. Op. 273; nav pVOwv Soph. Ph. 1417; soc. dat., én. 7@ KeAevopare Hat. 4.141. émaxpiBow, to treat with care and accuracy, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. ro. 753 so in Med., Diod, Excerpt. 611. 75. éraxpll, to reach the top of a thing, aludray eérhxpoe (=éen’ dxpov 7Ge Schol.) he reached the farthest point in deeds of blood, of Orestes the matricide, Aesch. Cho. 932; Hesych. and Eust. expl. as if it were =Opryxdo. émdkpwos, a, ov, (dxpa) on the heights, epith. of Zeus, Polyzel. Move. A II. % éraxpia (sc. xwpa) a district in Attica, Strabo 397. érakpodopat, Dep. =éraxovw, Tivds Plat. Com. Tpum. 2. éraxpéaors, ews, 7), a listening to, hearing, LXx (1 Regg. 15. 22). émakpos, ov, (dxpa) pointed at the end, Hipp. 483. 21. émaktatos, a, ov, =éndxrios, Opp. H. 2.127; al. divisim. én’ der-. émaxréov, verb. Adj. one must bring upon, médepov TH xupa Cic. Att. 9. 4, 2. 2. one must apply, pérpov twi Luc. Hist. Conscr. 9. émaxrnp, fpos, 6, (érayw) Ep. word,=6 «dvas érdyov, a hunter, huntsman, és Bijccay ixavov éraxrijpes Od. 19. 435, cf. 4453 Gvdpes er. Il. 17. 135 :—also, a fisherman, Ap. Rh. 1. 625. éraxtikés, 7, dv, leading on: 1. in Logic, inductive, opp. to ovddoyiorinds (v. érayoryh), Arist. An. Post. 1. 12, 6, Top. 1. 18, 5: Ady., éraxrix®s oxomeiv Id. Phys. 4. 3,15. 2. alluring’, attractive, Heliod. 4. 3; mpdés rt Ath. 52D. émaxrwos, ov, Eur. Sthen. 4, and fa, foy Soph. Tr. 1151, Fr. 493, Eur. Andr. 853: (d«rn) :—on the strand or shore, ll. cc., Soph. Aj. 413. émaxrés, dv, (émayw) brought in, téara Hipp. Aér. 286: esp. brought in from abroad, imported, Lat. adscititius, ér. otros Thuc. 6. 20; mav- tov énaxrav Seic@ae 7. 28; TH “EAAGS mevin piv .. cvvrpopds ort, dpert 5% éx. Hdt. 7.102; bbwp eiz’ én. etre ovpdvés Arist. Meteor. 4. 5, 5, cf. G. A. 3. 1, 12, Plat. Rep. 573 B; é. mfya Eur. Hipp. 318; xaxév Philem, Incert. 8. 5; é. map GAAow Sixaoy Plat. Rep. 405 B; Bpxos ér.an oath imposed by the other party, Lys. ap. Harp., Isocr. 6 Cc. 2. of persons, é. wounv an alien lord, Pind. O. 10 (11). 107; ob dards GAX’ éraxrds & GAAns xOovés Eur. Ion 290, cf. Ar. Fr. 327; so prob., é. dieacrat C. I. 2265.18 ;—esp. of foreign allies or mercen- aries, ém. orpdrevya, orpards Aesch. Theb. 583, Soph. Tr. 259 ; ddpu Id. O. C. 1525; éraxr@ Svvdper with an alien, mercenary force, Isocr. 215 C;—also, AaBay éraxrdv dvBpa, i. e. an adulterer, Soph. Aj. 1296; én. marnhp a false father, Eur. Ion 592. 3. OpBpos én. @XOdy rain driving on one, Pind. P. 6. 10. II. like av@atperos, brought upon oneself, véaos Soph. Tr. 491, cf. Eur. Phoen. 343. pa be énaxral (sc. jpépat), ai, intercalary days, Zonar. s. v.; hence, 2. éranrh, 7, the epact or excess of the solar over the lunar year, Eccl. ‘émaxrpets, ews, 5, = éraxrhp, Hesych., Eust. 1539. 25. émaxtpis, (50s, 4%, (end-yw) a light vessel, skiff, Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 11, cf. Aul. Gell. 10. 25 :—so, érraxrpo-KeAys, 6, a light piratical skiff, Aeschin. 27. 9, Arist. Interpr. 2, 2. v, 76, =éraxrpis, Nic, Th. 824. : ér&AaLovetonat, Dep. to boast over, Tivt Joseph. B. J, 2.18, 4. émtdhdlw, fut. fw, fo raise the war-cry, Aesch, Theb. 497, cf. 954; 7 "Evvadriy Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 26. émGdadweuev, v. sub éraréfor. I 511 ér&dGopat, Dep. with aor. pass. to wander aboiit-or over, TUAX’ eradn- Geis Od. 4. 81, 833 subj, aor. éraAnO7 15. 401. émiidacréw, to be full of wrath at a thing, rov nvda Od, 1. 252, cf. Ap. Rh. 3. 369, 557. éradyéw, to grieve over, TaY pOipévow Eur. Supp. 58. émahyns, és, painful, Strabo 523, Opp. H. 4. 508. éradyive, to give pain, Nic. Al. 335: to afflict, rd Q. Sm. 4. 416: —Med, to feel pain, Tzetz. Hist. 4. 398. emihelpo, fut. yw, 2o smear over, ent 8 otar’ dretpat éraipww Od. 12. 473 & ovata maow ddeupa Ib. 177; xnpdy .. , bv aguv én’ wolv dreuf’ Ib. 200; érérav.. Aeaivy éradeipovoa 7a rpayvOerra painting them over, Plat. Tim. 66 C; ér. xpéav érépav ep’ érépay Arist. de Sens. 3, 13; én. Tods Totxous to plaster, whitewash, Paus. 6. 3, 15 :—Pass., TO éradrepbéy Plat, Lys, 217 C; émadHAurrat 6 xvrrapos Arist, H. A. 5. 23, 3- 2. metaph., from anointing athletes, to prepare for battle, stir up, irritate, Polyb. 2. 51, 2, cf. Hipp. 1147 E; én. twas tive to set them upon him, Diog. L. 2. 38. émddeups, ews, 7), a smearing over, anointing, E. M. 69. 41. éradééw, fut. -adefjow, Ep. Verb, to defend, aid, help, rivi Il. 8. 365., 11.428; but, éraAaAnépuev dry (Ep. aor. 2 inf.) to lend aid against misery, Nic. Th. 352. II. to ward off, keep off, mt Tpwecow ddefqaev xakov tuap (for éradefqoew Tpd&ecow) Il. 20. 315. émiidetpetw, to grind at, c. gen., uwAgs Ap. Rh. 1. 1077. émddnPeis, v. sub éraddopat. érGAnletw, fo prove true, substantiate, verify, Thy alriay, Tov Ad-yov Thue. 4. 85., 8.52: Pass., Dion. H. 1. 58. érradndilw, =foreg., Hesych., Eust. Opusc. 95. 42. émadrs, és, (cf. dAéa) open to the sun, sunny, A€axn Hes. Op. 941. érah0éw, only found in fut. éraddhow, aor. éradOeiv :—to heal, cure, Nic. Al. 395,627; also in Med., Id. Th. 654. énadOns, és, healing, Nic. Th. 500. IL. healed, Id. Al. 156. émahwdéopat, Pass. Zo roll in or on, Ap. Rh. 4. 1463; so éraAtvBopat Nic. Th, 266. . éradkis, és, strong’, Aesch. Cho. 415; but the passage is corrupt. émadhayh, 7, =enadAagis, yao emaddayiy moeiy Hdt. 1. 74 (like énvyaplas movetcOat in 2.147, cf. Dion. H. 10, 60) ; Tas ém. ray cupd- Tow their fitting one into another, Arist. Fr. 202. . émadAd£, Adv., =évadadg, Xen. Eq. 1, 7, Diod. 19. 30. érddAakis, ews, #, an interchange, exchange, like éradAaryh, Antipho ap. Harp., Arist. Meteor. 4. 9, 23; % éw. Trav SaxTvAow a crossing of two fingers so as to feel double, Id. Metaph. 3. 6, 7, Insomn. 2, 18, Probl. 31. 11. 2. an interweaving, Plat. Soph. 240 C; af éxad- Adfers TOD xdpaxos Polyb. 18, 1, 11. 3. close association of two species, Arist. G. A. 2. I, Io. éradAdcow, Att. -rrw: fut. dfw:—to change over, interchange : Hom. has it only in Il. 13. 359, duorlov woAg€uoro meipap émadAdgayres making the rope-end of balanced“war go now this way, now that, i.e. fighting with doubtful victory (the metaph. being taken from a common child’s game) ; so, foov reivey modéporo Tédos Il. 20. 101, cf. 12. 436., 15. 413 :—éz. GApara to interchange leaps, i. €. one to leap into the other’s steps, Xen. Cyn. 5, 20; of carnivorous animals (kapxapdédoyra), én, rods dd6vras to have their teeth Sitting in like two saws, Arist. H, A. 2. 1, 51, (expl. in P. A. 3. 1, 5, évdAAag é€umlrrovow [ol dddvres], draws ph GpBdrdvevra rpiBdpevor mpds GAAHAovs), v. infr. I. 1:—Pass. to cross one another, ddpara ..ds heora dv ddAHAos émadAaTroTo Xen. Eq. Mag. 3, 3; émmdAaypévats de GAAHAwY Tais xepot with the arms crossed, Plut. Lucull. 21; mods émadAaxOels modl, Lat. consertus, closely joined, Eur. Heracl. 836; ph my 6 Adyos éraddaxO7 that it be not entangled, perplexed, Xen. Mem. 3. 8, I. II. intr. to alternate, édévres émadAdooorres zigzag teeth (v. supr.), Arist. P. A. 3.1, 5; to alternate with or fit into one another like rows of teeth, GAAHAos Id, G, A. 2.1, 22; cf. Theophr. H. P. 4. 6, to. 2. to pass from one into another, to be closely associated, of two species (cf. érapporepi(a 11), Arist.G. A. 4. 4,1; Todro pévoy ér, has the properties of both species, Ib, 4. 6, 33 1) pany er. TO yéver TOV ixObov Id. H. A. 2. 1, 52; of tyranny, éw. pds tiv Bagieiav to reciprocate with monarchy, Id. Pol. 4. 10, 2, cf. 6. 1, 3; 8 movef rods Adyous ér. makes the reasons ambiguous, Ib, 1. 6, 3, cf. I. 9, 15. é nAla, 4, immediate sequence, unbroken series, Eust. 11.32; €r. Tov pappaxov Galen. 19. 679. émadAnhos, oy, also n, ov, Dio C. 74. 10: (GAAHAwY) one close after another, in close order, ayé, Tages Polyb. 2. 69, 9., II. 11,7: con- tinuous, Bon Hdn. 2.7,6; dandvar C.1. 1625.35; em. wAnyal given in quick succession, Alciphro 3. 6. II. émaddAnAow xepoiv by one another's hands (as Herm. for én’ GAA-), Soph. Ant. 57; cf. éméAAnAor popai Philo 2.175, and v. dAAnAogérvor. III. Adv. -Aws, again and again, Diosc. 1. 166; én. éxew to be placed obversely, Ath. 456 E. éradAnddrns, 770s, %,=eradAyAla, Apoll. in A. B. 525. . pear sa 0, ov, clinging to another plant, like a creeper, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 9 and 11; where it has been proposed to read émaAAé- kaptros, ov, bearing fruit on another plant. : émdAdUEis, Adv. =dAAvais, Or. Sib. 10. 97. émdApevos, v. sub épadAopar. tnodfs, ews, %, (€rarkégw) a means of defence: mostly in pl. battle- ments, ll, 12. 263, Hdt. 9. 7, Aesch. Theb. 30, 158, Eur. Phoen. 1158, ete.; dmaGelv rds ér, Thuc. 3.23; al olxiar.. emddges AapuBavovea Id. 4. 69, cf. 115, and v. xpédcoat. b. in sing., mostly, the line of battlements, parapet, Il. 12. 381, etc. (never in Od.); of map’ éradgiv the defenders of the wall, Thue. 2. 13, cf. 7. 28, Ar. Ach. 72. 2. ’ &rakaorhoaca mpoo- | generally, a defence, protection, Aesch. Ag. 381, Eur. Or, 1203, etc. 512 énadttrys [7] Aldos, a coping-stone, Suid., E. M. Emradmvos, ov, (v. sub dAmmoros) cheerful, happy, Pind. P. 8. 120. émGro (Bekk. éraAzo), v. sub &pddAopau, and cf, dvanddAopat. émtiAdorns, ov, or (as Lob. Phryn. 254) —woris, 00, 6: (dAodw): —one who threshes with oxen, Xen. Occ. 18, 5. entipageto, Ion, for épap-, to traverse with cars, “yi .. emnuageupevn Tpoxotor marked with the tracks of wheels, Soph. Ant. 251. érGpdopar, fut. naouar: Med.:—to scrape together for oneself, ebviyy érapnoaro xepaiv heaped him up a bed (of leaves), Od. 5. 482, cf. dpicow I; yy émapnodpevoy Theogn. 428, cf. Anth. P. 7.440; av érapnoduevos having heaped up a grave or barrow, Hdt. 8.24; so, é7. xévw Polyaen. 2. 1, 13; én. Twi 7 Plut. 2. 982 B.—Later the Act. occurs; xéviv énapfoa Diog. L. 6. 79, cf. Iambl. V. Pyth. 192; the form épayGy in Heliod. 2. 20 cannot be correct. érapBatvo, post. for éravaBaivw, Opp. H. 3. 638. é THP, Hpos, 6, post. for éravaBarns, one who mounts upon, an assailant, vicot caprav érapBaripes of leprous eruptions, Aesch, Cho, 280; Auratus éreyBaripes. érapPrHSyy, erapPAndév, Adv., post. for éravaB-, é ive, f. 1. for dmazBAvvw in Artem. 3. 38. érGpelBo, fut. Yo, to exchange, interchange, barter, revxea 8 ddAHAots érapeipopey Il. 6.230; vce ér. Orph, Arg. 420:—Med. to come one after another, come in turn to, vien 8 éwapetBerar dvdpas ll. 6. 3393; €fadris 5° érépous érapelperat (sc. eNdea) Archil, 8. 9. é tpvéw, to acquiesce in, Tit Basil. 2. p. 124. €rdpepos [a], ov, Acol. for épuepos, Pind. €rappévos, Ion. for épnupévos, part. pf. pass. of épdmra. €rappévo, poét. for éravapéve, Aesch. Pr. 605. erGporBadis, Adv. (érapeiBw) like évadAdg, interchangeably, ds dpa munvot ddAdAnAoow epuv Er. so thick they grew with interwoven boughs, Od. 5. 481, cf. Ap. Rh, 4. 1030 :—in Hesych. also —&8év, érGpolBios, ov, =sq.; émapolBia épya barter, h, Hom. Merc, 516 (the Moscow Ms. én’ duoiBnya, whence Wolf érapotBiya). éraporBés, dv, (duetBm) in turn, one upon another, Ap. Rh. 2. 1076: in Hom, érnporBés, q. v. méexw: fut. -appétw: aor. 2 émhumoxor, inf, éraymoyxeiy :—to it on over, over-wrap, én. yhv tu Eur. Tro. 1148; tBpe kat xoprp mapméxew 7 Plut. Otho 5, cf, Sertor. 1o:—Med, to cloke or veil oneself, fw 2; 1102 C, : ; mHYyVopL, post. for émavar-, Orph. ee Med. =érapméxopat, Philo 1. 562. - énapivrwp, opos, 6, a helper, defender, Od. 16. 263; as fem., Orph, Lith. 581. _ érapive, to come to aid, defend, assist, rwi Il. 6. 361., 18. 99, al., Thuc. 3, 14, al., Lys. 139. 30, etc. 2. absol., Il. 16. 540, al. (but never in Od.), so, in Hdt. 9, 61, Thuc. 1.25, tor, Lys. 97. 42, etc.; Tay érapuviytov Adyav, ws eiot Geot apologetic arguments ¢o prove that .., Plat. Legg. Sgr B. érappépw, for émavapepar. émaporévupt, to cloke or veil, érappréca [ri arvxiav] xphuacw Menand. MAox. 4, Dind.; Meineke éwapqudcar, as if from éraypidto, ef, Aristid, 1. 72 :—Pass., émnpopteopévos mridoy Soph. Fr. 708, énaphorepldvrws, Adv. ambiguously, Schol. Ar. Pax 854. érapporepifw: fut. Att. 1% :—to be double: 1. of words or phrases, to admit a double sense, be ambiguous, Plat. Rep. 479 B, Cc, 2. of persons, to play a double game, or stand neutral, Pherecr. Air. 3, Thuc. 8. 85: 40 halt between two opinions, Plat. Phaedr. 257 B, cf. Isocr. 283 A; ém. Thy ywopny Philo 2.170; Tots Aoyopois Plut. Mar. 40; Aofd xal érapporepifovra ..dmoxpwéopevos Luc. D. Deor. 16. 1. 8. of vowels, to be doubtful in quantity, Arist. Quint. R Il. to be inclined to both sides, to be between both, of a species which lies between two others and partakes of the properties of both (cf. énadAdoow I. 2), of seals and bats, Arist. P. A. 4. 13, 28, cf. H.A. 8. 2, 2; of apes, én. dvOpamw kal rerpdmoat Ib. 2.8, 1, cf. P. A. 4. 10, 58; ddvOpwros émayp. wact Tois yéveat Id. G, A. 4. 4, 36, al. Eo a absol. to suffice for both, Ib. 4. 8, 16. ; > pbs, 5, inclination both ways, wavering, Arr. Epict. 4. 2, 5: uncertainty, Philo 2. 202. , 6, a double-dealer, Philo 1. 176. émaphotepos, ov,=duddrepos, Joseph. A. J. 12. 2, 9. bi; , Philostr. 543 :—Adv., —pws elmeiv, Philostr. 519. » Erdpov, ovos, 6, Coroyat) = éndwyv, an attendant, restored (from Hesych.) in Clitarch. ap. Ath. 267 C. émdv, Conjunct., later form of émpy; v. éwel A. 11. érra: or —Bacpss, 6, a step of a stair, Plat. Symp. 211 C. éravaBaive, fut. —Bicopat, to get up on, mount, éni re Ar. Nub. 1487, cf. Eq. 169; éravaBeBnxéres mounted (on horseback), Hdt. 3.85; of a star, to rise above the horizon, Arist. Meteor. 1. 6, 2. 2. of ani- mals, fo cover, Id. H. A. 5. 2, 9, al. 8. to come upon, Td yijpas éravaBdy Com. Anon. 58. II. to goup inland, Thue. 7. 29. III. to go up, ascend, Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 23: of causes, to mount up, emt 7a dverépw Arist. Metaph. 1. 8, 19, cf. Phys. 8. 5, 145 7d émavaBeBnkds a generality, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 174. éra , fut. —BaA®, to throw on or over: Oaiparia (cf. émavaBdAnidv), Ar. Eccl. 276. II. to lift up, 7a Acved Trav bpbadrpay Clem. Al. 294, cf. Ath. 529 A. III. in Med, to put off, defer, Tpla. érn én. Thy Xapdiay drwow Hat. 1.91. , ews, , =dvdBaats, Synes. 236 A. ‘, Causal of éravaBaivw, to make ta mount upon, aybpas IL. am- Med. éwavaBdadrAcobar (sc. rots mvpyyois) Thue, 3. 23, cf Dio C, 50, 23. d * . ~ ee Lis, te a eranrkirns — éravaxpaCw. éravaPiow, fut. —Bidoopat, to come to life again, Eumath, 10. 15. émavaBAndév, Adv. thrown over, émt [rois mOGo1] eipivea cipara .. ér. popéover Hdt. 2. 81; cf. émavaBdddw I. II. poét, éwapBAnidv and —BAniny, with delay, Hesych. éravaBodw, to cry out, Ar. Pl. 292. éravayryvaoke, to read over, read out, Lys.117.40, Polyb. 31.21, 10; én. Twi, of a teacher, Sext. Emp. M. Io. 19. énavaykdtw, fut. dow, to compel by force, constrain, c. acc, et inf., Aesch. Pr. 671, Ar. Av. 1083, Pl. 799; so in Pass., dpody éravayxacOeis Ib. 525 :—the inf. is often omitted, 008 émnvdyxae obdels (sc, abrois mpoiévat) Hdt. 8. 130, cf, Ar. Pl. 533, Thuc. 5.31. évivayxacpa, 76, compulsion, necessity, Nemes. de N. H. p. 53. Emavaykacrhs, od, J, one who compels, Symm, V. T. éraivaynns, (avdyxn) only used in neut. : 1. émdvayxes [earl] it is compulsory, necessary, c. inf, Andoc. 25. 7, Plat., etc.; én. pydev éarw let there be-no compulsion, Legg. 765 B, cf. Symp. 176 E. 2. as Adv. on compulsion, émdvayxes kop@vres wearing long hair by fixed custom, Hdt. 1.82; ém. Aéyew Aeschin. 4. 18, cf. Dem. gog. 8; én. AaBeiv Menand. Incert. 50; é. BovAjy GOpoiferw C. I. 355. 51: a form émdvaryoy occurs Ib. 3562. 19. : émavayopevw, to proclaim publicly :—impers. in Pass., émavaryopeverac proclamation is made, Ar. Ay. 1072. éravayw, fut. -dgw, to bring up; and so, 1. to stir up, excite (cf. Germ. auforingen), Tov Oupdév Hat. 7. 160. 2. to exalt, elevate, eis hpwikiy rag Dem. 1391. 22. Il. to bring up or back, els 7d pas Plat. Legg. 724 A. 2. to lead or draw back, 7d orparémedov és evpuvxwpiay Thuc. 7.3; ém. 7a defia Xen. Eq. 12,13; énaviyyayev ds buds Dem. 271.17; avarypov eis riv oixiay Antiph, “Apr. I. 3. to bring back, twa eis Tov Adyov Plat. Legg. 949 B; Tov Adyor ént tiv inddeow Xen. Mem. 4. 6,13; ém. Euavrdv ard xaxdy Ep. Plat. 325 A; eis €Aevdepiay 7a mpdypara Dem. 196. 7; 7a ddianpata eis TA Kowa Sixacrhpia én. to refer them to.., Plat. Legg. 846 B, cf. Diog. L. 10. 128:—Pass., éwavayéobw madw ent rods apxovras Arist. Pol. 4. 14, 16. III. intr. to withdraw, retreat, Xen. Cyr. 4. 1,3: to return, recur, éni tt Polyb. 3. 5, 9, etc. IV. to put out to sea, vais Xen, Hell. 6. 2, 28 ; and, vavs omitted, Ev. Luc. 5. 3 :—Pass. to put to sea against, rt Hat. 9.98; éravd-yeoOat ais vavoi with one’s ships, Thuc. 8. 42; and absol., Hdt. 7.194, Xen. Hell. 2.1, 24; émt rv Xiov Ib. 1. 6, 38. V. in Pass., also, to be carried to a place, Hdt. 4-103, where however Schweigh. suggests that dmeverx@évras (for én- avaxGévras) would be more usual. émaviiyoyn, 4, @ sailing against, a naval attack, Thuc. 7. 34. iT. a recall or return to a point, Plat. Rep. 532 C: restoration (of man), Justin. M. éravaywyés, dv, recalling, epith. of Tuxn, Dio C. 54. 10. éravadépw, =dvadépw, Hipp, 689. 23. émavadidwp, intr. fo increase more and more, Hipp. Epid. 1. 963. éravadimAdfw, post. émav5-, to reiterate questions, Aesch, Pr, 817. €mavabithéw, to repeat yet again, Arist. Probl. 15. 3:—Pass. to be reiterated, Id. An. Pr. 1, 38, 1, Metaph. 3. 2, 7. éravadindwpa, 76, a fold or double, Arist. H. A. 2. 15, 14. éravadimAwors, ews, %, a doubling, folding, rdv évrépwy Arist. H. A. 2.17, 14, cf.G, A.1. 4, 5., 1.6, 8. II. reiteration, Id. An, Pr. 1. 38, 2: recurrence of a fever, Galen. érrava, fevyvipe and vw, to pack up for return, Byz. émavaldwviipat, Med, to gird on one’s clothes, Philo 2. 479. érravabappéw, =dvabappew, éré r1v1 Onesand. 18. érravabe opat, Dep. to contemplate again, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 11. érravafeppatvonat, Pass. to receive warmth again, Hipp. Epid. 1. 966. érravabéw, to run up against, tii Onesand, 18. éravaOnpa, 75, that which is put on a foundation, building material, Clem. Al. 660, cf. 1 Ep. Cor. 3. 12. ; éravatpeors, «ws, 7, slaughter, destruction, Polyb. 2. 37, 8, etc. émavatperéov, verb. Adj. one must make away with, Clem, Al, 288. émavatpéw, to make away with, destroy, Diod. 1g. 51, often in App.:— so in Med., Polyb. 2. 19, 9, etc.; éwavaipeiobal ria pappaxw 8. 14, 2; én. Tas Supaxovcas I. 10, 8. II. in Med. also (c. pf. pass., Plut, Comp. Alcib. c, Cor. 2) to take upon one, enter into, Lat. suscipere, pudiav Plat. Lys. 219 A: esp. into a profession, réxvqv, Aarpelay Luc. Bis Acc. 1; é1. wéA€yov to enter upon a war, Polyb. 9. 29, 8; cf. émavaipw, 2. to withdraw, tov vépov Plut. T. Gracch. 10. émavaipw, to lift up, raise high, Tas xepadds Xen, Cyn. 6, 23 :—Med., kdmavaipovrat 5épu (so Herm. for kamavatpotvra) raise the spear one against the other, Soph. O.C. 424; but, éravhparo tiv Baxrnpiay raised his staff against him, Thuc. 8.84:—Pass, fo rise up, GAA’ én~ avatpou Ar. Eq. 784. éravakatvilw, to renew, Lxx (Job 10, 17). émavakidtw, to invoke besides, Aesch. Ag. 145 Dind. II. to recall, Aretae. Sign. M. Diut. 2.13, fin., in Pass. :—Med., Arr. An. 4. 27, I. ewavakapmre, intr. to come back again, ént tiv dpxhy Arist. Probl. 17. 33 absol., Id. H. A. 3.1, 15., 3.3, 21. émravdKepat, Pass. to be imposed upon as punishment, Tit Xen.Cyr.3.3,52+ émravakepdharsopat, Dep. =dvaxepadraida, cited from Hermog. éravakipvapat, Pass. to be mixed up again with, ran Greg. Naz. éravakhayydve, to give tongue again and again, Xen, Cyn. 4, 5. émavakAnors, €ws, ), a recall, reaction, 0épuns Hipp. Aph. 1253. éravakdive, to make to lie down, rivd Hipp. 403. 13. éravakowwsw, to communicate, rivi Tt Plat. Legg. 918 A, éravakopife, to bring back :—Pass. to return, Dio C. 40. 44. émavakpatw, to call out to, in aor. énavakpayérw, Poll. 5. 85. =» beae al , eTavakpemavyunal — emavépyouat. Sent eh Sep Pass. to be dependent, Arist. Pol. 6. 4, 7. émavaxplvw, =dvaxpivw, Dionys. ad Demoph. €mavaxpouots, ews, %, a putting back, Schol. Ar. Av. 648. éravaxpovw, to put a ship back (v. dvaxpodw), Hesych. :—Med, to put back, Ar. Av. 648. émavaxrdopat, Dep. to regain, recover, Vit. Io. Chrys. éravakréov, verb, Adj. of émavd-yw, one must recall, Synes. 193 C. éravakukAéw or —dw, to bring round and about, reiterate, Dionys. Ar., etc. II. Pass. to move in reversed orbit (cf. émavaxdpntw), Plat. Rep. 617 B. EravakvKAnors or —wots, ews, 7), a revolution, Plat. Tim. 4oC, éravakimrTw, fut. yw, to have an upward tendency, Xen. Eq. 12, 13. II. to rise up against, twi Joseph. B. J. 1. 31, I. 4 éxavéxupe Ad-yos a new argument rose up, Plut. 2. 725 B. éravakapBdve, fut. Bie ina :—to take up again, resume, repeat, Plat. Gorg. 488 B, Theaet. 169 E, Xen. Lac. 13, 2; eimwpev énavada- Bévres Arist. Pol. 6, 10, 11 ;—the part. may be best rendered by an Adv., mohAdus évavadapBavwv éxédevéy of déye he ordered him repeatedly, Plat. Phaedr, 228 A. II. to revise, correct, Id. Legg. 781 B; 7H TpopH Tiyv KakoTaVevay Theophr. C. P. 3. 7, 8. III. to take or assume again, Olympiod. ap. Phot. éravahéyopat, Med. to repeat, Alex. in Walz Rhett. 8. p. 445. émavadeiw, to plaster on, Galen. 6. p. 342, f. 1. pro éraA-. émavadnipis, ews, 3}, a regaining, Eccl. II. repetition, Dem. Phal. émava\toKw, to consume still more, xpdvov Dem. 1219. 25., 1223. 13. émavaktw, to return to a point, Greg. Nyss., etc. émavapévo, poét. érappev, to wait longer, Hdt. 8. 141, Ar. Eccl. 790. II. to wait for one, tiva Id. Nub. 804; érav. ria édAGeiv Id, Lys. 74 :—impers., ri p’ érappéver rabeiv what is there in store for me to suffer, Aesch. Pr.605; ob ogi xaxdv tor’ énappéver Tabeiv Id, Pers. 807; ris dpa pe wérpos .. émappéver; (so Herm. for émpéver), Soph. O. C. 1715. érravaptpvicKe, fut. uyjow, to remind one of, mention again to one, twa 7 Plat. Legg. 688 A, Dem. 74. 9: absol., Arist. de Mem. 1, 19. éravapvyors, 7, a mentioning again, Dion. H. de Rhet. 10, 18. éravavedopar, Med. to renew, revive, rov déyov Plat. Rep. 358 B. éravavéwots, ews, 4, a renewing, restoration, Eccl. éravatravw, to refresh, revive, rest, éavtdv Tut Acl.N.A.5.56:—Med. to rest upon, rats xepat Hdn, 2.1: to depend upon, Twi Ep. Rom. 2. 17, Artemid. 4.65; émi twa Ev. Luc. 10. 16. énavanépmw, to send back to a point, Hipp. 648. 7. émavamiyvipt, fut.—mjfw, to fix in or on: Med., Sovpar’ érapmpfacbat to fix their spears in the ground, Orph. Arg. 317. érravatrnSdw, fut. hoopat, to leap upon, Ar. Nub. 1375. énavanimrw, to lie down on, piddas pidwv Acl. V. H. 9. 24. éravatAdoow, Att. -rrw, =dvamAdoow, Axionic. Xadx. 2. éravatrAéw, Ion. —rAdw: fut. rAevcopar :—to put to sea against, ent twa Hat. 8.9, cf. 16; éni 7 for a purpose, Xen. Hell. 4, 8, 35. 2. to sail back again, Ib. 4. 8, 24, Dem. 1292. 2. II. to rise to the surface; metaph., énavamAwe bpiv émea ward ill language rises to your tongue, Hdt. 1. 212; cf. SaxputAdw. éravatrAnpse, to fill up, supply, Theophr. Sens. 8, in Pass. éravamvéw, fut. -rvevcopat, to recover breath, Hipp. 1234 D. érravaroBilw, to re-examine: hence émavamobteréov, verb. Adj., Arist. Gen. et Corr, I. 3, 5. émavatrohéw, to repeat yet again, Plat. Phileb. 60 A, Legg. 723 E. énavaTroAyats, ews, %), repetition, Philo 1. 254. éravapphyvipt, fut.—pygw, to tear open again, Lat. refricare, 70 Tpatpa Plut. Cato Mi. 70:—Pass. to burst open afresh, Hipp. 415. 5. éravapptimilo, =dvappimifw, Joseph. A. J. 19. 2, 2. énavappitrw or —€w, to throw up in the air: seemingly intr. (sub. éaurév) to spring high in the air, Xen. Cyn. 5, 4. émavacetots, ews, 7, a brandishing against, Trav Stdov Thue. 4. 126. énavacetw, do lift up and shake, Hipp. 915 B: metaph., ém. ddvayuy to threaten one with it, Dion, H, 11. ¢ :—Med. fo threaten, tevi Joseph. A. J. 19. 1, 16. " éravarkorréw, fut. -cxépouat, to consider yet again, Plat. Crat. 428 D, Hipp. Mi. 369D; wédAw dvactepdpeba Id. Theaet. 154 E. éravactretpw, to sow again; and —omopa, %, a second sowing, Tzetz. éravaotaots, ews, }, a rising up for any purpose, Hipp. Prorrh. 80: a rising up again, Diod. 18. 31. 2. a rising up against, an insur- rection, Hdt. 3. 44, 118, Thue. 2.27, etc.; éyévero em. dnd Tod Shpov trois Suvarois Id. 8. 21; ém. pépous Tivds TO GAM THs Yuyjs Plat. Rep. 444 B:—in Soph. Ant. 533, persons are called éravagracas Opévav rebellions (i.e. rebels) against the throne, II. a rising up, a swelling, Hipp. 154 D: a prominence on the head, Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 36. III. metaph., ém, Adyou elevation of language, Lat. oratio assurgens, Dem. Phal. 278. émavactéAAw, to draw back, dAtyov rod mapamerdcparos Clem, Al, 253. II. to compensate, as pOopds Arist. Mund. 5, 13. éravaornpa, 7d, a rising, swelling, Schol, Ar. Ran. 233. II. sublimity, Schol, Il. 13. 132, Hesych. éravacrpédw, intr. to turn back upon one, wheel round and return to the charge, Ar. Ran. L102, Thue. 4.130., 8. 105, Xen.:—so in Pass., Ar, Eq.244, Xen. Eq. Mag.8,25. II. Pass.,also, foreturn to thesurface, Arist. Fr. 316, éravarrpopy, 7,=avacTpopn, a return, Eust. Opusc. 253. 7S:—in Rhetoric, repetition of a word at the opening of a sentence, Hermog. éravacdlw, =dvackiw, Byz., Eccl. énavacwortuKés, 4, Cv, saving, preserving, Téxn Inscr. in Jo. Lyd. de Mens. 3. 47. 513 éravariiots, ews, 7, a stretching upwards, holding up, Tod oxnwrpov Arist. Pol. 3.14,12; v. sub oxjmrpov. II. metaph. a threatening, Philo 1, 282. émavatelive, to stretch out and hold up, rov tpaxndov Xen. An. 7. 4, 93 én. Tas xeipas as in prayer, Diod. Excerpt. 628. 70; ém. €Amldas Twi to hold out hopes, Xen. Cyr. 2. 1, 23. II. Med., éravareivecOac Baxrpoy tii to hold over as a threat, Luc. Catapl. 13; so, é. péBous tivi Polyb. 2. 44, 33 dmesAds cf. Dion. H. 7. 53: c. inf., ér. mpagew to threaten to do, Polyb. 15. 29, 14. III. metaph. in Med. ¢o speak with prolixity, Dion. H. de Rhet. 8. 54. éravaréhAw, post. éravréAdw :—like dvaréddw, to raise, wobdds ixvos Eur. Phoen. 104; ém. Képas é« perdmov to send forth, Opp. Cyn. 2, 97- II. intr. to rise, rov Hjdcov dvareiaa Hdt. 2. 142; HAlov dvarédAovros Id. 3. 84; ws émavéreAde 6 HAs Id. 7. 54; EwavTéAAw dorpaow %édos Anth. P. 12, 178; ebvijs émavrethacay having risen from bed, Aesch. Ag. 27; é« Tod xdpaxos Plut. Aemil. 18:—to shew oneself, appear, Aesch. Cho. 282, Eur. H. F. 1053 :—émavréAAwy xpévos the time coming to light, the future, Pind. O. 8. 37. émavatépvw, to cut open, Hipp. V.C. 905, Aretae. Cur. M, Ac. I. 4. éravatiOnpr, fut. -Ono0, to lay upon, éravad® cor kat EvAov Ar. Vesp. . 148:—Pass., pel(aw dtvapis dy. Tweis entrusted to him, Plat. Legg. 926 D. éravatpétw, to overturn, upset, Hdn. 3. 8. II. intr. ¢o return, mpos Tov Adyov Cratin. Muriv. 1. » éravatpédy, fut. -Opéym, to feed up, recruit, nourish, Hipp. Aph. 1244. éravatpéxw, =dvarpéxw, to recur, mpés tt Luc. Merc. Cond. 36. énavarptyde, to glean after the vintage, LXx (Deut. 24. 21). éravahépw,; post. érapdhépw, =dvapepw, to throw back upon, ascribe, refer, ph Tt Oeois Tovrea poipav énapuépere Solon 10. 2; Te els Twa oF ets Tt Ar. Nub. 1080, Plat. Rep. 434 E, Dem. 59. 25; éqi tt Plat. Legg. 680 D, Arist. Phys. 2. 4, 3, al.; mpdés 7¢ Hipp. Vet. Med. 8; émi twa, of an analogous case, Ib. 14; absol., Andoc. 27. 37; én. Tit imép Twos, Lat. referre alicui de re, Polyb. 21. 2, 14. 2. to put into the account, Lat. referre in.., Dem. 829: 5., 1034. 8. 3. to bring back a message, in Med., Xen. Hell. 2. 2, 21; &s twa Plut. Artox. 29. IL. intr. to return to oneself, revive, Hipp. 118 B: gene- rally, to come back, return, éni tt Plat. Lys. 219 C; so in Pass., Tim, Locr. 96 D. IIT. in Pass. also ¢o rise, as an exhalation, Xen. Cyn. 5,2; as the sun, Plut. 2. 19 E. émavahopa, 1), a referring, reference, éri t Arist. Eth. N. 5. 2, 53 mpés tt Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 4. 2. reference of a question to a superior court, Andoc, 27. 37. II. in Rhet. repetition of a word at the beginning of several clauses, Longin. 20. 2, Vit. Hom. éravadhopucds, 7, dv, of or for navaopa, Schol. Ar., Eust. 67. 35. éravahiodw, to play on the flute in accompaniment, Ar. Thesm. 1175. éravadiw, to put forth again, Ael. N, A. 10. 13. éravadhwvéw, to pronounce in addition or after, opp. to mpoavagavéw, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 130. émavaxpepmryptos, ov, promoting expectoration, cited from Hipp. éravaxpépmropat, Dep. to expectorate, Hipp. 415. 3- émavaxpepps, ews, 7), expectoration, Hipp. 415. 50., 416. 5. émavaxwpéw, = dvaxapéw, to retreat, return, Charon Fr. 2, Hdt. 9. 13, Ar. Lys. 461, Thuc. 1.131 (v. sub époppdw 111); és 70 retxos Thue. 1. 63, cf. 3.96; mpds Ta peréwpa 4. 44; emi Tt Plat. Legg. 781E; é. apxijs to return from .., Plut. 2, 580 A. émravaxwpyors, ews, 7, a return, kvpatos Thuc, 3. 89: retreat, Diod. Excerpt. 510. 31. ‘ éravouAdtw, post. for éravadimid cw. : éraviimdoifw, v. sub émdimAoigw. émavSpos, ov, (dvip) masculine, manly, Diod. 4. 50, C. 1. 5879. 73 70 émavdpov masculine spirit, Cornut.N.D.20. Adv. -dpws, Sext. Emp. M. 1r. 107, C. I. 4239. émaveyetpw, =dveyetpw, Hipp. 85 E, Plut. 2. tor A. émdveupt, (ey, ibo) used as fut. of émavépxopat, to go back, return, Thue. 6.102, etc.; avAds.. émaverow will recur, of the music at the annual meeting of the Amphictyons, Soph, Tr. 642:—in writing or speaking, to go back or return to a point, ém tov mpérepoy Ac-yov Hat. 7.138; ey 3 vOev eéBnv eraverps Xen, Hell. 7. 4, 13 puepdv erdverpe Id. Cyr. 1. 2,15; émdvetpe 57 wad els tas drodel~es Dem, 240. 3, cf. 578.1, Plat. Symp. 211 B; ém. wept tivos Id. Legg. 857D. 2. c, acc. tei, to return to, recapitulate, rods Adyous Ib. 698 C; 7a torepa brorebévra Id. Tim. 61D, II. fo go up, edraber ent tas dpovpas Ib. 22 E; ’Odvymiafe Id. Hipp. Mi. 363 C: fo rise, grow up, Hipp. V. C. gio. émavertreiv, to offer publicly besides, dpyipiov 7G amoxrelvayre Thuc. 6. 60. éravelpopat or —€popat (Hipp. Progn. 37): Med. :—to question again and again, Hdt. 1. 91., 3. 32:—in Att. we have only the aor. émavnpéuny, 7a56 o° éravépwpat Aesch. Pers. 973; 7d adris émavépy pe Ar. Ran. 4353 Tov Oedv éxavhpoyro ei .. Thuc. I. 25. 2. to ask again, éravéporrd rivé 7 Plat. Prot, 329A, cf.Gorg. 451 B, 454 A.—V. sub €popat. érravéAevars, ews, 4), (ravépxopat) a return, Eust, 1393. 8. émavéAkw, fo draw up on shore, Tv vady Arr. An, 2. 19, 3- émavepnéw, fo vomit repeatedly or thereafter, Hipp. Epid. 1.948. érdvepos, ov, windy, Hipp. 1200 D, eravepevyopar, =dvepevyouat, Hipp. Acut. 395. éravepéo Oat, v. sub dvetpopar, éravépxopat, fut. -edevoouat (but v. érdveipe): Dep. with aor. and pf. act, To go back, return, &e morapod Anacr. 20; é Teparews Andoc. 11.14, cf, Thuc. 4. 16, 74, etc. :—in writing or speaking, 4o go back or return toa point, éxeioe 52) “mdvehOe Eur. 1.T. 256; emi re Xen, Ll 514 Hell. r. 7, 31; éwavedOeiv dnddey .. env Bovdropat Dem. 298. 12; GN’ Exetoe Evavépxopar Id. 246. 27; els 7a ypdpuara Tadra Enaven- Geiv to refer to.., 1d. 837.14. 2. c. acc. rei, to return to, re- capitulate, Plat. Tim. 17 B, Xen. Oec. 6, 2, Ages. 11, I. If. to ‘0 up, ascend, eis dpn Id. Hell. 4.8, 35; Songer .. EvOedrev -yewperpin. . 5 Thy “EAAdba éravedOeiv to have gone up, passed over, Hdt. 2. 109. émavepwrdw, of persons, to question again, Hipp. Progn. 38; tid Plat. Crat, 413 A, Xen. Mem. 3.1, 11 :—Pass., Plat. Clitoph. 409 D. 2. of things, to ask over again, Id. Gorg. 454 B: io examine into, 7 Id. hee. os D: ef. peels peer émdvecis, ews, , (emavinys) abatement, rod wuperod Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 1. Eravéxa, fut. -fw, to hold up, support, 7d otxeia md0n Tois Snnoatos éxavéxwv Piut. Dem. 22 :—Med. to take upon oneself, rdv méA€poy ap. Suid, 2. to maintain, keep, xwpav Diod. 17. 115. II. seemingly intr. (sub. éavrdv), to rest upon, émt rais édnicw Dem. 357. 10:—+#o be contented with, revi Alciphro 1. 38. 2. (sub. rv ppéva), to fix one’s mind upon, twit Artemid. I. 12. émavykw, to have come back, to return, Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 1628, Plat. Com, Aax. 3; &s twa Dem. 1156. 3; mpds Twa Polyb. 6. 58, 3; mpos evdaipoviay Paus, 3. 9, 2. p émavyAoyéw, a dub. form in’ Hdt. 1. 90, éravnAdynoe macav tiv éwvrod Sidvocay, where (if gettuine) it must mean recounted: Valck. and others restore éwadsAAdynoe from Poll. 2.120, cf. Hdt. 1. 118.—The form xarndoyéw cannot be cited as analogous; for this represents xar- ddoyéw (dAoyéw being regularly formed from dAoyos), whereas éravn- Aoyéw must represent €7-ava-Aoyéw. ; éraviéw, to bloom, be in flower, sprout, Theocr. 5. 131. II. metaph. of any thing that forms on the surface, like Lat. efflorescere, iddv rots ovpect GAuny éxayOodoay Hat. 2.12; xvods phroraw éenqjvber Ar. Nub. 978; 7d tpupepdv . . émt rots phdows éravOe? Id. Eccl. 903; tiv éravOodcay tpixa Ib. 13 ; also of hair turning gray, evxvov .. TokWrepat 8) aid’ éxavOodow rpixes Id. Vesp. 1065, cf. Xen. Cyn. 4, 8. 2. carom to be upon the surface, tpnxvrns érnvOer Hipp. 1221 G (cf. mavOopa); éuol.. erhvOeev ddd 71 KaAAOs Theocr. 20. 21:—absol. to shew itself, appear plainly, robmxmpiov éravOet Ar. Nub. 1174; Step «- Taal cal Onpios. . gdppvrov énavOe Plat. Legg. 710A; waaw énavOet -+% xapis Luc. Imag. 9, cf. Hist. Conscr. 55 :—cf. érevpvobe. IIl. to be bright, xrepickows woppupots émavOovvrwv Babr. 118. 5. énavOnpa, 76, =eravOicpa: the most striking part, Jambi. in Nicom. Ar. 53 C. éravdnots, ews, , a flowering, bloom, Plotin. 4.°3, 13. oe poét. for Metin bn part. éwav@tdovres, Ap. Rh. 3. 519. éraviite, fut. ow, to deck as with flowers, to make bright-coloured, én. tit épvOnpa to give one a red tint, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 13; édépavra én. 7@ xpue@ Ib. 51:—Pass., xpdpaow ennvOropévos Diod.1. 49; (so SinvOcopevos in Paus. 7. 26, 4); éemqvOopevn dvépaat rornricots Philostr. 500. 2. metaph. to deck as with flowers, to deck, decorate, dis- tinguish, noxurois ér. matdva Aesch. Cho. 150; moAAois éx. mévoiot yevedy Id. Theb. 951.—The aor. med. érnv@icw occurs in a mutilated passage, Id. Ag. 1459. - éravOropa, 74, an efflorescence, dpp@des éx. Hipp. Prorrh. 69. énavOiop.6s, 6, efflorescence, Diosc. 5.107; v. Beckm. H. of Inv. 2. p. 261 sq. ; é chiicles to plait of or with flowers, Anth. P. 12. 8. ExavOpixises, wy, al, (dvOpaxis) small fish for frying, small fry, Ar. Ach. 670, Vesp. 1127. : émavOpaxitw, to broil on the coals, Meineke Cratin. ’Oducc. 5. érravOpakdopar, Pass. to be broiled on the coals, Poll. 6. 55. émr&ividopar, to annoy oneself at a thing, Xen. Eph. 1, 15. érravinpt, to let loose at, cot 8 ent rovrov dvijnev Il. 5. 405. II. to let go back, relax, c. acc., Tadra éravévras Dem. 26. 27; Tov mapévra émaveivat pdBov Id. 287. 7: to remit, ti Te Plut. Lyc. 22: to release from, Tas kivas én. tev névew Xen. Cyn. 7, 1. 2. intr. to relax, leave off, Tépvov ovx énavijxe mply .. Plat. Phaedr. 266 A: absol., of spasms, Hipp. Epid. 3.1096; pi) enamels with slackening speed, Xen. Cyn. 4, 5, cf. 7, 11., 10, 11; éravijeev 6 otros, Lat. annona laxavit, corn became easy, Dem. 889.9; éravévra luke-warm, opp. to Oeppd, Sosip. Kara, 1. 53. ae a be BT Manetho 5. 220. | éravicbw, to make quite equal, to balance evenly, equalise, twa mpés awa Thuc. 8. 57; é7. rd perpa C, 1. 123.15: absol. to provide com- pensation, Plat. Prot. 321 A :—Pass. to be made equal, rit Id. Legg. 745 D. éraviornpt, fut. -orfow, to set up again, 7a relxn Plat. Legg. 778 F 2. to make to rise against, dvipas éx xapdépas én, twi Plut. Sertor. 13: fo raise in revolt against, “IBnpiav ‘Papatois App. Hisp. Iol. II. Pass., with fut. med. (Hdt. 3. 62), aor. 2 and pf. act. to stand up after another or at his word, of 8 énavéornoay Il. 2. 85 (nowhere else in Hom.): to rise from bed, rise, Ar. P|. 5393 én Tivos Xen. Symp. 4, 2: fo rise to speak, Dem. 355. 23 :—of buildings, in pf. to be raised or built, Ar. AV. 554: ¢. gen. to rise above, Arist. H. A. 2. 12, 11, ef. Dion. H. 2. 50. 2. to rise up against, rise in insurrec- tion against, ru Hat. 1. 89, 130, Thuc. 1. 115, etc.; rots mpaypact Dinarch. 92. 31: absol. to rise in insurrection, Thuc. 3 39, al.; of éra~ vaoremres the insurgents, Hat. 3. 63; ¢. inf., édv res rupavveiv enavaari if any one aim at tyranny, Lex Solon. ap. Andoc. 13.13 :—hence to plot against, lay snares for, &. g. mapdévos Ael, Ep. 15. 3. Medic. to rise on the skin, to swell, Hipp. Prorth. 82; dra emaveornxdra project- r, prominent, Arist. P. A. 4.11, 6, cf. 3-14, 9, H. A. 2.12, 11. vie us, 4, a making equal, equalising, Philo 2. 479. 3 , ’ , ET AVEPWOTAM — érakovew, émavtréov, verb. Adj. one must return to a point, Plat, Rep. 532 D:— one must recapitulate, wept Twos Arist. P. A. 4. 5, 61. éndvodos, 7), a rising up, éx Tod karayetou eis Toy HAtov Plat. Rep. 532 B, cf. 521 C. TI. a return, as of the breath, Hipp. Acut. 386 B; to one’s country, Ep. Eur. 2,12, Hdn. 8. 7. 2. in speaking, recapitu- lation, Plat. Phaedr. 267 D, Arist. Rhet. 3.13, 33 cf. Quintil. 9. 3, 36. éravolyvupat, aor. éravorgdunv, Med. to cause to be opened, Epigr. Gr. 340. érravotyw, to open, 7d HpGov C. I. 4259. ExavoiSéw, to swell up, rise on the surface, Hipp. 563. 38, Arist. H. A. 4. 6, 6 :—Pass. émavord{ckopar in same sense, Hipp. V. C. go4. éavolkrwp, 5, one who bursts open, Ouvpérpav Manetho I. 310. émavovrréov, verb. Adj. one must refer, Polyb. 1. 37, 3. émavop0éw: impf. with double augm., éwnvw@pBouv Isocr, 274 E: aor. éxnvapdwoa Lys. 197. 14:—Med., fut. éravopSwoopat Plat. Lach. 200 B, Dem. 200. 23 (but in pass. sense, Dio C. 73. 1): impf. émnvwpbodpny Plat. Theaet.143 A: aor. éryvapOwodpny Isocr. 75 C, Dem. 81. 2 :— Pass., fut. éravop0wOncoua: Aeschin. 79. 12: aor. érnvapOwOnv Dem. 130. 17: pf. ExnvwpPwpat Id. 329. 2, To set up or upright, C. I. 1341. 2. to set up again, restore, Thy Siva .. Kainep wenTO- kviav Thuc. 7. 77; 7a dvorvxnbévra Lys. |. c.; Tiv moAcretay Isocr. 142D; 7d éimmxoy Dinarch. 102. 24, ete. 8. to correct, amend, revise, Tov vopov Plat. Legg 769 E; Tas cvvOfnas Isae. 37.8; 7d Gpap- Tha Plat. Prot. 340D; éz. twa to correct one, teach him better, Ar. Lys. 528, cf. Isocr. 1 C :—freq. also in Med., Plat. Rep. 361 A, Euthyphro 9 D, Theaet. 143 A, Isocr. 75 B, Dem. 11. 19, etc. ;—an Att. usage, acc. to Thom. M. éravop0wpa, 7d, a correction, Plat. Prot. 340 A, D, Theaet. 183 A, Dem. 774. 20. ErravopOwors, ews, %, a setting right, correcting, Tas yvxas Tim. Locr. 104A; a revisal, vopov Dem. 707. 7; én. €xev to be capable of im- provement, opp. to dviaroy efvat, Arist. Eth. N. 9. 3, 33 of circum- stances, profit, Polyb. 1. 66, 12. éravopQwréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be corrected, Plat. Legg. 809 A. éxavopOwréov, one must correct, Plut.2.24 A. ExavopPwris, od, 5, a corrector, restorer, TOD Kapvoyros Dion. H. 8. 67; Tav rpérwy Dio C. 54. 30; esp. in a political sense, C. I. 1624. émavopPwrikds, 4, dv, corrective, restorative, TOY 70Gv Strabo 16; 7d éravopOwrixdv Sixatoy Arist. Eth. N. 5. 4, 6. €mavTéAAw, post. and Ion. for éravaréAdw. émdvrns, €s, rare form for dvayrns, steep, Thuc. 7. 79. éravridtw, tut. dow, to fall in with, h. Hom. Ap. 152. émavthéw, to pump over or upon, pour over, Plat. Phaedo 112 C; (ib: D, éfnvrdc?ro should perhaps be read with Heind.); te émt 7 Id. Phaedr. 253 A; Adyous vwt én. to pour a flood of words over, Eur. ap. Plut. 2. 502 C, cf. Ael. N. A.6. 51; and absol., Luc. Peregr. 5; in Diphil. Incert. 26 legend. dmavrAc?:—Pass. to be filled, Plat. Phaedo 112 D: to be overflowed, Diod. 1. 33; ppovriow érnvrAnpévos Plut. 2. 107 A. éndvrAnpa, 76, a fomentation, -yayypatvys Diosc. 2. 132. érdvrAqots, ews, 7), a pouring over, as of water over a person bathing, Hipp. Acut. 395, Diod. 2. 10 (v.1. é1-). éravia, fut. vcai [0], to complete, accomplish, ob8€ woré oguw vinn énnvia6n the victory remained undecided, Hes, Sc. 311 (explained by the context, dxpirov elyov deOdov):—Med. to procure, oiay..émt poe Heréy xapw iviow (for érnvtow por) Soph, Tr. 996. émravw [a], Adv. (dva) above, atop, on the upper side or part, Ar. Lys. 773, Plat. Rep. 514 B, etc.: with Art., 6 érdvw mipyos the upper tower, Hdt. 3- 54, etc. 2. c. gen., Id. 1. 179, (divisim, émt Tod onparos ave Ib. 93), Plat. Phaedo 109 D; én. xaxlas superior to.., Plut. 2. 1063. C; xpnudrow én. elvat Diog. L. 6. 28. II. above, in a book, Lat. supra, év rots én. elpnrat Xen. An. 6. 3, I, ef. Arist. Metaph. 3. 8, 3, al.; 7d éx, NexOévra Strabo 115; Kadas én. yéypanrat C. 1. 1845. 131., 3059. 4. III. of Time, év rois éw. xpdvots in former times, Diod. 16, 42., 18. 49. IV. of Relationship, marépes nal Tovrwv ém. Dem. 1390. 26, V. in Logic, 76 é. yevos the genus or species above, opp. to 7d imoxdrw, Arist. Top. 4. 2, 4., 6. 4, 16, al. of Number, above, more, dn’ eixocaerods kat ér. LXX (Ex. 30.14, al.): above, more than, é. rpiaxogtav Ev. Marc. 14.53 ém. mevraxoaios, 1 Ep. Cor, 15. 6, émavabev, Ady. from above, above, Thuc. 2. 99; ¢. gen., Plat. Tim. 45 A. 2. of Time, of én. men of former time, Theocr. 7. 5—The form émdva0e in Eur. Alc. 463, Kovpa co xOav énavate récor; emdvwOe in Anth, P. 11, 404. émagt-épaaros, ov, amiable, Philo 2. 166. émrdgvos, a, ov: worthy, deserving of .., Twos Pind. N. 7. 13%; THs dinns éndgia Aesch. Eum. 272, cf.Cho.95; Oavudérov érdgia Eur. Bacch, 716; omovdis ov.. Todds twos én, Plat. Soph. 218 E:—c. inf., ém. [et] karourioat Soph. O. C. 461, cf. Plat. Legg. 961 B. 2. absol. deserved, orépavos Pind. I. 4.76 (3.62): worthy, meet, ddyos Aesch. Theb. 865 ; yapuos Soph. El. g71, etc.; xupeiv ray énagiwy to meet with one’s deserts, Aesch. Pr. 70:—so, Adv. -(ws, Soph. O. T. 133. 3. worth mentioning, Hdt. 2. 79., 7. 96: worth while todo a thing, Hipp. Art. 834. ,tmagiéa, to think right, deem it right, Lat. dignor, c. inf., 7007" emnfiwoa Spav Soph. Ph. 803, cf, El. 1274. 2. to expect, believe, c. acc. et inf., 7d 8° GAda.. éragid ce .. eldévar Ib. 658:—but, 6 yap févos o€.. éragiot dicalay Xap mapacyeiy deems thee worthy of honour, so as to render thee a due return, Id. O. C. 1496. érakiwors, ews, %, a valuing, estimation, Dion. H. Excerpt. p. 2352 Reisk. II. L émafovéw, (cigqy 11) to enroll in tablets, register, LXx (Num, 1, 18). , a. * P * emakovios ee: eTapX@. - érakévios, ov, (dgwv) upon an axle, dippos Theocr. 25. 249; v.1. évag-. émdtw, Dor. for émpfw, 2 sing. aor. med. of mfyvupt, Theocr. : €raoib4, 7, Ion. and poét. for érwdh. éraovdia, %, later form of foreg., Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 9. éraoidés, 6, = érwids, LXx (Ex. 7. 11, 22), Manetho, etc. éwamethéw, to hold out as a threat to one, tii Tt, Airy Eptdos, Thy mp&rov érnmetAna’ ’AxtAji Il. 1. 319., cf. Od. 13. 127; so, Hdt. 6. 32, Soph. Aj. 312, etc. 2. c. dat. only, to threaten, énameAngas ‘EAévy Il, 13. 582. 38. c. inf. to threaten to do, Hdt. 1. 189, Soph. El. 779, Ar. Av. 629: but the inf. is often omitted, ds érameiAncey as he threatened, Il. 14. 45, cf. Soph, Ant. 752. 4. én. ei ph) .., Xen. An. 5. 10, 7. 5. Pass., mpds cou rd dew’... ernmerAnuévor threatened, Soph. Ant. 408. émamepetSopat, Pass. to lean upon, twi Posidon. ap. Ath. 550 B. ématépxopat, Dep. fo go away after, Eccl. éramodtiréov, verb. Adj. one must strip for, TS mévw Clem. Al. 888. émamoStw, to strip one for combat against another, set him up as a rival to, Twa Tit Plut. 2. 788 D :—Med. to strip and set to work at a thing, 7@ mpdypart Ar. Lys. 615: to set upon, attack, rots veruenndoww Plut. Marcell. 3. énamoOvioKe, to die after another, rivi Plat. Symp. 208 D, cf. 180A; én. Aébyors to die while yet speaking, Joseph. A.J.13.11,3: absol., Plut. Aemil. 35. énamroixlfo, to colonise anew, Kapxnddva, Dio C. 52. 43. énatoxretve, to kill besides, éxi tur Dio C. 49. 23. éramohaiw, =évarohatw, to revel in, #dovais Diod. Excerpt. 609. 89. érraméANDpe or tw, fo kill in addition, Ael. N. A. To. 48, Luc. Merc. Cond. 42 :—Med., with pf. -awéAwAa, to die with, Tit Dio C. 60. 34. ératrohoyéopar, = droAoyéopar, v. 1. Plut. Marcell. 27. émamovivapat, Pass, to enjoy besides, Philo 1. 327. éraronviyw [i], fo choke besides :—Pass, aor. 2 émamomvtyeins, may Jou be choked besides, Ar. Eq. 940 (restored by Elmsl. for dromy-). ératoptw, to raise a new doubt or question, métepov.. Polyb. 6.3, 6: —Pass., éwamopetrat rt a new doubt is raised, Theophr. Vertig. 9; Ta éxamopndévra Polyb. 6. 5, 3. éramépypa, 76, a newly started difficulty, Eccl. éramépyots, ews, 7), (€mamopéw) = erandpnua, Cyril. érramopyrucds, 7, dv, of or for doubts, Diog. L. 7. 68. Adv. -Kds, Eust. 1114. 30. ématooréhhw, to send after, ér. ypapyard rie Polyb. 31.12, 143 én, Erepov arpatnyév to send another general after him (to supersede him), Id. 6. 15, 6. II. to send against, Id. 32. 21, 11. énamri, Ion. for épdmra :—éramtw, Dor. for érnriw. érapa, Ion. éraph, 7, a solemn curse, imprecation, Ocot 8 érédeov érapas Il. 9. 456, cf. ap. Ath. 466 A; énapds moeio9ar C. 1. 2691 c. 11. [érapa in Hom.] érapdopar: fut. dcopuat, Ion. qoopar: pf. érnpapar v. inft.: Dep. :— to imprecate curses upon, Tlépayot tohAd émapnodpevos Hdt. 3.75; én. éf{wAecdv Tut Antipho 130. 34, Lys. 121. 4; Tv iepdy by the temples, Isocr. 73 B. 2. c. dat. only, to cursé solemnly, Plat. Legg. 931 B, etc. 8. c. ace. rei only, tiva .. rév5’ ernpdow Adyov ; what im- precation is this that thou didst utter? Soph. El. 388; ri radra érnpapyat; Dem. 275. 7. 4. c. inf., é7. ra5e.., rovr@ fuvapuveiv Eur, I. A. 60, ef. Plut. Sull. ro. émapaplokw: fut. émdpaw: aor. —hpiipov. To fit to or upon, fasten, Ovpas araOpoto.v émfjpoer on or to the posts, Il. 14.167; émt dé tvydv Hpapev apupoiv L. Merc. 50. II. intr. in Ion. pf. émapnpa, plqpf. éxapnhpey, to fit tight or exactly, pla 5& KAnts émtiphpet a cross-bolt was fitted therein, Il. 12. 456; part. émapnpds, via, ds, close-fitting, well fixed, nocoly émapnpws firm on his feet, Arat. 83 ; also émdppevos, 7, ov, Ep. syncop, part. aor. pass. well-fitted, prepared, ready, Hes. Op. 599, 625. érapdoipos [pa], ov, abominable, Pseudo-Phocyl. 16. érapdoow, Att. -rrw, to dash or clap to, riv Odpay Plat. Prot. 314 D. II. intr. to burst in or forth, Synes. 163 B. émapatos, ov, (émapdopat) accursed, laid under a curse, én. Twa Totel- o0a Thuc. 8. 97; 8 érdparov jy pi) olketv which it was accursed to in- habit, Id. 2. 17; 7@ 3% Emdparoy rvyny [yevécbar] Plat. Legg. 877 A; used in imprecations on those who violated graves, C. I, 2824, 2826, sqq. émapyenos, ov, having a film over the eye, Arist. H. A. 9. 1, 22., 9. 34) 5+ II. metaph. dim, obscure, onpara, Ogopara, Ad-you Aesch. Pr. 499, Ag. 1113, Cho. 665. , érapytpoopat, Pass. to be overlaid with silver, C. 1. 159. 14:—metaph. of costly dinners, pi) ToAA’ yay .. , und ennpyupwpéva Mnesim. Avoxod, 1. énapytpos, ov, overlaid with silver, Hdt. 1. 50., 9. 80. érdpdevors, ews, 4, watering, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 89. émapdevw, =sq., Nonn, D. 11. 166, Or. Sib. 5. 58, énép5., to irrigate, Arr. An. 4.6,11; metaph., éx. dperais thy yuxny Luc. Anach, 26 :—in Pass., Tim. Locr! 102 B. émiipyyw, fut. fw, fo come to aid, help, vi Il. 23. 783, Od. 13. 391, Eur. El. 1350, Ar. Vesp. 402: absol., vv émapifov Aesch. Cho, 725; obnaphtay Soph. El. 1197; also in Xen. Cyr. 6. 4, 18. émripnyav, dvos, 6, %, a helper, Ap. Rh. 1. 1039, Orph. 89. erdpytts, ews, 7, help, aid, Eust. 52. 38. érdpny [a], v. sub meipw. émiiptper, eriipypas, v. sub érapapicxa. ‘ émtipOpéw, to count, in addition, Paus. 10. 5, 8; én. ais jpuépas tds modes to count the cities by the days, i, e. a city a day, Aristid. 1. 223. émaplorepos, ov, towards the left, on the left hand, Ta énapicrepa Hat. 2. 93., 4.191; but, émt 7d dpiorepd Id. 2. 36. II. metaph. /eft- handed, ér. éuabes ypappara Theognet. bacy. 1, cf. Ephipp. cA. 3; 515 of Cato, Plut. Cato Ma. 19.—Adv., AapBavay m1 érapiorépws Menand, Misoy. 1, cf. Plut. 2. 467 C.—Cf. Lob. Phryn. 259. y émiiprrrepdrys, 770s, 7, awkwardness, Arist. de Virt. 6, 1. *Emaptrat or Endpvrot [1], of, the soldiers of the Arcadian Federation (B.C. 371), Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 33-36, Ephor. 139, Androt. 54; Diod. (15. 62) seems to interpret it by émiAexror, ] éndpke.a, %, a supply of money or provisions, Polyb. 5. 51, 10; and in pl. supplies, 1d. 6. 49, 7: cf. érapxéos. émdpkects, ews, 7, aid, succour, Soph. O.C. 447, Eur. Hee. 758. émapkéw, fut. éow: Ep. aor, inf. érapoéooa: Epigr. Gr. 473. 8:—to be . strong enough for a thing, in Hom. always of cases of danger or injury: 1. c, acc. rei et dat. pers, fo ward off something from one, ovdé Té of .. érnpKece Avypoy dAcOpor Il. 2. 873. 2. c. acc. rei only, éo ward off, prevent, ore Tt TpAépaxos Tb y emhpeecev Od. 17. 568; ovdty ydp aire radr’ énapkéce 7d ph meceiv prohibebit quo- minus .., Aesch. Pr. 918; in Soph. Aj. 360 (a€ ror pévoy Sé50pKa ToLpevav énapxécovt’), motpévew seems to be corrupt; Reisk. suggested 77- povay. 3. c. dat. pers. only, to help, assist, Theogn. 869, Hdt. 1. 91, Lys. 138. 43, Ar. Pl. 830, etc.; cf. Buttm. Lexil. v. xparopetv :—rarely c. acc. pers., like @peAeiv, Eur. Or. 803:—absol, zis dp émapkége:; who will aid? Aesch, Theb. 92, cf. Soph. O.C. 777. If. to supply, furnish, impart, dkos 8 obdtv énfhpkecay, 7d pr méAw .. mabety Aesch. Ag. 1170; ém. rivi tt Plat. Prot. 321 A, ete.; also, ér. twit twos to impart to him a share of .., Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 60; c. dat. rei, 40 supply with a thing, Eur. Cycl. 301. 2. to provide for, pay the expense of, Tt Pind. N. 6. 103. III. absol. o be sufficient, enough, bacov énapxet Solon 4. 1 (cf. dwapkéw) ;- émapkice vepos 65° this law shall prevail, Soph. Ant. 612. érapkis, és, assisting, Nic. Al. 577. II. sufficient, otota rats Samrdvacs ér. Plut. Cic. 7, cf. Dion. P. 1601 :—Adv. -«@s, Lxx (1 Mace, Il. 35), Epigr. Gr. 471. émdpxios, ov, sufficient, Opp. H. 4. 377, Anth. P. 10. 76. émapkovvrws, Adv, part. pres. sufficiently, Soph. El. 354. énappa, 76, (€naipopat) something raised, a swelling, Hipp. Epid. 1. 938. II. metaph. elation, vanity, ér. rdxns Sotad. ap. Stob. 189. 48. mappevos, v. sub érapapioxw. €rapkts, %, dub. 1. in Emped. (94) ap. Arist. de Xenophan. 2, 8: for €apéts tero Mullach reads éravgqoese 76. : émdpoupos, ov, (dpoupa) attached to the soil as a serf, ascripius glebae, Bovdoipny «° éndpoupos édy Onrevépev GAA Od. 11. 480. érapots, ews, 4, (éraipw) a rising, swelling, koAins Hipp. Coac. 129 ; Tay paoTay Arist. H. A. 7. 1,6, cf. 6,18, 13, al.: v. sub tovOos. : elation of mind, Stoical word, Diog. L. 7. 114, Stob. Ecl. 2. 170. émaptaw, to hang on or over, én. PéBov tii Aeschin. 25. 5; Ttpoplar ti Ael. N, A. 11. 5 :—Med., literally, to hang upon, tiwi 71 Orph. Arg. 1334:—Pass. to hang over, impend, Lat. imminere, tocodros émnprytat poBos Dem. 666.14; dmaddAayhy ennprnpévay PéBwy 332. fin.; cf. Phylarch, 23, C, I. 3692. II. 70 énnprnpévoy [rot (uyot] the attached or suspended part, Arist. Mechan. 2, 4. : émapris, és, (dpréw) ready, equipt, émaprées eialy ératpor Od, 8. 151, cf. 14. 332., 19. 289; vijes, Cbwdn Ap. Rh. 1. 234., 3. 299- éraptifw, to get ready, Ap. Rh. 1. 1210:—Med,, c. inf., Ib, 877. émapriés, 7, dv, (éraipw) making to rise or swell, Tod oropaxou Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 2. énapruw and —Uvw [iv], fo fit or fix on, abrix’ énfprve mOpa Od. 8. 447. II. to prepare, ént yap Zeds Hprve mhya Od. 3. 152; dAeOpdy rive Opp. C. 2. 443 :—Med., detrvor énnprivavto they prepared them a meal, h. Hom, Cer. 128. émaipvornp, jpos, 7, and émapuotpls, Sos, 7, (4ptw) a vessel for pour- ing oil into a lamp, both in Lxx. énaptre, fut. dow, to pour upon, mix, Dio Chrys. 1. p. 411:—Med., tt Tt Plut. 2. 600C. érapxetov, 76, = érapyxia, C. I. 6627. émapxéw, to be an érapxos, C. I. 2047. érrapx(a, %, the government of an érapxos, or the district governed by him, the Roman provincia, Polyb. 2. 19, 2, C. I. 2597, Diod. Excerpt. 498.77, Plut. Caes. 4 :—in some places it is not clear whether it refers to the locality or the jurisdiction. érapxiKos, 7, dv, of or for an erapxos, én. eovata the office of Prae- fectus Urbis, Dio C. 75. 14. II. belonging to an énapxia, pro- vincial, Plut. Cic. 36, C. I. 356. émapxtorys, ov, 6, a provincial, Hadrian. ap. Justin, M. 84 D: fem. -&rtis, tos, Byz. émapxos, ov, (4pxq) a commander, KiAlkwv Aesch. Pers. 327; veav Id. Ag. 1227 (so Canter for drapxos): a governor of a country, Polyb. 5. 40, 7. 2. used to translate the Roman praefectus in all senses, Polyb, 11. 27, 2, etc., v. Indices C, I. p. 353 én. THs avAqs =praefectus praetorio, Plut. Galb. 2, cf. ib. 8,13; é. "Egas prefect of the East, Epigr. Gr. 919. 4; dnd érdpyow expraefectus, C. 1. 2593, sqq- TI. as Adj., dpxiv érapxoy arédov the office of admiral, Epigr. Gr. 838. érapxorys, 770s, 7), =érapxia, Phot. Bibl. 57. 9, Jo. Chr. émdpxo, fut. fw, to be governor of, rule over, Tis xepas Xen. Cyr. 4. 6. 2; tay dpdpow Isocr. bE, cf. Plat. Criti. 116 E; also c. dat., Epigr. ap. Paus. 6. 19, 6:—absol., 6 érépxov =énapxos, Hdn. 4. 12; of consular authority, Plut. Sull. 8. 2. to rule besides one’s hereditary dominions, Xen. Cyr. 1. 1, 4. II. the Med. is used by Hom. in the phrase éxdpfacGat dendecow: this phrase, like émépxopat, xarépxopat, had 2 religious or ritual sense, relating to the offering of libations to the gods before the wine was served: this appears most clearly from Od. 18. 417, Bovdctpara Diod. Excerpt. Vat. p.5; é4. Karoves awkward imitators ~ vivoxdos piv éraptdaba dencecow, Oppa os aacaata ag rece let 516 him begin by pouring wine into the cups, cf. 21. 263:—the whole pro- ceeding was as follows: the attendants mixed the wine in bowls (xpyrfjpes), then poured a small quantity with a can or ladle (oivoxén, Schol. Ven. Il. I. 471) into each cup to be used as a libation, and after that served the wine round for drinking: Movrdvoos .. oivoy éxipva, vapnoey 8 dpa maow érapfdpevos dendecow (after first pouring a little into the cups); airdp énet oneiody 7 éméy 6 bcov HOche Ovpds TA. Od. 7. 182; cf. the often-repeated lines, codpor .. epynrijpas émearépavro mor0t0, vepnoay & dpa waow erapgapevor dendevory Il. 1. 471., 9. 176, Od. 3. 340., 21. 272:—the éi probably means the same as in émoraddy, successively :— v. Buttm. Lexil. s. v., Nitzsch Od. 3. 340., 7. 182. 2. generally, to serve, offer, véxtap re Kat duBpoctny xepoty émnptaro h, Hom. Ap. 125; soinC.I, 2144, émdpxeodar 5é rods xopods xopelas TH Arcovicy. émiipwyn, 7), (erapnyw) help, aid, Ap. Rh. 1. 302. IT. én. tivos aid against a thing, Luc, Alex. 28: hence opposition, Epigr. Gr. 618. 5. émipwyns, és,=sq., Nic. Al. 110. émipwyds, 6, a helper, aider, Od. 11..498, Eur. Hec. 165, etc.: also fem., Ap. Rh. 4. 196: neut., 7 {was éraparyéy Anth. P. 6. 219, 21. éracOpatve, to breathe hard, pant.in working, Lxx (4 Macc. 6. 11). €maors, ews, , v. Gumaats. _émackéw, fut. jaw, to labour or toil at, prepare or finisk carefully, émhonnra 5é of avd} Totxw Kal Opryxoto: Od. 17. 266, cf. Anth. P. append. 328, Il. to adorn, exalt, rva Tipais Pind. N. 9. 23, cf. Fr. 206. 4. III. to practise, cultivate, Lat. exercere, TEXVNY, 7a és médcuov Hdt. 2. 166; pavvopaxiny 6. 92; 7a dAAa nara raira éx. 4.17; dperhy 3.82; copiay Ar. Nub. 517; maryxpariov Aeschin. 79. 243 pvhpny én. to cultivate memory, Hdt. 2.77; Svvapiv rivos éx. to increase his strength, Aeschin. 46, 10:—absol. to be in training as an athlete, Achae. ap. Ath. 418 A:—Pass., Tadra ‘Papatous é¢.madarod ém- oxnrat Arr. An. 5. 8, 1. .2. to train or set on one against.another, twa Tm Dio C. 46. 40; cf. éradeipa. 3. to train for the contest, aé0A nat .. épnBous Epigr. Gr. 967. 3. émackyréov, verb. Adj. one must practise, Arr. Tact. 2. Amqopa, 76, (Emqda) an enchantment, Zonar., Tzetz. é€ractaipw, to pant over or at, p6x0w Opp. H.5. 407. émacntSdopar, Pass. to take as a shield, evAdBeay Philo 2. 699. éracotrepos [i], a, ov, (docov,.dcatrepos) one upon another, one after another, mostly in pl., éracovrepar xivuvto padayyes ll. 4.427; wavTas énacavrépous médace yxOovi 8. 277; oKomol iov altv éracovrepot spies sat one after another, i.e. at short distances, Od. 16. 366; mézpas méumov er, Hes. Th. 716; and in sing., cua ..dpvur’ énacadrepov wave aoe wave, Il. 4..423. II. frequent, repeated, of a single thing, ovpos Ap. Rh. 1..579; xpyouootyn Id, 2. 472; cf. Nic. Th, 246.—The word is a Comp. only in form. émaccvrepo-rpipis, és:—dpéyuara yepds émaccureporptB7 blows of outstretched hand following one upon another, Aesch. Cho. 426, émgoréov, verb. Adj. one must enchant, Plat. Charm, 158.C. émgorns, 6, =ér@odds, Eccl. émacrpamre, to lighten upon or to, Twit Plut. 2. 594.D; absol., Anth. P..7. 49:—c. ace. cogn., ém. mip to flash fire, Anth, Plan, 4. 141; omv@7jpas Nonn. D. 18..74. émacxadXo, to be.indignant at, éri tu Manetho 3. 86. _émitrevife, fut. iow, to gaze steadfastly-at,-eis rt Theophr. Vertig. 9. ématpepéw, to remain quiet after a thing, Hipp. Art. 800. éngrto, Att. for éralacw. émavydtw, fut. dow, to illumine on the surface, Maxim. 7. kar. 26; cf. emadvyalo. 2. Med. to-look at by the light, behold, Anth..P.9. 58., 12. gI. II. intr., éwavyde it grows light, Polyaen..1. 39, 1; Koraés trauydce. émavSdw, fo call to or say in addition, Hesych., Suid.:—Med. to call upon, invoke, twa Soph. Ph, 395- érav0adiafopar or -ifopar, Dep. to persist obstinately, Arr. An. 4. 9, 8, Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 11,—with v. 1. dmavd-. émaviéw, to accompany on the flute, rH Ovatqa Luc. Sacrif. 12: absol., Id. Salt. to. 2. c. acc, cogn., ém. Tie 7d évéwduoy Ath, 184 F :— Pass., wéAos éravdciras to be played on-the flute, Eur. H. F. 895. _énavAlfopa:, Dep. with aor. med., fo encamp on the field, Thuc. 3, 5. 4.134; cf. abatfopar. 2. to encamp near, TH méAe Plut. Sull. 29 :—to pass the night with, rwi Hesych. _énatAvov, 74, Dim..of sq., Call. Fr. 131. 4, Polyb. 4. 4,-1, etc. II. 7a. énatda or H éravdria (sc. Hyepa), the day after the wedding, Lat. ne- potia, Alciphro 3..4, Poll. 3. 39, Hesych., Suid.; v. Becker Charicl. 489, and cf. dwavAca, mpoavda. travAts, ews, 7), a place to pass the night in, esp. for cattle, Hdt. 1. 111; ove dapadts A€ovrt kal mpoBdrors 6pod woreiaOat Ti}v émavhw Polyb. 5. 35, 13, cf. Tab. Iliac. in C.1. 6125. 11. 2. a farm-bniilding, country, house, Diod, 12. 43, Plut. Pomp. 34, etc. 3. in military language, quarters, ém, movetoOat to encamp, Plat, Alc. 2. 149 C; ént rém@ Polyb. 16. 15, 5. aid, 76, =sq., Schol..Aesch, Pers. 870. énaviopés, 6, a passing the night, Schol. Soph. Ant. 363. éxavios, 6, (avy) mostly in pl.,€mavdor Od. 23. 358, Ap. Rh, 1. 800; éxavaa Soph, O. T. 1138, 0..C. 669 :—a fold for cattle at night, Od. l.c., Soph. O. T. Lc. 2. generally, a dwelling, home, Aesch, Pers. El sa 0, C. 1. c. utdvw or -avkw (Xen. Occ. 7, 43): fat. -avéhoo :—to increase, enlarge, Emped. 94 (cf. émapfis) ; THY matpiéa wxncavras énavéjoa _ Thue. 7. 70., cf. 2. 36, Dem. 38. 1, etc. :—Pass. to grow, increase, Xen. .» Plat. T im. 19 A, etc. = tnavgnots, Plat. Legg. 815 E. e erapwyy — erapy. énavtis, és, increasing, growing, véco Hipp. 1185 D; wdGea Aretae. Caus, M. Ac. 2. 7. 4 éxavtnots, ews, 4, increase, increment, rav Sucatwy Plat. Legg. 957 D ; tov peérpo Plut. Solon 15; «ls Thy ém, THY moh TGy to their projit, Polyb. . 88, 6. Serato, -v. sub éxavfave. éraupaw, v..sub éravpicxopat, éxatpeots, ews, 7), enjoyment of the fruit of a thing, fruition, peyddat . . évaupéates (Ion. for —éoes) Hdt. 7.158; raxeias Tas én. movetodae Thue, 2. 53. éraupéw and érayplonw, émavpet Hes. Op. 417, éwavpicxover Theogn. III: aor, émadpoy Pind. P. 3. 65; subj. éwavpw, ps, p, v. infr., inf. énavpeiv, —Euev, Hom. :—Med., éravpioxopat Il., Hipp. 236. 13., 502. 14: fut. éwavpfhoopat Il.: aor. 1 éwqupapny Arist. Eth. N. 8. 13 (15), Ii, 2 sing. émm¥pw (where Elmsl. suggests émpdpov) Aesch. Pr. 28; inf. éxavpac@a Hipp. Jusj. fin.: aor. 2 émmvpduny Eur. Hel. 469, poét. 2 sing. émavpeo Pind. N..5.495 Ep. subj. 2 sing. éwavpnas Il., 3 pl. -wvras, opt. —orro (y. infr.).; inf. émavpéo@a: Eur., Andoc. 20. 3 (hardly elsewh. in Att. Prose), v. infr.11; Hom. has 2 sing. subj. émavpyar, -y, 3 pl. -wyrat. (Supposed Root *aipw, v. sub dwavpdw.) I. Act..to partake of, share, c. gen. rei, Tav .. BéArepdv eorw enavpéper Il. 18. 302; abrov..ce BovAop’ émaupépev (case omitted) Od. 17. 81; mAciov vueros émavpel enjoys a greater share of night, of Sirius, Hes. Op. 417 (ib. 238 the best Mss. give danvpa); yertévav wodAol émaipoy many have had enjoyment of (i.e. suffered loss from) neighbours, Pind. P. 3. 65; 70 péyorov émavpicxovar have enjoyment in the highest degree, Theogn, 141: to obtain, meet with, ei xe ..nvBepyntijpos émavpy Ap. Rh, 2.174, 2. of physical contact, .to touch, graze, esp, of slight wounds, c. acc., mapos xpéa Aeuvdy emaupety (sc. TA €yxea) Il. 11. 573., 15. 316; pats xpba XaAK@ eravpy 13. 649; -c. gen., Abou B dréaaOar éraupeiv take care not to. touch Il. 23. 340:—absol., nal ef x’ ddlyov mep énavpy if the spear touch ever so little (cf. émmpavw 11), 11. 391. II. Med. to reap the fruits or enjoy the benefit of a thing, whether good or bad, like éaoAavw : 1. c. gen., in good sense, Tod moAAol émaupi- cxovra Il, 13. 733; pdx0av duo.Bdv éemavpeo Pind. N. 5.89; Tovd’ éravpéoat Oedw Eur. 1.T. 529; Bidrov (avr éravpéaOar xpewy ap. Ath. 336 B, cf. Ap. Rh. 1. 677., 4. 964; mixpod 5¢ Bidrou (av7’ émavpecdat xpewv Com. Anon. 205; ovd& aous .. ToAAdY émaupapevoy Epigr. Gr. 274, cf. 839 :—rare in Prose, el .. xpi) dyaOdy €uod émavpecbat Andoc. 20. 2; dmodoréov ..dcov énntparo Arist. Eth..N. 8. 13, 11. b. more freq. in bad, though not ironical, sense, absol., iva mavres ératpwv- rat BactAjos that all may enjoy their king, i.e. feel what it is to have such a king, Il. 1. 410; od pay oid’, ei adre xaxoppadins ..emavpnat 15.17; Taxa 8 dv 71 Kal rod oiviparos énavporro might get something from .. , Hdt. 7. 180; rir’ airiay oxov fs ernupdpny éyw; Eur. Hel. 476: also c. acc. et gen., To.adr’ émnvpw rod didavOpwmov Tpdémov such profit didst.thou gain from .., Aesch. Pr. 28; and absol., T@ «al puy émavph- cecGat diw I doubt not Ae will feel the consequences, Il. 6. 353. 2. én. dnd twos to get nourishment from .., Hipp..502.14; cf. Buttm. Lexil. v. dmavpGy 3. 3. c. acc. rei, to bring upon oneself, ph mov Te kaxdv kat peiCov énatpy Od. 18. 107 (Buttm. émavpys); but perhaps it is better taken as 3 sing. aor. act., lest a greater evil reach thee.—The examples shew that the Verb is mainly poét. and Ion. :—cf. dmavpdm. éravip S, }, £.1, for ¢mavpeats, Democr. ap. Stob. 76. 17. érraup fw, (apa) to breathe or blow gently, Joseph. B. J. 1. 21, 5. ératprov, Ady. on the morrow, év rh én. (sc. Huépg).LXXx (Gen. 19. 34). éraitoas, endiicov [i], v.sub ématw. eraiiréw [t], 40 make.a noise or creak -besides, ént 58 mAHpvar yey’ direvy Hes. Sc. 309. IL. =érevpnpéw, exniirnoe 58 dads Call. Ap. 102, Q. Sm. 4. 262; BéBpuxes 8 ératreoy Theocr..22. 91; of horses, Q. Sm. II. 327 :—c. acc. cogn., ém. Bofy Call. Dian, 58. Cf. érava. éravtixa, Adv..immediately, Orph. Lith. 329. éravtopohéa, to pass over, mpds 7d fjyepov Ael. N. A. 2. 11. emautdpwpos, ov, =airdépupos, palpable, Schol. Ven. Il. 24. 556. EmrauXEevios, ov, (aixhy) on or for the neck, Cuyév Pind. P..2.172; xv vayxa Anth. P. 6,34. émauxéw, aor. —yvxnoa Ar. Av. 628:—to exult in or at, -c. dat. rei, Soph, Ant. 483, Ar, lic. 2. c. inf. to be confident that .. , Soph. El. 65. emauxpew, to be dry or dusty, Zeds enavxphoas having sent drought, opp. to béros, Soph. Fr. 470. éravw, to shout over, énavoas marpds py Aesch. Cho. 828: in Theocr. 23.44, Tpls endiiaov, & pire, xeioa, with v contrary to all usage; whence Briggs suggested endiicoy, pire, x., or éndniaov, & pire, x. (v. érymio). érradat pects, TodTo KadAtvew BéAn Soph. Ant. 496; boms GOpirov picw Bracray ex. ph war’ avOpamov ppovy Id. Aj. 761; et mraxos dy ener’ év "AOnvaios Aéyew pédAdw Ar. Ach. 498, cf. Flat, Gorg. 519 E, Prot. 319 D, Phaedo 70 E; sometimes the same usage is found with the second ot two verbal clauses, woAAd«ts piv Gpya .., erecta, -. FtexwAvero Plat. Rep. 336 B, cf. Prot. 310C, Ar. Av. 29, etc. :—so also Kamerra after a partic., Ar, Nub. 624, Av. 536; after a Verb, Ach, 520 126; cf. Heind. Plat, Crat. 411 B, Phaedo 90 B :—v. efra I. 2. 4. in apodosi, though never at the beginning of the clause, in Hom. often strengthd, 52 é., 69 roe ér., TOT’ en. 5. after a Temporal Conjunct. then, thereafter, Ered?) opaipy mephoavro, wpxelobny dn er. when they had done playing at ball, then they danced, Od. 8. 378: so, after éei, Il. 16. 247; énv Od. 11. 121; émdre, Il. 18. 5453 Ore, 3. 223; ws, 10. 522; Hpos, 1. 478. 6. after a Conditional Conjunct. then surely, eb 8 éredy di .. dyopeves, €€ dpa bn To én. Ceol ppévas @decay if thou speakest sooth, then of a surety have the gods infatuated thee, Il. 7. 360., 12. 234, ef. YO. 453, Od. 1. 290, etc.; so, after Hr, Il. 9. 394: so also when the apodosis takes the form of a question, ei yey 5) Erapdy ye xedreveré p’ avrov EdX€cba, THs dy érert’ ’OSva7os AaBoi- nv; how can I in such a case? etc., Il. 10. 243; further, Hom. so uses it, when ¢i is implied in relat, Pron., as dv (=ef Twa) pév «’ eémeines dxovepev, ovis én. révy’ eiverat Il. 1. 5473; esp. with a part., dv (=f Tiva) 5€é x’ éyav amdvevde paxns eOédovta vojow pipvacew, ob of en. Gprov éacetrar Il. 2. 392. II. of Sequence in thought, i. e. Consequence or Inference, then, therefore, fev’, rel dp 3 emerra.. Heveaives Od. 17. 185, cf. Il. 15. 49., 18.3573 ov ovy' Eera .. TUdeos €xyovds éoor Il, 5. 812: rarely at the beginning, éei6’ EAod ye Odrepa Soph. El. 345. 2. to begin a story, vijcos em. ris ort, well then, there is an island, Od. 4. 354. 3. in Att. often to introduce emphatic questions, why then..? ér. rob d€e; Ar. Pl. 827, cf. Thesm. 188, Nub. 226: mostly to express surprise, or to sneer at the argument alleged, and so forsooth ..? and so really..? énevr’ odx ote ppovricey [robs Oeods Tay, dvOpdmav] ; Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 11; so, Kdéwevra, Ar. Ach. 126, Av. 963; often with 97a added, érerra dra SodAos dv xopny éxes Ib. g11, cf. 1217, Id. Lys. 985, Eur. Alc. 822. émetre or émel Te, when or since, Hdt.1. 14, 48, etc. €mevrey, Ion. for érevra, thereafter, Hdt. 1.146.,2.52,al., v. Dind. deDial. Hat. p.xxxvi:—also Dor., Pind. P.4.376,N.3.94,al., Ar. Ach..745. Cf.elrev. émexBaivw, to go out upon, disembark, eis yiv Thuc. 8.105; absol., Id. 1. 49:—c. acc., ér. xépaov, of waves, to go out over, Anth, P. 9. 276. Reutioln, = bevcande, to cry out against, Dio C. 43. 24. émrexBonQéw, to rush out to aid, Thue. 7. 53., 8. 55. » €rexdiBacKe, to teach or explain besides, rt Plat, Prot. 328 E, Buthy- phro 7A; dmws.., Plut. Sol. 25. émexdSwp, to publish again, Schol. Il. 19. 365. émekdinyeopat, Dep. to explain besides, Plat. Phaedo 97 D sq. érexSinynois, ews, 7), a repeated narrative, Basil. émexSpopn, 7, an excursion, expedition, Thuc. 4. 25, Dio C. 46. 38. €réxewva, Adv., for én’ éxeiva, opp. to émt rab (Plat. Phaedo 112 B), on yonder side, beyond, Lat. ultra, c. gen., Hecatae. 203; Tod “Hpaxdciov én. Xen. Hell. 5.1, 10; of éw. Téypidos nal Evpparov Hdn. 2. 8; én. €XOciv Acovioou further than.., Arr. An. 5. 2,1; metaph., é7. rijs ovotas bmepexew Plat. Rep. 509 B. 2. with Article, 7d éméxeva, Att. robm., or Ta ér., Att. rdm., the part beyond, the far side, 7a &r. rijs Etpdrns, Hdt. 3. 115, cf. Thuc. 6. 63, etc.; rodméxewa rhode ~yijs beyond it, Eur. Hipp. sa Tlivéov re ram. Aesch, Supp. 257, cf. Xen. Hell. 5.1, 10: absol., of é« rod ém. Xen. An. 5. 4,33 &v 7 én. Thuc. 7. 58; els 7d em. brepBRvat Plat. Rep. 587 B. II. of Time, of é, xpovor the times beyond or before, earlier times, Isocr. 124 B, cf. 190A, etc. eémekékAero, v. sub éméAopat, émexOéw, = erexrpéxa, Thuc. 4. 34., 5. 9, Xen. Hell. 5. 3, 6. émexOvopar, (Ow) to offer sacrifice for, Arr. Epict. 2. 7, 9, Galen. érexkoudila, to lighten, Joseph. B. J. 1. 21, 12. érexrrive, fut, -mlopat, to drink off after, Eur. Cycl. 327. éréxhoos, contr. —mAous, 6, (ée7Aéw) a sailing out against, an attack by sea, éréxmd. rovetobat Thue. 8. 20. émextrvéw, to breathe out repeatedly, opp. to émeramvéw, Galen. éméxpytis, ews, 7, an outbreak, bursting out, Diog. L. 10. 115. émexpodéa, f.1. in Ar. Eq. 701; v. éxp-. Enéxpiiors, ews, 7, (Eepew) an influx from without, Leucipp. ap. Diog.. L. 9. 32, nisi legend. éreiopvors. éméxriiots, ews, %), extension, Arist. Cael. 3.7, 43 Exeuv én. to be capable of extension, Id. Lin, Insee. 42. II. the lengthening of a word, Arist. Poét. 22,8: cf. érexreivw 3. émexraitucds, 4, dv, lengthening, Eust. 1393.14. Adv. -«@s, Gramm. émexretvw, fo extend, 7 émi tivas Arist. Eth. N. I. 7, 7, al. :—Pass. to be extended, extend, 1d. Phys. 4. 9, 8, al. 2. intr. to extend, emt mhéov Id. An. Post. 2.13, 2; of a people or country, Strabo 342. 3. Pass. to extend beyond, twos Theophr. H, P. 6.8, 4; to reach out towards, ait Ep. Philipp. 3. 14. II. to lengthen, prolong, Adyous Plut. 2.1147. 2. to lengthen a syllable, Arist. Metaph. 4. 4, 1:—Pass., 7d énexrerapévov a word lengthened by inserting a vowel or other- wise, podvos for pcvos, iéAcos for Atos, opp. to d@npypévor, Id, Poét. aI, 23. III. to make more burthensome, Tas mpooddous Strabo 800. émrexretipevws, Adv. part. pf. pass. vehemently, Schol, Aesch. Pers. 1050. émextpéxe, aor. —édpipov :—to sally out upon or against, rut Xen. Hell. 4. 4,17; absol., Ib. 6. 2,17; also c. acc., Paus, 1. 20. éexhépo, fut. -ofcw, to carry out far, Plut. Alex. 206. émexxéw, fut. —ye®, to pour out upon, ap. Suid, :—Pass. to rush upon, mim, LXX: to be stretched upon, Tr Q. Sm. to, 481. émexywpéw, to advance next or after, only in Aesch. Pers. 401. émédaots, ews, }, a charge, of cavalry, Plat. Timol. 27; of elephants, Luc. Hist. Conser. 31:—also émehacta, %, Diod, Excerpt. 533. 46. émeAatve, fut. -eddow [a], Att. -eA@:—to drive upon, Tas dpdgas zredatvovet, i.e. upon the ice, Hat. 4. 28. 2. in Hom. fo Jay metal beaten out into plates over a surface (cf. éAad’yw 111.1), én 6 LJ , s , éweite — ermenpupw. 804, cf. 17. 493. 8. metaph., Spxov émedavve rivi to force an oath upon one, Hat. 1. 146, cf. 6. 62. II. to drive or ride against, inmov twit Xen. Eq. 8, 112 to lead against, riv otparehy Hat. 1. 164: to push forcibly against, orépva 0° dpov Kat xeipas Ap. Rh. 1. 381. 2. intr. 4o march against, Hdt.1.17., 3.151, al.; Twi Xen, Hell. 7.1, 21; émt BaBvddva Hat. 3.151, cf. 7.93 émpracav of inmérac charged, 9. 49, cf. 18; tpeis [vpes] enfracay wept 7d Epya drove upon the rock, 7. 183 :—c. acc. loci, to march over, Luc. Rhet. Praec. 5. Ifl. to be driven in after, Xen, Eq. Mag. 2, 3. emeAappifopar, Pass. to be lightened and lifted up, Philo 2. 621; metaph. of persons, Ib. 200. émehapive, to lighten, rov Seopdv Tit Plut. 2.165 F ; mévoy Joseph. A. J. 18. 1, 1. ' ya —Pass., éreAdoOw 7a émapia, let the fines be imposed, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 127. éreASopat, v. éméA5-. me eyo, = eAéyxm, Diog. L. 6. 97. érreAcvBeprdtw, to act with free will, Philo 2. 328. éréXevots, ews, %, (érépxopat) a coming on or to, arrival, Eust. 1574. 59: a touching on a thing, survey of it, Id. Dion. P. prooem. 2. an adventitious event, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2. 1045 D. émeAevorréov, verb. Adj. one must touch upon, cited from Eust. émeAcvorixds, 7, dv, (énéAevots) coming on or to, touching on a thing, Eust. Dion. P, prooem. 2. adventitious, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2.1045 B, émeA Auto, 3 sing. plapf. pass. of éweAatyw, éméAnoe, v. sub EmA7nOw. émeXioow, éréAxw, Ion. for eped—. éméAAGBe, post. for éréAaBe, 3 sing. aor. of émAapBave, éreAtrilw, to buoy up with hope, to cheat with false hopes, abrods Oed- oavres érhAmoay, ws Ahpovra Thuc. 8.1, cf. Plat. ap. Suid. s.v, MvOa- yépas, Luc. D. Mort. 5. 2. II. intr., ém. ruvi to pin one's hopes upon, hope in, Dio C. 41. 11, Heliod. 7. 26; absol., Luc, Timon 21: but also, 2. merely = €Ani(w, Eur. Hipp. torr, Thuc. 8. 54 (v. 1. €Ami{awr). éreAtropat, Ep. éméAropat (€Amw) :—poét. Verb, to have hopes of, to hope: c. inf, fut., ui) 51) ..€uods éméAmeo ptOous eldnoew Il. 1. 545; émedmipevos réye Oup@, vevpiy évraviceyv Od, 21.126; obdev émed- Topéva.. €xroduredoew Aesch, Ag. 1031: generally, to expect, Telest.1.1. érepacodpny, v. sub émpatopat. érrepBaSdv, Adv. step upon step, ascending, Anth., P. 9. 668. érepBatve, fut.—Bjcopat, to step or tread upon, andin pf. to stand upon, c. gen., ovd00 éreuBeBaws Il. 9. 582; offs érepBaivey xOovds Soph. O. C. 924; Sippou érepBeBaws mounted on a chariot, Hes. Sc. 324; absol., érepBeBaws Pind. N. 4. 47: also c. dat., wdpyous émeuBas Aesch. Theb. 634, and freq. later: c. acc., ém. dxSov, pay Eur. Bacch. 1061, Rhes. 783; with a Prep., els mérpay Sri 168° éreuBaoe (so Herm. for mor’, v. sub Baive A. 11, 4), Eur. I. T. 649. 2. to embark on ship-board, Dem. 1214. 26, etc. II. c. dat. pers. 4o trample upon, Lat. in- sultare, éxOpotow . . émeuBFvat wodt Soph. El. 456: metaph., taicd’ éreuBaivew Eur. Hipp. 668; «ar éuod.. waddAov émeuBaoe Soph. El. 836 (lyr.); druxnpact twos Plut. 2. 59 D. 2. to attack in a place, ot Té of .. dvrpw émeuBaivwow Q. Sm. 7. 467. 8. TO Kaip@ én- epBaivew taking advantage of the opportunity, Dem. 579. 22. érepBadAdw, fut. —BUAG, to put on, Tapa mio. Hes. Op. 98; ordpe’ er. éuot Eur. I. T. 9353 yeyyeoxorre én. to heap words on one who already knows, Arist, Rhet.3. 3, 9. 2. to throw down upon, Sépous érepBar@ will zhrow them on [the inmates], Eur. H. F. 864: c. acc. loci, éyov ws éeuBdry that she may dash [her] upon it, Id. 1. T. 290. 3. to put in besides, insert, Lat. intercalare, Hat. 2. 4, Plat. Crat. 399 A; émé re Ib. 414 D:—metaph., yijs cwrfjpa cavrdv TOS émepBadrdrAats Adyw by this story thou foistest thyself in, intrudest thyself, as saviour of the land, Soph. O. C. 463: in Inscrr. on grave-stones, to put in another corpse, C. I. 3510, 3515, al.:—Med, to make fresh additions, Plat. Polit. 277 A:—Pass., of fruit-trees, to be engrafted, Ath. 653 D: cf. émeuBodds. 4. to thrust on, Xen. Cyn, 10, 11. II. intr. to flow in besides, of rivers, Xen. Hell. 4. 2, 11. érepBads, ddos, %, a rising, elevation, dpéwy Paul. Sil. Descr. $. Soph. 175 (308). II. increase, 5nvaids AvedBaytos én. Ib. 518(935)- emépPiiors, €ws, %}, an attack, advance, Dion, H. 3. 19. émepBariip, 6, =érepBarns: v. érapBarhp. émepBdrns [%], ov, 6, one mounted, imnav énep Barat Eur. Bacch, 782; and absol., a horseman, Anacr. 75 :—also, dppdrwy éneuB. Eur. Supp. 585 3 and absol., 1b.685. II. one who walks on or in; émeuBarat ixveoe xovpors Orph. H. 30. 3. érepBAnréov, verb. Adj. one must insert, Plat. Tim. 51 D. errep, Bodw, fut. ycoua, to shout against, Opdov Nic. Al. 219. émepBodds, %, of fruit-trees, grafted, Arist.Fr.251: cf. émeuBaddw TI. 3. erep Born, 7), (EreuBdrAAw) an insertion, parenthesis, Hermog. 2. 280, Eust. 48. 46, etc. 2. a graft, Eust. Opusc. 136. 17. érepBodos, ov,=euBdArpos, intercalary, C.1. 2722.3: also émepBéd- Atpos, Jo. Lyd. de Magistr. 2. 3. émepBptpdopar, Dep. to be indignant against, Schol. rec. Aesch. Pr. 73. émepmacow, fut. dow, to sprinkle, strew over, Alex. Trall. p. 421. erreprndde, fut. Aooua, to trample upon, Tt xe.mevy Ar. Nub. 550. 3 erepaltrres, fut. —recodpat, to fall upon besides, attack furiously, €xOpots Joseph. A. J. 12.8, 4; émeuminrew Béow rw (like Batvey 1éda, y. atv A, 11. 4), Soph. Aj. 42. 2. to fall to, set to work, Lat. incumbere, Ar. Pax 471. érephépa, fut. -evoiow, to bring in besides, add, dvéynny Twi Hip- podam. ap, Stob. 554.55: Pass., Nic. Al. 28. GSoov frace xarxdy Il. 7, 223; ToAAs B eweAAaTO xadnds 1.13.4 €epptipw [0], to mix in, dip in, ri tut Clem. Al. II. See erevapiCw — erepetdw. ‘ treviipife, fut. fw, to kill one over another, Soph. O. C. 1733, restored by Elmsl. for évapigor. emevdidupr, fut. -daow, to give over and above, én. rpirnv I put in yet a third blow, Aesch. Ag. 1386. érévdtpa, 75, an upper garment, Plut. Alex. 32. érevitve [0], or —Stw, fo put on over, én rovrov dAXoy KiOava Hat. I. 195 :—Pass. érevdvouat, to have on over, éoOfras yuvatketas émevbe- dupevor rots Odpagi Plut. Pelop. 11, cf. Joseph. A.J. 5.1, 12. émevdurns [0], ov, 5, a tunic worn over another, Pseudo-Thesp. ap. Poll. 7. 45, Soph. Fr. 391; ém. xerd@v Nicoch. “Hp. 1. émevSvro-rd\Avov, 7, =foreg., C. I. 2663. (From Lat, pallium.) érrevouw, v. érevitve. émévetis, ews, 7), (emipépw, emeveyneiv) an adding to, Jo. Clim. Epist. p. 467. A worse form ééveyéts in E. M. émeveitkat, Ion, for émevéyeat, inf. aor. 1 of émupépm, Il. 19. 261. émeviveov, impf. from émvnvéw, II. émevyvole, v. sub évfpvobe. érévOeors, 7, (érevriOnu) insertion, as of a letter, Gramm. émevOetiKs, 7, dv, inserted, Schol. Hom. érevOpdoxw: aor. 2 —éopor, inf. -Oopeiv :—to leap upon, céApact vaav Aesch. Pers. 359; ém. dvw (sc. TH ebvq}) Soph. Tr. 917 :—ém. émi twa, to leap forth after or upon one, as an enemy, Id. O. T. 469. énevOipéopat, Dep. to think, meditate in addition, Eust. Opusc. 1. 47. émevOupnpa, 76, an added enthymeme, Arist. Rhet. Al. 33, 1, Hermog. émevOvpnors, ews, 7), the insertion of a corroborating clause, the addition of an enthymeme, Greg. Cor., Hermog. é érrevinpt, to put in besides, Galen. émrevveaxardéxatos, ov, in the ratio of 19 to 20, Arist. Quinct. p. 115. érevotheva, totwist oneself about (cf.cadevo II. 3), Arist. Physiogn.6, 46. énevréviw: fut. dow [0], Ep. toow:=énevreivw, to bind tightly to, meiopa veds .. ida’ émevravicas Od. 22. 467. émevrelva, to stretch tight upon, érevrabels stretched upon his sword, Soph. Ant. 1235. II. intr. to press on amain, érevreivapev dvpixd- tepov Ar. Pax 515: to gain strength, increase, of a report, Theophr. Char. 9. 2. émevtéhAw, fo command besides, Soph. Ant. 218. érevrlOnpt, fut.-Ohow, to insert, Apoll. de Constr. 94 ; cf. éréveats:— Pass. to be put in besides (cf. émeuBaddw), C. I. 4429. éntvrpavite, to fix one’s eyes upon, Twi Eust. Opusc. 201. 65. émevtpiBw, to rub in besides, Poll. 5. 102: to inflict, mAnyhy Eust. II. to afflict, destroy, Eus. H.E. 1.1. émevtptddw, to revel or be wanton in a thing, Byz. émevtpoyw, fut. -rp&fouar: inf. aor. —rpiiyeiy:—to eat besides, esp. sweetmeats or stimulants after a solid dinner, Philo 2. 479. émevtpopara, 74, Epicur. ap, Ath. 546 E, and érevtpaees, ai, Philo 1. 115 :—dainties, delicacies, expl. by Eust. Od. 1910. 40, épeOicpds Tpv- gyrixds. (Prob. for érevrepwpara from évrepa, v. Ern. Call. Dian. 133.) émevrio and —ivw [dv] :—to set right, get ready, émévrve v@iv immovs Il. 8. 374; xelpa éxevriveww emi ri to arm it for the fight, Soph. Aj. 451: —Med. to prepare or train oneself for a thing, émevrivovrat deOAa Od. 24.89: in Ap. Rh,, c. inf., érevrvvoyro véecOat 1. 720. émefayw [a], to lead out an army against the enemy, Thue. 2. 21. II. to extend, lengthen, Plut. 2.855 C: esp. to discuss at length, Dio C. 46.8; mept tivos Ib. 55. 28. 2. seemingly intr. (sub. rdgtv), é. dard apy to extend the line of battle (by taking ground to right or left), Thuc. 5.71; so of ships, éreg. TO TAO pds THY viv to extend his line by sailing towards land, Id. 7. 52; cf. émefayoryy. émeEd yoy, , extension of a line of battle, rod Knépws Thuc. 8. 105 ; v. foreg. II, 2. éretGpaptdve, fut. noopat, to sin or err yet more, Dion. H. 2. 35; €ls Twa against one, Joseph. A. J. 14. 16, 4:—émebapaptyréov, verb. Adj. one must err yet more, Dem. 595. 10. éretaviorapat, Pass. with aor, 2 act. -avéorny, to rise up, stand up, Philo 2. 582. énekaimardw, to deceive yet more, Mnesim. Aver. 1. éretept, (Zt ibo), serving as Att. fut. to éretépyopat, to which it also supplies the impf. -qew, Ion, 3 pl. -yicay Hdt. 7. 223. To go out against an enemy, Hdt. l.c., Thuc. 2. 13, 20, etc.; rivi Id. 6.97; mpds twa Xen, Eq. Mag. 7, 3; én. twt els waxnv Thue. 2. 23, etc.:—simply to get out, escape, Arist. Probl. 24. 13. II. to proceed against, take vengeance on, Hdt. 8. 143: esp. in legal sense, to prosecute, revi Dem. 583. 23; én. Tw pévov for murder, Plat. Legg. 866 B; én, twit imp pdvov Id. Euthyphro 4 B, cf. E:—also c. ace. pers., Eur. Andr, 735; éneffuev Tod pdvov Tov ’Apiorapxov ap. Dem. 549. 29, cf. Antipho 112. 35, etc.:—c. dat. rei, fo visit, avenge, TS maOjpari Plat. Legg. 886 B, (and c, acc. @4varov, Diod. 4. 66) :—also c, dat. modi, ém. Step to attack by action, Ib. 754 E; but in Aeschin. 40. 27, ér. ypapf to follow up an indictment, cf. Plat. Lys. 215 E. IIT. c. acc. to go over, traverse, go through in. detail, opixpd wat péyada Hdt. 1.5; mévra Ar. Ran. 1118; mdoas Tas dudicAnrjces Plat. Rep. 437 A; and absol., Id. Lys. 215 E. 2. to go through with, execute, mapackevas Adyy Karas Heupipevor dvopolus épyw emefiévae Thuc. 1, 84; én. rds Tyswplas ert peiCous Id, 3. 82. érefédacts, eos, , a marching out against, Eust. Opusc. 356. 30. émeteXatvw, to send on to the attack, tovs immets Xen, Hell. b: 3, 6. émeEéheyxos, 5, an additional édeyxos, Plat. Phaedr. 266 E (v. 1. énédeyxos), Arist. Rhet. 3. 13, 5: émetchevars, ews, 4, visitation, vengeance, Eust. 120, 38. émetehevorixés, 7, dv, avenging, Eust. Opusc, 171. II. émekéAro, to draw off besides, Hipp, 882 H. i 521 éreEepyalopar, fut. dcopar, Dep. to effect besides, tv 8 énegerpydcaro Dem. 274. 18: to accomplish, consummate, opp. to dpyew, Ion ap. Sext. M, 2. 24. 2. to slay over again, dAwdér’ dvdp’ émeerpyaow Soph. Ant. 1288, 8. to work anew, dypév Luc. Tim. 37. 4. to investigate, explain, Apoll. de Constr. 132. émetepyacta, 7), a finishing, completion, Schol, Il. 11. 226. émekepyaorns, of, 6, an executive officer, Eccl. éneEepyaorixés, 7, 6, of, fit for finishing, émegepyaotixdrepoy Tévat tov Adyov Sext. Emp. M. 9. 144. émeképtrw, to creep out into, c. acc., Hipp. 378. 48. émeEépxopar, (v. meter), to go out against, make a sally against, Hat. 3. 54., 6. 101, Thuc. 3. 26, etc.; ém. ru els waxnv Thuc. 5.9; of a message, én, Tut to reach him, Hat. 8.99. 2. to proceed against, prosecute, tive Antipho 111. 36, Thuc. 3. 38, etc.; ém. Tut pdvov to proceed against one for murder, Plat. Euthyphro 4D; also, ém. déenv or ypaphy to follow it up, go through with it, Id. Legg. 866 B, Lex ap. Dem. 529. 25; ém. pévoy Antipho 115.9: absol., éwefépye Alay thou visitest with severity, Eur, Bacch. 1346 :—c. acc. pers. to punish, Plut. Caes. 69; Tv médw Eur. Andr. 735, ubiv. Dind. 3. to proceed to an extremity, kdmanedav G5 énetépxet; Soph. Ant. 752; én. mpds tédos Plat. Legg. 632C. II. c, acc. to go through or over, xupyv Hat. 4. 9; 70 nav yap éreferOeiv diChpevor Id. 7. 166. 2. to carry out, accomplish, execute, pyy Tt Thuc, 1. 120; way émef. to try every course, 5. 100 (and so must be read in 1. 70 for €€A9war) ; Tiv vienv App. Civ. 5.91; é. 71 eis réAos Luc. Jup. Trag. 17. 8. to discuss, relate or examine accurately or fully, Lat. oratione persequi; ov5' et mavr’ éregéhOors cxondv Soph. Fr. 659, cf. Aesch. Pr. 870, Thuc. 3. 67, Plat. Legg. 672 A; dupiBelg wept Exdorou ém. Thuc, I. 22; dv dAtyor Plat. Legg. 778 C. \ émebéraons, ews, 7, a fresh review or muster, Thuc. 6. 42. éreteuplokw, to invent besides, Hdt. 2. 160. II. to discover besides, émefevpnuévar xpeiae Arist. Pol. 7. 11, 11. éme~nyéopar, Dep. to recount in detail, Plut. Artox. 8, Schol. Ar. Eq. 714; v. émegnynréov. 2. to explain besides, Schol. Il. 13. 281. érreEnynpatiKos, 7, dv, epexegetical, Schol. Plat. émeEnyyors, ews, 7, a detailed account, Cornut. N. D. 9, Schol, Il. 11. 221. 2. explanation, Walz Rhet. 8. 500. émeEnyntéov, verb. Adj. one must relate in detail, Clem. Al. 118. éretijs, Ion, for épefijs. éretvaxxdlw, to shout in triumph over, madva Aesch. Theb. 635. émeES510s, ov, of a march or expedition: éregddra (sc. iepd), 74, sacri- fices before the march of an army, v. 1. Xen. An. 6. 5, 2. éméboSos, 7, a march out against an enemy, mpés twa Thue. 5. 8. II. revenge, punishment, Philo 2. 314. émeEorwviLopar, to take auguries afresh, Galen. 8. 471. éméoue, to be like, to suit, c. dat. pers., daTts of 7° éréouxe Il. 9. 392 — elsewhere impers. it is fit, proper, seemly, c. dat. pers. et inf., opwiv péev 7 énéouxe .. Eordper Il. 4. 341; véw 5€ Te mTavT énéoue .. KEtaOat tis a seemly thing for a young man to lie dead, Il. 22. 71, cf. Pind. N. 7. 140:—c. acc, pers. et inf, Aaods & ob éwéorne .. Tadr’ éraryelper Il. 1. 126; dvr’ éréorxe Bovdds Bovdeveww Il. 10, 146 :—c, inf. alone, dmodw- copa bao’ énéoie [dmobscGax) Il. 24. 595 ; ovr’ ovy éabijros Sevhreac ovd€ rev GAdAou, ay éxéorx’ inérny .. dvtiacayra [pr SenOjvac], (unless for dvridcavra we read dytidacbat, cf. Il. 24.62), Od. 6. 193 :—part. pl. éwenxéra, seemly, fit, rwt Aesch. Cho. 669. (In all places of Il, éméoure is preceded by an apostrophé, except in 1.126: and as the last vowel of émi could not be elided before €oue, which orig. began with a conson. (v. sub voce), Ahrens (Zeitsch. f. Alt. 1836, p. 818) proposes to dismiss the word from Hom. altogether and to read of Te €o.ke, pev TE éoxe, mavTa Eorke, odx? Eotxe, etc.) émémOpev, Ep. sync. for émemotOapev, émemrolOe, v. sub mela, érémhas, v. sub émimAéw, émemrév0er, v. sub macxw. énémripe, v. sub émmratpa, éménrairo, v. sub émméropat. érém, Ion. for épérw. érépacros, ov, (€pdm) lovely, amiable, Luc. Tim. 17, Imagg. 10. much-loved, lo. Chrys.: cf. érqparos. émepyalopar, Dep. to cultivate besides, encroach upon, Ta Tod yetrovos Plat. Legg. 843 C. 2. esp. of sacred ground, as at Crissa, Aeschin. 69. 28, cf. Lys. 110. 25; dmorwérw de brs Ka AnPOH emepyaCdpevos.. orarijpas Inscr. Delph. in C. I. 1688.16; and v. éwepyacia. 3. generally to cultivate, Luc. Timo 37. II. pf, in pass. sense, to be wrought or sculptured upon, orndn Paus. 3. 17, 3, cf. 8. 31, I. émepyiicia, 7), cultivation of another's land, encroachment upon sacred ground (cf, émepyaCopar), ris yijs Tis lepas Thue. 1. 139, cf. Plat. Legg. 843 C. II. the right of mutual tillage in each other's territory, Xen. Cyr. 3. 2, 23: ef. émyapia, mepyos, ov, (€pyov) active, employed, els 7t C. I, 2930. 13. émepebilw, to stimulate, urge on, Plut. Eumen. 11; én. mperiba to touck the lyre, Anth. P. 9. 270. : érepeOiapds, 6, irritation, excitement, Plut. 2. 908 E. ; émepetBo, fut. -epeiow, to drive against, énépece 5¢ TMaddds “ACHYD éyxos].. velaroy és xevedva drove it home, Il. 5. 856, cf. 17. 48; exépee St tv’ dwédcOpoy put vast strength #o it, 7. 269, Od. 9. 538: to thrust a door to, shut it close, Q. Sm. 12. 3313 &m. yévewv Ti to lean it upon .., Ael. N. A. 5.56: metaph., ém. tiv Sidvoray Tu to attend to it, Plut. 2. 392 A; ér. 7@ qudciv euaurdy to give oneself up to, Ib, 463 C:—én. tiv pddayya tie to bring the whole force of the phalanx II. against, Id, Flamin, 8, of. Pyrth, 21:—Med., Aalpy mpordvos éreperdd- 522 pevat staying their sails on ropes, Eur. Hec, 114 :—Pass. to lean or bear upon; Baxrnpia Ar. Eccl. 277, cf. Plat. Legg. 78g E: metaph. zo lean upon, tw Ap. Rh. 4. 204: absol. to resist with all one’s force, Ar. Ran. 1102. II. intr. in Act., éwepeldey 7H xetpt to press heavily with the hand, Hipp. Art. 788. éméperors, ews, 7}, impact, Diosc. 5. 88, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 51, Clem. Al. 821:—so émeperopds, 6, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 50. émepéopat, Ion. for émefpopat, Luc. Syr. D. 36. émepevyopat, Pass. to be disgorged: of water, to be poured upon, dxrds Ap. Rh. 4. 631, cf. Dion, P. 95. épw, fut. yw, to put a cover upon, deck, elmoré ror xaptevt’ Ext ynov épepa decked it, either with garlands or tapestry, Il. 1. 39: cf. épépar, érépopar, v. sub érelpopa. émepphoavto, v. sub émppdopat. érrepuPpidw, fut. dow [a], to blush for or at a thing, rw Eccl. émepvwo, Ion. -eptw, fut. vow [0], to pull to, Qdpyy 8 ewépucce kopavyp Od. 1.441; émt aorndnv épicavres having dragged a stone to the top [of the tumulus], Od. 12.14: fo draw to one, Ap. Rh. 3. 149 :—Med. zo draw on one’s clothes, émeipuodpuevos thy Acovrhv Hat. 4. 8. émépxopat, impf. émnpxduny Thuc. 4.120 (v. sub €pxopuar): but the Att. impf. is érjev, and the fut. ewes (ely): Dep., with act. aor. énHrOov, Ep. —jAvOov, pf. -eAnAvda: I. to come upon: x of persons, to come upon, come near, approach, c. dat., Il. 12. 200, 218, etc.; esp. 2o come suddenly upon, Od. 19. 155, Hdt. 6. 95 :—c. acc., ez. méAw Eur. H. F. 593:—to come to for advice, Lat. adire aliquem, pavres, podoay Eur. Supp. 155, Hel. 165, cf. Plat. Legg. 772 D: with Preps., ém. és woraudy Od. 7. 280, cf. Soph. Aj. 4373; metaph., é. és Adyou ordaw Id. Tr. 1180; ém. és méAepov, Lat. inire bellum, Thuc. 3. 47; ém. évOdbe and drdce, Il. 24. 651, Od. 14. 139. b. often in hostile sense, to go or come against, to attack, assault, in Hom. mostly absol.; c. dat., Il. 20. gt, Eur. Bacch, 736, Thuc. 6. 34; rarely c. acc., Tunony abxév’ enpAGe Il. 7.262; Thy Tv wéAas Ex. to invade it, Thuc. 2. 39:—hence, ¢o visit, reprove, Twa Eur. I. A. 349, cf. Andr. 688 (but in Andr, 735 L. éwefeAOetv). c. to come forward to speak, Eur. Or. 931, Thuc. 1. 91,119, Plat. Legg. 850.C: also, ém. émt rov dijpov, ent rovs ’Edpous Hdt. 5. 97., 9. 73 émt 7d kody Thuc. I. go. 2. of events, etc., fo come upon or over, esp. to come suddenly upon, c. acc., pay .. exhrvde vASupos Urvos Od. 4. 793, etc., cf. Hdt. 2.141; épws yap dvipas ob povous énépyerat Soph. Fr. 607; c. dat., Totow émfrvde vi- Supos Umvos Od. 12. 311, cf. 5. 4723 por vodoos éwpdvbev I. 200; Bporotow .. drav krddwv kaxdy é7édXOy Aesch. Pers. Goo, cf. Ag. 1256 ; EnrOE por waGos Plat. Legg. 811 C, ete. b. c. dat. pers. ¢o come into one’s head, occur to one, éxépxerai pot, either with a nom., izepos enHaGe por EmeipecOar Hdt. 1. 30; & Te dy éwedOp, Lat. quicquid in buccam venerit, Isocr. 238A; or impers. c. inf., kat of émpAOe wrapeiv Hat. 6. 107, cf. Soph. Tr. 135, Plat. Gorg. 485 E, etc.; also, émépxerai ‘me A€yewv Id, Phaedo 88.C; cf. €respe I. 2.b, eloépxopar V. 2. II. of Time, to come on, return, émjAvOoy par the season came round again, Od, 2. 107, etc. :—also, to come on, be at hand, vit & dp’ ér7dOe 14. 457, cf. Theogn. 528, 728, Pind. O. 10 (11). 9; 70 adpos 76 7° érepxopevoy and that which is coming, the future, Aesch. Pr. 98. 2. to come in after or over another, of a second wife, Hdt. 5. 41. IIt. to go over or on a space, to traverse, visit, Lat. obire, c. acc., moAAIy yaiav Od. 4. 268; dypév 16. 27; dyxea moAAG Il. 18. 321, cf. Od. 14. 139, Hdt. 1. 30 :—of water, 6 NeiAos émépxerat 70 AéAra. overflows it, Hdt. 2. 19, cf. Aesch. Supp. 560, Thuc. 3. 8g:—so in Att., to go the round of, visit, ddpous Soph. El. 1297; vaods xopois Ant. 153; of jan officer, éw. mUAas ptAaxds re Eur. Phoen. 699; so, Tas fuvwpodias éxedOav Thuc. 8. 54:—also, to walk on ice, Id. 3. 23. 2. to go through or over, treat of, discuss, recount, like d:épxopat, c. acc., Hes. Fr. 14. 4, Eur. Andr, 688, Ar. Eq. 618; also, é. wept tTevos Arist. Phys. 1. 7,1, al.; foll. by a relat. word, wecparéov éredOeiv tives .. Id. Pol. 4. 2,6; mas bet .. éréAOwpev ovvrépws Ib. 6.1, 6. 3. to go through, execute, Tohéum Thuc. 1.97. IV. to come up to, imitate, Pind.P.6. 46. éepwrdw, Ion, émep—:—to consult, inquire of, question, c. acc. pers., 70 xpnorhpioy, Tov Oedy Hdt. 1.53, Thuc. 1.118, etc.; 7wa wept Twos Hat. 1. 32, cf. Dem. 1072. 12:—Pass. to be questioned, asked a question, Thuc. 5; 45, Plat. Soph. 250 A. 2. c. ace. rei, to ask a thing, Hdt. 1. 30, 55, al., Antipho 112. 30, Plat. Prot. 329 A, etc. ; but also ¢o ask about a thing, Hdt. 7.100; é%. 5 7 xpi) woreiy to inguire what .., Xen. Occ. 5, 19 :—Pass., 70 érepwrndev the question asked, Plat. Theaet. 146 E. 3. c. acc, pers. et rei, €m. Tos mpopyras 70 airiov Hdt. 9. 33, cf. Aeschin. 11. 33. 4, absol. to put the question, Dem. 5 6:7. . eTrepw , Ion. éreup-, 74, a question, Hat. 6.67, Thuc. 3. 53, 68. pa dons lon. pare €ws, hia questioning, consulting, Hdt. 6. 67 ; xpnopav Hadt. 9. 44; in pl., Thuc. 4. 38. émeoa, rare aor. I of mirrw, q.v- émecav, Ep. for éxoay, 3 pl. impf. of érerpe. é vo, = éreroBaivw, em éw, to use violent language, Lyc. 130, Maxim. 7. xarapx. Tor. émecPoXla, %}, hasty speech, scurrility, érecBodias dvapaiver Od. 4. 159; of Archilochus’ satires (cf. sq.), Anth, P..9. 185, cf. 7. 70. mea-Bédos, ov, (énos, BaAAw) throwing words about, rash-talhing, scurrilous, AwBnrhpa éreoB., of Thersites, Il. 2.275; vetkos ér. Ap. Rh. 4.1727; of satires, Anth. P. 4.3. | a ; én , fut, éréBopat: aor. inf. éruparyety :—to eat after or with (cf. éni B. 1.1. d, and v. émmivw), epéact Bociows xAwpa cd’ exqodev Eur. Fr. 899, cf. Xen. Mem. 3. 14, 3- 2. to eat as an antidote, brav éxews payp, ‘éreabies dpiyavoy Arist. H. A. Ot eee a ae it OE ah a ey os 9. 6, 6, cf. Trophil. ap. Stob. + eréperis — erevxopat. 541. fin. IT. to eat up, dnavr’ emjobiey Ar. Pl. 1005, cf. Eupol. et Teleclid, ap, Ath. 170 D: cf. émparyetv. éréa Ow, post. for érecOlw, Epich. 23Ahr., Pherecr. Incert, 6, Call. Epigr.50. émecktacpéves, Adv. darkly, obscurely, Eccl. émeomrov, aor. of épéma. énéooerat, Ep. for éxécerat, 3 sing. fut. of émerme (elt sum). énéooevev, &reaoevovTo, y. sub émiedo. émecotpévws, Ady. part. pf. pass. violently, Q. Sm. 3. 443. énicotra, érécoiiro, v. sub émoetw. éreoreds, Ion, part. pf. of épiornue. érerpépa, = treiapépa. éwecydptos, ov, (Eoxapa) on the hearth, Anth, P. 7. 648. éméoyov, —eoxdpyy, aor. 2 act. and med. of éréxw. émerevé-Kaptos, ov, bearing yearly fruit, Theophr. H. P. 1. 2, 2. : émereré-Kavdos, ov, changing its stalk every year, Theophr, H.P.6. 2,8. émérevos, Dor. gen. pl. emerey Aesch. Ag. 1016, Ion, dat. érereigot Hat. 6. 105 (v. 1. -etowwt), but éwérecos as fem, in Id. 2. 92., 3. 89, Plat. Legg. 955 D, Arist., etc., and in the form éméreos, Hdt. 3. 89 :—annual, yearly, every year, vata Id. 6.105; 6 én. kaprds Id. 8, 108; 6 én. pdpos the yearly revenue, Id. 5. 49, cf. 3. 89; also, éwéreta, 7d, Inscrr. Att. in C. 1.138-154 :—éméretor vooo recurring annually, Plat. Rep. 405 C:— metaph., éwérero: Ty puow changeful as the seasons, or acc. to others, like birds of passage, Ar. Eq. 518. 2. annual, lasting for a year, BUBXov Thy é. yevonévny Hat. 2. 92; 7d tdwp 7d én, the water drawn up by the sun every year, Id. 2. 25; ém. 7d moAAd Ty évrépmy Arist. de Long. Vit. 4,1; urd én. Ib.; ai éw. wédcrrat Id. H. A. 9. 40, 425 ény Wnpicpara Dem, 651.16; Ta Kard rds dpxds Polyb. 6. 46, 4. émeterooptw, to bear fruit every year, Theophr. C. P. 1. 20, 3. €merero-dpos, ov, fruiting every year, Ib. émererd-pvAXos, ov, losing the leaves yearly, Id. Ht P. 7.11, 3. émréreos, Ion. for émérecos. émérns, Dor. -as, 6, (Emopat) a follower, attendant, Pind. P. 5. init.: fem, érérs, 50s, Ap. Rh. 3. 666. émeryoros, ov, =éréreios, from year to year, yearly, kaprés Od. 7. 118: lasting the whole year, teAeopopin Call. Apoll. 77; éyxpovioas émery- a.ov for a year, C. I. 2569. 8. émerov, Acol. aor. of mimrw, Alcae. in An. Ox. 1. 144. émétooce, a Dor. aor. without any pres. in use, =éréruxe, fell in or met with, Pind. P. 4. 43; also in part., émrdécoas péCovras having come upon them as they were sacrificing, Id, P. 10. §2.—Cf. téoaas, €mev, Ion. imperat. of éouat, Hom. émeviide, Ep. aor. 2 of épavdavw, Musae. 180. émevatw, to shout over, Twa Orph.H. 79. 9: to exult over, dvdyrais 69.6. émrevBSoKéw, to acquiesce in, Tt Eccl. érrevOdpéw, fo rejoice at a thing, rw LxXx (Sap. 18. 6). érrevOuvw, to guide to a point, Xen. Cyn. 5, 32: to direct, administer, vopiopara Aesch. Pers, 860; 7a xowa y.1. Aeschin. 76. 13. émevdetfo, to glorify, make illustrious, marptd érevedeicas Simon. 1543 MOAAG o’ ératvos én. Epigr. Gr. 209, al. émeukréos, a, ov, =sq., Clem. Al. 556. émeverés, 7, dv, longed for, to be longed for, LXX (Jer. 20. 14). éwevAGBéouat, Dep. to beware of, be afraid of, LXX (2 Macc. 14. 18). érevdoyén, to bless, Tzetz. Hist. 9. 207, Byz. émevvaKror, wy, of, (ebvatw) a name for the Helots who were adopted into their lords’ places during the Messenian wars, Theopomp. Hist. ap. Ath. 271 C:—Diod., Excerpt. Vat. p. 10, writes émeuvaxrat, and seems to identify them with the mapGeviac: Hesych. gives évedvaxror oi map- evi, but émevvaxral: of ovyKotunral. érevplokw, Ion. for épeupioxw. émevpnpéw, to assent with a shout of applause, c. inf., mdvres émeuph- pycay ’Axatol aideiobal 6 iepija Il. 1. 22; cf. Ap. Rh. 4. 295: absol., Plut. Galb. 14: cf. érairéw, ernmiw, émaxo. II. c. acc. pers., Hpnv én. to glorify, sing praises to her, Musae. 275. 2. c. acc. tei, to sing over or in furtherance of, xoaiat .. ipvous émeupnpeire Aesch. Pers. 620; érevphuncav edxaiow .. madva Eur. 1. T. 1403. c, dupl. acc., éuds rdxas mady’ ennuphunoey sang a paean over my fortunes, Aesch. Fr. 281, 3; ém, ma@va “Aprepty to sing the paean ix praise of her, Eur. I. A. 1468, cf. Aesch. Fr. 281. 3. érevdnpifopar, Dep. ¢o use an euphemism, v. Lob. Phryn. 596 sq., 599- émevpparidios, ov, dwelling on Euphrates, Luc. Pisc. 19. erreuxy, oars = Plat. Legg. 871 C, in pl. : €mevxLov, TO, properly, a praying-carpet or rug, and so, generally, a rug, Eust. 1056. 64, Schol. re ep E 7 : emevxopat, Dep. :—to pray or make a vow to a deity, c. dat., Oeots, Aut Hom., Hdt., etc.; but in Soph. O. C. 1024, én, Oeots to give thanks to them ic. inf. to pray to one that .. , émedxero naar Oeoior vooricae Obuoqja Od. 14. 423., 20. 238, cf. Soph. Ph, fin., Ar. Pax 1320, etc. ; warOaveiv érnuxdpunv Soph. Tr. 16; én. evoprodyrt elvat d-yabd Lex ap. Andoc. 13. 22, cf. Aeschin. 69.15 :—c. acc. rei, to pray for, Odvarou Hotpay Aesch. Ag. 1462: also, c. acc. cogn., ém. Aerds Soph. O. C. 484; To.avra Oeois Aesch, Theb, 279 :—later c. acc. pers., ér. Geos Xen. Eph. I, 12, Aristaen, 2. 2. II. to vow that.., c. inf. fut., éx. Onoew Tpdmata Aesch. Theb. 276, III. to imprecate upon, pdpov.. Tedomibas Id. Ag. 1600, cf. 501, Cho. 112; dpds rots dweBotow Plat. Criti. r1gE; c. inf., émedxopae [air] maGeiv Soph. O. T. 249: absol. to utter imprecations, yi) ’mevéy mépa Id. Ph, 1286, cf. Tr. 809: —sarely in good sense, éx. ebruytay twi Plut. Galb. 18, cf, Aesch. Theb. 481. IV. to glory wer, doiacrw éenevgear ‘Inractdpat ll. 11. 431; absol., 5. 119. 2. c. inf. to boast that .., h. Hom. Ven. 287, Aesch. Ag. 1262, Eum, 58, ete. ; “Apyos marpid’ éuiy én. {sc. etvac] Eur. ’ , Sats émeveoviCw — eryy. I. T. 508; c. part., én. dxpuydy to boast that it has escaped, Plat. Soph. 235 C. 8. c. acc., pé-ya Opacos én. to boast of .. , Eur. Rhes. 693. émevavilw, to lower the price of a thing, Dem. 687. 24; én. THY dyopay Plut. C. Gracch. 5, Cic. 8; cf. Hemst. Luc. Nigr. 23. érevwxéopat, Med. zo feast in or upon, Dio C. 62. 15. émépavro, 3 sing. plgpf. pass. from paivw, Hes. Sc. 166. émepvov, Ep. redupl. aor. 2 from the Root *pévw; Hom, emedépBer, plapf. of péphw. éwébpabov, es, «, Ep. redupl. aor. 2 of ¢paw, Hom. émépixov, Ep. for érepixecay, 3 pl. plapf. of ¢vw, Hes. Op. 148, Th. 152, 673, Sc. 76; as if impf. of wep¥ew, which does not occur. €néxuvto, 3 pl. Ep. aor. 2 pass. of émtyéw, Hom. éméxao, fut. épéfw: aor. éréoxov, imperat. érioxes, inf. émioyxeiv; post. éréoxedov Aesch. Theb.453, Ap.Rh. To have or hold upon, Opivuv.. , @ kev émoxolns Acmapods rddas Il. 14. 241, cf. Od. 17.410; 7oT@ KpOocov én. to hold it to or for .., Theocr. 13. 46 :—Pass. to hold on by, Twos Ap. Rh, 4. 741. 2. to hold over a thing, ti te Arist. H. A. 5. 18, 9. II. like wapéxw, to hold out to, present, offer, oivoy émaxav Il. 9. 489 (485); éreoxé re oivoy EpvOpdvy Od. 16. 4443 KoTUAnY.. éreoxev Il. 22. 494; ef moré Tor .. watov érecxoy Ib. 83, cf. Eur. Andr. 225; also, ob« Ererxov .. paoT@ rpodeia parpis I offered not mother’s food with my breast, Id. Ion £492; c. inf., meiy érecyov Ar. Nub. 1382; absol., Id. Pax 1165 :—Med., émoydpuevos (sc. Thy nvAuKa) erémev having put it to his lips, Plat. Phaedo 117 C, cf. Ap. Rh. 1. 472; émt XetAeot .. paordy émaxopévn Euphor. ap. Stob. t. 78. 5. Tit. zo hold or direct towards, régov oxon@ énéxew Pind. O. 2.160; dAdAw éxéoxe Téa Eur. H. F. 984 :—Hom. uses the Med. absol., émayduevos Badev iG having aimed at him he hit him, Od. 22.15. —_b. intr. fo aim at, attack, ri po. GS eéwéxes; why thus launch out against me? Od. 19. 71; and in tmesi, én’ abr@ mavres Exwpev 22. '75 3 GAAHAOLs én. Hes, Th. 711; so, éwéxew emt rwa Hdt. 9. 59; ward mva Id. 9. 31; ént run Thuc. 8.105; mpds zt Plut. Anton. 66: also c. dat., rats dpxais ér. to aim at office, Ar. Lys. 490; dxrpow ewécxeOov held straight for the beach, Ap. Rh. 4. 1766 ; absol., Eur. Bacch. 1131. 2. éxéxew Thy Sidvoray ét tit to direct one’s mind ¢o a thing, Plat. Legg. 926 B, cf. Plut. Aemil. 8, etc. b. absol., éréxev (sc. Tov vodv), to intend, purpose, c. inf., émetxe éAAdupecOa Hat. 1. 80, cf. 1. 153., 6. 96; c. dat. rei, to be intent upon, Lat. animum advertere, tats dpyxais, SiaBdoe, etc., Ar. Lys. 490, Polyb. 3. 43, 2, etc.: cf. émBdAdw II. = 3. to stand facing, to face in a line of battle, obrox [of M750c)} éreaxov KopiyvOtous, etc., Hdt. 9. 31. IV. to keep in, hold back, check, Lat. inhibere (cf. émiaxw), émecxe 5t add péebpa Il. 21. 244; kat ras €mecxe xeipa..; Soph. Aj. 50; émoxdv hviav Ib. 847; éni- cxapev 70 mAciy Id. Ph. 881; dpyds, ordpa Eur. El. 1642, Hee. 1283; xpyopods ér. to withhold them, Id. Phoen. 866; éxéxew Twa ftw to keep him down with the stick, Ar. Pax 1121: to confine, as the earth a corpse, Anth. P. 7. 461; ér. 7H xept 7d ordpua to cover, Plut. Cat. Mi. 28; and in Med., émoydpevos 7a @ra Plat. Symp. 216 A. b. to stay or adjourn proceedings, Ta mpos ’Apyetous Thuc. 5. 46; iv Gnptay Ib. 633 riv diarray Dem. 541. 25. c. énéxewv Tivd Tivos to stop him, hinder him from it, Soph. Aj. 50, Eur. Andr, 160, Ar. Lys. 742: soc. inf., oe pare vit pyre Huepa emoxérw Hore dveivar .. let them not stop thee so that thou neglect.., Thuc. 1.129; ém. Tivd pi mpacoew tt Soph. El. 517, Ph. 349. 2. absol. to stay, stop, wait, pause, ’Ayrivoos 8 ér’ évetye Od. 21. 186, cf. Hdt. 1. 32, Soph. El. 1369, etc.: foll. by a Conjunction, esp. in Imperat., éwicyes fv .., wait and see whether .. , Eur. Supp. 3973; émloxes éor’ dy .. rpocpabys Aesch, Pr. 697; én. ws..Dem. 40. 2; péxpt Tocodrou éws.., Thuc. I. 90; or alone, érlaxes absol. hold! stop! Aesch. Cho. 896, Soph. O. C. 856, etc.; énlaxeroy, pdOwpery Id. Ph. 539, cf. Eur. Hipp. 567; in part., émaxdayv ddtyov xpévov Hat. 1. 132, al.; émoxdy, opp. to mapaxpiya, Antipho 135. 8; ob« moAdy xpévov én. Plat. Phaedo 59 E:—in Thuc. 2. 81, od« émerxov 7d orpatémedoy KaradaBeiv halted for the purpose of occupying a camp (where the Art. seems superfluous). b. c. gen. rei, to stop or cease from, éniaxes Tod Spdpov Ar. Av. 1200; THs Topeias Xen. Cyr. 4. 2,12; todrov Thue. 8. 31; also, é. mepi twos Id. 5. 32, cf. 8.5 :—so c. inf. to leave off, cease to do, like mavecOat, Xen, Mem. 3. 6, 10; and c. part. to cease doing, dvad@y obk épeges Ar. Av. 915, cf. Eur. Phoen. 449 :—so also in Med., c. inf., Thuc. 7. 33. e. as technical term of the Sceptics, to suspend one’s judgment, to doubt, ém. év trois dja Plut. 2.955 C; éwéxw wept rovrou Luc. Vit. Auct. 27; vy. roxy, eperricds. V. to reach or extend over a space, énra 8 érécyxe TéAcOpa Il, 21. 407; Omdacov. éwéoxe mip so far as the fire reached, Il. 23. 238., 24. 792, cf. Hdt. 7.19, Hipp. Aér. 282, Thuc. 2, 77;—so in aor, med., éxéaxero he lay outstretched, Wes. Th. 177 ; érécxero néapov prevailed over .., Epigt. Gr. 793. 5. VI. to have power over, to occupy a country, of SxvOat thy “Alyy macav éxecxov Hat. 1. 104, cf. 108., 8. 32, Thuc. 2. 101, etc. :—of things, } émdpn én’ derw pijvas Kupnvaious ér. occupied or engaged them, Hdt. 4. 199; Thy méAw éne?xe KAavOuds Plut. Oth. 17; so, 7d p@s ér. rt is spread over an object, Plat. Rep. 508 C. 2. absol. to prevail, predominate, iv pi} Aapmpds dvepos éwéxy Hdt. 2.96; cecpol émécxov éni mreiorov pépos THs ys Thuc. 1. 23; [ray vedy] én word tijs Oaddcans erexdvrow being spread over .. , Ib. 50; THY [rdxNY] .., H viv éxéxer Dem. 311. 22; érnotew émexdvtav Polyb. 5. 5, 0. b. of Time, to continue, Kpovow énetye Ar. Eccl. 327; éréxwv nat ove dmets continuously, Plat. Theaet. 165 E; ént mAcious tuépas 6 ceouds éneixev Dio C, 68, 25 ; ondros, vit éreaxe came on, Plut. Mar. 19, Crass. 30, etc. emnBaw, Ion. for épnBdw, Hat. 6. 83. émnBodos, ov, having reached, achi 523: od .. vnds énnBoros obd eperday yiryvouat Od. 2. 319; TovTow én. having achieved these ends, Hdt. 9. 94; Ttovrwy trav Oewy én. in posses- sion of .., Id. 8.111; Tepmvijs.. TRG er. vdoou Aesch. Ag. 542; én. ppevaiv compos mentis, Id. Pr. 444, Soph. Ant. 492; émornhyuns, maidelas ér. Plat, Euthyd. 289 B, Legg. 724 B, cf. Hipp. Lex; rijs nadAlorns @dfjs Plat. Legg. 666D; c. inf. most dexterous at .., xAépar émnBodrd- raros Plut. Arat. 10. 2. pertaining to, befitting, yuvagiv mévos .. én, Theocr. 28. 2, cf. Nic. Al. 232. II. pass. to be reached or won, énmBodros Gppart viooa Ap. Rh. 3.1272. | (The form éw@Bodos is due to the Ep. Poets, who could not get éiBodos into their verse; nor does the original form occur except in compds. evemiBodos, peya- AemiBodos : it is written é>#Bodos in C. I. (Add.) 4303 a. 20:—v. Ruhnk. Tim., Blomf. Aesch, Pr. 453, Lob. Phryn. 699.) émnykevibes [T], ai, in Od. 5. 253, the long planks bolted to the upright tibs (arapives) of the ship: v. sub ixpra. (Prob. from éveyxeiv, jvenns.) érnyopetw, to say against one, throw in his teeth, Twi Te Hdt. 1. 90; Hesych. seems to have read éwnyopéwv. émnyopta, %, accusation, blame, like xarnyopia, Dio C. 55. 18. II. =mpoonyopia, appellation, Eus. V. Const. 1. 31., 2. 19, al. émyewv, impf. of émerpe (lps ibo). émijev, Ep. 3 sing. impf. of dre (elul sum). émnertavos, dv, also 7, dv, v. infr.:—abundant, ample, sufficient, Hom. only in Od.; mapéxovow énneravdy yada OjoOa 4.89; mpactal., émneravov yavdwoa (as Adv.) 7. 128; otrov., én. rapt xorpe 13. 360; mdvvot én, troughs always full, 6, 86, cf. 13. 247; émel od Koped) kara vija Hev énneravds 8. 233, cf. 10. 427, etc.; émneravdy yap éxecxoy for they had great store, 7. 99, cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 1176 :—also, émneravat tpixes thick, full fleeces, Hes. Op. 515; émneraval mkaranoro Theocr. 25.20. (The deriv. from éros, as if the orig. notion were sufficient the whole year through, will not suit all the above-cited passages and is . not necessary in any. Curt. believes the Root to exist in aifés, aifay, aev-um, with the term. -ravos, as in diu-tinus, etc.) [In h, Hom. Merc. 113, and Hes. Op. 605, quadrisyll., as if érg7—.] érrijiev, éwhicav, Ep. 3 sing. and pl. impf. of émerye (elu ibo). émfjxav, Ion. for épjay, v. sub epinue. ; ps al Dor. émdkoos, ov: (éraxovw) :—listening or giving ear to, c. gen., éua@v Epyaw Aesch. Ag. 1420; xaxdv, dixns Id. Cho. 980, Eum. 732; Adyow Plat. Rep. 499 A; less often c, dat., ebxais Id. Phileb. 25 B; -yovedot Id. Legg. 931 B; ‘yuvaigiy Anth, P. 9. 303 :—absol. listening to prayer, of gods, Pind. O. 14. 21, Ar. Thesm. 1157. ‘a within hearing, within ear-shot, els érhxoov orioai twa, Kadécacat Xen. An. 2. 5, 38., 3.3, 13 also, é¢ érnxdov Luc. Contempl, 20; és 7d émn= kowrarov Tov odpavod Id. Icarom. 23; dvayvavat éx, &maat Id. Symp. 21. III. pass. heard, listened to, & was bpvet émquoa yeveoOat napa ray Gedy Plat. Legg. 931 B; én. a rod OeopudAods ebxai Philo 1. 296. émmAdts (not érnAis, Arcad. 31. 12), os, %, Ion. for épydts, a cover, lid, Soph. Fr. 877, Posidipp. Incert. 12. II. a freckle, Eust. 1562. 39. énnAAaypéves, Adv. part. pf. pass. of émadAdoow, changeably, uncer- tainly, Hierocl. de Provid. p. 26 Casaub. émndiydto or -(fw, to overshadow, cover, Td fyarios Acl. N. A. 1. 41:—Med., 7@ kowG $dBy Tov opérepov enndrvyaCecbar to throw a shade over, i.e. disguise, conceal one’s own fear by.., Thuc. 6. 36; ém. tiv xeipa to hold one’s hand as a shade over one’s eyes, Arist.G. A. 5.1, 35; and (without xe(pa) ém. mpd t&v dupdrow Ib. 5. 2,75; émpAvya- Cecdat Ta to put him as a screen before one, Plat. Lys. 207'B; so, ém. bAnv Arist. H. A. 6.1, 5., 9. 8,1, cf. 9. 39, 6:—Pass. to be concealed or essed, Hipp. 658. 58, etc—In Hipp., Plat., and Arist. the Mss. vaty between —a¢w and —iw. . émnAvyatos, ov, (pAV-yn) shady, dark, A. B. 243, Hesych. n éwijAvE, vyos, 6, %, overshadowing, Thy wétpay émnduya daBeiv to take the rock as a screen, Eur. Cycl. 680: cf. érnAvyd fw. , Emmis, v5os, 4, , ExnAv, 74, (€HAvPov) one who comes to a place, €dGer’ Erhavies avOis coming back to me (for they were going away), Soph. Ph. 1190. II. an incomer, stranger, foreigner, Lat. advena, opp. to abréxOov, Hdt. 1. 78., 4. 197, and Att.; dvdpas moAcplous éms Aesch. Pers. 243, cf. Theb. 34, Supp. 195 :—also in neut. pl., eniprvia Zvea Hat, 8. 73; neut. sing., émpAvdos yévous Dion. H. 1. 60; tdwp émnav Paus. 2.5, 3- ° éxndtiotn, 7, a coming over one, esp. by spells, a bewitching, witchery, h. Hom. Cer. 228, Merc. 37: Ep. word. emhAvors, ews, 3, (EmnAus) an approach, assault, Opp. H. 4. 228, Anth, P. 5. 268. deakiees [v], ov, 6,=&mnaAus, Thuc. 1.9, Xen. Occ. 11, 4; also emrh- tos, ov, Dion. H. 3. 72. émnparios, 7, ov, (nap) day by day, Ap. Rh. 3.895. émnporBés, dv, late 7, ov, as in Opp. H. 5.135: (auelBw) :—alternate, © Lat. alternus, dyijes én. (v. sub KAcis 1), Il. 12. 456; TeAapaves én. cross-belts, Opp. Cyn. 1.98. 2. alternating, serving for change, xir@ves én, Od, 14. 513, cf. Arat. 190, Nic, Th, 365. ennpve, to bend or bow down, én 8 juder doraxverow (sc. 7d Ajiov) Il. 2. 148, cf. Nic. Th. 870, etc. [On the quantity, v. 7u0@.] émijv, formed by a union of éme? dv, used by Hom., and in Att. Poetry and in Prose, till Xen., when émdv first appears, whereas in the Ton, of Hdt. and Hipp. émedy is the prevailing form:—Conjunction of Time, whenever: 1. with Subj., a. to denote a supposed case, I. 4. 239, ete. b. to denote an action repeated in future time, ll. 19. 223, Od. 11. 192, Hadt., ete. 2. with Opt., a. to denote an action repeated in past time, Od, 2. 105., 4. 222, etc. b, in express- ing the words or thoughts of another, Il. 19. 208., 24. 227. 3, with d, or gained a thing, c, gen., & Indic., only in late authors, as Schol. Luc. Peregr. 9. 524 emvepos, ov, (dvepos) windy: metaph. vain, Suid. empveov, émyvnga, v. sub éravew, énméa, v. sub myyvupt. émpovios, ov, (aay) on the beach or shore, Anth. P. 5. 125. €mopos, ov, (delpw) hovering, aloft, Ap. Rh. 2. 1066., 3. 856. Emmi, to shout in applause, Aaol 3 dpporépaow emhrvoy Il. 18. 502: cf. érevpnpéew. émipiiros, ov, (épdw) lovely, delightsome, Bactds én. Il. 9. 228; euara éocay én. Od. 8. 366; and often of places, as Ithaca is said to be paAAov én, tmroBéroto, 4. 606. Hom. never uses it of persons; and Hes. only of the form or voice (of goddesses), xaAdv €lB0s, émhparov Op. 63; émn- parov docav ieica Th. 67; but, én. vedvides Aesch. Eum. 959; tap0e- vin Ap. Rh. 3. 1099. Cf. émenpavos. émnpedto, to threaten abusively, Aéyew ernped (wy Hat. 6.9. II. to deal despitefully with, act despitefully towards (cf. érnpeacpés), c. dat. pers., Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 31; ém. por cuvex@s nal puxpad wal pela Dem, 519. 14, etc.; so, ém. Tots Wyplopact to oppose them insolently, Id. 331. 14 3—also, ér, eis teva Antipho 131. 23; é7. tds Luc. Nav. 273; Tid Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 15 :—absol. to be insolent, Antipho 142.16, Xen. Symp. 5, 6:—Pass. to be insulted, Lys. 182. 10, Dem. 519. 20: cf. dBpifw. émnpeacpds, 5, despiteful treatment, éumotiopos tais Bovdjceay, ovxX iva tt ait@, GAX iva po éxeivy, Arist. Rhet. 2. 2, 3 sq. émnpeaorys, od, 6, an insolent person, Achmes Onir. 104, Eccl. émnpeactiKés, 7, dv, insolent, Com. Anon. 357. Adv. -«@s, Galen. I. 353, Eccl. 2 €mnpera, 7, despiteful treatment, spiteful abuse, Lat. contumelia (cf. énnpeagpyds), Dem. 229. 9, etc.; mepl Tt 522. fin., etc.; eAevew Kar’ émnpeav to order haughtily or by way of insult, Thuc. 1. 26; Kar’ én. Tivos yeyéevnrai 7 is done to insult him, Amips. Kovy. 1.3; év émnpelas Tage Dem. 229.14; mpos erfperav, opp. to mpods xapuv, Arist. Pol. 3. 16, 73 &m. Bdaiyovds twos his capricious dealing, Luc. Laps. 1, Philostr. ; xopls ér. C. 1. 4474. 59. Cf. the Homeric Dak, pepe, to rest after, Tots xaparos Luc. Amor. 45- énnpetpos, ov, at the oar, éraipa eiar’ enhperpor Od. 2. 403; (so, of éw éperpa. ECouevor 12. 171); én. wévor Opp. H. 4. 76. 2. equipt with oars, vnes Od. 5. 16., 14. 224, etc. Emnpedrs, és, (epépw) overhanging, beetling, érnpepéas piye mérpas vijus €un Od. 10, 431, cf. 12.593; xpnuvol én, Il. 12.54; «ériwos Theocr. 25. 208: cf. karnpepns. II. pass. covered, sheltered, cipBdot Hes. Th. 598; ém. podtdeaat, of a dragon, Ap. Rh. 2. 736, cf. 4. 144. Emipys, €s, equipt, mrepiyecow Maxim. m. karapx. 415; €m. KeANTLOV a boat furnished with oars, Arr. An. 5. 7, 3- émnpioros or -Uros, ov, (épi{w) contended for, Eust. 725. 16., 1962. 7. émijpoe, Ep. 3 sing. aor. 1 of bryeoreae: énqjoav, Ep. 3 pl. impf. of émerps (ele tbo). é tev, Ion. 3 pl. opt. aor. 1 of épf5opat. _ émnravés, f. 1, for érneravés, ela, 7, =€mnrds, Ap. Rh. 3. 1007, in pl. €myris, ov, 6: (Eros): sable, sociable, gentle, as opp. to rude and barbarous, Od. 13. 332; énrf avdpt €ouas 18. 128:—Ap. Rh. has pl. émnrées as fem., 2. 987.—Cf. énris. émnrtikés, H, dv, given to follow, Metop. ap. Stob. 11. 22. é ios, ov, (7TpLov) properly, woven to, closely woven ; and generally, close, thronged, like muxvés, mupaol re preyeBovary enjrptpor torch upon torch, Il. 18. 211; dpdypara..ér. mimrov epate Ib. 552; Ainy yap moAAol Kat eriyrpipot .. wimrovot too many one after another, 19. 226. émnris [i], vos, %, (emnrns) kind, friendly address or conversation : generally, courtesy, kindness, Od. 21. 306. €mmupov, —dpny, v. sub éxavpicxopac. émyxé, to resound, re-echo, Eur. Cycl. 426, Plat. Rep. 492 C; c. acc. cogn., ér. xtpBadov to sound the loud cymbal, Clem. Al, 20. at; zo accompany one in shouting, Pseudo-Eur, I. A. 1 584. émn@os, ov, = bandos. ént, Skt. api Ora. aipi, perhaps Lat. ob :—Prep. with gen., dat., and acc., to denote the being upon or being supported upon a surface or point. A. WITH GEN.: I. of Place, 1. with Verbs of Rest, just like our upon or on, kadé(er’ émt Opdvov I. 1. 536; Horo .. bpod én’ Gxpordrns Kopuphs 13.12; émt mipyou éorn 16, 700; Keirar ént x0ovds 20. 345; and without a Verb expressed, €yxea p60’ ent cavpa- Thpos (sc. crabévra) 10,153; dicrol ém’ dpov the arrows on his shoul- ders, 1. 46:—also with Verbs of motion, where the subject rests upon something, as on a chariot, a horse, a ship, pevyapev ep’ imma on our chariot, 24.356; od« dy ep’ iperépa dxéaw .. ixeoBor 8. 455 5 dyaye «.50p’ én danvns 24. 4475 ent ris dudtns .. dxéero Hat. 1. 31; &p immov, often in Att. ; Kipes popéovow..émt vndy Il. 8. 528; mépnew twa ént rpnpovs Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 56, etc.; so, ém’ dyov.. seen Od. 10. 170; Badodvrat émt Svotv aKedoiv, ep’ Evds TopeverOa oxédous Plat. Symp. 190 D; én’ dxpwy ddomopeiy to walk on tiptoe, Soph. Aj. 1230:—in regard of actual Places, émi may be translated upon, if the place is an actual support, as, ém -yijs upon earth, opp. to xd vis, Soph. O. T. 416; ént rod edovdpou on the left, emt rev mrevpav on the flanks, Xen. An. 1. 8, 9., 3.2, 36;—but must generally be ren- dered by in, rarely in Hom., éx’ dypoi in the country, Od. I. 190; yijs én gérns Soph. O. C. 1706; end vqaov Id. Ph. 613; én adXorpias m= Aews Eur. Andr. 137; of émt @pduns Thue. 5. 35; é€mt ris Actas xaro- rely Isocr. 254 B; so, én’ olenparos xa0joGa in a brothel, Plat. Charm, 163 B; ént ray épyaorypiay Kabifey Isoct. 142 E; pévew ent rijs airy (sc. xépas) to remain in statu quo, ap. Thuc. 4. 118: sometimes ?¢ or near, én’ advrdov (sc. Tav myyav) Il. 22. 153; KéAmos 6 ent Hat. 4, 115; ab ém Ajpvov émixetpevat voor off Lemnos, ae cd /Thuc.1.17; Tam’ €uov Ar. Pl. 100, > , a8 ETNVEMLOS — ETL. Ib.6; rd ént Opdiens the borders of .., Thuc. 1. 59, etc.; én rorayot on, i.e. near it, Xen. An. 2. 5,18; émt trav rpawe(ay at the money- changers’ banks, Plat, Apol. 17 C; in Geometry, ai ép' dy AA BB [ypappyat] the lines AA BB, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 4, 11, etc.—Then, in various relations not strictly local: b. peévew ém ris dpxjs to re- main in the command, Xen. Ages. 1, 373 #évetv én Tivos to abide by it, Dem. 42. fin.; émt rav mpaypdrwoy, émt Tod modepeiv elvat to be engaged in .., Id. 193. 15., 1419. 4; émt dvéparos eivac to bear a name, Id. 1000. 21; éxeoOar emt vdcov Soph. Ant, 1141. ce. of ships, Sppetv én’ dykdpas to ride at (i.e. in dependence upon an) anchor, Hdt. 7. 188; so, ém! mpoomdAov mids xwpeiv dependent upon an attendant, Soph. 0. C. 746. d. with the personal and reflexive Pron., once in Hom., edxebe .. 01777) &p’ bpelwy Il. 7. 195: later mostly with 3rd person, én” éwura@v néeobar by themselves, Hdt. 2. 2, cf. 8. 32; olméew 5. 98; iCeoOa 9.17; ep Eavray mAciv Thuc. 8. 8, cf. 2.63; é7” ipéww abrav BdadAAcoOat to consider it by yourselves, Hdt. 3. 71, etc.; ép’ abrot oxomeiv Thuc. 6. 40; ép' judy aitav .. Tov éeracpor moretoOat Dem. 230. 143 éw éwur@v diadéyovrac speak in a dialect of their own, Hat. I. 142; also, abrds éf’ éavrod xwpeiv Xen. An. 2. 4,10; mparrew Plat. Prot. 326 D, cf. Soph. 217 C; 70 ép’ éavray their own interest only, e. with numerals, to denote the depth of a body of soldiers, én? rerrdpwy raxO7jvat to be drawn up four deep, four in file, Xen. An. I, 2, 15, etc.; mt wmevrhxovra doniiwv ovveorpappévor, of the Thebans at Leuctra, Id. Hell. 6. 4, 12; &F bAlyor reraypévor i.e. in a long thin line, Id. An. 4.8, 11, cf. Thuc. 7. 79; &p Evds dye in single file, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 2, cf. An. 5. 2, 6: rarely of the length of the line, éml recodpay tdocew (of ships), Thuc. 2.90; in Xen., éyévovro 76 pérwrov ént tpraxociwy, .. 7d 5e Babos ep Exardv Cyr. 2. 4, 2:—for mActv émt xépws or ént Képas, v. infr. 0. I. 3 :—éml pa- Aayyos yiyvera 7d orparevpa is formed in column, Xen. An. 4.6, 6, etc. : —in Eur. Phoen. 1466, domidav ém is merely in or under arms :—seldom of non-military matters, én dcrd tAivOwy 7d edpos eight bricks wide, Xen. An. 7. 8, 14: cf. wepddacos 1. 2. f. c. gen. pers. before, in presence of, Lat. coram, ént papripwy .. mpdocerai 7m Antipho r19. 1; efeAeyxeoOat emt mdvrav Dem. 781.4; ypdpoual ce ént ‘PadapavOvos Luc, Catapl. 18; micres dodvat émi Oe@v Dion. H. 5. 29 :—rarely, ént bucacrais Dem. 416. 28. g. with Verbs of perceiving, observing, judging, etc., in, dpav 7 éni rivos Xen. Mem. 3. 9, 3; alc@dvec@a, vonoat rt éni Twos Plat. Rep. 406 C, etc. ;. cxomeiv, xpivew tT ext Twos Dem. 298. 3., 305. 6, cf. 770.12; dyvoeiv ri éni twos Xen. Mem, 2. 3, 2:—also with Verbs of speaking, on a subject, Aéyev ént tivos Plat. Charm. 155 D, Rep. 524 E, etc.; émdenxvivar re éni tivos Isocr. 181. med, 2. implying Motion: a. where the sense of motion is lost in the sense of being supported, \dp0a0els .. én’ dyx@vos having raised himself upon his elbow, Il. 10. 80; éml peAins .. Eperoels 22. 225; Ti pev .. Kabetcev ent Opdvov 18. 389. b. where the motion is more evident, and the sense is pregnant (as in els I. 2, év 1. 8), én” iyretpovo épvocay drew the ship upon the land and left it there, 1. 485; mepdav vijcew én to carry to the islands and leave there, 21. 454, cf. 22. 453 so, éml rijs yijs karamimrey Xen. Cyr. 4. 5,543; dvaBiva ent rar mupyov Ib. 7. 1, 39. c. of motion towards or (as our military phrase has it) upon a place, mporpérovro pedawdow ént vnay Il. 5. 100; Tpéace..ép dpldod 11. 546; (but, vigov em Vupins véecOa Od. 3. 171, is to go near Psyria); én’ oixov dvaxoptlecOa, dvaxwpeiv, dmedauvey, dmedOeiv, etc., homewards, Hdt. 2.121, 4, Thuc. I. 30., 55.5 87, etc.; also with names of places, iévar ént Ku¢ixou Hat. 4.14; mAciv émt Xiov Id. 1. 164; dwomdeiv én’ Alybrrou Id. 1.1, cf. 168; dmad- AdaoesOat ent Cecoadrkns Id. 5.64; 6 KéAmos 6 émt Mayackov pépov the bay that leads to Pegasae, Id. 7. 193; 4) émt BaBuddros dds the road leading to B., Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 45, cf. An. 6, 2, 24:—in these instances the place is the object towards which the purpose of the goer is directed, d, metaph., ém yvdpns tiwds yiyvesBar to come fo an opinion, Dem. 42. 4; én éAmidos yiyvecOa Plut. Sol. 14; ds émt kuvBuvov as if to meet danger, Thuc. 6. 34; ént rod dAvmas (hv with a view to.., Plat. Prot. 358 B; cf. infr. B, II. 2. II. of Time, in the time of, émt mporépo dvOpémav Il. 5. 637. 23. 3323 émt Kpdvov Hes. Op. 108 ; éml Kéxpomos, én? Kipou, émt KapBicew, etc., Hdt. 8. 44, ete.; mt ray tpidxovra Lys. 130. 3; émt rovrou Tupavvedovros, émt Aéovros BacthevorTos, én? Midwy apxévrow, etc., Hdt. 1. 15, 65, 134, etc. ; ent rijs éuijs BaowAclas Isocr. 33 C; én’ éuod in my time, ép” ipa, etc., Hdt. 1. 5., 2.46, etc.; én’ elphyns in time of peace, Il. 2.797.» 9.403, etc.; én’ éuijs vedrnros Ar. Ach. 211; émt rod mporépov Todé- pou Thuc. 6. 6:—én’ ayépns éxdorns Hdt. 5. 117. _ b. later, émt delmvou at dinner, Luc. Asin, 3; émt ris tpamétys Plut. Alex. 23; ént THs KvALKOS, ent Tod moTnptov Luc. Pisc. 34, Plut. Alex. 53. III. in various Causal senses: 1. over, of persons in authority, éx’ ob érdxOnuev Hdt. 5. 109; 5 ént ray Smrwv the commander of the in- fantry, Decret. ap. Dem. 238. 13., 265.8; 6 én ray daira, 6 én rev innéwy Ib. 17 and 20; 6 ént rijs di:ouehoews the paymaster, Ib. 238. 14; of ént tév mpayparor the public officers, Dem. 309.9; 6 émt Tot olvou Plut. Pyrth. 5; 6 én rv émoroday rod ”OGwvos his secretary, Lat. ab epistolis, Id. Oth. 9; cf. Lob, Phryn. 474, and v. infr, B. 111. 6. 2. Kenhjobat éni twvos to be called after him, Hdt. 4. 45; €mi tivos pero- vopacbnva 1d, 1.943 éni twos rh éxuvvplny moreioat or Exe Id. 4. 1075 émi Tivos éravupos yiyvecbat Ib. 184; 9 ém ’Avradxidov eiphyy xahovpevn Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 36; also, 4 elpyvn 4 ém’Avradxibov Dem. 473-8, ubi v. Markl. et Wolf.: v. infr. B. 111. 5 3. of occasions, and the like, én? mdévrow on all occasions, Dem, 526. 22., 574. 33 &" éxdorwy Plat. Phil, 25E; &p’ Exarépov Id, Theaet. 1 59C; ep Exdorns pavretas Dem, 532. 3; én’ éfovolas nat mAovrou in... , Id. 559.24; emt > 8 €7l. Tis ddnPeias Kal Tod mpaypyaros Id. 538. 4, cf. 230.19; % emt rijs mopmhs kat ToD peOvery mpdpacis Id. 573. 1; emt oxoARs Aeschin, 81. med, ; én’ ddefas Plut. Sol. 22; and so in many phrases which become adverbial, as én’ tons (sc. polpas) equally, Soph. El. 1061; émt xarpod Dem, 484. 20. 4. in respect of, émt Tov mpayparwy Arist. Pol. 3-9, 3, cf. Eth. N. 5. 3, 6. B. WITH DAT.: I. of Place, upon, just like the gen., so that the Poets use whichever case suits their metre, whereas in Prose the dat. is more freq. : 1. with Verbs of Rest, €(eo 7@d° emt Sippy Il. 6. 3543 fr’ ént mipyy 3.153; 077 8 emt..vnt 8. 222; Keioda éxt rue Xen, An. 1. 8, 27; walew émt Bowe Il. 8. 240; yadxds ent orndecot 4. 420; ém xOovd dépxecOar I. 88, etc.: also with Verbs of motion, where the subject rests upon something, vnuaty én’ a«umépoiow €Bawov 2. 351; én’ wows pepe Eur. Phoen. 1131; (but é’ imme, 颒 immos and the like are never used for éf’ immov, etc.) :—with places it must often be rendered by in, mt rH xwpy Hdt. 5.77; tamt Tpoig Tlépyaua Soph. Ph. 353; ém eoxdras téwos Id. Tr. 1100; ém 7H yox7 Saxvopa Id. Ant. 317; also at or near, émt xphvp Od. 13. 408; énl Ovppor Il. 2. 788, etc.; and often ém moray@, where we also say on.., 7. 133, Hdt., etc.; ém éoxdpy Od. 7. 160; ém vnuot Il. 1, 558, etc.; also of persons, ob ram Avdois 008 én’ "Oppddn Aa- Tpedpara in or with .. , Soph. Tr. 356. b. on or over, én’ “Iqudd- Pavtt over the body of Iphidamas, Il. 11. 261, cf. 4. 470; Tolovd én’ dvipt xopma Ces Adyov Aesch. Ag. 1400:—also over or in honour of, éni cot karéOnne .. deOAa Od, 24.91; [Bods] ent Marpdcdw répver Il. 23. 776; xelpecdar xalras én’ *Adavd: Bion 1. 81; cf. Lys. 198. 12. ¢. in hostile sense, against, Hdt. 1. 61., 6. 74, 88, Soph. Ph. 1138, etc.:— but also towards, in reference to, émt mao xddov Tedéoat Il, 4.1783 di- xatérepos Kat én’ GAAw éooeat Ig. 181; cf. Soph. Ant. 88, Tr. 995, etc.: and so, sometimes, simply for an Adj., 7d émt 7@ o@part Ka4AAOs = ooparixéy or Tod omparos, Plat. Symp. 210 B, cf. Rep. 376 E; ram gol Kakd,=7ad od, Soph. Ph. 806:—in Att. also, vdpov ri0évar or ti- Gec0a éxi txt to make a law for his case, whether for or against, Plat. Gorg. 488 D, Lex ap. Andoc. 12.1, Dem., etc.; vdyous dvaypayar ent aut Id. Tor. 14; vdpos Ketrar emi Tur Id. 723. 4, cf. 739. 6., 744. 27; Tl Oecporote’s émt Tadarmmpy vexp® ; Eur. Phoen. 1645. d, of accumulation, upon, after, oyxvn én oyxvy one pear after another, pear on pear, Od. 7.120; émt Képdet xépSos Hes. Op. 642; arn Erépa én’ arp Aesch. Cho. 404; mhpara émt mhpac, ém voow vdcos Soph. Ant. 595, O.C. 544; cf, éracatrepos, émadAnros, ernrpipos. e. in addition to, over and above, besides, ob« dpa aoly’ ént eldei kat ppéves Hoav Od. 17. 454, cf. 308; GAAa re OAX’ emt rHot waploxoper Il. 9. 639, cf. Od. 22. 264; ént rotor besides, 24. 277; ent rovrois often in Att. ; yovaix’ ep hyiv .. Exes Eur, Med. 694 :—in Att. with Verbs of eating and drinking, with, émt r@ oirw mivay tdwp Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 27; véxrap motive én’ duBpooia Plat. Phaedr. 247 E; esp. of a relish, xdpdapov ént 7@ cirw Exew Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 11; malew ép adAt paay Ar. Ach. 835; metaph., payeiv ém BadAavtin Id. Eq. 707; cf. érecbiw:—so of numerals, tpioxtAlous ént puptors Plut. Popl. 20. f. of position, after, behind, of soldiers, Xen. Hell. 8. 3, 16-18. g. in dependence upon, in the power of, Lat. penes, 743 ov én dvdpace mefrat Pind. P. 8. 107; éni rivi ore ’tis in his power to do, c. inf., Hdt. 8. 29, Thuc., etc.; -ylyve- oar éni ri Id. 6, 22, Xen., etc.; ert 7@ wAHGE in their hands, Soph. O. C. 66, cf. Thuc. 2,84; 76 én’ éuol, 7d emi cor, etc., as far as is in my power, etc., Xen. Cyr. 5.4, 11, Isocr. 70B. h. according to, ént rots vé- Hots ap. Dem. 718.8; éat mot dixators Id. 483.26, cf. Soph. Tr.662. i, of condition or circumstances in which one is, émt épyq Il. 4. 175, etc. ; ravras él cuvrvxiats Pind. P. 1. 70; én’ ebmpagia Soph. O. C. 1554; ént 7S mapdvre Thuc. 2.36; ént rodros pévew Dem. 43. fin. ; éx’ abro- pap AaBeiv, v. sub adtépapos :—also, émt 7@ Seimvw at dinner, Xen. Cyr. I. 3, 12; ém rp «dAue Plat. Symp. 214 A; cf. Eur. Med. 192. 2. with Verbs of Motion: a. where the sense of motion merges in that of support, émt x@ovl Batve Il. 4. 443; Ocivar émt you- vaow 6, 92; Kkatadécba ém yatn 3.114; iordv eornoev emt papa- Bors 23. 8533; €mt ppeot One 1. 55; Svopdpovs yrwpas ent dupacr Badeiy Soph. Aj. 51, etc. b. in pregnant construction, mérovrat én’ dyOeovy fly on to the flowers and settle there, ll. 2. 89; é¢ ..Baivoy én pnyyin Oadracons Od. 15. 499; Kabetoer emt Sxapavdpy Il. 5. 36; €AOely emt Kpiyrecot 4. 251, cf. 273; viajes eipvara: .. emt Owt Oadrdoons 4. 248. ec. rarely for els c. acc., vnualy én yAapuppow éXavvépey 5- 327.) 1. 274. d. in hostile sense, upon or against, émi rut exe or idvvew tmmous 5. 240., 8. 110; emi rive iévae BéXos, iOdvecOar diardy I, 382, Od, 22.8; émt TudetSp ériraivero .. réga ll. 5.973 ép’ “Exropt .. dkovricom 16, 358; Kivas..cetn én’ ayporépw oul 11. 293; wppyn- Onoay én’ dvdpaat Od. 10. 214; freq. also in Att. Poets :—also, émi rut Te- 7Tax0a Thuc, 2. 70., 3. 13. II. of Time, rarely, and never in good Att., except in sense of Succession (infr. 2), émt vueri by night, Il. 8. 529; ép nucpy 78 ent vueri Hes. Op. 102; ém quart THOSE on this very day, Il. 13.234; €m quart for to-day, 9. 229; aiet én’ juart every day, Od. 14. 105, cf. 2. 284 :—then first in the late Prose of Diod., Eel. p. 525-735 Excerpt. 586. 64. 2. of Succession, after, €xrn émt dexary or TH exry én déxa, on the 16th of the month, ap. Dem. 279. 18., 288. 29; én’ &epyacpévos, Lat. re peracta, Hdt. 4. 164, etc.; émt Tur dyo- pevery, dvicracba, Aéyerv Eur. Or. 898, 902, Xen., etc. ; emt diepOappé- voot“Iwot Hdt. 1. 170; 7a ent rovrois, Lat. quod superest, Id. 9. 78, Thuc., etc.; rodvm r@de Eur. Hipp. 855, Plat., etc. IIT. in various Causal senses: 1. of the occasion or cause, Terevgerat Gry én’ airh for her, Ul. 21. 585; én ool pada wéAN’ Exadoy for thee, 9-492: very often with Verbs expressing some mental affection, péya 525 Hell. 3. 4, 11, etc.; Atay ent ru Soph. El. 360; dydAdecBat, dy- avaxreiv émi Tit Xen. An, 2.6, 26, etc. ; and so with yeynOéva, yalpey, adyeciv, Oavpdcey, etc.:—also, pevyew ep aiwart to be banished for bloodshed, Dem. 548, fin.; mAnyds AapBavew éi t1vt Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 16; (npodcOa éxi tx Dem. 738. 25, etc.:—in adverbial phrases, éx” dporyn with favour, Il. 23.574; S0Aip én réxvp Hes. Th. 540; én’ airia because of a charge, Hdt. 1. 137, etc. ; ém xaxoupyig Kal ove dpern for malice, Thuc. 1. 37; ém’ edvoig, én’ €x@pq Dem. 317. 8., 532. 143 én” d-ya0y Ehmid: with .., Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 18; ép Exarépors in both cases, Plat. Theaet. 158 D. 2. of an end or purpose, mais émt nredrecow an heir for all his wealth, Il. 9. 482, cf. 5.154; émt ddpmw for supper, Od. 18. 44; émt xax® for mischief, Hdt. 1. 68; emt d:apOop7 Id. 4. 164; emt o® xatp® Soph. Ph. 151; émt 7@ wépdee Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 56; Shoat ent Oavarw or tiv ént Gavarw Hat. 9. 37., 3. 119, cf. I. 109, Xen. An. 1. 6,10; én &aywyi for exportation, Hdt. 5.6; xpnornpidtecdar ént Th X&py with a view to gaining .. , 1d. 1.66; ém 7@ iBpiCecOar Thuc. 1. 38., cf. 34, 70, 71, etc. 3. of the condition upon which a thing is done, émt rovrois on these terms, Hdt. 1. 60, etc.; ém roiade, Haore.., Thuc. 3.114; ép’ @ or ef’ Gre on condition that .. , Hdt. 3. 83., 7.158; in orat. obliq. foll. by inf., Id. 1. 22, 3., 7.154, Xen. Hell. 2. 2, 20; ént ovdevi on no condition, on no account, Hdt. 3. 38, Dem. 558.9; én’ ton wat dpolg, én rh top Kat dpoig on fair and equal terms, Hat. 9. 7, Thuc. 1. 27; ém pnrois, v. sub fnrds: also of a woman’s dowry, Ti pnrépa éyyvav ént p’ pvais Dem. 840. 18; Tiv Ovyarépa éxew emt TH tupavvid: Hat. 1. 60. 4. of the price for which .. , Epyov TedAéoat «+ peyadrw emt Swpy Il. 10. 304, cf. 21. 445; émt xdaw xphuatt; Hdt. 3. 38; émt nécq; Plat. Apol. 41 A; ént raddvr@ xpuoiov Ar. Av.154; én” dpyupiy mpdrreyv, A€yerv Dem. 398. 18., 762. 20; émt xpyyact 44 233 émt 7oAAG@ 13.22 :—so also of the interest payable on money, daveiCecOat ént rots peyddos TéKols 13.20; emt dpaxpp Savelfew to lend at 12 per cent., 816.12; én’ dx7w& dBddos Saveifev Tod pnvds Thy pyay, i.e. at 16 per cent., 1250. 20; émt Siaxociais elxoot mévre Tas xiAlas for 225 per mille, i.e. 22.5 per cent., 926. 4: also of the security on which money is borrowed, davei(ev én dvipamddors 822. 8; én’ oivov kepaplos 928, 25; ent vnt 1283. 18. 5. KexAjjoba ext tun to be called after .. , Plat. Rep. 470 B, ubi y, Stallb.; so, Gvopa wetrat émi reve Xen, Cyr. 2. 2,12; Ovopa xadeiv éni rir Plat. Soph. 218 C, 224 B; mérepov Taira, mévre dvépata dvra, ént &t dvdpari éore Id. Prot. 349 B: v. supr. A. Tir. 2. 6. of persons in authority, ds p’ ént Bovoty eioev who set me over the kine, Od. 20. 200, cf. 221; momatvew én’ decor Il. 6. 253; waréAemov ent Kredrecow Od. 15. 89; onpaiver ént dpopow 22. 427; wéumey ent rocotry orparevpar: Thuc. 6. 293 ént rais vavoiy Xen. Hell. 1. 5, 11; of émt rats pnxavats Id. Cyr. 6. 3, 28; of ém rois xaphdros Ib, 33; of én rois mpdypaow Dem, Tio. 22; ént Ovyarpl .. yapely GAAnv yuvaixa Hat. 4. 154, cf. Eur. Alc. 305. 7. in possession of, (av émt ma:diow, TeXevTav én maicl with children, Alciphro 1. 3, Hdn. 4. 2; dmoOaveiv émt xAnpovdpos rais bu- ‘yarpdéor Artem. 1. 81. C. WITH ACC. : I. of Place, upon or on to a height, with Verbs of Motion, éa? mipyov Bn Il. 6. 386, cf. 12. 375; dvaBalvew én 7a iyndérara Hadt. 1. 131; mpoedOety ént 7d Bua Thue. 2. 34; dvaBibacev twa or dvaBaivey ént roy immoy Plat. Rep. 467 E, Xen. An. 3. 4, 35:—also, é immwy dmoBdvres ént xOdva Il. 3. 265; éfe- xvdta6n mpnvis émt ordua upon his face, 6. 43; émt Opdvor .. éfero 8. 442; dpw.. én ori00s cvvoxwkdre drawn together upon his breast, 2. 218; "OSve0H’ efoay emt oxémas Od. 6, 212; O€o0ar emt Ta yévara Xen. An. 7. 3, 23;—just like émé with gen. or dat., which are more common. 2. to, HAGE Sods ént vyas Il. 1. 12, etc.; émt Bwpdy dyew Tb. 440; lvoar 3 emt refxos 12. 4433 emt Tépp’ ddixero Soph. Aj. 48; 4 680s émi Sodoa Pépe Xen. An. 3. 5, 153 7) 650s dwd trav TvAGy ént 7rd Moceddévov Thuc. 4,118; ént 7d abrd al yvGpat epepov Id. 1. 79 :—also c, acc. pers., BH 8 dp’ én’ "Arpeldny Il. 2. 18, cf. 10. 18, 85, 150, etc.:—sometimes in pregn. constr. with Verbs of Rest, émarjvat ént rds Ovpas Plat. Symp. 212 D; mapeivat émt tov rapoy Thuc. 3. 24, cf, Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 12. b. metaph., émi épya rpéwec@ar, tévar Il. 3. 422, Od. 2.127; lévae én tov émawwoy Thuc. 2. 36; ém ovpopny ép- ninrew Hat. 7. 88, etc.:—metaph, also, émt viv tpdrefav amodidévat, dpeiAey to pay, owe fo the bank, Dem. 896. 7, ap. Dem. 1111.12; eyyin ent riy Tpame(ay 895.15, cf. goo. 14; also, &yypapijvat ént 7d Syoue Tivos to be entered under his name, IogI. 26. c. up to, as far as (=péxpe eri, Xen. An. 5. I, 1), wapareivew én “Hpaxdnias orhdas Hdt. 4. 181; én OdAaccay KaOjxew Thuc, 2. 97 :—metaph., émt meipar’ deOrov HAOopev Od. 23. 248; em dinxdaia drodiddvae to yield 200 fold, Hdt. 1. 193 :—in measurements, wAéov f) én dv0 ordiia Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 8, ef. An. 6. 2, 2; Sao én eixoor cradious Ib. 6. 4, 5, cf. 1.7, 15 :—very freq. with a neut. Adj., réagov ém .. , Saov 7’ Em as far as, Il. 3.12; Bocov én’ 2. 616, cf. 15. 358; ent rocodrd ye ppovéw so far L understand, Hdt.6.97; émt dcov def Thuc. 7.66; én mdvr’ dgueéoOar Soph. O. T. 265; émt may edGciv Xen. An. 3. 1, 18; ém 7d éoxarov eAciv Thuc. 4.92; émt pefov Ib, 117, Soph. Ph. 259 ; émt paxpérepor, émt pa- xpéraroy Thuc.4.41.,1.1; émt opuxpdv, émt Bpaxv a little way, a little, Soph. El. 414, Thuc.1.118; én’ €\arrov, én’ AdxucTor Plat. Phaedo 93 B, Thuc. 1. 70; én’ ddtyov, émt wodAd Plat. Soph. 254 B; émt mAéov stilt more, Hdt.1.171,Thuc. 2. 51; rarely with Advs., émt w@AAov Hdt. 1. 94., 4.181. d. before, Lat. coram, more freq. in gen. (supr. A. 1.1. f), iyyov airoy én ra Kowd Hat. 3.156; but, ards emi 7d ovvédpiov Id. 8. 79, is standing at the door of the council. e. in Military phrases (like a. 1.1. €), én dowidas wévre Kab etkoow éragavro, i.e. 25 in file, Thuc. 4. 933 én rodAods Teraypévor many in file, Xen, An. 4.8, 11; én’ dAlyov, ppoveiv éni rit to be proud at or of a thing, Plat. Prot. 342 D, Xen. dor ént derrdatoy 7d BaOos ylyvecOar Id, Cyr. 7. 5, 25 for ent wépas, ve 526 infr. 3. 3. of the quarter or direction towards or in which a thing takes place, ém Sega, én’ aprorepd to the right or left, Il. 7. 238., 12. 240, Od. 3.171, Hadt., etc.; éml ra érepa or éml Odrepa, Id. 5. 74, Thue. 1. 87, etc.; éml rd paxpérepa, Bpaxvrepa on the longer, shorter side, Hdt. 1. 50; ém’ dpadrepa both ways, Id. 8. 22, Pind., etc.; éni rd5¢e on this side, Isocr. 156 C; émt éxeiva, v. sub éréxerva :—also in Military phrases, ént Sépu dvaorpéyar, émt domida peraBarecda, to the spear or shield side, i.e. ¢o right or left, Xen. An. 4. 3, 29, Cyr. 7.5, 6; émt 1éda dvaxwpeiv, etc., to retire on the foot, i.e. facing the enemy, Id. An. 5. 2, 32; so, ént xépas or émt Képws weir, etc., to sail towards or on the wing, i.e. in column, y. sub «épas v11:—metaph., én 7d peiCov koopetv, Sevodv, etc., with exaggeration, Thuc. 1. 10., 8.74; so, émt 7d mAciov 6. 34; emt 7d poBepwrepov 6. 83; emt Ta yeAowWrepa so as to provoke laughter, Plat. Symp. 214 E; émt 7d xadXlw, énl rd aicyxiova Id. Polit. 293 E; ént 7d BéAriov, emt 7d xetpov Id, Rep. 381 B; emt 7d dewvoy ap. Dem. 1072. 11. 4. in hostile sense, against, lévat ént véas Il. 13. 101; @pro 8 én’ abrods 5. 590; orparevety or —eaOat éxi twa Hadt.t. 71,77, Thuc., ete.; lévat ent parw Soph. O. T. 495; mAciv ént rods AOnvaious Thue. 2. 90; mépmev orparnyov ent twa Hat. 1.153; OvecGa éni riva to offer sacrifice on going against .. , Xen. An. 7. 8, 21; ep’ buds, ép’ Has to your, our ica Dem. 73. 26.,146. 20. 5. of extension over a space, rovAdy eq’ typijv HAvOov over much water, Il. 10. 27; én’ eipéa vara Oaddoons 2.159; ent nUpara 13. 27; én oivota névrov mréav, dpbav, Aebaoow 7. 88., I. 350., 5.7713 emt worAdAa & @dAHOny Od. 14. 120 :—also with Verbs of Rest, én évvéa xetro méAcOpa over nine acres he lay stretched, 11. 577; ét réacoy over so much, 5. 251, cf. 13.114; émt woAv over a large space, Thuc. 1. 50, 62, etc.; ém tAciorov Ib. 4; ds ént mdetoror 2. 34, etc. b. this construction is often used in Greek, where we say on, rather than over, dpdxwv ént vara ddpowos Il. 2. 308; immovs .. emt vOrov éicas Ib. 765; dca Te yaiay ém mele 17. 447, etc.: also for among, [éarl of] KA€os mévras én’ GvOpwmous 10. 213, cf. 24. 202, 535, Hes. Op. 11, Th. 95; daccd- peva [krhyar’] ep’ jpéas Od. 16. 385, cf. Plat. Prot. 322 D. Ii. of Time, for or during a certain time, ém xpdvov Il. 2. 299, Od. 14.193; mohAov emt xpdvov 12. 407; mavpiiioy ..émt xpdvov Hes. Op. 132; én dijpov Il. 9. 415; émt wordy xpévoy Plat. Phaedo 84 C, etc.; én’ ériyov xpévov Lycurg. 148. 33; émt xpévov Twa or éni Twa xpévov. Plat. Prot. 344 B, Gorg. 524 D; énl déxa ern Thuc. 3. 68; ent dieres Dem. 1135. 43 éml rpets Hyepas Xen. An. 6. 6, 36; &¢’ jyépav enough for the day, Id. Cyr. 6. 2, 34) Dem. 1214. 6, cf. Hdt. 1. 32; ent oad for a long time, Thuc. 1. 6, etc. 2. up to or till a certain time, ebdov mavvixwos Kal én’ 4@ nat pécov Hyap Od. 7. 288; ent yjpas 8. 226. ITT. in various Causal senses: 1. of the object or pur- pose for which one goes, dyyeAlny ém Tvdij oretAay sent him for (i.e. to bring) tidings of... , ll. 4.384; émt Bodvtrwlethim go for an ox, Od. 3. 421; ént redxea § éooetovro Il. 2. 808 ; xarHASov emt roinrHy Ar. Ran, 1418; eAGeiv mpds twa én’ apydpiov Xen. Cyr. 1.6, 12; méwwev eis twa ent orparevpa Ib. 4. 5, 31; Hxewv él rods réKous for (i.e. to demand) the interest, Dem, 1225. 14; less often with acc. pers., én’ ‘Obvooja jie Od. 5. 149, cf. Soph. O. T. 555:—with acc. of a noun of action, éfcévae ént Ojpay to go out hunting, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2,9; érAeov obx ws ént vav- paxlay Thuc. 2. 83; ént paxny iévar Xen. An. 1. 4,12; €pxeoOae or tévac ent Sefrvoy Il. 2. 381, etc.; em Sépmov Od. 12. 439; Kadeiv ent defrvov Plat. Symp. 174 E, etc., cf. Hdt. 2. 107., 5. 18:—often with neut. Pron., émi rodro éAGeiv for this purpose, Xen. An. 2. 5, 22, cf. Thuc. 5.87; él aird rodro Plat. Gorg. B, etc.; éni ri; to what end? Lat. quorsum? Ar. Nub. 256; so, ép’ 6 71 Id. Lys. 22, 482; ép' for which purpose, Thuc. 7.15, etc.; ém’ toa for like ends, Pind. N. 7. 7; (but ém Toa, =tows, Il. 12. 436) § émt 7d BédAriov to a better result, Xen. An. 7.8, 4:—davel{ecOat émt rdxov for (i. ¢. to gain) interest, Dem. 1212. I:—also after Nouns, dpioro: racay én’ idvy 1.6.79, cf.Od. 4.434; dmopos ém ppévipa Soph. O. T. 691; xphotpos em .. ovdév Dem. 779. 14; 650s ént 7: Xen. Cyr. 1.6, 21; dpyavov ént 71 Il. 6. 2, 34. 2. so far as regards, as regards, roum rhvb_ riy Képny Soph. Ant. 889; Tovm’ éué Eur. Or. 1345; Tovmt oe, 70 éni ae Id. Hec. 514, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4,12; 70 ém opas elvac Thuc. 4. 28; éat 7d rodd for the most part, Arist. Top, 1. 3, 30 3. of set nag others, ém rods me{ods xaOioravar yovra Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 58, cf. . 3-4, 20: more common with gen. one ai pb Pt to, by, iat’ ord0puny by the rule, Lat. ad amussim, Od. 5. 245., 21. 44, etc. D. Posrrion :—ézi may follow its case, when it suffers anastrophé, as in Od. 20. 221: so also when it is separated by tmesis from its Verb, Hrvd” ere Yuyxh 24. 20. II. in Poets it is sometimes put with the second of two Nouns, though in sense it also governs the first, H Gdds 4 emt ys Od. 12. 27, cf. Soph. O. T. 761, Ant. 367. E. Assou., éwi without anastrophé, esp. én 5é .. , and besides... , Hat. 7. 65, 75, ete. II. ém, for éreott, (as évi for éveors), ‘tis here, Ul. 1. 515., 3- 45, Od. 16. 315; ob yap én’ dvfp .. there is no man here.., 2.58; got 8 ém ‘tis in thy power, 11.367; ém dé por yépas Aesch. Eum, 393. ¥F. Prosopy: in some words ¢ is not elided before a vowel, as in émdApevos, emeltedos, émenhs, etc. G. in CoMPOSITION: I. of Place, denoting, 1. Support or Rest upon, as in émetme, emixerpat, émnabilo,—enavxénios, Emi Bd- 2. Motion, a. upon or over, as in émBaivw, ém- D. to or towards, as in éwépyopat, émarérAAw,—énaplorepos, ¢. against, as in énaicow, émimdéw, tmarpareiu, émBov- d. up to a point, as in émreAew, . over a place, as in opat, éxapra® ;:—also over or beyond boundaries, as in émvépopat, i 8. Extension over a surface, as in émadcipa, + bd D; ) - , émi — ewiBaivo. éwavOiCw; eminéropat, emmdéor,—endpyyupos, éxixpuaos. | 4 Accu- mulation of one thing over or bestdes another, as in érayelpw, émipavOdva, éravtdva, émBadrdrAw,—énixrnros. 5. Accompaniment, to, with, as in éndda, éravdée, érayputvew :—hence of Interest, émirprros one and % more, 1+, Lat, sesquitertius; so émrérapros, énimeumtos, émd-ydoos, etc. II. of Time and Sequence, after, as in émPidw, émBAaoTavw, emylyvopat,—erraxddrovdos, éntyovos, émararns. III. in Causal 1. Superiority felt over or at, as in émrxalpw, émvyehdo, senses : énaroxtvopat. 2. Authority over, as in émxparéw,—€napxos, ém- ; bei t . BotdkoXos, éxuotunv. 3. Motive for, as in émOupéew,—eémiCj pos, éniOavaros. 4. to give force or intensity to the Verb, as in éa:- véo, Emtpéppopat, emelpw, emda. ém-dAAopat, Ep. for épadAopat, of which Hom. has part. aor. 2 syncop. émadApevos for épaddpevos, Il. 7. 15, Od. 24. 320. ém-idddw, fut. EmdaAd: aor. €minda [with 7}. To send upon, Lat. immittere, érdpois ém xeipas taddev laid hands upon them, Od. 9. 288 ; so, émt 8 Zeds odpov tadAev 15. 475; obTos ydp émindev rade Epya for this man brought these deeds ¢o pass, 22. 49 :—also in Att. Com., émaad (sc. 7d xévrpov) I will lay it on, Ar. Nub, 1299, cf. Fr. 461, and v. piddro. émaArys, ov, 6, Acol. for épiddrns. ém-avSdve, post. for épavddva, q. v. éni&pov, 74, Acol, for épiepov, a sacred penalty, Inscr, Vet. in C. 1. 11.9. én-tatw, to sleep among, c. dat., v. 1. for émavw, Od. 15. §57- 2. to sleep upon, jidow Anth, P. 6. 192. * ém-1dxo, to shout out, to shout applause after a speech, ds épad’- of & dpa mavres éniaxoy Il. 7. 403., 9- 50- 2. to shout, Sacov 7 évvedxirot ériaxov Il. 5. 860., 14. 148: cf. éwevpnwéw. [7 in impf. by the augm.] émpBd9pa, 7, a ladder or steps to ascend by: a scaling ladder, Arr. An. 4. 27,1: a ship's ladder, gangway, Diod. 12. 62; cf. Spanh, Call. Del. 22. 2. metaph. a means of approach, a stepping-stone, Polyb. 3. 24, 14., 16. 29, 2; tTwds towards .. , Plut. Demetr. 8, Clem. Al. 157. émBalpatve, to climb by an émBdOpa, dub. in Clem. Al. 296. émiBadpov, 74, the fare of an émBarns, passenger's fare, Lat. naulum, wat 5€ Kev GX’ eriBabpor .. doinv Od. 15.449: generally, rent, payment for anything, -yjjs Plut. 2. 727 F; cf. Spanh. Call. Del. 22. II. ra éniBaOpa (sc. tepd), sacrifices at embarkation, Ap, Rh. I. 421. III, éx. dpvidwy a roosting-place, perch, Anth. P. 9. 661. émPatvw, fut. —BAcopac: pf. —BéBnxa: aor. éréBny, imper. émiBa (for —B7%) Theogn. 845: aor. med. éweBnodpny (of which however Hom, always uses the Ion, form éreBfoero, imperat. émByceo). A. in these tenses, intr., to go upon: I. c. gen. to set foot on, tread or walk upon, yains, iyreipov Od. 9. 83, etc. ; méAnos, maTpidos, Tpoins Il, 16. 396, Od. 4. 521., 14. 229; advTav émBds Eur. Andr. 1035; and in Prose, ér. r@v otjpwy to set foot on the confines, Hdt. 4. 125, cf. Thuc. I. 103, Xen. Hell. 7. 4, 6, Plat. Legg. 778 E; émBds mupijs, of a corpse, placed upon... , Il. 4. 99 ;—also, én. émi tivos Hdt. 2. 107. 2. to get upon, mount on, Tupywv, vedv, innay, dippov, ebvjs, Hom.; esp. in aor, med., e.g. éweBhoer’ anhvns Od. 6. 78; ém. Tov Telxeos Hat. 9. 70; A€xrpow ew. Aesch. Supp. 40;—also, én. émt ynds Hat. 8. 118. 3. of Time, to arrive at, rerrapdxovra én. érayv Plat. Legg. 666 B; dexdrw (Dor, gen.) éw. Theocr. 26. 29; ris petpaxiwy HAuias Hdn.1.3. 4. also in various metaph. senses, éa’ dvaideins éwéBnoay indulged in impu- dence, Od, 22.424; edppoctvns éniBynrov keep to it, 23.52; &m. TExvys h. Hom, Merc. 465 ; evoeBias Soph. O. C. 189; én. d6¢ns to entertain an expectation, Id. Ph. 1463; [érous] Sw5exdrov émBas having entered upon.., Epigr. Gr. 689. 3; and in Prose, ém. opias to undertake it, Plat. Epin. 981 A, v. Ruhnk. h, Hom. Cer. 311; ém. Tis dpoppyhs, Tis mpopdcens to seize upon it, App. Syr. 2, Sammit. I, etc.; cf. infr. B. 2 II. c, dat. to mount upon, get upon, vavot Thuc. 7. 70, cf. Il, 2, 3515 én. 7H ZuceAia Diod. 16. 66; tmp Luc. Asin. 27; metaph., én, dvopéas Pind. N. 3. 34 :—also, é. ént mipyw Hat. 1. 181. 2. c. dat. pers. to set upon, attack, assault, rwi Xen. Cyr. §. 2, 26, etc.: also, simply, to approach, Pind. Fr. 58. 8. III. c. acc. loci, fo light upon, in Hom. twice of the gods lighting upon earth after their descent from Olympus, Mepiny émBds, émBaca Il. 14. 226, Od. 5. 50; so, ém. xapdv to light on the fit time, Pind. N. 1. 27 :—then, simply, fo §0 on toa place, to enter it, Hdt. 7. 50, Soph. Aj. 144:—so, émB. emt xépav Dem. 278. 21; eis.. , Diod. 14. 84. 2. c. acc. pers. rarely, to attack, like éépxopa, and only poét., Soph. Aj. 137, El. 492, cf. Ph. 194, Il. 16. 69. 3. to mount, vad’ imnay émBavres Hes. Sc. 286 ; émt inmov Hdt. 4. 22; ént vqa Id, 8, 120:—but, én. émt 7d O7Av, of the stallion, to cover a mare, Arist. H. A. 5. a, 4. with acc. of the Instr, of Motion (cf. Baivw 11. 4), émBjvac rov wbda 7wi Luc. D, Mer. 4. 3, Tox. 48. IV. absol. to get a footing, Od. 12. 434. 2, to step onwards, advance, Hes. Op. 677, cf. Pind, N. 10. 81; émiBawe népow Soph. O. C. 179:—to advance in one’s demands, Polyb. 1. 68, 8. 3. to mount on a chariot or on horseback, be mounted, ll. 5.666, Hdt. 3. 84: to go or be on board ship, ll. 15. 387, Soph. Aj. 357, Hat, 8. 90, Thuc, 1. go, etc. 4. of the male animal, often in Arist. B. Causal in aor. 1 act. (émBiBafw, émiBacKne serve as pres.), to make one mount, set him upon, bs pa 760’ inmwy .. éméBnoe Il. 8. 1293 TohAods 5& Tupis éméBno’ dreyavijs 9. 546 (542); Gs «’ Ene .. euns émBnoere (Ep. for —yre) marpns Od. 7. 223; Twas én ras vas App. Civ. 2. 59; dAkdow Tb. 5. 92; and in late Prose, e.g. Luc. D. Mort. 6, 4, App. Civ. 2. 59 :—so also in fut. med. aor. 1 med., puv &@ éneBacaro Dippy Call. Lav. Pall. 65. 2. metaph. (as in 1. 4), ev«Aelns éal- Bygov bring to great glory, Il. 8.285; caoppoodvns éxéBnoay they bring him ¢o sobriety, Od. 2 3. 133 Avyuphs éréBnoer doidps Hes. Op. 657, cf. h, Hom, Merc, 166; ef ce rUxn .. HAukias énéAnoev had brought thee to ert Baryeto — eri Brve. full age, Epigr. Gr. 39. 3. 7s TodAods EnéByoe KeAevov dawn set them on their way, Hes. Op. 582. € xevw, to rush on like a bacchanal, Nicostr. ’Apr. 1. _empBaddo, fut. —B4G; aor. éréBaidor: I. trans. to throw or cast upon, Lat. injicere, rpixas .., ds éxéBaddor [sc. mupi] Il. 23. 1353 én 52 yxAaivay Badov air@ Od. 14. 520, cf. 4. 440; Ewurdy és 7d mop Hdt. 7, 107; apn xépas Eur. El. 1221; ém. rwds ént ras dpdgas Thue. 4. 48, cf. Hdt. 4. 75., 5.1125 émBdddovras (sc. xodv) throwing on more and more, Thuc. 2. 76. 2. to lay on, Lat. applicare, (immots] ééBadrcy indodrny Od. 6. 320; émB. wAnyds Tar Xen. Rep. Lac, 2,8; Zebs em xeipa Bddo Aesch. Cho. 395, cf. Ar. Nub. 933; én. xeipds Twn Ar. Lys. 440:—in Prose, to day on as a tax, tribute, Tit 7 Hdt. 1. 106., 2. 180; asa fine or penalty, (yuiny, puyiy éx. rwi Id. 6. 92., 7. 3; dpydpiov Lys, 114. 39, cf. émBoAn U1. 2:—so in Trag., Ovnrots én. Kaka, AUqv,-etc., Soph, Tr. 128, Eur. Med. 1115, ef. Thuc. 8. 108. 3. émB. oppayisa to affix a seal, Hdt. 3. 128, cf. 2. 38; émi vt Ar. Av. 5593 Tei Ib. 1215. 4. to add, 7 Pind. P. 11. 22, Arist. Metaph. I min. 1, 1; and in Med., rivi re Theocr. 23. 27; émB. yada éni 1d b5up Theophr. Ign. 49:—metaph. to throw in, mention, Lat. mentionem injicere rei, rt Soph. El. 1246:—absol. to bid higher, Arist. Pol, I. 11,9. 5. to add to, increase, tt Plat. Crat. 409 B. 6. to place next in order, Polyb. 1: 26, 15. 7. to let grow, kAnpara Theophr. H. P. 4. 13, 5. II. absol. ¢o throw oneself upon, go straight towards, c. acc., # 5¢ beds éméBadde Od. 15. 297: later c. dat. loci, Polyb. 5. 18, 3, etq; eis or émt rémov Id. 2. 24, 17., 3. 6, 6: ef. éréxw U1. I. 2. to fall upon or against, rwi Plat. Phaedr. 248 A; 6 fjAcos én. Arist. H. A. 8, 1 3» L:—esp. in hostile sense, ¢o set upon, Lat. irruere, Ib. 9. 39, 7, Diod. 17. 64 ;—sensu obsc., Ar. Av. 1216, 3. (sub. rdv vovv) to set to a thing, devote oneself to it, c. dat., Tors Kowois mpaypaow ér., Lat. capessere rempublicam, Plut. Cicero 43 (in full, ray Sidvovay én. mpés Te Diod. 20. 43) :—generally, ¢o give one’s attention to, think on, Lat. animum advertere, Ev. Mar. 14. 72; cf. éméxo II. 2. 4. to fall in one’s way, Lat. incidere, bray émPddAq mept Tot- avrns mohireias oxéfis Arist. Pol. 2. 6, 22; ward roy émBddAovra Adyoy Id. G. A. 1. 2, 1: to live at the same time with, wi Clem. Al. 327. 5. to follow, come next, Polyb. 11. 23, 2, Plut. Aémil. 33; emi rut Diod. 18. 33 :—absol., émBaddv épn said thereupon, Polyb. 1. 80, I. 6. to belong to, fall to the share of, poprov boov, abroiat énéBadre Hat. 7. 23, cf. Diphil. Zoryp. 1. 16; ef py 7d SAov, wépos “ye, émBddAct drat Dem. 317. 1; doov émBddde abrois Arist. Pol. 1. 13, 8, cf. 2. 3, 4.5 3. 6, 3, etc. :—sometimes also impers. c. acc, et inf., rods Acdpois 5é éréBadre .. napacxeiy it concerned them to provide, Hadt. 2. 180; orc, dat. et inf., émBadAe tivt moveiy Polyb. 18. 34, 1:—7d ém- Badddgov (sc. pépos) the portion that falls to one, Hdt. 4. 115, cf. Lxx (Tob. 3.17.,6.11); so, 70 én. &p’ juads pépos Dem. 312.2; 7d én. Hépos THs ovclas Ev. Luc. 15. 12. 7. to shut to, close, Arist. P. A. 3. 3, 11, III. Med., mostly like the intr. usages, but also, 1. ¢. gen. to throw oneself upon, desire eagerly, évapow émBaddépevos Il. 6. 68; mapbevias émBdrdAopae Sappho 103; Tod ed Cav émBddAAovTat Arist. Pol. 1.9, 16. 2. c. acc. to put upon oneself, émPBadrdopévay .. wrd- ov dv@éwv Eur. Med, 840: metaph. ¢o take possession of, nat émt «Ajpous €Badovro Od. 14. 209 ; abOaiperoy Sovdeiay émPadcirar will take upon himself, Thuc. 6. 140. 3. c. acc. also to attempt, undertake, Plat. Soph. 264 B, Tim. 48 C, Arist. Pol. 2.1, 1:—and c. inf. to design, purpose to do, Decret. ap. Dem. 282. 14 and 27. 4. c. dat. to put one’s hand to, rwi Auth. P. 7. 650: metaph. fo apply or devote oneself to, Polyb. 5. 81, 1, Dion. H., etc.:—but also ¢o arrive at, rodleoat Call. Del. 68. IV. in Pass. to lie upon, to put upon, émBeBdAnpuévor rogérat archers with their arrows on the string, Xen, An. 4. 3, 28, cf. 5. 2,12; Adotov émBeBAnpévos having a rough cloak on, Theop. ’O6. 4. émiBahpa, 75, = donddiov, Hesych: émiBados, 6, the heel, Hesych. émpPanrifw, to dip again or in addition, Joseph. B. J. 1. 27, 1. émiBarros, ov, steeped in, rt Theophr. H. P. 3. 7, émBamrw, to dip into, 7 els rt Hipp. 496. 19. Probl. 10. 66, émBipéw, (ériBapus) to weigh down, ria Dion, H. 4. 9: c. dat. to press heavily upon, trois jrvxnkéot App. Civ. 4. 31, cf. 15 and 5. 107:— fut. med, ém:Bapnoopa: in pass. sense, shall be weighed down, Dion. H.8. 733 aor. pass., 9d ray Savelaw emBapnOjvat C. 1. 2335.9, cf.52. See the dialectic form ém{apéw. émBdpyors, ews, %, a burden, C. I. 2335. 32. émBipuvw, to press heavily on the enemy, App. Mithr, 25 :—so in Med., Basil. énlBapus, ea, v, oppressive, edwdia Theophr. H. P. 3. 13, 6. émBiota, 7,=sq., Dio C. 68. 13. 2.=8i«n, Hyperid. ap. Poll, 2. 200. émiBadors, ews, 7, (émPaivw), a stepping upon, an approaching, ap- proach, Polyb. 3. 54, 5; at én. rhs Oaddoons risings.., Id. 34. 9, 6. 2. metaph. a means of approach, access, Plat. Rep. 511 B; éxew én. C.1. 1098 b, 3. eis riva moveiaOa éw. to make a handle against, a means of attacking one, Hdt. 6. 61; ér. ridecbat eis 7t App. Civ. 1. 37: an attack, Luc, Hist. Conscr. 49: cf. émPd0pa, ém- Baredw, 4. a getting on one’s feet again, recovery after a broken leg, Hipp. Fract. 764; 7H éw. xpHa@at to walk leaning on the foot, Id. Art, 824. 5. a resting of one thing on another, e.g. of a bone, Ib. 816. 6. in Rhet., ar’ émiBaow by gradation, Longin, 11. 1. It. of the male, a covering, Lat. coitus, Plut. 2.754 A. émBaokw, Causal of émPaivw I, c. gen., Kakav émBacKéuey vias *Axaia@y to lead them into misery, Il. 2. 234. 4. II. to dye, Arist. : 527 émBaordbe, to weigh in the hand, Eur. Cycl. 379. émPéarevm, to set one foot upon, occupy, c. gen., Suptas Plut. Ant. 28, cf. Luc. Contempl. 2:—metaph. fo take one’s stand upon, Tod Sépdios obvéparos émBarevar usurping it, Hdt. 3. 63, 67, cf. 9.95; TovTov én. Tod prhyaros relying upon .., 6.65. II. to be an émBarns, passenger or soldier on board ship, én. ént vews Hat. 6. 15., 7. 96, 184, Luc. Paras, 46, cf. Plat. Lach. 183 D:—c. dat., Ar. Ran. 48 with an ob- scene allusion, cf, émBaivw II, 3. 2. to mount, rod Opdvou Phi- lostr. 580. emBiripwos, ov, fit for scaling, unxavi Joseph. B. J. 3. 7, 23: belong= ing to the entry of a place, #dn Himer. Ecl. 13 fin. 2. a name of Apollo, Paus. 2. 32, 2. II. émParipiov, 7d, a festival to celebrate the advent of a god, C. I. 4352-55. 2. émBarnpra (sc, fepd), Ta, sacrifices on entrance or embarkation, Liban.: cf. duaBarnpia. 3. in Christ. writers, ceremonies of dedication, Socr. E. H. 1. 28. émpParns [ci], ov, 6, one who mounts or embarks ; 1, émParat, of, the soldiers on board ship, the fighting men, as opp. to the rowers and seamen, Lat. classiarii milites, something like our marines, Hat. 6. 12., 7. 100, al. _b. a merchant on board ship, supercar go, Dem. 922. 14., 1280. 6, als; cf. Arnold Thuc. 3. 95. 2. the fighting man in a chariot, Plat. Criti. 119 B; on an elephant, Arr. An. 5.17, 4. 3. a rider, Arist, Eth. N. 2.6, 2. 4. a stallion, Geop. 16, 21, 9. 5. the head, Hesych. émBarucds, 7, dv, of or for the émPdrar, } er. xpeia their service, Polyb. 3. 95, 5:—70 én. the complement of émBarat on board ship, Arist. Pol. 7. 6, 8, Polyb. 1. 47,9. émpParés, 7, dv (Dio C. 42. 44), that can be climbed, accessible, Hdt. 4-62; & fs émBardy .. rots tére eyiyvero mopevopévors there was @ passage for them, Plat. Tim, 24 E:—metaph., xpuoig én. accessible to a bribe, Plut. Demosth. 14. énlBda, %, the day after a festival, Lat. repotia, Schol. Pind. P. 4. 249, E.M.; esp. the day after the three days of the Apaturia, Hesych, :— proverb., Epmetv mpds rpaxeiay éniBday to come to hard reckoning (on the day after the feast, when the guests suffer from excess), Pind. l, c. ; xaipe .. Tais éniBdais Cratin. Incert. 51, ubiv. Meineke; y. omnino Ruhnk. Tim, s.v. émBadac. 2. new-year’ s-day, Aristid. 1. p. 352. (Curt. sug- gests that the orig. form was émi-di:Fa, the after-day, dfa being =dies.) émBSddXw, to milk afterwards, Schol. Pind. P. 4. 249. ' émpPeBarda, to add proof, Theophr. C.P. 5.14, 4: to ratify, vépoy Plut. Cato Mi. 32 :—Pass. fo be confirmed still more, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 32, 2. émPeBaiwors, ews, %, further confirmation, Arist. Rhet. Al. 33, 1. émpPetopev, Ep. for —B&pev, and émBhpevar, for —ABfva, v. émBaivw. émBiocow, to cough after or besides, Hipp. Epid. 1. 979, with v. 1. drop. émpPyTwp, opos, 6, one who mounts, én. inna a mounted horseman, Od. 18. 263; veds émBhropa Aady=émBaras, Anth. P. 7. 498; ém. xbédov, of the Trojan horse, Tryph. 307. 2. of male animals, e. g. a boar, cvav émByrwp Od. 11. 131; of a bull, Theocr. 25. 128. II. as Adj. springing, Nonn. D, 20. 113 :—metaph. at home in, master of a thing, OnpodidacKadins Manetho 4. 245. émBrafopar, Dep. to constrain besides, C. 1. (add.) 4325 h. émpPiBalw, Causal of émBaive, to put one upon, tods dmAtras émt rds vas Thuc. 4. 31 :—Pass., Apollod. 3. 1, I. émBpiBdorkw, =foreg. to put the male to the female, Arist. H. A. 6. 18, 26. émpiBpdonw, to eat with a thing, émt 5¢ Avid «npioy éBpas (aor. 2) Call. Jov. 49 :—part. pf. pass, émBeBpmwpeévos, Galen, émlBuos, ov, surviving, nasdioy Isae. ap. Poll. 3. 108. émBrdw, fut. —Bidcopar: aor. —¢Biwy :—to live over or after, survive, éreBiew vo érn Thuc, 2.65 ; éreBiov bid mavrds oe moA€pou] 5. 265 émiBrobvros .. TévO’ 7ypépas Dem, 1053. 15; ais dy... émPi@ Ep. Plat. 361 D. émPAGBns, és, (BAGB) hurtful, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 2. Adv. —Bds, Poll. 5.135. émpBAacrdve, fut. -Bracriow, to grow or sprout on, Twi Plut. 2.723 F, II. to grow in addition or after, Theophr. C. P. 1. 10, 6. émPAdornots, ews, }, an after-growth, Theophr. C. P, 1. 10, 6. émBAacriés, 7, dv, able to grow afresh, Theophr. C. P. 1. 13, 8. émPracpypéw, to load with reproaches, App. Civ. 1.115, Joseph. A. J. 20. 5, 4. ph wa verb. Adj. one must look at, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 29, 7. émPBdéra : fut. Pouar, later yw (as in Lxx):—to look upon, look at- tentively, ets iva Plat. Phaedr. 63 A; émi te Dinarch. 99. 22, etc.; Twi Luc. Astrol, 20. 2. c. acc. to look well at, observe, Plat. Legg. 811 D, Arist. Eth. N, 7. 3,9, Metaph. 1. 9, 8. II. to eye with envy, Lat. invidere, rvxats Soph. O.T. 1526: of. éropOadpidw, émBAehaptBros, ov, on or of the eyelashes, Synes. 70 D. é apts, ios, 7, an eyelash, Eumath. p. 82. éiBrerpis, ews, 4, a looking at, gaze, view, Plut. Philop, 11, Nic. 25, al. 2. of the mind, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 29, I, al, émBARSyy, Adv. (€mBaAAw) laying on, urgently, Ap. Rh. 2. 80. ériBAnpa, 76, that which is thrown over, a cover, Nicostr. KAu. I. 2. tapestry, hangings, Plut. Cato Ma. 4, Arr. An. 6. 29, 8. II, that which is put on, a piece of embroidery, ér. mokidov xavdv C.1. I §5- 5. 2. a patch, Ev. Matth. 9. 16, etc. Bhi, Aros, 6, (émBadAw) a bolt or bar fitting intoa socket, Il. 24. 453; sensu obsc., Anth.P.5. 242, II, as Adj., = éxiBAnros, Anth.P. 7.479. émpPAntéov, verb, Adj. one must throw over, Aretae, Cur, M. Ac. 2. 10: one must make an attempt, twt Artem. 1. 11. émpPAntikds, 4, dv, impinging upon: Ady. —K@s, so as to impinge upon, zwi Epic. ap. Diog. L. to. 50. II. attentive, Ilambl. Protr. 4. p. 44. é naa ov, put upon, added, Gloss. émBAvlo, to well or gush forth, Anth, P. 9. 349. émBAvE, Ady. abundantly, redundantly, Pherecr, TWepa. 1. 4. Es 528. émPvu, = emBrutw, Ap, Rh, 4. 1238. émPBodw: fut. -Bonoopat, Ion, and Ep. —Bécopat (v. infr.), later how (as in Justin. M.). To call upon or to, cry out to, ém. Tut Stt.., Thue. 5.65; émB. rivi c. inf. fo call on one to do... , Id. 4. 20., 7. 70:— of hounds, ¢o give tongue, Xen. Cyn. 6, 19. 2. to utter or sing aloud over, rit 71, as, péAos xépviBe emBody Ar. Av. 898 :—to shriek out besides, arépy’ dp kam B® 7d Muotov Aesch, Pers, 1054 (as Dind., metri grat., for xdmPéda, cf. €Bwoa for EBdnoa); eyxet, kamBda _ Tplrov maiava Pherecr. Tepe. 2. 3. to cry out against, Luc. D. Meretr. 121 :—Pass., Td id:a émPBodpevos cried out against because of private matters, Thuc. 6, 16. 4. in sense, fo cry up, Arr. Epict. at 14:—cf. émBédnros. II. to invoke, call upon, Ocods émBauoouat Od. 1. 378., 2.143; o@ yap mpdrny .. émBwodped’ (cf. émdidwpu 11) Il. Io. 463 ; so in tenses which must be regarded as Med., ov ’AméAAwva émBdoacba Hdt. 1.87; émPBodra @éuy Eur. Med. 168 ; Oeods .. ém- Bodpevor, narépwy rapous éx. Thuc. 3. 59, 67 :—to call to aid, tiv Gd- Any orpariiy éreBwoayro Hat. 9. 23, cf. 5. 1:—c. inf., émB. [rwa] pA moeiy Thuc, 8.92. 2. in Med. also, c. ace. rei, to call out, Id. 7. 69. , 4}, =emBdnors, Diog. L. 5. 90. La, 1), a srw dais aid, succour, Thuc. 3.51, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 47. }onPéw, Ion. —BwPew, to come to aid, to succour, Tit Hat. 3. 146., 7. 207, Thue. 3. 69., 4. 29, al.; émi twa against an enemy, Xen, Hell. 7. 5, “4 absol., Thuc. 3. 96, al. émBonpa, 76, (émBodw) a call or cry to one, Thuc. 5. 65. émBdyors, ews, %, a calling to, Dion. H. de Rhet. 3, Plut, Arat. 23. émBPéyros, Ion. -Bwros, ov, cried out against, ill spoken of, wept Twos Thuc, 6.16; émiBwros dvOpumas Aeschrio ap. Ath. 335 C, cf. Anacr. 60. Cf. émBodw I. 3 €mBd0p.os, ov, (Bd0pos) in or at the trench, Aristid. 1. 296. émiBouov, 76,=70 em Bot dpa, a sacrifice of a sheep to Pandrosos after an ox offered to Athena, Philoch. 32. émBéAarov, 74, acovering, wrapper, garment, LXX (Ezek. 13. 18 and 21). émBod4, 7, (@mBadAw), a throwing or laying on, inariwv Thuc. 2.49; XéEtpav odnpoyv of grappling-irons, Id. 7.62; 7@v xpnuarwy Luc. Imag. 75 xetpav émBodral eyévoyro a fray arose, Dion. H. Io. 33. 2. metaph., éw. rijs S:avolas application of the mind to a thing, Diog. L. Io. 45, Clem. Al. 690:—absol. a perception, rijs ddAnOelas Ib. 644, etc. 3. a setting upon a thing, a purpose, design, attempt, enter- prise, Thuc. 3.45; c. gen., 9 ém. THs teroplas to write history, Polyb. 1. 4,2; Tav ddAov to gain empire, Id. 1. 3, 6, cf. 5.95,15 f Em:Bodjs, Lat. ex consulta, designedly, Lys. 105.14, Diod. 13. 27. 4. a hostile at- tempt, assault, Polyb. 6. 25, 7, v.1. Thuc. 1. 93; af émBodat rijs Oaddo- ons Plut. Pyrrh. 15. Il. that which is laid on, émPodat mrlvOwv layers or courses of bricks, Thuc. 3. 20; onpelwy émBodal impressions of seals, Luc. Tim. 13. 2. a penalty, fine, Ar. Vesp. 769 ; émiBodry ém- ‘BadAav Lys. 159.12, Xen. Hell. r. 7, 2, etc. ; émBords dpAciv Andoc. 10. 16; % éw. 77s BovAts the penalty imposed by the council, Aeschin. 40. 27; cf. émBdddw I. 2. 3. a requisition, number of men re- quired, Polyb. 3. 106, 3: an impost, public burden, Plut. Cato Ma. 18, III. a thing put over for shelter or protection, Theophr. C. P. 3. 16, 4. IV. an addition, accumulation of similar words, Rhett. loAos, ov, f, 1. for énBodos, q. v. émPopBéw, to roar in answer to or after, Tw Luc. D. Deor. 12. 1. é orkyOLS, ews, 7, a feeding upon, Theophr. C. P. 5. 17, 6. é is, 3, of insects, =mpoBooris, Arist. P. A. 4. 5, 6. émBdcKxopat, Med., of cattle, fo graze or feed upon, mpdcors Batr. 54: —Pass, to be fed upon, eaten down, ra émBooxdpeva Theophr. H. P. 3. 6, 3. 2. to feed on, draw its nutriment from, atav Nic. Th. 68:— metaph. to devour, of poison, Ib. 430; of fire, Hdn, 1. 14, 9. II, to feed among, wotyuvps Mosch. 2. 82. émPoukdros, 6, =Bovxddros, Od. 3. 422, etc., always in pleon. phrase, Body émtBourddos dvnp; but dvjp is omitted, 22. 292. ovAcupa, 76, a plot, attempt, scheme, Thuc. 3. 45, al. ovAevors, ews, 7, a plot, treachery, Plat. Legg. 872 D. émBovAcuris, od, 6, one who plots against, ér. erparod Soph. Aj. 726. vAeuTiKés, 7, dv, treacherous, Ptol. Tetrab. 66: Adv., —«@s, Eus. D.E. 472 D. émpPovdetw, to plan or contrive against, to contrive treacherously or secretly against, c. dat. pers, et acc. rei, émB. kaxdv méAe Tyrtae.2.10; énavacraciy 71 Hat.3.119; Oavardy Tm 1d,3.122, Andoc. 31.2, etc. ; Karddvow 7H Tupavviés Thuc. 6.54; also, 7¢ «is tiva, Wyttenb. ad Jul. p- 185. b. c. dat. pers. only, to plot against, lay snares for, TH méade Aesch. Theb. 29; 7G wAjGe Ar. Pl. 570, Thuc. 6,60; Oeots Plat. Rep. 378 B; 7f moAcrefa Dem. 99. 27 ;—absol., obmovdActaw the con- spirer, Soph. O. T. 618, cf. Arist. Eth. N. é 8, Io. @..c. acc. rei only, to plan secretly, scheme, plot, rov éxndovy Thuc.7.51, cf.8.60, ee 2. c. dat. rei, to form designs upon, aim at, mpiyypact peyadoor 3. 122, cf. 1.183; tupavvid: Plat. Gorg. 473 C, etc. ; épyors ror- otros Wys. 180.12; absol., Tov émBovdretovra novis rebus studentem, Plat. Legpr. 856 C. 3. c. inf. fo purpose or design to do, éxew Hat. 1.24; yemxerphoe 14.6.1375 movety Ar, Pl. 1111; €feAdeiv Thuc. 3. 20, cf. LyiS- 130. 38, etc. also, én. bnws..Xen, Cyr, 1. 4, 133— absol., Thuc. }\-82-,3-82:—so in aor. med., Arr. Epict. 4.1, 160. II, Pass., with fut,med. —edconat (in pass. sense), Xen. Cyr. 5.4, 345 fut. pass, -evdfcoyar, Dio C. 52.33: aor —«Bovaevdny Menand. “Lrof. 2.15, etc. (but v. supr.}. T+ T- b):—to have oot ‘formed against one, to be the object of plots, Aj atipho 114. 28., 126. 22, Thue. 4. 60, 64. 2. of , to be designed against, mparypya .., b rots Oeots .. €mBovrAeverar Ar. Pax 404; abq0l., Antipho 115.1, Thue, 3. 96; 7d émBovdrevipeva plots, Xen. Eq, Maci8- 9: 8. g Xen. Cyr. 1.5, 3, émiPAvw — ervyaula. émBovdn, 3, a plan against another, a plot, scheme, Hdt. 1. 12, Thuc. 4. 76, 86; mpds twa against one, Xen. An. 1. I, 8; & en Boudjs by treachery, treacherously, é{ én. Saray, && én. goveds Antipho IIg. 20., III. 433 cf. Thuc. 8, 92, etc.; so, pera émBovdjjs Plat. Legg. 867 A, al. : émPovdta, 4, treachery, Pind. N. 4. 60, Diod. Excerpt. 569. 2. émtBovdos, ov, plotting against, Tut Plat. Symp. 203 E: treacherous, Aesch. Supp. 587, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 27, Plat. Legg. 808 D; Bevds wal er. a deep, designing fellow, Lys. Fr. 45. 23 mOnKov, én. xaxédy Eubul. Xap. 1; (a én, Arist. H. A. 1. I, 325 7a, éniBovda treacheries, Plut. 2. 727 F:—Comp.—érepos, Plat. Theaet.174D. Adv., émBovdws yiyveobar Dion. H. 11. 49. émBpaBetw, to apportion, C. 1. 8735. 3, Eccl. émPpadive, to tarry or loiter at a place, Luc. Tim. 46. émBpaxeiv, inf. aor. 2 with no pres. in use, to echo, resound, énéBpaxe Q. Sm. 5. 498., 8. 408; in tmesi, Ap. Rh. 4. 642. émpPpuxv, Ady. for émt Bpaxd, v. mi 0.1. I. c. éniBpeypa, 76, a wet application, lotion, Ath. 692 A. “émBpéuw, to make to roar, 7d 8 [sc. wdp] émBpépet ts dvéuoro Il. 17. 739 :—Med. to roar, xeiAeow Ar. Ran. 680, cf. Opp. C. 4. 171. II. to roar out, én’ ebdopace Toad’ émBpépe Eur. Bacch, 15% :—absol. to ring, ovacw xn Musae. 193; orepomporv Q.Sm. 14. 458. émBpéxa, fut. fw, 2o pour water on, to water, Theophr. H. P. 5.3, 3; 70 rain upon, Tt ént Twa LXx (Ps. 10.6): to bathe, cited from Diosc. emBptOns, és, falling heavy upon, Aesch. Eum. 965. émPpOw [7], fut. iow, to fall heavy upon, fall heavily, of rain, 67” émBpion Avds buBpos Il. 5.91., 12. 286; in good sense, damdre 57) Ais Gpa émBpiceav irepOev when the seasons weigh down [the vines], i. e. make the clusters heavy, Od. 24. 344; so of winds, ér, mévry Theophr. Vent. 34; é dacea Q. Sm. 3. 326 :—metaph., Lat. incumbere, urgere, phnor émBploy modepos Il. 7. 3433 Of persons, éwéBpicav .. dupe dvaxra pressed closely, thronged around him, 12. 414, ef. Theocr. 22. 93, App. Civ. 4.25: also of wealth, dABos.. émBpicas émerat follows in full weight, Pind. P. 3.190; of love, Opp. C. 1.392; of wine, Ib. 4. 349; of sleep, Anth. P. 9, 481. II. trans. ¢o press in or on, dxoxhy éx. Opp. H. 2. 467. émBpipdopat, Pass. to be angry at, Gloss.: cf. émBpwpdopat. émPpopéw, to roar upon or over, of the sea, omAddecot Ap. Rh. 3. 1371; of lions, Opp. C. 3. 36; of sea-birds, fo scream over, meAdyecow Ap. Rh. 4. 240:—émp, d«ovai the ears ring, Sappho 2. 11 Bgk. (al. émippopBéw) ; and so in Pass., Opp’ .. émBpopéovro axovat Ap. Rh, 4.908. émBpovrdw, to thunder in response, Plut. Marcell. 12. émBpovrytos, ov, =euBpdvryros, frantic, Soph. Aj. 1386. émBpoxy, %, (em Bpéxw) a wetting, bathing, Galen. émBPptKw [0], fut. fw, o snap at another, Archipp. Tour. 2. én. 656vras to gnash the teeth, Anth. P. 7. 433. émBpixdopat, Dep. to roar at, Nonn. D. 2. 245, Aristid. 2. 394. émBpva, fut. dow [0], to burst over, as water: of flowers, to burst forth, Theocr. 22. 43; émBp. oxwAnge to be overrun by.., Alciphro 1. 17. a ig Dep. to bray at, rw Call. Del. 56; al. émeBpiparo. empvOlfw, to dip in water, Theophyl. Sim. Epist. 32. émPvorpa, 7), any stopper, stoppage, &rawv, Luc. Lexiph, 1. émBvw, fut. tow [0], to stop up, et ph... émBidce rs adrod 7d ordpa Cratin. Mur. 7; 70 ordp’ émBicas .. rav pyrdpwy Ar. Pl. 379 :—Med., émpBicac0a Ta dra Luc. Tim. g, pro Imagg. 29. émPw0éw, Ion. for émBonbéw, Hat. émPdpros, ov, (Bwpds) on or at the altar, yédos Aesch.Fr.22a; Top Eur. Andr. 1024; Bods Anth.P.9. 453; émBdpua par’ Epvew to drag them ¢o the altar, Ap. Rh. 4.1129; émPd&pua péev Theocr. 16. 26; of a suppliant, C. I. 6038. émPwoprooriréo, (as if from a Subst. émPBwpioordrys) to stand suppliant at the altar, Eur. Heracl. 44. émPwptrys [7], ov, 6, one who attends the altar, a sacrificing priest, Lysim. ap. Joseph. c, Ap. 1. 33. emBadoopat, Ion. for émBonoopat, fut. of émBodw, Hom. émBworpéw, Ion, and Dor. for émBodw, to shout to, call upon, Twa Theocr, 12. 35; Ahr. reads émP@rar =émBoarat, érlBwros, ov, Ion, for émBdnros. émPartwp, opos, 6,=Bdrwp, Burns, a shepherd, mBwropt phdov Od. 13. 222: cf, émBourdros, émtyavos, ov, (yf), -yaia) upon the earth, ra éniyata the parts on or near the ground, Hat. 2.125: cf, éni-yetos, émyapBpeta, Up connexion by marriage, Arr. Peripl. M. Rubri p. 152 and Gramm. :—émydpBpevors, ews, Anecd, Bar. in Phil. Mus. 2. 114. emcyapBpetw, to become son-in-law, 7 BactArc? Lxx (1 Regg. 18. 22), cf. Lyd. de Mens. 1. 13. II. én. yuvaixa, to take a woman to wife as her husband’s next of kin, LXX (Gen. 38. 8), Ev. Matth. 22. 24. émydpéo, fut. —yauéow, Att, ~yaip® :—to marry besides, én. mége néow to wed one husband after another, Eur. Or. 589; é1. Ti pnrépa TH Ovyarpi to marry the mother after the daughter, Andoc. 16. 46; é7. Téxvols unrpudy to marry and set a step-mother over one’s children, Eur, Alc. 305, ef. Plut. Cato Ma, 24; 2) émvyapnOeioa the second wife, Diod. 16. 93, Plut. Them, 32. emydphAvos, ov, nuptial, Eumath. p. 213. emydpia, 7, an additional marriage, Ath. 560 C. II. like Lat. 7 = jus bii, the right of intermarriage between states, émvyapias .. kai émepyacias xat émvoplas Xen, Cyr. 3. 2, 23; “AOnvaios dopey Emvyapiay Decret. ap. Dem. 256. 6, Inscrr. Cret. in C, I. 2554. 66, 2556. 13 :—generally, intermarriage, énvyaplas moveioOat Hat. 2. 147, cf, Decr. ap. Dem, 291. 4; Tut with another, Lys. TI. —_ ervryauios — eri'ypaumator os. 920. 1; map’ GAAHAos Xen. Hell. 5,2, 19; mpds GAAHAovs Arist. Pol. 3. 9, 10, Strabo 231; émyapiats xphoOa Arist. Pol. 3.9, 13. Cf. émepyacia. émvydpuos, ov, nuptial, ebxat Philo 2. 301. émlyapos, ov, marriageable, Hdt. 1.196, Dem. 1009. 14, etc. émyaivéw, to varnish over, Alex. Tov. 1. émydvupat [a], Pass. to exult in, rwi Greg. Nyss., Hesych., etc. émydorpwos, ov, (‘yaornp) over the belly: 7d én. the region of the sto- mach, from the breast to the navel, all below being the éroydorpiov, Plut. 2. 559 F, Aretae. Caus, M. Ac, 2. Io. II. metaph. devoted to the belly, Lat. ventri deditus, Bios Clem. Al. 173. émyaupsw, to make proud, Plut. 2. 78 C, etc. :—Pass. to be proud of, exult in, émvyavpwOels TH évroAf Xen, Cyr. 2. 4, 30; c. inf., Plut. Oth. 17. émySouTéw, Ep. for émbouréw to shout at or in applause (cf. érev- $npéw), emt & &ySovmnaav ’AOnvain re wal “Hpy Il. 11. 45: absol. to sound aloud, Anth. P. 9: 662; c. acc. cogn., xavaxny é. Nonn. D. 1.243. émvyetfo, to be on or of the earth, Herm. ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 1074. éncyelvopat, = émylyvouat, Pind. P. 4. 83, v. 1. Il. 10. 71. Pripeignrtne 22 =. ov, with stalk creeping on the ground, Theophr. H. P. 4, 5s émiyewos, ov, (yéa, yf) on or of the earth, terrestrial, (Ga Plat. Rep. 546A, cf. Arist. H.‘A. 9. 49 B, Io, P. A. 2. 13, 9, al., Anth. P. append. 309; cf. émlyacos. 2. as Subst., émi-yerov, 74, a stern-cable (cf. Tpupvhotos), ws eoloov er, Ar. Fr. 51, cf. 371. It is written éxfyuov in Harpocr., émi-yvoy in Polyb. 3. 46, 3 and Suid.; and these forms also occur in Inserr., v. Bockh Urkunden u. d. Att. Seewesen p. 162: cf. dmé-yatos. II. creeping, of plants, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 6. émyed-puAdos, ov, with its leaves on the ground, growing immediately JSrom the root, Theophr. H. P. 8.9, 9., 9. 10, 2. émyeAda, fut. dooua: [G], to laugh approvingly, like mpooyedda, Lat. arrideo, opp. to éreyyehaw (irrideo), yeAacay 8 én mavres ’Axacol Il. 23. 840, cf. Plat. Phaedo 62 A, Xen. Apol. 28, etc.; ér. rut to smile upon, Ar. Thesm. 979; Tiwt oxdxpavtt Theophr. Char. 2. 3: absol., edna émvyerG breaks with a plashing sound, Arist. Probl. 23.24; so, orépara émyeA@vra, of the mouths of rivers, Strabo 501; Adyou émvyeAavres pleasant words, Plut. 2. 27 F. IL. =éreyyeAdw, Luc. Bis Acc. 5. émyepllo, to lay as a burden, ént dvovs Lxx (Neh. 13. 15), cf. A. B. 94. émvyevertoupyés, dv, =yeveatoupyéds, Clem. Al. 668. émyevijs, és, (Emvylyvopa) growing after or late, Poll. 4. 194. émvyewvdopat, Pass. to grow after, Ath. 635 D. émvyévwypa, Dor. -Gpa, 76, that which grows upon, Hipp.156A. ITI. that which is produced after, Plut. 2. 637 E:—a result, consequence, Polyb. Fr. Gramm. 55; as philosoph. term of the Stoics, Archyt. ap. Stob. 15.1, Diog. L. 7. 86, Longin. 6. 2. in Medic. an after-symptom, Plut. 2. 910 E, Galen. émyevvnparirés, 7, dv, of the nature of an émvyévynua, resulting, con- sequential, Cic. Fin. 3.9. Adv. -*@s, Chrysipp. ap. Galen. Dogm. 3. émyepalpw, to give honour to, rivd Xen, Cyr. 8, 6, 11. émyevopat, Med. fo taste of, Tivos Plut. 2. 991 A, Ael. N. A. 4.15. Emyewpdpor, of, those after the yewpdpot, the artisans, A. B. 257. émynPéw, to rejoice or triumph over, ds pnre Oeds pHre Tis GAdos roiad émeynOe Aesch. Pr. 157 (where Elmsl. restored éyeyn0e, on the ound that yéy70a always has a pres. sense in Att.): fo exult in, yan mynonoavres Opp, H. 1. 170. émynpdcke, fut. dcopa: [a], to grow old one upon another, Julian. Ep. 24, cf. Od. 7. 120. bes Mee Ion, and later —ylvopat [7]: fut. émvyerqoopat: aor. érevyevouny : pf. émvyéyova: I. of Time, to be born after, come into being after, éapos 8 émvyl-yverat pn spring comes next, Il. 6. 148 (vulg. gapos 8 émvyl-yverar pp sc. rd PAdAa); of persons, Hdt. 7. 2; of émyryvépevor dvOpamot posterity, Id. 9. 85; of émyevdpevor tovTy cogiarat who came after him, Id. 2. 49; dvrt r@v dmodavévTav erepor -. €myevhoovra Xen. Cyr. 6, 1, 12, cf. Thuc. 6. 26; rH emvyevopéevn Hepa the following, the next .. , 1d. 3.75; Tov émvyeyvopévov Oépous Id, 4.52; Xpdvou émyyvopuevou as time went on, Hdt. 1. 28, Thuc. 1. 126; xpdvos .. mapa Adyov éemvyryvdpevos Id, 4. 26; Ta emt rovTrw emyevd- peva that happened after... , Hat, 8.37. 2. to come too late, Thuc. 3. 77% II. of persons, things, etc., to come upon, fall upon, be incident to, Lat. supervenire, c. dat., Bovdats ote éméyevro Tédos (syncop.) Theogn. 640; 1d TéAos én. rr Hdt. 3. 65, cf. 7. 157 :—esp. of sudden changes of weather and the like, ai ogu.. dpa rp Bpovry ceopdy ém- yevéoOa Id. 5.85; tAwover abrois yepdyv .. éreyévero Id. 8. 13, cf. Thuc. 4. 3; vd¢ éw. Hdt. 8. 70; vd er. 7G Epyw Thuc. 4. 25; dvepos éneyévero TH pdoyl seconded the flame, Id. 3. 74:—absol., tocatrn % Evupopda eneyeyévnro Id. 8. 96, cf. 1. 16; 7a émyvyvépeva each in succession, Id. 1. 71; ai jdoval émyryvdpevat the supervening pleasures, Plat. Rep. 574A, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 2. 3, 1. 2. to come in after, ént rH vavpaxin én. “Iortaios Hdt. 6, 27, cf. Ar. Eq. 136: to come upon, assault, attack, rt Thuc. 3. 30., 4.93; dpudderots én. Id. 7. 32, cf. 3. 108; of diseases, freq. in Hipp.; cf. Thuc. 2, 64, Dem. 946. 14, etc. 3. to befall, come to pass, Thuc. 5. 20. 4. to fall to one, become due, Dem. 497. 73 TA émyvyvdpeva the accruing interest, Arist. Pol. 3. 9, 5. 5. to be incident to, 50fq em. Weddds Te Kal dAnoés Plat, Phil. 37 B. 6. to be added, mpds te Arist, Cael. 2, 14, 13, etc. émytyvaoxw, Ion. and later —ytveoKe: fut. Emvyvdoopar: aor. éné- ‘wow: pf. éréeyvana. To look upon, witness, observe, iva mavres émyviwot .. papvapévous Od. 18. 30; Twa dpy(buevov Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 33,cf.Soph. Aj.18: rarely c. gen., Pind. P. 4. 497: V.sub yeyvwona. II. to recognise, know again, at xé p’ énvyvoln Od. 24. 217; Srws oe whrnp Hi ’aeyvécera paidp® mpoot&smw by thy glad face, Soph. El. 1297, cf. | 529 Plat. Theaet. 192 E. 2. of things, to find out, discover, detect, épyov Aesch. Ag. 1598, cf. Thuc. 1. 132; émeyvoins dy abriy [riv copiay] ..olkelav ywyvopévny you would recognise it when it became your own, Plat. Euthyd, 301 E; rodpdr émvyvods otvop’ Epigr. Gr. 506; —for Soph. Ant. 960, v. Pato. III. to come to a judgment, decide, tt mepi Twos Thuc. 3.57; 7a mpdaopa Trois otyopévois Id. 2.65; emvyv@- vat undév to come to no new resolve, Id.1.70; ém. 7 elvat Twds to adjudi= cate it as his property, Dion. H. 11. 52. IV. to recognise, acknowledge, approve, 1 Ep. Cor. 16. 18: cf. émlyvwots 11. émyAvoxpatvw, to make still more clammy, Hipp. Acut. 386. émvyAlxopat, Pass, to be eager for a thing, Clem. Al. 201. émtyAticalvw, to sweeten, Galen. II. intr. to be sweetish, Theophr. C. P. 6. 15, 4. émiyAvKus, eva, v, somewhat sweet, Theophr. H, P. 3. 18, 10. émyAvdw [iv], to carve on the surface, LXX (1 Macc. 13. 29). émyAwoodopat, Att. —rrdopat: Dep: (yA@ooa):—to throw forth ill language, utter abuse, unr’ eee wana Aesch, Cho. 1045; mept Tov *AOnvav obK emvyAwTTHaopat ToWDToY obdéy Ar. Lys. 37. II. c. gen. to vent reproaches against, radr’ émvyAwood Ards; Aesch. Pr. 929. émydwoots, Att. —rrls, (50s, 7), the valve which covers the larynx, the epiglottis, Hipp. 268. 30, Arist. H. A. 1, 11, 12. émyvaptrés, 7, dv, curved, twisted, h. Hom. Ven. 87. émyvapmrw, fut. yw, to curve, bend, HOcedre .. Gfar emvyvauwas Bipy Il. 21.178; éweyvaprrovro 5¢ x@mat Ap. Rh. 2. 59t, II. metaph. to bow or bend to one's purpose, “Hpn Accoopévn éméyvapwev Grayras Il. 2.14; émvyvdpwaca pldrov Kip 1. 569; eneyvaunrea vdoy écbdav 9. 514 (510) :—Med., Nic, Al. 363. émyvanrw, to clean clothes: 4o vamp up, Luc. Fugit. 28, éntyvaios, ov, cleaned, of clothes, Poll. 7. 77: cf. devrepoupyés. émyvapn, %, =éniyvwors, Hesych. émyvopootvn, %, prudence, LXx (Prov. 16. 23), Eccl. émi-yvopwv, ovos, 6, %, an arbiter, umpire, judge, c. gen. rei, Plat. Legg. 828 B, cf. 847 C, 867 E, C. 1. (addend.) 3641 5, Plut. Camill. 18 ; éx. Tis Tysfs an appraiser, Dem. 978. II. IL. , iA eTLOUvaTTEvW — eminpavos, Anth. P. 9. 58); émldp. Zepvporor overrun by the W. winds, Anth. P. Io. 13, cf. Opp. H. 3. 635; 7a éwidpopa Kat redid, of countries, Plut. Eumen. 9. IT. act. running over, spreading’, of sores, Nic. Th. 242. 2. metaph. over-hasty, rash, Spkos, yvm@pn Paus. 9. 21, 6.; 33. 3. 3. instant, imminent, Aesch, Supp. 124. III. éni- Spopos, 6, a cord which runs along the upper edge of a net, Xen. Cyn. 6, 9, Poll. 5. 29, cf. Plin. 19. 1; so, 8: épydvav émdpépor (prob.) by run- ning ropes, Plut. Sertor. 22» ef. wepiSpopos, 6. 2. a small sail at the stern, like the mizen-sail of a yawl (or, acc. to Poll. 1. gt, the mast of such a sail), v. Isid. Etym. 19. 3. éemdivacretio, to reign next to, after, T.vi cited from Synes. -émbvognpéo, to give an ill name to, rwi Arist, Eth. N. 7. 1, 3. émvw, aor. érédur, to set upon or so as to interrupt an action, pi) mplv én’ Hédcov Bivat Il. 2. 413; 6 HAcos pi) én. ed 7 Tapopyiop@ bpav Ep. Ephes. 4. 26, cf. Lxx (Deut. 24. 15), Philo 2. 324. emBdopdo, v. sub émdopéa, - embadpeba, v. EmbiSape 11. émBapéopat, Dep. to give besides, Galen. émbarns, ov, 5, (@m5idape) the Bountiful, epith. of gods, esp. Zeus, in Paus. 8. 9, 2, Plut. 2. 1102 F. emctxera, 7, (émieceqs) reasonableness, Adyos Exer émetnedy twa Hipp. Fraet. 772. 2. equity, as opp. to strict law, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 10, 8, etc. ; war’ émeixeiay, opp. to kard rods Spxous, Isocr. 377 D: cf. émeucts 11. 2. 38. of persons, 7 bleness, faii , equity, Thuc. 3. 40, 48., 5. 86, Plat., Isocr. Antid. § 160, etc.: also, goodness, virtuousness, Dem. 581.12, Arist. Eth, N. 10. 5, 6, al.; in pl., joined with xdprres, Isocr. 53 C. II. personified, Clemency, Plut. Caes. 57. emelkehos, ov, =eixedos, like, Tut, the mase. freq. in Hom. (esp. I1.), but only in phrases ér, dOavdrovoty, Oeois ém., Il. 1. 265, etc.; so, Oeois émeixeda réxva Hes, Th. 968: cf. émetredos. emexevdpat, Dep. to be émeuichs, LXXx (2 Esdr. 9. 8). emeueys, és, (elds) fitting, meet, suitable, riuBov ob péda TodASY.. , GAN émeneéa Toiov not very large, but meet in size, Il. 23. 246; rleovor Body émeé’ dpoiBhy a fair recompence for them, Od. 12. 382.— Elsewhere, Hom. has only the neut. émeiés, either parenthet., ds émeués as is meet, Ul. 19. 147., 23. 537, Od. 8. 839; or c. inf, dv #’ émekes dxovew when it may be meet for you to hear, Il. 1. 547; of” émetkes py’ Euev dOavdrow such as is meet they should be, 1g. 21, ef. 23.50, Od. 2. 207. II. after Hom., 1. of statements, rights, etc., a. reasonable, specious, % 5¢ rpitn [Tay ddav] .. , TOA- Aov emeikeotarn todoa, pddwora epevorar Hdt. 2. 22; én. mpdpacis Thuc. 3. 9; én. 686s a tolerable road, Plut. Crass. 22. b. opp, to dixaios, fair, equitable, not according to the letter of the law (v. Arist. Eth. N. 5. 14, Rhet. 1. 13, 13), ray dualov rd emeinéorepa mporibéact Hdt. 3. 53; ovyxapeiv ramen twi Ar. Nub. 1438; émeméorepov i dixatdrepoy Antipho 117. 40; én. duodoyla Thuc. 3. 4; yen Ar. Vesp. 1027; 70 éx. kal avyyvapov Plat. Legg. 757 D; mpds 70 én. =émer- xs 3, Thuc. 4. 19 :—generally = érpios, Dem. g15. fin. :—ef. émetxea It. 2. of persons, able, capable, mais ra wey ddda én, Apwvos 5E Hdt. 1. 85; of émenéoraro rev tpinpdpywy Xen. Hell. r. 1, 30; tives +. Tav veo éribogor yevécOar ér. may be expected to tum out well, make a figure in the world, Plat. Theaet. 143 D, cf. Rep. 398 B, Legg. 957A. b. in moral sense, reasonable, fair, kind, gentle, good, ér. tiv puxny, TH pice, Tots HOeow Id. Symp. 210 B, etc. ; absol., Thuc. 8. 93, Isocr. 12 D; én. dvdpes, opp. to poxOnpol, Arist. Pott. 13, 2: Toumernés, fairness, goodness, Soph. O. C. 1127; obre Tobm. ovre Thy xapw ofdey Id. Fr. 709. III. Adv. -«@s, Ion. —Kéws, fairly, tolerably, moderately, Lat. satis, éyydkdooe: ér. Hdt. 2. 92 ; én. Exe to be pretty well, Hipp. Coac. §76; ém. éfeniorac@at Ar. Vesp. 1249; ér. dvaic@nroy Arist. Gen. et Corr. I. 4, 33 ém. mAard Id. H. A. 1. 16, 17, cf. 17,18; of muperot és rerapratoy én. peOioravrat about the fourth day, Hipp. 139 A, cf. Alex. Incert. 37; ém. 70 rpirov pépos pretty nearly, about, Polyb. 6. 26, 8; réws pev én. for some little time, Plat. Phaedo 117 C; én, pev.. perhaps, Id. Gorg. 493 C. 2. probably, reason~ ably, Id. Rep. 431 E, etc. 3. with moderation, mildly, kindly, Plut. Pyrrh. 23; ém. €xew mpds twa Isocr. 310 D. émekrés, 7, dv, (elxw) yielding, Ep. word, in Hom. always with negat., abévos ob émerov unyielding, dauntless might, Il. 8.32, Od. 19. 4933 hivos .. ddaxerov, ov ér. Il. 5.892; mévOos dayeror, ov er. ceaseless, 16.549; but, épya yeAaorad Kal ov émeuerd not yielding, cruel, harsh, Od. 8. 307, ubi v. Nitzsch. , émetpevos, v. sub émévyupe. Emetoopar, émerodpevos, v. sub gree (ele ibo). ' émlekros, ov, =epexros, Auctt. Mus, éméASopar, post. for éréASopat, to desire, c. inf., Ap. Rh. 4.783. ém-eAterwp, opos, 5, one who rolls round, a word coined to explain the Homeric #Aexrwp, Schol. Il. 19. 398. éméAropat, Ep. for éréAmopat, q. v. émledmros, ov, to be hoped or expected, Archil. 69, Opp. H. 4. 311. émévviysr, to put on besides or over, xAaivay 5 éméooaper we threw a cloak over him, Od. 20. 143 :—elsewhere, Hom. has only the part. pf. Pass. émvesyevos, in metaph. sense c. acc., émepevos dAnhy, dvadeiny ex. clad in strength, shamelessness, Il. 1. 149., 8. 262, etc. ; ém. dyAvv Anth. P. 7. 283; Aeveotor képas én. dpos covered with hair over her white shoulders, Ap. Rh. 3. 45; xXaAxdy éméarae has brass upon or over it, Orac. ap. Hdt. 1. 47 :—Med. to put on oneself besides, put on as an upper Barment, xAaivas énelvvoGa Hat. 4. 64; metaph., ent 38 vepédny Eo- carro Il. 14. 350; yhv émecodpuevos (poét. fut.) i.e. to be buried, Pind. N. 11. 21; so, yhv émécacbat Xen. Cyr. 6. 4,63 viv émevvipeba Anth. 533 xpdxas having wrapt one’s shoulders with it, Pind. N. 10. 82.—Old Ep. Verb, not found till late in the form épévyuju, because of the digamma, v, &vyupu, earaévvuju; éméoaobat is retained even in Xen. l.c.; but épéavec@ar, épécoaro, épegodevos occur in Ap. Rh. 1. 691, 1326, Theocr. 1, c., Anth. P. 7. 299, 446. émepydafopat, v. sub érepyacouat. emerns, és, (éros) of this year, xiv Polyb. 3. 55, I. émbdve, Ion, for épifaver. emldipéw, = émBapéw, Eur. Rhes. 441, Phoen. 45 (ubi v. Valck. and Pors.): cf. (épeOpov, and v. sub Z ¢, ; émbadedos [a], ov, vehement, violent, xddos Il. 9. 525. Adv. ém¢a- Peds (as if from ém{ageAgs, which never occurs, v. Eust. 769. 22), vehe~ mently, furiously, ér, xadenaiveay, peveatvey, Il. 9. 516, Od. 6. 330; épeeivewh, Hom. Merc. 487; also, ém(dpedov xoréovoa Ap. Rh. 4.1672. —Only Ep. (The simple (d@eAos never occurs: it is plainly connected with the intens. Prefix ¢a-.) ° émfaw, Ion.-Ldw, to overlive, survive, et éxé(woe Hdt. 1.120; ay.. ém(n (vulg. ém(hp) Plat. Legg. 661 C: metaph. of envy, Plut. Num. 22. émfeiw, post. for ém(éw, Orph. Arg. 457. émilepa, 74, (ém(éw) a boiling or boiled liquid, Symm.V. T. émevyvipe and -tw: fut. -Cevéa. To join at top, Hdt. 7. 36; rods kiovas Tots émarvAios Plut. Pericl. 13: simply to bind fast, xeipas iudot Theocr. 22. 3. 2. to join to, Lat. adjungere, mwdots +» T6vd’ émeCevgac’ dxov Aesch. Eum, 405: metaph., ém¢. xowdr dvoud 7 wai ron Arist. H. A. 4. 7, 1, cf. Rhet. 3. 5, 7:—metaph. in Pass., und emevxOijs oréua phuais movnpais. nor let thy mouth be joined to evil sayings, Aesch. Cho. 1044; mathem., émCetixO «rd. let the point A be joined to the point B, Arist. Meteor, 3: 5, 7, al. II. to inclose, Polyb. I. 75, 4+) 3-49, 7- émiLevernp, jpos, 5, a band, Hesych. émlevirixés, 4, dv, connective, Schol. Ap, Rh. 1. 1349. éentfevkis, ews, 1), a fastening together, joining, Theophr. H. P. 2. 6,. I. II. in Gramm. the repetition of a word, Hdn. in Walz Rhett. 8. 603. émlépitipos, ov, towards the west, western, Euphor. 68:—the Italian Locrians were called "Em(epvpot, Pind. O. 10. 18, Hdt. 6. 23, etc. émbéw, fut. -(éow, to boil over, mupds kat KAvbves émCécayros Plut. 2. 399 D: to bubble up, Arr. in Stob. append. 2. 5 :—metaph., dxovcavti pot i} vedrns éréfece my youthful spirit boiled over when I heard, Hat. 7-133 % XoA}) emer Ar, Thesm. 468; Oupdrow ééCecer (as if he had said Ovpdés) Id. Ach, 321; «évrp’ ém¢éoavra, of the poison working oué of the skin, Soph. Tr. 840: c. dat., devdy Tt Hua Mprapidas éméCece Eur, Hec. 583. II. Act. to make to boil, heat, c. acc., émeiv A€Bnra Eur. Cycl. 392, cf. Musgr. (ap. Dind.) ad l.; so perh, I. T. 987, unless with Dind. we take it dev tus dpyn éeméCece, dyer Te TA Omeppa KTA. énifndos, Dor.-faAos, ov, enviable, happy, Bacchyl. 1.2, Aesch. Ag. 939- eminddw, to yearn after, Tt Julian 103 ©, émfqpros, Dor. -Ldpros, ov, ((nula) bringing loss upon, hurtful, pre- judicial, Charon Fr, 12, Thuc. 1. 32; twi Xen. Mem. 2. 7, 9. 2. penal Arist. Pol. 4. 13, pe ua, TA, punishments, penalties, Plat. Legg.784E, 788B; xpnodpeba em (nplors =emiCnpewooper, Dem. 280. 15: cf. émeAdw. II. liable to punishment, Plat. Legg. 765 A, Aeschin. 7.13. émnpréa, to mulct, crarhpe xara roy dvdpa Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 22. émbnptopa, 7d, a penalty, Tab. Heracl. in C. 1.5774. 155, Poll. 8. 149. émilntéw, to seek after, ask for, wish for, miss, Lat. desiderare, rwa Hat. 3. 36., 5. 24, cf. Plut. Sull. 19; ém. Tov dv@pwmov to make further search for .., Dem, 271.16; ris airias airiay én. to require to know, Polyb. 1.5, 3 —absol., of ém(nrodvres the beaters (for game), Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 25 :—Pass., rad émi(nrovpeva tepi rt the things which are required, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 8, 5. 2. to seek for besides, Arist. Top. I. 2, 25 pnd érep’ em nre xadd Antiph.”Apx. I. 5 :—Pass,, ém(nreira: is matter of question, Arist. Eth. N. 10. 2, 4; €7. wérepoy .. Ib. 9. 9, 2, etc. émbarnua, 7, a question, Clem. Al. 528. émfarnors, ews, ;. a seeking after, twos Galen,: inquiry, Joseph. c. Ap. I. 223 émtntyréov, verb, Adj. one must inquire, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 3, I. émbodow, to darken yet more, Eccl. émbvyéw, in Nic. ap. Ath. 683 C, in pass, sense, /o be joined. émbvyis, (Sos, 7, an iron pin to fixthe string of the ballista, Philo Belop. 53. émbliysw, to shut to, ras Ovpas Artemid. 1. 4, Poll. 10. 26. éembawipr, fut. -(wow, to gird on:—Pass., éme(wopévar with their clothes girt on so as to leave the breast bare, Hdt. 2. 85; éme{wopévos eyxetpiixov girt with.., Plut. C. Gracch, 15; rawlas roy xiT@va em (wadeis Paus. 9. 39, 8. ‘oorpa, 7), = (wornp, a girdle, Soph, Er. 216, émlaw, Ion. for ém aw, Hdt. 1. 120. émtnAe [7], v. sub émdddrw. émuqvbave, v. sub épavddvw, éxinpa pépev,=pa pepe or hpa empépew to bring one acceptable gifts, much like to do one a kind service, xapi{eo0at, éninpa pépovta Soph. O. 'B. 1095, cf, Rhian. ap. Stob. t. 4. 343; émlnpa pépecOae Ap. Rh, 4. 375; 5€x@ae Anth, P. 43. 22: éninpa as Ady. for the sake of, twvdés Nonn. Jo. 8 v. 46, II. a sing. éwinpos pleasant, grateful, occurs in Emped. 211; the neut. in Lesches (Fr. Hom. 56); Comp. ém- péorepos in Epich. ap. Eust. 1441. 15. Cf. #pa, émnpavos. , (Buttm. Lexil., vy. pa 8, rejects the word in Hom., reading ent pa pepay, i.e. Tipa émepépey, v. sub pa: but éninpa (cf. the compd. émjpavos) is prob. to be retained in later writers.) ; 4 émunpivos, ov, pleasing, acceptable, ob8€ ri pot modavimrpa moddv P, 7. 480, cf. Theocr. Epigr. 8.4; but also c, dat. rei, émecodpevor vara % emnpava Ovp@ Od. 10. 343 :—after Hom. the sense passes into that of 534 helping, assisting, like dpuvrucés, Mivdats émypavos Orph, Arg. 97; of ruling, governing, ’A8nvalav émhpave Anth. P. append. 50. 1, cf. Nonn. D. 2. 10; so, xaddy én. Epyav Emped. 429; epith. of Bacchus, Ion ap. Ath. 447 F:—then, warding off, repelling, émhpavos dons dxdvraw Anth. P. 9. 41. II. act., vevpwy émufjpavos strengthening, giving ten- sion, Plat. Com. #a. 1. 19.—Cf. Piers. Veris. 106, Buttm. Lexil. v. pa 12. éninpos, ov, v. sub éxinpa, apio-ypados, 6, a writer of epithalamia, Tzetz. prolog. Lyc. Los, ov, (OdAapos) belonging to a bridal, nuptial, + Salt. 44s ém, gdai Dion. H. de Rhet. 4. 1: as Subst., émPaddjuos, 6 or 4 (sub. vos or 5H), the bridal song, sung in chorus before the bridal chamber, v. Theocr. 18, Luc. Symp. 40, Himer. Or, 1. ins, ov, 6, epith. of Hermes in Euboea, Hesych. émBidaccibios, Att. ~rridios, ov, =sq., Thuc. 4. 76, Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 28, etc.; émOadarriatos is retained by Kramer in Strabo 73, 167. émOGAdcotos, Att. -rrios, a, ov, also os, ov Xen. Hell. 3.1, 16: (0d- Aagoa) :—lying or dwelling on the coast, Lat. maritimus, Hdt. 1. 154; 7a émiaddoora Id. 5. 30; ém. ris MeAowovyfjaov Thuc. 2. 56: marine, Epich. 68 Ahr.—In App. Hisp. 12 émOdAacaos is f.1. éemBadays, és, warm, Hesych. émOddmw, to warm on the surface, yatay Xenophan., cf. Plut. 2. 780 E, Ael, N. A. Io. 35. ; émPapBéw, to marvel at, Nonn. Jo. 7. v.15. émBavarios, ov, (Odvaros) condemned to death, Dion. H. 7 .35 :—Adv., émbavariws éxev =emibavarws éxev, Ael. V. H. 13. 26. TI. ai én, 535es the funeral torches, Liban. 4. 588. émdviros, ov, sick to death, hard at death’s door, Dem. 1225. 1:— Ady. —ras éxeuv, to be sick to death, Poll. 3. 106. Il. deadly, HBwots Hipp. Mochl. 861; of poisons, Theophr. C. P. 6. 4, 5. émBavis, és, (Gaveiv) = émiOavaros, Anon. ap. Suid. émOdrrw, to bury again, Philostr. 670. II. to bury another in the same grave, C. 1. 4341 d, 4366 k, sqq. émapréw, Att.—ppéw, to put trust in or on, re Plut. Brut.37. ‘IT. to take heart to resist, rois €x@pois App. Civ. 3. 10, cf. Acl. N. A. 4. 34., 9.1; én. 7G meAdyer to venture on.., Ib. 5. 56. émBapoivw, Att. —pptve, to cheer on, encourage, Twé Il. 4. 183, Dion. H. 10. 41, Plut. Mar. 36. émBaupdtw, to pay honour to, én. rov &i5doKadov by giving him a fee, Ar. Nub. 1147; ém@avyacas in admiration at .. , Plut. Marcell. 30, Arr. Epict. 1. 26, 12. embedtor, = emBerd{w, to invoke the gods against, vwi Pherecr. Mupp. 10; absol., dyavaxr@v al éx. with imprecations, Plat. Phaedr. 211 B. 2. =émiBeaalw I, v. sub émbodta. éme toview from above, Schol. Ar,: to reflectona thing, Poll. 6.115. émBerd£w, to call upon in the name of the gods, to adjure, conjure, Lat. obtestari per deos, rooadra émbedoas, Thuc. 2.75; é. pi) Karayev Id. 8, 53; c. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. @adooev 6 and v, émbed{w. II. to lend inspiration, 7@ Adyw Plut. Them. 28: to inspire, rwi Id. 2. 580 D, 589 D. b. absol. to be inspired, to prophesy, Dion. H. 1. 31. 2. to deify, ascribe to divine influence, ras mpages Plut, 2. 579 F. éemOetiors, ews, 7,=sq., Plut. 2.1117 A. émeacpés, 6, an appeal to the gods, Thuc. 7. 75, in pl. a; inspiration, Poll. 1. 16, Philo 2. 299- émOetre, Ep. 2 pl. opt. aor. 2 of émrlOnu, Hom. émbédyw, fut. fa, to soothe, assuage, Ti opyiy Plut. 2. 456 B. émiBena, 76, later form for ém{@nua (which must be restored in Hipp. 469. 47), Arist. H. A. 4. 4, 24 (v.1.—Onua), Diod. 3. 14, Paus. 1. 2, 3; y. Lob. Phryn. 249: 1. a cover, Joseph. A. J. 3. 6, 5, C. 1. 989 4, 991d. 2. the capital of a column, Lxx (3 Regg. 7. 16 sq.). 3. an external application, Aretae, Cur. M. Ac. 2. 2, si sana 1. , gimretiw, to be diligent about, work zealously for, riv Kabodov Thuc, 8. 47: to serve diligently, Ib. 84:—Pass., mpds twos Dio C. Fr. Ursin. 161. II. to apply additional remedies, Hipp. Mochl. 866, ef. Geop. 17. 23, 2. . émPeppatvopar, Pass, to become feverish, Hipp. Epid. I. 938, cf. 3. 1112. éniBeois, cas, }, (émrlOnu) a setting on its base, rod dvbpiayros C. 1. 3124:—a laying or putting on, Trav xepav Act. Ap. 8. 18, etc.; appli- cation, émtxpiarwy Plut. 2, 102 A. 2. an addition, opp. to daipects, Arist. de Juv. etc. 5, 11. 8. an application of epithets, Arist. Rhet. 3. 2, 14. II. (from Med.) a setting upon, attack, Antipho 117. 41; ém, ylyveral ru Xen. An. 4. 4, 225 1) Mepady er. ois “EAAqat Plat. Legg. 698 B; trav émdécewy ai piv ent 7d o@pa yiryvovTa Trav dpxdvrav attempts, Arist. Pol. 5. 10, 145 &m. ovorioa éni rive Ib. 5. 7, 33 movetoat Ib.5.10,25; ard twos Dion. H. 5.75 Tots Epryous Polyb. I. 45, 2. 2. c. gen. an attempt to gain, Ths Tupavvidos Diod. 13. 92, etc. 8. =tnideua, a cover, C.1. 3516. 4. imposture, de- ception, Eccl.: cf, émBerqs. * ‘@, of the Pythian Priestess, to prophesy or divine upon, r® rpimobt Hdt. 4. 179. II. of an oracle, o give sanction, Twi Dion. H. 2.6; ér. BaatAciay mii Id. 3. 35- é , 6, the sanction of an oracle, Arr. An. 6. 19, 9. émBeréov, verb. Adj. of émri@nu, one must impose, dienv Plat. Gorg. 507 D. II. one must lay one's hand to, set to work at, tivi Plat. Soph. 231 C, Symp. 217 C. émBérns, ov, 6, a plotter, impostor, Luc. ae 172. émbericés, 4, dv, (emriPepar) hor to ers ; Spies aie Mem. 4.1, enterprising, 07, arnyos Ib. 3- 1, 6; ember Taros wept macas Tas rg ers Ast, Pol a 1; 27. IL. (émcriOnpe) added, Lat. ad- iy “tm. the adjective, Apo'\. Constr. p. 81; and so Adv. -1és, . D. 35, Schol. Il. 13. 29. << 4 Eth. N. 3. 10,6 eed 4 >. , er inpos — er OuunTos. emideros, ov, (émridnuc) added, annexed, pudat Dion. H. 3. 71; én, éfoucia assumed power, Plut. Cleom. Io. 2: adventitious, adsci- titious, alien, éoprat Isocr. 145 C; émOupiat, opp. to owal, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 11, 1; én. 7H pdoe and Meuand. Incert. 5: fictitious, Theophr. H. P. 9. 8, 8: opp. to dAndwds, Dion. H. 4. 70, cf. 68 ef, énanrés, éninryros. II. as Subst., émtOerov, 76, an epithet, Arist. Rhet. 3-3, 3, etc. 2. masc., a throw of the dice, Eubul. Kuf. 2. III. Ady,, émérws A€yewv to describe or indicate by epithets, Strabo 36. émbéw, fut. Cedcopa, to run upon, at or after, Hdt. 9. 107, Xen. Cyn. 6, 10; twa App. Hisp. 27; én. mpds ry waxny Hdn. 6, 7. II. to run upon the surface of water, Arist. H. A. 5. 19, 13. émPewpéw, to examine over again or carefully, to ascertain, tt Hipp. Acut. 397, Philem. Incert. 49, Dion. H. de Rhet. 3. 2, Plut. Demetr. 1. émewpyais, ews, %, contemplation, M. Anton. 8. 26, émOhyw, to whet or sharpen yet more, Ta Kévtpa Acl. N. A. 5. 16: metaph. to stimulate yet more, Tas émOvplas Plut. 786 A. emOhKn, %, (EmeriOnur) an addition, increase, Hes. Op. 378; KamOnnny rérrapas and 4 drachmas over, Ar. Vesp. 1391. éwiOnpa, 74, something put on (cf. emi@cua), v.C.1. 2663; hence, 1. a lid, cover, pupiapayv émOhpara lids of chests, Il. 24, 228, cf. Hippon, 47 (41), Hat. 1. 48; dowida éx. 7O ppéart wapabes Ar. Fr. (v. Dind. 2. p. 505); Todm. ris xdrpas dpedAdy Hegesipp. Ad. 1. 13: a slab, used as the top of a table, Ath. 49 A. 2. a monument, sepulchral figure, Isae. 2. 36, Plut. Num. 22, Paus. I. 2, 3., 43. 8., 2. 7, 2,-etc. 3. the head of a spear, Diod. 5. 30. 4. a device on a shield, Paus. 5. 25, 9. émOnpaticés, 7, dv, of or for émOqpara, Poll. 7. 208. émOnparoupyla, 7), a making of lids or covers, Plat. Polit. 280 D. émOnpatdw, to put a lid upon, 7 Anticl. ap. Ath. 473 C. émOnpapxia, 7), the command of elephants, Ael. Tact. 23; émOqpap- xos, 6, the officer commanding them, Ib. émOnoavpit, to store up: verb. Adj. ém@noavpioréov, Clem, Al. 336. émOryydve, aor, éréOl-yov :—ito touch on the surface, touch lightly, Theophr. de Odor. 11; 77s xepadjs Plut. T. Gracch, 19:—to reach as Jar as, dns én, Tis Oaddoons Id. 2.921 D. éniOAdors, ews, 7, a crushing on the surface, Oribas. Cocch. 86. émOA(Bw [7], fut. Yo, to press upon the surface, Diod. 3. 14: metaph. to annoy, Plut. 2, 782 D. émlOAuis, ews, 7), pressure on the surface, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 9. émOvncke, to die afterwards, cited from Dion. H. . émBodtw, in Aesch, Cho, 856 (a5’ éwevxopévn xdmBodfovo’) and Eur. Med, 1409 (rd Kat Opnv& xamBoa{w) is commonly interpreted, fo sit as a suppliant at an altar, to pray the gods for aid, cf. @oa¢w 11: but in the Med. Ms. of Aesch. the o is doubtful, and Schiitz (foll. by most Editors) read ém@éaCouo’ invoking the gods; if so, xdémeagw must also be restored in Eur. émlBodos, ov, turbid, tSwp Io. Lyd. de Ostent. 8. émBodu, tomake turbid, Luc.Lexiph.4: Pass. to becomeso, Plut.2.894F. ém@dpvupar, Dep. ¢o cover, of male animals, Bovat Luc. Amor. 22, etc.; én, ais yeyapnuevas Philostr. 212, cf. 813: cf. droOdpyupat. émBopow, (Oépos) to impregnate, Clem, Al. 222. emBopt Btw, to shout to, Lat. acclamare : 1. in token of approval, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 50, etc. 2. in token of displeasure, Id. Hell. 1. 7, 13, emOpdcow, Att. -rrw, contr. for émrapdoow, Hesych. emOpavw, to break besides, dprov Anth. P. 6. 105. émOpétas, v. sub émrpéxo. émiOpemros, ov (rpépw) well-fed, corpulent, Hipp. 106 D. emp véw, to lament over, c. acc., Babr. 118, 8, Plut. 2. 123. C. emp] ois, ews, 7), lamentation over, Plut. 2. 611 A. ry ey dopar, Pass. to curdile, Nic. Al. 364. emdpt €, to babble to, Eccl. émOpinrw, to enfeeble, enervate, Philostr. 46:—Pass. to practise affecta- tions, Aristaen, I. 28; émreOpuppévos effeminate, Plut. Dio 17. : emOpdoe : fut. —Oopotpar: aor. -€0opov :—to leap upon, ¢. gen., vnds emOpwoxev Il, 8. 515, cf. Eur. Rhes, 100: also c. dat. to leap (con- temptuously) upon, like Lat. insuliare, TopBw émOpwoxav Meveddov Il. 4.177. : II. to leap over a space, réaaov émOpwoxouar so far do [the horses] spring at a bound, ll. 5.772; paxpd émOp. Hes. Sc. 438 :—to jut out, ofa wall, Orph. Arg. 491,1273, III. ¢o rise, 6uixAy Musae. 113, emBudXis, (Bos, j,=yhOvor, Ath. 371 E. emdipéo, (Gupéds) to set one’s heart upon a thing, lust after, long for, covet, desire, c. gen. rei, Hdt. 2. 66, Aesch. Ag. 216, etc.; also c. gen, pers., Lys. 96. 40, Xen. An. 4.1, 14 (even c. acc, pers., Menand. ap. Clem. Al. 605 D); of political attachments, Andoc, 32. 43, Lys. 158. 12 :—c. inf. to desire to do, mA@oa Hat. 1, 24; dm«véecda Ib. 116; mepicod dpav Soph, Tr. 617, etc. :—absol. to desire, covet, Thuc. 6, 92, Plat. Prot. 313 D, etc, :—rd emOvyoiy rod tho) =émOvpla, eagerness for it, Thuc. 6, 24 Pass. to be desired, ra. émOvpobpeva Plat. Phil. 35 D. émBipnua [0], 74, the object of desire, Xen, Hier. 4, 7- Jearning, desire, Hipp. 2. 44, Plat. Legg. 687 C, etc. emBipnors [®], ews, %, a longing desire, cited from Isaeus. émophrerpa, 7}, fem. of sq., Call. Dian, 237. . TNS, OV, 0, one who longs for or desires, vewrépwy Epyav Hat. 7: 6, Andoc, 29. 32; Tipfjs, coias Plat, Rep. 475 B, etc.; poet modcuou em. Arist, Pol. 1, 2, To. 2. absol. a lover, follower, Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 60. émBipnrixds, 7, év, desiring, coveting, lusting after, rwos Plat. Legg. 475 B, al.: 7d ém9. that part of the soul which is the seat of the desires and affections, Plat. Rep. 439 E, Arist. Eth.N.1.13, 2, al. Ady., ém- upnriuccs exew rivés = émOupeiv, Plat. Phaedo 108 A. émdipnrés, 4, dv, desired, to be desired : 7a én. objects of desire, Arist. Ila é ’ , 4 > , S em Ouula — emikaurios. ém@ipta, Ion. ty, 7, (emOvpew) desire, yearning, longing, én. éere- Aéoat Hdt. 1.32; émOupia by passion, opp. to mpovola, Thuc. 6.13; so Plat., etc.:—esp, sensual desire, lust, Plat., etc.; af mept 7d o@pa én. Plat. Phaedo 82 C; ém. mpés twa Xen. Lac. 2, 14. 2. c. gen. a longing after a thing, desire of or for it, JdaTos, cirov Thuc. 2. 52., 7. 84, etc.; ris Tipwpias Antipho 115. 29; THs ped’ byav wodrretas Andoc, 21.7; ris wapOevias Plat. Crat. 406 B; els ém. ruvds édGeiv Id. Criti. 113 D; év é. twos eivae or yiyveoOat Id, Prot. 318 A, Theaet. 143 E, Legg. 841 C; eis én. rds dpucéoda Id. Tim. 19 B; én. twvds éuBadrew ti Xen, Cyr. 1. 1,5; én. €wmoretvy rx els tiva an inclina- tion towards .. , Thuc. 4. 81. II. =émOdpnya, émbupias tvxelv Pittac. ap. Stob. 46. 6, cf. Ath, 295 A. émPipiapa, 76, an incense-offering, Soph. O.T. 913. emOiplaors, ews, 4, an offering of incense, C. 1. 3008 A. 24. émOiprarpés, 5, one who burns incense, C. 1. 2983. emOipidw, fut. dow, to offer incense, Plut. Alex. 25, C. I. 271 BGs. acc., 7@ Bopég ArBavidiov Menand, Kapx. 1, cf. Plut. 2. 372 C. émOvptos [0], ov, =emOupnrixds, Manetho 4. 565. émiBdpts, lSos, %, a wreath of flowers for the neck, Hesych. ; cf. #rofu- pis. II. émOipis, iSos, 7, thyme, Diosc. 3. 38. émiObp.6-Sertrvos, ov, eager for dinner, Plut. 2. 726A. one 76, a parasitic plant growing on thyme, Cuscuta Epithymis, iosc. 4.179. , énr-Wivw, = émevOdyw, Soph. Ph. 1059, Ap. Rh. 3. 1325. émiBiicrdw, to offer incense, Sophron ap. E. M. 443. 53. Bens €ws, 7), an after-sacrifice, Inscr. Cnid. in Newton, ap. Eus. . E. 34 B. émOurns [0], ov, 5, one who presides over sacrifices, C. 1. 3663 A. 15. éniOtw, (00a A): fut. vow [¥]:—to sacrifice besides or after, TéA€ov veapois ém@voas Aesch. Ag. 1504; ént 8’ d0vca pyrépa Eur. Or. 562 :— so in Med., Népwm P'éABay ém. Plut. Galb. 14, cf. Marcell. 29. II. zo offer incense on the altar, Wess. Diod. 12.11: to offer on, ént Tod Bwpod tds dexaras Dion. H. 1. 40: generally to offer, MBavwrdv Trois Oeois Ar. Pl. 116. émOdw, (dw B) :—to rush eagerly at, ds dv émOdcavres édoipeBa Od. 16. 297. 2. c. inf. to strive vehemently to do a thing, épdccacOa -- Tpwes émOvovar Il. 18. 175; Oupds émOder xOaplCew h. Hom. Merc. 475; soalsoinAp.Rh. [Only used in pres., and always émi@tw. Since t is long, it has been thought the simple Verb is not @vw, but i0da; but idvw always has ¥, so that the form ought to be émOdva. The t of ém- is lengthd. in arsi, v. Spitzn. Vers. Her. 85, 86.] émBwpaxiStov, 76, a tunic worn over the O&pagt, Plut. Artox. 11. émPwpaxifopar, Med. to put on one’s armour, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 27. emPupyocopar, Pass. to get ready for the fight, Ap. Rh. 1. 42. émPwtioow, to shout or call out, give loud commands, Aesch. Pr. 73; ovi« dxotoas éxeObii~as rodro thou didst urge this upon not unwilling ears, Ib. 277; xddAapos kemras emOwifer Eur. I. T. 1127. II. to cheer on, okvdAaxas Synes. 320 C. emidpov, ov, gen. ovos, =émilormp, Twés Anth. P. 6, 175. emviepevs, éws, 6, a presiding priest, C. 1. 381. émifopar, Ion. for épéCouat, Anth. P. 11. 403. emiorop, opos, 6, %, privy to a thing, Lat. conscius, c. gen., weyaAwy épyov én. privy to great works (i.e. the robbery of the mares), Od. 21. 26, cf. Lehrs. Aristarch. p. 116; so, redv pOwy ér. Ap. Rh. 4. 89, ef. 16. 2. acquainted with, practised in, Lat. sciens, dioxwy, -yewpe- tpins Anth. P, 11. 371, append. 26. 7. éemkayxabw, to laugh loud at, rivi Eccl.: cf. kaxdtw. plane! erage to exult in, rit Q. Sm. 1. 161. émiadarpéw, to pull down or destroy besides, Thuc. 8. 20. émka0aipw, to purge yet more, Rufus Matth. 286. éemKddapors, ews, 4), additional purging, Clem. Al. 128. émuaPelopar, Pass. to sit down upon, éri rut Ar. Pl. 185, where how- ever émcadétnrac is better taken as subj. aor. of émmaSifowac: part. aor. I émxadeoOeis, Artemid. 2. 20. émxabetSu, fut. —rabevdjaw, to sleep upon, twit Luc. adv. Indoct. 4: sit on eggs, Arist. H. A. 5.9, I. émkaOnAdw, to nail fast to, Apollod. Poliorc. 17. émdOnpat, Ion, -Kdrqpar, Pass. To sit upon, rt Hat. 6, 72, Ar. Eq. 1098: to press upon, be heavy upon, éi ru Ar. Ran. 1046: also c. acc., ém. kaumdous App. Syr. 32; méAis ..Adpov émaOnpevy Dion. H. I. 14:—absol. to sit upon eggs, to incubate, Arist. H. A. 5. 33, 5+ 9- 33: of bees, ém, ém? rots xnpiois Ib. 9. 40, 23. 2. én. ent rijs tpame (ns to sit at his counter, of a banker's clerk or money-changer, Dem. I 189. 20; and absol., 6 ém«ajpevos Id. 946. 14., 1193. fin. 3. of rain, to cling to a flower, Theophr. C. P. 3. 24, 4. IL. to sit down ‘ against a place, besiege it, absol., Thuc. 7.27; c. dat., App. Mithr. 78. éemcabibave, =émixabi(w, emi 7: Antiph. Szpar. 2. 12. émucabite, to set upon, Twa ent te Hipp. 838 C:—Med., pudaniy ére- nabicavro had a guard set, Thuc. 4.130 (where some Mss. érexabia- tayro, whence Poppo émxaiorayto). II. intr. to sit upon, wede mis émexdbicey Ent Tots yeldeot Eupol. Anp. 6; Tois kapxnators én. to light upon, Plut. Them. 12. 2. to sit down against, besiege, mode Polyb. 4. 61, 6. émkabinut, to let down, set upon, rt Tur Ephipp. Navay. i. to let down, shut, miAas App. Hannib. 51. émaliornpr, fut. karacthow:—to set upon, establish, pvdaras Dio C. 41.50; cf. émxadica. 2. to set over others, xprras Plat. Tim. 72 B. 8. to establish besides, tiv T&v’Epdpav dpxhy Arist. Pol. 5. II, 2; én. rd orparnydv to appoint as successor in command, Polyb. 2. 19,8; and in Pass., émxataoraéels orparnyés Ib, 2, 11. 2. 535 email, to renew, restore, LEX (1 Macc. 10. 44), in aor. pass. émtxaworopéw, =sq., Eus. H. E. 7. 3. émucatvoupyéw, to contrive novelties, Democr. ap. Stob. 4. 39. ‘ émcatvéw vdpous to introduce innovations into the laws, pi) mxawobvTwr vépous Aesch. Eum. 693 (as Steph. for pi) ’mxawdvrwv); Wakef. pi *mxpavovrov, violating. : ématvupat, Dep. to surpass, excel (v. katvupat), mavras én’ dvOph- mous éxéxacro bABy TE TAoUTYH Te Il. 24. 535 :—to be adorned or fur= nished with, ént ppect meveadipyor néxacrat 20. 353; ols émuaivurat inmos (vulg. émuctvurar), Q. Sm. 12. 145. - émuatpla, 7, opportunity, Hipp. 271. 10, Democr. ap. Diog. L. 9. 48. |! émuxatpios, ov,=énixaipos, Xen. Occ, 5, 4 :—Adv. —iws, conveniently, Strabo 424. 2. important, rd émarpiwrara rhs TéxVNs Xen. Occ. 15, 11; and of persons, of ér. the most important persons of the army, Id. Cyr. 3. 3, 12, cf. Hell. 3. 3, 11; ¢. inf, of Oepamevec@at emxaipioc those whose cure is all-important, Id. Cyr. 8.2, 25. 3. of parts of the body, vital, rémoe éx. Tim. Locr. 102 D. émlkapos, ov,=foreg., in fit time or place, in season, seasonable, op- portune, suitable, convenient, advantageous, Soph. O. T. 875, Thuc. 6. 343 vixn Id. 8. 106: of places, émaupérarov xwploy mpds Ta ent Opaxns dmoxphoa Id. 1.68; 7a é. advantageous positions, Xen. Hier. 19, 5 ; Tods émkaipovs Tay Témwv Dem. 234. 14, cf. Arist. Pol. 7.12, 1; vijcos év émixaupordrw Kepévn Isocr. Antid. § 115; 7a émxatpérara Arist. Rhet. 2. 22,10; Tod md@ous 7d éx. its occasion, Longin. 18. 2:—also c. gen., tpimoda..Aourpav énixapoyv=xaipdy exovra Aovrpwy, con» venient for .., Soph, Aj. 1406 :—of persons, helping in time of need, Pind. P. 4. 488. 2. important, ér. onpeta important symptoms, Hipp. 964 A, cf. 383. 36, etc. ; ér. Tp@ua Id. 759 G. 3. of parts of the body, vital, Xen. Eq. 12, 7, cf. Arist.G. A. 4.1, 35; mr. rod Gav necessary for life, Ib. 1. 11, 5 :—of wounds, dangerous (cf. xalpios), ém. €Axos Hipp. Acut. 391 :—Adv., émixaipws rerp@a0atPaus.4.8,4. IT. for a time, temporary, opp. to didios, Epict. ap. Stob. 74. 10, Clem. Al. 220. ématw, Att. Kd, fut. -cadow:—to light up or kindle on a place, mip h. Hom. Ap. 491: to burn on an altar, 6s pot moAAd Body ént pnp’ exnev Il. 22. 170, cf. Od. 3.9., 17. 241. II. to burn on the surface, scorch, Hipp. Aér. 291; of 7d compara bmd Tod HAlou émmexav- pévo Ep. Plat. 340D; of lightning, Arist. Meteor. 3. I, 10; of hot iron, Id. H. A.g. 50, 2; of cold, Hipp. 292. 46, Theophr. émuktddpdopar, Dep. to glean after the reapers, Luc. Tox. 16. émxaAéw, fut. dow, to call upon a god, invoke, Gedy Hat. 2. 39., 3. 8, al.: to appeal to, ovveow Kat maidelay Dem. 269. 24; (and so to translate the Rom. appello, Plut. Marcell. 2); é. Gedy Tit to invoke a god over one, to be gracious to him, Hdt. 1. 199; or to watch over his good faith, Id. 3. 65:—so in Med., Id. 1. 87, al., Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 23, al. 2. to invite, yépovras én mdéovas kadécavres Od. 7. 189; so in Med., Hdt. 1. 187, al. 8. Med. ¢o call in as a helper or ally, emnaretobat twa or ér. Twa cppaxoy Hat. 5. 63., 8.64, cf. Thuc. 1. IOl., 3.59, 23 em. &e Qeooadins emcxoupinv Hat. 5. 63. 4. to call in as witness, udptupa ér. twa Antipho 114. 34, cf. Plat. Legg. 664 C; c. inf., éw. Oeods. . kaBopay 7a yryvéueva Xen. Hell. 2.3,55; with neut. Adj., radra ér. Hat. 9. 62. 5. Med. to call before one, summon, of the Ephors, Id. 5. 39. 6. Med. to challenge, Id. 5. 1. rept Pass. to be called by surname, émexAnOnoav Kexpomtiar Hdt. 8. 44; to be nicknamed, ’AptoTdSnpov tov puxpdy émxadovpevoy Xen. Mem. I. 4, 2, cf. Hell. 2. 3, 30. IIL. like éyxadéw, to bring as an accusation against, wi te Thuc. I. 139, cf. 4.1333 ém. Tw, c. inf. to accuse one of doing, Antipho 121.1, Thuc. 2. 273 é. tiv dxéoracw ort. . érovh- cayro 1d. 3.36; én. 71 wavra boa HdeenTO Dio C.37.6; radr’ émnareis; is this your charge? Ar. Pax 663; ém. dpxadrnra pleading their antiquity, Plat. Legg. 657 B:—absol., émadeitw let him bring his action, Inscr. Halic, in Newton :—Pass., 7a émxadedpeva xphyata the money imputed to him, i.e. which he was charged with having, Hat. 2. 118, cf. Isoer. 234 C. 2. c. dat. pers, only, émaAdety rut to guar- rel, dispute with one, Plat. Legg. 766 E. émucadAtve, to deck out, Themist. 359 B. émucdhuppa, 7d, a cover, veil, roAAG@Y Kakay Menand. Bowwr. 3. Ir. in animals, the covering of any orifice, of the gills of fish, Arist. H. A. 2.13, 5, P. A. 4.13,153 of the tails of crabs and other crustacea, Id. H. A. 4. 3, 8., 5.753% cf. émlrruypa; of the operculum of certain shell- fish, Ib. 4. 4, 34, al. ‘ émxdAdunrnprov, 76, a covering, Arist. P. A. 4. 10, 28. émaddnre, to cover over, cover up, shroud, xaxdy 8 émt nOpa Ka- Adwret Hes. Th. 798; of snow covering a track, Xen. Cyn. 8,1; ém. ri dmopiay Plat. Charmid, 169 D:—Pass. to be covered over, veiled, Id. Crat. 395 B; ém. rov vody made is darkened, obscured, Arist. de An. 3. 3, 21. II. to put as a covering over, BAepapwy papos Eur. H. F. 642 :—Pass., Ta BA€papa én. form a covering, Arist. de Sens. 2, 2. émaduipis, ews, 7), a covering, concealment, Eccl. émukdpve, to suffer at or after, wi Ael.N. A. 14. 6. émuxaparh, %, the bend, return or angle of a building, Hdt. 1.180; é7. movetobar to draw up their army angular-wise, i. e. with the wings thrown forward at an angle with the centre, so as to take, the enemy in flank, Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 6; so, és ém. rérrew Arr. An, 2.9, 2., 3-12, 2: ef. éminap~ mos, émLKaUTTO. > émucapmys, és, curved, curling, obpatov Luc, Gall. 28; gvAoy Plut. Camill. 32. Adv.-m@s, Schol. Aesch. émudpmos, ov,=emxapymhs, curved, angular: én, rafts an order of battle, in which one or both wings formed an angle with the centre, being either thrown forwards to attack the enemy in flank (cf. émuxapm}), 4 or backwards so as to meet a flank attack, Diod. 17.57 —émeapmor, o or 536 76,=émkapmn, Art, Tact. 31; THs orods Plut. 2.594 B: év émxapnip at an angle, angular-wise, Polyb. 1. 27, 4.. 5. 82,9. ° émdprrw, to bend into an angle, rov daervdoy Arist. H. A. 5. 30, 8: +—Pass. to bend or turn, és Ta dpiorepa Hipp. 276. 353 oppis émexap- pévy Arist. P. A. 3.9,8; of troops, to move the wings forward, so as to form angles with the centre and take the enemy in flank (eis edxAwowv), Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 5, cf. Hell. 4, 2, 20, An. 7.1, 53 cf. ém«apmn, -Kdp- 0s. II. intr. to be bent, Arist. H. A. 4. 4, 18. » émnapmvdAos [i], ov, crooked, curved, épous in the shoulders, h. Hom. Merc. go, cf. Hes. Op. 425. emixapiis, ews, }, = emia, Dio C. 50. 31. émaviis, ids, 4}, =éyxavis, Hippiatr. p. 119, Poll. 2. 71. _ érlwdip, Adv. head-foremost, better divisim ént «dp, v. ap I. Sido, = Kapdidw, Nic, Al. 19. » (emxdpmos) the usufruct of a property, revenue, profit, } ‘enéreios én. Plat. Legg. 955 D, cf. Arist. Pol. 1. 11, 3; af ém. the profits, opp. to the principal (rd dpxaia), Dem. 829. 7; émxapmias AapBavew Asocr. 184 C, cf. Andoc. 12. 28; én. é« rhs mvns Id. 12.27; al é& vhs ys ér. Dion, H. 3. 58; dia riv én. rev ddpay Antiph. ’Axeotp. 1; mplacdat rv éx. Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 108. 2. the tithe paid for the pasturage of cattle, Arist. Occ. 2, I. 3. metaph., wappyaias émapriat Dio C. 39. Io. émnapibtos, ov, (xaprés) on fruit, xvods Anth. P. 9. 226, émuaprifopa, Dep. to draw the nutriment from, exhaust, yiv, of crops, Theophr. H. P. 8.9, 3. émdpmos, ov, omeias bringer or guardian of fruits, epith. of Zeus, etc., Arist. Mund. 7, 3, Plut. 2. 1048 C, etc.: fruit-bearing, @pa Arat. 552. 2. 70 én. the pedicle or fruit-stalk, Theophr. C, P. 1. 16, 1 (where Schneid. reputdpma), Phanias ap. Ath. 68 C, ef. 51C. II. («apwés 11) on or for the wrist, er. dpes bracelets in the shape of snakes, Philostr. Ep. 40 (22). émapmoAoyéopar, Dep. to glean, rov dunrdv Joseph. Macc. 2. 9. é , a, ov, later os, ov Polyb. 6. 29, I., 30. 6, Opp. C. 2. 169,=€¢yxdpo.os, opp. to phos, athwart, cross-wise, at an angle, esp. at a right angle, as of the streets of Babylon, opp. to i#eta, Hat. 1.180; so, Adpyn éx. mpds iy .. evOeiay Polyd. ll. c.; Tis ExvO«7js ra én, the country measured along the coast, opp. to 7d dphia (inwards, at right angles to the coast), Hdt. 4. lol:—c. gen., Tpijpeas Tov piv Ildvrov émxapoias, tod dt “EAAnondvrov Ka’ v forming an angle with the current of the Pontus, but .., Id.7.36; éw. cavides cross planks, Polyb. 1, 22, 5; émdpo.a 57) mpomecodpar (Ady.) athwart, Com. Anon. 129. II. in Od. 9. 70, ai wey [vijes] erect’ épépov7’ énixdpovat, Eust. derives it from émi «dp, and takes it to mean, plunged prow foremost, as ships with a heavy square sail would do with a follow- ing wind; but the Scholl. retain the ordinary sense. (The origin of —Kapouos in émix., éye, remains uncertain.) émxataBatve, fut.—Aicopat, to go down to a place, és MAaracds Hat. 9. 253 mpds Thy wéAw Thuc. 6.97; mpds Tiv OdAaccay Id. 7. 23, 36: to extend downwards, ddbvat és tds xeipas én. Hipp. Prorth, 112. 2. to go down after or against an enemy, Hdt.8.38; és WAaraids Id.9.25; cf. Thuc. 4. 11., 7. 84:—cf. émxaraBaddw 3. eaieretibhe poét. aor. 2 émedBBador Ap. Rh. 4. 188, Q. Sm. 14. 583. To throw down upon, én. adrois Tov oikoy, of Samson, Joseph. A. J. 5. 8,12: throw down at, wérpous Dio C. 50. 33- 2. to let fall down or droop at a thing, rd wa Xen. Cyr. 4. 3. 3. to impose a fine, Tab, Heracl. in C.1.5774.134, where for émuxara-Bavovr: Ahrens corrected —Badrdv7t, v. Franck. p. 709. émxardyvipat, Pass. to be broken also, of eggs, Arist. Probl. 9. 1. émxatdéyopat, Pass., of ships or persons at sea, fo come to land along with or afterwards, Thuc. 3. 49., 8.28, Dio C. 42. 7, etc. . émxaradap0dve, aor. 2 -édapfov, to fall asleep afterwards, Thuc, 4. 133» Plat. Rep. 534 D. , . émxaradév, to bind upon or to, Hipp. 1155 D, Luc. Asin. 16, 34. émkaraSvopat, Med. ¢o dive after, Poll. 1. 108 :—#o set, Schol. Eur. ématabéw, fo run down upon, attack, ox C. 40. 36. . émnaratpe, intr. to sink down upon, Twi Plat. Pomp. 31. ém«araxalo, fut. ‘ow, to burn besides, Liban. 4. 371- ématakAlve, to make bend down , Ti Tt Hesych. . émxatakAtle, to overflow besides, riv Aciny wacay Hat. 1. 107. émxatakoupdopat, Dep. fo sleep upon, Hdt. 4.172. A ‘ew, to titend rah Schol. Pind. 0. 6. 108. + woo, fut. -Ajyouat, to follow and catch up, overtake, ras vais Thuc. 2.90; 7wd Id. 3. 111, Polyb. 1. 66, 3, etc.; oeAtun jAcov én. Plat. Tim. 39 C; tis vuerds émuaradaBovons Diod. 18. 71:—Pass. to be overtaken, Arist. H. A. 9. 6, 1. ém«atadddyh, %, money paid for exchange, discount, Theophr. Char. 30. émxatahAdooopat, Pass. to be reconciled, tt Clem. Rom. 48. émxatapéva, to tarry longer, mepi 7: Xen. Cyt. 1. 2,11, Hell. 7. 4, 36. émxatapwxdopat, Dep, = Karapwxdopat, Poll. 8. 77. émnarapwptopat, Dep. =xarapwpéopat, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 791- émnatamdéw, to leap down after, eis ra andy Joseph. B. J. 3. 10, 9. ématamtpmpnpt, fo set fire to over, wi App. Civ. 2. 22. Emxatarimre, to throw oneself upon, Luc. Anach. 1. émxaramAdoow, to put on a plaster, Hipp. Fract. 767. émxartathéw, to bear down upon, of ships, Diod. * a émardpdopat, Dep. to imprecate curses on, Ta LXX(Num.5.19,22). S eetindocrenees Pass. ta fall with a crash, Dion. H. 10. 16, etc. émxardpGros, ov, yet more accursed, Ep. Gal. 3.10 and 13, C. I. 2664.6. émxarappta, fut. —pevicopat, to run down, of humours, from the head to : , J , erikaunre — érixedadew. émxarapphyvipat, Pass. fo fall violently down upon, tive Dion. H. 10. 16; of rain, Plut. Mar. 21. émucatapprmréw, to throw down after, Xen. An. 4. 7, 13. émucatacelw, to bring down on, éavt@ eAépavra Joseph, B.J. 1.1, 5. emuatacKamr, to throw down on, 7@ KA@m 70 onHAaov Dion. H. 1. 39. émucarackevdte, to build upon, tt éni te Dio C. 50, 23. émucataomaw, to draw down after, Arist. Probl. 11. 18:—Pass. to be convulsed besides, Hipp. 369. 33- ématacmévSw, to pour besides as a libation over, Joseph. B. J. 1. 3, 6. émuaractpédu, to invert a glass and put it over, tivi Geop. 10. 56, 6, ef. Diose. 5. 91. émxatacpata, later -opdrre, fut. fo, to slay upon or over, rwd 7H vexp®, éavrov 7@ TUpBy Hat. 1. 455 77 napbévy Plut. 2.772 C: without dat., Dion. H. 3-20, Plut. Cleom. 37. émxatatéuve, fo carry the workings of a mine beyond one’s boundaries, Dem. 977. 7- émxatatpéxw, to rusk down on, Dion. H, 9. 21, Dio C. 36. 32. ématadhépopat, Pass. to rusk down upon, Ti Joseph. A. J. 12. 9, 4. II. metaph. fo be brought or come to a thing, Aristid, 2. 520. émarddopos, prone to, éni or mpés 7: Ath. 391 E, 608 D. émxaratpaw, to harrow lightly, xwpav Strabo 831. émarapevSopat, Dep. fo tell lies besides, Hat. 3. 63, Thuc. 8. 74. émukataipyxw, to smooth down afterwards, App. Civ. 2. 145. éqikareiSov, aor. with no pres. émuafopaw in use, to look at besides, Te Hipp. Progn. 38. émucdreupt, (elt) to go down into, eis riv xordiav Thue. 2. 49. ématepdw, to pour off liquid on a thing, Galen, émarépxopar, Dep. =émxareru, Hipp. 246. 41. ématéxw, to detain still, Dion. H.9. 60, Luc. Hermot. 23. émkatnyoptw, to predicate of a thing, ri tevos Sext. Emp. M. 9. 334: to attribute to .., 7 rw Plut. 1113. C; 7d oxijua émxarnyopovo7 Dion. H.1, 66 (as L, Dind. for émucarnyopycet):—Pass. to be added to the predi~ cate, Arist. An. Pr. 2. 38, 2. II. Pass., also, to have charges heaped upon one, Justin. M. Apol. 1. 7. émarnyopta, %, a predicate, title, Sext. Emp. M. 10. 297. émaroukéw, fo live at, inhabit, Cebes 15. émuxarovopdfopat, Pass. to be named after a person, Clem. Al. 168. émkarop0da, fo set right again, daréa Hipp. Fract. 763. émxatoptocopat, Pass. to be buried with, Antipho 122. 17. émkarruw, to mend shoes, Poll. 7.82: metaph. of vamping' up old plays, Com. phrase in Phryn. A. B. 39. ém-Kavrd6-pvddAos, ov, with leaves on the stem, with sessile leaves, Theophr. H., P. 7. 8, 3. énixaupa, 76, (émxalw) a blister caused by a burn, Schol. Ar. Pl. 535 :—a spot on the cornea of the eye, Galen., etc. émikavors, ews, }, (@mxaiw) inflammation of the surface, scorching up, joined with épuaiBy, Plat. Ax. 368 C. II. =foreg., Diosc. 2, 166. émixavros, ov, burnt at the end, Lat. praeustus, dxévria Hdt.7. 71,74. émavxdona, Dep. to glory over, Twi Achmes Onir. 111, Schol. Il. 20. 388 :—émxatynors, ews, 4, triumph over another, Hermog. émayddlo, to plash against, ipa mérpaus émee. Ap. Rh. 4. 944- émuxdw [4], Att. for émiato, énixetpat, inf, —KefoOa, Ion. ~KéerOat, serving as Pass. to émrlOnus, to be laid upon, and so, I. of doors, to be put to or closed (cf. emeriOnpe 11), Odpar 8 énexewro paevat Od. 16.19; metaph., Ovpac yAwoon enixervrar Theogn. 421. 2. generally, to be placed, to lie in or on, c, dat., dpOadpds péoow évéxerro peramw Hes. Th. 143, cf. Theocr. 24. 116 :—of troops, dx@ais “Iorpou ém, Hdn. 2. 9. 3. of islands, vijoo émt Afpvov émueipevat lying off Lemnos, Hat. 7.6; so, er. TH Opnlen Ib. 185; ent rH Aaxwvexh Ib. 235; and absol., al vfjoor ai emiketpevat the islands off the coast, Thuc. 2.14, cf. 4.443 Taop én. TH Gaddooy to be close to the sea on all sides, of Crete, Arist. Pol. 2. 10, 13. | IL. to be laid on, euol oppnyls émnetodw roiad éreot Theogn. Ig; €mikerrat ..07) Kepary orépavos Id. 1259, cf. Xen. Oec. 19, 13: metaph., xparep?) 3 émueicer’ dvayen Il. 6. 458. 2. to press upon, be urgent in intreaty, Hdt. 5. 104: to press upon a retreating enemy, fo attack, Bowrotot Ib.81, cf.6.49; and absol., émuetcopat Raps Eur. Rhes. lol; xdmnelpevos Ba Ar. Eq. 252; KAéwv po’ iwerdparrev émeipevos Vesp. 1285; ém. Aaumpas Thuc. 7. 71; moAds 8 éwéxerro Theocr. 22. 90. 3. to hang over, Lat. imminere, tocovray émxepevav TO HotxevovTt Kaxwy Xen. Mem. 2.1, 5; of penalties, Odvaros 4} Cyuin émxéerar the penalty imposed is death, Hdt. 2. 38, cf. 6. 58, Antipho 128. 40; (npia.. éréxero oratnp Thuc. 3. 70, cf. Arist. Pol. 4. 13, 3 4. of a name, to be imposed, Plat. Crat. 411 C, Prot. 349 . 5. metaph., oxdppara émuelpeva suitable to the purpose, pointed, Longin. 34. 2. III. c. ace. rei, esp. in part., #dmuelpevae kapa kuvéas having their heads covered with helmets, Eur. Supp. 717, ubi v. Markl. (ap. Dind.); orépavoy émxeipevos with a crown on one, Plut. Marcell. 22; amas émnelpevoe rais xepadais Dion, H. 2. 705 Tpycamoy emxetwevos bearing an assumed character, Plut. Lys. 23; éréxerro drethas he bore scars upon him, App. Mithr.6; «é@dpav.. #ONoras: emnetmévny fitted with pegs, Luc. Indoct. 10;—metaph., of nivbuvov émikeipevot exposed to .. » App. Civ. 4.124. Airway Ep. aor. éréxepoa, to cut off, cut down, mpwras énéxepoe ¢ abe Il. 16. 394; dv otrov én. to reap, Lat. attondere, Theophr. ,P.8.7, 4. II. metaph. to cut short, baffle, Lat. praecidere, Haxns én Hideo kelper Il. 15.467, cf. 16.120: v. Keipa. pis tha Adv. part. pf. pass. secretly, Clem. Al. 817. MKEAGSEw, to shout at or to, esp. in applause, to cheer, én 5% Tp@es 0, fut, other parts, Hipp. Aér. 281, II, 4a fall down upon, rum Plut. Pelop. 4, Lee oe ey Fh ll Nii eee. _. » KeAGdnoay Il, 8. 542,, 18. 310, s , . , emrikehevais — emiKANpow, éméXevois, ews, }, a cheering on, exhortation, Thuc. 4. 95. émuedevorixds, 7, dv, cheering on: 1d én. the signal for attack, Polyaen. 5. 16, 4. émuceAevo, to exhort or encourage besides, to cheer on again, c, dat., éwexédAevod oot Eur. El. 1224; absol., Id, Bacch. 1088 ; also c. acc. pers., ér, rdv pi} davoodpevoy Thue. 3. 82; c. ace. rei cogn., mpds Tois GAA kedevopaow 7é5e émx, Xen. Cyn. 6, 20: joined with wapaxeAevouac (which properly means ¢o cheer one on to an act not begun, émt. to one already begun), Plat. Phaedo 61 A :—also in Med., Thuc. 4. 28. ém«éddw, aor. éwéxedoa, to bring ships to shore, vijas émnéAcat Lat. appellere naves, Od. 9. 148: to land a fish, Numen. ap. Ath. 321 B. 2. absol., as if intr. ¢o run ashore, Ib. 138; xépow én. eperpois Ap. Rh. 3.5753. c. acc., yijv ém. Id. 2. 352:—also of the ship itself, Hey recta hreipw éméxedoev Od, 13. 114: v. sub KéAAW. éméAopat, Dep. to call upon, orvyepas 8 érexéxder’ "Epiis (redupl. syne. aor. 2) Il. 9. 454; émumexAduevac Afov mépriv Aesch. Supp. 41; c. dat., ma:bi Ap. Rh, 3. 85. émxevijs, Adv. of no avail, Arist. Plant. 2. 3, 8. émevtpifw, to apply the spur, Anth. P. 9. 777. trees, Geop. 5.17, 11. émixevtpos, ov, in Astron., on the centre-point, Sext. Emp. M. 5. 40. émxepdwvipt, 2o mix in addition, olvoy émuphoa (for émixepdoat) mix Sresh wine, Od. 7.164: cf. émucipynpt. énixepas, 74, a plant, elsewhere 7HAts, Hipp. ap. Galen. 19. p. 99. émepaotiés, 77, dv, tempering the h ‘s, Galen., etc. émxepSalvw, to gain besides, tviavrov 7H dpyf Plut. Flamin. 3. émuxépdera, 7), = émxépdia (q. v.), Philostr. 740. émuepdis, és, (xép5os) advantageous, Schol. rec. Soph. Aj. 743. émuépbia, 74, profit on traffic or business, Hdt. 4. 152, Philostr. 603 ; cf, émépdea, 7). émxeptopéw, to mock, used by Hom. only in part., rdv 8 émxepro- Héov mpoaédns in mockery, Il. 16.744, Od. 22. 194; in milder sense, laughingly, Il. 24. 649. II. c. acc., émenepréunoe he reproached him, Hdt. 8.92; zwvos for a thing, Agath. ap. Suid.:—to teaze, plague, Theoer, 20. 2. émxeptopnpa, 76, a sarcasm, Dem. Phal. 111. émepropnors, ews, ,=foreg., Hdn. 7. ox. 52. 4. émépropos, ov, mocking, cheating, Q. Sm. 1. 136. émev0u, fut. cw, to conceal, hide, in Hom. always with a negat., épéw Eros, 005’ émuevow Il. 5.816; mpdppwv brodhaopat, od8 emnedow Od. 5.1435 elwé por... vnpepréa, pnd emuevons 15. 263; po0ov dé ror od émxevow 4. 744, cf. 17.141: and in Aesch, Ag. 800, c. acc. pers., ob ydp o émxetow I will not hide it from thee, cf. Ap. Rh. 3. 332. émepddAadopar, Med. to treat a subject summarily, Polyb. 2. 40, " II. Pass. to be summed up, Dio C. 52. 28. émnepddatos, a, ov, (xepadn) of or for the head, xbapos Suid. :— emnepadaoy, 76, a poll-tax, Arist. Oec. 2.15, 2; in Cic, Att. 5. 16, 2, occurs the pl. form émmepadua. émuépadov, 76, the head of the battering-ram, Ath, de Mach. 6. 335 IL. money distributed at so much a head, head-money, C. 1. 2336. 31. émucexoSas, 6, part. pf. of émxé(a, used as a mock-name for a bird, Shitterling, Ar. Av. 68. émucnSevos, ov, (xR 50s) of or at a burial, funeral, Bd) én. Eur. Tro. 513, Plat. Legg. 800 E; potoa Ael.N. A. 5.34; Adyor Dion. H. de Rhet. 6. 1; ér., 76, a dirge, elegy, Plut. Pelop.1; cf. Francke Callin. 125. émundevw yapous, to form connexions by marriage, Procop. é Kalo, fo revile, Hesych. émucimos, ov, (xiros) of or in a garden, Nonn. Jo. 19. 219. émnpatve, to be hostile to one, Hesych. émuxipios, ov, =sq., Heraclit. ap. Luc. Vit. Auct. 14. émixnpos, ov, («hp) subject to death, perishable, Arist. G. A. 3. 2, 13, Mund. 2,10; ios Call. Ep. 61; 7d ris pucews émixnpoy Plat. Ax. 367 B. Adv., émucnpws d:axetaGat Isocr. 230 E. émcnpdo, to wax over, rub with wax, Polyaen. 2. 20. éminpixeta, %, the sending an embassy to treat for peace, entering into negotiation, did tiv mpds Aakedatpovious piv émxnpureiav Dem. 61. 233 cf, Polyb. 14. 2, 13, Theopomp. Hist. 244. émknpikeupa, 76, a demand by herald, Eur. Med. 738. Emknpixevopat, Dep. to send a message by a herald, rit or mpds Twa Hadt. 6. 97., 9.87; ws twa Thuc. 7. 48; epi or imép rivos Diod. 14.75, Paus. 4. 8, 13 :—c. dat. et inf. to send a message calling on them to do a thing, Thuc. 8. 80, cf. 7.49; é. Tut et .. , sent him a message to ask whether .., Hdt. 1.60; ém. 5: dyyéAow Id. 1. 69 :—in Thuc. 8. 44 it seems to be Pass., émxnpuxevopévwv messages being sent. 2. to send ambassadors to treat for peace, to make proposals for a treaty of peace, Tit to one, Ar. Thesm. 336, Thuc. 4.27; Tatra tux Hat. 4. 80: to proclaim publicly, re Ar. Thesm. 1163. 3. of private affairs, fo negociate, Tiwi with one, Dem. 888, 28. II. absol. to go as herald or ambassador, mapa tivos Polyb. 21. 13, I. émuctpuktos, ov, denounced, @ Odvaros én. Hv App. Pun. 93. emnpréis, ews, 7}, proclamation of a reward, Ulp. ad Dem. 347. 25. émkyptoow, Att. —rrw: fut. fa :—to announce, make known by pro- clamation, Arist. Occ. 2. 31, 2; émxnpuxbels xOovi, Lat. rex renunciatus, Aesch, Theb. 634:—ém. 7d Ad@upov (v. sub Ad@upov); em. TéAEuOV Tit Dio C. 78. 38. 2. esp. of penalties, ér. Oavarov Tiv Cnplay to pro- claim death as the penalty, Xen. Hell. 1. 1,153 éw. dpytpiov éni ri to set a price on his head, Hdt.7.214; xpnuara rive émix. Dem. 3.47.25 :— Pass., nal of pvydvrt.. dpytpiov énexnptxOn Hat. 7. 213; Ta ém- II. to graft anpux@évra xphyata the price set upon’ one’s head, Ath. 266 D, cbt 5387 Plut. Them. 26; but also, 5 émanpuxOels the proscribed person, outlaw, Dio C. 37. 10. 3. to offer as a reward, xpnydtav mdnO0s Tois dvedovac Diod. 14, 8, cf. Plut. Them. 29, Dio C. 56. 43; andc. inf, TaXuvrov Swcev Te andyovrt Lys. 104. fin. II. to put up to ~ public sale, like édmoxnptcow Plut. Camill. 8. émlSvnpt, post. Verb, to spread over, xaxois émxidvare Ouudy spread a brave spirit over your ills, Orac. ap. Hdt. 7. 140:—Hom. always uses it in Pass. (only in Il.), #5wp émldvara: alav is spread over the earth, Il. 2. 850, cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 978; Scov 7’ émxidvarat ids far as the morn- ing light is spread, Il. 7. 451, 458. émxivalSiopa, 74, a lewd deed or word, Clem. Al. 270. émuxwBivedw, to run a risk :—Pass., émmvdvveterar 7@ Saveloavrt TA xpipara the risk is with the lender, Dem. 915. 14. émlvBivos, ov, in danger, insecure, precarious, Hdt. 6.86; ér. Rv pay AauPpoein Id. 7. 239; mpdcodor Dem. 948. 2; év émuwdtvw, opp. to év r@ dopaadel, Thuc. 1. 137 :—Comp. —érepos Xen. An. 1. 3, 19. 2. dangerous, orpareia Plat. Rep. 467D; devi) xat ér. Epis Plat. Legg. 730°C, cf. Xen. Mem. 4.6, 10; tit to one, Hipp. Aph. 1249, Thuc. 3. ‘54 :—emuclyduvdv [éort] there is danger, Arist. H. A. 7.12, 2. 3. Adv. -vws, in a precarious or critical state, Hipp. Aph. 1255; ém. xetoOae Soph. Ph, 502; én. €xew Eur. Fr. 683: at one’s risk, Thuc. 3. 37. émuxivSivabdys, es, (€250s) =foreg., Schol. Soph. El. 222. émuxivéopat, Pass. to gesticulate at a thing, v. 1. Epict. Enchir, 33. 10: to be moved, zealous, émi rut LXX (3 Esdr. 8. 74). émuctvupat, =foreg., Q. Sm. 12.145. émuctpvnpt, Ion. for émxepdvvupat, Heracl. All. Hom. p. 117 :—Pass., émulpvarat [6 xpnrnp] Hat. 1. 51, cf. Plut. 2. 270 A. émuctxAlSes, ai, a poem ascribed to Homer, so called because he was rewarded by a present of xixAat, fieldfares, cf. Ath. 65 A, 639 A, Bentl. Ep. Mill. p. 63. émuctxpypt, aor. éxéxpyoa, to lend, twit te mpds roy médepov Plut. Pomp. 52; €avrov eis dmaddorpiwow émyphoas C. I. 3281. émucddla, fut. —KrAdyéw, to sound to, Qadkacon Opp. H. 5. 2953 ént of éxdayge Bpovray let thunder sound in answer to him, Pind. P. 4. 41. émucdatw, Att. -KAdw: fut. -cAavcopat:—to weep in answer or still more, Ar. Thesm. 1063 ; tii at a thing, Nonn. D. 30, 114. émixAapos, -KGpdw, Dor. for ému«Anp-. érixAavros, ov, tearful, vipos Ar. Ran, 684. ’ émnAdw, fut. dow [a], to bend to or besides :—Pass. to bend double, defid wept thy Kepadry ent 7d dv émnexracpévy Luc. D. Deor. 11. 25 émnekr. Tov adxéva Id, Rhet. Praec. 11; twp emudrAmpevoy broken water, Id. Tox. 20. II. metaph., to bow down, break the spirits of, twa Plut. Pericl. 37, Oth. 15; ém. 71va els olxrov Ael. N. A. 10. 36: —Pass., EmixrAacOjvat TH yvwpn to be broken in spirit, lose courage, Lat. frangi animo, Thuc. 4. 37; but also, to be bent or turned to pity, Id. 3.59; or without 7H yvdpn, Id. 3.67; 7d émxexhacpévoy THY pedav effeminate, unmanly music, Luc. Demon, 12. ém-kAdw, Att. for -—KAalw. émucdefs, és, (xAéos) famed, famous, Ap. Rh. 4.1472, C.1.2613. 2 named, called after, ri Opp. H. 2. 130, in shortd. Ep. acc, émAdd, émAelwo, Ep. -KAntw, Att. KAq@:—to shut to, close, as a door, Ar. Pax 101; Oupay émexdnioce Tryph. 200:—Med., Luc, Tox. 50:—Pass. to be shut to, opp. to dvamriacopat, Xen. Eq. 12, 6. émucelw, to extol or praise the more, Thy yap dodhv paddAov emxdel= ovot Od. I. 351. 2. to relate or recount that .. , c. acc. et inf., Ap. Rh. 1, 18, Opp. C. 3. 78. 38. to call, name, Twa Tt Arat. 92:— Pass, in Ion. form émxAhCopat, to be called so and so, App. Syr. 17, Poéta ap. Diog. L. 6. 100. 4. to call upon, invoke, *AméAXwva Ap. Rh. 2. 700; c. inf., Ku0épecay én. dpiver 3. 553. émcAndny, Adv. =énixdny, formed like dvopaxdAndnv, Opp. C. 1. 471. émuxAnlo, Ion, for émAelo. : émikAnpa, 76, (Emxadéw) an accusation, charge, like éyxAnua, Soph, O. T. 227, 529, Eur. Or. 570, Xen. Oec. 11, 4. émixAny, Adv. (é¢mxaréw) by surname, by name, Plat. Soph. 221 C; énixAny Kkadovpevos Id. Tim. 58 D; én. twvds Aeydpevos called after him, Id, Phil. 48 C: cf. Luc. Symp. 6, Dio C. 75. 16. 2. nominally, Apollod. 3. 13, 4.—Properly acc. from an obsolete nom. éiAn =éni- KAnots (q. v.), and émixAny €xew, as an acc., occurs in Plat. Tim. 38 C, Anth. P. append. 239. émuAnpikés, 77, dv, of an émlednpos, Dion. H. Dinarch. 12. émucAnpitis, 150s, 7, =émixAnpos, 7, Isae. ap. Harp. émixAnpos, Dor. -KAapos, 7), an heiress, Ar. Av. 1653, Vesp. 583, Andoc. 16. 7, al., Lys. 176. 22; ®omep émxAnpouv dugutBythoaw Free Lys. 169. 29. At Athens, the next male of kin was entit/ed to marry an heiress, or, if there was no inheritance or a small one, he was bound by law either to marry her or endow her from his own estate ;—in order to marry her, he was enabled to divorce his existing wife: and in case of several claimants, the matter was tried at law, when the heiress was termed émidixos (q.v.), Isae. de Pyrrhi et Cironis Haered., and cf. Dict. of Antiqq. s.v. For the Spartan law of émiAnpot, v. Arist. Pol. 2. 9, 155 ef, C. I. 2448 M1. 31. 2. c. dat., éw. 7H apxf heiress to the king- dom, Dion. H. 1. 70; or, én. odaias peydaAns Plut. Cleom. 1. Ir. in Plat. Legg. 630 E, it seems to mean an inheritance in reversion. émxAnpde, Dor. —KAapéa, to assign by lot, rwi re Dem. 519. 13 én. rais dpxais 7d dixacrhpa Arist, Fr. 378; els rds pudds Ta dvdpara C. I. 3137. 523 Tivas émt puddy tia, Ib, 2671. 61 ; én. twa. c. inf., to appoint one to do, Call. Dian. 23; é. twas émi @avdrw to decimate them, Dio C. 41. 35 :—Pass. to be assigned by lot, rit Plat. Legg. 760B, C. I. 2905. 73 Tv Sixacrnpiav émuexAnpwpévav had been settled by lot, Dem. 978. 8. 2. to have assigned one by lot, r+ Dio C. 37. 50. , 538 émlkAnors, ews, 4, (emiadréw) a surname, to-name, ot additional name ; used by Hom. only in acc, absol., like émixAny, and mostly émlxAnow wahéey, as, Aotvavag, dv Tpdes érixAnow nadéover Astyanax, as they. call him by surname (his name being Scamandrius), Il. 22. 506 ; “Api¢ros, iy nal Guagay éxixdAnow Kadéovow which they call also the Wain, Il, 18. 487, Od. 5.273, cf. Il. 7.138., 22.93 Tirfvas émixAnow kadéeoker TiTaivovras aradbadin péya pega €pyov named them Titans, after their endeavouring .. (én 7@ tiraivew), Hes. Th. 207; so in Hdt., émlednow Se 4h ephyn émxadéerac “HAliov 4.181; *AOnvains, émixdAnow ’Agaonains I. I9:—but also, in name only, nominally, MevéoOov érexe TloAvdwpy Srepxe@, aitdap éxixAnaw Bwpw she bare him to Spercheius (really), but xominally to Borus, ll. 16.177; Tov Tod BouvedAov énixAnow vidy Hdt. 1,114; so, ear’ é. Apollod. 1. 3, 2. 2. after Hom. in nom., @ surname, name, Thuc. I. 3, etc. 3. an imputation, Id. 7. 68 ; énizAnow exer xaxds eivar Xen, Lac. 9, 4: cf. énlAnua. 4. a title, Dio C. 37. 6, etc. II. a calling upon, ’Appodirns Luc. Salt.11; d5a:udvav Dio C. 78. 4:—an appeal for help, Dion. H. 5.21; the Rom. appellatio, appeal to the Tribunes, Plut. Marcell. 2, Cato Mi. 33, 46. émixAntos, ov, (€rucadéw) called upon, called in as allies, Hdt. 5. 75. 7. 203, Thuc. 4. 61. 2. specially summoned, ovAdoyov én. Tlepoéav Tay apiarwy éroéero held a privy council, Hdt. 7. 8; éxixAnro privy- councillors, among the Persians, Id. 8. 1o1., 9. 42 :—called to an office, Dion. H. 2. 76. 3. called before the court, accused, Dio C. 78, al. II. invited in addition, a supernumerary guest, Lat. umbra, Ar. Pax 1266, cf. Plut. 2. 707 B. 2. alien, foreign, Dion. H. 6. 53; én. Aotopia Polyb. 8. 13, 2. émuAtBavios, ov, («AiBtivos) at or presiding over the oven, Carnead. ap. Sext. Emp. M. 9. 185. émucAivas, és, (émuedivw) sloping, xwpiov Thuc. 6. 96; Ado: Plut. Anton. 453 ém. 79 ordyvi «al pr dp0a inclining, bending, Theophr. C. P. 3. 22,1; émuAuwvés éore radavrov Call. Fr. 312 ;—émudivets in Ar, Lys. 575 is an error for émt xAlyys. Adv. -vas, Philo 1. 561. émucAlvrys, ov, 6, moving sideways, cecpot ém«dvrae earthquakes that move at acute angles, Arist. Mund. 4, 30. émixdwrpov, 76, a couch, arm-chair, Ar. Eccl. 907, Fr. 145; v. Lob. Phryn. 132. iaciios, to put a door #o; hence, in Pass., émexerATpévar oavides closed doors, Il. 12. 121 (not elsewhere in Hom.). II. to bend towards, ta dra én. to prick the ears, Xen. Cyn. 6, 15; é. abrov mpds rt to lean against .., Paus. 9. 30, 10; ém. 7d ordpa Arist. P. A. 2. 17, 9 :—Pass., kepatat émucexAcuevar spars leaning on the wall and inclined at an angle to it, Thue. 2. 76. 2. intr. to lean upon, Toiv xepotv Plat. Amat. 132 B :—+to incline towards, mpds t+ Dem. 30. fin.; éré 7+ Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2.1045 D. IIT. in Pass. to lie over against or near, Zadapivos, Tas émxexAtuévas iepots 6x Oars (sc. of Attica), Eur. Tro. 797, cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 418, IV. in Pass., also, to lie down at table, Anth, P. 11. 14. érixMtots, ews, 4, inclination towards, Antip. ap. Stob. 418. 3, Plut. 2. 1045 B sq. Buckets, to urge violently on, rwa Ap. Rh. 3.687; dipw Q. Sm. 8. 426 :—Pass. to rush like a tide upon, Ap. Rh. 1. 783: but in Il. 18, 7, Wolf restored vquoly éme «ovéovrat. émxAonin, 7, trickery, Nonn. D. 8, 121. émixAoros, ov, (KAémrw) thievish, given to stealing, tricksy, wily, aymepona 7° Euev wal énixdowoy Od. 11. 364; Kepdadéos x’ ety Kal énlxd. 13. 291; er. Hos, of women, Hes. Op. 67, cf. Aesch, Eum. 149; émudonwrepov ..70. ORAv Plat. Legg. 781 A. 2. c. gen., émixAomos érdeo piOav cunning in speech, Il, 22. 281; émixdomos émAero régwv cunning in archery, Od. 21. 397. ’ emudvlo, fut. vow, to overflow, flood, 86: nipar’ én hidvas KAvCeoKoy Il. 23. 61, cf. Thuc. 3. 89; ém. xpuo@ Tijv Aewpdpov Luc. Philops. 21, cf. Tim, 18 :—Pass. to be flooded, Arist. Mund. 5, 11, etc. 2. metaph. to deluge, swamp, bury, TéAw Eur. Tro. 1328, cf. Theocr. 25. 201; émé- auoe Oupodv dvin delware Ap. Rh, 3.695; én. rwa Kaxots Luc. Pseudol. 25. 8. to sweep away in the flood, Ap. Rh, 1. 257: metaph., 7d BaciAcndv xpuctov Thy damaynv émuwéxdvKev has merged, i.e. liquidated, the expenses, Aeschin. 78. 29. II. intr. like Lat. affluere, redun- dare, to overflow, Dion, H. 6.17; tui with a thing, Id. de Isocr. 14. émixdvors, ews, 7, an overflow, flood, Thuc. 3. 89, Theophr. Fr. 11. 12. émuchvopos, 5,=foreg., Poll. 1. 114, 116, Heliod. 9. 3. énixAvortos, ov, flooded, Diod. 1. 10, Strabo 32. émucdiirés, dv, famed, AB for wealth, Ap. Rh. 2. 236. émhtw, =éraxovw, to listen to, hear, c.acc., ret avr’ aivoy émécdve NnActiao Il. 23.652, ef. Ap. Rh. 3, 598; ¢. gen., Exedy Znvos éréxdrvev dyyedidev Od. 5. 150, cf. Ap. Rh, 1. 1240. émucAdOw, fut. —Adow, Callin. 1.9:—to spin to one, properly of the Fates who spun for men the thread of destiny (hence called the Kara- #AG0es) ; but also of all ers which influence men’s fortunes, of poe towdTov éréxAwoay Geol Od. 3. 208., 4. 208, etc. :—so in Med., Geot Bactrkedow emnrdoovra sitiy 20. 196., cf. 8. 579; sometimes c. inf. pro acc., T@ of éwesAdoavro Geol olxdvde véecOar 1.17; Ws yap ers cot Betdotar Bporotor, we dxvupévous Il. 24. 525 (the only place in Il. where it occurs) ; so Aesch, in act.. Todro yap Adxos a Moip’ érérawoev tumédws Exe Eum. 335; émel 76 “ye (sc. Oaveiv) Moip’ én, C, I, 3136, al.—Poét. word, used by Plat. Theaet. 169 C, Thy... cinappévny, iy dv ob enucdwons, cf. Luc. Char. 16, D. Mort. 30. 2; and in Pass., Ta émAwabévra. one’s destinies, Plat. Rep. 620 F, cf. Legg. 957 E, Plut. 2. 22 B, 114 eon Sree sense appears in Hermipp. Mop. 9, papp’ éwéxdrwoas, Cf. Nitzsc wSUTZ, Tuiletacria, ews, #, a spinning, E. M. 495. 25- émvéparro, Att. for emeyvdprre, ete Wier cil ‘ake Le ote < emixAnois — erixoppiCo. én) 8 ai-yetov xvq (for exvae) rupov émuvae, to scrape or grate over, , he 1582; 7é Tee Ib. 1586; Att. Il. 11. 639; én. rupdv, aidquov Ar. Av. 533, inf, ém«vjv, Com. Anon. 221. émucvéopar, Ion. for ép-. |e a émxvdw, Schol. Nic. Th. 698. : : *Emuvyploror, of, name of a tribe of Locrians, who lived on the slopes of Mount Cnemis in Thessaly, Strabo 416, ete. émucvifw, to scrape or cut on the surface, Theophr. H. P. 4. 2,1; of the plough, Anth. P. 6. 238. énlkvicts, ews, 7), a scratching on the surface, Theophr. C. P. 5. 2, 4. émuxovdatve, to excavate, Theophyl. Simoc. énixordos, ov, porous, spongy, daréov Hipp. V. C. 896. émucoupdopar, Pass. to fall asleep after a thing, Hipp. Aph. 12543 or over a thing, Lat. indormiscere, Plat. Euthyd. 300 A ; rots BiBAtous Luc. Alex. 49. II. metaph. in part. pf. pass. Jazy or negligent about a thing, Polyb. 2. 13, 4. émolpnats, ews, 7), a sleeping upor one ear, Hipp. Art. 805. émucoupife, to lull to sleep, Nonn. D. 4. 307. émixowos, ov, common to many, promiscuous, émixowov- Tay ‘yuvat- Kav Thy pitw moretobaz (cf. Lat. nuptiae promiscuae), Hdt. 4. 104, cf.172, 180 :—sharing equally in, Kéxrpwv Eur. Andr. 124: ¢. dat. in common with, épxiv én. abr@ Exetv Dio C. 42. 44; er. dupoiy belonging equally to, Plut. 2. 368E, 1018 E:—Hdt. has the neut. émixowa as Adv. in common, ér. xpéowrat yuvativ 1.216; xpnorhpiov, 7d énixowa éxpnoe % Tv0in 6.77; so, ExphaOn éxixowor xp. Ib. 19: ef. értguvos. II. in Gramm. epicene, of nouns used alike of both genders. émuxowbw, to communicate, Twi Tt or tepi Tivos, Lat. communicare cum aliquo rem vel de aliqua re, Dio C. 66. 10, etc.:—Med. fo con- sult with, Tw mepi Tivos Plat. Prot. 313 B; tut te Dio C. 52. 21:— Pass. to be shared with, ydpous GdAnAos emcotvovpévovs (vulg. émucot- vavoupevous) Plat. Legg. 631 D. ém éw, to icate with, rwt Hipp. Progn. 39, Plat. Soph. 251 D; ém. dAAjAots Arist. An. Post. 1. 11, 4; Tit wepi Twos Dem, 855. 6: to be connected with, to influence, rw Hipp. Fract. 772. 2. to share in a thing with one, riwi twos Plat. Gorg. 464 C; Tv ypapparov zi émxowvover; what letter has he in common? Id. Crat. 394.C; obdtv én. TO von having nothing in common with .., Aeschin. 59. 37 :—cf. emo. émkowevia, as, 7), ity, émuowovés, dv, =Kowwvds, Hipp. 23. 42. émuoipiivos, 6,=«xolpavos, like ém:BouxdAos, Orph. Arg, 292. émucourafopar, Dep. to pass the night, Arist. H. A.8. 14, 2. émcouréw, to keep watch over, emt ra&v épyuv Polyb. 22. 10, 6. émxotros, ov, (Koirn) at bed time, dopa ér. an evening song ot hymn, Hierocl. Carm. Aur. p, 208, émukoxkdorpia, 7, a mocker, %jx@ Adyar dvrwdds én. Ar. Thesm. 1059; al. éms«xoxkvorpea, a cuckoo-imitator ; but Aristoph, Gramm. ap. Eust. 1761, 26 refers it to a Verb émuonndto. emnohdmra, to carve as on stone, C.1. 2905. 1. D. 5, 10, etc. emucoAAatvin, to glue or stick on, mnddv Theophr. C. P. 1. 6, 6. émnoAAnpa, 76, that which is glued on, Theophr. C. P. 4. 3, 3. émucdAmos, ov, in or on the bosom, Acl. N, A. 2. 50, Nonn. D. 8. 78. émucdhavos, ov, on or over a hill, 634s Diod. 19. 19. émuKopdw, to wear hair, Poll. 2. 25., 4.136. érikdp Bra, 74, (“6pBos) money tied up in little linen bags and thrown among the people on festivals by the Byzantine emperors: sometimes written émucépma, v. Ducange. émucopife, fut. Att. %:—to bring or carry to, Arist. ap. Diog. L. 5. 14, in Pass. :—Med. to bring with one, Dio C. 50. 11. erucoppda, to adorn with cosmetics, Themist. 167 D. érrixopos, ov, (xbun) with or wearing hair, Poll. 4.137. emnopmdtwe, to add boastingly, Eur. H.F. 981; GAnbet Ady Tt Plut. Camill. 22, 2. to boast or exult in a thing, Call. Dian. 263; but Valck, reads 6Alyw én’ éxdunace p10 00. emucoprréco, =foreg. 1, Thue. 8. 81. 2. to boast of, Tt Id. 4. 126. Emucopipertio, to deck out, Aé-yor Joseph. A. J. 20. 11, 2. emtxomrdvov, 76, a chopping-block, Menand, ’Avart0. 3. ,emKomm, 7, a cutting close, lopping, Theophr. C. P. 5. 17, 33 peas emmys elvas to fall by a single blow, Dio.C. 38. 50., 49. 29. énixomos, ov, of trees, lopped, pollarded, Theophr. H.P.5.1, 12. 2. of coins, re-stamped, E. M. 360. 41, Hesych. II. act. for cutting : as Subst., émixomoy, 76, =érixéravoy, Luc, D, Mott. 10. 9. émcorpito, to manure, Geop. 2. 23, 5. émsarns, ov, 6, @ satirist, censor, Timon. ap. Diog. L. 9. 18, and (with v.1, émoxdmrns) 4. 33, cf. 2.127, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 224. emo, do strike upon (i. e. from above), to fell, Boov émndywv Od. 3+ 443- 2. later, of trees, to lop, pollard, Theophr. C. P. 5. 17, 3: metaph. ¢o cut short, bring down from high estate, Lat. accidere, rots Teppovnuariapévous Arist. Pol. 3, 3, 19, cf. Plut. 2. 529 B: to impede, , Plat. Soph. 252 D. Ib. 975 A: to reprove, tw Id. Cic. 24, Philostr. 843: cf. émucdmrns, émokdmre, 3. 7. xaparriipa to stamp, e.g. coin, Arist. Occ. 2. oe 2 4, to cut anew, rov dmorpBévra pddov, cited from an mth aes = es Med. ¢o smite one’s breast, to wail for, Lat. plangi, ig ee Suri Dep., later form for bmoopifozar (Moer. 380), Arist. erik: eee: , eA , 2 , ld. 166063; TO, (xoppds) =emuoravoy, Eust. 1476. 34: male émsoppov emucoppife, (xdppy\ to strike or peck on the head, Schneid. Arist. H. A. + 98,8 > Vulg. émucopi¢m sine sensu. erixopptardés — ETIKpITOS. - émicoppiorés, 7, dv, with one’s ears boxed (ent Képpns), Hesych. émkoptocopat, Med. to arm oneself against, ran Luc. Alex. 57. émuxoptipaais, ews, 2}, increasing in a certain proportion, Nicom.Arithm. 2. p. IIo. émucds, 7), dv, (os) epic, oinats Dion. H. de Comp. 22; ém. KuKXos, v. KUKAos ; of émucol the epic poets. Adv. —K@s, Suid. . émoopéw, to add ornaments to, to decorate after or besides, Ta ipa Hdt.1.184; €. tiwas émvypdupact ito honour them with .., 7. 228; Gedy én. to honour, celebrate, Ar. Ran. 383; of funeral honours, Xen. Cyr. 7- 3,113 Pass., Arist. Pol. 2. 5, 5. emkoopnpa, 76, an ornament, Eccl. émucotéw, fut. éow, =KoTréw, Nic. Th. 181, in tmesi. énikoros, ov, wrathful, vengeful, ordots Pind. Fr. 228; phSea Aesch. Pr. 602; dpds .. émxérous tpopas in wrath at the sons he had bred, Id. Theb, 787, v. Herm.—Adv. -rws, wrathfully, Aesch. Pr. 162. aT. pass. hateful, Soph. Fr. 386, cf. Aesch. Cho. 628, émotTaBile, to throw the cottabus on or at, Poll. 6.110; prob. f. 1. for dmoxotr-. *Emxotpetos, ov, of Epicurus, Epicurean, drowa Anth.P.11.93; ai- peows Stob. append. p. 24; of ’Em. the Epicureans, Luc. Hermot. 16. émukoupéw, to be an éxixoupos, to act as an ally, in Hom. only once, é Moipa Hy émxouphoovra pera Mplapoyr Il. 5. 614, cf. Hdt. 4,128, Thuc. 7-57; Tw Eur, Rhes. 937, 956, Thuc. 5. 23, etc. 2. to serve as allies or mercenaries, Isocr. 76. 2; puoOod én. Plat. Rep. 575 B. II. generally, to aid or help at need, ti Eur. I. A. 1453, Ar. Vesp. 1018 ; Th dixaoodvy Plat. Rep. 368 C; but c. dat. rei, also, 77 dvayxaia Tpopp éx. to provide for it, Aeschin. 4. 38; vécots émxoupeiv to remedy them, aid one against them, Xen, Mem. 1. 4,133; so, én. TO Atu@, TH ynpa, 7@ meviq Id. Lac. 2,6,, 10, 2, etc.; écOis emxovper tu ‘does him yeoman's service,’ Id. Cyr. 6. 2, 30. 2. c. acc. rei, émucoupely rive xetpava to keep it off from one, Xen. An. 5.8, 25, cf. Lat. defendere ; but, in Ar. Fr. 302.8, xapaBoy -yuvargt . . érexovpyoarte supplied, provided. émxotpnpa, 74, protection, x.dvos against snow, Xen. An. 4. 5, 13. Emucovpysts, ews, 7, protection, Tov Oe@v Euryph. ap. Stob. 555. fin. ; waxay against evils, Eur. Andr, 28 ; ts dropias Plat. Legg. 919 B. émoupia, Ion, -{n, 4, aid, succour, Hdt.6.108, Aesch. Pers. 731, etc.; €muoupias 5etc@ar Thuc. 1.32; émucoupiay moetoOat tun Ib. 33; én. AapBavey, €xew Eur. Or. 266, Plat. Gorg. 492 C; dmodoyias towards one’s defence, Dem. I1g9. II. IL. an auxiliary force, Aesch. Supp. 721 :—mercenary troops, Hdt. 5. 63., 6.100; in pl., Thuc. 7.59: cf. ouppaxia I. 2. the position of the éxixovupor in Plato’s Republic, Rep. 415 C: cf. éwixoupos 1. 4. émuoupifw, to hold with Epicurus, Origen. émuoupikds, 4, dv, serving for help, assistant, Plat. Rep. 434 C, 441 A. 2. mostly of troops, auwiliary, allied, Thuc. 7. 48, etc.: 7d éx. =émucoupia It, Id. 4.52, Plat., etc. émucovptos, ov, =foreg., epith. of deities, Paus. 8. 41, 7, C. I. 139.1, al. émixoupos, 6, an assister, ally, Hom. only in Il, mostly in pl. of the barbarian allies of Troy, Tp@es.. 78 éminovpor 2. 815; Tpaes kat Adpbavo. 75 érixovpa 3. 456, al.; cf. Hdt. 2. 152., 3. 91, al. 2. in Att., émlxoupoe were mercenary troops (also called gévot, and literally pu000pépo hirelings), opp. to the citizen-soldiers (woAfrat), Thuc. 6. 55; émixovpous mpoopiaboda0a Id. 2. 33, cf. Lys. 129. 4, etc. ; amd “Apxadias émixovpot Hermipp. Incert, 18, cf. Popp. 1. 18:—a less honourable name than ovppaxor, Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 12. 3.=dopupdpor, the hired body-guards of kings and tyrants, Hdt. 1. 64., 6. 39, cf. Thuc. 6. 58. 4. of én. the auxiliaries, a name given to the military class in Plato’s Republic, Rep. 414 B, 415 A, 545 D. II. as Adj. assisting, aiding, c. dat. pers., "Appodirn ..” Ape: émixoupos Il. 21. 431; Bava én. 7m Pind, O. 13.137; tais vycos er. Ar.Eq.1319; Tots ddicovpévors ér. Thuc. 3.67; also c. gen. pers., émixoupe Bpétwy their defender, h. Hom. Mart. 9, cf. Plat. Symp. 189 D, al.: absol. a patron, protector, deordrns em. Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 61. 2. c. gen. rei, defending or pro- tecting against, vécov Eur. Or. 211; ydbyous Xen. Mem. 4. 3,7; AaB- daxidas éx. Oavarow protecting them against deaths, Soph. O. T. 496; matpi aiuarow én. Eur, El, 138. émucoudita, fut. Att. 1:—to lighten a ship by throwing out part of its cargo, Hdt. 8. 118, in Pass.: metaph., ém. rots mévous T® aGpxovti to lighten his labours, Xen, Cyr. 1. 6, 253; Tas cuppopds Dem. 643. 11:— also c. gen. rei, to relieve of a burden, ydx@ov Eur. El. 72; 760 déovs Dio C. 43. 18. II. to lift up, support, marpos mAevpas adv épot Tao8 émxovdr¢’ Soph. Aj. 1411; em. thy yijv to lift up the soil, Xen. Oec. 17, 13. 2. metaph. fo lift up, encourage, édmior Id. Cyr. 7. 1, 18. b. én, véov dvipés to puff up, in bad sense, Theogn. 629. émuoupiopos, 5, relief, Clem, Al. 880, C. 1. 3461. 9. émpadatve, fo wave on high, Poll. 5. 6, Greg. Nyss. 2. p. 74. émupaddw, =foreg., Ap. Rh. 1.552, Opp. C. 1. 91. ém«pate, fut. fw, Zo shout to or at, Twi Luc, Anach. 16, in pf. émuexpa- yoras: aor. émxpagat, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 1. émpatvw, Ep. —Kpatatve: fut. —«piiva (but émupavel or dvremnpavet Aesch, Ag. 1340, on which v, sub paivw): aor. I -éxpava, Ep. -éxpyva, —expiinva:—Med. érexphvavro Q.Sm.14.297. To ae to pass, ac- complish, fulfil, Hom., only in Il., etc.; dpiy waaay émupnvee may she Fulfil it, 11.15.5993 ob oguy erexpatawe he fulfilled, granted it not for them, 3. 302, cf. 2. 419; viv por 768° Emxpnnvov eéddwp grant me this prayer, fulfil it, Il. 1.455, etc.; wd0ov éwexphnve kapnatt by a nod, Call. Dian. 40; so, éw. reAos Aesch. Supp. 624; dAn67 Id. Theb. 687 5 yapov mpds TedevTds Id. Ag. 7453; mowds Oavdroy lb. 1340; xdpw dvr’ épyov Ib. 1546; cf. Soph. Ph. 1468:—Pass., xpua@ 8 éml xeidea kekpaavro were finished off with gold, Od. 4. 132, cf. 616., 15. 1163 4, 539 érexpaivero pbporpos aiwy Aesch. Supp. 46, cf. Eum. 969. II. to direct, govern, 0eovs h.Hom. Merc. 531, where Herm. ofyous (for Geos). émucpavis, idos, #), the membrane of the cerebellum (cf. mapeyepadis), Plut. 2. 899 A, Galen. émucpaviris, ios, x, the top part of the wall, corresponding to the capitals in height and ornamentation, C. I. 160, vy. Béckh p. 274. émlxpavov, 76, that which is put on the head, a head-dress, cap, Eur. Hipp. 201: a skull-cap, helmet, Strabo 504, Plut. 2. 1o1r D. ta =kovéxpavov, a capital, Pind. Fr. 58, 7, Eur. I. T. 51. énixpiots, ews, , a tempering, Diph. ap. Ath. 91 F; of humours, Diosc. 2. 53. émucparavéw, to add strength to, confirm, Lxx (Eccl. 4. émucpareta, 1), (mixpairhs) tery, dominion, p ion, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4, 28, Polyb. 12. 25, 3, etc.: victory, superiority, Polyb. 2.1, 3. 2. prevalence, Plut. 2. 906 C, cf. Sext. Emp. P. 1. 80. II. of a country, a realm, dominion, dmpev ..é« THs tovrwy émxpareias Xen. An. 7. 6, 42; t10 7H ér. Tod xwpiov within the country subject to the place, Ib. 6. 4, 4, cf. Ep. Plat. 349 C. émucpiiréw, to rule over, c. dat., vnecow emueparéovow dpioror Il. 10. 214; vacoow Od. 1. 245+ 16.122: absol, to have or hold power, cdr’ dy pykér’ émxparéwor dvarres 17. 320, cf. 14. 60, Archil. 63. II. to prevail in battle, be victorious, émxparéovot mep éumns [to them] victorious as they are, Il. 14. 98, cf. Ar. Lys. 767; ém. 7) awéAAvoGat to conquer or to die, Hdt. 7.104; ém. TH ordoe to be victorious in the party-conflict or by means of his faction, Id. 1.173. 2. often c. gen. to prevail over, get the mastery of an enemy, ém. waxy Tov Ted Hat. 7.155; rv éx@pav Id. 8. 94, Lys. 920.6; én. abrod mapa TO Baordéi, in a suit at law, Hdt. 4. 65; so also, éw. Tod mupds Id. 1, 86; yipws Plat. Legg. 752 A; dav én. rod xéag Ar. Ran. 267. 3. rarely c, acc. to master, c er, TAs dpaprias Isocr.13.C; dv0 BaotAéas Dio C. 35.16; én. ra akte Tov modépou to gain chief advantages in the war, Thuc. 4. 19, cf. 7. 63. 4. c. gen. also, to become master of, Lat. potiri, Trav mpaypdroy Hdt. 4.164; THs Oaddoons Id. 1.17, al.; trav “EAARvwr, Trav Tepoéwy Id. 2. 1, etc.; Tav ToAlev, Trav vedy Id. 6.32, 115; THs dvaryxatov rpopys Thuc.1.2; tav ép&rey Pind. P, 8. 9, etc. 5. generally, to prevail, be superior, wAnOet Hat, 4.187., 5.23; T@ vavTie@ Thuc. 2. 93; TO mel@ Id. 7. 63; ward O4- Aaocay Xen. Hell. 7.1, 6: c. inf. they carried the point that .., Thuc. 5.40; éwexparovy pr) déxec0at rods AOnvatous Id. 6. 74. b. metaph. to prevail, émxpare? 7d dvOpwmevov 7Oos Plat. Criti. 121A; 70 dixacoy Menand. ’Emrp. 1; 70 Yoxos, 7d bypdy Arist. Meteor. I. 11, 3, etc.; 7d évopa. Polyb, 2. 38, 1; 6 Adyos Diod, 5. 62. 6. c. part., é7. diat- pores to succeed in keeping it open, Arist. G. A. 4. 4, 49. émpiris, és, master of a thing: only used in Comp., émxparéorepos Th pax superior in .., Thuc, 6. 88; émxparéorepds Tivos having the upper hand of .., Dio C. 55. 30, cf. Memnon 29 :—«ard 7d émxparé- » @repov with success, Diod. Excerpt. p. 539.—Hom. has only the Adv. —réws, with overwhelming might, impetuously, ll. 16. 67, 81., 23. 863 (never in Od.) ; so Hes. Sc. 321, 419, 461, Ap. Rh. 1. 367, etc. émparnots, ews, , a mastering, conquest of, Twos Thuc. 1. 41. Zr. supreme power, sovereigniy over, Twos Dio C. 47. 21. Til. of things, prevalence, Galen. émkparytéov, verb. Adj. one must conquer, Tivés Clem, Al. 224. émukparytiKkds, 7, dv, restraining, astringent, Galen. éru darnp, 6, the ruling star, Ptolem, émuparides, iSwy, ai, (pds, xpards) a kind of head-dress (cf. énixpa- vov) or towel, Hipp. 28. 7. émupatiucds, 7, dv, (émxepavvup) =emaxepacricds, Galen. émpavydfw, zo cry out to or at, Arr. Epict. I. 21, 3., 4.1, 19. émucpepdvvdp. and -tw: fut. — — [a], Att.-xpeuo. To hang over, drnv tit Theogn. 206; xivdvvoy Polyb. 2. 31, 7; péBoy Dio 16. 50. II. Pass., émixpépapat, aor. érexpeudoOnv :—to over- hang, of a rock, h. Hom. Ap. 2843 olxos ému«pepapevos Th aryopG Plut. Poplic. 10:—metaph. to hang over, threaten, Lat. imminere, Oavaros Simon. 48; 8dAcos aid Pind, I. 8. 28; tipmpla Thuc. 2. 53; émxpe- papevos kiviuvos impending danger, Id. 7. 75, cf. 3. 40; c. dat. pers., Ap. Rh. 3. 483; Ep. 3 pl. émum«pexdavrat Nonn. D. 20. 173. émucpepys, és, overhanging, suspended, Christod. Ecphr. 183: metaph. doubtful, Schol. Soph. Aj. 23. émuproios, 6, a Cretan dance, Ath. 629 C. Emucpiyvov, -—Kphvete, v. sub émxpalyw. érixpypvos, ov, precipitous, steep, Pherecyd. ap. Schol, Od. 21. 22, Dicaearch. 2. 6 (with v. 1. doxp-). émucpioat, y. sub émxepavvupe. émucptdSov, Adv. (émxpivw) by choice, Ap. Rh. 2. 302. énixpipa, 7d, an edict, decree, C. I. 2737 a. 23., 4957. 28. émucplve [7], fut.—«ptva@, to decide, determine, 71 Plat. Rep. 524E, Legg. 768 A, Dion, H. 3. 29; Tt mepi twos Decret. ap. Dem. 238. 13, ete. ; ér. Ti Sapéper what is the difference, Arist. de An. 3. 7,4; 70 émixpivov the deciding power, Id, Insomn. 3, 8 :—to adjudge, inflict, @dvarov LXX (2 Macc, 4. 47). II. to select, pick out, Diod.1. 753 ém. Twa ica ddeApots to distinguish, esteem, Hipp. Jusj. én-{xprov, 74, the yard-arm of a ship, Od. 5. 254, 318. émixptows, ews, 4, determination, Twos of a thing, Strabo 7, Plut. 2. 43 C, Diog. L. 9. 92. 3 bi oh aca 76, a body of supernumerary judges, Inscr. Cret. in C. I. 2556. 67. Sruxptrhs, 00, 6, an adjudicator, arbiter, Twos Polyb. 14. 3, 7. émucpitiKds, 7, dv, adjudicatory, tivos Diog. L. 9. 47. énixptros, ov, approved, Joseph. B. J. 3. 5. 5- 12), in Pass. 540 émikpoxov, 76, a woman's garment, either from its saffron colour (kpéxos) or its thick pile (xpoxn), Hesych. érruk (fw, =sq., Nonn, D. 17. 29. émxporéw, Zo rattle on or over, TA 8 [appara] emxporéovra mérovro flew rattling over the ground, Hes. Sc. 308 :—c. acc. to strike with a rattling sound, to clash, 7a xtpBada Alciphro 1, 12; "yévetov Opp. C. 2. 244. 2. to clap, applaud, Menand. Incert. 304, Plut. Anton, 12, Luc. Char, 8 :—later, ér. r® xeipe Synes. 166 D. 3. c. dat. instrum., ér, d80001 to chatter with one’s teeth, Pseudo-Luc, Philopatr. 21; é7. tots daxrvAots to snap the fingers, Lat. digitis crepare, Eust. 1602. 10 ; absol., Aristob. ap. Ath. 530 B. artkporos, ov, beaten or trodden hard, esp. of ground, év 7@ émpdrw immedew Xen. Eq. Mag. 3,14; én. woreiv Arist. H. A. 5. 33, 2:—metaph., 70 ér. ToD Adyou its sonorousness, Philostr. 539. énixpoupa, 76, a thing struck against, Soph. Fr. 270. énixpovats, ews, 4, a striking against, Galen. émicpovw, tohammer in, HAov Ar.Thesm.1004. _—_ II. éw. xObva Baxrpois zo smite with their sceptres on the earth, Aesch. Ag. 202; €m. 77 xetpt 70 £ipos to clap one’s hand on one’s sword, Plut. Pomp. 58: metaph. to jeer at, eis twa Macho ap. Ath. 579 B. III. =émiucporew, LXx (Jer. 48. 26). émuputréov, verb. Adj. one must conceal, Clem. Al. 348. énixpunros, ov, hidden, concealed, Tzetz. empire, fut. yw: aor. 2 éméxpipov. To throw a cloak over, conceal, xetpas povias Aesch. Eum. 317; 7) BovAnoww Plat. Crat. 421 B; (in Eur. Supp. 296, Herm. restores érn xpvmrew); often in late Prose, but mostly used in Med. to disguise, xam«pdiao8at xaxd Soph. Fr. tog ; Tas avrod Tixas .. ToUmEpUTTEedbat copdy Eur. Fr. 557; €1. tiv avtow dmopiay Plat. Lach. 196 B, cf. Prot. 346 B; 6 7 ody tyaive Id. Rep. 476E; 7dAn07 Dem. 216.16: absol., émxpumrdpevos with concealment or secrecy, Xen, An. 1. 1,6; émupdmrecGat ri Te one thing by another, Dem. 1415. 3; also, ve ets rt one thing under another, Plut. Pericl. 4 :— émupurrecbat Tia Tt to conceal a thing from one, Polyb. 3. 75, 1; also, én. Ta ds .., Plat. Theaet. 180 D:—to disguise oneself, conceal one’s purpose, TG dvépare Thuc, 8. 92; éo677: Plut. Caes. 38; é. rivd to elude his observation, Lat. fallzre, Plut. Theaet. 180 C:—Pass. to be concealed, Arist. Pol. 3. 5, 9. bos, ov, unknown, inglorious, Pind. O. 8. 92, Plut. Arat. Io. énixpuis, ews, 7), concealment, Plut. Nic. 23, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut. 1. 5. émupafe, to caw or croak at, Ar. Eq. 1051; tii Themist. 61 D. émxrdéopa, Dep. to gain or win besides, pidovs Aesch. Eum. gor; Gddrov obdéva [vdpov] émceréovrat (Ion.) Hdt. 2. 79; é1. dpxqv to extend one’s empire, Thuc. 1. 144; ém. 7@ pa mpoonkovra Id. 4. 61; Tpihpes KéxTnoGe moAAdS Kal mdrpiov Hpiv éorw émueTaaGa to add to ‘those you have, Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 3; Tévd er. cdppaxoy as an ally, Aesch. Eum. 671; fvppaprupas buds er. Soph. Ant. 846. °: émucretvw, to Rill besides or again, én. roy Oavévra to slay the slain anew, Soph. Ant. 1030, cf. Plut. Caes. 46. - émrénov, 76, («rels) the tow which remains in the heckle, ér. dpod Awod Hipp. 619. fin. II. the abdomen immediately above the pudenda, Id. 611. 43, ete. émuctepet{w, to perform funeral rites over, Nonn. D. 47. 241. éntkrnpa, 76, (émierdopat) a new acquisition, Ammon. p. 84. exixrnois, ews, }, further acquisition, fresh gain, Soph. Ph. 1344; muarov Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 11; in pl., Dion. H. 9. 53. KTyTos, ov, gained besides or in addition, én. yf acquired land, which was formerly under water, as the Delta of Egypt, Hdt. 2. 5, cf. 10; or, land added to one’s hereditary property, Plat. Legg. 924 A, cf. Lycurg. 15.4. 1: én. yur a foreign wife (like énaxrés), or newly acquired, Hat. 3. 3; éalier. pidoe newly acquired friends, opp. to dpxato., Xen. ‘Ages. 1, 36; émlr. dé¢a, opp. to eupuros émOupla, adventitious fame, Plat. Phaedr. 237 D; 7a ér., opp. to 72 pice dvra, Id. Rep. 618 D; ‘opp. to adppura, Arist. G. A. 1.17, 9; 70 ém., opp. to adropués, Id. Rhet. 1. 7, 33, etc.: cf. éwaxrds, énideros. émurilw, to found in addition or anew, Strabo 831. II. to found in or among, modes dyplos €Oveot Plut. 2. 328 B. . , aor. I, V. inf: aor. 2 éwéxrimoy, Ap. Rh. 1. 1136:—to make a noise upon, Toiv modoiv enemy to stamp on the ground with the fect, Ar. Eccl. 483; odxea gupéeow én. clashed on their shields with .., Ap. Rh. l.c.; canéecow én. Id. 2. 1081: absol. to re-echo, respond, mas 8 éwexrdano’ “Odvpmos Ar. Av. 780; of a chorus, Polyb. 30. 13, 9. émlxuBot, of, v. sub cuBemixvBot. ‘ vopat, Pass. fo exult in, rit Dio C. 71. 2. émnibys, és, (4080s) glorious, distinguished, Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 36: brilliant, successful, émxvbdéorepa Ta apuyiate énoinoer Isocr. 69 C; emnvdéorepae edmides Polyb. 16. 4, 3; and of persons, émucvdéarepos ais édnlot more sanguine, Id. 5. 69, 11:—Adv. only in Comp., €or épws Lot a Id. 5. 23, 2. dw, =emixvdatvopat, Ap. Rh. 4. 383; al. 9 ém xvdides, emuvéw, =émicvicxopos, Hipp. 1144 E, Arist. H. A. 7. 4, fin., al. émutmpa, 76, @ superfetation, Hipp. 260. 10, Arist. G. A. 4. 5, 2. ious, ews, %, superfetation, name of a treatise by Hipp. ype pe Pass. to become doubly pregnant, i.e. pregnant again before the first foetus is born, Lat. superfoctare, Hat. 3. 108, Hipp. 260. 6, Arist. G. A. 4. 5,1, al.: ef. émuvew. iq 3 émvedéw, intr. fo come round in pd a gn ve wat xapa naar Aodat Soph. Tr. 130: so in Pass., Dion. H. de Rhet. 17. Pisin os) ov, aaa: én. (sc. mAakods), 6, a round Sicilian cake, ich. ap. Ath. 645 E; for Plut. 2. 1146 D, v. sub emxvdineos. — erbieu 6, an epicycle (in Astron.), Plut. 2, 1028 B. ‘ | SmnvAlbes, (oar, al, the upper eyelids, Poll. 2. 66: y. sub Kuda. Les ie ~ is * ae OF érixpoxov — ériAauBave. émvAtkevos, ov, said or done over one’s cups (inter pocula), Aé-yor Ath. 2 A, and prob. I. Plut. 2.1146D; cf. Diog. L. 4. 42, and y. sub «vA. émucvAwSéw or —KvAlw (Diod. 19. 19): fut. evAlcw [7] :—to roll down upon, mérpous él riva Xen. Hell. 3.5, 20; aor. 1 émeevdtoat, Polyb. 3. 53» 4:—Pass., réew réxois emuvdabévraw interest being heaped on interest, Plut. 2. 831 E. 2. intr. to roll on, xbpara Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 3. émuctAtvSpdopar, Pass. to be flattened by rollers, Theophr. C. P. 5. 6, 7. émuctArov, 76, the upper eyelid (cf. émuvdlbes), Eust. 1951. 20. émtAAopa, 75, lameness, Eust. 1599. 13- émuxipatve, fut. dv&, to flow in waves over, 7H Gaddrrp Philostr. 836: metaph., Tots immedow ér. padayé Plut. Alex. 33. II. trans. to make to rise in waves, tiv OdAaccay Joseph. A. J. 4. 3, 2. émndpiirifo, to float upon the waves, Poll. 8.138, Philo ¥. 445. émikipdtwois, ews, 7, fluctuation, M. Anton. 9. 28. emma, fut. Yow, to bend oneself over, to stoop over, bow down, Hipp. Art. 819, Ar. Thesm. 239; dp0ds Eornne, pexpdv émxvaroy Arist. H. A. 3. 21, 2: cf. dwontmrw, bmoxiarw :—én. émi tt to stoop down to get something, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3,18; ém. és BiBAtov to pore over a book, Luc. Hermot. 2 :—to lean upon, rivi Id. D. Mort. 6.2; but, é. 7@ avvedpiv to bow before it, Id. Jup. Trag. 11>—part. pf. émuexupds, habitually stooping, Anaxandr. Mayv6, ¥. émixipioce, to strike violently, of storms, v. 1. Theophr. Vent. 34. émxpsw, to confirm, sanction, ratify, rhv ywwpny Thuc. 3. 71, cf. Soph. El. 793, Xen. An. 3. 2, 32, Oratt., etc.; c. inf, tives .. Ad-you xa- Oetdov Has Karexdpwoay Oaveiy Eur. Or, 862 :—Pass., mpiv Te émucvpar- Ojvat Thuc. 5. 45. énikuprtos, ov, bent forward, kump-backed, Plut. 2. 53 C. émuptéa, to bend forward, xapnva Hes. Sc. 234.:—Pass. to be arched, Luc. Amor. 14. émuxtpw, Ep. impf. érixipoy, Ep. aor. 1 émixupoa or émucdpnoa (v. infr.). To light upon, fall in with, like émrvyxavw, Lat. incidere, c. dat., peydaw “et ere xupoas ll. 3.23; lepotoww én’ aldopevorot kuphoas Hes. Op. 753; ality én’ abyév kdpe pacivod Soupds dxwxy kept always threatening his neck with.., Il. 23. 821; (but in Q. Sm. 13. 394, ént ios abxév Kpoa to hold it over ..); éx. perarpomias Pind. P. 10. 30:—also c. gen. to meet with, obtain, émxipoas apOdvev dorav Id. O. 6.10; peyddas dyads re .. Biords érextpoapev Aesch, Pers. 853, ef. Ap. Rh. 3. 342. émikipwors, ews, }, (Emnupdw) ratification, confirmation, Eccl. enixihos, ov,=érixupros, bent over, crooked, LXX (3 Macc.4. 5), Suid. émucupeAros, 6, («vpeAn) a guard of beehives, May Anth, P. 9. 226. emixuies, ews, 7), a bending over a thing, Oribas. 2 Mai. émxwPavifopat, Dep. to go on drinking, Critias 27. Emikwkvw, fut. vow [0], to lament over, marpds daira. Soph. El. 283; tov vidy Ib. 805; absol., Heliod. 1. 13. émkodtv, fut. vow [0], to hinder, check, Thuc. 6. 17; aAAjAous Xen. Occ. 8, 43 Tis... wf obmxwdtowv 7d5€; Soph. Ph. 1242. éemuxopato, to rush on or in with a party of revellers, Polyb. 26. 10, 5, Call. Ep. 44; generally, to make a riotous assault, émi twa Ar. Ach. 982; Twi Menand. Incert. 234; «ls 7ds réAets Plat. Legg. 950A; ént Thy oixiay tivds Plut. 2. 772 F :—Pass. to be grossly maltreated and insulted, Id. Pyrrh, 13. emuKopiaoriKds, Ady. = éykap—(q.v.), Schol. Pind. N. 8. 1. ETLKMPLOS, a, ov, of, at, or for a K@pos or festal procession, Op, bpvosPind, P. to. 9,N.8.85; emndpua, rd, =eyxdpua, praises, Ib.6.56: v. e@pos. énikwpos, ov,=foreg., Aristias ap. Ath. 686 A (as L. Dind. for éni- komos), Plut. 2. 128 D, Alciphro 1. 37, Hesych. émkapodéo, to make a jest of in comedy, Plat. Apol. 31 D. énixwtos, ov, (kim) at the oar, a rower, Menander ap. Joseph. A. J. 9-14, 2. 2. of a boat, furnished with oars, Moschio ap. Ath. 208 F, Dion. H. 3. 44: énixwmos (sub. vais), , a despatch-boat, Cic. Att. 5. II, cf. Gell. 10. 25. 3. of a weapon, up to the hilt, through and through, Ar. Ach. 231.—Cf. énixopos, EmAGBH, 7}, (mAapBave) a taking hold of, grasping, mémdav 7° &mt- AaBas €vay Aesch. Supp. 432. 2. a handle, hold, Hipp. Art, 814. emdayxave, fut. -Angopa., to obtain the lot, to succeed another in an office, in case he made a vacancy (cf. Aayyxdvw I. 2), obre Aaxdv oir’ emihaxcav Aeschin. 62. 31, Dem. 1331. 5; émaA. tit Bovdts to succeed him in the Council, Plat. Com. ‘Yr. 3. 43 v. Harpoer. II. to fail to one’s lot next, émdédoyxe miparov ..yjpas Soph. O. C, 12 : Aoyxe mip ‘Yiipas Sop 35 (where others take it he has it for his lot, but v. Aayxave IV). én-TAaBév, Adv., =lAadéy, in troops, in numbers, Dion. P. 763. émAdlupar, Dep. to hold tight, stop, ér. ordpa, i.e. I am silent, Eur. Andr. 250.—Only poét., cf. sub AdCopas. emAarpapyéw, to be greedy for, dy Clem. Al. 171. émAaits, 180s, %, v. 1. for broAais, in Arist. H, A. 8. 3, 5- énthaxkos, ov, forming a hollow, 70 én. Hépos, i.e, the lower part of the neck, Schol. Theocr. 3. 54. emAdAbwo, to interrupt in speaking, Symm. V. T. thing, Eust. 773. 26, in Pass. Ss ye a ata fut. —Afpouat: aor. —€r%Bov. To take or get besides, : . evrnKovra Takavros éxardv Arist, Pol, 1. 11, 11 :—c. gen. ac oe ToD xpévov to take a little more time, M. Anton. I. ioe ‘ae Pxiis Paus. 9.14, 5. IZ. to lay hold of, seize, pag a a aed Hdt. 8. 115, Hipp. Aph. 1258, Thuc. 2. 51; of eatnge y “34 avig. 36:—Pass., émetAnnrac vécw Soph. Ant. 7323 20 absol., Arist. H. A, 3. 3, fin.; Tv alcOnow emAnpbels Lat. prc captus, Plut. Flam. 6; cf. ériAnrros, -Anpia, —Anyus. b. of events, to overtake, surprise, pi) .. xeyudv THY pudaniy émAdBor 2. to say of a » Thue. 4. 273 vurros émAaBovans 7d pyov Ib. 96; raxd émAaBov et ériAapm pos — er AjoTuwv. *yiipas Plat. Epin. 974 A!—impers., émAapPaver, c. acc. et inf., it befalls one that .., Paus. 6, 22, 4., 7. 21, I. 2. to attain to, come within reach of, reach, Xen. An. 6. 5, 6; &rn dxra én. to live over eight years, Thuc. 4. 133; but €. gen. partit., éw. rerdprov pnvds to arrive at, not live over it, Arist. H. A. 7. 3, 9; so, Gore wal xetpavos éx. Theophr. H. P. 1. 9, 6, cf. Plut. Mar. 46. 3. to seize, stop, esp. by pressure, tiv piva Ar. Pl. 703; é. twa THs dalaw 6500 to stop him from getting back, Hdt. 2. 87; é. 70 tSwp to stop the water-clock (as was don when an orator stopt speaking, to have witnesses exa d or doc it read, v. eAey~ddpa), Lys. 166. 43, Isae., etc. ; cf. Att. Process. pp. 713 sq.3 Tovs mépous Tov aréparos ém, Arist. H. A. 4. 3, 5, etc. 4. to occupy space, pndév trav ris méAews.. oixodopnuact én. Plat. Legg. 799 C; meie Témov Arist. Cael. 3.7, 3:—metaph., roAbv x@pov én. to get over much ground, ¢raverse it rapidly, as in Virgil corripere campum, Theocr. 13. 65. 5. c. gen. to undertake, ths kwhoews, THS vagews Acl. N. A. 5. 18., 13. 19. 6. c. dat. to assist, App. Civ. 4. 96. 7. intr. to succeed, follow, Arist. Probl. 1. 8, 3. III. Med., with pf. pass. (Plat. Crat. 396 D), to hold oneself on by, lay hold of, c. gen., Tov vedv Hdt. 6,113, Thuc. 4.14, etc.; Tay dprdorwy vnds Hat. 6. 114; Tay émanacrnpov Ib. 91; Srov émAdBorro 7a Spétava whomso- ever the scythes caught, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 31; émAapBaverat pov Tis xetpds 7H Sega Plat. Prot. 335 C; émAaBdpevos [rivos] rH xetpt Dem. 534.13; Twos Tay tprx@v by the hair, Aeschin. 75. 3; 0) ‘mAapBavou hold me not, Eur. Phoen. 896. 2. to attack, twos Xen. Hell. 4. 2, 22, Arist. Pol. 5.6, 4; esp. with words, Plat. Phaedr. 236 B; of diseases, Luc, Nigr. 29. 3. to make a seizure of, arrest, Tav matdwy Dem. 895. 10: ¢o seize goods in default of payment, Id. 558.18: to Jay claim to, erhparos Plat. Legg. 954 C. 4, to lay hold of, get, obtain, mpoorarecs a chief, Hdt. 1.127; mpopdoros a pretext, 3. 36., 6. 49; Suvapios 9. 99; Katpod Ar. Lys. 696; éfovcias, yadnvys Plat. Rep. 360 D, Polit, 273 A; T&v dyagéy Plut. Oth. 3; ém. Aoyopu@ Lat. ratione assequi, Plat. Phaedo 79 A. 5. of place, to gain, reach, dacéos ér. a thicket, Arist. H. A.g. 44, 3; 7@v dp@yv Plut. Anton. 41; in Luc, Con- templ. 5, wiay ér. dxpay, which in Class. Gr. would be yuds dxpas; of a state or condition, épnpias émetdnupevor Dem. 36. 2. 6. to attempt, mpagewv peyadwy Plut. Mar. 7. 7. to touch on, Lat. strictim attingere, twos Plat. Rep. 449 D. 8. to take up, interrupt in speaking (cf. iroAapBavw), Id. Gorg. 506 B, Symp. 814 E: to object to, Tod ynpicparos Xen. Hell. 2.1, 32; 7. bre .. to object that .., Plat. ee 49e C. 9. rarely c. acc. to seize, Tas ’AOqvas Lycurg. 158. 23. ériAapmpos, ov, brilliant, illustrious, Artemid. 3. 61. émAapmptve, to make splendid, adorn, rdv olkov Plut. Lysand. 30; yévos tipais Dion. H. 6. 41:—of sound, to make loud and clear, raise high, rov 7xov Id. de Comp. p. 96 Schaf.; rv porqy Plut. 2. 912 C. érikaptros, ov, Ion. for émiAnrros. émthaptra, to shine after or thereupon, hédtos 3 énédapie thereupon the sun skone forth, ll. 17. 650; so, of the moon, h. Hom. Merc. 141, Plut., etc.; &s oe Huepn ewérapwe Hat. 8. 14, cf. 3.1353 emaAappdons Hépys when day had fuily come, Id. 7. 13 ; so, €apos EmAdwavros Id. 8. 130. 2. to shine upon (a place), absol., Hipp. Aer. 283, Xen. Cyn. 8, 1; c. dat., ém. dxpow rots xépact Plut, Fab. 6; 6 Atos €méAappe TO €pyy Id. Arat. 22:—metaph., ovpios..émidappoy eu@ Epwrt, Kumpe Anth. P. 5.17; Tots dmeAmi€ovow én. to weet them new light, C. 1. 4717. 20. IZ. trans, to make to shine, wox0o vedrar’ éréAappav pupion (so L. Dind. for pupios), Pind. Fr. 158 :—Pass, to shine upon, at Ap. Rh, 2. 920. 2. to illumine, 7 Ib. 164. émAavOdvea, v. sub émA7Ow. ér-tAapxia, 7, a double iAn, i.e. two TAat or 128 horse, Arr. Tact. 18. 2 :—én-Thdpxys, 6, the commander of it, prob. 1. African. Cest. 72. én-idaots, Dor. for éridnots, Pind. émAcalvw, fo smoothe over, Plut. 2. 75 B: metaph., émAenvas Tih Béptew yvwny, i. e. making it plausible, Hdt. 7.9, 3, cf.8.142,and Aealyw, émA€avors, ews, 4, a smoothing over, Philo 1. 254. émdéySnv, Adv. by selection, Eust. 955. 8. éméyo, to say in addition, Hdt. 2. 35, 64, etc.; moet tt kal émtré- yey to say while or after doing it, Id. 4. 65; maiCovow émaAéyovres Id. 5.4; én. tov Adyov révbe, ws... 1d. 2. 156., 8. 49; enmaraw .. ém- Ayo roavri Ar. Eq. 418; ér. rexphpia tiv GdAqny airod . . mapavo- play citing it as proof, Thuc. 6, 28; ém. rwi ti to say besides to him, Xen. Cyr. I. 3, 7:—so also in Med. to repeat, Dion. H. de Rhet. 11. 5. 2. to call by name, Hat. 5. 70, Plat. Legg. 700 B: so in Med., Aesch, Supp. 49. 8. to attribute to one, Arist. Pol. 7.1, 7; é7. tivi, as .. to impute to one, that .., Id. Eth. N. 2. 6, 9. 4, to say against one, App. Civ. 3. 18. II. to choose, pick out, select, Hdt. 3. 44, 81: but more used in Med., rv BaBvdwviay énedéfaro he chose him certain of the Babylonians, Id. 3. 157, cf. 6. 73, Thuc. 7. 19, Arist. Fr. 146 :—Pass., émiAeAeypevot or éretheypevot chosen men, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 41, cf. Isocr. 7x B Bekk. IIT. also in Med. to think upon, think over, Tatra Hat, 1. 78., 2. 120, al.; ov« or pt ér., nihil curare, 7.236, al.; od8apa ér. ph Kore .. to have no fear lest .. , 3. 65., 7-149; ¢. inf, nav émaAcyspevos teloecbat expecting .., 7. 49, cf. 523 rare in Att., und emAcxO7s *"Ayapeuvoviay elvar pw ddoxov deem me not to be.., Aesch. Ag. 1498 (but Herm., pnxére AexO 8 "Ayap. p. ef. GA. let it no more be said that ..). 2. in Hdt. also, to con over, read, Td BiBXiov, 7a ypappara 1.124, 125., 2.125, al.; so in Paus. 1. 12, 3. émAciBw, fo pour wine over a thing, émt 3 aldora olvoy AeiBe Il. 1. 4633 absol., dviordyevar 8 éréAc:Bov Od. 3. 341. éniAetpa, 7d, a remnant, Schol. Arat. 786. émeidw, to smooth off, shave smooth, 7d yéverov Dio C. 48. 34, in Med. FS 541 émAcltrw, to leave behind, émt 5 mrefov éd€derTro Od. 8. 475, cf. Xen. An. 1. 8, 18:—Pass. c. gen. to fall short of, Plat. Epin. 978 A. 2. to leave untouched, ws obr’ dv Trav épay emAltorpe obdev obre TY pidwy Plat. Prot. 310 E; c. part., pupia ér. Aéyow Id. Phil. 26 B, cf. 52 D. II. of things, to fail one, like Lat. deficere, c. acc. pers., 7Bnv.., % pw’ émdeimee Theogn. 1130; vdwp piv émédume the water failed him, Hdt. 7. 21, cf. 2.174; so, Tav ouBpay émaAtmévrov avrous (sc. rods morapovs) Id. 2.25; yAadxes bpas ovmor’ émAchpouat Ar. Av. 1102; éweddy adrovs émAimwow édmides Thuc. 5. 103, cf»Antipho 131.273; émAcimer pe 6 xpévos time fails me, Lat. dies me deficit, Isocr. 4A, cf. 345 C; émaAciper we A€yovra % Huepa Dem. 324. 18 :—later, c. dat., Plut. Cic. 42, Ael. N. A. 8. 17. 2. in Hdt., often of rivers, én. 70 péeOpov to eave their stream unfilled, run dry, Hat. 7. 43, 58, etc.; and so without féeOpor, to fail, run dry, Id. 7.127; so, €m. 7a ppéara Dem. 186. 16. 3. then, generally, to fail, be wanting, iva ph émAtry carecOidpeva Hdt. 3.108; otros émdim@y a deficiency of it, Thuc. 3.20; ra émrhdea ér. Xen. An. 4. 7,1; wore tov Adyov pndérore ér. Plat. Prot. 334 E; opp. to meprylyvecOat, Ar. Pl. 554. émdelxw, to lick over, to lick, y. 1, Longus 1. 24. émikeups, ews, 7, (émAcimw) a deficiency, failure, lack, épvidav Thuc. 2.50; THs Suvdpews Plut. 2.695 D; reddy C. I. 2695 b. émAckr-dpxys, ov, 6, commander of a picked band, Plut. Arat. 32. éntXextos, ov, (EmAéyw) chosen, picked, {UAa mpds edwdiav émidr. Acl. V.H. 5. 6:—esp. of soldiers, of éwiAewro: Xen. An. 3. 4, 43, Hell. 5.3,233 the Lat. extraordinarii, Polyb. 6. 26,6, etc. Ady. -rws, Schol. Thuc, émdedoyiopévws, Ady. with consideration, Clem. Al. 186, eridegis, ews, ), (€mAéyo) choice, selection, App. Civ. 3. 5. émAetrivw, fo smear over with a thin coat, Hesych., Poll. 7. 1, 24. émAemra, fut. Yw,-to strip of bark, é¢ov h, Hom. Merc. 109. émAcunatvw, to be white on the surface, Arist. P. A. 4. 1,3, Theophr, H. P. 3. 12, 9, etc. ‘ émAeuita, 4, =Aeven, leprosy, Plut. 2. 670 F. émidevtos, ov, white on the surface, whitish, Theophr. H. P. 3. 7, 5. émAetoow, to look towards or at, téccov Tis Tt émadAgdooe: one can only see so far before one, Il. 3. 12. émthyfos, ov, (émAavOdvw) causing to forget, c. gen., papyaKov.., vntevOes 7° dxoddv Te Kakav 7° éridnOoy anavrav (éniknGes in Pseudo- Plut. Vit. Hom. p. 255, Clem. Al. 3), Od. 4. 221; with fem., tvyya déovs énidndov mayrés Acl.N. A. 4. 41., 15. 19. émA7Oe, fut. ow, to cause to forget, 6 yap 7 [umvos] éwédnoev drdvrav laps one in forgetfulness of all, Od. 20.85; %50v2) opéas émAnOovea Tay mapos Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 2.12; émAhoe ce tay ’Appodiciov Philostr. (?) :—Pass. to be forgotten, émAacbév Pind. Fr. 86; pf. part. émAeAnopévos Lxx (Isai. 23. 16), Ev. Luc, 12.6: cf. dAaoros. BE Med. émAav@dvopat, or more commonly émAPopar: fut. —Apgouae: aor. —eAadéuny Plat. Apol.17.A; in Nonn. D. 48. 968 —eAjoaro: with pf. act. -AéAn@a Hat. 3. 46, Pind.O.10(11). 4; but more commonly pass. —AéAnopar Eur. Bacch. 188, Ar. Nub. 631, Lys. 175.8, Plat. Phaedo 75 D,al.: plqpf. -eAeAjopuny Ar. Vesp. 605, Plat. Phaedo 3 E, al. :—to let a thing escape one, to forget, lose thought of, c. gen., dmws "I8dens émaAnoerat (Ep. for -yrar) Gd. 1.57; 008 6 yépav Sodins érednbero Téxvns 4.455, cf. Hes. Th. 560; 088 ds oxedins éreAndero Od. 5. 3245 yovéwy émAabera: (Dor.) Soph. El. 146; so in Hdt. 4. 4 and Att. :—also c, acc., Hdt. 3.46, Eur. Hel. 265, Ar. Nub. 631, etc. :—c. inf., Ar. Vesp. 853, Plat. Rep. 563 B; elmeiv Hyperid. Lyc. 7; c. part., dpelAwv ém- AeAGba I forgot that I owed, Pind. O. 10 (11). 4, cf. Eur. Bacch. 188 : also, é. mepi Tivos Andoc. 19. 16, Plat. Prot. 334 D, 336 D:: also to leave disregarded, to neglect, mpooraypa, cited from Cebes. 2. more rarely, to forget wilfully, rev évrohéaw pepvnpévos émedavOdvero Hat. 3-147; 80, éxdy émAnOopar Id. 4. 43, cf. 3.75, Aeschin. 22. 39. émAnts, tos, 4, (Acia) obtained as booty or plunder, gained in war, woAes Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 23. émAnkéw, fo shout in applause, like-émayw, or to beat time to the dancers, Od. 8. 379. émAnktOlorpra, %, comic nickname of the Tragic muse, the bom- bastical, Anth. P. 13. 21: cf. An«vOos 1. 2. émAjvios, ov, (Anvés) of a wine-press or the vintage, wédos Ath. 199 A; tpvos Anacreont. 60. 8; émAnvia xaipew Opp. C. 1.127 :—as name of Bacchus, Orph. H. 49.1; also émAnvator Oeoi, Max. Tyr. 30. 4. émAnmréov, verb. Adj. one must assume, Arist. Color. 2, 12. émAntrevopar, =sq., LX (1 Regg. 21. 15). émAnmrito, (ériAnmros) to be epileptic, Plut. 2. 290 B. émAntrués, 7, dv, subject to epilepsy, epileptic, Hipp. Aph. 1246, al. II. véco, voohpara én. epileptic complaints, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 5,6,al. Adv. -x@is, Hipp. 172 F. émikntros, Ion. ériAaprrros, ov, (émAapBavw) caught or detected in anything, Lat. deprehensus, Soph. Ant. 406; c. part., émiAapmros dpao- covoa caught in the act of feeling, Hdt. 3. 69. 2. culpable, cen- surable, Bios Philo 2.43; #dAdos C. I. (add.) 2347 0. II. suffering from epilepsy, epileptic, Hipp. Aph. 1247, Arist. H. A. 9.8, 3, al.:—Dem., 794. 3, puns on the two senses, rods émAfmrous pyolv lacGat, abros ov éridknrros mdop movnpia; so, én. i7d maOous Plut. 2. 798 E. t ss Wey opos, 6, @ censurer, Zivavos mévray émAnnropos Timo ap. Plat. Pericl. 4. éntAqots, Dor. —-Adots, ews, 4}, (émAHOouar) a forgetting, forgetfulness, kapérov Pind.P.1.46:—also émAnopovy, 3, Alex. Incert. 68 (v. Meineke 5.p.92), Lxx,N.T.; émAnopootvn, #, Cratin. Incert. 147, Dio C. 56. 41: cf. Lob. Phryn, 385. . émAhopay, ov, gen. ovos, (2mAnGopat) apt to forget, forgetful, Cratin. May. 3, Ar. Nub. 129, 485, 629, Lysins 128, 15, Plat., etc.; c. gen. rel, 542 Xen. Apol. 6, in Comp. émAnopovéorepos, whereas Ar. Nub. 790 has émaAnopéraros (as if from émiAnopos). II. act. causing forget- fulness, én, émwdn an oblivious charm, Chion. Epist. 3. émAoopat, vy. sub émAavOava, émAnoricés, 7, dv, forgetting, Eust. Opusc. 117. 79. émAnia, 2, =éridnyis, a stoppage, Arist. Probl. 2. 1. us 11, Hipp. Aph. 1248, Arist. Fr. 331. HYupos, ov, reprehensible, Luc. Rhet. Praec. 22, etc. éridnias, ews, %, (émAapBavw) a taking hold of, seizure, Epicur. ap. Plut. 2.1117 B: a taking besides, App. Civ. 5.77. 2. in law, a claiming property by seizing, Lat. manus injectio, Plat. Legg. 954 3. reprehension, censure, Isocr.171C; exer émAnpes admits room for censure, Ath. 187 F. II. like émaAnyia u, the falling sickness, epilepsy, also called fepd vécos, Lat. morbus comitialis, Hipp. 216E, Arist. Probl. 31. 27, cf.30.1,2. . émAlySnv, Adv. grazing, like émypdBony, I1.17.599 (where the 2nd syll. is long in arsi, as if ém:AAly5nv), Luc. Nigrin. 36. @, to graze lightly, Nic. ap. E. M.s. v. ci{w. émdipvafoua, Pass. fo be overflowed, Plut. Caes. 25. émAtvaw, to set or watch nets, Hesych. émAtveuris, ov, 6, one who catches with nets, Anth. P. 6.93 Jacobs. émXtrratvw, to make fat or sleek, Plut. Alex. 57. émAtrrapéw, to persevere in a thing, émt rue Themist. 457 Dind. Bascom és, =éAAurfs, Plut. Sull. 7 (or as Schiif. takes it =émiAouros), esych, émAtans, és, (Adros) =imodumhs, Oribas. in Chir. Vett. p. 114. émdrxpdw, = émdciyw, Babr. 48. 6 :—Med. in Philo 1. 305, 45 (where émdrxpqjonrat is the true reading), 527.18, etc. émdixvedw, =émiAelxw, Philo 1. 137. émA)elBw, Ep. for émAciBw, Ap, Rh. ér-AAtlo, to make signs to one by winking, ob« dtes bre Bh bor émtAXi- Qovow dmavres Od. 18. 11: to wink roguishly, h. Hom. Merc. 387, Ap. Rh. 3. 791. 2. to blink, when drowsy, Nic. Th. 161. 3. to contract the eyes in looking hard at a thing, Aristocl. ap. Eus. P. E. 14. p. 762. Cf. iAAds, émAAdmT, etc. €m-thdos, ov, leering, squinting, Lat. strabo, Eust. 206. 29. ér-AA6w, =sq., Eust. 206. 32. , to wink or leer at, Plut. 2. 51 C, ubi v. Wyttenb. émAoPis, ios, 5, (AoBds) a lobe of the liver, Hesych. emdoyn, #}, (EmAdyw) selection, Lysim. ap. Joseph. c. Ap. 1.34. émAoylfopar, fut. Att. -Aoytodpar Plat. Ax. 365 B: aor. -eAoyodpny Xen., Dem.; -edoylaOny Hat.: pf. -AeAdyopar Dion. H.3.15: Dep. To reckon over, conclude, consider, S71 .. Hdt. 7.177, Dem. 1090. fin. ; obdév robro érehoyloavronullam hujus rei rationem habuerunt, Xen. Hell.7. 5,16; cf. émAoyporéov. II. to address the peroration,mpés Tt Arist. Fr. 123. émAoyurds, 4, dv, (énidoyos) of, belonging to the epilogue or peroration, Ath. 590E. Adv. —«@s, Gramm. Sakepeud, €os, %, =sq., Epicur. ap. Plut. 2, tog B. é vapds, 6, a reckoning over, calculation, Arist. Pol.6.8, 21; ér. rijs airias Plut. 2. 40, ubi v. Wyttenb., cf. Foés. Oecon. Hipp. émdoyroréov, verb. Adj. one must caleubate, Plut. 2. 40 B. émAoytorixés, 4, dv, able to calculate, raw éffjs Arr. Epict. 2. 10, 3: calculating, prudent, Clem. Al. 254. 3 0s, 6, (émA€ya) a conclusion, inference, only in Ion. Gr., Hdt. 1. 273; émidoyor moeiobar THs yvmpns Hipp. 224. 11 sq. II. the peroration of a speech, Lat. epilogus, peroratio, Arist. Rhet. 3. 13, 3., 19, I. 2. the concluding portion of a play,=€£o50s, whence our epilogue, opp. to mpédovyos, Schol. Ar. Ran. 1548. 8. also a sub- joined or explanatory sentence, Arist. Rhet. 2. 21, 6, cf. 20, 9.—In Eur. El. 719, émiAoyor is corrupt. : émiXoyxos, ov, (Adyx7) barbed, BéAos Eur. Hipp. 221. , (émAeiBw) a drink-offering, Orph. Arg. 6or. oy, serving for libations, piédn Christod. Ecphr. 157. péw, fo cast reproaches on, Polyb. 15. 33, 45 restored by Casaub, for daeAorddpour :-—Med., Suid. s. v. émrwbaav. érn, incantations to drive away pestilence, Poll. 4. 53- énidouros, ov, still left, remaining, pijvas énrd robs émaAoimovs Kap- Bian és 7a dures ern mAnphawos Hat. 3.67; mostly in pl. c. gen., ai er. tov toriwv 6. 333 7a ér. Tod Adyou 4.1543 Tam. TOV Adyov Soph. Ph. 24, etc.; rdmiAoura the rest, Eur. Tro. 9233 7) *aidoumos 65és Id. Phoen. 842; rt ody ériAormov ; Andoc. 12. 2. 2. of Time, to come, future, os Hdt. 2.13, Plat. Legg. 628 A, etc. ; Hpépar ér, Pind. O. 1. 53; Bios Antipho ap. Ath. 525 B, Plat. Legg. 929 E. , ov, =Aoliabos, Paul. Sil. Ambo 171. éntdourpov, 76, the price of a bath, Luc. Lexiph. 2. emAvydto, -Avyatos, —Atylfw, errors of the Copyists for Most of the examples have been corrected from the better Mss. émAtlo, to have the hiccough by or besides, Nic. Al. 81. émAvpatvopat, Dep. to infest, ruin, 7 Plut. 2. 881 D. émddréw, to trouble, annoy, offend besides, Twa Hat. 9. 50 :—Pass. to be troubled at, 711, cited from lambl.; Sri .. , Sext. Emp, M. 11. 127. émddria, }, trouble, grief, Zeno ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 100. éxtAdros, ov, (vn) in low spirits, Aretae. Caus. M. Ac, 2.12: morose, Plut. 2.13 A. II. painful, distressing, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 2, 5, al. ; 70 éntdurov a thing that causes pain, Ib. 3.1,13. dmidtiors, ews, 4, (emAtw) release from, er. pbBay iddvar Aesch. ‘Theb. 134. 2. solution, coproparaw Sext. Emp. P. 2. 246: explana- tion, Heliod. 1. 18, cf. 4. 9., 2 Ep. Petr. 1. 20. i wood, to rave at, Eccl. _ verb, Adj. one must solve, Clem. Al. 736. II, =éni- énmhr-. ‘J , : , ETA TOMAL — ETIMATTLOS. emAvrixés, 7, dv, fitted for solving difficulties, Suid. v. SwotBtos. émiurpos, ov, set at liberty for ransom, Strabo 496. émiAvyvos, 6, or —ov, 76, oil for lamps, Arist. ap. Ath. 173 F; but prob. f. 1. for ére Adxvoy, as Schneid. émAtw, to loose, untie, Sepa Theocr. 30. 423; én. xtvas to let slip dogs, Xen. Cyn. 7, 8: generally, to seé Sree, release, Tovs KaKoUpyous 7@ mwodéu@ Luc. Paras. 50; and in Med., émAvecbai Tiva 7d pr ovxt d-yavaxrewy Plat. Crito 43 C; émAvecdat émorodds to open them, Hdt. 12. 2. to solve, explain, Arist. Fr. 164, Sext. Emp. P. 246; and so in Med., Ath. 450 F, al. 3. to confute an accusation, Luc. Bis Acc. 30. TI. fut. med. in pass. sense, ¢o lose strength, give in, Lys. 174. 38, where however émArjoea@at seems to be the prob. |. émAwPdopat, Pass, to be disfigured (by leprosy), Achmes Onir. 54. émAwBetw, to make mockery of a thing, Od. 2. 323. emAwPis, és, (A@Bn) injurious, mischievous, Nic. Th. 35, 771. EmASBnTOs, ov, (érsAwPdopar) insulted, degraded, Lyc. 1173. émpatwos, ov, (uatds) =éempaoribios, Anth. P. 5. 276., 9. 548. empddera, 4, (empavOavw) a learning after, Cornut. N. D. 18. émparpdw, to long earnestly after or desire, Twds Lyc. 301. émpatve, to make madly in love with, rwd Tw ap. Suid. s. v. “Avayu- pacvos. II. Pass., with aor, émepdvny [a], but also med. érepnvd- pny: pf. —néunva:—to be mad after, c. dat., Tr Be yuri) Mpotrou éme- pnvaro Il, 6.160; 7d mpdypad’, ols 767° émepaivero Ar. Vesp. 744, cf. 1469, Mosch. 6. 2, Luc, Amor. 22 :—absol. to be mad, to rage, Aesch. Ag. 1427, Theb. 155. 2. to fly at, fall upon, wipyots Anth. Plan, 106. émpatopar: Ep. fut. —ydooopat, aor. —enacoduny: Dep., only used in Ep. — To strive after, seek to obtain, aim at, mostly c. gen., oxoméAov émpateo make for (i.e. steer for) the rock, Od. 12. 220; metaph., ém- pateo véorov strive after a return, Od. 5. 3443; Supav érepatero Ovpds his mind was set upon presents, Il. 10, 401 ; Aourp@v Theocr. 23. 57; gvyfs Timo ap. Sext. Emp. M. 57 :—so, c. dat. to be set upon, Orph. Arg. 930. II. c. acc. to lay hold of, grasp, tipeos & érepatero kdéomny he clutched his sword-hilt, Od. 11. 531; Tov ddr’ idtceeE .. em xepot pacacba Ib. 591; xelp’ (i.e. xetpl) émpaccdpevos having clutched [the sword] with my hand, 9. 302 (ubi v. Nitzsch), cf. 19. 480; 7iv érepaooaro xetpbs took her by the hand, Ap. Rh, 3. 106. 2. to touch, handle, feel, dtov érepatero v@ra Od. 9. 441; Tov 8 émpaccd- pevos mpooépn .. WoAvpnuos Ib. 446; yv@ p empaccapéevn [adrdv] 19. 468, cf, 480; émt var’ émpatero Hes. ap. Ath. 498 B; €Axos & inrip empaooerat 9 embjoe pappaxa Il. 4. 190; Os dpa py .. papdy érepdooar’ ’AOnvn Od. 13. 320, cf. 16.172; pdorrye Bows érepaler’ dp’ mous she touched the horses sharply with the whip, Il. 5. 748, etc.: metaph., éweyatero réxvny, Lat. artem tractavit, h. Hom. Merc. 108 ; ér, T. vig Ap. Rh. 3. 816. IIT. later, absol., of night, to come slowly on, Orph, Arg. 119. émipaxpos, ov, oblong, Hipp. Art. 838, where émépaxpos should be restored, v. Littré 4. p. 316. émpavbGAdurov, 76, (uavdaXwrds) a lascivious hiss, like xarayAdr- tTiopa, Ar. Ach, 1201. émupivis, és, mad after a thing, eis tds yuvaixas Paus. 1. 6, 8; so, mpos Twa, Ach, Tat. 8. 1:—Ady., émpavas éxew mpds Tt Ath. 276 E. 2. absol. raving, mad, Polyb. ap. Ath. 45 C, Plut. Dio 47. empavOdve, fut. -wiOjcopa, to learn besides or after, opp. to mpoyay- Oavw, Thuc, 1.138; c. inf., Hdt. 1.131; ef.., Id. 2. 160. émpavrevionat, Dep. to prophesy besides, c. acc. et inf., App. Civ. 4. 127; Twl 7 Ib. 138. émpapyatve, to be raving-mad after, rwi Arat. 1123. éripapyos, ov, mad after a thing, Suid. empdprre, to clutch, Hesych, empaptipéiw, to bear witness to a thing, to depose to, ém. Hiv Ta dvd- Hara pi)..KxetcOa Plat. Crat. 397 A; ér. 7 rpds Twa Plut. Lysand, 22 ; 7a xphpara & xa émpapruphowvre of which they admit the possession, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 156; c. inf, Plut. Sertor.12; 87.., Luc. Alex. 42; absol., Plut. Nic. 6:—Pass. to be confirmed by evidence, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 211. II. in Med. to adjure, rwe pr) movety re Hat. 5. 93: ef. émpaprdpopyat. EMpapTUpPyoLs, Ews, 7, confirmation of evidence, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. Io. 147, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 212, Plut. 1121 D. empapripia, %}, a witness, testimony, eis mip. Thuc. 2. 74. empapriipopar [¥], Dep. to call to witness, appeal to, in case of a treaty, tovs Oeovs Xen. Cyr, 8.5, 25, An. 4. 8, 7, etc.; in case of injury, Id. Hell. 3. 4, 43, and absol., Polyb. 25.9, 8:—also, to call a person to appear as one's witness, appeal to evidence, Lat. antestari, Ar. Nub. 495, cf. Vesp. 1437. 2. to call on earnestly, to conjure, Lat. obtestari, Hat. 5. 92, fin. ; émp. twa pi) morety 7 to call on one not to do, Ib. 93, Thuc. 6. 29. 3. c, acc. rei foll, by dru... , to affirm or declare before witnesses that .., Dem, 915. 12, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 244 B; c. acc. Tei et inf., Plut. Lucull. 35. empdpripos, 5, a witness to one’s word, etc., Zeds 8 dup’ en. Zorw Il. 7. 79; Ocot 8 ér. érrwy Od. 1. 273, cf. Hes. Sc. 20. émpdprus, Ypos, 5, =foreg., Ar. Lys. 1287: acc.—paprupa, Musae. r, Anth. P. app. 179; —Hdprupas Ap. Rh. 4. 229 :—as fem., Christod. Ecphr. 193. émpaodopat, Dep. to eat afterwards, Alciphro 3. 51, Geop. 12. 30, 9. éempdoow, to knead again: in Med., xepaddy émpaocerat strokes thy head, Anth. P. 7.730: émpdoocerar’ émavterat émt mdéov Soph. ap. Hesych.—But in Ep. Poets émpdooopat, émeuacodpny are fut. and aor. of €mpatopat. _emparribios, ov, (uaords) on or at the breast, not yet weaned, of infants, Aesch. Theb. 349, Soph. Fr. 962, Eur. I. T. 231, ete. $ émpdorvos, ov, (uaords) =foreg., Ap. Rh. 4.1734, Poll. 2. 8. . > emiparrio — ermeT pew. émpaortio, to whip or flog besides, Nonn. D. 1. 80. €ripactos, ov, (mpatlopat) seeking after or for, énipacros adntns a begging vagrant, Od. 20. 377. emipax ew, (udxouat) to stand by, help one in battle, rj GAAnAwY émpa- xetv to make a league for the mutual defence of their countries, Thuc. 5.27. émpdaixia, 9, a defensive alliance, opp. to cuppaxta (both offensive and defensive), Thuc. I. 44., 5. 48, Dem. 160. 14, Arist. Pol, 3. 9, 11. émipiixos, ov, (udxopat) that may easily be attacked, assailable, of fortified places, like émBards and émidpopos, opp. to duaxos, Hdt. 1. 84, Thue. 4. 31, 35, etc.: of a country in general, open to attack, q 70 ém- paxwratov hv Too xwpiov Hat. 9. 21, cf. 6.133, Thuc. 4. 4, Xen. An. 5. 4,14. II. equipped for battle, Thom. M, 349; and so, WAov- Tove émpaxy Inscr. Cnid, in Newton’s Halic. III. in Heliod. tended for, contested, cf. Coraés 2. 374, 381. émyerSdw, to smile at or upon, in Hom. always in phrase, roy 8 ém- Hedjoas mpocépn he addressed him with a smile, Il. 8. 38, etc.; in Il. 10. 400, of a scornful, savage smile; but, Hx’ émperdnoas Hes. Th. 547: —c. dat., Anth. P, 6, 345. émperdlacus, ews, , a smiling upon, Plut. 1. 1009 E, 1092 E. émperSidw, fut. dow [ti], to smile upon, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2,16, Ap. Rh. 3. 129. 2. to smile at, r@ Adyw Arr. An. 5. 2, 4. émupelfov, ov, gen. ovos, strengthd. for pelfwr, still larger or greater, Democr. ap, Stob. 66. 37. émpetAta, v. sub peiAra. émupeAatvouat, Pass. to become black a-top, a symptom of mortification, Hipp. Fract. 775. II. of fruit, 2o blacken in ripening, Theophr. H. P. k 15, 6. émpédas, ava, dv, black on the top, Theophr. H. P. 3. 8, 6, etc. émpéAca, 4: Acol. gen. —nfas in a Mityl. Inscr, in C. I. 2189; nom. -ta in Spart. Inscr. ib. 2189 and in Mss.: (émipedys). Care bestowed upon a thing, attention paid to it, and absol. attention, diligence, Prose word, used once by Hdt, (v. infr.), then often in Thuc., Xen., etc.; in pl., like our pains, Xen. Cyr. 6.1, 4, etc.:—c. gen. objecti, éx. rod vavrixod, Tov olxelov Kat moAiTiK@Y Thuc. 2. 39, 40, cf.94; TaV epywr Id. 3. 46 ; rév mpayparow Andoc. 21.24; T&v Koy Isocr.144D; Tov xapvdvrow Plat. Legg. 720C, etc.; also, wept revos Thuc. 7. 56; mept Tiva or Tt Lycurg. 162. 24, Plat. Rep. 451D; mpds twa or Tt Dem. 618, 8, Plat. Legg. 754 B; els tt Posidon. ap. Ath, 263 D; émpédedy twos moeioOat, Frew Hat. 6. 105, Thuc. 6. 41, Dem. 1414. 10; opp. to ém- Hedelas Tvyxavew to have attention paid one, Isocr. 113 D, etc.; én. mapa twos Hyperid. ap. Stob.; &° émpedelas Exew Twa. Isae. 64. 37 3 émpércav éxew to use all diligence, Arist. Pol. 5. 11,17; émpedela, war’ émpédecav, with diligence, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 47, Hell. 4. 4, 8; id emipercias Bod yiyvecOa under his watchful care, Antipho123.20. 2. a public charge or commission, Lat. procuratio, Aeschin. 55.35; opp. to dpx7f (a magistracy), Arist. Pol. 4.15, 3; % wept rods Oeovs Ex. Ib. 6.8, 18; mept-dyavas Ib. 22; % Tay epnBwy é7., a special office at Athens, Dinarch, 110, 14: cf: émpednrns. B»any employment or pursuit, Lat. studium, Xen. Cyr, 1. 6, 13, etc.: in pl., ém. nat orovdai Plat. Legg. 74° D, Arist. Eth. N. 6. 1, 2, al. émpeAopar and émpéAopar,—the latter always in Hdt. (1. 98., 2. 2, 174, etc.), and also in Att. (Thuc. 6.54., 7. 39, Lys. 110. 28, Plat. Gorg. 516 B, etc., and restored everywhere by L. Dind. in Xen., v. ad Cyr. I. 2, 10, Mem. 1. 1, 19); but émpeAéopa: prevails in Mss. and is required by the metre in Eur. Phoen. 556 :—fut. émpeAjoouae Hdt. 5. 29, Thuc., etc.; (the form —peAnOjcopat is v. 1. Xen, Mem. 2. 7, 8, Aeschin. 57. 39) :—aor. émeneAnOnv Hdt. 8. 109, Thuc. 8. 68, Isocr. 48 B, Xen. Mem. I. 3, IL (€wepeAnoduny only late, C. I. 2802, Galen.; in Diod. 2. 45 Bekk, émpeAouévny) :—pf. émpeuéAnuar Thuc. 6. 41: Dep.: (pédo- pat). To take care of, have charge of, have the management of, opp. to dyedéa, rare in Poets, as Eur. Phoen, 556, freq. in Prose: c. gen. objecti, Hdt. 1. 98., 5. 29, Ar. Vesp. 154, Pl. 1117, Thuc. 3. 25, etc.; mepi Tivos Xen. An. 5. 7,10; iwép ros Id. Cyr. 1. 6, 12; mepl Twa Plat. Menex. 248 E:—c. acc. et inf. to take care that .., Thuc. 6.54, Xen. Mem. 4.5, 10; or c. gen, et inf, Id. Oec. 20, 9; foll. by Smws with Indic, fut. or Subj. aor., Thuc. 4.118, Xen, Mem, 2. 10, 2, etc.; (in Id. Hell. 6. 5, 37 for dudcatpey, 1. dudcwpev); and by ws with Opt. (after past tenses), Id. An. 1.1, 5, etc.: also, éw. r1vos Smws €arat Plat. Euthyphro 2 D:—also with neut. Adj. in acc. to take care with respect to a thing, Hdt. 2.174, Thuc. 6. 41, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 4, etc. (in Eur. Phoen. 556 the acc. belongs to éxovres):—c, acc. cogn., ém. macav émipéAcay Plat. Prot. 325 C :—absol. to give heed, attend, Hdt. 2. 2. 2. in public Offices, to have charge of, be curator of, Fav popiay éha@y Lys. 110. fin. ; Trav Sexddwy Xen. Cyr. 8.1,14; Tod Spdpyov Id. An. 4. 8, 25; Ta iepdy Plat. Rep. 331 D; ray 6dav C. I. 4011: cf. ineingen 5 8. to be engaged in or cultivate any pursuit, art, etc., dvoiv réxvay Dem. 823. 10; Tis pavrixhs, Tod A€yev dbvacOa, etc., Xen. Cyr. 7.5, 71, etc.; wept Ths povorxhs Plat. Legg. 812 E; irtp rhs orparnyias Xen, Cyr. 1. 6, 12. empéAnpa, 7d, a care, anxiety, Xen. Occ. 4, 4., 7-22, 37. émpeAns, és, (uéAopar) careful or anxious about, fe in charge of, twos Plat, Symp. 197 D, Xen. Mem. 2, 6, 35, etc. :—70 émpedés Tivos = émpédea, Thuc. 5.66 ;—ém, epi 7: Xen. Mem, 3. 4, 2. 2. absol. careful, atigntive, Soph. Fr. 419, Ar. Nub. 501; so, in Comp. and Sup., Xen. An. 3- 2, 30, Isocr. 70 B; émpedcorépay Exev érépov Oepameiay Menand. Peo. 2. 9:—Adv. -A@s, carefully, Plat. Tim, 88 C, al.; Ion. —Aéws, Hipp. Art. 822: Comp. -eorépws, Ath. 629 B; Sup. -éo7ara, Plat. Alc. 2. 104 D. II. pass. cared for, an object of care, ol rodr’ iv ém- Hedés Hdt. 3. 40; ofs dyvela .. émpedns Plat. Legg. gog E; 70 én. rod Spapévou the charge of the execution of orders, Thuc. 5. 66;—mostly in ~h. Hom, Cer. 160; so, émp. ie 4s 543 him, made him anxious, Hdt. 1.89, cf. 5. 12., 7.373 ém. poe fv it was my business, Id. 2.150; c. inf., ovdevt én. Hv oxomeiy it was no one’s business to see, Antipho 119. 44; ofs én, jy eidévae who made it their business to know, Thuc. 1. 5, cf, Dem. 310.43; so, ém. morodpar eidévar Plat. Symp. 172 E; én. éorw p.. Lat. caveatur ne.., Plat. Legg. 932 D5; éori por én, rovrou Ib. 763 E, cf. 824 B; def wept dperijs ex. civac TH --7éde Arist. Pol. 2. 3, 8. émuyeAntéov, verb. Adj. one must take care of, pay attention, én, brws.., Plat, Rep. 618 B; rwds Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 28; mept te Arist. Pol. 7,16, 1. empednreve, fo be an émpednris, C. 1.1713, 2047-8, 2371. empeAnris, of, 6, (@mpedéopat) one who has charge of a thing, a manager, curator, Tov Tis wéAEws mpaypdarey Ar. Pl. 907; immwy Kat dvey Plat. Gorg. 516A; T&v mpds diarray émerndelav Xen. Cyr. 8.1, 95 also, 6 wept ris maidelas én, Plat. Legg. 951 E:—absol., pvAag «al én. Xen. Mem, 2. 7,14; of a countryman, Theocr. 10.54; of a governor, Xen. Hell. 3. 2,11, cf. Polyb. 4. 80,15, C. I. 332, 335, al.; esp. of the Athenian administrator of Delos, Ib. 2286-8, 2293, al. II. of officers appointed to the charge of anything, a curator, 1. of sacred matters, Lys. 111. 1, C. 1. 108, 109; T@v pvarnpioy Dem. 570. 7; eis 7a Avovdora Id, 519. 17. 2. of the Eleven, ém, trav kaxovpyav Antipho 131. 26, 3. of the chiefs of the pvAat or Tribes, Dem. 519. 2, C. 1. 104, 213; of év rais ovppopias ér. Dem. 1145. 15. 4, Tév vewptow Id. 612. 21; éx. Tod éumopiov a clerk of the market, Id, 1324. 18, Dinarch. 106. 20; tod Acuévos a harbour-master, C.1. 124.19; inspector of weights and measures, Ib. 123; curator of the gymnasia, 353-12; of the mpuraveioy, 575; xpyvay Arist. Pol. 6.8,5; muvAgy re kal TexG@v pudaxis Ib, 14; ddav C. I. 2638 ; etc. émpeAnrixés, 7, dv, able to take charge, managing, Xen. Occ, 12, 19: h —Knh (sc. réxvn) =émpéreca, Plat. Polit. 275 E sq. émpeAqrpta, 7, fem, of émpeAnrhs, Hesych. s. v. coptorpia. émpeAta, v. émpéAeca sub fin. émpeAdo, to delay yet longer, Memnon p. 332 Orell. émupeAopar, v. sub émpeAéouat. émyétrw, to sing to, “Avda maava Aesch. Theb. 869. émpeh@béw, fo sing to, accompany by singing, Aristid. 1. 511. empeAgSnpa, 76, that which is chanted over, Schol. Theocr, 1.64. émipéeuBrerar, Ep. for émpepéAnrat, syncop. pf. pass. (in act. sense), Q. Sm, 3. 123: cf. wéuBAera. émpeprypévws, Adv. =émpif, Apollon. Lex. émysépova,, poet. pf. 2 with pres. sense, fo desire (sc. ropevecOat), Soph. Ph. 515. V. sub péuora. énipepmros, ov, =sq., Apollon. Dysc. in A. B. 505. 2. blaming, Schol. Soph. Tr, 446, Adv. -rws, Anth. P. 6, 260. émipenpys, és, =émivoupos 1, Nic. Fr. 2. 15. émpéndopar, fut, Youar: Dep.:—to cast blame upon, c. dat. pers., 7 Tt kaovyvyros émpéeppeat Od, 16. 97, cf. Hat. 4. 159, etc. :—c. gen. rei, to find fault for or because of a thing, complain of it, ebxwAjs ém- Héupera complains of the vow [neglected], Il. 1.65, cf. 2.225, and y. peppopa 4; also, p. évex’ dpyripos 1.94:—then, én. revi tivos to blame one for a thing, Luc. D. Mort. 27.2; rarely, ém. T1vd Twos on the analogy of airidopat, dv émpeupopéva ce Soph. Tr, 122 :—c, acc. to blame, vpcov Call. Del. 163, cf. Anth. P. 6. 83:—absol. to find fault, complain, Hdt. I. 65, 116, etc.; émp, Sv .. Hipp. 293. 44. 2. c. acc, rei, to im- pute as matter of blame, ra. Kpoicos énipeupdpevos TG Kipp Hdt.1.75, etc., cf, 2. 161., 7. 169. ’ émipepipis, ews, 2), = émipouph, Dion. H. 3. 11. émpévo, aor. éréuewa:—to stay on, tarry or abide still, Hom. and Att.; absol., Il. 19. 142, Od. 17. 277; émpetvar és avpioy 11. 351; énipetvoy, Tevxea dUw wait, let me (i. e. wait ti/1 1) put on my armour, Il. 6. 3.40; also, ér. évt peydporow .., Oppa.., Od. 4.587; emp. iva.., és re.., Xen, An, 5.5, 2:—after Hom., médet Andoc. 10. 26; émt 7H orpariad Xen. An. 7. 2, ‘4 2. absol. to remain in place, continue as they are, of things, Thuc. 4. 4, Plat. Phaedo 80 C, Xen. Cyn. 6, 4:—to keep his seat, of a horseman, Id, Cyr. 1. 4, 8. 8. to continue in a pursuit, én? wh , ‘J , émitdews — eriToALOomat. émunviyo, 40 suffocate, choke, stifle, Byz. ae : éninvowa, 4, (émmvéw) a breathing upon, inspiration, Lat. afflatus, ém, mpadérnros Plat. Tim, 71 C; ef émmvotas Ards, Znvés Aesch. Supp. 18, 453 Geias én. Ib. 576; od« dvev tds emumvoias Bewy Plat. Legg. 811 C, cf. Crat. 399 A; pavruciy .. rimvoay AnddAwuos Oévres KTA. Id. Phaedr, 265 B; émmvolg Sapoviov évOovora¢ew Arist. Eth. E. 1. 1, 43 ém. mpos 7d xadév Plut. Agis 7; the Sibyl spoke é@ twos duvarjs én., Justin. M. ad Graec. 37. II. a blast, ér. xepepivai Theophr. de Vent. 55. énimvoos, ov, contr. —tvous, ov: (émurvéa) :—breathed upon, Poll. 5. I10:—inspired, mapa tivos Plat. Crat. 428.C; én. kal Kkatexdpevos ex 700 O03 Id. Meno gg D, cf. Symp. 181 C, etc.; ém. Kal poiBdAnmros Plut. Pomp. 48. Adv, -avws, Poll. 1. 16. émurddtos, a, ov, (rods) upon the feet, formed like éumddios, mepercéxos, Soph, O. T. 1350. emumoPéw, Zo desire besides, or to yearn after, regret greatly, c. acc., Hdt, 5. 93, Plat. Prot. 329 D, Legg. 855 E;. ém. twos Lxx (Ps, 118. 20); émi 7 (Ib. 61. 0). émimdOnpa, 76, an object of desire, Aquila V. T. émdOqors, ews, , a longing after, 2 Ep. Cor. 7. 7, Clem. Al. 977. émmé0nros, ov, longed for, desired, App. Hisp. 43, Ep. Phil. 4. 1. émuroOla, 7), = émmdOnois, Ep. Rom. 15. 23. émoréw, 10 superadd, tit 71 Philostr. 570, Synes. 60 A. énvrolyros, ov, made up, artificial, false, Synes. 17 C. émmoyrty, vos, 6, }, =mohy, a shepherd, Ocal 5 émmorpéves cicly Od. 12. 131: cf. émBourdros. émtaokos, ov, covered with wool, woolly, v. 1. LXX (4 Regg. 3. 4). émuroddlw, fut. ow, (emimoA}) to be at the top, come to the surface, float on the surface, tn én, Xen. Occ. 16, 14; ai &yxéAers obs Er, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 17, cf. 5. 15, 16; % drpis ém. Id, Meteor. 1. 4,33 70 ém- méralov, opp. to 7d iquordpevor, Id. Cael. 1. 3, 2, al. ; c. dat., Hare én. Ib. 4. 4, 2; 70 €Aauov &v TO Vdarr én. Id. Meteor. 4. 7, 2 :—of birds, to hover over, Theopomp. Hist. 79 :—of food, like Lat. innatare stomacho, to remain crude in the stomach, Hipp. 359. 25, Arist. An. Post. 2. 11, 5, Galen. II. metaph. 4o be uppermost, to prevail, Epich, 133 Ahr.; iAurmos émmoAd¢e Philip kas the upper hand, Dem. 117. 16, ef, Isocr. 95 A, 181 B; ém. év maou rots woArredpacw Polyb. 30. Io, 2. 2. to be prevalent, popular, fashionable, current, Tots TnAucov- Tos ..UBpis ér, Xen. Lac. 3, 2; &« THs émmoAdaCovans 7a viv Aeoxn+ velas Plat. Ax. 369 D; al padsora émmodafovoa [ddgar} Arist. Eth, N.1. 4,4; €mumoAd(oytos Tod yeAotou Ib. 4. 8, 4. 8. to be common, to abound, 6 xupos émerédagev Hipp. Epid. 1. 952; of émemodd(oytes es Arist. H. A. 6. 37, 2; THY .. dvovay én, Alex. Any. 67; of habits, Polyb. 13. 3, I, etc.; of poems, Schol. Ar. Thesm. 162. 4. to be forward or insolent, Dion. H. 11. 6, App. Mithr. 75; tmepoyia én. Id. Civ. 3. 76: c. dat. pers. to behave insolently to, Plut. 2. 634 C, cf. Luc. Icarom, 29. III. to wander over, tiv Atyumroy Heliod. 2. 25, cf. 8.8: absol. to roam about, App. Mithr. 75. IV. to overflow, of the sea, Luc. Asin. 34. 2. én. Th pyropirg to be engaged upon it, Id, Rhet. Praec. 26. émvmoAaépprbos, ov, (fifa) with roots which run along the surface, Theophr. H. P. 1. 6, 4., 2. 5, I. émumédatos, ov, (émmodt) on the surface, superficial, Hipp. Art. 832; Aemrdv Kat én, dépya Arist. Probl. 8.5; tpadpa Luc. Navig. 37. 2. prominent, projecting, daréov Hipp. 913 D; dp@adpol Xen. Symp. 5, 5. 3. metaph. superficial, ordinary, common-place, Lat. quotidi- anus, matdeta Isocr. Antid. § 203; én. 7Soval kat diarpiBat Dem. 1418. 1; é, mavdérns Diosc. Ther. prooem. ; én. invos light sleep, Luc. Gall. 25; €pws Id. D. Mer. 8, 2. b. on the surface, manifest, ém. h€yo- pey 7a navrt dfAa Arist. Rhet. 3. 10, 4, cf. 11, 10; émmoAatdrepoy Tod (yrovpévov Id. Eth, N. 1. 5, 43 % émemoAacorary .. Cyrnats Id. Pol. 3+ 35 33 &mmddraov 7d Weddos Ib. 3. 12, 4. II. Ady. -ws, on the surface, Arist. Plant. 2. 4,8; terpdoxew Joseph, B. J. 3- 7, 22- 2. superficially, Hipp. Aph, 1245, Arist. Metaph. 1. 5,16; Comp. —orépws Ib. 1 (EAarz.). 1, 3. III. émméaaor, 74, v. sub émimAoor. emmoddars, ews, 7, a being on the surface, coming to the surface, Hipp. 47- 35, Arist. Sens. 3, 21. éemutoAacpés, 5,=foreg., ér. Hs Cécews Arist. Probl. 22. 8. metaph. arrogance, insolence, Dion. H. 6. 65: cf. émumoddgw. émmohacticés, h, ov, apt to rise to the surface, swimming on the stomach, of undigested food, Hipp. Acut, 394, Arist. Probl. 3. 18, I. 2. insolent :—Adv, —Kés, violently, Polyb. 4. 12, 9 emumoAevw, =émmord{w, Acl, N. A. 9. 61. €mumodn, %, (emméAopar) a surface, Aretae, Sign. M. Diut. 2. 7, Galen., etc.; v. Lob. Phryn, 126 sq. II, good writers only used in gen. emmoAys as Adv. on the surface, a-top, Hdt. 2. 62, Xen. Occ: 19, 4; Karo piv. nal émmodijs.., ev péow Bé.., Id, Mem. 3. 1, 7; Alay én. mepurevpéva Id. Occ. 19, 4; én. 7d owvapdy oxédos Exovra uppermost, Hipp. Art. 837: 70 én. the surface, Tod cwparos Td éx. Te Kal evrds Plat, Phil. 46 D, cf. 47 C, 2. as Prep. c. gen. on the top of, above, Tov muddwy Hat. 1. 187, cf. Ar. Eccl, 1108, Pl. 1207, and y. infr. Iv. 3. with other Preps., xatumep0e émumodqs Tov fUAwv Hat, 4. 201; é én. Diod. 5. 38, Luc. Nigr. 35, etc, (in Arist. G. A. 2. 7, 17, Bekker omits é¢, cf. v, Il. Probl. 1. 43); 8” é. Seleuc. ap. Ath. 398 A; $0, €v émmohf = émmodjjs, Strabo 570. III. plainly, ideiv Arist. H. A. 9. 38, 23 én. Buoye:pwrd Dem. 141,21. LV. ’Emmodai, a piece of ground near Syracuse, with a flat surface sloping towards the sea, and precipitous on the sides, dvduac ba Rs Tov a. elvax Emmodat Thuc. 6. 96. Cree Te 2 Ne émumodife, to build upon, Hesych. b émuoAvdopat, Pass. to begin to grow gray, rpixes é. Arist.G. A. 5. 5, 3+ 2. ° , .J , emiToALos — ETITMOPMULG. ‘emumoXtos, ov, growing gray, grizzled, Dem. 1267. 21. énitodos, ov, =mpdamodos, a companion, Soph. O. T. 1322. émumoAu, Ady. for émt modu, v. sub moAds IV. 3. émropmeto, to triumph over, tii Plut. Caes. 56. ble a }, @ visitation: a spell, enchantment, Poéta de Herb. 22. 165, 175. émitrovéw, to toil on, continue one’s labour, persevere, Xen. Cyr. 5. 4,17; Lac. 2, 5, Plat. Legg. 789 E. émumovia, 7, continued toil, Hesych. s. v. wovnpia. émltrovos, ov, painful, toilsome, laborious, 4uépa Soph. Tr. 654; Aatpeta Ib. 830; yédpos Id. O.C. 1561; doyxodrla, doxnots, pvAaxy Thue. I. 70., 2. 393 ‘yapas Plat. Rep. 329 D; Bios Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 11; pabjoets nat HeAera Id. Cyn. 12, 15: wearisome, huépac Soph. Tr. 654; émmovw- tepov [€pyov] ove eiAnp’ éyw Alex. Mpwr, 1; ovdey d:aBoAjs éorw er. Menand. Incert. 50, cf. Xen. An. I. 3, 19 :—rarely in good sense, épya ward kal ér, Plat. Legg, 801 E, cf. Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 29:—7d émimovov toil, Id. Cyn. lc.; 7a 3 Arist. Eth. N. 3. 7, 13, al. :—éntovdy [éor] tiv dicKAcay apavica ’tis a hard task to.., Thuc. 3. 58. 2. of persons, /aborious, patient of toil, Ar. Ran. 1370, Plat. Phaedr. 229 D: —also, sensitive to fatigue, easily exhausted, Theophr. Sens, 11. 3. of omens, portending suffering, Xen, An. 6, 1, 23. IT. Ady. -vas, Lat. aegre, Hipp. Epid. 1. 939, Thuc. 1. 22; é. nat xadds Isocr. 386 D; Bidoera: Xen. Mem. 1. 7, 2, etc.:—Comp. —wrepoy Arched. Ono. 2. 8 :—Sup. -wrara, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 67. émurovtia, 7, Goddess of the Sea, epith. of Aphrodité in Hesych. émmopela, %), a coming, approach, opp. to domop., Hero Autom. 261. émumopevopar, fut. evcouar; aor. émemopevOnv: Dep.: (mopedw). To go, travel, march to, émi tt Polyb. 4.9, 2: to march over, c. acc., Id. I. 12, 4, etc.; c. dat., Plut. Lycurg. 28. 2. c. ace. also, ¢o visit, Lat. obire, of a general, Polyb. 11. 12, I., 15. 10, 1: metaph. fo go or run through, Th Savoia, rH Owe Plut., v. Wyttenb. ad 107 E. émurépevars, ews, 4), a going to, Tzetz.: the course of planets, Ptolem. émvmopréopat, pf. —rexdprnpar: Dep. :—to buckle on oneself, buckle on, moppuptéa Polyb. 39. 1, 2; adyous Diod. 5. 30. émuméprnpa, Dor. -Gpa, 76, like éumepdynua, any garment buckled over the shoulders, esp. a cloak, mantle, part of the dress of a musician, Plat. Com. af dd’ iep. 2, Plut. Alex. 32: cf. mepovarpls. énuroptis, (50s, 7, Call. Ap. 32, acc. to some=émimdprynpya, others = népmn, cf. Jac. Anth. P. p. 192. émuméptropa, = émmoptis, Hesych. émmopcatve, to prepare for one, offer, supply, Nic. Fr. 2. 54. émuropotve, =foreg., Q. Sm. 7. 712. émvmophipif, to have a tinge of purple, Arist. Color. 5, 26, Theophr. H. P. 3. 18, 2. émuméphipos, ov, with a purple tinge, Theophr. H. P. 4. 6, 7. émuorap.os, a, ov, on a river, woAts Hellanic. 150; 6 én. one who dwells on a river, Synes. 111 D:—fem. émurorapts, 60s, a river-nymph, Schol. Il. 20. 8. émmordopat, pf. émmendrnuat: Dep.:—lengthd. for émméropat, to fy or hover over, rotov én xvépas dvipt .. nendrarat Aesch. Eum. 379; orvyia Tis én’ dxAvs mendrata Pers. 669; qv Kal @4Aaccayv Philo 2. 200. II. to float upon, dépe Diosc. 5. 85; T@ byp@ Porphyr. Antr. Nymph. to. émmparropat, Med. to exact over and above from, rid tt Suid. émumpétreta, 7), propriety, suitableness, Arist. Physiogn. 4, 7, al., Archyt. ap. Stob. t. 1. 79; in pl., Polyb. 3. 78, 2. émumpemms, és, becoming, Diotog. ap. Stob. 331. 9:—70. émmpenés = foreg., Luc. Imag. 7. émunpétra, to be manifest on the surface, to be conspicuous, ovdé Ti Tot dovAciov Enimpérer eloopdacba eldos Kat péyeOos Od. 24. 252; pug 7d yervaioy émmpére & tarépwy ratolv Aja Pind. P. 8. 63, cf. Theocr. 25. 40, Dion, H. de Din. 7; 6 ép0aApds é. TO perma Luc. D. Mar. Ji. II. to beseem, jit, suit, rwi Xen. Cyr. 7.5,83, cf. Plut.2.794A. émumpecBevopat, Dep, to go as ambassador any whither, like énuenpv- xevopat, Dion. H. 2. 47. IL. to send an embassy, mpés twa 14.6.56; 7 Plut. Sertor. 27, Anton.68. 2. tosend another embassy, App. Gall.18. émunpyyys, és, leaning towards, in front of, Ap. Rh. ¥. 939- émumpytiyy, vos, 6, 7, of a full year or more, Hesych. émimprive, Ion. for émmpatve, to soothe, Dion. P. 1052. émmpiw, to grind with rage at, rd yéveov Anth. P. 7. 531, cf. Hesych. émmpé, Adv. right through, onwards, Ap. Rh, 2. 133, Dion. P. 276. émumpoBalvw, to stretch forward, Dion. P. 128. émmpoBddAw, fo throw forward, 7 ért Twa ap. Plut. Rom. 17. Emumpoenka, émimpogpev, v. sub émcmpoinpe, émumpotxopat, Pass. to stand forward, project, Ap. Rh. 4. 524. émumpo0éw, to run on further, Ap. Rh. 1. 582, Nic. Th. 382. émumpotéhAw, post. Verb, fo set out or place before one, opaty ém- mpoinre tpdrefay Il. 11. 628. II. to send on one after another, Geods éxexpotadAev h. Hom. Cer. 327; GAdow én’ dddAw ldv Q. Sm. 6. 231. émumpotnpt, post. Verb, to send forth, Tov wey vyvoly émmpoénka... TAtoy éicw on board ship to Ilium, Il. 18.58; but, eetvov .. ynvalv émempoenna Oofow, édOciv .. to the ships, to go.., 17. 708; dvdpas Bt AicoecBa emimpoénxey dplarous sent them forth to supplicate, 9. 520 (516); Meve- Adw emmpoéuev raxdv idv (Ep. inf, aor. 2) to shoot an arrow at him, 4.94; Bagw ér. Ap. Rh. 4.1617; mérpov Poéta ap. Luc. Alex. 27; Avyov odpov Orph. Arg. 359; Tivd Oaddoon into the sea, Ap. Rh. 4. 161 , etc.; péeOpov Paddaon, of a river, Dion. P. 79:—hence, seemingly intr., yhoo énerpoenre (sc. vadv) he made straight for them, Od. 15. 299. Enimpoukos, 7, (mpoit) a woman whose dowry is charged upon the property, A.B, 256, Poll. 3. 25, Hesych. 549 émumpopodeiy, inf. aor. of —BAdexw, to go forth towards, Ap. Rh. 3. 665. émumpovéopat, Dep.=foreg., Ap. Rh. 4. 1588. émumpovetw, to lean forward over, Nic. Th. 374, Opp. C. 4. 122. émunponlara, to fall forwards, Ap. Rh. 4. 1449, Nic. Al. 496. émumpooBadAw, Zo direct one’s course to, "ABVSq Ap. Rh. 1. 931. émumpooytyvopat, Dep. to be added besides, Apoll. de Constr. 258. émumpocdéopar, fut. -dencouat, Dep. to beg still more, Parthen. 17. énimpoobev, post. (but rarely) -mpooQe Eur. Supp. 514, Antiph. Incert. 41: Adv.: I. of Place, before, érimp, TidecOat, movetabai Te to put before one as a screen, Eur. Or. 468, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 24; én. ylyvecOat or elvat to be in the way, Plat. Gorg. 523 D, Parm. 137 E; yewAdous éz. motetgOax to make the hills cover one, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 28 (cf. ém- mpoabéw). 2. c. gen., ém. Tov dpOarpav éxew Plat. Symp, 213 A, cf. Theophr. Vent. 30. II. of Degree, Ocivai re én. Tis to prefer one before another, Eur. Supp. 514; é. efvat tivos to be better than.., Id. Or. 641; én. raloxpa .. Trav addy Antiph. l.c. émumpooVects, émimpooVérnars, superaddition, y. émempdaOnats. émmpooéw, (émimpoaGev) to be before or in the way, Theophr. Vent. 32; c. dat., 7d pécov én. Tois mépact stands before, is in a line with, Arist. Top. 6. 11, 1; éa. rots mupyots is in a line with them, so as to cover one with the other, Polyb. 1. 47,.2:—Pass., of a light, fo be covered by a dark object, Greg. Nyss. 1.9 B; [hv tpaywdtar’] ind rev dvoparow émmpocdouperny obscured, Plut. 2. 41 C. émunpéoOnors, ews, , a being before, a covering, Arist. Meteor. 1. 5, 2, Theophr. Vent. 30; esp., of eclipses, Arist. Cael. 2. 13, 7., 2. 14, 7, Plut. 2.121 B: of objects that serve to cover, Polyb. 3. 71, 3. In Arist. ém- mpéabeots is ay. 1. in most places; émumpoo%érnots occurs in Epicur. ap. Diog. L. ¥0. 92, 94, 96, cf. Philodem. ap. Gomperz Herk. Stud. 1. p. 13. énumpooméw, to sail to or towards, c. dat., Strabo 57. émumpoorlOnunr, to add besides, Hipp. 380. 47, Dion. H. 6. 9, ete. émumpéow, afar, at the end, Aretae. Sign. M. Diut. 2. 12. émumporépwoe, Ady. still further, 0¢ew Ap. Rh. 2.940. émumpodatvopar, Pass. fo appear anywhere, Ap. Rh, 3. 917. émumpodépw, to move on forwards, Tapody odds Ap. Rh. 4. 1519. émumpoxéw, fut. —ye®, to pour forth, Opiivov h. Hom. 18. 18 :—Pass, to gush forth, burst loose, Nonn. D. 21. 69. émumpow0éw, to push further forward, Luc. Asin. 10. émumpwitatrepov, strengthd. for mpwiatrepov, dub. 1. Hipp. 998 C. énimpwpos, ov, (mpapa) at the prow of a ship, Hesych. émumratpa, to sneeze at, vids pou éménrape mactw emecow he sneezed as I spoke the words (a good omen, cf. Xen. An. 3. 2, 9, Ath. 66 C), Od. 17. 545, cf. h. Hom. Merc. 297:—metaph., of the gods, 4o be gracious to, favour, tit Theocr. 7. 96., 18. 16. } éntrraopa, 76, a snap of the fingers, Ar. Fr. 609: cf. émimaicpa. émumtépvupar, Dep. =émmraipw, Hesych. énlarrepov, 74, v. émimerpor. émumrycow, to crouch for fear, tv retxet ap. Philostr. 384. émurtiocopat, Pass. to be shelled, freed from the husk, Geop. 3. 7, I. énlartuypa, 76, (€mmrtccw) an over-fold, pe such as covers the orifices in animals, Lat. operculum, like émudAvppa, Arist. P. A. 4. 5, 21, H. A. 4. 2, 21., 4. 4, Io. 2. in pl. the gills of fish, Id. Resp. 12, 6. énimrvtis, ews, %, a folding over, covering, Galen. 3. 564. émmrricocopat, Pass. to be folded over so as to cover, rivet Hipp. 1201 E; of the epiglottis, ér. émt 7d rijs dprnplas rphya Arist. H. A. 1. 16, to, cf. P. A. 3. 3, II. émunrixh, },=ériarvypa, a flap, Plut. 2.979 D; rot Owpaxos Id. Pomp. 353; al ér. r@v paxiwy rags and tatters, Luc. D, Mort. 1. 2, énunriw, to spit upon, Twi Call. Fr. 235, Galen. 6.754,17. — énlarwots, ews, 9, (emminrw) a falling to one, KAnpor Plut.2.740D: a chancing, chance, Theag. ap. Stob. 9. 21, Strabo 102. émuminots, ews, 7), (tvéw) an after-festering, Hipp. Progn. 39. émuruxvéopat, Pass. Zo dense, Arist. Color. 3, 17. éruruvOdvopar, Dep. to learn after, ra. yeyevnpéva Dion. H. de Thue. 29. énurupydta, %, on the tower, epith. of Hecaté at Athens, Paus. 2.30, 2: so émurupyitts, of Athena at Abdera, Hesych. émutipécow, to have a fever afterwards, Hipp. Prorrh. 68, Galen. énuriiperatve, = foreg., Hipp. 255.37, etc.; also émurupidw, Hesych. énlripov, 7d, (wip) the hearth of an altar, Hero in Math. Vett. 211. énttruppos, ov, reddish, Arist. Physiogn. 13, 5, Theophr. H. P. 4. 10, 4. émutrupoela, 7), a repeated signal by fires, Polyaen. 6. 19, 2. isitedsnes Dep. to go about, go through, Lat. obire, c. acc., émema- Aero orixas dvipay, of the general inspecting his troops, Il. 3.196, ete. ; —but in Il. 11. 264, 540, of reconnoitring an enemy. Hom. has it only in this phrase, and never in Od. In Themist. we find the form émumo- ActoGar to visit, Béowopov 75 C; c. dat., Svpos 152 B, where Lob. (Phryn. 584) would read. émmwaA-. émim@Anors, ews, 7, a going round, visitation, a name given by Gramm. to the latter half of' ll. 4, C. I. 6129 b. 59, cf. Plut. 2. 29 A. érimwpa, 74, a cover, Oribas. p. 125 Mai. émumapatlw, to cover with or as with a lid, Hero Spir. 150 :—Pass. to be so. covered, Hipp. 423. 30; Lxx (Ps. 68. 16).—So émtrwpdvvupt Hero Spir. 180. émiTapacyds, of, 5, a covering with a lid, Eust. 1630. 63. émumopatilo, =émmwpd cw, Arist. Cael.2.13,16, Theophr. Ign. 49, 59: —Pass., Arist. Fr. 294. émuTaparicés, 7, ov, serving to close up, Schol. Ar. Pl. 616. émimwpdopat, Pass. to become or be callous on the surface, Hipp. Fract. 796 ; or afterwards, Ib. 776. émurapapa, 76, a callus formed over the fracture of bone, Hipp. Art. 8 802: generally a callus, Id. g2 C, D. 550 émummpwars, ews, 4, the formation of a callus, Hipp. Art. 791 :—a callus, Plut. 2. 906 F, Aretae. Sign. M. Diut. 2. 3. She a lengthd. form of émmordouat, Anth, P. 9. 88. émpp @, to smile with a rod again, Hesych. s. v. xpadins vdpos. empp joopéw, a word in Xen, Eq. 7, 11, applied by some to the tider, to urge a horse by shaking the whip (cf. émcetw); by others to the horse, to gallop, v. Donalds. N. Cratyl. p. 224. Oipéw, 20 be careless about a thing, Luc. Bis Acc. 1. émppatvw, to sprinkle upon or over, ri tut Theocr. 24.96, Arist. G.A. 3: 8,5; 7 éwi 7m Id. H. A..6. 13, 5. II. to besprinkle, c. acc., Ib. . 13, 6:—Pass., Id. G. A. 3. 5, 12. émppaxrés, 7, dv, dashed on or down, Otpa éemppaxrh a trap-door, Plut. 2. 781 D, cf. 356 C, ubi v. Wyttenb.: cf. «arappaxrns. énippapps., 7d, that which is sewn on,Gloss.; restored by Kuhn in Poll. 4. 119 for éwippynua, and so perhaps in 7.66. Cf. Meineke Com. Fr. 4. 683. émppavrifw, = émppaivw, LXx (Lev.6.27). Cf. sq. émppimife, to smite, ra ward xdppys Aristaen, 1.4; én. 70 mip (fort. émppavrifev), Dion, H. 1. 59. 2. metaph. to rebuke, Ath. 168 F, 422 C. émppames, Ion. for -1o1s, ews, 7, reproof, Ion. ap. Ath. 604 B. émppiimopos, 6, =€mppdmifgis, Polyb. 2. 64, 4. Emppimrw, to sew or stitch on, Te éni Te Ev. Marc. 2, 21:—an aor. 2 éréppapev, Nonn. D. 9. 3, is prob. corrupt. émppaszow, fut. fw, like the Ep. émpphocw, to dash to, shut violently, slam to, mUAas émippdgac’ éce (so Dobree for émpphgac’) Soph. O. T. 1244; 70 mHpa Plut. 2. 356 C:—Pass. to be dashed to, of gates, Dion. H. 8.18: cf. émeppaxrés, émpphoow. 2. to dash against, én. abrois tiv trnov to throw the cavalry upon them, Ib. 3.25; é1. Al@ov Plut. Philop. 19. II. intr. to break or burst upon one, of a storm, p} mis Auds kepavyds # Tis duBpia xaAaQ’ Emppagaca Soph. O. C. 1503, cf. App. Civ. 2.59; ém. twit to assault him, Diod. 15. 84, etc. mippabpdew, to recite in accompaniment, én Luc. Nec. 4; éa. &rq tii upon him, Philostr. 682. eo, to offer sacrifices at a place, 06: mavres émppéCecxov ddtrat (Ion. impf.) Od. 17. 211. 2. to sacrifice afterwards or besides, Znvi xotpoy Theocr. 24. 97, cf. Anth. P. 6. 157. émppepBas, Adv. heed/essly, Hermes ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 1092. émppéreta, ), a leaning towards, Jo. Chr. émppetijs, és, leaning towards, Lat. proclivis, mpds rt Luc. Hist. Conscr. 60, Ath. 576 F; els 7 Hdn. 6.9; émppemectépas tds yvapas mpés mwa éxew Id. 5.8: absol., Ams émppenearépa favourable, Polyb. 1. 55, 1, Adv., émppen@s xe mpds 71 Arr. Epict. 3. 22, 1, Sext. Emp. M.1. 380. émppéma, to lean towards, hpiv 8 aids odeOpos émppéry, metaph. from the balance, Il, 14. 99, cf. 8.72: hence, generally, o fall to one’s lot, twt moreitv Tt Aesch, Ag. 707; absol., Ib. 1042. ITI, trans., én. rddavrov to force down one scale, Theogn. 157. 2. to weigh out to one, allot, esp. of ill fortune, ém. pijviy moder Aesch. Eum, 888 ; Aika tots maoter pabeiv émtppéme 7d pédAov Ag. 250: v. KaTappéTw. émuppéw, aor. émeppuny pass. (in act. sense): (cf. féw). To flow upon the surface, float a-top, kadvmepOev Emppéet, 707’ EXaiov I).2.754. 2. to flow in besides, flow fresh and fresh, worapaiv éxippeévrwy (into the sea), Ar. Nub. 1294; mAclw det émppéovra Plat. Theaet. 177 C, cf. Tim. 85 E, al.; dvaev emt rds dpovpas Ib. 22 E:—metaph. of large bodies of men, fo stream on and on, énéppeov C0vea meC@yv Il. 11.724; émppedvrav Tay ‘EXAjver Kat ywopévar thetvav Hat. 9. 38; én. JxAos Topydvev Plat. Phaedr. 229 D; boos dxAo0s dupuv Emppet Theocr. 15.59; of the déppora of Democritus, Plut, 2.733 E; c. inf., 7) wARO0s THY «cimeiv émppedyraw Isocr. 252 C:—metaph. also, obmppéwv xpdvos onward- streaming time, i. e. the future, Aesch. Eum. 853; ABou émppvévtos if wealth flows on and on, Eur. Med. 1229, cf. Xen. Apol. 27, Plat. Legg. 788 D. ITI. in Pass, to be overflowed, viacr Paus. g. 8, 6. émppyyvipr, fut. —pygw: aor. éxéppnta:—to rend, émdov F exéppne? éxt cvupopa Aesch. Pers, 1028. Cf. émppdcow, emppiaow, enippaxros. émpphSnv, Adv. (épéo, pnOfjvat) by name or surname, as éwixhyy and énixdnow, with xadcia@at, Arat. 261. IL. =d:appHdqy, positively, openly, Ap. Rh. 2. 640, 847: clearly, Arat. 191. énippypa, 76, that which is-said afterwards: I. in Old Comedy, a speech, commonly of trochaic tetrameters, spoken by the Coryphaeus after the Parabasis, as in Ar. Nub. 575, Eq. 565; v. Hesych., E. M. II. an adverb, Dion. H. de Comp. 2, Apoll, Dysc. in A. B. pp. 529 sq. IIL. @ sur-name, nickname, Macho ap. Ath. 578 D. émppyparixés, 4, dv, adverbial, Schol, Ar. Pl. 24.4, etc. :—Adv. -Kas, Gramm. emippytus, ews, 7, a rending, a rent, Galen. 14. p. 424, 8. énippyors, ews, 9, a rebuke, reproach, Archil. 7, Plut. 2. 19 C, Hesych. II. a spell, charm, Luc. Philops. 31. é 0, Ep. and Ion. for émppacow, to dash to, shut violently, Ovpny B exe... ewiBags.., Tov Tpels perv empphocecxoy “Axaoi, tpcis 5 dvaotyecxoy Il. 24. 454, cf. 456, and v. émppiyyvupt. 2. to carry violently along, of a wind, Opp. H. 1. 634 :—and, intr. to burst forth, of wind, Arat. 292. R émppyréov, verb. Adj. one must say besides, Plut. 2. 36 B. émppyropevo, to declaim over, ai reve Luc, Hist. Conser. 26; 7 Kara sivos Ach, Tat. 8. 8. II. to introduce besides, Ath. 590 E. émippyros, ov, exclaimed against, infamous, like émPdonros, réxvat en. 4, 23 tAodros Philostr. 303. Adv, -rws, Poll. 3. 139. Hipp. Epid. 1. 951, ¢o shiver afterwards. shrunk up, Xen. Cyn. 4, 1 with a long nose, Pse udo-Luc. Philopatr, 12. d ~ eTITMOPHTIS — ETIPPHOMAL. émppurréw, =sq., only in pres. and impf., Xen. An. 5. 2, 23. 2. intr. Zo throw oneself upon the track, Xen. Cyn. 6, 22,00 émppire, to cast at, bre por xaAKhpea dotpa Tpies éneppipay Od. 5. 310; 6 Aéww én. éaurév throws himself upon his prey, Arist. A. A. 9. 44, 43 &r. orepdvous Polyb. 18. 29, 12 ; Bpovrp Thy powinida Plut. Anton. 22; xeipa é., Lat. manus injecit, Auth, P. 9. 84 :—metaph., én, mAdvas TiveAesch. Pr. 738; pevdets airias ér.Diod. 14.12. II. to throw out opinions, ddvopioTws ém. wept Ta Aotrav Arist. Metaph. 1.5, 8. émuppon, 7), (emippéw) affluce, influx, in-flow, kakais én, ddap Hiatvay Aesch. Eum. 694; émppoatow aiparwy Id, Ag. 1510; daxptay émippoat Eur. Fr. 577; én. aiparos a determination of blood to Pa. Hipp. 4 af ee 904; opp. to dmoppon (efflux), Tim. Locr. 102 B; THs TpOpijs Theophr. C.P. 5. 4, 6; war’ émppofy Tim, Locr. 101 C; avgny re Kal én. Plat. Legg. 783 B:—metaph., ém. xax@v Eur. Andr. 349; dvapynots éorlv én. ppovyaews drodimovons Plat. Legg. 732 B. 2. the stream of a river, Aesch. Fr. 141, Ap. Rh. 4. 623. d émuppo0éw, to shout in answer or in approval (cf. émevpnpéw), ordas maycowos GS emppobe? Aesch. Cho. 4593 Xxopds .. ix@vav érep- pd Soph. Fr. 700, cf. Eur. Hec. 553, Or. gor; én. krimw to answer to, ring with the sound, Aesch. Cho. 427. 2. c. acc., Adyots Emippo- Geiy Tit to rage against, abuse him, Soph. Tr. 264. émuppd9nros, ov, blamed, Hesych. énippolos, ov, hasting to the rescue, a helper, Toln of éntppoBos jev *AOjvn Il. 4. 390; ed .., pot Emippobos EXO Todoity 23. 770; waxpal érippodor edppdvar cict Hes. Op. 558; emippoBor dup médcoGe Ap. Rh. 2. 1193:—more strictly as Adj., mpyos, pitts éw. Ap. Rh. 4. 1045, etc.:—c. gen, giving aid against, viKTepov Tédos .. dAyéwv em. Aesch. Theb. 368:—more common in poét. lengthd. form émrdppodos (q. v.). II. éx. kana reproaches bandied backwards and forwards, abusive language, Soph, Ant. 413, cf. Valck. Hipp. 628 ;—hence, blame- worthy, mean, 6wpara Soph, Fr. 517. éntppota, 7},=émppon, Theophr. Fr. 9. 20, Ael. N. A. 10. 36, etc.; 7 én, Tav ayabey Diod. Excerpt. 597. 98. émpporBdéw, to croak so as to forbode rain, of a raven, Theophr. Sign. I. 10:—c. acc. cogn., én. lov Aatu@ to shoot a whizzing arrow at.., Q. Sm, 8. 322: cf. émpporféw. emppotBSnv, Ady., like Avdnv, with noisy fury, Eur. H. F. 860. émipporléw, = émippo.Bdéw, Theophr. Sign. 1.16, Arat. 969 :—c. acc. cogn., ém. puyds tit to shriek flight at him, Aesch. Eum. 424, cf. Lyc. 585. II. to fly whizzing at, of arrows, Nonn. D. 48. 940. émppopBéw, to rush at with a whirring noise, Schol. Pind. I. 4. 78 (3. 65). In Sappho 2.11 Bgk. reads émBpopeéw. émippoos, contr. —pous, ov, 6, an influx, redundance, Hipp. 881 F. émrippoddve, = émppopew, Hipp. 534. 51. émppodpéw, to swallow besides, Hipp. Acut. 387, Arist. Probl. 27. 3, 4; émippopety Tod USaros Plut. Phoc. g. II. to swallow greedily, gulp down, opp. to mivw, Clearch. K.0.1; ér. d-yaod Sat povos Theopomp. Com. Incert. 20, ; émippdoypa, 7d, that which is gulped down, Alex. Trall. 12. p. 686. émppuyxis, (dos, 7), (pvyxos) the hook of a bird’s beak, Suid. émpptt«, to set a dog on one, éni tia Ar. Vesp. 705, acc. to Schol. and Hesych.: yet cf. pucw. émppv0puife, to bring into rhythm, toqpata Plat. Legg. 802 B; én. és 7d dedts Eaurhy to dress oneself simply, Luc. Pisc. 12. émppvopar, Dep. to save, preserve, Aesch. Theb. 165. émppitratve, to soil on the surface, Plut. 2. 828 A. énipptats, €ws, 7), = émppon, Hipp.416. 54, Arist. P.A.2.7,14,G.A. 2.6,51. emippvopios, 7, ov, (Avopds) in-flowing, Hesych.; émppuopin éxa- oro % 86g1s adventitious, Democrit. ap. Sext. Emp. 7. 137. éippiros, ov, (@mppéw) flowing in or to, USwp Theophr. C. P. 3. 8, 3; of food, infused into the body, Plat. Tim. 80D; of sight, infused from the sun, Id, Rep. 508 B, cf. Tim. Locr. 99 D. 2. metaph. over- flowing, abundant, xapwés Aesch. Eum. 907: cf. éxtacvros. If. pass. flowed into, subject to influx, opp. to dmdppuros, Plat. Tim. 43 A. 2. overflowed, moist, mediov Xen. An, 1. 2, 22. emppwyodoyéopar, Dep. (put, pig) to glean grapes off the vines, Joseph. Mace. 3: cf. ém«aprodoyéopat. émppaowipe and Vw: aor. éréppwoa :—to add strength to, strengthen or encourage in a thing, abrat [ai vées] .. opéas éméppwoay Hat. 8. 14: Tovs pev efemdntev, rods Bt TOAAG paddov éréppwoev Thuc. 4. 36, cf. 8.89; els 70 émippioat avrovs Xen. Hell. 7. 5, €. éx. Tid. mpds Tt Plut. Lysand. 4; €nippwooy cavrhy take courage, Luc. Tim. 41; én, 77v ywepyy, 7a. 7a0n Plut. 2. 62 A, 681 F. II. Pass., in which the pf. éméppwpat, plqpf. éreppw@pny serve as pres. and impf.; fut. émppw- o9jcopa Luc. Somn. 18; aor. émeppioOnv:—to recover strength, pluck up courage, Thuc. 6. 93., 7.2; of KoplyOrot .. roAA® padAdov eweppowro Id. 7.17; és TaAAa word eméppowro Ib. 7; eweppiodn.. i8dv Xen, Hell. 3+ 45 18 ; érepp&a0ar pds 7 Polyb. 1. 24,1; Tas Yuxds Hdn, 3. 3 :—xelvos .. émeppwa6y Aéyew (impers.) they took courage to speak, Soph. 0. C, 661. €mtppwopat, old Ep. pres.: aor. 1 med. éreppwoavro:—to flow or stream upon (one’s head), xatrat émepphoavro dvakros xparods Gn’ afa- varouo his locks flowed waving from his head, Il. 1. 529; mAoxpol.. EmeppwovTo dvr Ap. Rh. 2. 677. 2. to move nimbly, tocol ereppwoavro Hes. Th. 8, cf. Ap. Rh. 1. 385: c. acc. cogn., émippwcat be Xopetny urge the rapid dance, Anth. P. 9. 463. 3. to follow facrectds éreppwovro reOnvD Coluth, 100. II. to apply one’s strength 9 a thing, work lustily at it, c, dat., puAas BbSexa macat ereppwovTo ‘yuvatices worked with might and main at the mill, Od. 20. 107; émep- + poor’ éddrpat, like Lat. incumbere remis, Ap. Rh. 2.661. Cf. Awopear. ex ippwots — érirxedavvyme. enlppwors, ews, 7, a strengthening, Ael. N. A. 6.1, Longin. 11. 2. énivaypa, 76, (€madrrw) a pack-saddle, LXx (Lev. 15. 9), a load, évew Schol. Ar. Nub. 450 :—metaph., dewdv rodmicaypa Tod voonparos the burden of the disease, Soph. Ph. 755. énicaQpos, ov, = éxicampos, infirm, feeble, Eccl. émotAdetw, fo ride at anchor off, rois dxpwrnplos Philostr. 740:— metaph., ém, Tots dors (v. caked I. 3), Arist. Physiogn. 6, 45. II, to float over, % Képn emoadete 7G per&m Philostr. 798; so in Med., Luc. Amor. 40. émiaaaAos, ov, tost on the sea; unstable, Theoph. Sim., Suid, Fi a to accompany on the trumpet, trois ipywdodow Joseph. D123, 3- émicagis, ews, %, a heaping on or up, Tis ‘ys Theophr. C. P. 5. 6, 3. émicampos, ov, rotting on the surface, rotting, Theophr. H. P. 3. 7,5. émoapkatw, to grin or sneer at, Philo 1. 587; rwvé Schol. Il. 11. 110. énicapkos, oy, covered with flesh, daréov Hipp. Fract. 764. émodrra, ¢o pile a load upon, rt ént dvovs, em kaphAous Hat. 1. 194., 3-9; trmoy én, simply, fo saddle it, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 27, An. 3. 45 353 ¢. dupl. acc. 4o load with, riv dvoy cidxa Alciphro 3. 20. 2. to heap up, Thy émoecayperny yiv Theophr. H. P. 7. 2, 5. emoidyvifo, to make still more plain or clear, Clem. Al. 545. émoPéwipat, Pass. to go out after, r@ dvOpan Luc. Jup. Trag. 15. éxicaov, 76, the region of the pubes, Hipp. 252. 34, etc,; also written émetovov, Lyc. 1385; émiovov, Arist. H. A. 1. 13, I. émiceoros, ov, shaking or waving over the forehead, xéun Luc. Gall. 26. 2. émiaeoros, 6, a comic mask with hair hanging on the forehead, Poll, 4. 146 sq., cf, Miiller Archéol. d. Kunst § 330. 4. émoeiw, Ep. émao— (as always in Hom.) :—to shake at or against, i ru, esp, with the view of scaring, Zeds .. abrds émaoelnow épepviv aiyida maow Il. 4. 167, cf. 15. 230; émoclovoa tov Adpov eumaHrre ve Luc. D. Deor. 19. 1, cf: 2. 2, etc. ; éx. wéAepor to stir up .., Joseph. B. J. 2.17, 3; Uépoas én. to hold them out as a threat, Plut. Them. 4; but, €m. viv Xelpa, in token of agsent or applause, Luc. Scyth. 11, pro Imag. 4, Bis Acc. 28:—absol., ém 8 égeice xépay Eur. 1. T. 1276; téacov émacele so ske seems to threaten, of a statue, Anth. P, 9- 755- 2. to urge on, trmov Soph. Fr. 159; ém. twit ras dpaxovrd- Seis xdpas set them upon one, Eur. Or. 255; €m, modu cot Ib. 613; pa) *giceie por Tov .. Mioydday Alex. ’Ayar. I. 8. intr. to assault, tivi Diod. 13.94. 4. to shake so as to touch, Callistr. Stat. 6, cf. Poll. 4.147. émorelwv, ovros, 6, the streamer of a ship, akin to mapaceor, Poll. 1. 99, gI. 2.=pakporwmywv, Id. 4. 143. émaéAnvos, ov, (seAqvn) moon-shaped: émaéAnva, ra, cakes of this shape, Plat. Com. a, 2.10; mémava pnvoedh Hesych. émcepvivopat, Pass, to pride oneself on a thing, Philo 1. 599, Joseph. c. Apion. 2, 3:—the Act. to exalt or magnify, Eccl. émureruppévas, Adv. part. pf. pass. of émavpm, lazily, carelessly, Epict. Enchir. 31, Clem. Al. 958, émoetw, Ep. émoo- (as always inHom.). To put in motion against, set on, pi) .. pot Kiros émacedn péya dalyow Od. 5. 421; du@as émo- oedas 14. 399: metaph., réca yap por énéccevev Kanda daipov 18. 256., 19.129; dveipar’ éwégoevey 20. 87; xfpas Anth, P. 7. 439. II. mostly in Pass, to hurry or hasten to or towards, émecoevovro 5é Aaol Il, 2,86; és 71va 13. 757; émeocevovro vopdvde to pasture, 18.575; vad" (so Aristarch.) éwegoevdovro Od, 13.19; in hostile sense, to rush upon or at, c. dat., vnvolv émocedvecOar Il. 15. 347. 2. very often in part. pf. pass. émecodpevos, with 3 sing. plqpf. éréootro (used as an aor.): 3 pl. aor. 1 éwéoovGey Opp. C. 4. 136:—mostly in hostile sense, to rush on, émégovto Baipov Taos Il. 5. 438., 16. 705, etc.; iG éenecotpevoy Bade reixeos dymAoio struck him with an arrow from the wall as he rushed on, 12. 388; c. dat., ab7@ por énécovro 5. 459, cf. 21. 227; Cc. acc., TeXos Emecadpevor 12, 143., 13. 3953 Cc gen., emecovpevos nediouo rushing, hurrying over the plain, 14.147., 22. 26 (cf. kampdoow); also of fire, etc., hire mip, 76 7° émeaotpevor .. preyed 17. 7373 Kona dewvov emecotpevov Od. 5. 31.4, cf. 431:—also, without any hostile sense, to express rapid motion, c. dat., &s of .. dvetpoy énéoavro 4. 841; Cc. acc., ws moi) érégouro Séuvia swept over them, 6. 20; c. inf., énécavro dine he hasted on to follow, Il. 21. 6or, cf. Ap. Rh. 1. 758; absol., xepoly érecodpevos AGBe wérpys Od. 5. 428; emecodpevos AdBe yoUvey 22. 310. 3. metaph, to be in excitement or agitation, ¢f Tor Ovpods éwécourat Il. 1.173; Ovpds én. opp’ exaptvw 6, 361; c. inf., éxécovro Oupds .. répmeabat 9. 398.—This Ep. word is used once or twice by Trag., but only in lyrics, wé5ov émovpevos Aesch. Eum. 786 ; éxéouro ravie yav..dra Eur. Phoen, 1065; relxea..énéavro parade Id. Hel. 1162; so, ris .. dpea 748 énéouro; Ar. Fr. 557. émoatiw, to sprinkle upon, ti rit Joseph. A.J. 8. 7, 3. énlonya, 76, a device on a coin, Simon. 160; on a shield, rodmionp’ Aesch. Theb.659; én. éxov .. év wéow oaxer Eur, Phoen, 1107, cf. 1125, and y. éxianpov. emonpatve, to set a mark upon, of a disease, Tav axpwrnpiay dyzi- Anus avrov émeonpavey the seizure of his extremities set a mark upon him, Thuc. 2. 49; so in Pass., jv drat émonuavdy if once he has the mark of the disease upon him, Hipp. 306.17: cf. émionpyos:—c. inf., 6 cds éreohpawey abr@ Sorov elvat Xen. Hell. 4.7.2; Pass. fo have a mark set on one, wamanuavOnoerat Keivov nexdpoOar Aads Eur. Ion 1593- II. to indicate, ér. xax@ Tiv mapavopulay Plut. Num. 22, III. intr. to give signs, appear as a symptom in a case, Hipp. Epid. 1. 954; apOpoy én. ovvrerapévor Id, Art. 797, cf. Foés. Oecon. :—of puberty, to shew itself, Arist. G. A. 1. 19, I1., I. 20, 14; of the weather, Theophr. de Sign. 1. 10; of omens, 7@ ‘Pw yores én. € Dion. H, 1. 86, étc.; els 70 Bypdotov Paus. 3.12, 6; of the gods, | 551 Saipdmov abrois ét, Diod. 19. 103, cf. 5. 3, Plut. Sull. 14 :—impers., émonuaiver symptoms appear, Arist. H. A. 5.14, 3-, 6.18, 19, G. A.1. 20, 15, al. IV..Med. to mark for oneself, distinguish, play twa picw Plat. Phileb. 25 A, cf. Polit. 258 C; éay re idoipos édy re dviatos Son eivat Id. Gorg. 526 B. 2. to signify, indicate, rt BovAopat Id. Legg. 744A; 3.."Opnpos éreo. Ib.681E; én. éy rots Spxas Ste ‘obw Gdinnow? Arist. Pol. 5.9, 11; 7@ pedtdpare .. rv dtapapriay Luc, Laps. 1. 3. to set one’s name and seal to a thing (in token of approbation), ém- onpatvecOa ras ebOivas Dem. 310. 21: generally, fo applaud, signify approval, to approve, Isocr. 233 B, Aeschin. 34. 26, Menand. @aop. 1, etc.: rarely in bad sense, to disapprove, Diod. 13. 28, App. Civ. 5, cf. Polyb. 2. 61, I. 4. to distinguish by reward or punishment, ém-~ onpatvecbat twa Sipois Polyb. 6. 39,6; Kkoddceoty Id. ap. Suid. émoypavors, ews, 7, a marking, ard émonudvoews Kepavvev where lightning Aas left its mark, Arist. Probl. 24. 18. II. observation, Eust. Op. 260. 81. émonpavréoy, verb. Adj. one must signify, Arist. Top. 8. 6, 1. émon a, %, a@ marking, notice, dgtos émonpuacias Polyb. 40. 6, 1; Tuxeiv émonuactas Id. 30. 1, 2, Diod. 16. 83, etc.; em. edvoixh Polyb. 6.6, 8; in pl. acclamations, Cic. Att. 1. 16, cf.14.3: in bad sense, Diod. 16. 83. Il. a sign, token, symptom, and hence access of an illness, Galen, :—of the stars as signs of the seasons, Polyb.1.37,4,Diod.1. ~ 49, Plut. 889 E. IIL. avoting, suffrage, populi ému.Cic. Att. 14.3, 2. éemonperdopar, Med. =émonpuaivopat, to distinguish, observe, Td av- Pa) tt Sext, Emp. M. 5.68; xpér@ by applause, Plut. 235 C. émonpelwors, ews, 7), a note or comment, Diog. L. 7. 20. émionpov, 74, any distinguishing mark, adevice or badge, like our crest, Hdt. 1.195; a badge or bearing on a shield (cf. émionua), Id. 9. 74: the ensign or flag of a ship, 1d.8.88; the device on a coin, Plut. Thes. 6. éntonpos, ov, (ofua) having a mark on it, bearing an inscription or device, esp. of money, stamped, coined, xpuads ém., opp. to donpos, Hdt. 9.41; dpyipiov Thuc. 2.13; xpvatoy Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 40, cf. C. 1. 145. 56., 146.11; so, dvadhpara ove én. offerings with no inscription on them, Hdt. 1.51; domldes é7., opp. to Aefat, C. I. 139. 13 and 28, cf. Menand. Wo. 1 :—of epileptic patients, bearing the marks of the disease, Hipp. 306. 12 :—of cattle, spotted or striped, LXx (Gen. 30. 42). 2. notable, remarkable, glorious, Lat. insignis, pvijpa ém. a speaking re- membrance, Soph, Ant. 1258; {vuqopai Eur. Or. 543; €dvn, A€xos Id. H.F.68, Or, 21; téxn Id, Med. 5443; xapareriip Id. Hec. 379; Taos émonpéraros Thuc. 2.43; Tipmpia Lycurg. 166, 10;—and of persons, éx. copiny notable for wisdom, Hdt.2.20; €1. év Bporois Eur. Hipp. 103; éx. £évor Ar. Fr. 460: in bad sense, conspicuous, notorious, és rov Woyov Eur, Or. 249; 5:d Snpoxomtay Plut. Fab. 14; 7H woxOnpia Luc. Rhet. Praec. 25. II. Adv. -pws, Polyb. 6. 39,9: Comp. -orépws, Artem. 2.9. éxlons, for én’ tons (sc. olpas), v. sub tgos IV. 2. émioGéve, to have strength enough, c. inf., Q.Sm. 4. 567., 14. 177. érr-toOpios, ov, on the neck: pi 76, a collar, Hesych. énlovypa, 76, a hounding on of a dog, prob. 1. Soph. Fr. 8. émotlw, to hound on, set on, as a dog, Ar. Vesp. 704: ef. éntovror. émtotpos, ov, somewhat fiat-nosed, Inscr. in Béckh Erkl. e. Aegypt. Urkund. p. 4. émotpoa, to bend inwards, riv mpoBooxida Ael, N. A. 8. 10:—seem- ingly intr. to turn aside one’s course, Xen. Hell. 5. 4,50: cf. droowpso. émoivns, és, (civopac) liable to be injured by, épviat Theophr. H. P. 8. 6, 1, cf. C. P. 4. 10, 3. II. act. injurious, Ib. 2. 3, 2. émotvios, ov, mischievous, Hesych. €moivopat [ot], Dep. to do hurt to, Nic. Al. 413. énlovov, 76, v. émoelov. énlovortov, 74, a cry to urge on dogs, A. B. 252, E. M. 363. 54. _ €motrifopar, fut. Att. -codpas, Ion. -vedpax Hdt. 9. 50; later -icopar Arr. An. 3. 90: Med, :—to furnish oneself with food or provender, Hat. l.c., Thuc. 8. ror, cf. Xen. Vect. 4, 48; én. é« rijs nopyns Hdt. 7.176; ér. TH orparia Thuc. 6.94; efxov obdtv Saou dy émorticawro Dem. 1223.8; eis EvBaay én. Arist. Rhet. 3. 10, 7. 2. c. acc, rei, é. dpioroy to provide oneself with .., Thuc.8. 95; dpytptov ér. émt rv mopetay Xen. An. 7.1, 7. 3. c. acc. pers. to supply with provisions, 70 orpéreupa Ib. 1.5, 4. 4, metaph., én. pds cogucreiay to store oneself for sophistry, Plut. 2. 78 F. IL. =rapaccréw, Pherecr.Upaes I. émeoitios, ov, (airos) working for his victuals alone (without wages), of slaves, Plat. Rep. 420 A, Eubul. Aard, 1; applied to wapdovro: Ar. Fr. 382, Timocl. Muer. 1: cf. émiavros. IL. émotria, 7a, provision- money, Lys. ap. Harp. éemotriots, ews, 7,=sq. 2, Diod. 20. 73, Suid. :—also émolnopa, 7d, Polyaen. 3.10, 11, 3 émotropés, 6, (émorrifoua) a furnishing lf with provi: foraging, Xen, Hell. 3. 2, 26, An. 1. 5, 9. 2. a stock or store of provisions, Ib. 7. 1, 9; Exovres emotriopov Hepa p' Philipp. ap. Dem. 280. 11; én. dvvivns C.1.5128.15; in pl., Hdn. 6. 7. ° énlatros, ov, =ématrios, of a parasite, Crates ToAy. I. émoitrw, =émaifw, Hesych. ‘ emokdtw, to limp upon, wé8ecar Ap. Rh. 1.669; absol., Nic. Th. 294. émokatpw, to rise at, as a fish, Ael. N. A. 14. 8, Nonn. D. 48. 902. émoxadpls, (50s, , (cxadyéds) the part of the rowlock on which the oar rests, Hesych., Poll. 1. 87. : émokdnro, to dig superficially, Anth. P. 9. 52. in seed, Lat. inoccare, Geop. 2. 24. éemurkideds, éws, 5, one who harrows in the seed, Hesych. ay. émokeddwipt, fut. -cxeddow, to scatter or sprinkle over, Tt €mt Tt Plat. Tim. 85 A, cf. Alex. Mov, 1. 9:—Pass. to be sprinkled over, Tw Plut, Cato Mi. 32. II. to harrow 552 émoxeNtots, ews, 7, (cxédos) the first spring or bound, in a horse’s gallop, Xen. Eq. 7, 12, cf. Herm. Opuse. 1. 73. émokéhiw, to dry up: intr. pf. éwéoxAnna, Epich. ap. Ath. 60 F: cf. dmookdjva. émoxeTrato, fut. dow, to cover over, twa Lxx (Lament. 3. 43): to put over, Ti Tw Ib. émokenys, és, (cern) covered over, sheltered, Arist. H. A. 9. 16, 1, Theophr. Vent. 30. ‘ ‘émoxenréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to idk 18, Plat. Phaedo 107 B. Id. Rep. 598 D. émokétrns, od, 6,=éricxomos, A.B. 254: a spy, App. Civ. 3. 25. émoxenticés, 7, dv, fit for examining, né0080s Sext. Emp. M. 5. 3. * €moxKérropat, a pres. used only by late authors (as Pseudo-Hipp., Menand. Incert. 162), which furnishes its tenses to émoxowéw; v. oxémTopat. émokémw, = émoxeratw, Anth. P, 6.62, Apollod. 1. 6, 2. émoxevalo, to get ready, defmvov Ar. Eccl. 1147, in Pass. :—ér. vaby to equip, fit out, Thuc. 1. 29, etc.; én, trmous to saddle, equip them, Xen. Hell. 5. 3, £:—Med., émoxevdtecda: vaidv to have it equipped, Thuc. 7. 36; én. tmoldqua to have them packed, pack them, Xen. Hell.7.2,18; é7. Thy diadexrinny eis .. Arist. Rhet. 1. 4, 6. 2. also, 74 xphyara ep’ dpatay émoxevdcat to pack them upon .., Xen. Cyr. 7. 3,1. aT; to make afresh, to repair, restore, Lat. reficere, af telxn Thue. 7. 24; rov vadv Xen. An. 5. 3, 13; Tas rpinpers Andoc, 26. 18, cf. Lys. Fr. 18 ; ras ddovs Dem. 36.17; and in Med., réAw madady én. Plat. Legg. 738 B. émokevacTHs, 03, 6, one who equips or repairs, Tav pen al Dem. 618. 4, etc. ; ' émok: ed or d, Thue. 6. II. neut. émoxerréoy, one must consider, Aj.579- Plut.Sertor. 24; v.sq. > oie ’ r €TITKENITIS — ETITKOTEW- Bloy Luc. Hist. Conscr. 11, Calumn. 1; 7H evyeveiqa Hdn. 2, 10:—Pass., Aadpaiov bpp’ ewecxiacpévn keeping a hidden watch, Soph, Tr. 914. émoktiots, ews, }, =emomacpds, Byz. émotacpa, 7d, a shadow thrown over, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 112. émoxiacpds, 6, a shading, covering, Hesych. emokidw, =emoxdtw, Arat. 736, Q. Sm. 2. 4793 of peacocks, édy dépas .. maxidovow Opp. C. 2. 590. émioxuos, ov, (cxd) shaded, dark, Témos Plat. Rep. 432 C, Arist. H. A. 6. 15, 6; otenua Plut. Mar. 39: metaph., Bios ém. a retired life, Lat. vita umbratilis, opp. to a public life, Id. 2.135 B. il. act. shading, c. gen., xelp duparav énicxios Soph.O.C.1650. Adv. —iws, Poll. 4. 51. émoxiptaéw, to leap upon, tr Nonn. D. 2. 29: metaph., like Lat. insultare, 7® vexp@ Plut. Demosth, 22:—absol., émoxpT@ow eeipar, tovAo: Anth, P. 5. 103., 12. Io. émoxiprnpa, 7d, a spring, bound, Nonn. D. 19. 152. émioxAnpos, ov, somewhat hard, xohin Hipp. 79 D. émokorela, %), the dignity of a bishop, Epiphan. 1. 735. émoxotetov, 75, the residence of a bishop ; or his office, both in Byz. éemokotrevw, =sq., Lxx (Mich. 7. 7). 2. to be an énickoros, Eccl. émokotéw: fut. —cxépopat, later -cxomfow Babr. 103. 8: aor. —eoxe- papny, later -eoxdanoa Luc. Hermot. 44 and 59: pf. éréoxeppar Hipp. Vet. Med. 13, Plat. Epin. 990 A; also used in pass. sense, Arist. Cael. 3. I, 10, P. A. 4. II, 21. Zo look upon er at, inspect, observe, examine, Hadt., and Att.: to regard, ray’ én. xaxd Eur. Heracl. 869; of tutelary ods, OnBatas émaxonodvr’ dryuds, of Bacchus, Soph. Ant. 1136; “IAuoy .. émoxone cepvds Tlocedav Eur. I. T. 1414, cf. Phoen. 661 ; @ Ap, evapyas 4 Ocds émoxonet Ar. Eq. 1173, cf. 1186; also of a ruler, éx. Tiv moAcretay Plat. Rep. 506 B, cf. Xen. Oec. 4,6; and so in Med., Plat. Lys. 207 A:—followed by Relatives, ér. dom eAdaoov 5 xapos yéyove Hat. 2. 109; é7. mas Eyer Plat. Gorg. 451 C; 748° mlonepar ef 7 A€yw Id. Phaedo 87 B, cf. Xen. Mem, 2.1, 22; aérepov.., H+., Plat. Rep. 518A; ris ein .. Xen. Mem.3. 2, 4, cf. Symp. 1,125 ém. 1). to take care lest, x Ep. Petr. 5. 2. 2. to visity & Oavare, viv pw émioxepar pohov Soph. Aj. 854; Zo visit as a friend, so as to console, Dem. 113. 25; ém. Tovs Kapvovras Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 25, Mem. 3. 1%, 10, Plut., etc.; and so in Med., Dem. 1364. 11 :—Pass., edviy dvelpas ove émoxomoupévny visited not by dreams, i. e. sleepless, Aesch. Ag. 13. 8. of a general, to inspect, review, rds rdgers Xen, An. 2.3, 2; Ta SmAa Id. Cyr. 6. 5, 21, cf. Aesch. Eum. 296. 4. to consider, reflect, Sophs El. 1184; 6 7 av pédAgs epelv, mpdrepov emondre TH -yvmpp Isocr. 11 A; also, é. mpés tt Plat. Legg. 924; mept twos Id. Prot. 348 D, al., Xen.; bmép tivos Polyb. 3. 15, 23 ém. Sorts eins Xen.Mem. 4.2, 24; év.7is.., mola Tis... , etc,, Arist. Pol. 3.1, 13 mérepov .., Ib. 3. 4, 1 :—Med. to examine with oneself, meditate, Plat. Phaedo 91D; eis 7d GAnBes én. 7 Id. Phileb. 61 E, cf. Alex. Tapavr. 3. 8, Philem. Mvor. 1:—pf. pass. to be considered, supr. 5.=émoxorevw 2, Eccl. émoxory, }, a watching over, visitation, of God, Lxx (Num. 16.29), Ev. Luc. 19. 44. IT. the office of énicxomos, 1 Ep. Tim. 3. 2, Eccl.:— generally, an office, Lx (Ps. 108. 8), cf. Act. Ap. 1. 20. 2. the bishop’s residence, Byz. émokdmyars, €ws, 7), inspection, examination, Aen. Tact. 10. émoxonta, },=edoroxia, Poll. 6. 205. II. a looking at, re- garding, jAtov Anth. P. append. 315. émoxomikés, 7, dv, episcopal, Eccl. Adv. -K@s, Ib. émickoros, 5, (oxords 1) one who watches over, an overseer, guardian, 7} yap Srwras enloxoros, Sore puv abriy pioxev (sc. Tiy méAw), of Hector, Il. 24.729; émloxomos . . ddaiwv Od.8.163; éxtoxomor dppovidev watchers over compacts, of the gods, Il. 22. 255; vexpov Soph. Ant. 217; ots pas Id.O.C. 112; én. diorav, of an archer (cf. dvag xan), Theocr. 24. 105; in education, a tutor, Plat. Legg. 795 D; ém. awppo- aivns Kat UBpews Ib. 849 A:—esp. of tutelary gods (cf. émoxonéw), TladAds én, Solon 15. 3; Sixn Plat. Legg.872E; Kaew ém. xepviBov Simon. 74; Xdperes Mivvdy é, Pind. O. 14. 5; Oeot én. dyopas Aesch. Theb. 272; marpyov Sapdrav er. Id. Cho. 126; 7d Sewov .. ppevav énioxomoy guardian of the mind, Id.Eum.518; vuxtev pbeyparav ér., of Bacchus, Soph. Ant. 1118; rarely c. dat., maou yap én. érdx67 .. Néxeots Plat. Legg. 717D; Aten én. Ib. 872 E. 2. a scout, watch, c. dat., ér. Tpweoat, vnecow hperépnow one set to watch them, Il. ro. 38, 342. 3. the Athenians used to send public officers called énioxorot, intendants, to the subject states, similar to the Laced. dpyooral, Ar.Av. 1023, C. 1.73, 73 6 (addend.) 4. an ecclesiastical superintendent, in the apostolic age =mpeoBurepos, Act. Ap. 20. 28, Ep. Phil, 1. 1, 1 Tim. 3. 2, Tit. 1. 7; but from Ignat. downwards, a bishop. érriokoros, ov, (oxonds I) hitting the mark, successful, BaAdAew én. Themist. 143 A; rog¢érqs Himer. Ecl. 14. 4; $x Opp. C. 1. 42 :—reach- ing, touching, viens pi) kaijs énioxoma Aesch. Eum. 903 (v. Dind. ad Ag. 1378) drns THIS er, pédos reaching to, suitable to the calamity, Soph. Aj. 9°, ubi y. Lob.:—neut. pl. émicxoma, as Adv. successfully, with good aim, m. Togevey Hat. 3. 35: regul. Adv. —mws, Poll. 6. 205: Comp. —wrepa, Themist. 116 B: Sup. -@rara Poll. 1. 215. Of, evoroxos, edoxoros. émokoprite, to scatter over, Suid., Eccl. éemiokordte, =sq., Hipp. Offic. 740, C..1. 3915. 39. émurkoréw, (axdT0s) to throw a shadow over, olxlay dkoddpnoev Tooav- thy wore maow emonoreiv rois év tomy Dem. 565. 253 ém. Tut THS Géas to be in the way of his seeing, Plat. Euthyd. 274 C, cf. Polyb. 34. sf Oy i Plut. 2. 538. E. 2. metaph., o throw darkness or obscurity over, T) Kptoe Hipp. 1299. 4, Arist. Rhet. 1. 1, 73 tals THs puxiis emtperetas Isocr, 3 C; 7d mpds xdpiy pnOev em. 7H kaOopay Id. 160 D, cf. Dem. 23. 275 oivos 7@ spovety émoxore? Eubul. Incert. 11 ; ém. yap TP ppovety 70 AapBavew Antiph, Incert. 41; 70 8 épay ém. Gmaaww, as a4 ° , bJ , ETLTKOTNTLS — émiaTadaCw, éouev Menand. *Av5p. I, etc. :—Pass, 40 be in the dark or in uncertainty, émoxoréopevos TH dmepln Hipp. 27. 37; émoxoreiabat nat nwdvecOa Polyb. 2. 39, 12. émokdryots, ews, 7, a darkening, obscurity, of the sun or moon in eclipse, Plut. Pericl. 35, Nic. 23, etc. éemokorife, =eémoxoréw, Polyb. 13. 5, 6, in Pass. emotions, ews, 7%, and —top.ds, 0d, 6, =emonédryots, Procl. émtoxoros, ov, in the dark, darkened, wapeddodoa [} oceAnvn] tiv én. x“pav (ofaneclipse), Plut. Aemil, 17; hence Herm. restored émlaxorov drpa- nov écotpevos, of the sun, in Pind. Fr. 74. 4, for the corrupt émoxdmrev. emokvlopar, Dep. to be indignant at a thing, dpa wat dAdot emoxtov- tat ’Axatot Il. 9. 370; pi col Oupds émoxvocaro iddyrt (Ep. aor.) Od. 7. 306 :—act. aor. émoxtoat, E. M. 364. 13. emokidite, fut. 18, to ply with drink in Scythian fashion, i.e. with unmixed wine, Hdt. 6. 84, cf. Ath. 427 B sq. émoxvOpwrdto, to look gloomy or stern, of hounds, Xen. Cyn. 3, 5; of men, Plut. 2. 375 A. émokiviov [i], 76, the skin of the brows which projects over the eyes and is knitted in frowning (Arist. G. A. 5. 1, 36), mav 3€ 7° émoxd- viov Kaw edxerat, doce KaAvTTwY, Of a lion, Il. 17. 1360; dewdv émor. fuvdyar, of Aeschylus, Ar, Ran. 823; roiov émox. BAooupO enécerro mpoowmrw Theocr. 24. 116, cf. Anth. Plan. 4. 100; puodv ém., TmodLdy ér. Anth. P.6.64., 7.117; and even paidpdv ér., Ib. 12.159; émorpé- yas ‘yupdv ér., of one who puts on a wise face, Ib, 11. 376; in pl. Ib. append. 68 :—also like d@pus, Lat. supercilium, used for supercilious- ness, affectation, Ib. 7.63, etc.; but in Polyb. 26. 5, 6, simply austerity, gravity of deportment. émioxupos, 6, a certain game at ball, Hesych., v. Kuster in v. @ governor, Call. Fr. 231. -€MGKoTTYS, ov, 6, a mocker: v. émudarns. émokotrw, to laugh at, quiz, make game of, rwé Plat. Euthyphro 11 C, Xen. Mem. 4. 4, 6; 7 Ib. 3. 11, 16, Symp. 1, 5, and often as v. 1. for émixérrw ; eis Tt Plut. Lyc. 30. 2. absol. zo joke, sport, make fun, Ar. Ran. 375; pn émoxdmrov Xen. Mem. t. 3, 7- érioxarpis, ews, 7%, mocking’, raillery, Plut. Anton. 24. émopipiyéw, to rattle or echo again, Opp. C. 2. 78, Q. Sm. 2. 546, etc. :—c. acc. cogn., én. Huvoy rut Nonn. D. 48. 965. émapdw, to rub or smear something over a person, c. acc. pers. et rei, vi yap Huds ove émoph Trav nakav; Ar. Thesm. 389, cf. Cratin. KAeoB. 9 :—€mopyxw is a less Att. form, Opp. C. 1. 50% (Vv. 1. émoptxw). éemopiyepos, 4, dv, gloomy, sad, Axduvs Hes. Sc. 264; aloa Ap. Rh. 4. 1065.—Hom, has only the Adv., émopuyeps dréricey sadly did he pay for it, Od. 3. 195 ; émopuyepas vavriAderat at his peril, to his mis- Sortune doth he sail, 4. 672. émooPéw, to urge on, udoritt rva Themist. 50 B: to push on, 7t Heliod. 6.11, cf. 4. 5: €m. nuOwvd ri to send whizzing at, Alex. Navy. 5. én-io-oykos, ov, of equal bulk, corrupt in Strabo 614; Coraés émicoudyxov, én-toos, ov, =iaos, Polyb. 3. 115, 1, Lxx (Sirac. 9. 12). éemomddnv [i], Adv. (émondw) at one draught, nivew Hipp. 546. 23. émonatpw, to be in alarm, ént rw Plut. 2. 327 E. enioniows, ews, }, a drawing in, rijs rpophs Arist. Spir. 6, 10, cf. Theophr. C. P. 1. 17, 6, etc. émonacpés, 6, a drawing in the breath, Hipp. 1185 E. émonacrip, jpos, 6, (émondw) the latch or handle by which a door is pulled to, Hdt. 6.91: cf. émomdw I. 2, énionacrpov, pérrpov. II. tpixworov émonacripa Bédow, of the angler’s line, Anth. P. 6. 109. emonaorids, 7, dv, drawing to oneself, drawing in, Tod bypod Arist. Probl. 37. 3, 2, Polyb. 4. 84, ‘ etc.: of drugs, calculated to draw out humours, Galen. Adv., émomagrixds niveiv Sext. Emp. P. 3. 69. émomacrés (not éricracros, Lob. Paral. 491), 4, 6¥, drawn upon oneself, *Ipos .. émonagrdy kaxdv ee Od. 18. 73, cf. 24. 462; Avan Heliod. 2.6; deomoreia DioC. 62. 3:—émoraorol, of the suitors in the Od., Paus. 8. 12, 6. II. ér. Bpdxos a tight-drawn noose, Eur. Hipp. 783. énionactpov, 75, a rope for hauling or towing, Diod. 17. 90: also a Sowler’s snare, Opp. Ix. 3. 12. 2. alantorien Poll. 10. 22. II. that which is drawn over, a curtain, hanging, LXX (Ex. 26. 36.) émomdw, fut. -omdow [a]: to draw or drag after one, Hat. 2. 121, 4; and in Med., Xen. An. 4. 7, 143 fy émondoas xdpns by the hair, Eur. Hel. 116, cf. Tro, 882, Andr, 711; émonacOjvae TH Xetpt with the hand, Thuc. 4. 130:—metaph. to bring on, cause, roobvde wAHOos mHydTov Aesch. Pers. 477. 2. to pull to, rv Odpav Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 36, cf. émonacrnp: émonacbévros Tod Bpdxou being drawn tight, Dem. 744. 9. 8. to attract, gain, win, wéroba rodr’ émandcey xréos Soph, Aj. 769 :—often in Med., émomwao@ar xépSos Hdt. 3. 72; edvo.ay Polyb. 3. 98, 9; €xOpay Anth. P. 11. 340; émomdcOa méyava to get one a beard, Luc. Jup. Trag. 16. 4. to draw on, allure, persuade, tiv yuxny Plat. Crat. 420 A; so in Med., 6 Adyos.. dv émamdcacro Thue. 3. 44, cf. 5.111; émonaoat twa eis éavrod BovAnoty Plat. Legg. 863 E; én. 6 wépdig rov Onpedovra Arist. H. A. g. 8, 3;—c. inf. to in- duce to do, émandcacda [av] abrods tyye?ro mpobupnoecOa he thought it would induce, invite them to make the venture, Thuc. 4. 9; émona- oOai Twa éumdrnoOjva Saxptov Ta Sppara Xen. Cyr. 5. 5, 10:—ér. Tovs ToAEnious ep’ éavrdy Plut. Philop. 18, cf. Mar. 11. 21, 26, Polyb. 3- 110, 2, etc. :—Pass., poBodpar pr) waves .. émawacOGowv . . TorEpT- oat Dem. 62. 5. 5. Med. ¢o draw in nourishment, of plants, Arist. Probl. 2. 25, al., Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 12, al.; ¢o quaff, of a drinker, Luc. D, D. 5. 4. 6. Med. also to draw in, call in, Tvppov Polyb. 1. 6,53 pudaxiv nal BofOeav napd twos Ib. 7. 6. 7. in Pass., of the sea, émomapévy Bracdrepor (acc. to the Schol.) returning with a rush after haying retired, Thuc. 3. 89. II. II. to overturn, ence + 553 proverb., GAny tiv Guagay émeondow, Lat. plaustrum perculisti, Luc. Pseudol. 32. III. in Med. to draw the prepuce forward, become as if uncircumetsed, pi) émomda@w 1 Ep. Cor. 7. 18, cf. 1 Macc. I. 15, Joseph. A. J. 12. 5, 1. emotety, émurmav, v. Epéra. émometpw, fut.-omep®, to sow with seed, rémov Hat. 7. 115: to sow upon or among, Tt wt re Theophr. C, P. 3. 15, 43; Tevé te Ib. 2. 17, 3: —metaph., ér. poppay dderpois Pind. N. 8. 67. énlomerots, ews, , a libation poured over a sacrifice, Hdt. 2. 39- ériomecpa, 76, poured as a last libation over: metaph., ém. TeV Exxe- xupévar Biov Plut. 2. 349 B, ex emend. Reisk. émonévBw, fut.-omeicw, to pour upon or over, esp. as a drink-offering, ént rod Bapod oivoy xara rod ipniov ér. Hat. 2. 39; olvoy é. xara Tav Keparéov Id. 4.625 rotor ipotor Id. 7.167; vexp@ Aesch. Ag. 1395; toaicd én’ evyais raad ex, xoas after the vows I pour these libations, Id. Cho. 149 :—absol. to make a libation, Hdt. 4. 60; ob7’ dv rt Ovwv obr’ émonévbwv dvos Aesch. Fr. 156:—also, ém. daxpu Theocr. 23. 38. II. in Med. to make a fresh treaty, Thuc. 5. 22. émomepxys, és, hasty, hurried, pi) é., GAN dryabds pawéodw Arist. Physiogn. 3, 2. Adv. —y@s, Xen. Cyr. 4. I, 3. © émotépxw, to urge on, Od. 22. 451; |fwmous] xévrpy émomépxwy Il. 23. 430; vady Eperpois Ap. Rh. 3. 346; 70 mpaypya Kap’ émanépxet 6eds Aesch. Theb. 689; rods dAAous To.adr’ énéomepxe Thuc. 4.12: ¢. inf. to urge one to do, Ap. Rh. 1. 525, Plut. 2.347 A. 2. én. ixvos to follow close upon the track, Opp. C. 4. 90, cf. Nic. Th. 144. II. intr. to rage furiously, émonépyxovow dedAAat Od. 5. 304. émorré 1 V. &péra'B. ‘ émorevSw, to urge on, further or promote an object, opp. to dmoomevdur, Hdt. 7.18; ém. 70 Spay Soph. El. 467; thy orparetay Isocr. 69 A, etc. : of persons, fo urge on, hasten, Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 33; dderav Theocr. 16. 93 :—Pass., Theophr. C. P. 5. 9, 10. II. intr. ¢o hasten onward, Eur. Tro. 1275; mpés twa Xen. Vect, 3, 45 émom. eis 71 to be zealous for, aim at an object, Bornem. Xen. Symp. 7, 4: ¢. dat. to help, assist, ols pi) piots énéomevoev whom nature hath not helped, Plat. Legg. 810 B; part. émometSwv in haste, Ap. Rh. 3. 1389. émomevoriés, 7, dv, urgent, Eust. 831. 29. émomAayxvitopar, Dep. to have compassion on, LXX (Prov. 17. 5)- énlomAnvos, ov, diseased in the spleen, splenetic, Hipp. 1238 B. émormépevos, v. épérw B. émomovby, 7, a renewed or renewable truce, Thuc. 5. 32, in pl. émomopa, %, (émaomelpw) a sowing with one seed after another, Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 10, Eccl. + cf. fe gue émonropets, ews, 6, one who sows after, Eccl. émoropta, 7,=foreg., Hes. Op. 444, cf. Poll. 1. 123. ; éniotopos, ov, sown afterwards, oi ém. posterity, Aesch. Eum.673; Ta . én. vegetables sown for a second crop, Theophr. H. P. 7. 1, 2. émomovbdlw, to urge on, further, often in LXx, II. intr. to haste or make haste in a thing, Luc. Pisce. 2. é s, 00, 6, one who presses on a work, LXX (Isai. 14. 4). érlomw, —orroust, ody, v. sub épémw. émoocat, ai, =emyryvoueva, Hecatae, Fr. 367: cf. wéraooat. émocetw, émieoevw, Ep. for émoeiw, émoeto. émigootos, 6, a magistrate in some Dor. states chosen to conduct the business of the Assembly, C. I. 2448 vil. 16 sqq. ~ éxloaitos, ov, (émoedw, émécovpar) rushing, gushing, of tears, Aesch, Ag. 887: violent, sudden, Star Ib. 1150; Biov rdxar Id, Eum. 924:— c. acc, rushing upon, rds ppévas Eur. Hipp. 574. énicowrpov, 76, Ep. for éricwrpor, Il. éntora, for éricracat, 2 sing. of éniorapat, Pind., Aesch. érioraypa, 76, anything dropped on or in, Galen. Lex. émoraypos, 6, (mara tw) a bleeding at the nose, Diosc. 3. 23. v, Adv. (plornu, émorfvat) standing over each in turn (équordpevos Exdorw E.M.), i.e. one after another, successively, veixeov GXAobev Gdadov er, Od. 12. 392; veopnoev BF dpa maow ér, 13. 54., 18. 425: cf. émdpxopat, and v. Ap. Rh. 1. 293, cf. 4.1687.—The words of Od. 16. 453, Sdprov én. dwAifovro, seem to have given rise to the other expl. of the Shol. émorapévars, tumelpws (as if from ériorapac), but needlessly. émoratw, to let fall in drops upon or into, instil, rwi 71 Arist. Probl. 3. 5, 6, Oribas. Cocchi p, 102: metaph., ém. xdpiv to shed delight or honour, Pind. I. 4 (3). fin.; Bpaxd rijs medovs Luc. Amor. 19: cf. év- ora {a :—Pass. to be dropped on or in, Tit Diosc. 2.75. TI. intr! to bleed at the nose again, Hipp. 80 E (ubi male éwioragis), 171 E. émora0pdopar, Dep. to weigh well, ponder, Aesch. Ag. 164. émorabpela, %, v. 1. for émorabula. émoraipetw, to be billeted or quartered upon another, Plut. Sull. 25 ; mim Id. Demetr. 23, cf. 2. 828 F. II. Pass. to have ters assigned one, Polyb, ap. Suid.: to be assigned as quarters, oixia Plut. Anton. 9. III. trans. to occupy with, in metaph. sense, Ta Gra Suadégeow Plut. 2. 778 B. émora0pia, x, a lodging, én. movetoOar mapd TwWt to take up one’s quarters with him, Diod. 17. 47 (v.1. -efav), cf. Excerpt. 603. 92 and 96. II. a liability to have persons quartered on one, Plut. Sertor. 6 (in pl.), Cic. Att. 13. §2, 2. éxtora0pos, ov, at the door, Anth. P. 9. 336. 2. quartered on another, Polyaen, 7. 40, 1:—éniora@pa, 7a, quarters, Poll. 4. 173. II. as Subst., émlara@pos, 5, a quartermaster, Isocr. 65 E: a station-master, én. Kapias Id. 74 D, ef. A. B. 253. 2. =ovptro- clapxos, Plut. 2. 612 C. . emorihdle, =tmardtw, ri ru Luc. Epist. Sat. 31: also émortaldw, to drop over, iSpms ., ar7j 80s ér. Anth. P. 9. 322. 4 554 éntorahpa, 76, (emorédAAw) a commission, Theophr. Char. 6; said to be Alexandrian, Sturz Dial. Mac. p. 72. TMOTAATIKOS, 7, dv, commanding: % —Kn (sc. mr@ats), the dative, Apollon. Constr. 239, A. B. 636. 2. epistolary, Procl. ap. Phot. énlorapatr, 2 pers. agar Aesch. Pr. 374, 982, Soph. El. 629, Plat., but éniora Pind. P. 3. 142, Aesch, Eum. 86, 581, and ériory Theogn. 1085, Ton. éiarea: (in compd. éfer—) Hdt. 7. 135: imperat. émiorago Id. 7. 29, Aesch. Pr. 840, 967, etc.; but éwicrao Hdt. 7. 209, contr. éxiorw Soph, O. T. 658, etc,; subj. Ion. émoréwyar Hat. 3. 134, Att. énicra- pa. Plat. Euthyd. 296 A:—impf. qmorauny, aco, aro, Aesch., etc. ; without augm. éricraro Hom,, and in Hdt. most Edd. write it without augm.; Ion. 3 pl. #moréaro or émoréaro:—fut. émorhoopat Hom., Att.: —aor. WmornOnv Hat. 3.15, Plat, Legg. 687:—Dep. : I. c. inf. to know how to do, to be able to do, capable of doing, c. inf., ob5é of dare’ émathoovra “Axatol ddd€éat Il. 21. 320, cf. Od. 13. 207: he has it both of intellectual power, doris émigraito jor ppeoty dpria Bacew Il. 14. 92, Od. 8. 240; émordpevar cada Oup@ 4. 730; and of artistic skill, ds yepolv éiararo Saiéada mavra redxey Il.5.60;—often in Att., otra cappoveiy émicracat Aesch. Pr. 982, cf. Soph. O. T. 589; névecOa 8 ob er. Sbpos Aesch. Ag. 962; én. .. Oeods céBew Eur. Hipp. 996, cf. Alc. 566; x«Oapitey od« én. Ar. Vesp. 969, cf. Plat. Symp. 223 D, Rep. 420 E, al.: the inf. is often omitted, c@¢ dmws érioracar Aesch. Pr. 374, cf. Eum. 581. - 2. in Hdt. to be assured, feel sure, believe that .., 3. 134, 140., 6. 139, al. II. c. acc. to under- stand a matter, know, be versed in or acquainted with, moAN iniorato épya Il. 23. 705, cf. Od. 2. 117., 7. 1113 Moucéwy SHpov Archil. 1; tiv Téxvny Hdt. 3. 130; 7d wéAdov Aesch. Pers. 3733 €umetpia én. 71 Thuc. 4.10; mdoas ras Snpuoupyias Plat. Rep. 598 C; eyarye ypappar’ ov8 ér. Cratin. Nou. 1: with an acc. and inf. conjoined, Aesch. Eum. 276; with an inf. to expl. the acc., épyor 5& podvoy éoGiew ér. Simon. Amorg. 24, cf. Archil.59;—ém. pdOovs rods Aiawmov to know them by heart, Plat. Phaedo 61 B, cf. Gorg. 484 B: also with an Adv., Supio7i éz. to know Syrian, Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 31- 2. after Hom. to know as a fact, know for certain, know well (whence émornpn), Hdt. 7. 8, and Att.; éioracOat is used convertibly with «idévar, Plat. Theaet. 163 C, Arist. An. Pr. 2. 21,9 sq., Phys. 1. 1, 1; (but sometimes efdévac is the general term, éwicrac@a: being confined to strictly scientific knowledge (émorhpn), Arist. Metaph. 1. 2, 10) ;—often strengthd., ed éw. Hdt. 5. 423; oapas é. Aesch. Pr. 840, etc. ; 7a povra ém, Andoc. 31. 34: —Construct., ér. re Hdt. and Att.; ém. wept rwos Hdt. 2. 3, Thuc. 6. 60; wept Oewy Eur. Fr. 793; foll. by a dependent clause, ré oi xpf- onra ér. Theogn, 770; én. b7t.., or én. ToUTO, S7e.., Hat. 1. 3, 156, al., and Att.; @s.., Hdt. 1,122, Aesch, Pers. 599, Soph. Aj. 1370; é7. avrov ois Woplfera Ar. Eq. 715, etc. 8. rarely to know a person, like yv@vai, 5 mais rods texdyras otk én. Eur. Ion 51, cf. Ar. Eq. 1278. III. c. part., in Prose and Att., 4o know that one is, has, etc., «0 én, airds oxhoov Hat. 5. 42; éa0dds dy éniotaco Soph. Aj. 1399, cf. Thuc. 2. 445 also, ds G3’ éxévraw avd’ én, ce xpi Soph. Aj. 281, cf.O. T. 848:—c. dupl, acc., éavrods avarvAov imarapyeba waidas (sc. évras) Plut. Rom. 7. IV. the part. pres. emaordpevos, 7, ov, though it often retains its verbal force, is often also used as an Adj. like émarhpov, knowing, understanding, skilful, dvbpds émarapevou Od, 14. 3593 ém. mep eévri Il. 19. 80; wat paar’ ex. Od, 13. 3133 even of a dancer’s feet, Opétacxoy émorapevorar médecot Il. 18. 599:—also c. gen., émardpevos Ttohépow, dp, , dodAs skilled, versed in them, 2. 611, Od. 21. 406; and c, dat., deovrs (where BéAAey pethaps should be supplied), Il. 15. 282:—hence, — 2. Ady. émordpévas, skilfully, expertly, Hom., Hes, Th. 87, etc.; «0 at émorapévws Il. 10. 265, Od. 20. 161, Hes. Op. 107; émor. mivev Theogn, 212 Bgk.; also in Prose, Xen. Cyr. 1.3, 3. (Since the Att. use épiornpe Tov voty somewhat in the sense of émlorapat, to attend, observe, it is prob. that éniarapat is merely an old med, form of é¢tarnyt, cf. Arist. Phys. 7.3, 13,72 yap tpepijca kal orhvat riv idvoay ericracba ..réyopev, and v. énicracts 2.) émoriota, Ion. -(y, 7,=érioracts, as €Aacia for éAaats (cf. Lob. Phryn. 528), attention, care, én. €xew to deserve attention, Ath. 66 B; én. ris véoou Aretae, Caus. M. Diut. 1. 6. II. authority, dominion, mpos Thy éx. adrav to obtain dominion over them, Strab. 366, cf. Diod. 20. 32; absol., Plut. Lucull. 2, Nic. 28, etc. ‘0, to be at variance about, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 37. émordovos Zeis, 5, the Jupiter Stator of the Romans, Plut. Rom. 18. (From épicrnps, he that makes to stand firm.) émloriiots, ews, }, (Eplarnps) astopping, stoppage, Tis ko.Ains, Tod opou Hipp. 195 E, 76E; én. aiparos a staunching of blood, Id. 380. 15; cf. Arist. G. A. I. 7, I. 2. ya i Cc, = 2.9, EA II. épior a stopping, halting, a halt, rot orparedparos Xen. An. 2. see ey ecudriting x thought, anxious thoughts, Soph. Ant, 225; opp. to «ivyots, Arist. de An. 1. 3, 21, al. 2. a stopping to examine a thing, observation, attention, Id. Metaph. 13. 2, 17; rodr’ dfiov émordacews Id. Phys. 2. - 7; pera én, Id. Lin. Insec, 18; én. yeyeral twos Polyb. 8. 30, 133 dios émordoews Id. 11. 2, 4 dyeav rw els én, Id. g. 22, 73 & ém. attentively, Id. 3. 58, 33 Ggcos ém. Id. 11. 2, as 3.=émoraotatt, Diod. 14.82; én. épyav superintendence of works, Xen. Mem.1.5,2:—inthissense, perh., 2Ep.Cor.11.28. 4, abeginning, én. moreioardrd .., Polyb,1.12,6; én. rhs loroplas Id, 2.71,7; THs Kaxias ‘ Lxx(2Macc.6.3). 5. scwm,Hipp.Aph.1259. _ 6. position, riyv én. &r GAAfaAats éxew, of ships, Polyb. 1. 26, 12. III. v. émovoracts. ritela, , (emarareda) authority, rule, lambl. V.P. § 174. ov, v. émararnréov. 2, =sq., Eus. ap. Stob. 308. 42, C. 1. 5142. émortrns, to be set over, morpvios Soph. O, Tid € ’ , ° , CTLITAAUA — ETLTTEVAXY. 1028, cf. Eur. Fr, 188; } Yuya) ew. TO ohpare Plat. Gorg. 465 C, cf. Rep. 443 E; 7@ rod vopoOérou Epyw Id. Crat. 39° C, ef. 405 D. 2. c. gen. to be in charge of, have the care of, Tod épyou Hat. 7.22; épyav Xen. Mem. 2. 8, 3; (ov Id, Cyr. 1. 1, 2; Tod cious Sef eivar Ib. 8. 1, 16; Tis matdelas Plat. Rep. 600D; ove dv dpbds éxor Ov xelpw Trav Bedrriévey émarareiv Id. Prot. 338, cf. Isocr.62 C; é. rav vooedvTav Hipp. 27.7; and absol., Plat. Polit. 293 B. 3. to stand by, second, aid, ob Wevdis paprus Epypaow én. Pind. N. 7. 71; Mawy 705° éne- arate Adéyw Aesch. Ag. 1248. 4, rarely c. acc. to attend, follow, tis yap we 25x00s ob exeordrer; Soph. Fr. 163. II. at Athens, to be *Emordrns or President (in the BovAn and éxxAnola), often at the head of decrees, d5ofe T@ Shy’ .. Nuiadns éweordre: Thuc. 4. 118, cf. Ar. Thesm. 373, Andoc. 13. 3, C. I. 73 6. 1 (addend.), 74. 8, 76. 2, etc. - and y. émordrys, mpvravs II. émordtn, }, =émardrns U1, Schol. Ar. Av. 436. émordrnp, jpos, 6,=sq., Hesych., who also explains it, 7d o7dpa rijs vews, and in pl. of rv mdolwy vopels. émorarns, ov, 6, (épicrapat) one who stands near or by, and so, like ixérns, a suppliant, ob ot 7 dv ..0@ émorary obd dda Boins Od. 17. 455- 2. in battle-order, one’s rear-rank man (as mapacrarns is the right- or left-hand man, mpoorarns the front-rank man), Xen. Cyr. 3- 3, 59., 8. I, 10, al. II. one who stands or is mounted upon, dpparov ém., of a charioteer, Soph. El. 702; of a warrior, like mapa- Barns, Eur. Phoen, 1147; €Aepavrwy ér., of the driver, Polyb, 1. 40, rei 2. one who is set over, a chief, commander, Aesch. Theb, 815; motuviev ém. Id. Pers. 379; SmtAwyv Soph. Aj. 27; €perpoy én. (like kaans dvag) Eur. Hel. 1267; Ovuaros én. Id. Hec. 223; but, ravpor muprvdav Cevyhaict mastering them with.., Id. Med. 478; évémrpwr kal pupov, of the Trojans, Id, Or. 1112; émor. KoAwvod, of a tutelary god, Soph. O. C. 889; «aipds dvBpaciw péyotos Epyou mavrdés ear’ én. Id. El. 76;—also in Prose, ray Adywv icous nal Kowods.. émararas yevéobat judges, Andoc, 29.34; Tolas épyacias ém.; Answ, Tod rorjoae Savdv A€yey ; (where it runs into the sense of émorhpwr), Plat. Prot. 312 D; én. GO\aw president, steward of the games, Id. Legg. 949 A, cf. Xen. Lac. 8, 4; of the training-master, Id. Mem. 3. 5, 18; of a pilot, Id. Occ. 21, 3, and (metaph.) Plat. Rep. 412 A. IIT. at Athens specially, 1. the President of the mpuravas (vy. mp’ravis), who presided in both the BovAy and the é«xAnoia on the day of his election and until the appointment of the 9 pde5por, after which he had charge of the Records and Treasury, Poll. 8. 96:—but the President of the mpéedpor was also called émordrys, Aeschin. 59. 13, Dem. 596, 4, C. I 186, 189, 5, etc. 2. an overseer, superintendent, in charge of any public works, building or works, rod véw Tov ev 7éAet, i.e. of the temple of Athena Polias, C. 1.160. 1; é. rav épywy, Lat. praefectus operum, Dem. 264. 26, cf. Aeschin. 55. 41; Tod vavrixod Id. 85. 29; TOY Kompwvay Dem. 785. 13, etc. IV. in Ar. Av. 436 =imvoA€Bys or Tplaous, the caldron for the hot bath which stood over the fire, or a clay image of Hephaestus placed there as a tutelary god, y. Schol. ad 1, Casaub, Theophr. Char. 9, and cf. éricrarov. emoriirytéov, verb, Adj. of émoraréw, one must oversee, superintend, c. dat., Plat. Rep. 377 B, 401 B; c.gen., Xen. Occ. 7,35; v- Lob. Phryn. 766. émordricds, 7, dv, of or for government : 4} -Kh (sc. Emorqyn), Plat. Polit. 292 B, 308 E. II. standing still, Diog. L. 7. 45 :—Adv. ~Kas, Schol. Ap. Rh, 2.84: carefully, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 182. emorarts, t6os, %, fem. of émordrns, Schol. Ar. Thesm. 374, Suid. énioritroy, 76, =€mordarns U1, Inscr. Vet. in C. I. 8. emorixiw, (o7dxUs) to shoot or sprout forth, properly of corn; metaph, of the beard, Ap. Rh, 1, 972. émoréarar, Ton, for éwicravra. tmareyafe, to roof over, oixnua Soxois Ctesias ap. Ath. 529 C. émoreiBo, to tread upon, stand upon, témov Soph. O. C. 56; yaiay Rhian, ap. Stob. 54. 18; aiyaddvde Orph. Arg, 1118; ém. épyov, Lat. opus aggredi, Ib. 941. emorretpuos, ov, on or at the oreipa, Suid. emoretxe, to approach, vacov Pind, I. 6. , 30; dqpara .. en. xOdva Aesch. Eum. 906; absol., my émorelxovcay Huépay Eur. Fr. 813. 7. (emoreho, fut. —07€A@, to send to, ypdipas és BiBdioy Tabe éwéoTeLhe és Sdpoy Hat. 3. 40, cf. 7. 239; Hdlw.. av dxov div ..émoréddrew Thue. 7.14; ér. 7 mpds twa Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 26; ém. emorodds rive Dem. 51. 2, Ep. Plat. 363 B:—absol. to send a message, Eur. 1. T. 770; esp. by letter, 40 write word, Lys, 160.27; mept twos ds dducodyTos Thue. 8.38; ém. Or .., Ib. 50, 99; Ta émoradevra tx Sdpou the news received from Samos, Ib. 50; 7d éwearadpéva letters, Plut. Artox. 21, etc.: cf. moron. 2. to enjoin, command, twi te Thue. 5. 37; Twa TL Xen, Cyr. 2. 4, 323 tev epi Twos Ib. 4. 5, 34, Plat.; c. inf, éx. Tevt antaraca Hat. 6. 3; tit éxuadety Eur. Phoen. 863; also, ém. Tid Toveiy 7t Soph. O, T. 106, Xen. Cyr. 5. 5,1; and without any case, to give orders to do, Aesch. Eum. 205, Thuc. 8. 72, etc.:—so, in Pass., énéaraAré oi .. c. inf. he had received orders to do, Hdt. 4. 131; «at Hot ée Baorréws die érécradrra Id. 6, 97; als éméaradtat TéAos to whom the office has been committed, Aesch. Ag. 908, cf. Eum. 7433 Té emeoTahueva orders given, Id. Cho. 7793 ph 70 én. ind Anpoabévous Thue. 4. 8, 3. to order by will, Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 14, cf. Valck. Hipp. 858. II. to draw in or over, papos katwpaddy Christod. Ecphr. 140: cf. cugré\Aw, emorevate, fut. déw, to groan over, twit Aesch, Pers. 727, Plut. Brat. 52, ete.; absol., Eur. 1. T. 283. smorevaKros, 7, ov, uttered in lament over, Schol. Eur, Phoen, 1301. emarrevaixi fer, =tmoréver, Nonn. D. 8. 204: cf. émaorovaxifw. MaTEvaXo, —emisTéve, tii Aesch. Ag. 790; aor, emearevaxnae as €TLOTEVOS —— Gavivrs C. I. (addend.) 2109 g:—absol., Soph. O. T. 185 :—Med., érearevaxovro 8 éraipor Il. 4. 154, cf. 19. 301., 22. 515. émiotevos, ov, contracted, Arist. H. A. 3. 4, 7, in Comp. émorévw, to groan or sigh at or in answer, énl 3 €areve Shyos Il. 24. 776, cf. Hes. Th, 679: to lament over, réxvows Eur. Med. 929, cf. Plut. Caes. 21, etc. 2. c. acc. to lament, Soph. Tr. 947. emarepivew, to deck with a crown, Bwpdy Pind.O.g9. fin.; Ta C.1. 401. émorepis, és, Hom. only in phrase epyrfpas émorepéas oivoro, bowls crowned (i.e. brimming high) with wine, ll. 8. 232, Od. 2. 431, cf. ém- arépa ;—vAns ér. crowned with wood, of Thasos, Archil. 18. émortépw, properly, to surround with or as with a chaplet: Hom. always in Med., xpyrijpas émoré~avro mworoto crowned them to the brim, filled them brimming high, with wine, Il. 1. 470, Od. 1. 148, ete., cf. Ath. 13 D, 674 E; (for it has nothing to do with the later practice of crowning the cup with flowers, vina coronare, as Virg. takes it, Aen. 3. 525, cf. Ath. 13 D, 674 F, and v. sub émorepns, duduorepys). Il. to be covered with, Tpdmecdar paxaviday emarépocar dprov Aleman 61. IIL. yods é, rit to offer libations as an honour or orna- ment to the dead, Soph. El. 441. émeoréwvrat, émlorp, v. sub éxiorapat. é OiLopar, to lean one’s breast on, LXX (Cant.8.5),v.l.forémornp-. émariPos, ov, (ar700s) on or close to the breast, of a bosom friend, Eccl.: also €moryOitos, E. M. 760. 48. émornAdopar, Pass. to be set up asa column upon, Anth. P. 7. 503. éniompa, 75, (@piornm) anything set up, e.g. a monument over a grave, Plat. Legg. 958 E: an ornament on ships, Diod. 13. 3. éemorhn, 7, (émloarapar) acquaintance with a matter, understanding, skill, experience, as in archery, Soph. Ph. 1057; in war, Thuc. I. 121., 6. 72., 7.62; é@. mpds rov méAcuov Lys. 914. 153 epi re Plat. Phil. 55D; rod vetyId.Gorg.311C. ‘II. generally, knowledge, émothun ot pou mpovxos dv Soph. O. T. 1115; wavr’ émorhuns wréws full of know- ledge in all things, Id. Ant. 721, cf. Tr. 338. 2. scientific know- ledge, science, v. esp. Plat. Rep. 477 B sq., Arist. An. Post. 1. 33, Eth. N. 6. 3; opp. to 7éxvy and éyvmepia, Plat. Rep. 422 C, Ion 536, cf. Arist. Metaph. 1. 1, 4; to 5éfa, Hipp. Lex, Plat. Polit. 301 B :—in pl. the sciences, often in Plat., etc. émiornpov-apxys, ov, 6, a master of science, Eust. Opusc. 21. 8:— —apxucds, 4, dv, fit for such mastery, Ib. 50. 20: —apxew, to be such, Ib. 66. 78. émortnpovitw, fo make wise, Symm. V.T. émornpovikes, 7, dv, capable of knowledge, opp. to Aoyorinds, 70 ez. [Hépos 7Hs Yuyxis] Arist. de An, 3.8, 2, Eth. N. 6.1, 6; Oeds .. mavrar éematnuovixwrarov Id. Fr. 12. II. of or for science, scientific, dpxai Id. Top. 1. 1, 2; dpiopds Id. Metaph. 6. 15, 3; amddegis Id. An. Post. 1.6, 11, etc. Adv. -«@s, Id. Top. 2. 9, 4. éxiormpos, ov, =émaorhuwr, knowing, c. gen. rei, Hipp. 1200 C. emorpooivny, 1}, =érorhun, Xenocr. ap. Diog. L. 4. 13. emotpov, ov, gen. ovos, (ériorapar) knowing, wise, prudent, én. Bova te vow re Od. 16. 3743 dpxovres Xen. Oec. 21, 5; émornyov yap épyacia. etc.; épyatspevor, od dixatduevoy, xexriabae Thy ovaiav Antipho 117. 353 épy. &v rots pyos in the mines, Dem. 1048. fin.; c. dat. instrum., XaAK@ with brass, Hes. Op. 150:—also: of animals, Bows épyarns Soph. Fr. 149; of birds working to get food, Arist. H. A. 9. 18, 1; of bees, Ib. 40, 33:—of Vulcan’s self-acting bellows, Il. 18. 469; 78 xpi épyd¢era: the matter works, i.e. goes on, Ar. Eccl. 148; 6 dip épyd- Cera: produces an effect, Theophr. C. P. 5. 12, 7. II. trans., like movéw, to work at, make, build, xAvra. Epya, of Athena, Od. 20. 72, cf, 22, 422; dydApara, duyous Pind. N. 5. 2, I. 2.66; dyagidas Ar. Nub. 880; olxoddunua Thuc. 2. 76; eixdvas, dvipavras, etc., Plat. Crat. 431 C, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 6, etc.; 7dr knpov, oxaddvas, of bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 40; 49, 54: to make so and so, énpov épy. Twa Luc. D: Marin, 11,2; péyay Ael, V. H. 3.1. 2. like dpaw, to do, perform, épya dexéa Il. 24. 733; Epyov épy-, of husbandmen, Hes. Op. 380, cf. 395; plda, évaloipa épyatecdar Od. 17. 32%., 24.210; Kad, OavpagTa Plat., etc.; mept Oeods dSixov Plat. Gorg. 522 D; épy. épyov, opp. to Bovaevew, Soph. Ant. 267, cf. 0. T. 347:—e. dupl. acc. to do something to another, 7oAAol moAAd .. bpas elow eipyaopéevar Hat. 2. 26, etc. ; but in this sense mostly, ¢o do one ill, do one a shrewd turn, axa épyd- Ceadat tiva, like xaxd Spay or moeiv Td, Soph. Ph. 786, Thuc. 1. 137, etc.; so, old p’ elpydow; rip’ épydoer; Soph. Ph. 928, 1171, etc.; piy dqra Tord p’ Epydon Id. El. 1206; aicxiora épy, twa Ar. Vesp. 787 ; more rarely, dya0a épy. twa Hat. 8. 79, ef. Soph. O. T. 1373, Thuc. 3- 52, Plat. Crito53.A; moAAG xai Kada Thy “EAAdba Plat, Phaedr. 244 B: —seldom, vi tt Ar. Vesp. 1350. 3. to work a material, é7Aa .., oloty re xpuadv elpyacero Od. 3. 4353 €py- yiv to work the land, Hdt. I. 17, etc.; épy. [yav] épyarais Xen. Cyr. 1.6, 11; yiv wat fvAa Kat AiOous Id. Hell. 3..3,.7; dpyupirw ap. Dem. 974. fin.; épy. @ddAacoay, of traders, Dion. H. 3. 46; so, yAaveny épy., of fishers, Hes. Th. 440:—to digest food, Lat. subigere, Arist. H. A. 9. 18, 1, cf. Theophr. C. P. 5. 12, 7., 6. 18, I. 4. to earn by working, xpnuara Hat. 1. 24, Ar. Eq. 840, etc.; Biov é* Tov Siatov Andoc. 18. 42, c& Hes. Op. 43, 2975 dpytpoy ad cogias Plat. Hipp. Ma. 282D; puodod rd émrHdea Xen. Mem. 2.8, 2: ¢o deal in, 71 Dem. 794.22; (nplav épy. (sc. €avr@) Isae. 58. 19. 5. to work at, practise, Lat. exercere, TExvnv, Epyaciay Plat. Phaedo 60 £, etc.; dperny, cwppoodyny, v. 1. Isocr. 292.A. 6. absol. to work at a trade or business, to traffic, trade, év yvaelw Lys. 166. 31; év épmopiy Dem. 957. 27; €v TH dyopG 1308. 9; Kara Oddac- gav 1297.9; TovTas vavrixots épyateobar to trade with this money on bottomry, 893. 24; dts } zpls épy. TS aiT@ dpyupiy 1292. 3; Tadra épy. thus he trades, 794. 22; of épyaCéperor traders, 922. 10:—esp. of courtesans, o@part épy., Lat. guaestum corporis facere, 1351. 21; épy. dnd Tov owparos Polyb. 12. 13, 2; awd THs wpas Alex. Sam. ap. Ath. 572 F: cf. évepyd{ouar. 7. to cause, mnyovas Soph. Ant. 236; 1é0ov ivi Dem. 1404. 18. III. the pf. pass. etpyacpar is used in act. sense, as Hdt, 3. 155, Aesch, Fr. 321, Antipho 125. 36, and so always in Soph., v. Lob. Aj.21: but it also often occurs in pass, sense, 1. to be made or built, pyaoro 70 reixos Hdt. 1. 179; é« wétpas elpyac- Hévos Aesch. Pr. 242; olxodéunua &a Taxéwv eipy..Thuc. 4. 8; Aldor elpy. wrought stones, Id. 1. 93; yf eipy. Xen. Occ. 19, 8; Odpaxas eb eipy. Id. Mem. 3. 10, 9. 2. as Pass. also in the sense ¢o be done, Aesch. Ag. 354, 1346, Eur. Hec. 1085; 7a eipyaopéva the things done, deeds, Hat. 7. 53, Eur. Ion 1281; épy’ éore .. eipyaocpéva Soph. O. T. 1374, cf. 1369.—The pres. in pass. sense is rare, TO xpHe épyaterar Ar. Lys. 148; oxevn ols % épyaera: Dion. H. 8.87; impf. jpya¢ero Hyperid, Euxen. 44: fut. €pyac@ncopa: always in pass. sense, Soph. Tr. 1218, Isocr. Epist. 6; and so aor. elpydaOny Plat. Polit. 281 E, Rep. 353 A: cf. da-, b-, év-, &-epya Copa. épyadeiv, Ep. éepyabeiv, Att. elpya0eiv, post. aor. 2 inf. of elpya, to sever, cut off, dnd 8 adxévos Gpov eépyabey Il. 5.147; ard. wAcupav xpéa Epyabey 11.437. II. to hold back, check, Soph. El. 1271, Eur. Phoen. 1175, Ap. Rh. 3. 1171: cf. xarepya0duny. For the form, cf. dpuvabeiv, duxadeiv, cixabeiv. €pyaAciov, Ion. —Hiov, 74, (Epyov) a tool, instrument, Hdt. 3. 131, Thue. 6. 44, Plat. Polit. 281 C, etc. épyavn [4], 4, @ worker, also épyavn, epith. of Athena, Lat. operosa Minerva, Soph. Fr. 724, cf, Ael. V. H. 1.2, Plut. 2.99 A, Paus, I. 24, 3: cf, epydres IL. II.=épyacia, Clem. Al. 269, Hesych. epydopat, = épyd(ouar, Lxx (Ex, 20.9, al.). ,pyuceiw, Desiderat. of épydopat, to long to do, be about to do, ws epyacetaw ovdev Soph. Tr. 1232; 7h 8 épyaceteis ; Ph. rool. épyiola, Ton. -ty, %, (Epydgopar) work, daily labour, business, Lat. labor, épyacinv pet-yew h. Hom. Merc. 486, and Att.; opp. to dpyia, Xen, Mem. 2.7, 73 €py. &ya0h productive labour, Id. Vect. 4, 293 dvedevbepos Arist. Eth. N. 4. 1, 40; épyacia &yxeipeiv, of bees, Id. H. A. 9. ide % mepl riv Oddagoay épy., of seamen, Plat. Rep. 371 B; pi) yevouevns Epyaaias if no work was going on, Dem, 819. 28; 60s épya- gtay, c, inf., Lat. da operam ut .., Ev. Luc. 12,58; in pl., rds év inai- py épyacias épyatecbar Xen. Occ. 7, 20. II. a working at, making, building, rex@v Thuc. 7.6; izarlwy, drodnudray, etc., Plat. Gorg. 449 D, Theaet.146D; ris éoOiros Xen. Occ. 7, 21; mirTns Theophr, H. P. 9. 2, 6:—metaph., Mépyapos dup) reais épyactats dai- oxera Troy is (i.e. is doomed to be) taken in the part wrought by thy hands, Pind. O. 8. 56; épy. jdovijs production of pleasure, Plat. Prot. 353D. 2. aworking of a material, 4 épy. rod acdqpou Hat. 1. 68; XaAKov, Epiav, vAow Plat. Charm, 173 E; trav xpuoclwy peraddAwv Thuc. 4. 105, cf. Hyperid. Euxen. 45: but most commonly a working of the round, épy. Yns, x@pas Ar, Ran. 1034, Isocr. 145 D, etc.; €py- wep xnav Plat. Min. 316 B; also digestion of food, Arist. de Resp. 1,. Be Ste 3. generally, trade, commerce, Xen, Mem, 3. 10, 1, Dem. €pyaciun — épyov. 976. 28, etc.; ént rijs épyacias dv rijs xara rv Oddaccay engaged in trade by sea, Dem. 893. 21; épy. xpnuarav Arist. Eth. N. 8. 9, 5:— esp. of a courtesan’s trade or way of living, Hdt. 2. 135, v. Valck. ad I. 93, Dem. 270. 15. 4. a practising, exercising, Tov Texvav Plat. Gorg. 450C; 9 épy. tis rpamé{ns the business of a banker, Dem. 946. 3; Kumpidos Anth. P. 5. 219. 5. a work of art, production, Terpaywvos épy., of the Hermae, Thuc. 6. 27, cf. 7. 6. III. a guild or company of workmen, % épy. Tav Bapéwy C. I. 3924, cf. 3938, and v. épyov v. épyacipn, 7, a poor kind of myrrh, Diosc. 1. 77. épyaotpos, ov, to be worked, that can be worked, MOo Plut. 2. 7or C; £vAa Poll. 7. 109; but mostly of land, éyy. xwpia tillable land, cultivated and, Plat. Legg. 639 A, 958 D; so, 7a épy. Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 16, etc. ; 7a repévy, boa .. Oeperdy Ear epydoipa morely to bring into cultiva- tion, C. 1. 103.17; % épy. (sc. 9) Theophr. H. P. 6. 3, 5. 2. épy. Huépa a work-day, LXx (1 Regg. 20. 19). II. act. working for a livelihood, 7d épy. the working people, App. Civ. 3.72: esp. of courtesans, Artemid. 1, 80. 2. active, OQpactrns Orph. H. 59. 7. épyacréov, verb, Adj. one must work the land, Xen. Eq. Mag. 8, 8. II. rodpyov gor’ épy. it must be done or one must do it, Aesch. Cho, 298, cf. Eur. Med. 791, Xen. Oec. 7, 35; 7a épya..ds éoriv épyaoréa Ib. 13, 3; Sr’ Hv épy. when it was necessary to act, Soph. Tr. 688. épyaorap, jpos, 6, a workman, esp. in husbandry, Xen. Occ. 5,15; of a smith, Orph. H. 65. 4:—more commonly épydrqs. épyaornptakol, of, handicrafismen, Polyb. 38. 4, 5. épy pt-dpxys, ov, 6, the foreman of a workshop, C.1. 4968. épyaornptov, 7d, any place in which work is done: a workshop, manu- factory, in which the works were done by slaves, Hdt. 4. 14, Lys. 120. 44, Isae. 40. 11 sqq., C. I. 123. 9, al.:—a mine, quarry, Ib. 162. 6, Dem. 967. 17 sqq.:—a butcher's shop, Ar. Eq. 744:—a barber’s shop, Plut. 2. 973 B, cf. Perizon. Ael. V. H. 6. 12:—euphem. for a brothel, Dem. 1367. 26 (v. épydCopat 1. 6). 2. metaph., rv réAw bvTws elva: mohéuou épy. Xen. Hell. 3. 4,17; ovxopaytay épy. a gang of informers, Dem. 995. 8, cf. L010. 25. épyacris, C. I. 3920, cf. 3480, Apoll. Dysc. in A. B. 500; v. 1. for épyarat in Joseph. A. J. 18.1, 1. épyactixés, 7, dv, able to work, working, industrious, Hipp. 86 B, Plat. Meno 81 D, Xen. Mem. 3. 1, 6; of épy. the working men, Polyb. Lo. 16, 1: cf. épyarids. 2. 4 Epyaoriny (sc. réxvn) the art of manufacturing anything, Plat. Polit. 280 E, 281 A; 7d ras Tpopis ép- yaorindy the organ that digests food, Arist. Pol. 4. 4, 8. épyacrivat, al, girls who wove the peplos of Athena, Hesych. épyarela, %, a labour, work, handicraft, in pl., LXX (Sap. 7. 17). épyarevonar, Dep. to work hard, labour, Diod. 20. 92, Eccl. épyarns [a], ov, 6, a workman, C.1. 2266. 18, etc.: esp. one who works the soil, a husbandman (cf. épyov 1. 2, EpyaCouart), yijs py. Hat. 4. 209., 5.6; of épy. of wept yewpyiay Dem. 933. fin.; often also absol., like avroupydés, Soph. O. T. 859, Eur. El. 75, Ar. Ach. 611, etc.; also with a Subst., épy. dvnp Theocr. 10. 9, Dem. 1362. 11; obpydarns Aeds the country-folk, Ar. Pax 632; also of animals, Bods épy. a working ox, Archil. 36, Soph. Fr.149; épy. opijxes Arist. H. A. 9. 41, 2:—also, épy. Oaddoons of a fisher, Alciphro-1. 11; épy. Ai@wy a stone-mason, Luc. Somn. 2. 2. as Adj., hard-working, strenuous, épy. orparnyés Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 18; opp. to dpyds, Plat. Euthyd. 281 C, cf. Rep. 554 A: cf. épyaris. II. one who practises an art, Tav tokEpKav Xen. Cyr. 4.1, 43 épy. dlens of a judge, Lyc, 128: absol. a practitioner in some special branch of surgery, e.g. lithotomy, Hipp. Jusj. 1. Tit. a doer, worker, Soph. Ant. 252; Tv xad@v Xen. Mem. 2. I, 27; THs dduxias Ey. Luc. 13. 27. IV. a sort of capstan or windlass, Bito in Math, Vett. 110 E; ergata in Vitruv. ro. 4. épyariotos, a, ov, producing an income, xupa Plut. Cato Ma. 21, épyariés, 7, dv,=epyaorixds, Plat. Polit. 259 E: like a workman, urn épy. Luc. Somn. 6 :—given to labour, diligent, active, Plat. Meno 81D; 70 épy. Hipp. Aér. 295 ; Comp. -repos, Sup. -wraros, of bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 38 and 40.—Hdt. (2. 11) uses it of the Nile, with reference to the quantity of its alluvial deposits. Adv., épyarie@s mpds rt advan- tageously for .. , Plut. Camill. 16, épyartivns [1], ov, 6,=epyarns, esp. a husband épy. B » epy. dvnp Theocr. Io. 1., 21. 3, Anth. P,11. 58; so, Bows épy. Ap. Rh. 2. 663, Anth. P. 6. 228. 2. as Adj. working, active, with Subst. fem., laborious, épyarivais raddpatowv, Anth. P. append, 323. es c. gen. making a thing or practising an art, Anth. P. 5. 240, 275. €pyarts [a], sos, fem. of épyarns, a workwoman ; of the working bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 50; épy. Bows Anth, P. 9. 741. 2. as a real Adj. laborious, industrious, active, yuvatkes orw épy. Hdt. 5.13; yA@ooav uv dpydv xeipa 8 elyev épyarw Soph. Ph. 97; Stora Anth, Plan. 1. 5. 3. working for hire, Moto’ ova épyaris iv the Muse was no hireling yet, Pind. I, 2.10; yur? épy. of a courtesan (cf. épyd{ouae 11. 6), Archil. 173. II. c. gen. working at or producing, pynpny dnavroy ..épyariv Aesch. Pr. 461 (where Herm. from Stob. épydavny) ; véxrapos épy., of bees, Anth. P. 9. 404; vfparos, of a distaff, 6.174; ceAldwy, of poets, 9. 26; Kumpidos, of courtesans, 5. 245; rare in Prose, mohrela épy. Tay ayabay Dion. H. 2. 76. €pyaro-kuAlvipios, 6, =épydrys V, Bito in Math. Vett. p. 109. , > , epeuvyt €oy — epi Bpeuys. epewyréov, verb. Adj. one must seek out, Xen. Symp. 8, 39. €peuvyTyp, Hpos, 6, Nonn. D. 2. 25; épevvyrijs, o@, 6, Clearch. ap. Ath. 256 A, Joseph. A. J.17.5,553 an inguirer, searcher. ¥pevvytpia, 7, fem. of foreg., Cornut. N. D. io. €pevtis, ews, ), (épev-youar) eructation, Hipp. Epid. 1. 959. €pevét-xodos, ov, vomiting bile, choleric, Byz. épéhw: impf. fpepow Ar. Fr. 54, pott. ép- Pind. O. 1, 110:—fut. Epéoo Id. Av. 1X10: ‘aor. Hpe~a Dem. 426. x (nowhere else in Att. » Prose), Ep. épeya Hom. :—Med., fut. €peyouat Eur. Bacch. 323: aor, dpebapny Ap. Rh. 2. 159, etc., («ar-) Ar. Vesp. 1294 :—Pass., pf. hpemrat Philostr. 33. (Hence dpopos: cf. épémrw, and for the Root, v. bpprn.) To cover with a roof, caBimepOey epepar .. dpopov Aetpw- vodev Gunoayres, i,e, they thatched [the tent] with reeds (v. Spitzner Exc. 36), Il. 24. 450, cf. Od. 23. 193, Il. 1. 39 (v. émepépw); Tas... olxias épépapey mpos derdy (vy. derds 11), Ar. Ay. 1110, cf. Fr. 54; fvAos jpee iv oixiay Dem. l.c. 2. to cover witk a crown, to crown, Pind. 0.13. 46; [xparnpov] par’ epepor xat AaBds Soph. O. C. 473:—Med. to crown oneself, xico@ Eur. Bacch. 323; dd4pvp pérowra one's forehead, Ap. Rh. 2.159: cf. épémra. 8. to wreathe | with garlands, vadv Pind. 1. 4. 94 (3. 72): generally, to cover, Adxvat vw péedav yéveoy épepor Id. O. 1. 110. “EpexOevs, éws, Ep. jos, 6, an ancient hero of Attica, the Render (from €péx Oo), first in Il. 2. 547, Od. 7. 81: hence "EpéxOaov, 74, the Temple of Erechtheus at Athens, Paus. 1. 26, 6, Plut. 2. 843 F:—and "EpexOet- Sar, of, as a name of the Athenians, Pind, and Trag.; sing. in Ar. Eq. 1015, 1030; “EpexOetSat in Eur. Med. 824 :—Epex Ons, iSos, fem. Adj. of Erechtheus, 0aAagoa "Ep. a fountain at Athens sacred to him, Apollod. 3. 14, I, cf. Hdt. 8. 55: also a name of one of the Attic Tribes, Dem. 536. 21, etc. II. a name of Poseidon at Athens, Plut. 2. 843 B, Lyc. 158, 431. €pix8w, to rend, break, Sdxpvor kat orovayjot Kat Gd-yect Oupdy épé- x9wy Od. 5. 83, 157 :—Pass., épexOopevyy avépuo.ot, of a ship, shattered by the winds, Il. 23. 317; dédvpow épexPouevn h. Hom. Ap. 358.—Cf. Spitzn. Exc. Il, xxxiv. § 3. (Akin to épeixw.) Epéppos, ov, of or for roofing, dévdpa epéfipa Plat. Criti. 111 C; Aq Theophr. H. P. 4. 2, 8. €peiis, ews, %, a roofing, Theophr. H. P. 5. 6,1: a roof, Plut. Pericl. 13, Anton, 45, etc. épéw (A), Ep. Verb, =épeciva, Epopar, épwrdw (not to be confounded with épéw, (B)) :—to ask, enquire, c. acc. rei, about a thing, épéwy -yevefy re rékov Te Il. 7. 128, cf. Od. 21. 31. 2. c. acc. pers. to question, pavrw épeiouey 7) iepja (Ep. for épéwpev) Il. 1. 62; GAAHAoUs épéorpev Od. 4.192; Gms epéorm Exdorny 11. 229. €péw (B), lon, for ép@, I will say: v. pa. " €pnpdte, (épfjuos) to be left lonely, go alone, épnudtecxoy (Ion. impf.) Theocr. 22. 35, cf. Anth. P. 7. 315. Epnpaios, a, ov, post. for épfjuos, desolate, solitary, Mosch. 3. 21, Ap. Rh, 2. 672, etc.: silent, vdg Emped. 252: deserted, veoooot Ap. Rh. 4. 1298 :—c. gen. reft of, Anth, P. 9. 439. ‘épypds, dbos, 7, pecul. fem. of épquos, Manetho 6. 67. c. gen. reft of, Christod. Ecphr. 334. épqpy (sc. dixn), 4, v. sub epjos 11. épnpta, 7, I. of places, a solitude, desert, wilderness, Hdt. 3. 98, Aesch. Pr. 2, etc.; % Svar Ep. (proverb. from Hdt. 4.17 sq.), Ar. Ach. 704; dixer’ eis ep, Id. Lys. 787; Epmew eis épnutas to solitary places, Arist. H. A. g. 3, 2, etc. II. as a state or condition, solitude, loneliness, Epnpiav dyav, €xew to keep alone, Eur. Med. 50, Bacch. 609; épyplas ruxeiv Id. El. 510; &y épnuia edordopodvro Antipho 115. 19; of persons, isolation, destitution, Soph. O. C. 957, Lys. 151. 30, Isae. 35. 12, etc. ; 51” épnyiay from being left alone, Thuc. 1.71, cf. 3.67; épnyias érethknupevar Dem. 36, 2; eipericdy evai pact thy €p. Menand, *Avdp. 4. b. of places, desolation, Lat. vastitas, ' €pnpig Sodvat rt Eur. Tro. 26,95; arpiBis in’ épnuias Thuc. 4. 8. 2. c. gen. want of, absence, pikay Xen. Mem. 2. 2, 14; dpoévwv, Bpotar, dyipav Eur. Hec. 1017, Bacch, 875, Thuc. 6. 102; Avxvay Ar. Ay. 1484, etc.; &’ épnulas worepiay mopeverOar without finding any enemy, Xen. Hell. 3. 4, 21; thy ép. ép@v ray xwdvodyrwy seeing that there would be none to hinder him, Dem. 54.10; even, ép. xax@v freedom from evil, Eur. H. F. 1157. épnpids, ddos, 7, in Theocr. 27. 62, seems to be a solitary devotee. épypixds, 7, dv, of or for solitude, living in a desert, LxX (Ps. 101. 7). “épnptrys [f], ov, 6, of the desert, 6vos LXx (Job. 11.12). If. as Subst. an eremite, hermit, Eccl. * épypo-Képys, es, gen. ov, void of hair, Anth. P. 6. 294., 7. 383. €pnyso-AdAos [a], ov, chattering in the desert, rérmié Anth. P. 7. 196. €pnpd-vojtos or —vépos, ov, haunting the wilds, Oeai Ap. Rh. 4.13335 Ofjpes Anth. P. 6, 184. €pnpo-mAdvos [4], ov, wandering alone, Orph. H. 38. 4 (vulg. épnpo- mdavay) ; noted as divpapBa@des by Demetr. Phal. 116. épnpo-rords, dv, making desolate, Suid. €pnpd-rroAts, «, gen, dos, reft of one’s city, Eur. Tro. 599. €pijpos, ov, but also fem. épyjyn Od. 3. 270, Soph. O. C. 1719, Ant. 739, Tr. 530, and in the Att. phrase Stn éphun (vy. infr. 11); Att. also épnpos, ov, Hdn. m. pov. Aef. 33 (cf. Eroipos): Comp. -drepos, Thuc. 3.11, Lys., etc:; Sup. —ératos, Hdt. 9.118, Xen. _ Desolate, lonely, lonesome, solitary, 1. of places, és viaov épnynv Od. 3. 270; xpos Il, 10. 520; freq. in Hdt., and Att.; 7a ép. ris AcBuns the desert parts .., Hdt. 3. 32, cf. Thuc. 2.17; % épjpos (sc. xwpa) Hat. 2. 32., 3. 102, cf. épnuta 1; also, % éphyy Ael. N. A. 7. 48. 2. of persons or animals, 7a 5’ épjua poBeirat (i.e. the cattle), Il. 5.140; Réptnv &. ¢ TI. 577 [HoAeiv] Aesch, Pers. 7343 qoOate dipous epnyov Id. Ag. 862; mépris €phua Soph. Tr. 530; epnuos wdipidos Id. Ph, 228; ép. dwodimdy twa Ar. Pl. 447; often of poor, helpless persons, Andoc. 31. 8, etc.; obs dy TaY épnworaraw ovTe Tov drépwy Koptdp Dem. 551. 73; eis dppava «at Epnpa vBpifew Plat. Legg. 927 C:—of animals, solitary, not gregarious, Plut. Caes, 63 :—neut. as Adv., pnua xAaiw I weep in solitude, Eur. Supp. 7755 €pypov éuBdAémev to look vacantly, Ar. Fr. 393. 3. of conditions, rAdvos, rérpos Soph. O. C. 1114, 1716. II. c. gen. reft of, void or destitute of, [xwpn] ép. mavrav Hat. 2. 32; dvOpmrev 4.17, cf. 18; dvipdy 6. 23, cf. 8. 65, Soph. O. T. 57; aréyar pidaw €p. 1d. El. 1405; Mepard ép. dvra vedv Thuc. 8. 96; 7 iv épnudraroy Toy TodEpiav (sc. Td Tetxos) Hdt. g. 118. 2. of persons, abandoned by, ouppaxov. Id, 7. 160; cage Soph. O. C. 1717; marpds xat paytpés Plat. Legg. 927 D3; mpds pidwv Soph. Ant. 919; so, €p. oikos a house without heirs, Isae. 66. 29. 8. with no bad sense, wanting, without, éo@}s Epijuos StAav Hat. 9. 63: free from, avip@y Kaxay épnuos rédus Plat. Legg. 862 E, cf. 908 C. III. epnen, rarely €pnuos (with or more commonly without ypapy, dinn, diacra), 7, an undefended action, in which one party does not appear, and judgment goes against him by default, as contumacious, 7Am Ee ...77)v ypapny.. é€pnuny cecbar would be undefended, Antipho 116. 1; éphup dicp Cava- Tov KarayvyvwoKey tivds Thuc. 6. 61; épyynv edoy [sc. dixny] I got judgment by default, Dem. 540. 21; éphunv adtov daBértes .. eiAov Lys. 159. 343 €pnuov diddvau to give it by default in one’s favour, Id. 542. 4; Epnuov Gpre dixny he let it go by default, Dem. 542. 23, cf. Antipho 131.1; éphuny karayyvaoxev or xatadiairay twos to give it agate him by default, Dem. 903. 9., 1013. 223; “yevouevns Epjyov kara Mediou Id. 544. 22; éphunv xarnyopety to accuse in a case wheré there was no defence, Plat. Apol, 18 C, cf. Dem. 542. 20; éphuny or eg éphuns Kpareiv, Luc., etc. 2. for épfhuas tpuyav y. sub Tpvydo. (Akin to jpépa, etc., acc. to Curt. no. 454.) épnpd-cKotos, 6, one who keeps watch negligently, ap. Suid. €pnpoowvn, 7), solitude, Anth. P. 9. 4 and 665. i épnpo-iAys [i], ov, 6, loving solitude, Anth. P. 9. 396, Plan. 256... épnpde, fut. dow, (€pnuos) zo strip bare, to desolate, lay waste, iepd Oeav Thuc. 3. 58; Tv xwpav Andoc, 26, 10:—Pass., Kphrns épnyo- Ocions Hdt. 7.171; wéAcs jpnuwOnoay Thuc. 1. 23, cf. 2. 44. le to bereave one of a thing, c. dupl. acc., ép. Teva evppoctvas pépos Pind. P, 3.174 (cf. orepéw, dparpéw); but c. acc. et gen., dvdpay ép. éoriay Id. I. 4. 27.(3. 35); ép. vavBar&y éperpd to leave the oars without men, Eur. Hel. 1610; ceavrov Epnyots [plAwy] Plut. Alex. 39 :—Pass. fo be bereft of, dvipay Hdt. 1.164; cuppaxov Id. 7.1743 dpaévos Aesch. Ag. 260; marpés Eur. Andr, 805 ; 7a épnuovpeva pudanijs left without, Xen. Eq. Mag. 4, 18. 2. to set free or deliver from, AwWs ddgos 7ph- poce déovros Eur. H. F..360; 'Aciav TWepoixav SmAwy Plut. Cim. 123 —Pass., mvedpa dcpay épnuwbév being free from.., Plat. Tim. 66 E. III. to abandon, desert, éov x@pov Pind. P. 4. 479; Tagtv jpnyov Cavey Aesch. Pers. 298, cf. Eur. Andr. 314, Plat. Legg. 865 E; €p. Supaxovcas to evacuate it, Thuc. 5. 4; T6vd’ épnuwoas Oxov having left it empty, by stepping out of it, Aesch. Ag. 1070. IV. io heep in solitude, isolate, Aesch. Supp. 516, Eur. Med. 90 :—Pass., Epnpa dévres Tod Spirovu being isolated from .., Hat. 4.135- éphpwors, ews, 7), a making desolate, xwplov Arr. An, I, 9, 13- épnperns, od, 6, a desolator, Anth. P.6.115. épnpwricds, 7, dv, desolating, Epiphan. 1. p. 458. épnpédarar, —aro, v. sub épetda. Eptpyspat, v. sub épelmrw. Epyiptorrat, v. sub épifw. ‘ épntiw, Dor. éparvw: impf. épytvov (without augm.) IL, lon. -veoxov, Ap. Rh. 1. 1301, Q. Sm.: fut. Jew Ap. Rh., («a7-) Soph. Ph, 1416; aor. épyrvca Il. 1. 192, Eur.; épyricacne 2. 189., 11. 567:—Pass., v.infr. [# before a vowel, unless it be a long syll., as, épyriovro pé- voyres Il. 8. 345; but long before o, and in Aeol. 3 pl. aor. pass. ép7- TuOev: but Soph. O. C. 164 has before a long syll.} Ep. Verb (used twice in Trag.), fo heep back, restrain, check, xhpuxes 8 dpa dady épyrvoy Il. Te. 503; épytvcacke pddayyas 11. 567; éexéecouw ephrve pera Exacrov 2. 164, cf. 75, 189, Od. -9. 493; €pnticeé Te Ovpdv Il. 1. 192; moAAA KéAevbos Eparvor (so Musgr, for -ve) let a long distance bar thy approach, Soph. O. C. 164 :—Med., épnrvovro 6 Aadv Ii, 15. 723:—Pass., épyrvovro pévoyres 8. 345; epytuer’ ev gpect Oupds 9. 462 (458), cf. 13. 280; épnrvdey (Acol. for -@ncav) & nad? €5pas 2.99, 211; mapa vnuaiv épnrvovro 8. 345, al. 2. later ec. gen. to keep away from, réxva Sevis dyiddns Eur. Phoen. 1260; [«dvas] dAaypod Theocr. 25. 75 :—Pass., c. inf., vaurcAlns .. pytvovro peAecOa Ap. Rh. 2. 835. €pt, 74, indecl. form of éptov wool, Philet. 18. bs épt-, insepar. Particle, like dpt-, used as a prefix to strengthen the sense of a word, very, much; mostly Ep. and Lyr. épt-avyns, és, very brilliant, Orph. Fr. 7. 11. : épt-avxny, evos, 6, %, with high-arching neck, épravdxeves inno Il, Io. 305, al., never in Od.: opp. to Bucadyny. ept-axOas, és, (prov, dx8os) laden with wool, woolly, or (&pi-, &x8os) heavy-laden, moiuvn Maxim. 7. karapx. 520. épi-Boas, ov, 6, loud-shouting, of Bacchus, Pind, Fr. 45. 10; of Hermes, Anth. P. 15. 27. ; épt-BopBos, ov, loud-buzzing, wédAucoa Orph. Fr. 49. x épu-Bpepérns, ov, 5, of Zeus, loud-thundering, Zevs ll. 13. 624; Aloxv- Aos Ar. Ran. 814; Awyvgos Dion. P. 578, etc.: loud-roaring, déav Pind. I. 4. 77 (3. 64): loud-sounding, avAds Anth. P. 6. 195. b Ept-Bpewys, <3, =epiBpopos, Anth. P. 6.344. A 578 épi-BpiOys, és, very heavy, Orph. H. 5. 636. ; €pt-Bpopos, ov, loud-shouting, of Bacchus, h. Hom. Bacch. 56, Anacr. 14, Panyas. ap. Ath. 36 D: Joud-roaring, Xéovres Pind. O. 11 (10). fin. ; xoer, vepérhy Id. P. 6. 3, 11. sevBorxns [@], gen. ov Ep. -ew, 6,=sq., radpos Hes. Th. 832; mév7os, A€wy Opp. H. 1. 476, 709. épt-Bpixos, ov, loud-bellowing, Bods h. Hom. Merc. 116; Aéov Q. Sm. 3.171: loud-braying, of the trumpet, Anth. P. 6. 159. é , dkos, 5, }, with large clods, of rich, loamy soil; hence, very Jertile, once in Od., ép:BdAaxos Hreipoo 13. 235; often in Il., év Bip épBdAak I. 155, etc.; méAews ép. Cratin. Apa. 3, ubi v. Meineke. t-Bwdos, ov, =foreg., Od. 5. 34, and often in Il. yaaTwp, opos, 6, %, pot-bellied, pdayxos Nic. Al. 344. éprySouréw, to ratile loud, coined by Schol. Il. 7. 507. épt-ySoumos, ov,=épidouros (q. y.), loud-sounding, thundering, in Hom. always as epith, of Zeus, épirySovmou Aids vidy Il.5.672; ép. méors “Hpns Od. 15. 112, 180, Il.; except in Il. 11. 152, ép. wddes imo. éprynOijs, és, very joyful, Orph. Lith. pr. 24. épt-ynpus, 6, , loud-speaking, Hesych. éplyAnvos, ov, with large eye-balls, full-eyed, Opp. C. 1. 310. Epuypa, 76, (Epeixw) bruised beans, Hipp. 220F: v. épeypa. éptypn, 7, =foreg., Schol. Ar. Ran. 505. €piSatvw: impf. 7pidawoy Babr. 68: Ep. aor. épfSqva Ap. Rh. 1.89: —Med., Q. Sm. 5. 105: Ep. aor. 1 inf. épidqoac@a (with « long) or ép58jcacGa: Il. 23. 792: elsewhere Hom. uses only pres.: (épi¢w). To wrangle, quarrel, pet’ dvbpaot Od. 21. 310; avTws yap fp’ énéeoa’ ssicad ed Il. 2. 342; viv 6 wept mrwxay ep. Od. 18. 403; «i 5) opm vexa Ovnray ép. Il. 1.574; elvexa rips dperhs ép. ye strive (as for a prize) for her excellence, Od. 2. 206; c, dat., épidalveroy dAAHAativ .. meAcurCéuer Il. 16. 765, cf. Ap. Rh. 1.89; also, dvria mévrow .. épidat- véyev olos Od, 1. 79; tT ina thing, Call. Dian. 262:—of war, first in Ap. Rh, 2. 986, etc. :—Med., rogaly Fdhoacdas *Axatots with them in the foot-race, Il. 23. 792.—Ep. word used by Dem, Byz. ap. Ath. 452 D; Luc, Pisc. 6 is taken from Ap. Rh. 1. 89. vrns, ov, 6, a wrangler, Timo ap. Diog. L. 2. 107; an Ion. gen. pl. ép:5avréwy is cited from Democr. by Plut. 2. 614 E, which led Clem. Al. (p. 328) to invent the nom, ép:davrées, SmAos, ov, very conspicuous, Nonn. Jo. 18. y. 15. < épidivis, és, (Sivos), whirling, eddying swiftly, Tryph. 231. épiS.ov, 7d, Dim. of Eptov, Luc. Ocyp. 89 (where épidiov), Arr. Epict. 3. 22, 71, Phot. s. v. Aaumddiov. éptdpatvw, = epediCw, to provoke to strife, irritate, opnrecaw torndres .., ods raides éptduatvwow Il, 16. 260. II. intr. =épdaivw, to con- tend, Ap. Rh. 3. 94; Tt about .., Mosch. 2.69; 54 7 Anth, Plan. 4. 297; brép twos Nic. Al. 407; ¢. inf., depa pépeoOar Theocr. 12. 31. épt-Sparos, ov, (Sum) strongly-built, i.e. immoveable, unconquerable, pis ep. (cf. Oed5punros, evdunros), Aesch. Ag. 1461 :—Herm. refers it to Sapdw, épliparos dvdpds oi(us sharply-taming, overpowering the man. , ov, like épi-ySouros, except that Hom. uses the latter form of persons, the former always of things and places, d«ral, worapol Il. 20. 50, Od. 10. 515; aiGovea Il. 24. 323, and Od. épi-Swpos, ov, rich in gifts, abundant, dmmpn Opp. C. 3. 504. éptfw, Dor. 3 pl. épigovre Pind. N. 5. 72; Ep. inf. épCéuevar —épev Il. 21. 185., 23. 404, Dor. épiadey Theocr. 6. 5: impf. #ptCov Dem. 113. 20, Ep. épifoy Il. 2. 555, Ion. épi¢eoxoy Od, 8. 225: fut. épiow (5:-) App. Civ. 5.127, Dor. épigfw Pind. ap. Eust. Opusc. 56. 94:—Ep. aor. hptoa Hes. Th. 928, Lys. 194. 33, poet. €pioa, Pind. I. 8 (7). 60; Ep. opt. épiccere Hom., v. infr.; Dor. #piga, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5775. 26 :—pf. pica Polyb. 3. 91, 7:—Med., Ep. impf. épifero Hes, Th. 534: Ep. aor. subj. épicverat (for épionra), Od. 4. 80:—Pass., Ep. pf. épypispar (in act. sense), v. infr, | (Perhaps akin to ép-é0w, ép-e0i¢w.) To strive, wrangle, quarrel, usu. of wordy contests, twit with one, Il. 1. 6, etc., and Att. ; Haro, Od. 18. 277, Plat.; dvrBiny rivi Il. 1. 277; dyria Tivi Pind. P. 4.507; mpdés Twa Id) P. 2. 162, Hdt. 7.50, 1, Plat. Rep. 395 D; is mor’ ’A@nvaiay épw pice Theocr. 5. 23 ;—mepi tivos about a thing, Il. 12. 423, al.:—foll. by a relat., ép. Saris dpeiwy Theocr. 5.67; dmdrepos -yevvaidérepos Plat. Lys. 207 C:—absol. in Plat. of so- phistical disputations, opp. to diadéyeoOat, Rep. 454 A, cf. Prot. 337 B. 2. to rival, vie with, be a match for, ove av érar ’Odvoqt y épiacere Bpords GAdos Il. 3.223; émel oqiow obris Epifey Od. 8. 371, cf, Xen, Cyn, 1, 12 :—c. acc. rei, to rival or contend with one in a thing, 00d ei .. "Appodirn Kaddos éptfor Il. 9. 389, cf. Od. 5. 213, Hes. Sc. 5 ;— also, c. dat. rei, Spyorootvp ob dy pot épicvee Bpords dddos in running, Od. 15. 321, cf. 13. 325; so in Att., ympp ép. rivi Lys. 194. 34; also, épignrov (Ep. for -erov) wept tons Il. 12. 423; éplaceay rept piOwv 15.284; dOavdroow épifecnov mept rétov Od. 8, 225, cf. Hdt. 5. 49: also c. inf., épi{eroy GAAHAotivy xepot paxjaacbat Od. 18. 38; loa be aivew ovms of dvOpdmwv tpioev Phalaec. ap. Ath. 440 E. 8. absol. to engage in a contest, keep the contest up, Néotwp olos épCe Il. 2. 555- II. Hom. sometimes uses the Med., like the Act., & [rééq] ov ris rot épifera: Il. 5.172; por éplooera .. erhpacw Od. 4. 80; so, épi¢ero Bovdds Kpoviww Hes. Th, 534; so also pf. pass. TH ob Tis epr- piorat xparos Id. Fr. 53, cf. Pind. O. 1.155, 1. 4. 49 (3-47)- ; épt-fwos, ov, long-lived, Lat. vivax, Greg. Naz., Hesych. épi-qkoos, ov, (dxotw) heen of ear, Orph. Lith. 462. épt-npos, ov, (“dpw, cf. jpa) sitting exactly: as epith. of éraipos, faithful, trusty, épinpos ératpos, in sing., only in Il. 4. 266; elsewhere always in heterocl. pl. épinpes éraipot, acc. épinpas éraipous, Il. 3. 475 8, Od. g. 100, 172, 193, etc.; parodied by Cratin. "Odvac. 5 :— ok Hite dordds, Od, 1. 346., 8. 62, 471, must be taken in a general sense, b €ptBpOs — epiveos. faithful, loyal to his master’s house, (not to the Suitors, for he sung on compulsion, 1. 154). epu-nxijs, és, (%xéw) loud-sounding, Opp. H. 3. 213. épiOakn, 7), bee-bread, Arist. H. A. 5. 22,9, cf. 9. 49; also called xnpwos, cavdapaxn. 2. bees-wax, Var. R. R. 3. 16. eptOaxls, (50s, 4), =eprOos, (%), a female day-labourer, Theocr. 3. 35. épiOaKos, 4, a solitary bird, which could be taught to speak, Arist. H. A. 9. 49 B, 4., 8. 3; also called épidevs, EpiOvdos, and, perhaps, the same as the powsoupds (q. v.): Adams thinks it the red-breast. ept0aKddns, es, (eld0s) like the tpl@axos, chattering, Epich. 33 Ahr. épubadys or -OadArs, Dor. for épenAzs, Hesych. épOaAls, f5os, , name of a plant in Hesych., prob. =épiOadés in Plin. H.N. 25. 13, stone-crop. épiOaddos, ov, (04AAw) growing luxuriantly, flourishing, of plants and trees, Simon. 23: cf. épeOnAjs. épideta, %, (EpPevopar) labour for wages, Hesych., Suid. II. canvassing for public office, intriguing, Lat. ambitus, Arist. Pol. 5. 2, 6; in pl., Ib. 5. 3, 9- éptOevopar, Dep.: (€piOos):—to serve, work for hire, Lx (Tob. 2.11); so in Act., Heliod, 1. §, Schol. Soph. Aj. 833, Eust. 1162. 23. II. of public officers or characters, fo canvass for office, court popular applause, of épBevdpevor, Lat. ambitum exercentes, Arist. Pol. 5. 3, 9: but trans. in compos., éfepevecOar rods véous to inveigle them into party measures, Polyb. 10. 22,9. Cf. épiBela, dvepiOevros, éptOevs, éws, 6, =epiPaxos, Arat. 1025, Theophr. Fr. 6. 3, 2. épt-Ondys, és, (aAAw, TEONAG) very flourishing, luxuriant, of plants, puptxns 7° EpOnréas dCous Il. 10. 467; Epvos .. EpiOndes édains 17. 53; Bdgyns epbnrgos dCoy Hes. Th. 30; of gardens, dAwdwy épibndéay Il, 5. 90; so yaia Ap. Rh. 2. 723; metaph., edvopia Anth, Plan. 4. 72. €plOndros, ov, =foreg., “Pwpn Or. Sib. 8. p. 714. éptOos, 5, also }, a day-labourer, hired servant of any sort; in Il., ép:Boe are mowers or reapers, 18. 550, 560: later, EpOot, al, spinsters and weavers, workers in wool (its likeness to prov is accidental), Dem. 1313.6, Theocr.15.80,etc.; of spiders, ravra 8 épidav dpaxvay Bpida Soph, Fr. 269. II. rAjpwv yaorpos p.os, Lat. erepitus ventris, h. Hom. Merc. 296, ubi v. Herm. éplOudos, 5, =épt@axos, Schol. Ar. Vesp. 927. éplOdpos, ov, high-spirited, Q.Sm. 1. 742. éptketv, v. sub épetew. épixy C. y. sub épeten. épixts, (50s, }, (pelea) pounded barley, groats, mostly in pl., Galen. : also épeuxis (q. v.); and éptkds, Hesych. épixttas dpros, 6, bread of groats, Seleuc. ap. Ath. 114 B. épi-kAdykrys, ov, 6, (KAG(w) loud-sounding, Pind. P. 12. 38. épt-kAavorros and -KAavros, ov, much-weeping, Anth. P. 7. 560, C. I. 4000. II. II. pass. much-wept, bewailed, Opp. H. 2. 668. épixAiros, ov, much-renownea, Orph. Arg. 1028. épixdets, contr, éptkods, ofcca, ody, heathery: only found in pr. n. Ept- kotooa, one of the Aeolian Isles, Strabo 276, Steph. Byz. s. v.; written *Epexotoca in Schol. Ar. Pl. 586, “EpixdSys in Schol. Ap. Rh. 2. 43. épi-Kréaivos, ov, wealthy, Opp. C. 1. 312. épixrés, 7, dv, v. sub épeuerds. épl-krimos, ov, loud-sounding, Mocedav, Hes. Th. 456. 930. épi-K05is, és, very famous, glorious, Ep. epith. of the gods and their descendants, Il. 14. 327, Od. 11. 576, 631; of their gifts, Oe@v épvdéa bHpa Il. 3. 65., 20, 265; ép. #Bn 11. 225, Hes. Th. 988 :—besides this, Hom. only has dats épux. a splendid festival, Il. 24. 802, Od. 3. 66., 10. 182, etc..—and even here it is a sacrificial feast :—of places and men, dory Orac. ap. Hdt. 7. 220, Orph., etc. €pt-Kupov [0], ov, (xbw) big with young, ép. péppart Aesch. Ag. 119: but Cod, Med. has épievpara, whence Seidl. restored épixcvpdda. épthapéris, %, pecul. fem. of sq., Maxim. 7. xarapy. 102. épt-Aapmijs, és, bright-shining, Orph, Fr. 29, Procl. H. 2. 30. €pt-puKys [v], ov, 6,=sq., radpos Call, Fr. 452. épt-pikos, ov, (uuxdoua, uéuvea) loud-bellowing, Body ind méa0" épi- Hukov Il, 20. 497, cf. 23. 775, Od. 15. 235, Hes. Op, 788; ddodvyh Anth. P. 6. 219. epivdtea: fut. dow, Dor. dfw :—like Lat. caprifico, to apply the flower of the wild Jig (&pweds) to the cultivated fig (cv«H) for the purpose of impregnating it, to impregnate the fig, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 53 this process was performed naturally by the gall-insects (\pives) which pierced the young fig, so that it was ready to receive the pollen from the flower of the wild fig, v. Arist. H. A. 5. 32, 6, Theophr. l.c., and cf, Hdt. 1, 193; 70 jpwacpévov the impregnated fig, Theophr. H. P, 2. 8, 3: cf. Yiyv, ddrvvOd ca, II. to gather wild figs, Poll. 7. 143. épivas, ddos, 4, =epveds, Nic. Th. 854. IL. =épiveoy, Amer. ap. Ath. 76 E. jptvacnés, 6, the process of caprification, Theophr. C. P. 2.9, 5. epivacrés, , dv, ripened by caprification, Schneid, Theophr. C.P. 2.9, 12. épivedv, 75, the fruit of the épiveds, Lyne. ap. Ath. 75 D; pl. épwa Arist. H. A. 5. 32,6 :—also = dduvO0s, v. épvdv. épiveds, 6, the wild fig-tree, ficus caprificus, (still called épivea in ea Il. 6, 433.) 11. 167, al., Hes. ap. Strabo 643, Epich. 85 Ahr., heocr. ; Att. épivews (not épiveds, Chocrobosc. 261 Gaisf.), Ath. 75 D: cf. puvds, 2. =épivedy, Arist. H. A. 5. 32, 5. II. as Adj., eae: 4, A, aap ovs, G, ody, of the wild Jig-tree, epivedy adKov = » Arist. H. A. 5. 22,9.,32,6; pl. oy Cpa @ - : ipwais tpadats Kar i Ha 3 3 pl. gen., épiv@v ovxdy Ath. 76 C Be [], a, ov, Ton, ciplveos, n, ov, of wool, woollen, mOdv, eluara, +» Hat. I, 195., 2. 81., 4.73, Hipp, Art. 837, Fract. 763: cf. Att. Epeods. épivewdns — epipeyyis. épiveddys, €s, (ef50s) full of wild fig-trees (épwveot), Strabo 598. Eplvews, v. sub épiveds. épivév, 74, an unripe fig, Alex. AeB. 1, Theophr. H. P. 2. 8,1. épivés, 6,=<épiveds, a wild fig-tree, Stratt. Tpwid. 2, Nic. Al.319. 2. =tpwéy, a wild fig, wendy ép. ts, dxpetos dv Soph. Fr. 190. éptvos, 6, a plant like basil, Diosc, 4. 29. *Epivts, (so written, not "Epwyvds, in the best Mss. and in Inscir.,.v. Dind. Steph. Thes.), gen. vos, 4: pl. Epwves, Att. Epuids: Att. gen. *Epwir, like yeviv, Dind. Eur. I. T. 931, 970. The Erinys, an avenging deity, used by Hom. (like the Roman Furiae) always in pl., except in Il. 9. 571., 19. 87, Od. 15. 234; but Trag. use sing. quite as often as in pl., in which case the Erinys may be taken as.an impersona- tion of Conscience. The number Three first in Eur. Tro. 457, Or. 1650; but the names Tisiphoné, Megaera, Alecto only in late writers, as Apol- lod. I. 1, 4, etc.: in Hom. no number is mentioned, Aesch. composes a whole Chorus of them, and Eur. does not limit their number in I. T. 961 sq. In the oldest Ep, they visit for perjury, Il. 19. 259, Hes. Op. 801; homicide, Il. 9. 571; undutiful conduct to parents, Ib. 454, Od. 2. 135 (v. infr. 11) ; ill-treatment of suppliants, 17. 475; disrespect to elders, Il. 15. 204; and any presumptuous conduct :—they silence the horse of Achilles, when about to reveal too much, 19. 418; they lead men to mistake evil for good, like “Arn, 19. 87, Od. 15. 234. Their abode was Erebos, hence the epith. jepoporris, Il. 9. 571 (567)., 19. 87; and hence their vengeance reached beyond the grave, 19. 260, Od. 20. 78. Acc, to Hes. Th. 185, they sprang from Gaia and the drops of Uranos’ blood (v, Gladstone Hom. Stud. 2. 302 sqq.); Aesch. makes them daughters of Night. For their worship at Athens and the Athenian notions of them, v. Miller Aesch. Eum. § 77 sq., and cf. Edpevides, Sepuval. II. as appellat., paTpos Epwves curses from one’s mother, Il. 21 -412,Od, 11. 280; Apa 7’ Epwis marpos 1) peyaobevns Aesch. Theb. 70, cf.724, 886, Soph. O. C. 1434; but, Tigatro ..Epwis marpés the blood-guiltiness of his sire, Hes. Th. 472 3 80, “Epwies Aaiou the curses inherited from L., ap. Hat. 4-149; ppev@v “Epis distraction, Soph. Ant. 603 ; “Epwdy émophidtew a Fury-song, Aesch. Ag. 1120 :—in Trag., also, persons sent to be curses to mankind are called ’Epwves, Aesch. Ag. 749, Soph. El. 1080, Tr. 891, Eur. Or. 1390; but not found in Prose till Ep. Plat. 357 A, Polyb. 24. 8, 2, etc, Cf. dddorwp. III. epith. of Demeter, when distraught by the pursuit of Poseidon, Call. Fr. 207, Paus. 8. 25, 4 sq. [@ in all trisyll. cases, Pors. Med. 1254; & in quadrisyll.] (Cf. Skt. Saran-yii, a mythical Being in the Veda, (cf. Hesych. “Apdvriow~ ’Epiviot); on the relation of the two, v. M. Miiller Sc. of L. 2. p. 484.) éptvuw, to be angry, indignant, acc, to Paus. 8.2 5,6, an Arcadian word, from ’Epivds, or the same root. "Epivicdns, es, ( Pp 2 ‘On 580 Epideros, ov, (épipos) of a kid, Pherecr, Mepo. 1. 9, Antiphan. @:Awr. 1. 7, Xen. An.»4. 5, 31. épirov, 7d, Dim. of éptpos, Athenio ap. Ath. 661 B, N. T. épi-pAcyns, és, much-flaming, Nonn. D. 26. 33. €pt-ddoros, ov, with thick bark, Sptes Agathocl. ap. Eust. 994. 42. pios, 6, a young goat, kid, dpvecaww .. 7%) épiporory Il. 5. 392, cf. 24. 262, Od. 9. 226. II. Epipor, of, Lat. hoedi, a constellation (rising on Oct. 6th) which brought storms, Theoer. 7.53, Arat. 158; én’ épipors in stormy weather, Interprr. ad Theocr. 7. 53. €pt-pvAXas, ov, with many or large leaves, Hesych. XO6vi0s, 6, an Attic hero, prob. the same as ’Epey@evs, Themist. Or. 27. p. 337, cf. Aesch. Fr. 55, and cf. Kéxpoy :—EpiySovidat, = es: C. 1. 411. pi-xptoos, oy, rich in gold, wealthy, Anth. P. 9. 785. épiddns, es, (€f50s) like wool, woolly, Hipp. Art. 816, Arist. H. A. 9. 45, 3, Theophr. H. P. 3. 7, 4. épuadivos, ov, (dddvn) very painful, Maxim. m. karapx. 161, Hesych. épiddy or éprwdH (Koen Greg. p. 570), 4, a whirlwind, hurricane, Ap. Rh, 1. 1132., 4. 1778; applied to Cleon by Ar. Eq. 511, cf. Bépadpor : in Vesp. 1148 he puns upon it, as if derived from épiov dAAVvvat, wool- consumption. épi-corrys, ov, 5, fem, —Oms, tdos, (di) large-eyed, full-eyed, in fem., Ep. Hom. 1, 2; in mase. acc. épiwmea, Maxim. . earapx. 5453 éplwma Ib. 32. épxivy, 4, (pros, eipyw) a fence, inclosure, Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 969, 1578: a stall, Themist. 292 A. épketos (not Epreros or Epxios), ov, also a, ov in Aesch. Cho. 653 :—of or in the €pxos or front court, Zevs ‘Epetos, as the household god, 6 his statue ‘stood in the €pros, Od, 22. 335, Hdt. 6. 68, Soph. Ant. 487, Eur. Tro. 17, Cratin. Jun. xep. 1. 5, cf. Heind, Plat. Euthyd. 302 D; absol., “Epxecos, 6, Paus. 4.17, 4; (Ovid retains the Gr. word, Fupiter Hercéus; elsewhere in Lat. it is Penetralis; and the Greeks translate the Roman Penates by ‘Epxetot, Dion. H. 1. 67). 2. mia, Bards, Ouvpa Ep. the gates, threshold, doors of the court, Aesch. Cho. 561, 571, 653; mpds xiov’ épxelov aréyns of the court itself,-Soph. Aj. 108; ép’ épxeiy mupa Eur. Tro. 483. épxtov, 7d, a fence, inclosure, avdjs Il. 9. 476, Od. 18. 102: later also, a dwelling, Ap. Rh. 2. 1074, cf. Theophr. de Sign. 53. (From €pxos, but a Dim. only in form.) bth [2], ov, 6, name for a farm-slave, Amer. ap, Ath. 267 C, Anecd. IX, 2. 45. €poOnypicds, 77, dv, (Onpa) of or for netting or hunting with nets, Plat. Soph. 220C; épko-Onpeurixds in Poll. 7. 139; —pevTis, 4, Ib. 137. épxé-mela,, 1), a low paling, Hesych., Phot. Epxos, eos, 7, (Epyor, eipyw) a fence of any kind (way dcoy dy tvera norvoews eipyn 7 mepréxov Plat. Soph. 220 B) round gardens and vine- yards, Od. 7. 113, Il. 5. go., 18. 564. 2. esp. a fence round the court-yards of houses, Od. 21. 238, al. (cf. Epwetos); Epxos brepOopeiv Solon 15. 28, Hdt. 6. 134; in pl., Soph. Aj. 1253:—also the place en- closed, the court-yard, ords péow Epxei Il. 16. 231., 24. 306, cf. Od. 8. 57,etc.; Kicowoy pxos, i.e, Susa, Aesch. Pers. 17; "yatas €pxos a fenced city, Eur. Heracl. 441; €pios fpdy, i.e. the altar, Soph. Tr. 607; of the shell of the pinna, Plut. 2. 980 B. 8. a wall for defence, Epxet xadnelo Il. 15. 566; epxos.. ee vavyylov mepieBddovro Hat. 7. 191, cf. 9. 99+ 4. periphr., Epcos d5évrav mostly in phrase, woidy ce éxos piyev Epxos b8dvTwy the ring or wall which the teeth make round the tongue, v. Heyne Il. 4. 350, Solon 25 (3). 13 $0, duciperar Epxos bddévray Il. 9. 409, Od. 10.328; eapxapoy Epos, without ddovrwy, Opp. H. 1. 506; also, dyyéwv epxeat, for dyyeot, Pind. N. 10.68; opparyidos €pxos, i.e. a seal, Soph. Tr. 615. 5. metaph. any fence or defence, ipkos dudvraw, of a shield, a defence against javelins, ll. 15. 646, cf. 4. 137; tpwos Bedgwv 5. 316; Epxos iwxpoto, of the lion’s skin, Theocr. 25. 279, cf. Hdt. 9.99; €pxeaw elpyav xdpa Oaddcons Acsch. Pers. go:—of persons, as Ajax is called Epxos "Axai@y Il. 3. 229., 6. 5., 7. 211; of the best soldiers, pos moAéyoo a defence against war, 4. 299; of Achilles, pos "Axaotaw .. tod€poro I. 284; so of Clytaemnestra, yalas povdppovpoy Epxos Aesch. Ag. 257; absol., Pind, P. 5. 151, etc. :—cf. mupyos. 6. from the sense of enclosure or confinement, a net, toils, for birds, Od. 22. 469; mostly in pl. onf( Saws ev Epxeor Soph. Fr. 382, cf. Ar. Av. 528; for deer, Pind. N. 3. 89; for fish, Id. P. 2. 147; in Hdt. 7. 85 of the coils of the Sagartian lasso :—metaph., ris Atens év pxeow Aesch. Ag. 1611, cf. Soph. Aj. 60, Eur. Med. 986, El. 155, Bacch. 58; xpuoobéras epeeaw ..-yuvaindv by the golden necklace which Degeiled Eriphylé to betray her husband, Soph. El. 838. épx-odpos, ov, watching an enclosure, Anth. P. 12. 257 (MS. dpoipos). épxrh, 9, Ion. for eiperm, épxrés, 4, dv, = penrds, feasible, Arr. Ind. 20. épkrwp, opos, 6, (*épyw) a doer, kax@v Antim. 5 Bgk. ppa, 75, a prop, support: of the props (whether of wood or stone) used to keep ships upright when hauled ashore (cf. épeopa), vja .. én’ imelporo epvacay invod emt papdbos, ind 8 Eppara paxpd ravuccay Il, 1. 486; id 8 jpeov éppara vndy 2, 154: metaph. of men, Epya moAnos prep or stay of the city, 16. 549, Od. 23.121; Toro .. oloy tppa nédeas kela0w as a foundation for the city, Plat. Legg. 737 A; domep éppua ris wodtretas BeBarov Plut, 2. 814 €: cf. Epps. b. there is an obscure metaph, in Il. 4. 117, peAawvéow Epp’ ddvydev, of a sharp arrow, the foundation of pangs, i.e. the origin or cause of them; but the verse was rejected by Aristarch. 2. a sunken rock, reef, Bs: on which a vessel may strike, Hdt. 7. 183, Thuc. 7. 25, Eur. Hel. end. éy’ épua); donua éppara sunken reefs, Anacr. 36 (ubi Bs. (ubi | 5 )3 Gpavroy épya Aesch, Ag. 1007, cf. Eum, 565; eppara tipara €picpevos — Epunvevars. Dion. H. 1. 52; €pya yas dnaddy a soft bank of mud, App. Civ. ‘5. lol. 3. a mound, cairn, barrow, Tpds éppa rupBbxwaroy .. Tapov Soph. Ant. 849; épicdevis Epya Gavovew C. I. 45995 (and so Herm. reads for pupa in Aesch. Cho. 154:) the starting-post, dernpiov Eppa Philox. in Anth. P. 9. 319; €ppara ray Oepedioy ruins of the founda- tions, Diod. 5. 70. 4. that which keeps a ship steady, ballast, Plut. 2. 782 B: so Arist. H. A. 8. 12, 8., 9. 40, 46, uses it of stones with which cranes and bees were supposed to steady themselves in their flight (the saburra of Virg. G. 4. 195), cf. Ar. Ay. 1137, 1429; metaph., 70 dnd Tis ppovnicews Eppa Socrat. ap. Stob. t. 3. 72; olov Epua thy Tov yepov- tov apxhv Genévn Plut. Lyc. 5: from this sense of ballast within a ship, comes the metaph. in Aesch. Supp. 580, AaBodca 8 épya diov having conceived and become pregnant by Zeus :—cf. éppativa. II. in pl. €pyara, earrings, ll. 14. 182, Od. 18. 297. 2. so, in Ael. a band, noose, N. A. 17. 353 a serpent’s coils, Ib. 37. (In this last sense it must come from eipw, sero, like Sppos: but the first sense, with its variations, points to épelSw, cf. épectua, and vy. Buttm. Lexil. s. v.) épp-tiyéAn, %, a herd of Hermae, Anth. P. 11. 353. éppdto, (pyc) to steady, support, Hipp. Art. 808; and L. Dind. restores HppacOa for jpydaba, Ib. 743 A. TSpy-tO%vn, 4, a Hermathena, Cic. Att. 1.1 and 4. It is disputed whether this was (1) a terminal figure like a Hermes with the head of Athena, or (2) a figure with a Yanus-like head both of Hermes and Athena, ot (3) a figure compounded of both deities: the same doubt belongs to the forms ‘Epp-dvoufis, Anth. P. 11. 360, Greg. Naz. ; “Epp- épas, Plin. 36.4, 10; ‘Epp-npaxA‘js, Cic. Att. 1.10; “Eppé-qay, A. B. 1198, Arcad. 8.9. ‘The third sense is certainly found in “Eppadpébtros (q.v.); and the Epigr. in Anth. Plan. 234 (where a statue is described with the head of Pan, the trunk of Hercules, and the legs of Hermes) confirms this. The Hermaphrodite of Polycles was famous (prob. the elder Polycles, B. C. 370), Plin. 34. 19, 20. Hermaphrodite statues-are mentioned by Theophr. Char. 17 and Posidippus (New Com., about 289 B.C.); cf. Miiller Archiol. der Kunst § 128, 345. ‘Eppitlo, to imitate Hermes, Eust. 10. 15: cf. “EAAnviCa. “Eppaixés, 4, dv, of or like Hermes, Marin. V. Procl. 28, Eust. Opusc. 263. 36:—Eppaixoi, Horace’s viri Mercuriales, literary characters, Theod. Hyrtac. in Notices des Mss. 6. p. 45. Adv. -n@s, Eust. 818. 19. €ppacov, 7d, properly a gift of the god Hermes, i.e. an unexpected piece of luck, a god-send, wind-fall (v. sub ‘Eppjjs 11), Soph. Ant. 397; €ppasov dy jv tii, c. inf., Plat. Phaedo 107 C; €pp. ay ely hpiv, et .. Id. Symp. 176C; Epy. dv epavn Id. Rep. 368D; éppaim evruyxavev Id. Gorg. ones Epp. HyyetoOau or roeioOai 71 Id. Symp. 217 A, Gorg. 489C; vopi- ew Dem. 986. 16:—cf. etpyua 11. 2. =€ppag, Hesych. ti. "Eppaia, (sc. lepa), ra, a feast of Hermes, Plat. Lys. 206 D, Aeschin. 2. 22, C. 1. 108. 7. (Properly neut. of “Eppatos, but as Subst. written proparox., Steph. B, s.v. ’Aya07, Eust. Od, 1809. 43.) ‘Eppatos, a, ov, called after Hermes, ‘Epp. Adpos in Ithaca, Od. 16. 471; “Epp. A€was Anyvov Aesch, Ag. 283, cf. Soph. Ph. 1459 :—the Schol. on Od, represents the ‘Epp. Adpos in Od. as=€pyaé, cf. Dict. of Antt. s. v. Hermae. 2. of or from Hermes, gainful, datpdvav déots Aesch, Eum. 947; Avpn Arat. 674. ‘Eppatav, vos, 6, name of a month at Halicarnassus, Inscr. in New- ton’s Halic. éppdv, f.1. for €pua in Phot. and Harpocr. ‘Epp-dvoupis, tos, 6, a Hermanubis, v. “Eppabjqyn. €ppat, dios, %, (from Epya, cf. AlOag) a heap of stones, such as were collected on the roadsides by the custom of each traveller throwing a stone as he passed, Nic. Th. 150: cf. “Eppatos, ‘Eppetov. ai, =€pya 1. 3, Hesych. ‘Eppaproy, 76, Dim. of “Epyjjs, E. M. 146. 36. Eppaiors, ews, 77, (Epudtw), a supporting, Erotian. p. 174. €ppacpa, 76, a prop, support, Hipp. Offic. 749: cf. Eppa. ép aopds, 6, a supporting (cf. sq.), Hipp. Fract. 770. eppiir foo, = Epudtw, to support by means of a sling, THs KvnUNS Hpye- mio Hévns Hipp. Fract. 766, II. to steady as by ballast, to bal- last (€pya I. 5), épp. EavTods Adicts Plut. 2. 967 B:—Med. to balla:t themselves, MOdiors Ib. 979 D; but trans., vUuas és olKous EppariCorrac they take brides into their houses as ballast, Eur. Fr. 406, 8, ef. Lyc. 1319. fppitiens, 4, serving as ballast, rérpos Lyc. 618. Epp-adpdstros, 6, an Hermaphrodite, or person partaking of the attri- butes of both sexes, so called from Hermaphroditus, son of Hermes and Aphrodité, Diod. 4. 6, Luc. D. D. 23, Christod. Ecphr. 202, etc. On Hermaphrodite statues, v. ‘Eppadjvn. : ‘Eppdoy, ‘Eppicas, ‘Eppetas, v. sub “Epyijs. Eppeiov, 70, a shrine of Hermes, or perhaps = €ppag, Strabo 343. Epp-€pws, wros, 5, a Hermeros, v. “Eppadhyn. Epprpatov, v. “Eppiiov, Epunvela, 7, (Epunvedw) interpretation, explanation, Diog. Apoll. Fr. 1, Plat. Rep. 524 B, Theaet. 209A; esp. of thoughts by words, Xen. Mem. 4.3, 125 xpdo0a 7H yAwoon mpds Eppnveiay Arist. P. A. 2.17, 5, cf. de An. 2. 8,16, de Resp. 11,1: an expression, ai WAarwvixal épp. Dion. H. ad Pomp. 1. 2: @ commentary, Eccl. épytiveupa, 76, an interpretation, an explanation, Eur. Phoen. 470, H. F. 1137. | 2. a symbol, monument, NopjSos -yapov Eur. Andr. 46. Sppnvevs, ews, 6, (Epyijs, the messenger of the gods), an interpreter, esp. of foreign tongues, a dragoman, Hdt. 2.125, 154, al., Xen. An. 1. 2, 4S Spee II. an interpreter, expounder, Pind. O, 2.153, Aesch. Ag. bi v1 2, a8 poets are called Eppnveis Tay OeGy Plat. Ion 534E; reason wy vopwy ep. 1d. Legg. 907 D; ciwmiy 3’ dopos tp. Ad-yow Eur, Fr.127. 2 SPH HVEVars, ews, 1), ax interpretation, Dio C. 66.1. épunvevtéov — eprrucie. _ppyvevreov, verb. Adj. one must interpret, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 226. Eppnveurijs, o0, 6, =épynveds, Plat, Polit. 290 C, Poll. 5. 154. Eppnveutucds, 4, dv, of or for interpreting : % —Kn (sc. Téxvn) Plat. Polit. 260 D; py. Svvayus Luc. Hist, Conser. 34. éppyvevtpia, 7), fem. of Epunvevrys, Schol. Eur, Hipp. 589. Epnvevoo, fut. cw, to interpret foreign tongues, Xen. An.5.4,4. II. zo interpret, put into words, give utterance to, Antipho 121. 17, Thuc. 2. 60, etc. 2. to explain, expound, Soph. O. C. 398, Eur. Fr. 637; pu. 8 71 Ayer Philyll. oA. 3; 7a rOy worray Plat. Ion 535 :—Med., Id. Epin. 985 B :—Pass., Arist. Soph, Elench. 4, 9. Eppnpoxhis, éous, 6, a Hermheracles, v. “Epuadhvn. ‘Eppijs, od, 6: besides the nom., Hom. often has acc. ‘Eppfv, but “Epyy C. I. 509479 :—dat. “Eppy Od. 14. 435: voc. ‘Epuj h. Hom. 17, 12, Aesch. Pers. 629, Eum. go: Ep. gen. “Epyéw, h. Merc. 413, Ven. 149, Hdt. 5.7, etc.; lengthd, “Epyefw Il. 15. 214:—uncontr. form “Eppéas only in dat. “Epyeéa Il, 5. 390:—Ep. nom. ‘Eppetas, acc. -av, often in Hom, ; “Eppetns only in late Ep., as Call., Nic., etc.; gen. “Ep- peiao Od. 12. 390., 15. 318, “Epyela Anth. P. 7. 480; voc. ‘Eppeia Hom. :—Dor. nom. “Eppas, gen. @, Pind., etc., voc. “Epyd Aesch. Frr. 271, 387: also “Eppdev [4], Hes. Fr. 9, Bion 3. 8, Anth. P. 4. 3, 110; Boeot. gen. ‘Eppdov Keil Inscrr. p. 76. Hermes, the Lat. Mer- curius, son of Maia and Zeus, acc. to Hes. Th. 938; Hom. mentions no father, but calls his mother Maias, Od. 14. 435. In Hom., as messenger of the gods (Il. 24. 334, Od. 5. 28) he is Siduropos (q. v.); as giver of good luck (Il. 14. 491, Od. 15. 319) Eptovrios, dxduenra, cf. &p- paoy, with esp, reference to increase of cattle (Hes. Th. 444), so that later he is a pastoral god (v. vésuos); as god of all secret dealings, cunning, and stratagem (Od. 19. 397) 5dALos; from his golden rod with magical properties (Od. 5. 47) xpuodppams; as conductor of defunct spirits (Hom, only in Od. 24. 1, but later very often) yuxomopumds, Top~ matos. In h, Hom, Merc. he is the inventor of the xéAvs, and a clever thief. Later, he is tutelary god of all skill and accomplishments, as gymnastics (v. €vayavios) ; of speech, writing, and all arts and sciences ; of traffic, markets, roads (dyopatos, éumodatos, bdi0s, évddios), and of heralds. His rod had magic power, v. infr. 11. 4. He was commonly represented as a slightly-made youth: an older Pelasgic figure of him was bearded, without hands or feet, membro erecto, Hdt. 2. 51; and at Athens any four-cornered pillar ending in a head or bust was called a Hermes, (in which sense Winckelman, Lessing etc. connect the word with Epua, Epuag); called » rerpdywvos épyacia Thuc. 6. 27; 7). oxfua 7d TeTparywvov Paus. 4. 33, 3: these figures were set up as marks of boun- daries, and were held sacred; hence the tumult caused by their mutilation ‘at Athens in the year 415 B.C., v. Thuc. 6. 27, 53, Andoc. 6. 7, etc.: ef. “Eppadqvy and v. Dict. of Antt. s.v. Hermae ; the pl. av lep&v ‘Eppav occurs also in a Samothr, Iuscr. in C. I. 2158. II. proverbs: i. “Epuiy Axe to make a last effort, from the parting cup at a feast being ‘drunk to Hermes, Strattis Anuy. I. 2. kowds “Eppijs shares in your luck! Arist. Rhet. 2. 24, 2, Theophr. Char. 30, ubi v. Casaub, : cf. Epyator. 8. év 7@ AlOw ‘Eppijs, of the form implicitly contained in matter, Arist. Metaph, 2. 5,6., 4. 2, 7, al. 4. ‘Eppijs rea jAde Hermes is come in, a saying used when conversation suddenly ceased, Plut. 2. 502 F. 5. 70 ‘Eppod faBdlor, like ‘Fortunatus’ cap,’ Arr. Epict. 3. 20, 12. ‘Epptovov [75], 7d, Dim. of “Epyijs, a little figure of Hermes, Ar. Pax 924; as a term of endearment, my dear little Hermes, Ib. 382. In Luc. Contempl, 1, “Epyndiov, which perhaps is the true form. €ppts or éppty, ivos, 6,=Epya, in the sense of a bedpost, dat. pl. épyior Od. 8. 278; acc. sing. éppiva 23. 198. ” éppo-yAvdetov, 74, a statuary's shop, Plat. Symp. 215 A. éppo-yAtdevs, éws, 6, a carver of Hermae: generally, a statuary, Luc. ‘Somn, 2, Plut. 2. 580 E, cf. Thom. M. 365, and v. éppoyAvdos. éppo-yAvdixés, 7, dv, of or for a statuary: 4 -Kn (sc. Téxv7), the art of statuary, Luc. Somn, 7. éppo-yAudos, 4, = épyoryAupeds, Luc. Somn. 2. éppo-Sakrvdos, oy, 6, a plant, by some identified with Colchicum au- tumnale, by others with Iris tuberosa, Alex. Trall, éppokomidys, ov, 6, (xdarw) a Hermes-mutilator, Ar. Lys. 1094, Plut. ‘Alcib. 20: cf. “Epyjjs I. fin. ‘Epp6-rav, 6, a Hermopan, v. “Eppabqvn. épveot-merros, ov, wrapt in foliage, Orph. H. 29. 5- épvo-Képos, ov, tending young plants, Hesych, €pvdopat, Pass. to shoot up, Philo 2. 402. €pvos, eos, 7d, a young sprout, shoot, scion, as a symbol of youthful slimness and beauty, 7 8 dvédpapev épvei Toos shot up like a young plant, Il. 18. 56, 437, cf. Od. 14. 175; so, olov 5& rpepe Epvos dxip EpiOndres édains Il. 17.°53, cf. Od. 6. 163 :—Pind. uses €pvea (absol.) for the wreaths worn by victors in the games, N. 11. 37, Lr. 38, 94. II. later, metaph. of a child, as we say a scion (cf. Oddos), Pind. N. 6.64, I. 4. 77 (3. 63), and Trag., as Aesch. Ag. 1525, Eum. 661, 666, Soph. O.C.1108 ; épvos rijs vndvos Eur. Bacch.1307; Kepdwv Epvos periphr. for xépaa, Opp. C. 2. 194; Delos is called an épvos, as having sprung out of the sea, Pind. Fr. 58. 2. 2. fruit, of the apple of Discord, Coluth. 60, 130, 147. €pvuE, tryos, 6, =foreg., post. for épas, Arist. Poét. 21, 17. Epvadns, es, (eldos) like a young sprout, Geop. 10. 22, 5. Bpketys or Eptins, 6,in Hdt. 6.98, as a translation of the Persian name Darius (q. v.); acc. to some from *épyw, €pdw the worker, doer: others from €pyw, cipyw, Lat. coercitor. "Epgin occurs in a verse ap, Hephaest. 34-5. Cf. E. M. 376. 52. : bobo, épta, v. sub épiw. 581 €poeis, eroa, ev, (Epos) poét., lovely, charming, ‘Adin Hes. Th. 245, cf. h. Hom. Ven, 264, Merc. 31; also in lyr. passages of Att. Poets, Eur. Fr. go3, Ar. Av. 248. €popar, 2 sing. épeat Orac. in Hes. Aya; Ion. and Ep. elpopar; (épwrdw is the Att. form, and épéw A is another Ep. form, distinct from épéw, Att. €p, to say): impf. eipduny:—fut. épfoouae Soph. O. T. 1166, Eur., Plat., etc.; Ion. eipaopat Od. 4. 61., 7. 237, Hdt.:—aor. jpduyy Eur, lon 541, Thuc., etc.; imper. €pod Soph. El. 563, Eur., etc., Ep. épeto Il, rz. 611; subj. Epwpae Od. 8. 133, Att.; opt. époluny Od. 1. 135., 3.77, Att.; inf. . €péa0ar (often wrongly written épeoOar), which always occurs in the phrase HeTahAjoat Kai épeGar Od. 3. 69, 243, al. (except in I. 405); part, épd- Hevos Ar, Eq. 574, Thuc. 4. 40.—Another Ep. and Ion. form épéopa occurs in the subj. épéwyar Od. 17. 509, inf. épgeoOar 6. 298., 23. 106, Hipp. 113 A, impf. épéovro Il. . 332., 8. 445; and an Ion. compd. én- etpéouar in Hdt. 3. 64. To ask, enquire, mostly foll. by a relat., eipovro .. 6 Trt € endot Od. 9. 402, etc.; Hpero 8 re Oavpdtor Thuc, 3. 113; €pdpeda et tw’ deOdov oide Od, 8. 133, etc.; so, épéoOar Brov.., Plat. Rep. 327C; da 7e.., Id. Prot. 355 C, etc.: also followed by a direct question, #pero Revopavra, elé por, pn, & Revopay, ob ad evé- putes..; Xen, Mem. 1. 3, 9; €pouévov 5& Tov Aynathdov, Gp dv ev Kaup® yévorro, et ..; Id, Hell. 4. 3, 2, cf. Cyr. 1. 4, 19. Qs. chace: objecti, to learn by enquiry, épéecOar Swpata warpds Od. 6. 298: to ask after or for, eipdpevar maidas Il. 6. 239; eipeae”Exropa dioy 24. 390; Oedv eipwpeba Bovdds Od, 16. 402. 3. c. acc, pers. to question, Il. 1. 332, 513, etc., Hdt. 1. 32; elpero & Hyudas, & feivor, wider eor€; Od. 9. 251; eipovro tis ein al 160ev €XOx 17. 368. 4. c. dupl. acc. fo ask one about a thing, 7d pév oe mp@Tor .. eipnoopa.., Tis midev els dvdpiv; 7. 237, cf. 19. 509. 5. very often, twa mepi Twos, as, iva yuv wept warpds .. €porro 1.135, cf. 3. 77, Hdt. 4. 76, etc., Eur. El. 548; also, of 5€ puv dupt dixas eipovto Od, 11. 570; dyupt mice cipeobat 19. 95. épos, 6, acc. Epo, dat. épw:—the oldest, but merely poét., form of épws (cf. yéAws), love, desire, ov .. eds Epos obdt yuvainds Il. 14. 315, cf. Od. 18. 212; but most freq. in the phrase é¢ €pov Evro (v. sub é¢inpe 11) ; used also by Hes. Th.120, 910, Ibyc.1. 4, Sappho 43, Theogn. 1060, 1322, and sometimes in Trag., as Soph. El. 198, Eur. Med, 151, in lyrics; but by Eur. also in dialogue, Hipp. 337, 449, Ion 1227, El. 297, I. T. 1172. Since épos is the general Homeric form, épws (which occurs in our Edd. of Il. 3. 442., 14. 294) should prob. be altered to pos; and in Od. 18. 212, the dat. should be written épw, not €pw (apoc. for épwrt). II. as nom. pr. Eros, the god of love, Hes. Th. 120. pos, 76, wool, only occurs in the Ion. form éfpos. f €porn, %, Cyprian for éopry, acc. to Hesych.; but €potis Acol. (acc. to Eust.), Eur. El, 625, cf. Eust. 1908. 57, E. M. 379. 31. éptr-dxav0a, 7, creeping thorn, a plant, Diosc. 3. 19. éprreré-Syk os, ov, bitten by a reptile, Diosc. 3. 79. éptrerdets, eco, ev, of reptiles, yévos Opp. C. 2. 274. éprreré-popdos, ov, reptile-shaped, Epiphan. épmrerév, 74, (€pmw) a beast or animal which goes on all fours, opp. to man who walks upright, Od, 4. 418; dqus cat cavpas, kal ro.atra tov épmerav Hat. 4. 183; Tots wey GAAos éprerois mébas Cdwnev .. , dvOpd- my 5¢ at xeipas Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 11; épwerd, opp. to werewa, Hdt. 1. 140, cf. Theocr. 15. 118, Ap. Rh. 4. 1240:—in Pind. P. 1, 47 the hundred- headed monster Typhéecus is called épwerdy, cf. Call. Jov. 13; muxiwé- tarov épm., of a hound, Pind. Fr. 73; of insects, Simon. 12, Nic, Fr. 2. 46. II. esp. a creeping thing, reptile, esp. a snake, Eur. Andr. 269, Theocr. 24. 56; épmera re xal daxera mavra Ar. Ay. 1069. éptreto-pdyos, ov, eating animals, Epiphan. épretadys, es, like a reptile: tortuous, Aretae, Caus, M. Diut. 2. 13. Eprrndav, dvos, 7, =epans, Nic. Al, 418, ubi Schol, male épmuddva. €pwiAn, v. sub EpmAAa, . épryvadns, es, of the nature of prs, Philo 2. 205. Epis, 770s, 6, (pra) herpes, shingles,a vesicular cutaneous eruption, that spreads round the body, Foés. Oec. Hipp.; épm. éc@:duevos Hipp. Aph. 1253 :—also épiry, fos, 6, Philo 2. 64; €pmwjvy, 7, E. M. 377. 3. éptrynorip, jpos, 6, v. 1. for Epmvornp, Orph. Lith. 49. pba ov, 6,=€peréy, Nic. Th. g, etc.; of a mouse, Anth. P. 9. 86. 2. Adj. creeping, éprnoriy ndda, kiace, xopevaas Ib. 11. 33. Eprryotixés, 7, dv, disposed to creep: Ta Eprnatina (cf. epmns) spread- ing eruptions, Hipp. Coac. 220 E, Poll. 4. 206 (v. 1. épmucrued). Ep , 4, name of a sea-animal, Numen, ap. Ath. 306C; épmjAas 5odtxjmobes Ib, 305 A (where prob. épmiAAas should be restored). épms, 6, Egypt. word for wine, Hippon. Fr. 42, Sappho ap. Ath. 39 A, Tzetz. Lyc. 579 ;—erp or arp is found in hieroglyphics on a bottle or vase in Ebers Aegypten p. 327. éprrrév, 76, =épmerdy, in Arist. ap. Eust. Il. 481. 36. éprrite, impf. etprufov Q. Sm. 13. 93: Hom. uses it only in pres.: Att. only in aor. éprvoat [0], to supply the want of an aor. in €pmw (q. V.); (épmw). To creep, crawl, in Hom. always of age or persons weighed down by deep distress, Epré(ov7’ dvd youvdy Od. 1. 193; épricoy mapa iva 13. 220, cf. Il. 23. 2253 of quadrupeds (cf. épmerov) and children, Nic. Al. 555; of time, Anth. P. 6. 19; of ivy, Ib. 7. 22. s éprrvAXivos, 7, ov, made of serpyllum, orépavos Eubul. Srep. 4; pUpov Antiphan. @opir. 1. 7. épavAALov, 76, =€pmuAdos, Aretae. Cur, M. Diut. 1. 3. éprvAXls, (dos, , the grasshopper, Hesych. €prrvAAos, 6, poet. also 4, Theocr. Ep. 1, Anth. P. 4.1, 54, Pancr. ap. Ath. 677 F:—creeping thyme, Lat. serpyllum, an evergreen herb used for wreaths, sacred to the Muses, Cratin. MaA@. 1, Ar. Pax 168. Ba éptrtors, ews, , (EpmvG@) a creeping, Eccl.; éprucpds, 6, Suid. 582 éprruorate, = eprifw, Apollon. Lex. s. v. draAde. Epruorip, jpos, 6, =éprnorhs, a reptile, Opp. C. 3. 110. 2. Adj. creeping, Opes épw, Opp. C. 3. 411, Orph. Lith. 49; €pm. Spdpos Paul, Sil. Amb. 243:—also ¢ is, 00, 6, a crawling child, Anth. P. 9. 302. aon s, , dv, creeping, (Ga épm. reptiles, Arist. H. A. I. 1, 29, . A. 4. 10, 31. €prrw, impf. elprov: Dor. fut. py Theocr. 5. 45., 18. 40, Att. only in compd. épépyw: aor, efpa in Dio Chr. (Lob. Paral. 1. 35), the Att. form bein; et inf. Eprvcas (supplied by Eprifw), cf. EAxw, etAniioa. (From 4/ EPIL come also ép1-v{w, épn-erdr, épr-ns; cf. Skt.sarp, sarp-ami, sarp-as; Lat. serp-o, serp-ens.) To creep, crawl, and generally to move slowly, walk, like éprifw, ijpevos 7) (pray Od. 17. 158; boa Te yatav ém mveter re nat prec Il. 17. 447, Od. 18. 131, cf. Pind. O. 7.95; efprov pivot began to move, Od. 12. 395; of infants, Aesch, Theb. 17; of a lame man, Soph. Ph. 207; €pm. €¢ edvjs Ar. Vesp. 552 :—often in Trag., simply, ¢o go or come, Aesch. Pr. 810, etc.; pred’ ws raxtoTa Soph. O. C. 1643; Onoeds 65 Epwe Eur. H. F. 1154; €pmew és pd0ov, mpos @bds Id. Hel. 316, Cycl. 423; épwe Seipo come hither, Id. Andr. 722; and c, acc. cogn., pw. d50vs Soph. Aj. 287; «éAevor Id. Ph. 1223, cf. Aesch. Fr. 195; also, prov rois 680001 Onprov Com. ap. Plut. 54 B. 2. of things and events, Bérpus én’ jjuap epme Soph. Fr. 239; 48 Eprovoa mpéow Ib. 546; of a tear stealing from the eye, Id, El. 1231; of reports, to creep on, spread, like Lat. serpit rumor, Pind. I. 4. 68 (3. 58), cf. Soph. Aj. 1087; pds rdv €xov6’ 6 pOdvos épme Ib. 157 (cf. bpépmw); 5 wéA€nos Eprérm let it take its course, Ar. Eq. 673, cf. Lys. 129 :—also to go on, prosper, Pind. O. 13. 148, cf. N. 7. 100:—of calamities, o come suddenly on one, Soph, Ant. 585, 619, cf. Aj. 1087. éppddara, v. sub pair. Eppadioupynpévas, Adv. heedlessly, at random, Epiphan. €ppaos, 6, a ram, Lyc. 1316 (v. 1. éppwos): also a wild boar, Call. Fr. 335 (acc. to Tzetz. Lyc. in 1.): in Hesych. written éppds. (Prob. from Gppnv, lon. épony ; cf. Skt. vrshas (taurus), Lat. verres, aries.) €ppanre, =évparrw, Hipp. Art. 802, Dion. H. 4. 62, Ael. N. A. 2. 22, Aristid. 1. 29. éppgotwveupévas, Adv. part. pf. pass. negligently, Byz. €ppevri, Adv. (formed from a part. éppels, as if from *éppnut, =€ppw), like é@cAovzi, prob. in the sense of utterly, Alcae, 125. EppHOny, v. ép@, elmeiv. €ppyvo-Bookés, év, = mpoBaroBocxds, Soph. Fr. 589. spendopin, =dppnpopéw, C. 1. 431. pptya, pf. of pryéw: Dor. 3 pl. éppiyovre. Eppivov, 76, (év, piv) an errhine, sternutatory medicine, Paus. ap. Eust. 0. I. 2 pudpicpévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. moderately, Dio C. 79. 16. pu0j.os, ov, =evpuOpos, Plut. 2. 623 B. pw: fut. éppow h. Hom. Merc. 259, Ar. (v. infr.): aor. #ppyoa Id. Ran. 1192 (cf. dv-, eio-€ppw): pf. appnea (elo—-) Id. Thesm. 1075. (From 4/FEPP, y. Il. ll. citand., and cf. amdé-Fepoe.) To go slowly, of slow, halting gait, whence Hephaestus is called €ppwv, limping, Il. 18. 421; hp olp een ouvhvrero met me wandering alone, Od. 4. 367, cf. h, Mere. 259. 2. simply ¢o go, és rds éoprds Inscr. Cret. in C..1. 2554. 76, cf. 2556. 39. II. to go or come to one’s own loss or harm, év0d5e Eppa Il. 8. 239., 9. 364; often in Att., Eppwy éx vads gone, fallen from a ship, Aesch. Pers, 963, cf. Eur. 1. T. 379, Plat. Phil. 24D; dripos éppew Aesch. Eum. 884; ds TéAvBov ippyoev he went with a murrain to Polybus, Ar. Ran. 1192, cf. Lys. 336. 2. mostly in imperat. éppe, Lat. abi in malam rem, away! egone! Il, 8. 164., 24. 239. Theogn. 601; épp’ obrws Il. 22. 498; so, Eppors Eur. Alc. 734, Anth, P. 5. 3; also in pl. éppere, Il. 24. 239, Ap. Rh. 3. 562; and in 3 sing. éppérw, away with him,-let him go to ruin, Il. 20. 349, Od. 5. 1393 doms éxcivn eppérw Archil. 5; éppérw “IAsoy perish Troy! Soph. Ph. 1200: with a Prep., épp’ é« vngov Oacaor, Lat. aufer te hinc ocius, Od, 10. 72; épp’ da’ éueto Theocr. 20. 2; in Att. strengthd., épp’ és xdpaxas, Lat. pasce corvos, be thou hung, Ar. Pl. G04; Epp’ és képaxas .. €x THs *Arruchs Alex. ‘Imm. 1; so, ovw eppioere; ode és xdpaas éppnoere ; Ar. Lys. 1240, Pax 500; el pi) ppnoer’ Id. Vesp. 1329. 3. in Att. of persons and things, to be clean gone, to be lost, perish, disappear, like otxopa, Aesch. Ag. 419; ppec mavwaAns Id. Pers, 732; apavros eppe Soph. O. T. 560; €ppec ra Geta the honour due to the gods is gone, Ib. gio; eppe déuas proyordy Id. El. 57; Epper parnv Eur. Hel. 1220; Oavévras éppey Id. Supp. 1113; ef oiow wadwy éppes from what fortunes hast thou fallen, Id. 1. T. 3793 also-in Prose, éppe ra Eud mpdypara Lat. actum est de me! Xen. Symp. 1, 15, cf. Cyr. 6. 1, 3, Plat. Legg. 677C; éppe ra xadd the luck is gone (but cf. x4Aov), Mindarus in Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 23, etc. éppwya, pf. of Ajyvupe. ay éppwpévos, 7, ov, part. pf. pass. of pdvvups, used as Adj. in good health, stout, vigorous, opp. to 4ppwaros, Plat. Phaedr. 268 A, Dem, 24. 3; €p- popévos dv Lys. 168. 38; éppapévn Sivays Plat, Phaedr. 268 A:— irreg. Comp., Terxopaxin éppwpeveotepy Hat. 9. 70, Plat. Gorg. 483 C; eppapeverrépas tais yvapas Xen, Cyr. 3. 3, 31; 7 pice Eppwperé- orepov Plat. Symp. 181 C:—Sup. -éo7aros, Andoc. 34. 15, Plat. Rep. 477 E.—Adv., Eppwpévas, stoutly, manfully, vigorously, Aesch. Pr. 65, 76, Ar. Vesp. 230; xwpeiv Xen. Ages. 2,11: Comp. —éarepoy, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 287 A, -eorépws, Isoct.74E; Sup, -éorara, Plat. Rep. 401 D. éppwpny, v. sub poyvupe. € , ppaaavro, y. sub popat, éppwos, 5, =éppaos, f. 1. in Lyc. 1316. & , V. sub pavvupe. époaios, a, ov, =épaneis, Hesych. éptuaTaco — épvO pds. pon, 7; Ep. eépon; Dor. gepora Pind. N. 3.135; €poa Alcman 32, aay 4 bia le gee dew, Il. 23. 598, etc.; TeOadvia éépon abundant dew, Od. 13. 2455 50, Oijdus epon 5. 467, Hes. Sc. 395: —in pl. rain-drops, nara 3 bydbev heey epoas aipari pudaréas Il. 11, 533 oTtAmval 8 dmémmrov Eepoat (sc. THs vepédys) 14. 3513 XAwpais éépous Pind. N. 8. 69 :—generally of any liquid, avOepov wovtias ipe- Rota’ éépaas from the water of the sea, Ib. 7. 116, cf. 3. 1355 prurepi} éépon, of honey, Hes. Th. 83. II. in Od. 9. 222, xwpls 5 avd époat (the only place where Hom. has this form), metaph. of young and tender animals; so Aesch, calls young animals dpéco, Soph. paxador ; cf. Bpépos, wéraoeat. (From 4/FEP%, as the Hom, forms é-épo-n, é-epo-fes prove; cf. Skt. varsh, varsh-ati (pluit), varsh-as (pluvia) ; and perh. also ras-as (humor); Lat. ros; a connection with dpdgos is also suggested by Pott.) r potas, Ep. éepo-, eooa, ev, dewy, dew-besprent, Awrdv 8 Epojevra Il. 14. 348; Actudy Anth, P. g. 668, etc.: metaph. of a corpse, olov éep- ones Ketras fresh, ll. 24. 419; viv d€ por épojes Kat mpdoparos .. wetoat Ib. 757. épony, tit 6, Ion, for See. é opta, v. sub dppypdpos. co %, (abe) co bading, band, Suid., etc., v. 1, Thuc. 1. 6. pow, (pon) to bedew, moisten, like dpdw, Nic. Th. 62. 631. époadns, €s, (el50s) =épones, Theophr. C. P. 3. 2, 6. éptydw, =sq., Geop. 17. 17. épvyydéve, common Prose and Att. form of épedyopat, eructare, Hipp. 371. 46, Cratin. Apar. 2: c. acc. cogn., olvoy épvyy. Eur. Cycl. 523, cf. Eupol.Mapix.14; oxopoddApny Luc. Alex. 39; metaph., daver’ épvyyavav Diphil. Zoryp. 2.21: also in Med., Hipp. 371. 24, 28.—For jpiyor, v. sub épetvyouat. éptiyi}, 7, a belching, Lat. eructatio, Schol, Ar. Pax 529, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 5. II. a bellowing, Hesych. épuypa, 76, =foreg., Hipp. 484. 28. épiiypatve, = épvyyavew, Hesych.; épvypéw, Hipp. 1207 E. épuyparadins, es, (€f50s) causing eructation, Hipp. 485. 27. éptypnios, n, ov, (épdyeiv) loud-bellowing, ravpos ll. 18. 580; like Epipuxos. II. épvypnan, éniderov papavov, tows awd Tis Epv'yijs, E. M. 379. 28, cf. Hesych. (where the MS. gives épvyfA7). épuypos, 6,=épvyf, Arist. Probl. 13. 4, al., Theophr. Fr, 4. 61. éptWatvw: aor. épv@qva Ap. Rh. 1. 791 :—poét. for épvdpaive, to dye red, Id. 4. 474: to make to blush, Id. 1. 791:—Hom, only in Pass. to be- come red, épvOaivero aipart yaia Il. 10. 484., 21. 21; (in Act. he uses éped0w) ; c. gen., Nonn. D, 11.92: to blush scarlet, Anth. P. 12. 8; Pass. also in late Prose, Arr. ap. Stob. app. 2. 5, Poll. 2.87, Eumath. épvOnpa, 76, (épi@aivw) a redness or flush upon the skin, Hipp. Aph, 1260, Thuc. 2. 49; ép. mpoowmou a blush, Eur. Phoen. 1488, cf. Pee. 397 :—absol. redness, Xen, Cyn. 5,18; a@ blush, Chaerem. ap. Ath, 08 D. €pv0iBros, 1, Rhodian for épvaiBios, q. v. épiibivos, 6, =épuOpivos, Henioch. MoAuzp. 1, Opp. H. 1. 97. épulpdbiov, 74, = epvdpddavor, Schol. Nic. Th. 74. épvOpatve, to dye red, Theophr. H. P. 3.15, 3; mpéowmov Perict. ap. Stob. 488. 2:—Pass. to become red, Theophr. H. P. 3.12, 5: to blush, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 4, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 9, 2. II. intr. to be red, Id. Probl. 8. 4, 3. épvOpaios, a, ov, = epvOpds, évros, @4Aacaa Dion. P. 38, etc.; KéAapos Ib.1127; Al@os Stat. Silv. 4.6,18. II. of or from Erythrae, Hat., etc. épu0pavis, év, red, of a kind of ivy, Plin. 24. 49. EpvOpnpa, 74,=ept@nua (perh. f.1.), Poll. 6. 180, Greg. Nyss. 1. PP- 54, 135. €pviplas, ov, 6, of ruddy complexion, opp. to &xplas, Arist. Categ. 8, 15. €pv0plaors, Ion, —qots, ews, %, ruddiness, blushing, Hipp. 23. 34. épulpidw, Ep. part. -idav, Musae. 161: impf. #pvOpiwv Luc. Laps. 1, etc. : aor. jpuOpiaca Plat., etc.: pf. ipvdpiaxa (v. dmnpvOpiaxirws). To be apt to blush, to colour up, Ar, Nub, 1216, Plat. Prot. 312 A, cf. Dem. 270.2; doreidy ye .. drt EpvOpids Plat. Lys. 204 C; c. part. fo blush at doing, Dromo WaArp. 1; doris 8 épudpid .. pos Tods Eavrod -yovéas, ote corw waxds Antiph. Incert. 58, cf. Menand. Incert. 173, 287; also, ép. Tia to blush before one, Aristaen. 1. 13: +c. inf., Liban. 4. 775- épudpivos, 6,a kind of red mullet, Arist. H. A. 4. 11, 8, al. €pudpiov, 76, a red ointment, Paul. Aeg. 7. 18. €pvdpo-Baidrjs, és, red-dyed, Eust. 6.8: épvOp6-Bamros, ov, Eccl. épu0ps-Bwhos, ov, with red earth, Schol. Dion. P, 183. ~ €pu0ps-ypapipos, ov, with red lines, Arist. Fr. 278, cf. Ath. 321 E. seee Genrehee, ov, red-fingered, criticised as unpoét., Arist. Rhet. 3. 2, 13. épvOpdBavov, 76, madder, Lat. rubia tinctoria, Diosc. 3. 150: €pu- Opddavos, %, Plin. 24. 56. EpvOpodaviw, to dye with madder, dye red, LXx (Ex. 25. §., 26. 14). épvdpo-cidijs, és, of a ruddy look ; prob. f. 1, for €Aurpo-, q. v. Epudpo-Kdpdtos, ov, with red pith, Theophr. H. P. 3. 12, 3- épv0ps-Koj1os, ov, red-haired, with red down, Plin. 13. 34. épudps-AevKos, ov, reddish-white, Hesych, s. v. pAoyaAevkov. €pv0po-péhas, awa, av, blackish red, Ath. 652 E. Epudpdviov, 70, a plant of the satyrium kind, Diosc. 3. 144. Epupo-rrolkihos, ov, spotted with red, Epich. 47 Ahr. €pu0po-rrous, 6, %, neut. wouv, red-footed, mededs Arist. H. A. 5.13, . II. in Ar. Av. 303, a bird, prob. the redshank. Epv0po-mpbownos, ov, of a ruddy look, Anon. ap. Suid. s. v.“Apparos. épvOpés, d, dv: [i by nature, Ar. Ach, 787, Eq. 1088, Ay. 145; so that 3 $ the correct forms of the Comp. and Sup. are -d&repos, -draros, as in EpvOporns — épiw. Plat. Tim. 83 B, Epin. 987 C; but the metre requires —érepos in Anaxandr, Kepx.1, Drom. ¥aArp. 1]. Red, Lat. ruber, of the colour of nectar and wine, Il. 19. 38, Od. 5. 93; of copper, Il. 9. 365 (v. sub xadkéds); of gold, Theogn. 450; of minium, Hdt. 3.57; of «dé«xos (scarlet), Dromo 1.c.; of blood, Aesch. Eum. 265 :—épu0pa, ra, red pimples, an eruption, Hipp. Coac. 147, 427. I, ete. II. ’EpvOp7) @dAacca in Hdt. the Erythraean sea, including not only the Red Sea or Arabian Gulf, but also the Indian Ocean, (of the existence of the Persian Gulf he was ignorant), 1. 180, 202., 2. 8, 158., 4. 393 so, mévros "Ep. Pind, P. 4. 448 :—later also of the Persian Gulf, Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, Io, Diod. 2. 11; used vaguely of remote and unknown places, pdvoy ob« én) riy "Ep. Oddarray mpecBelas néprev Dem. 438.20. Cf. *EpvOpatos. (From 4/EPYT® come also épev0-w, épua-iBn; cf. Skt. rudh-iram (sanguis), rohit-as (ruber); Lat. rub-er, ruf-us, rut-ilus, rob-igo (Umbr. ruf-ru) ;— Goth. ga-riud-jo (verecundia); O. Norse rjod-r (ruddy), rjod-a; A. S. redd-an (to redden) ;—O. H. G. r6t, rost (roth, red), etc.) épuOpdérns, nos, %, redness, ruddiness, Arist. Plant. 1.5, 10, Galen. épv0p6-xAwpos, ov, pale-red, Hipp. 1175 G; v. 1. -xodos. €pv0p6-xpoos, ov, contr, —xpous, ovv, red-coloured, Dio C. 43. 43. €pv0pé-xpws, wros, 6, ,=foreg., Cratin. Tpog. 1. €pudpabins, es, =epvOpoedys, Ath. 76 B. épixdvdw, poét. for épvxw, to restrain, withhold, xeivov épvxavdwo’ déxoyta Od. I. 199; c. inf., from doing, Q. Sm.12. 205: also Ep. impf. épvxave (from épuxavw) Od. 10. 429, cf. Orph. Arg. 650. Epuxriipes, of, a class of freedmen at Sparta, Myro ap. Ath. 271 F. €ptxw [0], Il, Hdt., Trag., rare in Att. Prose, Xen. An. 3. I, 25, cf. dmepixw; Ep. inf. épdeévev:—fut. épdgw, Hom., not Att.: aor. 1 jpufa Aesch. Theb. 1076, (4m-) Xen. An. 5. 8, 25; Ep. épuga Il. 3. 113, Od. 17.515, etc.:—Ep. aor. 2 npuxdxov (cf. jvimame from évimre) Il. 5. 321., 20. 458, or épvxdxov II. 352, etc., inf. épdedxéew 5. 262, Od. II. 105: —Med., Il. 12. 285 :—Pass., v. infr. 11.—Collat. forms épukdve, -avdw (cf. dexavdopat) occur in Hom, (Akin to éptw.) To keep in, hold back, curb, restrain, trmovus .. éputévev Il. 11. 48, etc.; Aady Epuxdxere keep them back (from flight), 6. 80, cf. 24. 658; but, Addy épuxe, simply, kept them in their place, 23. 258; Ovpdv épvxanéew to curb desire, Od. 11. 105; but, Erepos 5é pe Ovpds epuxey another mind checked me (opp. to dvfjxev), 9. 302; épuxéuev edpvora Ziv’ to restrain him, Il. 18. 206; miorv ép. i.e. to mistrust, Emped. 360; épuxé puv évb00ev aidus Ap. Rh. 3. 652 i—c. gen., uf pe pure paxns keep me not from fight, Il. 18.126; dAAd Tis Oe@y .."Arda ode Sépmv épvxer Soph. Tr. 120; so, dn’ €pyou Oupdy épvxor Hes. Op. 28 :—c. inf. praes. to hinder from doing, Pind. N. 4. 54, Eur. Heracl. 691; c. inf. aor., Id. H. F. 317; fut., Ap. Rh. 1. 346; c. acc. et inf., qpuge wéAw pavarparqva Aesch. Theb, 1076; ép. rid uy .., Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 11. 2 absol. to hinder, épvxaxe yap tpupadrea Il. 11. 352; épuxépuer fo stay [their flight], 21. 7. 3. to hold in check, keep off the enemy, ef xe.. épugopev dvridoayres Il. 15. 297, cf. Od. 22.138; so, Ta 5 ob pévos dpov épdge 11.8.178; ep. rods émdvras Hdt.4.125, cf.5.15, etc. 4. to detain a guest, Lat. hospitio detinere, feivia’ évt peydpot, eelxoow juar’ épvgas Il. 6.217; often in Od., as 17. 408:—but also, to detain by force, to withhold, confine, [mévros] modéas déxovras épdxe Il. 21. 59, cf. Od. 1. 14., 7. 315, etc.; Epugov évt peydpoot yuvaikas keep them close, 19.16; yh pv épvwe, of one dead, Il. 21. 62, 63; ode... dédos Kal decpds épdger Od. 8. 317; and in Med., copa 5é .. puv Epvxerar Il. 12. 285. 5. 10 ward off, Lat. arcere, deovra 21. 594; & Kev Tot Arpoy épveor Od. 5.166; Kakdv, 7d of ob Tis épdxaxer Il. 15. 450, cf. 17. 2925 so, ép. pevdéow &umnay Pind. O. 11(10).7; 7a pi) Kadad voopw €p. Theocr. 7.127; 7a Kaka dn’ uavrod Xen. An. 3. I, 253; méAepov dé tivos Polyb. ap. Suid. 6. to keep apart, separate, dAlyos & ert x@pos Epvxe Il. 10. 161. II. Pass. to be held back, detained, 598 evt vnow epieeat Od. 4. 373, cf. 466., 17. 17. 2. absol. to hold back, keep back, wh pot épvxecBov, says the driver to his horses, Il. 23. 443. 3. to be kept away, ard rod “Aawrov Hat. 9. 49- 4. dvéiny 65€ xpos epvxerar this place is remissly guarded, i.e, is free or open to all, Soph. Ph. 1153 (but Pors. took the words 6 52... duiy as parenth., so that dvé5ny should be construed with Eprere). Eptpa, 74, (€pvouat) a fence, guard, épuya xpods, of defensive armour, Il. 4. 137; of a cloak, Hes. Op. 534; Owpaxas, épdpata cwpa- tow Xen. Cyr. 4. 3,9; &p. viperod a defence against .. , Call. Fr. 142; 70 ép, Tod Telxeos the defence given by it, Hdt.7.223, 225 ; meptBarécbar Epios, ép. Tav vedv Id. g. 96, cf. Thuc. 8. 40; &p. Tpwwy the wall of Troy, Soph. Aj. 467; ép. Al@ors dp00dv a breast-work, Thuc. 6. 66; ép. rerxicecOat, reryicew Id. 1. 11, Xen. Hell, 2. 3, 46: also of a river or trench used as a military defence, Id. An. 2. 4, 22. 2 a safeguard or defence, ép. xu@pas, of the Areopagus, Aesch, Eum. 701; matbas ép, bdpaat Eur. Med. 597; ép. moAcutas xepds against .. , Ib. 1322 :—cf. éppat. 4. €ptpariov, 74, Dim. of foreg., Luc. D. Meretr. 9. 5. épupvdopat, Pass. to be defended, Anon. ap. Suid. épupvé-vwros, ov, with fenced back, of a crab, Anth. P. 6. 696. €pupves, 4, ov: Sup. -draros, Anth. P. 7. 138, 599: (€pvopat) :— Senced, fortified, strong, by art or nature, TAqkwva 7° épupyqy Hes. Fr. 15 (132 Gottl.), cf. Thuc. 5. 65; ép. Sdpara Eur. Hel. 68; xetvar pev mupyot . . Epupvai, Ajdos 8 ’AnéAAwn Call. Del. 23; 7a Epupva strong positions, Xen. An. 5. 7, 31, etc.; Témot of Ep. Arist. Pol. 7. 11, 5 ; of hills, steep, sheer, Ap. Rh. 2.514, etc. Adv. Comp.—orépws, Arist. Pol. 7.12, 3. épupvorns, 770s, 7, strength or security of a place, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1. 23; Tav Texay Arist. Pol. 7. 11,9; ép. Tov ”"AAmeww the difficulty of pass- ing them, Polyb. 3. 47, 9, etc. €pupvow, to fortify, make strong, E. M. 378. 31. éputts, ews, 7, =€pevgis, Hipp. 1200 A. 583 éptio-dppares, acc. -dras, nom. and acc. pl., with no sing. in use, chariot-drawing, épvodppares trmot, épvodpparas tmmous Il. 15. 354.5 16. 370, Hes. Sc. 369. Cf. Lob. Paral. 179. éptictBda, to suffer from mildew, Theophr. C. P. 4.14, 2. éptotBn [7], 7, mildew, the red blight, Lat. robigo, esp. in corn, Plat. Rep. 609 A; avxpol at ép. Arist. H. A. 5. 22, 3; in pl., Plat. Symp. 188 B, etc. (From épuépés, q.v.: cf. wiAros WI.) [For the quantity, v. Orph. Lith. 594.]} éptictBios, 5, and épvorBty, 4, averting mildew, epith. of Apollo and Demeter at Rhodes, etc., like the Lat. Robigus, in whose honour the Robigalia were celebrated to avert robigo.—The former only in Rhodian form épv@iBios Strabo 613; and the latter wrongly written épvolBn in Etym. Gud. s. v. épv@iBtos. ~ €ptotBbw, to affect with mildew, Theophr. C. P. 3. 24. fin. :—Pass.= épuotBaw, Theophr. Ib. 22. 2, etc. €ptotBasns, es, mildewed, Arist. H. A. 8. 27, 3., 9. 40, 46, Theophr. éptiot-Opit Yjxrpa, a comb for drawing through the hair, a small-tootk comb, Anth. P. 6. 246. épictpov, 76, hedge-mustard, Theophr. H. P. 8. 3, 1: elptowpov in Nic. Th. 894: also piotpov. épiat-vyis, f5os, 7, preserving ships, dyxvpa Anth. P. 6. 90. éptiot-mehas, 74, a violent redness and rising of the skin, erysipelas, St. Antony's fire, Hipp. Vet. Med. 16, Aph. 1253. (From épuOpds, médXa skin, Curt. no. 353: cf. épvatBn.) épuotmearé-xpoos, ov, contr. —xpous, of the colour of erysipelas, Psell. in Boiss. Anecd. 1. 228: and éptotreAdrabns, es, (ef50s) of the nature of épvoimedas, Hipp. V. C. 912. épict-mrodis, 6, 4, (pvouat) protecting the city, epith. of Athena, Il. 6. 305, h. Hom. to. 1., 28. 3. Epiiots, ews, 1), (Epdw) a drawing, Max. Tyr. 19. 4: in Philo 1. 602, f.1. for dpovats. épuct-ocxnmrpov, 76, name of a plant,=domdAaGos, Theophr. Odor. 57, Diosc. 1. 19. €ptiot-xatos, ov, carrying a shepherd's staff, Alcman 12, cf. Arcad. p. 43; Apollod. (ap. Strabo 460) regards the word as a prop. n. €ptot-x Ov, 6, 7), tearing up the earth, of an ox ploughing, Strabo ap. Ath. 382 E. épvopos, 6, a safeguard against witchcraft, h, Hom. Cer. 230. épuorés, 4, dv, drawn, Kodedy épvora .. ibn Soph. Aj. 730. €ptirnp, pos, 6, one that draws or rescues from, kaxav Nic. Al. 363. éptw, Ion. eipvw; Ep. inf. eip¥pevar [0] Hes. Op. 816 :—impf. etpvoy Mosch. 2. 14, €pvoy Il. 12. 258; épvecxov Nonn, D. 43. 50:—fut. épdw Il. 11. 454., 15. 351-, 22.67; al. épdow as in Opp. H. 5. 375; Ep. épvoow Orph., Nonn. :—aor. eiptca Hom., Hdt.; épioa Il. 5. 573, Pind.; elpuooa Il. 3. 373, Od. 8. 85; lengthd. épdcacxe (éf-) Il. 10. 4905 imper. €tpvsov even in Soph. Tr. 1033 (in a chorus); subj. épvow Il., elpvow, Hipp. 452. 12, etc., 2 sing. épvoons 5. 110, Ep. 1 pl. épdocopev (for -wpev) Il. 14. 76., 17. 6353 opt. épicarue Il.; épvoat, épvocat Il. ; inf. elpdoa (d:-, &—) Hdt.; part. épdoas Il. 23. 21, eipvoas Hdt. 4. 10; éptooas Ap. Rh. 3. 913. Ion. and poét. Verb. To drag along the ground, drag, draw, generally with a sense of violence or force, va. . els Ga Il. 1. 141, Od, 8. 34; GAabe 2. 389; Hrepdvbe 10. 423; én” dyretpoto on land, 16. 325, 359; émt Ot Il. 4.248; [Sédpu] Ep. x’ axpys, of the Trojan horse, Od. 8. 508 :—of the dead, pls 8 épdcas mepl ofjua, of Hector’s body, Il. 24.16; vexpdév, vexpods ép., either of the friends, to drag them away, rescue them, 5. 573., 16. 781; or of the enemy, fo drag them off for plunder, ransom, etc,, 4. 467 sq., al. (v. infr. B. I. 2); of dogs and birds of prey, to drag and tear, olavol &pnorat épvovor 11. 454, etc.:—hence to drag away, carry off violently, Od. 9. 993 ©. gen. partis, 5d SdHpar’ ép... 4 odds H Kal xerpds 17.479; SO, Ep. Tia Kouplg by the hair, 22.188 :—to draw upwards or downwards, é& odpavddev mediovde Zhv’ Il. 8. 22, cf. vss. sqq.; celpny.. ior’ dv’ imrry epioat to draw it up a pillar, Od. 22.176; xeipt madw ép. Il. 5; 836 (cf. aveptw) :—of warriors, ddpu .. & wredqs elpuce 16. 863; &F wpowo.. diordy 5.110; peAlny .. Ee Kpnuvoto 21.175; also, papyaxoy é -yains Od. 10. 303 :—also, 20 pull down, tear away, xpbocas pev mipyav épiav Il. 12. 258, cf. 14. 35. 2. without any sense of violence, to draw, Papos .. dx kepadns elpvoce drew it over his head, Od. 8. 85; dAAOr pev xAaivns épiwv, drdov 5 xurGvos pulling or plucking him by .., ll. 22. 4933 veuphy ép. éni tit to draw the bowstring at him, Il. 15. 4645 so, ép. Tofov Hdt. 3. 30; @yxos elpycoy draw thy sword, Soph. Tr. 1033; émt tive KAfjpoy ép. to draw lots for .. , Call. Jov. 62; é& mobds ép. to put aside, Pind. N. 7. 2? i—but wAlvdous elptev, Lat. ducere lateres, like €Axerv, Hat. 2. 136. B. Med. épvopat, Ion. eipvouar (with %, whereas fpvopat (q. v.) commonly has @): fut. inf. €pvecOar Il. 9. 248., 14. 422., 20. 195; Epva~ copat 10. 44, Od. 21.125, eiptooopae Il. 18. 276:—aor. elptoduny 4. 186, elpdccaro 22. 306, éptoavro 1. 466, etc.; subj. épdowpar Ap. Rh. I. 12043 opt. épvoato, -aiaro Il. 5. 456, 298; elpvtoatuny, 8. 143, Od. 16. 459; inf. épvoac@at Il, 22. 351, eipvooac@a 1. 216; part. épvoad~ Hevos I. 190, elpvoduevos (ér-) Hdt. 4. 8:—besides these, we have in med, sense the foll. forms, éptrac Ap. Rh. 2. 1208 ; 3 pl. efpvarat [1] I. I. 239, [w] Od. 16. 463; inf. eipvo@ae Od.: eptao, épiro Il., Hes., eipvro Hom.; e(pwvro, -varo Il. 12. 454., 22. 3033 3 pl.:—in form these tenses belong to the pf. and plqpf. pass.; but Bekker writes the inf. eipvoOat, Epvabat (not elpdabat, Eptaba:), and epvao, Epuro at least must be taken as parts of an Ep. impf. or aor.:—by examining the examples which follow it will be seen that these pass. forms, when used as med., always take the metaph. sense, ¢o rescue, guard, protect, ward off (cf. & bvopat), and never take the literal sense, fo draw, but when they are 584 passive (v. infr. ©), except in Od. 22. 90 (puro d& pacyavoy ov), where épuro can hardly be taken in pass. sense. ‘o draw for oneself, épv- gacbat vijas to launch us ships, Il. 14.79, V. infr. c.1; [émmoy] és dixpb- modw ép. Od. 8. 5043 fidos, waxatpav, dop éptec@ar to draw one's sword, Il. 4. 530., 21. 173., 3. 271; €* woAeoto Theocr. 22. 191; Sdpu & @redjjs eipvoduny Od. 10.165; of meat on the spit, épvcavrd re mavra they drew all off, Il. 1. 466, etc.; éptocec@at peveaivoy in his anxiety fo string [the bows], Od. 21.125; Bupoay @npds awd pedrcwy Theocr. 25. 273. 2. to draw towards Uf, Gi épt ‘o Od. 1g. 481. II. to draw out of the press, épicacdat twa waxns, xapyns Il. 5. 456., 17. 161; esp. of friends dragging away the body of a slain hero, ovbé xe ..é Bedewv épvcavro vervy 18. 152, cf. 5. 298., 17. 104; but also enemies, 14. 422: hence, 2. to rescue, deliver, pera xepoly épiccaro PoiBos ‘“Amédddwy 5. 344, cf. 11. 363; mas av «. eipigoatabe “Ido ; 17. 327; Tooeddwv .. Neoropos vidy épuTo 13. 5553 BovAjjs .. , ijrts Kev Epvocerat 75¢ cawoe “Apyetovs 10. 44; GAN Hoasoros épvro cdwoe re 5. 22; 6 8 éptooaro Kat pw’ édénoev Od. 14. 279; then of captives, to redeem, 1 » Xpvo®@ epvoacOa dydryor (not to weigh them against gold), Il. 22. 351. 3. the orig. sense of drawing away often wholly vanishes, and épveo@ar means simply ¢o protect, guard, of armour, dAAd mépoier cipicato Cwornp Il. 4. 186; [«uvéy] eipuro ndpn Hes, Scut.138; plirpys.., % of mAciorov Epuro Il. 4.1383 épvto Bt vdoh Odpyt 23. 819; also, dory d& mdpyo iypprail re muha aavides 7’ .. elpvocovra 18. 275; cavidov.., ai fa mAas eipuvo 12. 454 3 oios éptero “IAtov “Exrwp 6. 403, cf. 21. 507+, 24. 4993 oi pe mapos ye eipvaro 22. 303; Avelny etpuro dienot re nal péved' d 16. 542; [€Aapov] bAn elpvcaro 15. 273; door .. rpeis dvdpas Epuabat Od. §. 484: then,’ II. c. acc. rei, to keep off, ward off, ddr ovk oiwvotaw éptccaro Kijpa péAaway by no augury could he ward off black death, Il. 2, 859; 9 9 (sc. domls) ob €yxos eprro 5. 538., 17. 518., 24.524. 2. to thwart, check, curb, much like épi«w, Ards vdov eiptooato 8.143; py) 6 wiv Kpadiy xOdov ovK épicaTo 24. 584; ov épvoodpevor having avoided return, i.e. remaining, Pind. N. 9. 54i vipa 7 épdodar Ap. Rh. 3. 607. 3. to keep guard upon, watch, vija, vas epvadar Od. 9. 194., 10. 444., 14. 259+. 17- 429; elpvaar péya Spa 23.151; 4 v@iv eipuTo Ovpas, of a female slave, 229; éné- Teddev .. €ipvoGar aor 3. 268; avAw épuvro, of dogs, Theocr. 25. 76; also, €rt pw’ adr’ elpdarat otxad idvra lie in wait for me, Od. 16. 463; xadrendy oe Ocdy .. SHvea cipvoba to discover them, 23. 82; gpeciv epicacbat to keep in one’s heart, to conceal, 16. 459; of Te Gemioras mpds Aws elpdarat maintain them, Il. 1. 239: hence, 4, to support, hold in h , with riotion of obedience, od atye BovAds eiptcao Kpoviwvos 21. 230; émos elpvecacba 1. 216. IV. to take to oneself, or to retain, tiv tpophy Hipp. 663. 24, cf. 661. 52. - G. Pass. to be drawn ashore, drawn up in line, of ships, eipyvro vées taxdv dup’ Axirjja Il. 18.69; boar mpOrar eipvaro 15. 654; Gir’ &p’ adds morris elpupévar 13. 682; elpvaro vijes Biv’ ep’ adds ToALi}s 14. 30; cipvarar dugt Oadrdoons Ib. 75, cf. 4. 248; and so perhaps, vijes 0 5ddv.. eipvarat are drawn up along the road (where others take it in med. sense, B. 11. 4, they guard the road), Od. 6. 265. II. zo be guarded ot kept confined, like épvxopat,#d epi’ eiv’Apipocoty Hes. Th. 301. * ‘2D. It has been doubted whether épiw fo drag and épvopat fo rescue, protect belong to the same Root; but the connexion of sense, as above given, seems not unsatisfactory: cf. pvopat. phos, cos, 74, a skin, =oréppos, Téppos, Nic. Al. 248, Th. 376. .Sxrar, px&ro, Ion. pf. and plapf. pass. of épya. -€pxairdopat, Pass. to be kept or shut up, ev 8 Exdory [ovped] mevr7- Kovra aves .. epxarowvro Od, 14. 15. épxarées, eaoa, ev, like a hedge, Hesych, epxaros, 5, a fence, inclosure, hedge, like épxos, Hesych. -€pxopat Hom., etc.: impf. ypxéuny Hipp. 1226 E, and often in late Prose, as Luc. Jud. Voc. 4, Paus. §. 8, 5, etc.; in Att. only found in compds., é-npxdunv Thuc. 4.120, mpoo- Ib. 121, mept- Ar. Thesm. 504; if #pxovro be read (for mpo-) in Xen. An.1,8,17, it is impf. of dpxopat, as in Plat. Rep. 452 E:—these tenses come from 4/EP, EPX (cf. Skt. ar, ark’h); the following from 4/EAY®O, viz. fut. édev- gopat, Hom., Ion. and late Prose, sometimes in Trag- (Aesch. Pr. 854, Supp. 522, Soph. O. C. 1206, Tr. 595), but in Att. Prose only in Lys. 165. 13, v. mox infr.:—aor. 7Av@ov, Ep. and Lyr., used by Eur, even in dialogue (Rhes. 660, El. 598, Tro. 374, cf. Neophr. ap. Schol. Med. 661); even in Hom. the syncop. forts fhOor is more common, and in the obl. moods the sync. forms alone are used, €A0E, EAPw, EXoupe, enGeiv, EAOdv; Ep. inf. €AOépevat, —éuev Il.; Dor. jvOov, Epich. 126 Abr., Theocr. 2. 118., 16. 9; Lacon. on, €Acorpe, Eady Ar. Lys. 105, 118, 1081: a late aor. #A@a occurs in Lxx and N. T., cf. C. I. 4922, 6210, etc.; 3 pl. HA@ocay LXx; HAvoa C, I. 6278, cf. Anth. P. 14. 44: —pf. éAqatda, Att.; sync. pl. eAndtpev, -vTe Cratin. Xeip. 9, Achae. ap. Hephaest. p.18; in Hom, always Ep. eiAqAov9a, whence I pl. €/A7j- Aovdpev Il. 9. 49, Od. 3. 81, part. eiAnAovdas 19, 28., 20, 3605 and once (Il. 15. 81) €AnAoudds :—plapf. éAgAvGev Eupol.(?) in Ar. Eq. 1306; Ion. édndvéee Hat. ; Ep. elAndovet Il; also 7AndovOew Call. in An, Ox. 4. 417.—Some parts of this Verb were replaced in Att. by forms of ety (ibo), viz. the obl. moods of fee Tt, tor, torpu, evar, ivy (for Zpxou, etc.); impf. fa, pay (for Apxounvs; fut. pe (for éAetcouar) ; vy. Elmsl. Heracl. 210, Lob. Phryn. 38, Cobet. V. LL. p. 32. To come or go (cf. Hew, olxopar), very freq. from Hom. downwds, :—the ecial senses arise from construction with other words, and chiefly from Ae eck. which follow the Verb; 1. to come toa place or to go y, both frequently in Hom., esp. in imperat., which also is used like ye, go! come! merely as a hortatory .exclam. 2. fo come or go | 1 he - pos — py. back, return, dyyediny orparod .. épxopévoto Od. 2. 30, cf. 10, 267; in full, abris, dy, wéduv €AGerv, 19. 533» 5441 etc.; also, olwoy éhevoerat 19. 3133 so, oixade, mpds olxov, Att.:—absol., Aves thou art come, 19, 401, etc.. II. c. acc. cogn., ddr or KéAcvBoy éAOciv to go a joumey, Il. 1. 151, Od. 9. 262; tyioiny dddv éAGely 3. 316; freq. in Att., as Aesch. Pr..962, Theb. 714; also, xara Ti abriy dddy Plat. Legg. 707 D; véoripov méda édGety (cf. Baive A. 1. 4), Eur. Alc. 1153: —also, dyyedinv, eealny eddciv (as we say) fo go a message, Il. 11. 140., 24. 235, Od. 21. 20. 2. c. acc. loci, to come to, arrive at, rare in Hom., ’AtSao dépous épxeat Il. 22. 483; epxerOov KArainy 1. 322; but freq. in later Poets, as Pind. P. 4. 91, Soph. Tr. 259, etc. ; so also Hat. 2. 24, 25:—also c. acc. pers., o& 5', @ Téxvov, 760° EApAUOEr nav. xparos Soph. Ph. 141: v. Baive A. II. 3. 3. c. gen. loci, medio.o éAdeiv through or across the plain (cf. diampacc, dadeonad Il 2. Sor; but in Att. from a place, ys Twos Soph. O. C. 5723 &« TlvAov Od. 15. 42 :—and of persons, dé twos from one, Plat. Prot. 309 B: to proceed or be produced from, Sei éx r&v mapivtav dya0ods dvipas éAGeiv Xen, An. 3. 2, 3. 4. c. dat. pers. to come to, i.e. to come to aid or relieve one, rare in Hom., Od. 16. 4533 but freq. later, Pind. O- 1.161, Aesch. Pr. 663, Thuc. 1. 13., 8. 19, etc. ; dmopodvre abT@ Epxerac Tpopndeds Plat. Prot. 321 C; also of evil, Aesch. Pr. 358, Pers. 440, etc.: v. inf. B. I. IIT. c, part. fut., to denote the object, épxoxat oigdpevos éyxos I go to fetch.., Il. 13. 256; Epxopar épopevn 14. 301; freq. in Att., waprupowy HAOov Aesch. Eum. 576, etc.; in: Eur. Med. 1303, Elmsl. restored éxowowv for éxoGoar; also, éAGeiv ds mowy- odpevor Xen., etc. 2. in Hat, like an auxiliary Verb, épxopat Aéfov Iam going to tell, I intend to say (as in French je m'en vais vous dire), I. By 2. 40.) 7. 102. 3.6, als; so, Epx. onpavéww 4.99; Epx. HyKuvéa 2. 3%;—tare in Att., Plat. Euthyphro 2 C, Theag.129 A; in Phacdo 100 B, épyopar émyerpav cor émideitacba, for épx. gor émbdegdpevos, v. Heind, 8. with part. pres., aor., or pf., in Hom., to shew the manner of moving, #\9¢ @€ovoea she came running, Il. 11. 715, etc. ; HAGE mepoBnuévos he went fleeing, he fled away, 10. 510; HAGE POd- pevos he came first, 23.7793; wexaptopévos éOciv Od. 2. 54:—Il. 18. 180 is remarkable, ai xév te véxvs joxuppévos €dAOp if it should come to be (i.e. be) mangled or insulted,—!ike venias for fias in Virg. G. 1. 293 hence the common Att. sense, fo end in being, come to be, turn out, Lat. evadere, exire, prodire. 4. the part. aor. €A@ayv is often added to, another Verb, od divapa.. payeoGar ehOdy go and fight, Il, 16. 521; xGOnpov €Ocuv come and cleanse, Ib. 668; so in Att., Aeyos dy eAOdv Aesch, Supp. 928; dpa viv rad’ &€XOuv Soph, Ant. 1107, cf. Schif. Aj. 1183. IV. of any kind of motion, é£ adds éAOety to rise out of the sea, Hom.; ént mévrov to go over it, Od. 2. 265; and specially qualified, miSecorv Epyxeabat to go on foot, 6. 40; mefds HAvoe went by land, Il. 5. 204, etc.; of birds, 17. 758, etc.; of ships, 15. 549, Od. 14. 334; of spears or javelins, often in Il.:—of natural phenomena, as rivers, Il. 5. 91; wind and storm, Il. 9. 6, Od. 12. 288; clouds, Il. 4. 276., 16. 364; stars, to rise, Od. 13. 94; time, eis 5 Kev €AOp vvE Il..14. 77, cf. 24. 3515, emiy EdOnar O€pos Od. 11. 1923; Eros HAGE I. 16 :—of events and conditions, eis 5 xe yijpas On Kal Odvaros 13. 59, cf. 11. 135 >— of feelings, to arise, dxos, ipepos HAGev Il. 22. 43. 24. 5143 of sounds, etc., Tov ..mept ppévas HAvd’ iwh 10. 149; Kvwdwma meph opévas HAvoe oivos Od. 9. 362; and without ppévas, mept 5é peas HAO lar 17. 261, cf. 16. 6; of battle, dudo’ FAGe paxn Il. 13. 337; of things. sent or taken, dppa xe BGpa ee KAroins EXOat 19. 191, cf. 1. 120:—so also in Att., e.g., of dangers, and the like, ef mdAw €A@cc 7H “EAAdSe wivduvos md BapBapay Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 433 pnd bn’ dvdryens ydpos €A0or Aesch. Supp. 1032, cf. Pers, 436, 4403; of reports, commands, etc.,: Id. Pr. 663, Thuc. 8. 19, 96, etc. :—els éavrdy @dGeiv to come to oneself, Ey. Luc. 15,17, Arr. Epict. 3. 1, 15. B. Post-Homeric phrases: 1. els Adyous épxec@ai tu to come to speech with, Hdt. 6..86, 1, Soph, O. C. 1164; so, és yey rut: eABeiv Hdt. 3. 42. . 2. eis xetpas €AGeiy Tivi (v. sub xelp IL. 3. 4); $0, €5 waxy edOcty Tin Hdt. 7. 9, 3; els dpyds tive Plat. Rep. 572 A: v. infr. 6, 3. emt peifov épx. to increase, Soph. Ph. 259; mav €\Geiv to try everything, Xen. An. 3. 1, 18. 4, és 7d Sewvdv, és Ta adyewva €Geiy to come into danger, etc., Thuc. 3. 45. 2. 393 «ls ToTOUTS Tivos dociv wore .. Plat. Gorg. 487 B, etc.; is 70 éoxaroy Id. Rep. 361D; door evraiea HAuwias AAOov arrived at that time of life, Ib. 329 B; és dobevis épx. to come to an impotent conclusion, Hdt. 1. 120; €s dpiOudry édeiv to be numbered, Thuc. 2. 723 «ls pura Twos EAOciv Anaxil. Neorr. 2; els €Xeyxov Philem. Incert. 8. 3, etc. 5. Tapa puxpdv &dOciv, c. inf. to come within a little of, be near a thing, Eur. Heracl. 296; so, map’ dA‘yov éAGeiy Plut. Pyrth. 10; mapa Tocov- TOV .. Ade kwdtvov so narrow was her escape, Thuc. 3. 49. 6. with 8:4 and gen., as emphatic periphr. for a Verb, e.g. dia pans rut epxerbar for paxeoOat rit, Eur, Hel. 978, Thuc. 4. 92; 51d moA€uov €pxeo0at for ToAepetv, Hdt, 6.9, Thuc. 2.11; dd pudtas tw pxeabar for qudety tia, bid meipas EpxeoOar for meipaabat, 5a pdvov, dud tupds «A, to slay, burn, etc., Valck. Phoen, 482, Br. Soph. O.'T. 773, like Lat. grassari rapinis, ferro, igne, ira; cf. bia A. IV :—but, of 5a wdvra Tov a éAnhuOdres who have gone through the whole circle of duties, iy fulfilled them all, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 15; di wodAA@y Kwdvvev EdAOdvTEs Plat. Alc, 1.142 A. 7. €pxeoOat mapa tiv yuvaika, tov dvdpa, of sexual intercourse, ¢o go in do her, to him, Hdt. 2. 115., 6. 68. Epxopevis, © or % (Kriiger Xen, An. 2. 5, 37, Poppo Proleg. Thuc. cap. 8), the same as ’Opxopevds, perhaps to be read in Hes. Fr. 15, cf. Schol. ‘Arat. Phaen. 45, C. I. 1569. a, It. Epes, as, 7}, (Zpma) a creeping, Plat. Crat. 419 D, Arist. P. A,r. 1, 7. €p@, dat. from €pos (q. v.), Od. 3 ; 7 A x €pw — eoay, €p& Att., Ion. and Ep. épéw, fut. of the rare pres. elpw (B); Att. opt. €poiny Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 14 :—from same Root, pf. act. elpnica, Att. ; plqpf. eiphxew Plut. 2,184: pf. pass. efpnuas Il., Att., Ion. 3 pl. elpéarae Hat. 7. 81: plqpf. eipyro Il,, Att.:—aor. pass. épphOny, later éppéOny (the former is always given by Bekk. in Plato, but éppé@nyv in Arist., as Categ. » 3), Ion. eipéOny Hat. 4. 77, 156: fut. pyOAcopar Thuc. 1. 73, Plat. ep. 473, Isocr. 173 E, Dem. 830. 10; but more commonly elpycopar, hardly used but in 3 sing. —qoerar, Il. 23. 795, Pind. I. 6 (5). 87, Soph. Ph. 1276, etc.—Hom. uses the fut. épéw; 3 sing. pf. and plqpf. pass., With part. eipypévos ; aor. part. pnOels in the phrase émt AnbévTe Sixaiy (v. infr.), and fut. pass.—The place of the pres. efpw (rare even in Ep. and never in Att.) is supplied by nyt, Aéyw or dyopedw; and eimov serves as the aor. (From 4/EP or FEP come also ép-opat, eip-w, fn-r6s, ph-rpa, pi-rwp, pR-pa; cf. Skt. bri, bra-vimi (logui); Lat. ver-bum; Goth. vaur-d (word), anda-waurd (ant-wort):—prob. also épéw (A), Epeciva, Epwrdw, also épevvaw, dapitw, eiphvn are connected with the Root.) I. I will say or speak, c. acc. rei et dat. pers., Hom. ; also absol., oS mdAuw épéet he will say nothing against it, Il. 9. 56; &v 8 ipiv épéw among you, Ib. 528, cf. Od. 16. 378 ;—then freq. in Att., épeiv apés twa, wept Tivos, etc. :—also c. acc. pers. to speak of, kakas épeiv Twa Theogn. 796, Eur. Alc. 705; and c. dupl. acc., épetv rid 71 Ib. 954, Plat. Crito 48 A :—Pass., p0os’. . elpnuévos éorw Il. 8. 524, cf. Od. 12. ult.; Alay elpyyévor too true, Aesch. Pr. 1031. II, I will teil, proclaim, éros, dyyeAtny Il. 1. 419, etc.; so "Hés is mentioned as Znvi pbws épéovea to announce it, Il. 2. 49; émt fnOévrt Sexalwy upon clear right, Od. 18. 414. 2. eipnuévos promised, prodds Hes. Op. 363, Hdt. 6. 23, cf. Schiif. ap. Seidl. Eur. El. 33; eipypévor, absol. when it had been agreed, Thuc. 1. 140. 8. to tell, order, c. dat. pers. et inf., Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 6, etc.; c. acc. et inf., Id. Cyr. 8. 3, 6 :—so in Pass., efpnré oi, c. inf., orders had been given him to do, Hdt. 7. 26, etc, III. in Pass. to be mentioned, otrot piv of mapada- Adgotor .. eipéarar Id. 4. 180. tpwStds, 6, the heron or hernshaw, Lat. ardea, Il. ro. 274, Simon, lamb. 7, Ar. Av. 886, etc.; also pwSiés, Hippon. 59 :—Arist. mentions three kinds: 6 éAAos, prob. the common heron, Ardea cinerea; 5 Aevkés, the egret, A. egretta; 6 doreptas, A. stellaris, the bittern, H. A. 9.1, 23: the épwiids which led the chiefs by night (in Il. 1. c.) was prob. the A. nycticorax, the night-heron or marabou. épwéw, fut. yaw: aor. Hpdnoa: (épar) :—Ep. Verb, to rush, rush forth, alya edad épanoe rept dovpt Il. 1. 303, Od. 16.441; hpwnoav ériccw, of horses, they started back, ll. 23. 433; ipa@noev ..’Apy& Theocr. 13. 74. 2. c. gen. rei, to draw back or rest from, épwnaa moAgpowo Il. 13. 776, cf. 7. 422; épanoovor dt ydpyns 14. 101; épenoav Kapdroro h. Hom. Cer. 302: also seemingly absol., vépos oiror’ épwet the cloud never fails from it, never leaves it (oxoméAou being supplied from the context), Od. 12. 75; i@ viv xara Aady "Ayaidy, pndé 7° Epwee (sc. tov tévac) Il, 2. 179 :—later c. acc. to leave, quit, Theocr. 13. 74., 24. 99. ° II. trans. to drive or force back, only once in Hom., T@ xe Kal écovpevdv rep Epwhoar’ amd yng Il. 13.57; but found in later Poets, as Theocr. 22. 174, Call. Del. 133, Q. Sm. 3. 520. €pwr, , Ep. Noun (used by Hom. only in Il.), any quick motion, rush, force, dvipos tpaf Il. 3. 62, cf. 14. 488; mostly of things, Soupds épw7 II. 357+ 15. 358; épon Berwv 4. 542., 17.562; Aetwero Soupds epwhy a spear's throw behind, 23. 529, cf. 21. 251; Aucepnripos épwn the force or swing of the winnower's (shovel), 13.590; merpdwv Ap. Rh. 4.1657; mupés Anth. P. 9. 490. 2. impulse, desire, wept Kimpw épan Ib. 10. 112, cf. Opp. C. 3. 175. II. c. gen. rei, a drawing back Srom, rest from, worepou & od yiyver’ Epw7 Il. 16. 302., 17. 761; paxns Theocr, 22. 192; Baxpvev Mosch. 4. 40: absol. escape, Dion. P. 6or. €pwpiivéw, to be mad for love, Opp. C. 3. 368, Anth. P. 5. 267. €pw-piiviis, és, maddened by love, Diod. Excerpt. 581.98 (as Vales. for &pwpeévny). 2. exciting mad love, pidrpa Orph. H. 54. 14. épwpavia, 9, mad love, Anth. P. 5. 47, 220, 255. Epwpénov, 76, a little love, darling, Anth. P. 11. 168. épapevos, 5, pwpévy, %, one’s love: y. sub épaw. épws, wros, 6: on the dat. épw for épwrt, v. sub épos; in Poets we have acc. €paw for épwra, Jac. A. P. p. 459 (9. 39): (€papar, épdw). Later form of the Epic and Lyric épos, Jove, mostly of the sexual passion (for. the Homeric passages, v. sub épos); pws OnAveparhs Aesch. Cho. 600; épws dvinare paxyav Krd. Soph. Ant. 781 sq.; Epwr’ épav Eur. Hipp. 32; épws tivds love for one, Soph. Tr. 433, Eur. lon 67; mpds twa Arist. H. A. 9. 48, init. :—generally, love of a thing, desire for it, tiwds Aesch. Ag. 540, Eum, 865, etc.; mepi 7 Plat. Legg. 782 E; mpds 7 Luc. Nigr. init. :—éxw ¢pwra twos Hat. 5. 32; epws éxee pe Aesch, Supp. 521, Soph.-Fr. 690; €pws éori pot, c. inf., Id, O. C. 368; epas ép- nimrer pot, c. inf., Aesch. Ag. 341, Thuc. 6, 24; els épwrd Tivos aucéoOat, €AGety Antiph. “Ydp. 1. 3, Anaxil. Neorr. 2:—in pl. loves, amours, Lat. amores, Pind. N. 3. 51, etc.; odx dorot ép. Eur. Hipp. 7643 epwres ends médews Ar. Av. 1316, etc. 2. the object of love or desire, dmpéaixror €pwres Pind. N. 11. fin., cf. Luc. Tim. 14. 8. in Soph. Aj. 693, of passionate joy, cf. ppiaow 1. 4. IT: as prop. n. the god of love, Eros, Amor, Anacr. 64, Soph. Ant. 781, Eur. Hipp. 525 sq., etc.; the oldest of the gods acc. to Hes. (v. €pos), cf. Parmen. 132;—in pl., Simon. Y16, etc.; cf. Horat. mater Cupidinum. “€pwrdprov, 74, Dim. of épas, a little Cupid, Anth. P. 11. 174. '€pwrda, Ep. elpwrdc, but contr. in Hom.,v. infr.: in Hdt. the Mss.vary between the contr. forms eipwrG, eipwraot, etc., (Hdt. 3. 119., 1. 67, al.), and elpwréew, etc. (Id. 4.145, al.): impf. jpwteav Thuc. 7.10, etc.; elpwra Od. 4. 251, cf 15. 423: Ion. eipwreov or -evy, Hdt. 4. 145., 3. 140:— 3 pl imperat, tpwravrwv- Antipho 137; 5 :—fut. how, etc, the usual J, 585 word in Att., supplying the defective tenses of époyat, the Ep. forms being épéw A, épecivw. To ask, Teva 7¢ something of one, & p eipwras Od. 4. 347., 17.138; elpwrds yw’ dvopa KAvrév 9. 364; b0° av a épwrd | Soph. O, T. 1122; ob rodr’ épwr® o° Ar. Nub. 641, etc. :—Pass. to be asked, 7« Plat. Legg. 895 E, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 3. 2. &p. tt to ask about a thing, Aesch. Pr. 226, Plat.Rep.508A; r« mept rivos Id. Theaet. 185 C; ép. épwrnua to ask a question, Id. Rep. 487 E:—Pass., 70 eparnbév, 7d épwrdpevov the question, Thuc. 3. 61, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 23, etc.; 7d Eumpoober iparnuéva Plat. Legg. 662 D, cf. Lob, Paral. 522. 3. foll. by a Relat. word, jpwra .. tis ein, nal rdBev EdOoe Od. 15. 423; €p.el.. or Hv.., toask whether .., Hipp.682. 46, Thuc., etc., (v. sub ovis); ép. }-., Aesch.'Theb. 182; mérepor.. Ar. Ach. 648; Oars Aesch., etc. II. to question a person, elpwrds p” édddvra Ged Oedv Od. 5.97; ep. wat edéyxew Antipho 144. 73 Twa dpi twos Eur, lon 236; ép. rov Gedy to interrogate him, Xen. An. 3. 1, 7, Mem. 1. 3, 1, etc. :—Pass. to be questioned, pwracat 0€dw Eur. I. A. 1130. 2. in Dialectic, as opp. to direct syllogistic argument, fo elicit conclusions from the opp t by of q ing, Arist. An. Pr. I. I, 3, al.; so interrogare in Cic. Fat. 28; hence later, to be con- cluded syllogistically (cf. cuvepwrdw 11), Luc. Hist. Conscr. 17. eee. in late Gr. =airéw, to ask, in the sense of begging, intreating, soliciting, ép. Twa Tt LXX (1 Regg. 30. 21, al.);. ép. Twa orev rt Ev. Luc. 8. 37, al.; ép. riva iva or Omws moh Tt Id. 7. 36., 7.3, al.3 €p. Twa tept Tivos Ev. Jo. 16. 26, etc. €parn, Dor. for épwra, 3 sing. impf. of épwrdw, Ar. Ach. 800. Epdarnpa, 74, that which is asked, a question, Thuc. 3.54; % mpos 7d ép. dméxpiors Ib. 60; 7a ép. Tod fuvOnparos asking for the watchword, Id. 7. 443 €p, mepi twos Plat. Prot. 336D; ép. épwrav, épécOat Id. Phil. 42 E, Rep. 487 E. II. a question for the purpose of eliciting a conclusion, Arist. An. Pr. 1.15, 8, Post. 1.12, 2, al.: cf. épwrd It. 2. Epwrnpatilw, to put questions, so as to elicit conclusions from your op- ponent, Arist. Top. 8. 1, 2. épwrnpariés, 7, dv, interrogative; in Ady. -x@s, Schol, Ar. Nub. 1225, etc. é ois, €ws, 7), a questioning, question, Piat. Prot, 312 D, al., Xen. Cyr. 8. 4,13, al.; &p. movefoOat Isocr. 171 A; Tivos about a thing, Plat. Theaet. 147 C. II. in Dialectic, an eliciting of conclustons by questioning, Arist. An. Pr. 1. 1, 3, al.: cf. épwrdw I. 2. épwrnréov, verb. Adj. one must question, Arist. An, Post. I. 12, 2. Epwrnticds, 7, dv, skilled in questioning, Plat. Crat. 398 E. II.. %) -kn), the art of eliciting conclusions by question, Arist. Soph. Elench. 11, 9. épwrids, ddos, 7, pecul. fem. of épwrexds, Anth. P. 9. 627. €pwridw, to be lovesick, Ach. Tat. 6. 20. épwridevs, éws, 6, a young Eros, Cupid, formed like Aayievs from Aayws: pl. éparidets, Anacreont. 26. *Epwridia (sc. iepa), 74, a feast of Eros, Ath. 561 E, Schol. Pind. O. 7. 154, and in Spartan Inscrr., C. I. 1429, 1430 (where Epwrideca and -aia). épwrilo, =tpwraw, Hesych. s. v. pwricor. épwrixés, 7, dv, of or d by love, tory, opyn, Adan Thuc. 6.57, 593 ép. fuvrvxia a love-affair, 1b. 54; ép. Adyos a discourse on love, Plat. Phaedr. 227 C; ép. wéAos a love song, Bion 15.2; mept ép. airiav Arist. Pol. 5. 4, 1:—rd épwrid love-matiers, Plat. Symp. 186 C, 193 E, al.; 7d ép. wept yuvaixas Plut. Cim. 4; also=’Epwridia, Plut. 2, 748 F: —} Epwriuch =Ta épwrika, Arist. Eth. N. 9. 1, 2. II. of persons, given to love, amorous, Plat. Rep. 474 D, al.: Comp. -wrepos, Xen. Symp. 4, 62: generally, fond of a thing, mpés 7 Plut. Demosth. 25: —Adv. -Kas, Thuc. 6. 54; &p. peraxetpi(ecOat twa Lys. Fr. 25 €p. di:ariPecOa Plat. Symp. 207 B; ép. xe Tuvds to be very fond of .. , Ib. 222 C; to be eager for, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 12. épadtiov, 76, = €pwrdpiov, Luc. Philops. 1f. €pwris, iSos, 4, a loved one, darling, Theocr. 4. 59. Adj., €pwrides vjcor, islands of love, Anth. P. 7. 628. épwrd-BAnrtos, ov, smitten by love, v. 1. in Eumath. épwro-ypados, oy, for writing of love, wérpov Anth. P. 7. 421. épwro-Seopm, 7), and -Secpos, 6, a bond of love, Byz. épwro-BtBacKiiAos, 5, 1), teacher of the art of love, Ath. 219 D. épwrées, ecoa, ev, loving, Hdn. Epim. 206. épwro-Kparnros, ov, mastered by love, Byz. Epwrodyntréw, fo captivate by love, Byz. : épwrd-Anros, ov, love-smitten, Lat. amore captus, Nicet. Eug. 6. 624. EpwroAnipta, 4, a being love-smitten, Suid. épwropiivew, = epwpavew, Stoic. ap. Stob. Ecl. 2.118, Poll. 3. 68. Epwro-pavis, és, =tpwpavys, Orph. H. 54. 14, Ath. 599 E. épwro-pavia, 7), =epapavia, raving love, Plut. 2. 451 E. épwro-ralyvov, 76, a love-play, amatory poem, Gell. 2. 24. épwro-mAdvos, ov, beguiling love, pOdyyos Anth. P. 7. 195. épwro-mAo€y, fo sail on love’s ocean, Anth, P. 5. 156. €pwro-troréopat, Pass. fo be made for love, Justin. M. p. 49. épwro-rékos, ov, producing love, Musae. 159. : épwro-rpddos, ov, the nurse ot mother of love, i.e. Aphrodité, Orph. Arg. 476, cf. 871. épwtvAos, 6, Dor. word, a darling, sweetheart, Theocr. 3. 7- If. as Adj., épwrvAa delSev to sing love-songs, Bion 3. 10, 13. és, Ion. and old Att. form of eis: all compounds must be sought under éia-, except a few Ion. and Ep. words which appear only in the form éo-. écayeipw, éodyw, v. sub eia-. écaet, for ever, v. sub det. écafpéw, Evakovte, etc., v, sub cic. éoaAro, v, sub elgadAopar. évav, Ep. and‘Ion. 3 pl. impf. of , eT XATOWY s—/ETEOSs Plat. Phaedr. 247 B, Rep. 361 A; ddvva: al éoy Id. Prot. 354 B; diyos écx. the worst democracy, Arist. Pol. 4. 11, Il. b. as Subst., 7d écxarov, Ta éoxara, the utmost, és 7d tox. kaxod dmxécOat Hat. 8. 52; rerptabat és 7d ox. kaxod Id.1.22; daxaprepéew és 7d éoy. Id. 7.107 ; én’ écxara Baives Soph, O.C. 217; mpoBaa’ én’ érxarov Opdaovs Id. Ant. 853; éa écx. €Adeiv dnbias Plat, Phaedr. 240 D, cf. Rep. 361 D, etce.; 0 navrov ., écxardv éor, maaxev Id. Phaedo 83 .C; Ta écx. moveiy Xen. Cyr. 8,8, 2; mar trois éox. Cnrodabat, extremis suppliciis, Plat. Polit. 297 E; éoxar’ éoxarov nana worst of possible evils, Soph. Ph. 65, cf. Philem. Incert. 87 (Meineke p. 423); so in Sup., 72 mévrow éoxarhrara madeiy the extremest.., Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 49; though this is not correct, as Arist. remarks, ob yap Tod éoxdrov écxardrepoy ein dv 7 Metaph. 9. 4, 4, cf. Phryn. 135 Lob. 3. of Persons, lowest, meanest, Diod. Excerpt, Vat. p.g, Dio C. 42. 5, Alciphro 3. 43: proverb., ovdels, ob8' 6 Mugay éoxaros, i.e. the meanest of mankind, Magnes Tloaorp. 1, cf. Philem. Sue. 3, Menand, Incert. 481 ; in Plat. Theaet. 209 B.it seems to mean the remotest of mankind, as in the proverb mpds éoxarnv Mvody in Paroemiogr. p. 38 Gaisf. 4. of Time, last, és 7d éox. to the end, Hdt. 7. 107, Thuc. 3. 40; €ox, mAods, vauriAla the end of it, Pind, P. 10. 45, N. 3. 393 éoxdras iméep pitas over the last scion of the race, Soph. Ant. 599; €ox. ‘EAAjvay, ‘Papatwy Plut. Philop. I, Brut. 44:—neut, éoxarov as Adv, for the last time, Soph. O. C. 1550; 70 écx. Plat. Gorg. 473 C. 5. in the Logic of Arist., 7a €oxara are the last or lowest species, i.e. particulars, individuals, Metaph. 2. 3, 5, cf. An. Post. 2. 13, 5, P. A. 1. 3, 20, al.; so, 7d éox. dropov Metaph. 9-9, 3, al.; 7d €ox. apxn ris mpdgews de An, 3. 10, 2, etc. b. 6 ox, Opos the minor term of a syllogism, Eth. N. 7. 3, 13. II. —Tws, to the uttermost, exceedingly, Hipp. 5.33; éox. SuapaxeoOa: Arist. H. A. 9.7,6; éox. ptdomwéAcuos Xen. An, 2.6, 1. 2. so, és Td €ox. =toxarws Hdt. 7. 229, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 33; els 72 ox. wdda Id. Lac. I, 2; also, 7d éoxaroy Plat. Gorg. 473, al. éoxXitéwv, dwoa, v. sub écxardw. €axefov, v. sub éxw. éoxnpariocpéves, Ady. part. pf. pass. figuratively, Basil., Gramm. €oxov, éoxopyy, v. sub éxw. écxov, impf. of *rydw, =cxdtw. ow, older form of efow, cf. eis and etow:—Comp., éowrépw rijs “EAAG5os Hdt. 8.66; Sup., ws écwrarw ris waoxddns Hipp. 783 C, cf. 276. 18. éowbev (elowdev only in Hipp. Art. 811 H, 812 A), rarely owe, Eur. Heracl. 42, (in Aesch. Cho, 800 éaw has been restored): Adv. :—from within, Hdt. 7. 36., 8. 37, and Att. 2. within, inside, Id. 1. 181., 2.36, Aesch. Ag. 991 :—c. gen., €owbev dvtpov Eur. Cycly 516: cf. ow. éowmn, }, (Gp) appearance, look, Opp. H. 4. 358. €omtatos, 7, ov, Sup. of €ow, innermost, Lat. intimus, opp. to ¢¢wraros, Philo 2.147, Joseph., etc.:—€o@repos, a, ov, Act. Ap. 16.24 :—v. sub ow, éowrepicds, 7), dv, inner, esoteric : the works of Aristotle were divided into the éowrepixd and the xowd nat éefwrepixd (cf. éfwrepixds), Clem. Al. 68; and Luc. Vit. Auct. 26 describes Arist, as presenting a twofold appearance (uépvyao Tov pev eowrepicdy Tov Be efarrepicdy Kadeiv) :-— but the word is not used by Arist. himself, and was prob. invented to correspond with éfwrepixds (q. v.), which he does use. éowréptov or éowddprov, 7d, an inner garment, Lat. interula, Salmas. Tertull. Pall. p. 409. écwrtépw, Comp. of gow, q. v. érafw, to examine, test, mostly in compd. é¢erdtw (for which it is v. 1. in Hdt. 3.62); but érd¢e (only for etym, purposes) Plat. Crat. 410 D; éra€ovat Polus ap. Stob. 105.47, aor. sub, érdons Anth.P. 7. 17., 12.135: —Pass., Lxx (Sap. 6. 7, al.). (V. sub éreds.) éraipa, Ion. -py, 7, v. sub éraipos It. ératpeta, 46, (often written éraipia in Mss., Soph. Aj. 682, Eur. Or. 1072, 1079, Thuc, 3. 82, Isocr. 56 D, Dem., etc., cf. dvSpeia), lon. qty: (éraipos). Companionship, association, brotherhood, rav #Auowréwv Hat. 5-713 ér. moreioOa, ovvaryety Isocr, 38 A, Plat. Rep. 365 D; papripay cweoraoa ér, Dem, 560.5; af Bots véyovra Kad’ éraipeias Arist. H. A. 9. 4. 2. at Athens, a political club or union for party purposes, Thuc. 3. 82, Lys. 125. 16, Isocr, 56 D, Plat. Rep. 365 D; éraipetat éx’ dpyxds Id. Theaet. 173 D; so at Carthage, 7a ovociria TeV ér., compared to the p:ditva at Sparta, Arist. Pol. 2. 11, 3, cf. 5. 6, 6., 5. ao: Ss II. generally, friendly connexion, friendship, Simon. 119, Soph. and Eur. ll. cc.; opp. to €x@pa, Dem. 851. 18. Itt. =€raipnots, Andoc, 13. 27, Diod. 2. 18 ;—Anaxil. Neorr. 2, combines signfs, 11, and 11, eratpet-dpxns, ov, 6, leader of a faction, Byz. €ratpeios, a, ov, Ion. Atos, 4, ov :—of or belonging to companions Zebs ér. presiding over fellowship, Hdt. 1. 44, Diphil, Bad. 1; pédvos ér. the murder of a comrade, Anth. P. 9. 519. II. amorous, ér, piddrns h. Hom. Merc. 58, cf. Anth. P. 9. 415. ératpevopat, Pass. to prostitute oneself, Diod. 12. 21, etc. ératpéw, to keep company with, Aeschin. 2. 42, al., Phoenicid, Incert. 1.2; tum with a man, Andoc. 13. 28, ete. ; girla érapodoa mere- tricious friendship, Plut. 2.62 D:—cf. mopyevw, and for the difference between them, v. Andoc. 8. 16, II. Med., =€ératpevopar, Theopomp. ap. Ath, 260 E, éraipyin, Eraipyios, 7, ov, Ion. for éraipela, Eratpeios,’a, ov. Talpnois, ews, %, (Erarpéw) unchastity, Aeschin, 2. 43, etc. éraipia, 7, v. sub éraipeia. érarpidpyns, 6, captain of the Imperial Guards, C. 1. 8903. Eratpidera (sc. fepd), 7d, tke festival of Zeds érarpeios at Magnesia, Heges. ap. Ath. 572 D. ératpiorov, Dim. of éraipa, Plut. 2. 808 E. 589 éraiplfa, fut. tow, fo be éraipos or comrade to atty one, c. dat., dvdpt éraipiooa: Il. 24. 335; of the Graces, h. Hom. Ven. 96. 2. trans. in Med, #0 associate with oneself, choose for one’s comrade, } Tivd mov Tpwav érapiccaro (Ep. for éraipicairo) Il. 13. 456, cf. Naumach. 55. II. =€raipevopa, to be a courtesan, in Act., Luc. D. Meretrs 8.2; in Med., Ath. 593 B. ératpixds, 7, dv, of or befitting a companion: 4 éraiptch companionship, Arist. Eth. N. 8. 5, 3., 8. 12, 1 sq., al. 2. 70 ératpicdy, = ératpeta 2, Thue. 8, 48; ér.. cuvdyew Hyperid. Euxen. 23; 7a éraipixd factions, clubs, Plut. Lysand. 5, Dio C. 37. 57; (also for the collegia of the Romans, Dio C, 38. 13). b. the bond of club-association, the ties of party, Thue. 3. 82. 3. inmos éraupixn a body of horse-guards of the Macedonian kings, Polyb. 16. 18, 7: cf. éraipos 1. 6. IL. of or like an éraipa, meretricious, yuv7) Plut. 2. 140 C, ete.: 70 ér. the cus- tom of éraipa:, Alciphro 2. 1:—soAdv.-«@s, Luc. Bis Acc. 20, Plut. Pomp. 2. ératpls, idos, 4,=<éraipa, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 6, Ath. 567 A, Anth. P. 6! 208 :—not good Att., acc. to Thom. M. 357. érapiopes, 6, (érarpi{w 11) harlotry, Ath. 516 B. éraiptoris, od, 6, a lewd man, Poll. 6.188: fem. ératplorpia, =7pi- Bas, Plat. Symp. 19 E. éraipos, Ep. and Ion, €r&pos (used by Aesch. Pers. 9go lyr.), 6: (for the Root, v.érys). A comrade, companion, mostly of the followers of a chief, comrades in arms, Il. 1. 179., 3. 259. 9. 658, etc.; also, a mess- mate, 17.5773 @ fellow-slave, Od. 14. 407, 413., 15. 307 sq.; of the suitors, 18, 350., 21. ¥00: joined with dynp, 8. 584, Hdt. 3. 95, Antipho 113.24; the Hom. epithets are éo@Ads, mords, pidos ér., epinpes ér.:— as a kind address to followers or servants, Il. 1. 179., 3- 259.) 9. 658., IO. 151, Od. 13. 266; and so, later, as a common way of addressing people, @ "raipe my good friend, Ar. Vesp. 1239; pid’ éraipe Theogn, 751; etc.:—c. gen. partit., Sacrds éraipe partner of my feast, h. Hom. Merc. 436; vuerds ér. Ib. 290; méatos Kat Bp@oros Eraipor messmates, Theogn. 115 ; also, ér. év mpaypyare Id. 116. 2. metaph. of things, €a0X0s éraipos, of a fair wind, Od. 11. 7., 12.149; POdvos.. ér. avipav Pind. Fr. 231; -yéAws ér. UBpews Plut. 2. 622 B; c. dat., Bloy.. roy copois érapoy Anth. P. 7. 470. 3. pupils or disciples were called the éraipo: of their masters, as those of Socrates, Xen. Mem. 2. 8, 1, al., cf, Arist. Pol. 2.12,7; so Democritus was the ér. of Leucippus, Id. Metaph. 1. 4,93 schoolfellows, Poll. 4. 45. 4. of political partisans (cf. éraipela 1. 2), Lys. 124. 14; of mept adrod ér. his club-mates, Dem. 521.12. 5. rarely of lovers, Sim. Mul. 49, Ar. Eccl. 913. 6. éraipot, oi, the guards, a body of horse in the Macedonian army, Polyb, ap. Ath. 194 E: cf. weCérarpor. 7. as Adj. associate in, 7d ém6u- parixdy Hdovav Eratpoy Plat. Rep. 439 D :—hence in Sup., tots cavrod éraipbrarovs your closest companions, Id, Gorg. 487 D, cf. Phaedo 89 D :—also, capdav yévos rérppow éraipoy constant to the rocks, Opp. H. 4. 267: absol. of animals, gregarious, Id. C. 2. 325. 7 éraipa, Ion. ératpy, Ep. rdpy [a], 7), @ companion, “Epis ..”Apeos . .: Kaovyvnrn erdapy re Il. 4. 441; pvca, poBov npudevros éraipn 9.2; pdp- pry .., Iv dpa Sarr? Geol roinoay éraipny Od. 17. 271, cf. Hor. Od. 3. 11, 6, h. Hom. Merc. 478; Nixnv, % xopua@y tari éraipa Ar. Eq. 589, cf. Plat. Rep. 603 B; mevia ou éraipa Theocr, 21. 16; TMoce- dadvos éraipn, of a submerged city, Call, Del. ror. 2. in Att. mostly opp. to a lawful wife, and so with various shades of meaning, from a concubine (who might be a wife in all but the legal qualification of citizenship) down to a courtesan, but distinguished from a aépvy, Anaxil. Neorr. 2; first in Hdt. 2.134, 135, and often in Com., v. Ar. Pl, 149, Ath. 571 C sqq. This indefiniteness of sense has caused the retention of the word hetaera, cf, Dict. of Antt. s. v. Hetderae:— Agpodirn was wor- shipped as ‘Eratpa, Philetaer. Képiv@. 1, Clem. Al. 33. Cf. ératpéw. éraipooivn, 7, =éraipeia, Paul. Alex. Apotel. p. 15. éraipdcvvos, 7, ov, friendly, a friend, Anth. P. 12.247. ératpo-tpbdos, ov, keeping mistresses, Manetho 4. 313, Eccl. érédaccas, v. sub *rAdw. érapiooatto, v. sub érarpi(w 1. €rapos, érdpy, Ep., and Ion. for éraipos, éraipn. €ras, acc. pl. of érns. . €raiots, ews, }, and éraopés, 6, (érd(w) both in Lxx, rare forms for éféracts, -acpds. So érarréov, =éferacréov, Tzetz,: rarris, = éfera- orns, C, I. (add.) 3641 b. 42, Suid.: Eraoruds, 7, dv, =eferaorinds, Eccl. érefj, Adv. of éreds, really, truly, Democr. ap. Galen. 3. p. 2; cf. Sext. Emp. P. 1, 214, Diog. L. 9. 72.—In Ap. Rh. 2. 1179, for the Ms. reading (Zedbs aire? ra Exact’ émbdépxerar) some read Zevs érep. éreOymea, v. sub ré0y7a. éreos, a, ov, (€ros) yearly, from year to year, Lat. annuus, GeOAca, Pind. I. 4. 114; ppoupa Aesch, Ag. 2; Sacpuds Eur. Rhes. 435: cf. émé- Tetos :—ereia as Adv., Lyc. 721. II. of one year, yearling, Xen. Cyn. 5, 14, cf. Valck, Diatr. p. 6. €rexov, v. sub Tinta, éreAts, 6, a fish, Arist. H. A. 6.13, 1: also évredus, edredis. *Ereo-Boutdbns, ov, 6, a genuine son of Butes, one of the hereditary priests of Athena Polias, Alex. Mupavy. 1. 3, Dem. 573. 10, v. Harp. :-— they are called Bovrdda: érvpor in C. 1. 666. N éreo-Bpbs, Bos, 6, an honest slave, Hesych.; prob. a mere y.1. «al « éredducwav (for kal xe reo Sudwv) in Od. 16. 305. *hreoxAéys, contr, —«Afjs, 6: poet. acc. "EreoxAéa (for —*Aeéa) Aesch. Theb. 1007 ; voc. ’EreoxAées Ib, 39: (éreds, wA€os) :—Eteocles. *Eveé-Kpnres, of, true Cretans, of the old stock, Od. 19. 176. éred-Kpt0os, 4}, genuine, good barley, Theophr. C. P, 3. 22, 2. éreds, 4, dv. (From 4/ET come also ér-vpos, ér-d{w; cf. Skt. sat-yas (werus), sat-yam (veritas) ; O, Norse sann-r, A. S. sdth (sooth)) :—true, 590. real, genuine, TOAN ered Il. 20,2553 i éredv Kédxas pavredverat truth, 2.300; ws éredy mep as the truth is, 14.125; and very often (esp. in Od.), ei éredv -ye if tis so indeed, cf. Spitan. Il. 14. 125. II. éredy, as Adv., in truth, really, verily, Lat. revera, eimé por et eredy ye pidnv els marpid’ ikdvw Od. 13. 328, cf. Il. 8. 423; ef 39 p’ éredy ye Kat Grpexéws dryopevas 15.53; el éredy.. popvqoKxopa rightly, Theocr. 25.173. ° 2. in Ar. always as an interrog., really, indeed, tell me, ove dxovcedd’ éredv.. ; Ach, 322, cf. 609; éredv ipyet yap Oeovs; Eq. 32, cf. 732; Th ody rodr’ early éredv; Nub.g3; ti Tour’ éyéXacas éreév; Ib. 820, cf. 1502; also alone in ironical sense, éredv; like GAnOes; so! indeed? Lat. itane? Av. 393: cf. dAnOys IT. 2, and v. éros (Ady.).—The masc. is not found; the fem. only in the Adv. éref, q.v.—Jo. Alex. tov, maparyy. p. 29. 5, also cites érd* dd rod érds.. , ds *érd Thuevidos xpiceoy yévos.’ érep-adkijs, és, epithet of Victory, giving strength to one of two; used by Hom. mostly in the phrase payns érepadxéa vixny victory in battle inclining to one side or the other, yiyvwoxe yw. ér. v. perceived that victory was inclining to the other side, Il. 16. 362; ofa Tidels Tpwecot, p. ér. v, a sign that victory was changing sides, 8.171; but, iva 51) - Aavaotan p. Er. v. BGs inclining to their Side, 7.26; so without paxns, Sidov érepadnéa vinnv 17. 627, Od. 22. 236; so, ér.”Apns Aesch. Pers. 951 (lyr.); and in late Prose, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 8, Ael. ap. Suid. 2. act., djpuos ér. a body of men which decides the victory, Ul. 15. 738; Avows ér. Nic. Th. 2; wodav ér. rapog, of a lame man, Nonn. D. 9. 230. II. inclining first to one side then to the other, doubtful, Lat. anceps, waxy Hat. 9. 103; and so, érepadkéws dyovifec@at ancipiti Marte pugnare, 1d.8.11; so, ud0ou ér. KAaryp@ Poéta ap. Luc. J. Trag. 31.—The same variety of sense appears in other compds., cf. érepoxAwv7s, érepoppemns, érepdppotos, Erephpepos. érep-dpOpos, ov, of different number, Phoeb. in Walz Rhett. 8. 503. érepax ew, = érepoxdAivéw, A. B. 38. Zé érep-axOns, és, loaded and leaning on one side, Cyrill. or —€w, to suffer in half the brain (cf. jpuxpavia), to be half-mad, crazy, Ar. Fr. 611, A. B. 37. érepadis, és,=érepoeidqs, Nic. Al. 84. érepypepta, 7, a living on alternate days, v.1. Philo 2. 189. Epos, ov, on alternate days, day and day about, (éuovo’ Erephpe- por, of the Dioscuri, Od. 11. 303, cf. Philo 2,189; of an intermittent ak Orph. Lith. ‘oan an ‘ pnpys. €s, (*dpw) = ens, Maxim. m. xarapx. 165. érépnot, Ep. dat. fem. of érepos. érepoBdpea, 7), a weighing down to one side, Hesych.: érepo-Bapys, és, weighing down one side, Eust. 1316. 26. trepofoudta, }, change of will, Cyrill.: érepé-Bovdos, ov, differing in will, Eccl. po-yaorptos, ov, by another venter, by another mother, opp. to dpo- yaorptos, Schol. Hes. Op. 347. éxepoyevéw, to be of another kind, Nicom. Ar. Introd. éxepo-yeviis, és, of different hinds, 7d ér., of animals, Arist. H. A. 8. 18,1, G. A. 1. 18, 24. II. ra é7., in Gramm., nouns which change their gender, as Saxrvdos, pl. SaxrvAa, etc., first perh. in Arist. Categ. 3, 2: Adv. -vds, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 361. AavuKos, cv, with one eye gray, Arist. G. A. 5. 1, 18. érepd-yAworros, Att. -rTos, ov, of other (i.e. foreign) tongue, Polyb. 24. 9, 5, Strabo 333; é éreyAdaaois Aadety by men of foreign tongue, 1 Ep. Cor. 14. 21. Adv. cows, Jo. Chrys.—Opp. to dpéyAwaaos. érepé-yvaios, 6, with one side of the mouth harder than the other, tmmos Xen. Eq. 1, 9.5 3s 5-1 9; 9 2 , to differ in so om in neo aA 283. 37. trepoyvwpooivy, %, difference of opinion, Joseph. A. J. 10. 11, 7. “ides tin atta ov, of augwos opinion, Cyrill., etc. érep6-yovos, ov, = érepoyevns, Hippiatr. érepo-Béornoros, ov, belonging to another master, Eccl. érepo-BtSaxros, ov, taught by another, Olymp. ad Plat. Alc. p. 11. - drepoBiSackaAlw, to teach differently, to teach errors, 1 Ep. Tim. 1. 3, Eccl. :—érepodiSackaAla, 7, a teaching of error, Eust. Opusc. 81. - o-BiSdoKados, 6, teaching error, Eus. H.E. 3. 32. érepodotéw, to be of a different opinion, to be heterodox, Plat. Theaet. 190 E, often in Eccl. tia, 4, a taking one thing for another, error of opinion, heterodoxy (cf. AA oBogla), Plat. Theaet. 193 D, Epiphan, etc. érep5-Sokos, ov, of another opinion, differing in opinion, opp. to dud- Sofos, Luc. Eun. 2: hence, 2. holding opinions other than the right, heterodox, opp. to 6p06dofos, Arr. Epict. 2. 9, 19, Joseph. B. J. 2. 8, 5, Eccl.:—Adyv. -£ws, in heterodox manner, Philostr. 559. 0-51) . ov, of eae power: 7d ét. difference of powers or faculties, Stob. Ecl. 1, 838. ; érepo-cOvis, és, of another tribe, foreign, Strabo 128, Clem. Al. 478. ixepo-edijs, és, of another kind, v.\. Arist. H. A. 2.17, 25, Plut. 2. 804 A: %, another kind, Theol. Ar. p. 8. trepb talon: ov, zealous for one side, leaning to one side, of the balance, Eust. Op. 345. 35:—Adv. -Aas, unfairly, Hes. Th. 544. II. zealous in another pursuit, Anth. P. 11. 216. érepotiiryéw, to be Erepdlvyos, to draw unequally, Apollon. Lex. v. ico- pdpor:—c. dat., ér. rots dmiorots to be yoked in unequal partnership with the unbelievers, 2 Ep. Cor. 6. 14, cf. erepiluyos. Erepoliynors, «ws, 7, discord, Nicet. 376 D:—but érepoluyla, %, inclination to one side, of the balance, Schol. Luc, Lexiph. 3. , ov, unevenly yoked, coupled with an animal of diverse éreparkys — éreponpdowros. declined; so Adv. —yws:—in Ady., also, differently, Procl. in A. B. 1164. 2. of the balance, leaning to one side, Pseudo-Phocyl. 13. II. yoked with another, i.e. double, Nonn. D. Lo. 348. érepé-fut, vyos, 5, 4, yoked singly, without its yokefellow, metaph., pare viv mod érepdlvya mepudety yeyernuévgy Ion ap, Plut, Cim. 16: cf. povdcué. II. foreg. 1, Nonn. D. 5. 148. érepo-BtAdys, és, flourishing on one side: of children of the same father, but different mothers, Byz.: opp. to duqubad7js. éxepo-BeAns, és, of different will, Damasc. (?) érep6-Onkros, ov, whetted on one side, Nicet. Ann. 171 C. érepd-Opoos, ov, of another language, Nonn. D. 2,172: contr. -Opous, ouy, Cyril. érepotos, a, ov, Ep. —dtos, 7, ov, Dion. P. 1180:—of a different hind, Hat. 1. 99., 2. 35., 4. 62; ér. 7.., Hipp. Vet. Med. 10; €r. tivds Ib. 11:—unusual, strange, Id. Acut. 384. Ady. -otws, Hipp. Acut. 390. érepordrys, 770s, 77, difference in kind, Plat. Parm. 160 D, 164 A. érepordw, to make of different kind, to alter, Hipp. Acut. 389, Plut. 2. 559 C; eis re Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 2,.1:—Pass. to be changed or altered, to alter, Hdt. 2. 142., 7. 225, Hipp. Vet. Med. 13, Fract. 762. érepolwors, ews, %, alteration, Arist. Phys. 4. 9,11, Mund, 6, 32. érepowtikés, 7, dv, alterative, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 70. érepo-kapmos, ov, bearing different fruits, of grafts, Hipp. 245. 34. érepoxivycta, %, motion by another, Procl. ad Plat. Alc. p. 225. érepo-Kivnros, ov, moved by another, incapable of self-motion, opp. to avroxivnros, Procl., Simplic., etc. érepoxAtvéw, to lean on one side, Symm. V. T., A. B. 38, Eccl. érepo-KAivis, és, leaning to one side, uneven, Hipp. Art. 795, Dio C. 57. 21; xwpilov ér. sloping ground, Xen. Cyn. 2,7. Adv., érepoxduvais éxew mpos HSovnv to have a propensity to it, Arr. Epict. 3. 12, 7. érepdkXtros, ov, («Alvw) irregularly inflected, of nouns, as ‘yuvi} yuvainds, Zeds Ards, Apoll, de Constr. 1075, etc.; of verbs, Id. de Pron. 22 Ady. —rws, Eust. 113. 41. epo-KAovéw, Zo shake to one side, Opp. C. 4. 2043 v.1. -KAwéw. érepo-nvers, és, half-dark, in twilight, Synes. (?): cf. érepopans. érepoxotria, 7, an exercise in which two parties are engaged, a game at ball, Cael. Aurel. 5. 11. ‘ &repo-korr0s, ov, double-edged, Anna Comn. érepo-kpavia, 7), a pain on one side of the head (cf. jpuxpavia), Archi- gen. ap. Gal., etc.; also érepo-kpdviov, 76, Galen, :—Adj. érepo-Kpavi- kés, 4, dv, liable to such pain, Antyll. in Matthaei Med. 309. érepd-kwoos, ov, deaf on one side, Gramm.,: erepoxwdéew, to be deaf of one ear, LXX (Sirac. 19, 27), but Lob. Phryn. 137 restores €0eAoK-. érepo-hektos, ov, said by another, Byz. érepo-Aetia, 7), another expression for the same thing, Eccl. érepo-Aoyla, 7, a different, i.e. false, speech, Symm. V. T. érepd-padXos, ov, woolly, shaggy on one side, Strabo 218. érepo-pdoyados xirdv, 5, a frock with only one hole for the arm, i.e. only coming over one shoulder, a servile garb, opp. to dudipaoxados, Poll. 7. 47: cf. Miiller Archdol, d. Kunst. § 337. 3- érepo-peyeBéw, to increase on one side, Artemid. I. 31. érepopépera, 7), inclination to one side, Suid., Phot. €repo-pepis, és, leaning to one side, one-sided, Bios Crito ap. Stob. 44. 8; dpiOpol ér.=érepopjnes, Theol. Ar. p, 63 Ast. 2. 7d Er. separation, Porph, ap. Stob. Ecl. 1. 838. erepoperpia, 7, difference of metre; trepb-perpos, ov, of different metre, both in Hephaest. 15. 3. érepo-pikns, es, with sides of uneven length, i. e. oblong, rect- angular, Xen, Eq. 7,14: érepdunnes, 76, a rectangle, Arist. Categ. 8, 35, de An. 2, 2, 2, Euclid. 2. of numbers, not square, i. e. produced by the multiplication of two unequal factors, as 6=3 x 2, Plat. Theaet. 148 A, Plut. 2, 367 F; opp. to iodwAevpos, Arist. An. Post. 1.4,3- Cf. Tpopnnns. erepopnkixds Adyos, 6, the ratio of the sides of a rectangle, Iambl. in Nicom. 133 A, erepo-p: ptos, ov, born of another mother, Schol. Lyc. 19; €repo- PyTwp, opos, 6, %, Schol. Ap. Rh. 4. 223. repopdAtos diien, #), (uodetv) a trial in which only one of the two parties appears, Paroemiogr. 299, Eust. 999. 63, Phot. érepé-popdos, ov, of different form, Ael. N. A. 12. 16, Philo 1. 655. érepo-ovata, %, difference of nature, Epiphan. :—érepo-ovctos, = érepov- aos, Eccl. éreporrdbera, %), (rideiv) counter-irritation, ap. Diosc. 2. 184. érepo-maxys, és, unevenly thick, EbAa Apollod. Pol. 27. érepé-morros, ov, =érepddofos, Eccl. - érepo-mAiivis, és, wandering hither and thither, Nic. Al. 243. érepo-mAarhs, és, of uneven breadth, Apolled. Pol. 26. érepé-m)oos, ov, contr. -mAous, ovy, lent on bottomry with the risk of the outward, but not of the homeward, voyage, dpytpiov Dem. 916. 3; Baveifew ér. rapyipov els “A@Hvas Id. 1291. 25; 7a ErepdwAoa (sub. apyvpia) Id, gog. 25, cf. Bockh P, E. 1. 178. A Tepd-mrvoor avdoi, of, uneven, double flutes, Anacreont.25 (49); 2 dub. orm, érepotroBéw, (érepémous) to go lame of one foot, Hippiatr. gs a ie ov, (wépmn) clasped on one side, of a woman’s dress, Call. r. 225, érepd-rrous, 6,4, with uneven feet, halting, Alciphro 3. 27, Philostr. 515. TEpoTpocuteEw, to differ in person, Gramm. irepo-mpbowmos, ov, differing in person, and Adv.-mws,Gramm. IT. oxijpa ér., when a statement is made in the words of another, Phoebamm. t f * “ei Levit. 19. 19), cf. Deut. 22. 10):—in Gramm. differently in Walz Rhett, 8. 504: Adv. -mu«eds, Gramm, e , e , eTEpOTTOALS — eTEpoppovpyros. trepo-rroXs, 6, 7, of another city, Erinna 4, Nonn. D. 26, 41. b-1rwT0s, ov, in a different case, Apollon, de Pron, 11 C. trepoppémesa, 7), a leaning to one side, Poll. 8. 14. érepoppetréw, to lean to one side, Plut. 2. 1026 E. érepop-pemns, és, act. making now one side and now another preponde- rate, Zevs Aesch, Supp. 403. IL. =érepépporos, of patients in the crisis of a disorder, Hipp. 399.553 so, ér. (gTnwa Hermog, Ady. ~t@s, Poll. 4. 172. érepop-pomia, 7), = Erepoppémeca, Poll. 4. 172. érepdp-pomos, ov, (also 7, ov, in Hipp. Epid. 1. 939, but prob. wrongly), inclined to one side, of the balance, ér. émt yy dpixéo@ar to come down on one corner, unevenly, Hipp. Art. 808 ; é7. émappara swellings on one side, Id. Epid. 1. 938; of crippled limbs, Id. Offic, 748; Oey ér. daipa gifts that may prove either good or evil, Rhian.ap.Stob. 54.4. Adv.-mws, Poll.8.13. érepdp-puOpos, Dor. -pucpos, ov, of different rhythm, Galen., Hesych. repos, a, ov; Dor. ei [4], Koen. Greg. 304 :—but Grepos [a], Att. crasis for 6 Erepos, Ion, ovrepos, Hdt. 1. 34, etc., Dor. &repos, Theocr. ; neut. @4repov Att., Ion. rovrepov Hdt. 1. 32: pl. drepor, for of érepo, Arist. Pol. 1. 6,4; Odrepa, Att.: gen. Oarépov, Att., Ion. tovrépov Simon. Mul. 113, Dor. @arépw Tim. Locr. 94 A, or Owrépw Epich.: dat. @arépy Aesch. Pr. 778: fem, nom. d7épa or (in Mss. of Soph. O. C. 497, Ar. Lys. 85, 90, #répa): dat. @drépg Soph. O. T. 782, Tr. 272, Eur., etc. (in Mss. sometimes Onrépq), Ion. ryrépy Phoenix ap. Ath. 495 E.—Later and less correct writers used a nom. @a7epos, even with the Art. 6 @drepos, % Oarépa, Menand, Incert. 200, Lyc. 590; @arépay, Oarépwy, etc., Joseph., and Eccl.; cf. Valck. Hipp. 349, Piers. Moer. 432. (From 4/ANT, cf. Skt. ant-aras; Goth. anp-ar; Icel. ann-arr, pl. adrir; Germ. and-ere, etc.: in Lat. alt-er the n has been changed, and has disappeared in A.S. od-ar (oth-er), as in €r-epos.) I. the other, one of two, in which case (except in Poets) the Article is commonly added ; often of one of the hands, cxap eyxos é€xav, Erépyge 5t Adfero mérpov ll. 16. 7343 TH érépn wev.., TH 8 érépp.., 14. 272., 21. 71, Od. 22. 183, cf. Xen. Cyn. 10, 11; yxeept érépp with one hand, Il. 12. 452, Od. 10. 171, (but xelp érépy commonly of the left hand, v. infr. IV, I); so of the other parts ‘hat go in pairs, érépoto 5d xporapao Il, 4. 502; xwAds 8 érepov wéda 2. 217, cf. Ar. Eccl. 162, Dinarch. 100. 353 dupdrepa ai yvador, 4% érépa Xen. Eq. 1, 9; 6 ér. Tay dpOadpav Dion. H. 5. 23; eis yévu Oarepor Philostr. 843 :—then of all persons or things of which there are two, Lat. alteruter, Il. 5. 258, etc.; Ti ér. TvAnv one of the two gates, Hdt. 3. 156; ravde rd érepa Id. 4.126; Toivd od dbvoiv .. rov ér. Eur. Phoen. 951; 6 &r. rav orpatnyav one of the two.., Thuc. 4. 43; Svoiv dyadoiv 7d ér. Ib. 28; 7d Er. roiv dvoiy raxotv Id. 7.24; dvoiv Odrepov, }..,%.., Plat. Theaet. 187 B; 7o érépy 7} aeaetioas Id. Gorg. 475 A:—in pl. one of two parties, the one or other set, Lat. alterutri, Od. 11. 258; Trav Erepot ye maida KAav- aovrat one set of parents, either mine or thine, Il. 20. 210; érepoiat +e vixny (or «v5os) dodvar Il., etc.: often with negat., o¥8 repo 11.71: cf. obdérepos, pndérepos. 2. in double clauses érepos (in Prose always 6 €repos) is repeated, v. sub init.; érépw pev Sovpt.., TO 8 érépp 21.164; Tov Erepov, érepoy 5€.., Od. 5. 265; Er. Aevedy, érépny Be pédatvay Il. 3. 103; Erepor pev edwxe marnp, erepor 3 dvé- vevoe 16. 250; and so in all later authors:—é€vepos is sometimes omitted in one clause, didwor [repos piv] naxav, Erepos 5& edwy 24, 528, cf. 7. 420; } wev.., % 8 érépn 22, 149; Erepos.., 6 5€.., Od. 8. 3743 repos pév.., GAdos 5é.. one.., but any other.., Il. 9. 313, 472, cf. Thuc. 4. 61, Plat. Rep. 439 B, Theaet. 185 A; and reversely, GrAw dopxnaotiv, érépy KiOapw [édwxer] Il. 13. 721, cf. Od. 7. 123; Tore pev Erepa.., dAAore 5¢ GAAa.., Plat. Alc. 1.116 E; 6 Erepos.., 6 Aomés.., Xen. An. 4. 1, 23; €repa.., 7a 5é.. Soph. O. C. 1454; and in late Prose, fs pév.., €repos dé... 8. often repeated in the same clause, é érépay érep’ éoriv one depends upon the other, Od. 17. 266; 4 8 érépa ri érépay [KvAig] Oeirw let one cup push on the other, Alcae. 41; 7) Oarepov def dvorvyxeiv 4 Oarepov one party or the other, Eur. Ion 849; €repor érépwv dpxovat the one rule the other, Thuc. 2.64; Erepos dp’ érépou eOvnoxoy Id. 2, 51; ef ris te Erepos érépov mpopéper Id. 7. 64; fuppeyvupévaw érépwy érépors Ar. Av. 701; also, ovppopa érépa érépous méCet one calamity oppresses one, another others, Eur. Alc. 893; and even thrice, érépa 3 repos repoy dABy Kal Suvd- pee maphrGer Id. Bacch, 905, cf. Soph, O. C. 231; so also, GAAn 8’ els érépnv dduptpero Ap. Rh. I. 250. 4. also like Lat. alter, = Sevrepos, second, 7 piv .., hd erépy .. , 7} 52 tpirn .. , Od. 10. 352 8q., cf. 13. 67 sq., Il. 12. 93 sq., 16. 179, Hdt. 7.57, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3, 22: % érépa (sc. Huépa), the second day, i.e. day after to-morrow, Ib. 4. 6, 10; (cf. mpéraais). b. so with Pronouns of quantity, récco 8 avd’ €repot as many more, Hes. Th. 367; érepov rocovro another of the same size, Hdt. 2.149; érépov rogovrov xpévov for as long again, Isocr. 72D; ér. roatra other things of like kind, Hdt. 1.120, 191; Tovodros ér. just such another, Id. 3. 47, cf. 1. 207., 2.53 7@ abT@ rpdmy .. TO érépy in the same way over again, Id. 2.127; GAAa Te ToLa06’ Erepa pupla Ar. Fr, 313; xiAtas érépas (Spayeuds) Dem. 1323. 20; devrepos, Tpiros, térapros €r. yet a second, third, fourth, Id. 643. 18., 644. 171, etc. ; so, €repor abrot second selves, Arist. Eth. N. 8. 12, 3; evpyKe Tov ér., Tov oé Menand. “Tpy. 4; 6 éraipos ér. éyw Clem. Al. 450. II. put loosely for dAAos, Lat. alius, another, of many, but always with a sense of difference, in which case the Article is never added, Il. 4. 306, Od. 7. 124, etc., and often in Att., Ar. Ach. 422; €r. Tis Id. Eq. 949, Pax 274, Plat., etc.; érepa drra Id, Theaet. 188 B; repeated, érépay xdrépay Tptkuptay Menand. Incert. 7; €7. av or are again another, Ar. Lys. 66, Pax 295:—in Att. with a negat., ola obx érepa .. [éyévero] such as none 591 mporépwy Id. 7. 70, cf. 29, Plut. 2. 671 B, etc. III. other than usual, different, repos 5€ pe Oupds Epuxev Od. 9. 302; 7d pev Erepov, 70 8 ér., i.e. they are both different, Plat. Meno 97D, cf. Rep. aah: ér. Te nat dvdpo.ov Id. Symp. 186 B; 10 tabrdv Er. dxopaivew Kai 7d ér. rabrév Id. Soph. 259 D; ér. wat obx 6 airés Dem. gII. 7, etc. :— with dAdos, xarépous dAAous mévous and other different toils, Eur. Supp. 573» cf. Or, 346, et Dind. ad l.; ‘Pédoy wat dAdAas méAas érépas Dem. 198, 21; érepov 76 7 GAyeiv Kal Oewpeiv éor’ tows Philem, Ste. 1; érepa ppovav nat dnunyopay Dinarch. 92. 23:—c. gen., other than, different from, pidous .. érépovs tav viv dvrwy Thuc, 1. 28, cf. Plat. Prot. 333 A, Dem. 142. 26; also, érepov 7 .. , Eur. Or. 346; so followed by mapa (beside), mapa mavra Tatra érepov Plat. Phaedo 74 A, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 2; repa etd mapa povapxiay Arist. Pol. 4. 8, 10, ef. 3. 15, 13. 2. other than should be, other than good, euphem. for raxdés, as Lat. alius or seqguior for malus, madeiv piv ev, mabeiv 5¢ Oarepa Soph. Ph. 503; dya0a 7) Odrepa, iva pydtv eimw pdaidpoy Dem. 597. 3; but also absol., Saiuwy ér, Pind. P. 3.62; Ovoia Aesch. Ag. 151; Aéx7pa, ovpdopai Eur. Med. 639, H. F. 1238; wAgov Oarepoy moreiy more evil, Isocr. 389 D, cf. Plat. Phaedo 114 E, Euthyd. 280 E, Dem. 1175. 19; v. Bentl, Op. p. 21, Valck. Diatr. p. 112. IV. Special Phrases : 1. elliptical, mostly in dat. fem., a. TH érépa (sc. xetpt), Ep. 7H érépn or érépngi, with one hand (v. sub init.) ; with the left hand, Il. 18. 477, Od. 19. 481, Theocr. 24. 45; hence proverb., 77 érépg AapBavew to get with little trouble, Plat. Soph. 226 A; érépnge (not —n¢gu, v. Gottl.) Hes. Op. 214 :—also, é« 8 érépys Ap. Rh. 1. 1115, Anth, P. g. 650. b. (sub. #épq) on the next day, Soph. O. T. 782, Odrépa Eur. Rhes. 449'; 7H érépq Xen, Cyr. 4. 6, Io. c. (sub. 650) in another or a different way, Soph. O. C. 1444: another way, TpémecOat Ar. Nub, 812; érépa mn Id. Eq. 35; 167° GAdoo’.., Odrépg 5¢.. Soph. Tr. 272; Odrépa.. , Oarépq.., in one way .., in the other .. , Henioch. Incert. 1. 16 :—also in acc., érépay éxrpémec@a Luc. Timo 5. 2. Adverbial with Preps., a. ént Oarepa to the one or the other side, one or the other way, émi Odrepa piv .. , én 0. 5é.., Hipp. 783D,E; rére pev ént Oarepa, tére & ént 0, Plat.Soph.259C; also with another Prep., és 7a ént Odrepa to or on the other side, Thuc. 1.87; é« rod ént Oarepa from the other side, Id. 7. 37; &« pev Tov émt 0., é St Tod ent 0. Plat. Prot. 314 E:—c. gen., és rd én 9. ro} morauod Thuc. 7. 84; els ram 6. THs méAews Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 7; 7d emt Odrepov ris pds Hipp. 802 Cc. b. xara Oarepa on the one or other side, nara 0. dards Dem. 1307. 24, cf. Plut. Brut. 51, etc. :—but, «a6” érepa at other points, Thuc, P42: V. Adv. érépws, in one or the other way, opp. to dpudpo- Tépws, Plat. Theaet. 181 E; ér. re wat ér.=dpporépas, Id, Phaedr, 235 A; ét. éxew rod oxédous =érepooxeArs eivat Philostr. 129. 2. otherwise, not well, ér. €BddovTo or EBdAovTO Od. 1. 234 (where Spitzn. and Nitzsch prefer érépwoe Bddovro) ; nor is it common in later Poets, Soph. Ant. 687 (as Herm.), Theocr. Ep. 10. 3; ér. €xewv to be different, Ar. Pl. 371 :—more often in Prose, ds ér., in some way else, Hipp. 800 D, Plat. Soph, 266 A, etc.: édv Te Kad@s, éav 6 ws ér. Dem. 254. 7, cf. 298. 22 :—c. gen. differently from, ér. nws Toy elwbdray Plat. Polit. 295 D; ér. frep.., Ael. N. A, 12, 28. érepo-onpavros, ov, of different signification, Eust. 1411. 43. Ady. ~—Tws, Schol. Hes. érepo-oxeAns, és, with uneven legs, Hippiatr.; of a triangle, Poll. 4. 161. érepdoxtos, ov, (oxida) throwing a shadow only one way (at noon), of those who live north and south of the tropics, Posidon, ap. Stob, 135, cf. 133: v. duplomos, mepionos. érepdc-cvros, ov, darting from the other side, Nonn. D. 38. 244. érepb-ororxos, ov, belonging to the other line or row, Zonat. érepd-oropos, ov, one-edged, méAexus Poll, 1. 137. II. ér. $a- Aayé having its officers half on one side, half on the other, Arrian. Tact. 29. 3. éreps-orpodos, ov, consisting of different strophés, Hephaest. 9. 3. érepo-cxnparioros, ov, differently formed: 70 ér. an irregular form of syntax, Phoebamm. in Walz Rhett. 8. 503. ages érepo-oxqpov, ov, of different shape, Theophr. H. P, 1. 10, 1, Luc, Hist. Conscr. 51:—later -oxnpos, ov. érepo-rayns, és, belonging to a different order, Eccl. érepérns, Tos, 4, generic or essential difference, whereas d.apopa is specific, Arist. Metaph. 9. 8, 3, cf. 4. 9, 4.5 9. 3) 7: érepotpotréw, to be of other manners, Eccl. érep6-tporros, ov, of different sort or fashion, kaxdv Ar. Thesm.724; ‘ya- Aedv Er. HdAG Opp. H. I. 37: II. turning another way, uncertain, ‘rixns ér. Spyh Anth. P.g. 68, ef, Nonn. D. 2.669., 7.7. Adv.—mws, Eccl. érepd-rpodos, ov, differently brought up, Synes. 22 A. érep-ovas, 6, 1), 76, one-eared, one-handled, An, Ox. 2. p, 7. 22, Eust. 870. 2: but v. Lob, Phryn. 658. evdnriv, Ivos, 6, %, with beautiful rays, Arcad. p, 103, E. M. 491.50. . evadaloveutos, ov, easy to brag of, Arist. Rhet. 2. 15, 2. evaAd«aros, ov, Dor. for eiy7A-, Theocr. 28. 22. ebaddis, és, (dAdalvw) well-grown, luxuriant, Anth. P. 9. 325, append. 50. 24 :—Adv. —éws, Hipp. Lex. II. act. fertilising, Arat. 217, Plut. 2.664 D: nourishing, Nic. Al. 543: cf. evapons. etadOys, és, (GAbw) easily healed, Hipp. Art. S04;—Comp., Ib. 831. IT. act. healing, Nic. Al. 326. evdAvos, ov, Dor. for edvAcos, Eur. evadkns, és, (4A«q) stout, Numen, ap. Clem. Al. 411. edadAolwros, ov, (4AAotdw) easily changed, Galen. i etadors, és, (dAcos) with beautiful groves, Strabo 152. ebdAdtros, ov, of good meal, Anth. P. 7. 736. ev-ahwota, }, (dws) filling the threshing-floor, of Demeter, Hesych. evddwros, ov, easy to be taken or caught, Xen, Cyn. 9, 9, Plat. Phaedr. 240 A, Demetr. Incert, 2; id mévrov bd Kodaxeias edad, Plut. Crass. 6; ov58 iy’ Hdovis, ob8 ind déous edGA. Id. Sertor. 10; edad. els or mpos 71 easily led away to... , Ib. 11, etc.; evdd. els Td pupetoOat easily led to imitate, Id. 2.334 D:—Comp. —érepos, Luc. Abdic, 28; irreg. evadov- arepos, Alciphro 2. 1, doubted by Lob, Paral. 39. Adv.—rws, Philo 1, 129. evapeple, evdpepos, Dor. for ednu-. eddpmeAos, ov, with fine vines, Strabo 152, 247, 269:—epith. of Dionysos, Anth. P. 9. 524. evdv [4], evan, a cry of the Bacchanals, like eda, evot, Eur. Tro. 326, Luce. Trag. 38.—Acc. to Hesych., an Indian name for ¢he ivy, which was sacred to Bacchus, evavayvworos, ov, easy to be read, Arist. Rhet. 3. 5, 6. evavdywyos, ov, easy to expectorate, Diosc. 3. 44. edavadiSdnrws, Adv. so as to be easily taught, Suid. evavaSoros, ov, easy to distribute, Ath. 26. A; or, to digest, Diphil. Siphn. ib. 356 B (v. 1. edamddorov). evavakAnTos, ov, easy to call out, of the names of dogs, Xen. Cyn. 7, 5- II. easy to recal, mpds 7d Kowvdv oupépov Plat. Cim, 17; ebay. éavrdv mapéxew Id. T. Gracch. 2 —Ady., evavakaAntas éxev mpds twa. Id. M. Anton, 1. 7. evavax , ov, easy to bring back, Plut. 2. 458 E, Galen. evavédnmros, ov, easy to recover, Strabo 24 :—easily, comfortably sus- pended, of fractured limbs in a sling, Hipp. Fract. 779; Ady. —Tws, Id. Offic. 743. II. act. easily taking in, of good capacity for, dperijs Stob. Ecl. 1. 220. evdvadwros, ov, easily consumed, tpevvat Arist, Plant. I. 1, 4. evavapvyoros, ov, easily remembering, Hierocl. Pyth. 80. 7. evavanvevoros, ov, easy to repeat in a breath, défis Arist. Rhet. 3.9, 5- evavacrpodos, ov, easy. to turn back, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 230. evavdodadros, ov, quickly recovering, Hipp. 382. 11. evavatunros — Ev Baa. evavatpyros, ov, easy to cut, Galen. 4. p. I0T. evavarperrros, ov, easy to upset, Cic. Att. 2.14, 1, Eccl. evavarpodos, ov, well-fed, Schol. Lyc. 307. evavipéw, to abound in men, Strabo 46, etc.; ebayd. woAAF HArKig Plut. Cato Ma. 26:—Med., Scymn. 249, Ocell. 4. II. to be in full vigour, Plut. Camill. 8, App. Syr. 37. evavSpycia, late form for sq., Hdn. in Boiss. Anecd. 246. evavipla, 7, abundance of men, esp. of good men and true, ob8é eday- dpia év GAAq wéde Spota nowhere else such store of goodly men, Xen. Mem. 3. 3, 12, ubi v. Schneid.; in pl., wAnpwudrow evavdplas by the crews being able-bodied men, Plut. Pomp. 24:—at Athens there was a contest for ebavdpia, Dinarch. ap. Harp.; evavdpig vuxay Andoc. 34. 29; év rais ebavdpias Ath. 565 F, ubi v. Schweigh. II. manhood, manliness, manly spirit, Eur. El. 367; 4 8 ebavdpia ddaxrdv éore Id.Supp. 913; Tapackevacey mpos evavdpiay to train to manly spirit, Antig. Rex ap. Diog. L, 7. 7. evavdpos, ov, (4vip) abounding in good men and true, Tyrtae. 12. I, Pind. P. 1.77, Eur. Tro. 229, etc.; evavdpordrn médts Plut. 2. 209 E. II. prosperous to men, cuppopat Aesch. Eum, 1031. eddvepos, Dor. for ebjvepos. eddveros, ov, (dvinut) easy to dissolve, Diosc. 5. 152. ebdvOepov, 74, a plant like chamomile, Hipp. 625. 54. ebdvbepos, ov, flowery, blooming, Pind. O. 1.109, Anth. P. 4. 1,9. evavPéw, to be flowery or blooming, Luc. V.H. 2.6: metaph, to be over- grown, Hipp. 595. 42., 653. 29. edavOis, és, (dvO0s) blooming, sprouting, muxdoat Te yévus edavOei AG- xvp Od. 11. 320: v. sub oivdy67 1. 3. II. rich in flowers, flowery, dypot Theogn. 1200; Amo: Aetudvow Ar. Ran. 373: decked with flowers, Pind. P. 2. 113. 2. flowered, gay-coloured, gay, bright, xpapa Plat. Phaedo 100 C, cf. Arist. Color. 2, 3 and 5; éo67s Luc. Rhet. Praec.15; Bagpat Ael. N. A. 16. 41; moppvpa Anth. P. 6. 250; 70 edavés Tov dpyibos its bright colours, Ath. 399 A. III. metaph. blooming, fresh, goodly, OdBos Pind. I. 5 (4). 16; of persons, iaAcsia Ib. 7 (6). 48, cf. O. 6. 144, Ar. Nub. 1002; eb. dpyf a goodly, noble temper, Pind. P. 1. 173; év GAup .. evavdeorépa in fresher brine, Sotad. "EyxA. 1. 21. . ebdvios, ov, (dvia) taking trouble easily, Hesych., who also adds the expl. meOjv10s, confounding edaros with ebavios (Dor. for edjr0s). evavopta, 7%, Dor. for ednvopia, evavréw, to meet graciously, c, dat., Call. Dian. 268. eddvrys, €s,=sq., opp. to duedvrys, Ap. Rh. 4. 148. eddvrytos, ov, (dvrdw) easy to meet, accessible, gracious, Oeds Anth. P. append, 283. II. acceptable, d-ypn Opp. C. 2. 488, cf. H. 2. 149. evdvrut, ios, 5, 4, of a chariot, with beautiful dvrvf, Suid. II. Jinely vaulted, of a building, Paul. Sil. Ecphr. 121. evdvp [4], opos, 6, %, Dor. for edfvap. evagtos, ov, easily broken, Geop. 10. 57. evamddAakros, ov, easy to part with, tmmos Xen. Eq. 3,1; ebawaddan- térepov 1d8os Arist. Probl. 5.22. Adv. —rws, Aen. Tact. p. 50 Or. evatravrnota, 4, affability, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2. 441 B. evamdvrntos, ov, =eddvrnros, Clem. Al. 858, C. I. (add,) 21 39 b. 26. etandptictos, ov, well-finished, perfect, Schol. Eur. Hipp. 362. evimdrnros, ov, easy to cheat, Plat. Phaedr, 263 B, Bias ap. Stob. 221. 46, Arist. Insomn. 2, 16, al. II. act. cheating readily, Id. H. A.9. 1, 7. eva ‘os, ov, Ion. for evapnynros. ebambBaros, easy to disembark on, vijcos evawoBatwrépa Thuc. 4. 30. ebanbBAnros, ov, easily lost, Simplic. etaméSeros, ov, easily proved, probable, Eccl. _ ebamdbSexros, ov, acceptable, Schol. Il, 2. 2 35- Adv. -rws, Eccl. evamodetia, ), friendly conduct, Theod. Stud. evard5oros, ov, easy of digestion, v. sub evavddoros. solution or explanation, cited from Strabo. evatéxptros, ov, easy to answer, Soran. Ady., —Tws Exe mpds Tt to have an easy answer .. , Artem. 4. 6 evarokvAtoros, ov, easy fo roll off, Galen. 4. p. 471, 538- ‘ ebarrohdynros, ov, easy to excuse, Strabo 463, Plut. Ages. 18. ebaréAvros, ov, easy to be separated, twos Hipp. Mochl. 842; and tivos Id. Art. 792, Arist. H. A. 4. 4, 30. ebatrovimros, ov, easy to wash off, A. B. 817. ebatrémvoos, oy, easily evaporating, Theophr. Odor. 42. evarémrwros, ov, easily falling off, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 3- ' edaméppiros, ov, easily flowing away, Hipp. Fract. 770. ebaréaBeoros, ov, easy to extinguish, Artemid. 1. 74. evambceorws, Adv. so astobe easily shaken off, Sebel BA gl ig evanéoracros, ov, easy to be torn from, GAAfAav Arist. H. A. 5. 18, 4. ebatrorelxioros, ov, easy fo wall off, easy to blockade by lines of cir- eumvallation, Thuc. 6. 75, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 31. etarédutros, ov, easily escaping, slippery, Schol. Ar. Ran. 826. ebapins, és, watering well, Plut. 2, 912 F; prob. f.1. for evaddqs. eakos, v. sub evapeoros. ebdpeoréw, opp. to duc-, to be well pleasing, rw to one, Diod. 14. 4: —Pass. to be well pleased, ri with a thing, Id.; dwoxpioes ebapeorov- Hevat satisfactory answers, Id. 17. 113. II. intr. =Pass., Lysipp. Incert. 1, Dion. H. 11. 60. pLos, a, ov, propitiatory, Ovotat Dion. H. 1. 67. eiptaryors, ews, %, a being well pleased, mpds Thy Kkowhy evap. ac- cording to the pleasure of the public, Dion. H. ro. 57, etc. eornréov, verb. Adj. one must acquiesce, Philo 2. 413. evaperria, 7, =evapéornots, Eccl. ebiperrikds, 7), dv, likely to satisfy, M. Anton. 9. 6. 2. easy of 595 ebdpeotos, ov, (dpcoxw) well-pleasing, acceptable, ri 2 Ep. Cor. 5.9, etc.; mpés twa Clem. Al. 882 :—76 ed. = ebapéoryais, Ep. Rom. 12. 2:— Adv., edapectorépws diaxeic@ai tur Xen. Mem. 3.5, 5; vulg. evapeoxo- Tépws, vy. Lob. Phryn, 621. evaptOunros, ov, easy to count, i.e. few in number, Hipp. Acut. 383, Plat. Apol. 40 D, Symp. 179 C: in Byz., ebdprOpos, ov. etapKros, ov, (4px) easy to govern, manageable, of a horse’s mouth, Aesch, Pers, 193. evdppiros, ov, (dpya) with beauteous car, ©48n Soph. Ant. 645. victorious in the chariot-race, Pind. P. 2, 9, I. 2. 24. evappoortw, to be well tempered or composed, Hipp. 28. 2. evappootta, %, happy adaptation, suitableness, wi) wovoy Tots Aeyopevots, GAG Kal rais Todt evappoorias ovumelGew Isocr. Antid. § 203; €v. Tis Yuxijs mpos Tas H5ovds Def. Plat. 411 E. II. of men’s dispositions and tempers, Plat. Rep. 400 D, Prot. 326 B; evap. rpérav Dem. 1407. 5; evap. mpds évrevéw Plut. Pomp, 1. evdppootos, ov, (dpud{w) well-joined, harmonious, xédapot Eur. El. 702; péAos, dvoua Plat. Legg. 655 A, Crat. 405 A. II. of men, well-adapted, dated, harmonious, mpds dmavra Isocr. 239 C; eidppy. éavrdv év waor mapéxew Plat. Rep. 413 E:—Comp. and Sup., Plat. Prot. 326 B, Rep. 412 A; 7d evapy.,=evappooria, Id. Theaet. 178 D:—Adv., evappdéorws éxew mpds tt Isocr. 223 E. evapvos, ov, rich in sheep, Anth. P.6. 108: in lambs, dts Ib. 7. 657. ebdporos, ov, (dpi) well-ploughed or easy to be ploughed, Ap. Rh. 2. 810, Anth. P. 6. 41., 9. 347. evdpriros, ov, (dpriw) well-seasoned, of meats, Ath. 165 B. evapxla, %, good-guidance, good government, E. M. 390. 38. edapxos, ov, governing well, Lyc. 233. 2. easily governed, Arist. Oec. 1.5, 5. II. beginning well, Aé-yos Luc. Lexiph. 1:—making a good beginning, of one’s first customer in the market, Anth. P. 6. 304. evas, 6, the Roman ovatio, v. evaorhs Il. evds, ddos, 7), one who cries cba, i.e. a Bacchanal, xovpn Orph. H. 48, 1, Philostr. 2. as Adj., 6, 4, Bacchic, wv Nonn. D. 19. 108: v. sub oivds. II. Evas, 6, a name of Bacchus, Hesych. evacpa, 76, a Bacchanalian shout, Eur. Bacch. 129, 151. evacpés, 5, (ebdtw) the cry of eba, a shout of revelry, of the Eleusinian mysteries, Hermesian. 5. 18, cf. Plut. Marcell. 22, Anton. 75. evdoretpa, 7), fem. from edvaornp, Orph. H. 50. 8., 68. 1. evdorepos, ov, (dornp) rich in stars, starry, Arat. 237. star, of the moon, Orph. H. 8. 3. evacrip, jpos, 6,=sq., Orph. H. 29, Anth. P. 9. 246. evaoris, od, or parox. evdorns, ov, 6, (ebdtw) one who cries eda, a Bacchanal, Orph. H. 53. 5, Anth. Plan. 1. 15, etc. II. 6 edacris OpiapBos used by Dion. H. 5. 47 to express the ovatio of the Romans, for which Plut. Marcell. 22 uses evas. evactiKds, 4, dv, Bacchanalian, Hesych, evdrptos [a], ov, Dor, for edprptos. evatyeua,. evavyns, v. sub evayns 0. evavéts, és, quick-growing, Arist. H. A. 1.13, 4: Comp. —€orepos, Id. P. A. 3. 12, Theophr. C. P. 1. 8, 4. evatyny, evos, 6, 7, with beautiful neck, Tzetz. Posth. 478. evadaiperos, ov, easy to take away, Theophr. Odor. 42. evddera, 7), softness to the touch, Heraclid. ap. Ath. 48 D, Oribas 133 Mai. evadaqyqros, Ion. etan-, ov, easy to describe, Hat. 7. 63, Dio C. evadhs, és, (ap) yielding to the touch, delicate, Theophr. C, P. 2. 17, 10:—metaph. susceptible, vods Plut. 2. 588 D:—Adv. -@s, Ion, —péws, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 1. 6; intelligibly, Seunvivat M, Anton. 11. 18, Io. II. act. touching gently, Aretae, ut supr. 9. 10 ; Adv. -$0s, Luc. Harm. 1: metaph., ed. peraBaots an easy, unforced transition, Id, Hist, Conser. 55:—r0 ebages rv SaxrbAwv delicate touch, Id. Imagg. 14. evaddin, #, lon. for edapera, Anth. P. 5. 35, 294. eddduov, 76, a medicine which heals by external application, Galen. evdchoppos, ov, opportune, ready, Eccl. II. easy to excuse, Ib. - evaxns, evaxnros, Dor. for ebnx-. evBdorakros, ov, easy to carry or move, unxavn Hat. 2. 125. easy to bear or endure, Arist. Rhet. 1. 12, 34, Pol. 1.9, 8. well-supported, Hipp. Fract. 772. evParos, ov, (Baivw) accessible, passable, opp. to diaBaros, ob yap evB. mepav Aesch. Pr. 718; moueiv Te evBardv ri Plat. Legg. 761 A; Comp. -wrepos, Xen. Hell. 4. 6, 9. evPadys, és, well steeped or dyed, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 942. ebBtos, ov, =sq., Arist. H. A. 9. 36, 1, in Sup. evBloros, ov, easily finding their food, of certain animals, Arist.H.A.9. I, 23., II, 5, al. II. of men, respectable, Dio C. 52. 39. amros, ov, easily hurt, Arist. G. A. 1. 12, 1. II, easily hurting, Geop. 9. 9, 10. 2. I. fair 2. II, evPracréw, to shoot or grow luxuriantly, Theophr.C.P.1.20,5. IT. causal, to promote growth, Ib. 4. 3, 3. evBr , €s, luxuriantly growing, Theophr. C. P. 3. 24, 2. II. act, making to grow luxuriantly, lb. 2. 3, 3. etPdaortia, 4, abundant growth, Theophr. C. P. I. 20, 5. evBAacros, ov, =edBAaorTHs I, Philo 2. 56. II. =ciPAaorns U, Theophr. C. P. 2. 8, 2. evPAehapos, ov, with beautiful eyelids, Anth, P. 14. 122. etPAnros, ov, easily hit, exposed to blows, App. Civ. 2. 79, Syt. 35- etPonPyros, ov, easily assisted or defended, xwpa Arist, Pol. 7. 5, 3, cf. 6, 3. 2. of diseases, easily healed, Hipp. 397. 22, Arist. Probl. 1. 25. EvBoua, gen. as Ion. ns, 4, Euboea, now Negropont (i.e. Egripo or Evripo, from Euripus), an island lying along the coast of Boeotia and $ Attica, Hom.,, Hes., etc.:—EtBotnGev, pot. -Ge, from Euboea, Call. Qq2 596 : Del. 197. 200. EvPoevs, (not EiBorevs, E. M. 289. 10), éws, 5, acc. E04, pl. -ods (though Mss. of Thuc. 4.92, etc., give -o€as), y. Apoll. de Pron. p. 126 B; an Euboean, Hdt., etc. Adj., EvBotkés, 7, dv, Euboean, Thuc., etc.; in Hdt. EtBoeuds, 3. 89, 95; in Trag. also EvBouxds, Aesch. Fr. 371, Eur. Hel. 767; also ES Los, a, ov, Soph, Fr. 239; masc. EvBotrys, ov, 6, Strabo 449; fem. EtPois, gen. EvBol- Sos, Hdt. 3. 89, Diod. 12. 11; but contr. acc, EvBoida Aesch. Fr. 27, Soph, Tr. 74, etc. ; also ie Sp EvBovts, Soph. Tr. 237, 401, Fr. 239:— Adv. EvBoik&s, Synes. 23 D. evBodéw, to make a good throw with the dice, Luc. Amor. 16. os, ov, (BGAAw) throwing luckily (with the dice), Midas év evBoow eiBodwraros Eubul. KvB. 4, Poll. 9. 94, Suid. s.v, Midas :— generally, lucky, successful, d-ypn Opp. H. 3. 71, Heliod. 5. 18 :—Adv., Rv yap edBddrws Exo he was in luck, Aesch, Cho. 696 (so Pors. for edBovAws), joota, 7), good pasture, xwpa exer TOAAHY eA. Arist. H. A. 3. 21, 3, cf. 6. 22, 3. 2. abundance and goodness, Id. G. A.1.18,59., 4.6,53 &€ aXés Anth, P. 11.199. II. a name of Demeter, C. I. 3858, cf. 39060. gocriee ov, with beautiful locks, Anth. P. 5.251, Poll. 2. 27. wBoréopar, Dep. to have good pasture, Strabo 500. ay , ov, (Béoxe) abounding in pasture, with good pasture, Od. 15. 400; Trois (yos maow eBoroy Plat. Criti. 111 A, cf. Plut. Camill. 16. II. well-fed, thriving, duvés Theocr. 5. oy etBortpus, vu, gen. vos, rick in grapes, Soph. Ph. 548, Anth. P. 9. 668: evBéSrpvos, ov, in Anacreont. 4. 17. evPovdets, éws, 5, like etBovdos, he of good-counsel, epith. of several gods, Diod.5.72, Nic. Al.14, Orph. H. 29.6; acc. edBovAF, Plut. 2. 714C. evBovdla, 7), good counsel, soundness of judgment, pergg Aesch. Pr. 1035, 1038, Soph. Ant. 1050, Thuc. 1. 78, al.; mept rivos Plat. Prot. 318 E, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 6. 9, 3. etBovdos, ov, well-advised, prudent, Theogn.329, Hdt.8. 110, Pind.O. 13.11, and Att.; Comp., Ar. Pax 689; Sup., Andoc. 18.18. Adv. -Aws (v.sub e¥Bodos) ; Comp. -érepor, DioC. 43. 16; Sup.—drara, Geop.5. 16,1. evBous, 6, %, rich in cattle, h. Hom. Ap. 54, in etBour (al. eBay). ; ene és, well steeped or soaked, Nic. Al. 298: v.1. edBpax7s. os, ov, well-noosed, well-knit, dpya Anth. P. 6.179, patos, ov, good to eat, Tt Ath. 113 B. Uptos, ov, =evorxos, Euphor, 92, cf. E. M. 389. ri) Ss, ov, with beautiful hide or skin, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 1299. o-aTpidyros, ov, easy to plough, Eust. 385. 36., 1431. 53- Sha chad v. evBous. ‘ evyG0ys, ebya0nros, Dor. for « —, ” etyatos, ov, a constant v. 1. for A alg evyahakros, ov, yielding good milk, aig Alciphro 3. 21. evyaAnqvos [a], ov, verycalm,Lyc.20. Adv.—vws,Schol. Ap.Rh. 4.1776. ebyapéo, to marry happily, Hephaest. Apotelesm. p. 5. evyapta, 4, happiness in marriage, Poll. g. 160. etyapos, ov, happily wedded, Nonn. D. 1. 27. ¢ or ev ye, Adv. well, rightly, in replies confirming or approving what has been said; as, col yap xapiCopat.—Answ., eye ob toy Plat. Rep. 351 C; so, evy’, edye morqoavres Ar. Pax 285; edye Acyeis Plat. Apol. 24 E, etc.; to cheer on dogs, ebye, evye, @ Kives, Erecbe Xen. Cyn. 6, 19:—ironically, eb yotv Olyos dy xepviBov Eur. Or. 1602; dye pev ray dereOny Ar. Av. 1692. 2. without a Verb, good! well said! well done! Lat. euge! Plat. Gorg. 494 C, al.; doubled, eiy’ cbye Ar. Eq. 470; cdy’, dye, v7) AL ee Eccl, 213; €by', br éxeicOns Nub. 866; c. gen., ebye THs mpoaipécews Luc. Vit. Auct. 8. eb yeros, ov, (yf) of or with good soil, Theophr. H. P. 4. 11, 1, Strabo 311, 545 : 4 evyetos (sc. yf or xupa), fertile land, Theophr. C. P. 5. 13, 2. evyéveia, post. edyevia (q. v.), 9, nobility of birth, high descent, opp. to dvoryéveia, Aesch. Pers. 442, Epich. 142 Ahr., often in Eur.; éuav evy. raldov =étpol evyevets matdes Eur, Tro. 583; in pl., Plat. Euthyd. 279 B, Rep. 618 D: cf. evyerqs. 2. of animals, plants, etc., nobleness of form, etc., Plut., etc. 8. of style, Longin. 34. 2. evyéveros, Ep. wiyev-, ov, (yévetov) of a lion, well-maned, déav.. Avyévevos Od. 4. 456; Als Il. 15. 275., 17. 109, etc.: of Pan, well- bearded, h. Hom, 18. 39; of men, Plat. Euthyphro 2 B, Luc. Icar. ro. evyevérns, ov, 6,=sq., Eur. Ion 1060, Andr. 771, Phoen. 1510, etc. : fem. evyevéretpa, Anth. P. g. 788. evyevijs, és, in Hom. etmy: (q.¥.), and in h. Hom. Ven. 94 jye- vijs: (yévos):—well-born, of noble race, of high descent, Lat. generosus, Aesch. Pers. 704. Soph. O. C. 728, etc.; evy. 56uos Eur. Ion 1540; 7d pv eorixa ebyevés being tattooed is a mark of nobility, Hdt. 5. ’ 2. in the Trag. this sense is associated with that of nob/e- minded, generous, as Soph. Ant. 38, Ph. 874, etc. ; dapepa picts yevvalov cxidaxos ..veavionov eiryevois Plat. Rep. 375 A;—but this sense properly belongs to -yevvaios, Arist. Rhet. 2.15, 3, H. A. 1. 1, 32. 8. of animals, high-bred, noble, generous, inmos Theogn. 184, Soph. El. 25; A€wy Aesch. Ag. 1259; opvies Polyb. 1.58, 7; of plants, of a good sort, Ael. V. H. 2. 14, Galen.; of a country, fertile, Plut. Cato Mi. 25; pAéBes xat Ives Theophr. H.P.5.1,7. 4. of outward form, noble, brav ebyevertatn gary (sc. } a€Ajvy) Soph. Fr. 713; map- Gévos evyevs e60s Eur. Hel. 10; eby. mpdowmov, wapyis, etc., Id.; of style, 70 ey. ris Aéfews Ael. N. A. fin, IL. Adv. -vais, nobly, Eur. Cycl. 201: bravely, Id. Tro. 729. evyevia, }, =edyéveca, Eur. H. F. 696, Anth. P. 7. 337, append. 130. ebyevifw, to ennoble, wéAw Philem. Incert. 89. 3 4 ebyévios, ov, = evyev7js, in Hesych. II. evyénov, 7d, name of a kind of grape, Geop. 11. 3; 4- € s, (Bos, late fem. of evyevys, Joseph. A. J. 7. 3, 3, C. I. 3200, .) 3857 ui—the word is rejected by Hdn., v. Lob. Phryn. 451. 7 oe e evBorew — evdapoviCus. ebyedipwros [0], ov, easy to bridge over, ténos Polyb. 5. 66, 5. ebyeopyntos, ov, easy to cultivate, Scylax p. g. evyéwpyos, ov, =foreg,, Jo. Chrys. ; etyews, wv, =eiryetos, Ael. N. A. 5. 561, App. Civ. 4, 102. ebyn bis, és, joyous, cheerful, Eur. H. F. 792. evy , Dor. evya0—, ov, =foreg., Eur. OM RE NB ebynpée, to grow old happily, Stoic. in Stob, Ecl. 2. 236. evynpla, %, a green old age, Arist. Rhet. 1. 5, 15: cf. edynpas. eSynpus, v, sweet-sounding, dovdy Ar. Ran. 213, Opp. H. 5. 617. edynpws, wy, enjoying a green old age, opp. to TAXUYNPWS, Arist. Rhet. I. 5, 15, Call. Ep. 41, Epit. in C. I. 2892: a nom. pl. evynpor occurs in Arist. H. A. 9. 12, 3; neut. evynpa, Hipp. Art. 825. evyAdyeros, ov, =sq., Luc. Trag. 110. ‘ ebyhaytjs, és, Nic. Th. 617; and ebyAayos, ov, Lyc. 307:—abounding in milk :—a metapl. dat. evyAay:, as if from ebyAag, is used by Leon. Tar. in Anth. P. 9, 744. edyAnvos, ov, bright-eyed, of wild beasts, Lyc. 598, Opp. C. 3. 97. Avmros, ov, well-carved, well-engraved, Anth. P. 7. 363: also eiyhigaves, ov, Nonn. D. 34. 228; evyAtoys, és, Anth, P. 6. 63. evyAwoota, Att. -rria, 7, glibness of tongue, fluency of speech, Eur. Fr. 205, Ar. Eq. 837. II. sweetness of song, Ael. N. A. 17. 23. eiyAwooos, Att. -rros, ov, good of tongue, eloquent, Aesch. Supp. 7753 70 Neorépeoy eA. wédos Eur. Fr. 891: glib of tongue, voluble, Ar. Nub. 445. 2. sweet-sounding, of the Attic dialect, Anth. P. 9. 188 :—1d evyA. eloquence, Dion, H. de Comp. 1. II. act. loosing the tongue, making eloquent, olvos Anth. P. 9. 403. evyotréo, to be fluent, Thom. M., Eccl. ebyAwtrifw, to make eloquent, Td Tt one upon a thing, Philostr. 273. evyAaxIv, ivos, 5, %, keen-pointed, Opp. H. 5. 439, Q. Sm. 8. 406. eiypa, 76, (evxopat) like edxos, a boast, boasting, neva etypara eimay Od, 22. 249. II. like ev, but always in pl. prayers, wishes, Aesch. Pr. 584, Theb. 267, Cho. 463, Soph. Ant.1185, Ar. Thesm. 354, Call. Lay. Pall. 139. etvyvaptros, Ep. eiyy-, ov, well-bent, well-twisted, kAniow tiryaprros Od. 18. 294; xaAwot Opp. H. 5. 498; mepévn Ap. Rh. 3. 833; dyxvpa Orph., etc.—On the fem, evyvdurrn, vy. Lob. Par. 459 sq. evyvntos, ov, =edyevfs, Philox. ap. Ath. 685 D. evyvapovew, to be fair and honest, shew good feeling, Arist. Rhet, Al. I, 2, Plut. Num. 12, Lucull. 4; mpdés twa Diod, 13. 22. edyvapootvn, %, the character of an etryvapwv, kindness of heart, con- siderateness, indulgence, Aeschin. 78. 8, Arist. M. Mor. 2, 2. le prudence, Plut. Them. 7, etc. ebyvapowy, ov, gen. ovos, (yvwpn) of good feeling, kind-hearted, con- siderate, reasonable, indulgent, Andoc. 20. 26, Xen. Mem, 2. 8, 6, Aeschin. 78. 6, cf. Arist. Eth. N. 6. 11, 1; Weddos edyvapovéorepoy Luc. V. H.1.4; madeiv evyvmpova to be indulgently treated, Diod. 13. 23. 2. wise, prudent, Plut. 2. 420E; evyvwpoy 7d névnya is thoughtful, Anth. Plan. 4. 41. II. Adv. -pdévws, indulgently, kindly, Diod. 19. 9: fairly, candidly, Luc. V. H. 1. 4. 2. prudently, Xen, Ages. 2, 25. eiyvworos, ov, well-known, familiar, Soph. Aj. 704, Eur. Or. 1394, Lys. 148. 26. 2. easy to discern, Plat. Soph. 218E; evyvworov.., mérepds .. arty & movnpds Dem. 844. 16.—On the form etyvarros, v. Lob. Aj. lc. etyoudos, ov, well-nailed, well-fastened, Eur.1.T.1286; also ebyépdw- Tos, ov, Opp. H. 1. 58. ebyovéw, to be fruitful, Theophr. C. P. 1. 14, 1. evyovia, i, fruitfulness, Plat. Rep. 546 A, Xen. Lac. 1, 6. evyovos, ov, productive, Schol, Eur. Hec. 581: 7d ebyovov productive power, Joseph. B. J. 4. 8, 3. edypappia, %, good drawing, Ath. 197 B. evypappos, ov, well-drawn, Luc. Jup. Trag. 33; of graceful contour, Strabo 100; rév dpptav 7d ebypappov their fine lines, Luc. Imag. 6. é II. well-defined, repiodo. Dion. H. de Comp. 22. ebypadns, és, (ypdow) well-painted, Anth. P. 6. 221. writing well, kddapos Ib. 6. 66, cf. 65. ebypiidos, ov, finely painted, Paul. Sil. Ambo 7. ebyviidos, ov, well arched or rounded, Tryph. 537, Nonn. D. 13. 68. ebyipos, ov, well-circling, Anth. Plan, 25. ebyovla, }, regularity of angles, Eur. lon 1137, € conj. Elms. euyavios, ov, with regular angles, Xen, Occ. 4, 21, Arist. Probl. 15.11, 1- ev8aldaAos, ov, beautifully wrought, Bacchyl. 22, Anth, P. 1. 16. evdarpovéw, fut. qow: pf. ebdarudyqea Arist. Metaph. 8.6, 8: (€dSal- pov). To be prosperous, well off, happy, Hdt. 1.170, Thuc. 8. 24, Eur., etc.; 71 in respect to.., Hdt. 2,177, Soph. Ant. 506, etc.; eis amayra Eur. Fr. 46; és @vyarépas Id, Or. 541; év To Luc. D. Mort. 24. 3 :—eudatuovoins, as a form of blessing used by Eur., El. 231, Phoen. 1086, y. Elmsl. Med. 1041 (1073); parodied by Ar. Ach, 446, 457. evBatpovypa, 76, a piece of good luck, Luc. Imag. 22, Stob. Ecl. 2. 194. evdarpovia, Ion. —{y, 4, prosperity, good fortune, wealth, weal, h. Hom. 10. 5, Pind. N. 7.83, Hdt. 1, 5, 32, and often in Att.; xpyudtar mpoodip wat Ty adAp ev. Thuc. 2, 97; of countries, Hdt. 5. 28., 7. 220, etc.; Hoip’ ebSarpovtas Pind. P. 3. 150: also in pl., Eur. I. A. 591, Plat. Phaedo 115 D. 2. in Plat, and Arist. complete happiness, v. evdaiyev sub fin. evSatpovife, to call or account happy, evdaiporie waida ony Eur. Tro. 268, cf, Xen. Mem. 2. 7, 7, Isocr. 175 D, etc.; c. gen. rei, ov.. potpas evdaipovicat mpérns for his eminent fortune, Soph. O. C. 144, cf. Plat. Rep. 516 C, 518 B, Symp. 194E; abrdv eddayponer ris Tepiovolas Dem. 550, 20, cf. 362.12; 0d. rwd beep Tivos Xen. An. 1. 7, 33 én Tit Dem, 314. 2; di¢ 7 Luc Nigr. 23 :—Pass., Plat. Rep. 465 D, al. ITI. act. , evdathovikos — evdtos. -edSatpovikes, 4, dv, tending or conducive to happiness, Arist. Eth. N. Io, 6, 3, Rhet. 1. 19, 31; 7a €v5. the constituents thereof, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 343 TeAeTH wary re Kal edd. Plat. Phaedr. 253 C. 2. of per- sons, likely to be happy, Ar. Eccl. 1134, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 8, 16; of ed- Sarporixot philosophers who make happiness the chief good, Diog. L. 1. ry, Clearch. ap. Ath. 548 B:—Ady., -«@s mpdrrewv, diayew Ar. Pax 356, Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 9. , * U evUKTEavos — evOYia, 74, votive offerings, vows, prayers, Aesch. Supp. 631, Soph. Tr. 239. 2. epith. of gods, invoked in or by special prayer, narpds edxraiay *Epwiv, marpdbev edxraia paris, of the curse invoked by Oedipus, Aesch. Theb. 724, 841; @émis ederaia Eur. Med. 169; rotor bvorvxotaw ederala eds Id, Or, 214. 3. generally, prayed for, desired, qjus, Acpny Anth. P. 6. 203., 9.41; yapos yap ..everaiov xarév Menand. Monost. 102 :— desirable, Plat. Legg. 687 E (vy. 1. ederéov), Luc. Tyrann. 17. etnrédvos, ov, (kréavov) wealthy, Aesch. Pers. 897, Anth. P. 9. 442. evtxrédivos, ov, (xrels) =sq., Theophr. H. P. 3. 9, 3 (in Comp.): slender, tall, edxr. Spis Plut. Marc. 8, cf, Eust. P. E. 99 C ;—cf. i@vxréavos. evkriSov, ov, gen. ovos, (krndwv) with straight fibres: hence easily cleft, of wood, Theophr, H. P. 5.1, 11: cf. vem evxtnpooivn, %), wealth, Poll. 6. 196. eixrhpov, ov, (xrHua) wealthy, Pind. N. 7.135 edkriptos, ov, of or for prayer, otkos C. 1.8638, 76, an oratory, Ib. 8668, al. etkryros, ov, easily gotten, Anth. P. append. 47, Aristaen. 2.15. evxticés, 7, dv, (evxrds) expressing a wish, votive, }uvor Menand. Rhet. in Walz 9. 136; péAos Procl. Chrest. p. 389 Gaisf., cf. Anth. P. 1. 118. 2. 70 evxrindy, the optative mood, Gramm.: Adv. —K@s, in the optative, Suid. éixripevos, 7, ov, (erilw) well-built, Homeric epith. of cities, évxr. mroAie@poy Il. 2. 501, etc.; then of anything on which man’s labour has been bestowed, vijcov éveripevny éxdpoyro wrought it so as to be furnished with goodly buildings, Od. 9.130 (ubiv.Nitzsch); éd«r. éy dAw7 on well- made threshing-floor, Il. 20. 496., 21.77; of a garden, well-wrought, Od. 4.226. The common form evripévn occurs in h, Hom. Ap. 36. eixtirtos, ov, post. éiur—, («ri{w) =foreg., Byz. éixtitos, ov, =everipevos, Il. 2.592, h. Hom. Ap. 423, Dion. P. 552. etxrés, 7, dv, (eUxopuat) wished for, desired, bpp’ Ext pGAdov Tpwot ev eberd yévnrat that what they wish for may happen, Il. 14.98; 7a & eberd rapa Gedy yrnodpuny Soph. Fr. 723. 2. to be wished for, etxrov dvOpmros Eur. lon 642, Isocr. 283 E, Theocr.10, 52; ed«rd- Taros ydpos Eupol. Incert. 142 :—ev«rdy éort, c. inf., Eur. Heracl. 458, Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 5. IL. vowed, dedicated, Anth. P. Io. 19. éixriméwv, ovga, ov, (kruméw) clattering, Q. Sm. 5. 21. evxtBéw, (xUBos) to be lucky with the dice, Amphis T'vvacop. 3. edkuKdos, ov, well-rounded, round, in Il. always epith. of domis, 5. 453, 797, al., Aesch. Theb. 590; etx. €5pa Pind. N. 4.107; opaipn Parmen. 103; dxot Aesch. Pr. 710; dvriang Eur. Ion 1391; orepdvn Xen. Cyn. 9, 12; evxvedov moreiy Plat. Tim. 40 A; dp0aAoil Alciphro Fr. 5. 2. in Od. as epith. of dmfyn, prob. the same as evrpoxos, well-wheeled, 6. 58, 70. II. moving in a circle, circling, xopela Ar. Thesm. 968 :—Ady. -Aws, Orph. Lith. 135. etxvkdwros, ov, well-rounded, Eubul. KuB. 1, Aristopho é:Awyv. 1. edxtAtkos, 7, ov, (KvAig) suited to the wine-cup, Kadi} Anth.P. 7. 440. eixtAtotos, ov, easily rolled, Hero Autom. 245. Adv. —rws, Ib. edxtpavros, ov, strong-surging, metaph. in Eust. 1392. 49- eikwos, ov, well-equipt with oars, Opp. H.5. 244. etAGBea, %, Ion, 23 Theogn. 118 :—the character and conduct of the evkaBhs, discretion, caution, circumspection, Theogn. I.c., Simon, 111 Gaisf., etc.; ebA. owe Soph. El. 994; personified in Eur. Phoen. 782 ; H edd. ower mavra Ar. Av. 377; evAaBeay éxew py .. ,=ebAaBeioba Pf .., Plat. Prot. 321 A; so, edA. arn ..70 ph véous .. yedecOat caution to prevent their tasting, Id. Rep. 539 A; edAaBelas Seirar ToAATs, vA. €or odds Dem. 425. 5, Arist. Pol. 2. 8, 22; edAdBeav moreioba mept wt Ib. 5. 11, 28; & edAaPelas éxew twa Dion. H. 5. 38; én’ etAaBeig .. mpoeipnra by way of caution, Plat. Rep. 539 D ;—em. edd. in Aesch, Ag. 1024 is prob. a gloss; Triclin. suggested én’ dfdAaBeiq, following the expl. of the Schol. wore pi) BAaBRvat. 2. c. gen. caution or discretion in a thing, evAdBed tivos moinréa Antipho 123. 433 edAdBerat rAnyav avoidance of .., Plat. Legg. 815 A; Tay aicxpay Arist. Eth. N. 4. 1, 393 cf. nbAaBera t&v motovpévew Soph, O.C. 116; eiAdBeav mpovdepny ravde Id. El. 1334. 3. reverence, piety, mpos or wept 7) Oefov Diod. 13. 12, Plut. Camill. 21, Num. 22; absol. godly fear, Ep. Hebr. 5. 7., 12. 28, cf. Plut. 2. 432 E. 4. in bad sense, over-caution, timidity, Id. Fab. 1. etA&Béopar: impf. 7dAaBovpny Eur. Or. 748, 1059 (v. 1. ebA-), evA- Aeschin, 4. 26 :—fut. -#aopar Plat. Rep. 410 A; also —yOf4oopat Arist. M. Mor. 1. 30, 2, Diog. L. 7.116, Galen., Lxx :—aor. 7dAaBHOnv (or evA-), v. infr, To behave like the ebAaBhs, have a care, to be discreet, ‘cautious, circumspect, to beware, Lat. cavere, foll. by pH or Smws wh with subj., evA. wu?) pavjs Kaxds yeyds Soph. Tr. 1129, cf. Eur. Hipp. 100, Ar. Eq. 253, Plat. Phaedo 89 C, etc.; by fut. ind., daws ph .. olyjoopat Ib. 91 C;—also c. inf., sometimes without pH, evAaBouperm meceiv Soph, O. T. 616; edd. Aéyery Plat. Phaedo 101 C; sometimes with ph inserted, ebA. pty oe gidrovs Eur. Or. 1059, cf. Ar. Lys. 1277, Plat. Charm. 155 D. 2. to take care, Snws katoices Ar. Ach. 955; «vA. mepi tt Plat. Legg. 927 C, Ion 537 A; mept rivos Id. Legg. 6o1 B; aupi run Luc, Gall. 21:—absol., evdaBhOnrs Soph. O. T. 47; edAa- Botpevos rpduny Plat. Prot. 333 E; ef pydey evAaBnOévra radndes eimeiy Bot without reserve, Dem. 280. 25: to take precautions, Arist. Pol. 5. 4, 3. II. c, acc. to have a care of, beware of, ebdaBod Bpépov .., wh o” dvapndon Aesch. Fr. 195; edd. Tov Kiva ware the dog, Ar. Lys. 1215; edd. weviay Plat. Rep. 372 C, cf. Prot. 316D; roy $Pdvoy Dem, 327.13; 7d Weddos Arist. Eth. N. 4. 7,8; Tovs bBpifecOa vopeCopeévous Id. Pol. 5. 11, 3; Tas pias Id. H. A. 9. 5, 7, al. 2. to reverence, pay honour to, Tov Oedy Plat. Legg.879E; Tov djyor Plut. Pericl. Te 38. to watch for, await quietly, xatpov Eur. Or. 699, cf. Phoen. 141. etaPis, és, (AaBeiv) taking hold well, holding fast, used literally in al. II. etxriprov, + Pind, O. 5. fin.: in late Inserr., pratse to God, C, 1, 4838 ¢, al, 605 Adv. etAaBas, ebdaBéorara karéyew Ael. N. A. 3. 13. 6. 55: but mostly in metaph. sense, 2. undertaking prudently, discreet, cautious,. circumspect, Plat. Polit.311 A, al.; 7d evAaBés = ebAGBaa, Ib.B; evAa Bis nepi Tt, mpds te Plut. C. Gracch. 3, etc.; vA. dad rivos keeping from .., Lxx (Lev. 15. 31). 8. in bad sense, over-cautious, timid, Plut. Fab. 17:—Ady. evAaBas, Plat. Soph. 246 B: Comp. -eorépws, Eur. I. T. 13753 —€orepov, Polyb. 1. 18, 1; Sup. -€orara, Ael. ll. cc. 4. reverent, pious, religious, Ev. Luc. 2. 25, Act. Ap. 2. 5., 8. 2, and oft. in Christ. Inscrr. C, I, 8615, 8647, al. II. pass. easy to get hold of, wevia Luc. Tim. 29. 2. cautiously undertaken or effected, wera~ Baots Plat. Legg. 736D; #5ovai Plut. Pericl. 15 (Sintenis d8AaBeis). evAaBnréov, verb. Adj. one must take care, beware, c. inf., Plat. Rep. 608 A. II. one must beware of, c. acc., Ib. 424 C. ‘ ethaByricds, 4, dv, circumspect, Def. Plat. 412 A, Stob. Ecl. 2. 106. evAGPin, Ion. for edAdBea. evAdlw, ( , »” edapadopos — evTAekTos. edmepwonros, ov, well-considered, atixos C, I. 2722. 9. ebreplomros, ov, easily slighted, despicable, Polyb, Fr. 30. edrepiopioros, ov, well-defined, Strabo 83. evmeptmiitos, ov, allowing one to walk easily, Luc. Trag. 324. etmeptomacros, ov, easy to pull away, Xen. Cyn. 2, 7. evmeploriiros, ov, easily besetting, Gpapria Ep. Hebr. 12.1. _ evmepitpenros, ov, easy to turn over, Ai@os Ath. 155 E: going from one to another, Luc. J. Trag. 50. evmeptwpos, ov, easily detected, Plut. 2. 238 F. evtreplytros, ov, pouring itself readily round, Plut. 2. 954 D. evrerdAeta, 7, fem. of sq., Poéta de Vir. Herb. in Fabr. 3. p. 633. etrériitos, ov, with beautiful leaves, leafy, Ar. Thesm, 1000, Anth. P. 4. I, 19, etc. II. as Subst., edméradov, 74, a plant, Diosc. 4. 148. 2. evmérados, 6, a precious stone, Orph, Lith. 228. evnéracros, ov, easy to spread out, Hesych, etrérea, 6, ease, 3¢ edreretas easily, Eur. Phoen. 262; per’ ebrereias Plat. Tim. 64D; ar’ edmérecay Dion. H. 6. 52:—in pl., edmerelas b:- Sévac to give facilities, grant indulgences, kaxias mépt Plat. Rep. 364 Cc, 2. easiness of getting or having, Lat. copia, yuvaueéy Hat. 5. 20; tpophs Xen. Oec. 5,5; Ta mpodupoupevev Plat. Legg. 718 D; dyopas Plut. Nic. 20. 8. feebleness of body, Hipp. 230. 37. edrrers, és, (4/ILET, minzw) :—properly of the dice, falling well ; metaph, favourable, fortunate, Aesch. Supp. Io11; and so in Adv., ev7e- ras éxev Id. Ag. 552:—in Gramm. also, 76 edwerés good cadence, Schiif. Dion. H. de Comp. p. 310:—but usually, easy, without trouble, Lat. facilis, Hdt., Trag., etc.; mdnua Aesch. Pers. 95; 68és, mpdcodos Plat. Soph, 218 D, Xen. Cyr. 5. 2, 3, etc.; mavra 8 evmeri Geots Eur. Phoen. 689; ovdey ebmerts Tay peyddov Plat. Rep. 365 C:—c. inf., edmeris xetpwOfvac Hdt. 3. 120, 145; dpOAva, eicaxovoa Plat. Soph. 254 A, Rep. 494D; also, edwerés [E71], it is easy to .., moAdods edmeréarepoy diabddrdrav 4 &va Hat. 5. 97, cf. Aesch. Supp. 995, Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, 13. 2. Ady. -ras, Ion. -réws, ob xademas, GAA’ evr. Hdt. 3. 69, cf. 1. 189, al.; ed. puAdgacOa Antipho 124. 38; €xerv Xen. An. 2. 5, 23;—with numerals, éfaxoctous dupopéas evr. xwpéet it easily holds 600 amphoreis, i.e. full 600, Hdt. 4. 81; 7d mAdros yiverat Tecoépay cdr. daxTvAwy comes to full four fingers, Id. 1. 193:—Comp. —eorépas Id, 3. 143; also —éorepov, Hipp. Progn. 38. II. of garments and arms, easy to wear, light, Polyb. 2. 28, 7, Plut. Philop. 9. rit. of persons, contented, accommodating, Eur. Cycl. 526; evr, 700s Dion. H. ad Pomp. 4, 2: so, ebmera@s pépew Soph. Fr. 521. IV. ei, dvaxmpnors hasty, Plut, 2. 797 B. etreris, és, (mérouar) flying well, Eust. 899. 55. etiretpos, ov, of good hard stone, Anth, P. 6. 306. ebrreia, 4, good digestion, Arist. P. A. 2. 3, 8., 4+ 3» 5- etrnyns, és,=ednayhs, evrneros, once in Hom., feivos peyas 75 ebanyns well-built, stout, Od. 21. 3343 parpat Hipp. 609. 11. Uarniros, ov, (wiyvupus) well put together, well-built, év peyapy ei. Il, 2.661; puxd Arroins ed. 9. 663 (659); pUXP Oadrduor evr. Od. 23, 41; ovpryya ée Kap® etrdnroo of well-moulded, compact, wax, Theocr. 1. 128: cf. ebmayns, ebrnyis. IL. of fluids, easily congealing, Arist. Longaey. 5, 9, cf. 6, I. 2. act., evr. dnp Theophr. C. P. 5. 14, 3. ebrpAnt, 6, }, with beautiful helmet, Anth. P. 6. 120, Babr. ap. Suid. etrrqvos, ov, (whyn) of fine texture, ipai Eur. I. T. 312, 814, etc. ebmmia, %, (€dmnetos) compactness, Adam, Physiogn. 2. 16, eumnxus, v, with beautiful arms, xeipes Eur. Hipp. 200; epith, of Athena, Rhian. 1. 14. ebridaé, dos, 5, 4, abounding in fountains, Anth. P. 6. 253. ebmOéw, = cireiOéw, Hipp. 650. 22. ’ cdribys, és,=ebmeiOns 1, ob welcas vv, ob yap ebm. Aesch. Pr. 333; 9apoos evr. Id. Ag, 982 :—in four other passages, where the metre does not require ednt0ns, the Mss. give ebmeiOjs, v. sub voce. ebmtAnros [t], ov, well-compressed, dense, Arist. de Sens. 2, 12. edrivea, }, a goodly crust of antiquity, nitor obsoletus (Auct. ad Herenn. 4. 46), used of the style of ancient writers, simplicity, naiveté, Longin. 30: v. ebmygs Il. 2. a quality of good iron, Oribas. 125 Mai. eumivas, és, (wivos) with goodly dirt upon one, like an athlete in the palaestra, Cratin. Incert. 118; as a quality of good iron, Oribas. 121 Mai. II. with goodly rust as of age, properly of old statues ; then of the style of old writers, simple, naive, Cic. Att. 12. 6, 3; and so Ady. ~vas, Ib, 15.17, 2:—on the word, v. Toup Longin. 30, Schif. Dion. H.deComp.p. 301,329, Emesti Clay, Cic, in v.: cf. mivos, ebmivea, dpxaomuhs, myvdopat. cimoros, ov, (iors) trustworthy, trusty, of persons, Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 12; evmora things easy to believe, Soph. Aj. 151;—in both places with v. 1. evreioros, II. act. easily believing, credulous, Menand, Wap. 4, Arist. Rhet. 2. 12, 7: so Ady., edmiorws éxev Ar. Thesm. 105. III. readily obeying, Euclides ap. Stob. 86. 2, nisi leg, evmeroros. custo, i], ov, gen. ovos, very fat: very rich, Anth, P. 7. 654. ebmAavis, és, wandering at will, Opp. C. 4. 365. , ettrhacros, ov, easy fo mould or put into shape, of a broken nose, Hipp. Art. 804. 2. easy to mould, ductile, of wax, Plat. Rep. 588 D; Hjdos Id. Legg, 666 C; of men, Arist, Post. 17, 4. II. moulding well or easily, puoi Id. G. A. 3. 11, 6. ; etmharijs, és, of a good breadth, Aéyxn Xen, Cyn. 10, 3. timhevos, a, ov, well filled, «a5 8 dpa mhpny Ojrev éimdeinv Od. 17.467. timdexhs, és, =sq., Poavor.. wavres eimdexées II, 2. 4493 cf. evmA€K- Tos: of baskets, Anth. P. 6. 28; of cords, Opp. H. 5. 379. ettrhexros, Ep. éim-, ov, also 7, ov Nonn. D. 13. 200: (mAéxw) -— well-plaited, well-twisted, ceipds 7’ ebmd€xrous Il. 23.115; dimer er Sippy a chariot with sides of wicker or basketwork, Ib. 3353 (so, Sippoe. preange x» , , evTAeupos — evTpeTrera. éimdexées Ib. 436, Hes. Sc. 306, 370); later, of nets, Eur. Bacch. 870; of hair, Anth, P. 5. 287. eimAevpos, ov, with strong lungs, Lat. bona latera habens, Arist. H. A. 7-9: 3, Physiogn. 6, 9, al. etmAnOhs, és, quite full, luxuriant, Theophr. H. P. 4. 11, 4. edrAnkTos, ov, easily struck, so as to sound, Plut. 2. 721 E. edtAnpwrtos, ov, easily filled: full, Galen. ebwhote, to have a good voyage, Vita Hom. 18, Teles ap. Stob. 232. 22; v. Dorv. Charit. p. 599; edmAoetre, as a wish, C. I. (add.) 6250 b. edmrova, post. -otn, 4, a fair voyage, el 5é kev edmdAolny Sen .. "Evvo- aiyaos Il. 9. 362; etmAcay empagay Aesch, Supp. 1046; edmAotas tuxdv Soph. O. T. 423, etc, The form edAoiy is required by the metre in Anth, P. 9. 9 and 107, append. 283, but not in Il. II. EbrAoa, a name of Aphrodité, C. I. 4443. éimAoKdpts, fos, Ep. fem. of sq., formed like evvnpus, Hom. only in Od. 2. 119., 19. 542, €imAowapides ’"Axarat. edtAdKipos, Ep. éimA-, ov, with goodly locks, fair-haired, often in Hom. as epith. of goddesses and women, esp. of Eos and Artemis, Od. 5. 390., 20. 80, etc.; later also of boys and men, e. g. Mosch. 1. 12, Orph. Lith. 4333 edmA. xdyat goodly tresses, Eur. I. A. 791 :—metaph., édmAo- xapov modus GAds Archil. ap. Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 824, cf. Opp. C. 1. 131. 3.182. ° etirAoxos, ov, (mAéew) = edtAeTos, Opp. H. 3. 75, Anth. P. 6.174. ebmoos, ov, contr. —wAous, ov, (nAéw) good for sailing, fair, ebm. méos, =evmdoua, Erinna 2; evmAoov bppov ixovro may he reach a friendly port (nisi legend. e¥rAoos), Theocr. 7. 62. etmAourtos, ov, wealthy, Hesych. édrdvvas, és, (wAdyew) well hed, well-cl 392, 425. 13. 67., 16. 173. eitAwros, ov, favourable to sailing, xdya Anth. P. to. 25. edtrvotw, =ciirvods ely, Arist. Probl. 10. 48. etmvowa, 7, easiness of breathing, Hipp. 38.11, Arist. Probl. 38. 3, 1, al. II. free blowing, dvépwr Diod. 2. 40. 2. an airy situation, Arist. Probl. 14. 7; év edmvoia Theophr. C. P. 6. 16,5; ev- mvorat editor Diosc. 3. 134. ILI. fragrance, Anth. P. 12. 7, in poét. form edrvoln. eUmvoos, ov, contr. etmvous, owv; Ep. édtrvoos: (mvéw) :—breathing well or freely, Hipp. Progn. 41. 2. causal, making one breathe freely, relieving oppression of the breath, Xovrpév Hipp. 395. 34. 3. breathing out a sweet smell, sweet-smelling, Xeipia Mosch. 2. 32; pddov Anth. P. append. 287. II. affording a free passage to the air, Lat. perflabilis, puxrjpes Xen. Eq. 1, 10; 6 wept ri Kepadriy rémos ebmvous Arist. P. A. 2. 7,19, cf. 3. 12, 3; KéAapot Long. 2.35. 2. open to the winds, airy, oinia evmvous piv Tod Oépous, edfAtos 5e TOD YeLpa- vos Arist. Oec. 1. 6, 9; rémot Id. Probl. 14. 7; 5évdpa Theophr. C. P. 1. 15,43; 7 eUmvouy rod Témov Plat. Phaedr. 230 C. III. good to breathe, fresh and pure, of the air, Theophr. C. P. 1. 13, 8, Strabo 150.— Comp. ebmvowrepos, Xen. |. c., Hipp. 1131 G; also edrvodorepos, Hipp. 1121 A, Arist., etc.; Sup. -ovoraros, Id. P. A. 3.12, 3. edrroBia, 4, (edrous) goodness of foot, Xen. Eq. 1, 3, Poll. 1. 194. evrovéw, ebrotnréos, faulty forms for eb wor-. evrointixds, 7, dv, disposed to do good, beneficent, els or wept xphuara Arist. Rhet. 2. 4, 8., 1. 9,10; Tivos towards one, Ib, 2. 2, 25: 70 ebm. beneficence, Ib. 1. 11, 22, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2. 1052 B. edmoinros, ov, (v. infr.) :—well-made, well-wrought, év Te Opdvots ed, Od. 20. 150; edroinrév re mupdypnv 3. 434; so also Hes. Sc. 64, Ap. Rh., etc.—In Il. 5. 466., 16. 636, where the fem. term. occurs, it must be written divisim €b womrfjiot, eb tonrdwr, ebrrotia, 7, beneficence, Luc. Abdic. 25; THs els Eavrdv ebm. C. I. 189. 9 s—pPl. benefits, Hierocl. ap. Stob. 477. 37- evroikthos, ov, much varied, variegated, Anth. P. 6.154. edrrovds, dv, (roréw) = ebrroinrucds, Hesych. ebrrokos, ov, rich in wool, fleecy, vouedpara Aesch. Ag. 1416. Evrréderos, ov, of or like Eupolis, Dion. H. de Rhet. 11. 10. evrroAgunros, ov, easy to be conquered, Poll. 1. 158. etmédepos, ov, good at war, successful in war, Nien h. Hom. 7. 4; mods Xen. Vect. 4, 51, Oec. 4,3; of warriors, Anth. Plan. 4.331. Adv. —pws, skilfully, of an officer, Dio C. 78. 38. edrroAts, t5os, 5, }, abounding in cities, Poll. 9. 27. edtroptos, ov, well-conducting, conducting to a happy issue, Soph. O.T. 697; ebréurp Tdx7y (in allusion to Hermes topmaios), Aesch. Eum. 93. evtévas, Adv. with easy labour, easily, Herm. Soph. O. T. 301. edopevtos, ov, easily passing, Tzetz. Lyc. 686. 2. pervious, Cyril. edrropéw, fut. 7ow: aor. edmdpnoa: pf. edwdpyea Plat. Hipp. Ma. 297 E, etc., but i= Plut. 2. 403 F. To be evropos, to prosper, thrive, be well off, ob« dv ebmopotny I could not succeed, Plat. Legg. 634 B; edmopodor yap of dAtyor are wealthy, Arist. Pol. 3. 8,73 «dm. ard Tay movnporarwy Xen. Mem. 2. 7, 43; of ebmopodvres Amphis Ac. 2 :—of things, 6@ev 6 méAcuos ebmope’ from which sources war is successfully maintained, Thuc. 6. 34. b. c. gen. rei, to have plenty of, to have store of, to abound in, xpnudarwy Lys. 154.15, Antiphan. Incert. 4.2; cirew Xen. Hell. 1. 6,19; pnydrwr, dvopdray, Adyov Plat. Ion 536 C, Soph. 267 D, Symp. 209 B; ed. immav to gain possession of .. , Xen. Hell. 1. 1,10; ebm. THs GAnGelas to attain it, Arist. Metaph. 2. 1, fin. :—also, etx, év run Antipho 137. 12; Tue Polyb. 1. 17, 2. 2. to find a way, find means, absol., &s €xacrot ebrépnoav Thuc. 6.44: c. inf. to be able to do, Aéyewv Plat. Phaedr, 235 A, Arist. Top. 1. 5, 3, cf. Plat. Gorg. 478 A :—also, ebmop® & 1 A€yw I have plenty to say, Id. Ion 532 C; TovTo evr. to be provided with an answer on this point, Id. Euthyd. 279 A; ob« ebm, San .. not to know how to do, Id, Symp. 219 E. d, papos éidmd. Od. 8. IL ebmpérea, , goodly appearance, dignity, aaa Tt 611 c. acc. rei, to supply or furnish, rapydpiov Isae. 64. 15, cf. Thuc. 6. 34; déxa pras rut Dem.894.19: to procure, dAdobev xphuara Id, 1019.12; 80ev ovrowopmias ebmépyoe Tois oTparimrais 1d.671.13: to bring forward, drodelges Diod. 2, 31: cf. cvveumopéw and y. Lob. Phryn. 595 :—hence in Pass., =intr. Act. to have plenty of, to abound in, twos Arist. Occ. 2. 2, 43 Tie Polyb. 5. 43, 8; absol., of edropovpeva: C. I. 2058. 66, cf. Luc. Bis Acc. 27:—edmopnOéy in strict pass, sense, being furnished, Vit. Hom. 210. III. as Philosoph. term, opp. to dmopéw, to have one’s doubts resolved, gain clear knowledge, Arist. Metaph, 2.1, 2; vm. mept Twos Id. de An, 1. 2,1, P.A. 1.5, 2. ebrrépypa, 76, an advantage, help, Alcidam. p. 87. ebrropta, 7, (etmopos) an easy way of doing a thing, facility for, faculty of, c. inf., Emped. 347; ebm. Hv moveiaOat Thuc. 4. 52; absol., te moAAI) byiv ebm. paiverat Xen. An. 7. 6, 37 :—c. gen. rei, easy means of pro- viding, Tod Biov Plat. Prot. 321 E; rod xaé’ juépay Thuc. 3. 82; also, eit, ey Tin, & Twos Lys. 168. 29, 30; so, ebm. THs TUXNS Thuc. 3. 45 5 e’ropiay TH Bdedupia 7H EavTod Tods cuppdxous roeioGat to make them a means of satisfying his brutal passions, Aeschin. 15.17; 7) map’ GAAq- Ay ed. mutual assistance, Isocr. 129 E; % wept iv ovciay ebm. Arist. Pol. 7. 5, 2. 2. plenty, store, abundance, xpnyatwy Xen. Hell. 4. 8, 28; dya@av Arist. Metaph. 13. 4,8; 7 wept roy Biov ebm. Isocr. 234 B: absol. welfare, wealth, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3,7; opp. to dmopia, Arist. Pol. 3. 8, 4:—in pl. advantages, Isocr. Antid. 253, Dem. 59. 2; «vmopiat Tov mpooddav Arist. Pol. 4. 6, 5; dpovpata evn. rustic wealth, Anth, P. 9- 3733 Métis dios Kat Bods etm. consisting of one sheep or ox, Ib. 149. II. opp. to dropia, the solution of doubts or difficulties, positive knowledge, Plat. Phil. 15 C, Xen. Oec. 9,1; borepoy evr, Avats Tav mpétepov dmopovpévay Arist. Metaph. 2. I, 2. evropurria, 7, a being easily procured, Porph. de Abst. I. 51. ebrréptoros, ov, (ropi{w) easy to procure, Epicur. ap. Diog. L.10.144, Cic. Att. 7. 1, 7;—edmépiora (sc. pdppaxa), Ta, common, family medi- cines, Plut. Lucull. 40; title of a work by Diose. ebtropos, ov, easy to pass or travel through, drys .. wédayos ob par’ edmopov Aesch, Supp. 470; dds Plat. Rep. 321 E; 7a ebmopa open ground, Xen. Eq. Mag. 4, 4; ebmopdv éore diiévae Thue. 4. 78, cf. Xen. An, 3.5,17; evm. moetv Ta Sra to open one’s ears, Luc. Lexiph. 1. 2. easily gotten, easily done, easy, TA péyiora .. ot etmopa éore Hat. 4, 593 ToAAG Tot Oeds .. evmop’ GvOpwmmos Tere? Eur, Fr. 101; map’ énod & gorw ratra ebmopa Ar. Pl. 532, cf. Plat. Rep. 404 C; quAdla .. evr. ein Ar. Lys.1267; rTiv xara Oadaccay épodoy evmopmrepay Thue. I. 93; mAetorov. . wéAckal evwopwrarov Plat. Rep. 564 E:—70 evropoy = evropia, eiplotew 70 evr. Hipp. Art.837; dia 70 ebm. THs EATidos Thuc.8. 48; evro- pr éo7t it is easy, c. inf., Id. 4. Io, etc. Il. going easily, ready, glib, yA@rra Ar. Eq. 637. 2. of persons, full of resources ot devices, ingenious, inventive, ready, opp. to dmopos, Eur. Fr. 433; «l ody 7T1s.- ebmopwrepos éyod Plat. Phaedo 86D; evmopos & tots dndpos Alex. Tpavp. 2; ebwopwrepos mpds Gamay Epyor Plat. Prot. 348 D; c. inf., ed- mopwraros topitev xphyara Ar. Eccl. 236; és ri .. diarray .. ebmopd- tarot Id. Vesp. 1112. III. well-provided with, rich in, moAw Tois maow ednopwrarny Thuc. 2. 64, cf. Dem. 369. 18; 7d wept rox Biov Isocr. 162 E; xapn@yv Arist. Oec. 2. 24, 4:—absol. well off, wealthy, Dem. 17. 9., 1045. 23; of evm., opp. to of dopo, Arist. Pol. 3. 7, 5, etc, ' IV. Adv. -pws, easily, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 9, etc.; Comp. -wrepov Plat. Symp. 204 E. 2. in abundance, ebm. éxev navra Thuc. 8. 36; ebm. Exew to be well off, Luc. Lexiph. 2. ; edrréphipos, ov, of bright purple colour, Schol. Theocr. 5. 96. etrroct-dpyx7s, ov, 6, a name of an officer at Smyrna, C, I. 3385. 3. evrorpéw, to be lucky, fortunate, Plut. Aemil. 26. evrotpla, 4, good fortune, Xanth. Fr. 10, Plut. Aristid. 21, Luc. D. D. 14. I, Ael. N. A. 11, Io. evrrotpos, ov, happy, prosperous, aiwy Aesch. Ag. 245; ebmorpérare Soph. Fr. 146, cf. Plut. 2. 58 D. ettroros, ov, (mivw) easy to drink, pleasant to the taste, of fresh water, Aesch., Pr. 676, 812; of milk, Pers. 611. II. good to drink from, éermpara Eratosth, ap. Ath. 482 B. evrrous, 6, 7, mouv, 76, with good feet, of horses and dogs, Xen. Eq. 1, 3, Cyn. 3, 2; of a bird, evmous nat xaxdmrgpos Arist. H. A. 9. 22, 2. II. with good feet, flowing, of verses, Anth. P. 6. 54, al. edrpayéw, =d mpdcow, to do well, be well off, flourish, Thuc. 2. 60., 6.16, Xen. Apol. 27, etc. eimpdynpa, 76, a success, in war, App. Pun. 4, Civ. 1. 51. edmpayns, és, (mpa-yos) flourishing :—Ady. yas, Greg. Naz. etrpayla, 4, well-doing, well-being, welfare, success, Antipho 120. 14, Thue. 5. 46, etc. ; also in Pind. O. 8.18, P. 7.17; edmpagia, Ion. —néin, (q. v.) is the form used by Hdt, and Trag.:—Thuc, has the pl. in 1. 84., 4.17, as also Plat. Legg. 732 C, Isocr. 197 B. IX. well doing, opp. to mere success, Plat. Alc. 1. 116 B, Euthyd. 281 B; mept adAnua- tov eimp. Ib. 279 E, cf. Prot. 345 A. etimpakros, ov, easy to be done, Xen. An, 2. 3, 20. do, prosperous, Opp. H. 3.63, Manetho 1. 352. etmpatia, Ion. edrpnttn, 7,=eimpayia, Hdt. 7. 49., 8. 54, Aesch. Theb. 224, Soph, O. C. 1554, and Eur.; in pl., Eur. Ion 566; also in the Mss. of Thue. 1. 33., 3. 39, though in Att. Prose ebmparyia was pre- ferred; both forms are freq, in Bekker’s Arist. 2. a name of Arte- mis, C. I, (add.) 5613 6. II. good conduct, Xen. Mem. 3. 9; 14, Arist. Eth. N. 6.5, 4. edmpagis, #, post. for edmpagia, Aesch. Ag. 255; but Lob, Phryn. 501 prefers éAorro .. ev mpafis, cf. v. 500. etirpepvos, ov, with good stem, ipds Anth.P. 6.221; xé5por Nonn. Jo. 18.1. cimpereig. ™po- 2 II. well-to- ‘ 612 éxew Thue. 6.31; opp. to dmpémeta, Plat. Phaedr. 274 D, al. TI. colourable appearance, speciousness, plausibility, evmpeneiq Ad-you Thuc. 3.113; €xet.. edmpérecay paddov 7 GAjOeay Plat. Euthyd. 305 E. edmpemys, és, (mpémw) well-looking, goodly, comely, of outward appear- ance, oxqua evmperécraroy Hat. 1. Pa cf. 2. 37; wécpos edmp. Aesch. Pers. 833 ; evmp. ideiy fair to look on, Ar. Thesm. 192, Xen. Mem. 2.1, 22; eldos ebmpenns Eur. Hec. 269; tiv dfiv Dem. 1016. 24; Koopeiv -- olxodopjpact ebmpenéorepa Plat. Legg. 761C. 2. decent, seemly, Sitting, becoming, dvdpa 8 eimpenéorepor (sc. eeGeiv éorr) Aesch. Cho. 664, etc.; ob yap ebmpemés A€yerv Eur. Or. 1145; Adyos euol ove edmpenéarepos A€yeoBar Hat. 2. 47; vdonpa ode ebmp. Isocr. 289 A; TedevT? ebmperecrarn a most glorious end, Thuc. 2. 44. 3. specious, plausible, opp. to ddnOhs, Eur. Tro. 951; oxjyis evmpererrarn Hat. 3. 72; ebmp. airia Thuc. 6.76; ebmp. deAia cowardice veiled under a fine name, 3. 82; per’ dvduaros ebmpemods Ib.; aarp etrperei’4. 86; ex Tov edmperods in pretence, 7.57; TO edmperes Tod Adyou, =evmpéreca II, 3. 38, 445 edmp. iv mpds Tovs moAAos 8, 66. II. Ady. —1as, Ton. —7éws, Hdt. 7. 220, Aesch. Ag. 616, etc.; Comp. ~éorepov, Eur. Rhes. 841; Sup. -wéorara, Thue. 8. 109. edtrpetros, ov, conspicuous, Aesch, Supp. 772: cf. maumperros. edrrpnttn, Ion. for ebmpagia. edrpyoow, incorrect reading for) mp- in Od. 8. 259. ‘etrpnoros, ov, (mpi0m) well-blowing, strong-blowing, etmpnotov dir- piv efavieivat, of bellows, Il. 18. 471. evrpyov, avos, 6, %, with fair forelands, Paul. $. Ambo 247. etmpiotia, }, a being easily sawn'through, Schol. Ven. Il. 8. 93. etrpioros, ov, eusily sawn, Hipp. V. C. 911, Theophr. H. P. 5. 6, 3. etmpoaiperos, ov, forming a right choice, Artemid. 2. 37, Jo. Chrys. evrpd0ipos, ov, ver'y ready or zealous, Eccl. et’mpécdexros, ov, acceptable, Plut. 2. 801 C, Ep. Rom. 15. 16, 31, etc. edmpécedpos, ov, v.1. for edmdpedpos in N. T. _evmpoonyopia, 7), affability, Isocr. 6 B. —1yopos, ov, easy of address, i.e. affable, courteous, Eur. Hipp. 95, ubiv. Valck.; edap. pphy, ordpa Id. Alc.775;etc.; yijpas Ib. 594.22, Trag. ap. Stob.; 7G Adyw evmpoonyopos Isocr. 6A; ode ebmp. Grat miseries that forbid my being spoken to, Eur. H. F.1284; év-edmpoonydpot- oy éort 71s xapis Menand. Monost.663. Adv. —pws, Dion. H.de Rhet.5. 4. eimpdaberos, ov, easily procured, rpopy Hipp. 383. 9. e’mpoctros, ov, easy of access, ‘of places, Strabo 545, Luc. V. H. 2. 44. 2. of persons, accessible, affable, Eccl.: agreeable, Manetho 5. 288. ettrpocdbeutos, ov, =sq., Geop. 10. I, 3. evmpocodos, ov, of persons, accessible, affable, Lat. qui faciles aditus habet, Thuc. 6. 57, Xen. Ages. 9, 2. 2. of a easily accessible, Id. Hell. 6. 5, 24, An. 5. 4,°30; €0a Gero elvat.. ebmpocodwrarov boa def mpockopierOa: the readiest way of approach for .. , Id. Cyr. 6. I, 23. II. act. approaching easily, vavs Philo Belop. 104. ebrpdcoveros, ov, easy of approach; and, generally, easy, éxBaots Eur. Med. 279. Baipco betta, ov, =evdpiros, A. B. 39. etrpocdppicros, ov, easy to land on, vijr0s" Diod. 5.13, cf. Poll. 1. 100. edmpéapytos, ov, =eimpoonyopos, Poll. 5. 138. edrpdapbeyKros, ov, accordant, well-sounding, Hesych. evrpdahopos, ov, easily uttering, fluent, év TH Popalay povy Hdn. 8. 3, Fs II. pleasant-to eat, nutritious, of food, Xenocr. Aq. 7.9: cf, mpoopépos. eimpdahitos, ov, easily growing to, Tt Theophr. C. P. 1. 6, 2. et’mpoowrtw, to make a fair show; Ep. Gal. 6. 12. etmpoowria, 4, fair appearance, Dion. H. 3. 11. cimpocwno-Kotrns, 5, lying’ so as to present a fair face, rix.at ebmp. (me- taph. from the dice), Aesch. Cho. 969, as emended by Herm. and Franz. etmpécuros, ov, fair of face, Cratin. Incert. 29; peipdxov Ar. Pl. 976, cf. Ran. 410, Xen. Mem. 1. 3, 10: with glad countenance, Soph. Aj. 1009. 2. metaph. fairin d show, specious, dwexpivayto .. eirpéowra Hat. 7.168; ob« ebmp: ppoipiors Eur. Phoen. 1336; Adyous eimp. kat ptOous Dem. 277. 6; evmp. 9 ro.avry vopobecia Arist. Pol. 2, 5, 11. Adv, -mws, Philostr. 510. , ov, with “good pretext, plausible, airia Thuc. 6. 105. 2. easily admitting of pretexts, App. Pun. 64. evrpddopos, ov, easy to utter, Dion. H. de Comp. 12. earn és, well-steering, well-governing, eimpupvi| ppevds xdpiv Aesch. Supp. 989, if the word be correct. é etmpupvos, ov, with ly stern or poop, vies Ul. 4. 248, Eur. I. T. 1000, 1357; mAdra Id. I. A. 723. etimpwpos, ov, with goodly prow or head, mhérn Eur. I. A. 765. edtrravatos, ov, easy stumbling : unsteady, unsafe, Hipp. 26. 19. etrrrepos, ov, well-winged, well-plumed, of birds, Soph. O. T. 176, Eur, Ion 1200, 1203; apérpa Bion 1.'82; metaph., etmr. -yuvaikes high- plumed dames, Ar. Nub. 800. E eirrépttyos, ov, =foreg., Opp.'C. 3. 1253 of ships, Anth. P. 10. 6, € ola, %), expertness in flying, Artemid. 5. 69. evrrr , ov, easily scared, pe Gray Plut. 2. 642 A. Snrddepos, ov, poet. for eddrcpos, ‘Q. Sm. 5. 320. eirropbos, ov, finely branching, of horns, Anth. Plan. 4. 96. edriyla, 4, fine shape in the hinder parts, Alex. Iooor. I, 11. edriyos, ov, (muy) well-shaped in the hinder parts, Hermes Stob. Ecl, I. 992, Poll. 2.184: cf. kadAtmvyos. : : Sdxwros, ov, well-botiomed, of a cup, Luc, Lexiph. 13. edrrupyos, ov, well-towered, of fortified towns, Tpolny eur. Il. 7. 71, cf. Hes. Sc. 270; poit. also jémupyos, Pind. N. 4. 19. “eimipos, ov, fertile in corn, Poll. 9. 162. ~ drat gd Soe SS Ee ee i edrpemys — Evprridiov. edripodédpos, f. 1. for tupopdpos in Strabo 24%. etiripwros, ov, (mpéw) easily set fire to, Theophr. C, P. r. 22, 5. etndyov, 5, well-bearded, Arist. Physiogn. 3. 11, Anth. P. 9. 99, 744. e’mwdos, ov, abounding in foals or horses, in Hom. as epith. of Troy, “Tatoy els em. Il. 5. 551, etc.; S@poy .. euro, evmwdov .., where the former refers to the use of the horse in war, the latter to the breeding of horses, Soph. O. C. 711. evpiOdpryt, vyyos, 6, %, dripping-wet, Nonn. D. 5. 258. evpat, ai, the tips of the axle, on which the wheels run, Poll. 1. 146. evp-akvAuv, v. sub edpoxAvian. eipdpny, v. sub cipicxw, A ; etpdk, Ady. on one side, sideways, ori 8 edpag adv dovpi Il. 11. 251., 15. 541. IL. ebpag maraf, an exclamation in Ar. Av. 1258,— to frighten away birds. iipetOpos, ov, =éijppens, Manetho 1. 141. evpepa, 7d, late and incorrect form of etpnya, Anth, P. 7. 411, Babr. prooem. 108 ; v. Lob. Phryn. 446. eipeotémeta, —eméa, v. sub evpyat-. etpeot-nakos, ov, inventive of evil, Schol. Ear. Med. 407. eipeothoyéw, fo invent or multiply words, Polyb, ap. Ath. 193 D, Diog. L, 2. 134. siactiiyia: %, skill in finding words, command of words, fluency, loquacity, Polyb.’18. 29, 3, Diod. 1. 37, etc.:—saphistical use of words, power of playing with them, Plut. 2. 1033 B, Arr. Epict. 2.20, 35.—ev- pyow— is a freq. v. 1. etdpect-Adyos, ov, inventive of words, having a great command of words, Diog. L. 4. 37, cf. Wyttenb. Plut. 2. 31 E.—Written eipyor— in Mss., Lob. Phryn. 446. etpécros Zeds, 6, Zeus as god of discovery, Dion. Hi 1. 39. eipeots, ews, }, a finding, discovery, Plat. Rep. 336 E, Crat. 436 A, al. II. of writings, invention, conception (technically rapacKevi), Dion. H. dé Dem. 51: cf. evpyats. etpect-rexvos, ov, inventor of arts, Orph. H, 31.14. etperéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be discovered, found out, Thuc. 3. 45: not ebpnréos, Lob. Phryn. 446. edperis, od, 6, an inventor, discoverer, Plat. Lach. 186 E, Isocr. 18 B, etc.: cf. ebpéris. etiperixds, 7, dv, inventive, ingenious, Plat. Symp. 209 A, Polit. 286 E, 287 A; ebperindy elvat pact riv épnpiay Menand., *Avdp. 4. etipérts, cdos, fem. of ebperns, Soph. Fr.88; acc..eipériw Diod.1.25: (this form determines the accent ; for the acc. of etperis would be ebperiéa.) ebperés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of eipioxw, discoverable, Ta pry didaxTa pay- Gave, 7a 5 ebpera (nr® Soph. Fr. 723; edpera dvOpémors Xen, Mem,4. 7, 6. etpérpia, 7), =ebpers, Diod. 5. 67. ‘elperpov, 76, the reward of discovery, Ulpian., Eccl. eUpna, pf. of ebipioxw. eti-pykros, ov, easy to break, Aretae. Cur. M. Diut, 1. 13, Oribas,12a Mai. , ~ Ca 29, 5:—Adv. —pis, heedlessly, recklessly, @ Aeyov evXEp@s Ort dv BovAndfs Dem. 248. 11, cf. 315.33 edxep@s mus Plat, Theaet. 154 B; Comp. —éorepoy Arist. Pol. 5. 7, 11. edxerdopat, Ep. for ef xouat, Dep., used only in pres. and impf. (with- out augm.). To pray, Oeotat .. ueyar’ edxerdawro Exagros Il. 8. 347-5 15. 369; Kpovian .. ebxeraacda 6. 268; mdvres 3 ebxerdwvro Oewv Auk Néotop: 8 dvdpav 11. 761, cf. Od. 8. 467. II. to boast oneself, profess, c. inf., tives Eupevar edxerdavrar; Od. 1. 172, etc. ; and with inf. omitted, Ap. Rh. 1. 189, Orph. Arg. 287:—#o brag, Lat. gloriari, iva ph ris... edxero@r’ énéeoor Il. 12. 391; od pev Kaddv brépBuov edxerdacbar 17. 19; pay airws ebxerdacbar 20. 348 :— Krapévoiow én’ dvdpdow ebxeraacba to glory over them (referring to éAdAvfer in vy. 408), Od. 22. 412. etx, 4, (edxouar) a prayer or vow, once only in Hom. (his usual words being edyos and edxwAn), émjy ebxfjot Ai Od. 10. 526; so Hes. Th. 419, Theogn. 341, Hdt. 1.31, Pind., and Att., cf. réXeLos II, TeAcopdpos 1; Oeds evppay cin... ebxais Pind.O,4.21; ebxds dvacxeiv mit Soph. El. 636; edxiv émreAéoat, Lat. vota persolvere, Hat. 1. 86; dmodidévar Xen, Mem. 2. 2, 10; edxH xpHjoOat, Lat. votis potiri, Plat. Legg. 688 B; xara xiAiwy .. edxy Toncacba xtpapwov to make a vow of a thousand goats, Ar. Eq. 661; év Qeav edxaiat Soph. O. T. 239, etc.; edxas ebxecOar mpos Tovs Geods or Tots Oeots Plat. Legg. 7oo B, Dem. 381.10, etc.; ebx7v drobvev Diphil. Zoryp. 2.10; Kar’ evxny, & edxijs, Lat. ex voto, Call. Epigr. 50, Anth. P. 6.357. 2. a mere wish, an aspiration, a visionary thing, as opp. to the reality, ebxais Suora Aeyerw to build castles in the air, Plat. Rep. 499 C, cf. 456C, 540D; pr edxi doxp elvar 6 Adyos Ib. 450D; xara thy maddy evyqy like a boy’s wish, Id. Soph. 249 D; dgca evyijs things to be wished, but not expected, Isocr. 79 A; Tmodrrela % Kat’ edyiv ywopévn Arist. Pol. 4. 11, 1, cf. 4. 1, 3. 3. a prayer for evil, i.e. a curse, imprecation, marpds kat” ebxds Aesch. Theb. 819, cf. Eur. Phoen. 70. evxtpov, ov, to be wished for, Hesych.,—prob. by an error. etxthos, ov, rich in fodder, kamn Lyc. 95. II. of a horse, feeding well, Xen. Eq. 1, 12, cf. Arist. P. A. 3.14, 21. edxipdpos [t], ov, rick in goats, Anth. P. 6. 108. €txAoos, ov, contr. —xAous, ovr, (xAda) fresh and green, epith, of Demeter, Soph. O. C. 1600: blooming, Nonn. D. 41. 15. edxAwpos, f. 1. for éyxAwpos, Theophr. H. P, 3. 5, 2. edXxo-hédytov, 76, a prayer-book, Eccl., v. Suicer. s. v. etxopar, Ep. 2 sing. edfear Od. 3. 45: impf. ydxduqy or ed-: fut. evfopar : aor, ndgdpny or ev-: the augm. never occurs in Ep, and Ion. ; in Att. Elmsl,, Dind., and others follow Moeris in editing #-:—for the pass. forms v. infr.Iv: Dep. (Akin to abyéw, xavydopat.) To pray, offer prayers, pay one’s vows, make a vow, Lat. precari, vota facere, Ge, Geois, Hom. and other Poets, but also in Hdt. 7. 178., 8.64, Thuc. 3.58; and c, acc. cogn., ety. ebyds Tots Oeois, etc., v. sub dyn; €bx. Gedy only in late Poets, as Anth. P. 9. 268; ex. mpds rods Oeods Xen. Mem. 1. 3, 2, etc.; edxds dxép Tivos mpds rods Beovs ev. Aeschin. 56. 22; evx. émos to utter it in prayer, Simon. 43. 18, Pind. P. 3. 3, cf. Aesch. Supp. 1060 :—c. dat. commodi, to pray for one, Il. 7. 298 :— Hom. is fond of joining peydéAa or roAAa edxea0ar to pray aloud and earnestly, make many prayers:—absol., Aesch.Cho.465,Supp.980. 2, c. acc. et inf. to pray zhat, Od. £5. 353., 21. 211, Hat. 1. 31, and Att. : c. inf. alone, bx. Odvarov pvyeiv Il. 2. 401; Th doxéers eVxETOat GAdO, i}. -AaBeiy; Hdt. 1. 27; olxoy ideiv Pind. P. 4. 521, etc.: also, evy.Tods Geobs Sodvai por to pray them to give, Ar. Thesm. 351, Xen. An. 6. 1, 26; mpds rods Oeods S:dévax Xen. Mem. 1.3, 23 Tais Modoas elev Plat. Rep. 545 D, etc. ;—in Soph. O. T, 1512 (where the Mss. give viv 5e Tov’ ed ETE pot, oF Kaipds Cy, Tod Blov dt Adovos iuas Kuphaat), we must read of xaipds &@ (as monosyll.) jv, with Dind., or ob «. 7 (iv with Meineke. 8. c. acc. objecti, to pray for, long or wish for, xpvodv Pind. N. 8. 63, and so Att.; ebydpevos ToUT’ dy evgarro Antipho 141.16; ety. rwi 7 to pray for something for a person, as Soph. Ph. 1019; also to pray for a thing from .., as, Tots Geois Ta-yaba umep twos Xen, Mem. 2, 2, 10, cf. 3. 14, 3, Cyr. 2. 3; I- II. to vow or promise to do.., c. inf. fut., evyopar éfedday xbvas Il. 8. 526; Geoter oo éxarduBas béfev Od. 17. 50, cf. Il. 4. 101, Plat. Phaedo 58 B; c. inf. A0F., EUXETO navr’ dmododvae Il. 18. 499, and so in Att.; in Att., c. inf. pres., qigw Oeois .. dv &S Epdew rade Aesch. Ag. 933, cf. Soph. Ph. 1033. 2. c. acc, rei only, like Lat. vovere, to vow a thing, toAA@v Tarno pov ciudrov Aesch. Ag. 963; fepeiov, Ovotas Ar. Av. 1619, etc. ; [Avxvov] meph maudds Call. Ep. 56. 3. 8. the thing vowed is some- times put with kard, to vow to offer them, as if they were on the altar, €UX. Tots Beois kata éxaTduBns Plut. Mar.26,2.294B; kara vienrnplay Dem. Epist. 1; ef. Interpp. Ar. Eq. 660. IIT. from the sense of vowing to do a thing comes a sense like that of abyéw, to profess loudly, to boast, vaunt, orm pyat Kat ebyerat, obver’ Ayiddeds vnvoly er e¥xopdos — edwyia, Aagdupiot péver Il, 14. 366:—mostly not of empty boasting, but of something of which one has a right to be proud, tavrns To -yevefjs Te kai aiparos ebxopat eivar Il. 6. 211, cf.8.190; marpds 8 ef dyabod kat eye yévos evxopa eivat 14. 113, cf. Plat. Gorg. 449 A; rarely without the inf., é« Kpyrdwy yévos etxopat (sc. elvar) Od. 14. 199; 70 marpddev é« Aids exovra: Pind. P. 4.173; wéptis edxera Bobs (sc elvat) Aesch, Supp. 313, cf. 19, 536; evOev edxopae -yévos Eur, Fr. 697: —but also, 2. to boast vainly, brag, avrws edxeat Il. 11. 388; c. inf., ed. Sngcev Soph. O. C. 1318. 3. simply to profess or declare, ixérns 5€ rot ebx. elvar Od. 5. 450, cf. Pind. O. 6. 88; ris xOdv ebxerar He [eivac]; Ap. Rh. 4.1251 —cf. edyerdopa: 1. Iv. as a Pass., €uol perpiws edxra I have prayed sufficiently, Plat. Phaedr. 279 C; % mavyyupis 7} .. €dxOelca vowed, Dio C. 48. 32 :—but Soph. uses plqpf. ni-ypny in act. sense, Tr. 610. etxopbdos, ov, well-strung, Avpa Pind. N. to. 39. edxoptos, ov, of cattle, thriving on its fodder, Arist. H. A. 8. 8, 5 II. rich in fodder, fertile, Poll. 7. 184. ebxos, eos, 76, (edopat), poet. Noun: I. the thing prayed for, object of prayer, edxos dodvat, dpéat, mopety Tit to grant one’s prayer, Il. 5. 285., 22. 130, Od. 22. 7, cf. Soph. Ph. 1202; edyos dpéoOa to obtain it, Il. 7.203; éAeiv Tyrtae. 9. 36, Pind. P. 5. 26; Tedxpor.. ebxos Gnavpay to take it away from him, Il. 15.462. II. a boast, vaunt, pédrcov 5é of edxos édwxas Il. 21.473, and often in Pind., as O. Io (11). 75; of persons, "Avdxpeoy, evxos “Idvaw Anth. P. 7. 27. ITI. later, a vow, votive offering, Plat. in Anth, P. 6. 43. etx pews, wy, =expyoros, Antim. ap. Ath. 469 F. etxpypiiréw, fo be edxprpuaros, Poll. 3. 109., 6. 196 :—edxpyparia, 7, wealth, Poll. 6. 196 :—etxpnpdrioros, ov, moneyed, Procl.:—ebxpi- patos, ov, wealthy, Poll. 3. 109. eixpnpovéw, = edxpyyaréw, Plat. Com. ap. Poll. 6. 196. edxpyortw, to be serviceable, ri for a thing, Polyb. 12.18, 3; €ts Te Diosc. 1. 6, etc. 3 reve to a person, C. I. 3800. 13: absol., Chrysipp. ap. Diog. L. 7. 129, C. I. 2270. 22. II. Pass., evxpnoretoOar did Twa. to receive assistance through his means, Diod. 5.12; bmé tvos Plut. 2. 185 D. 2. to be in common use, of words, Eust. 964. 21, etc. ebxpiompa, 76, an advantage received, Cic. Fin. 3. 21. eixpyoria, 7}, ready use, oxevay Arist. Occ. 1. 6, 9: utility, mpds Tt Polyb. 9. 7, 5. II. credit, Diod. 1. 79. edxpnoros, ov, (xpdopac) easy to make use of, useful, serviceable, Hipp. Fract. 763, and often in Xen. (who has both Comp. and Sup.) ; apdés 71 Plat. Legg. 777, Xen. Mem. 3. 8, 5; «is 7s Diod. 5. 40. Adv. —r1as, Chrysipp. ap. Plut. 2. 1044 D; ebdxp. éxetv mpds re Polyb. 3. 73, 5. ebxpoactos, ov, =ebxpoos, dub. in Xen. Eq. 1,17; L. Dind. evpworor. etxpotw, fo be of a good, healthy look, Ar. Lys. 80, Galen. edxpors, és, rare poét. form for evxpoos, 5épya Bderoy evxpoés Od. 14.24. edxpota, Ion. -ofn, %, good: of complexion, a fresh and healthy Zook, Hipp. Coac. 127 A, Arist. H. A. 7. 4, 5, etc. ebxpoos, ov, contr. etxpous, ovv: Ion. etxpouos, ov: cf. evypws: (xpéa) :—well-coloured, of good complexion, fresh-looking, healthy, Hipp. Aph. 1247, Xen. Lac. 5, 8, etc.:—Comp. —oWrepos, Xen. Cyr. 8. I, 41; —ovorepos Arist. Probl. 2. 30, etc.; Sup. -ovoraros Ib. 32.1. 2. in Music, eypoa ypd¶ Philochor. ap. Ath. 638 A. eixptcos, ov, rich in gold, of the Pactolus, Soph. Ph. 394. etxpws, wy, =edxpoos, Ar. Eq. 1171, Thesm. 644, Lys. 206, Xen. Occ. Io, 5; pl. edxpw, Arist. P. A. 4. 2. 2. of music, like evxpoos, Plat. Legg. 655 A. Only used in nom, and acc. evxiAla, 4, goodness of flavour, Ath. 87 C, 306 E. ebxtdos, ov, with healthy juices, juicy, Theophr. C. P: 6.11, 15; of meat, Alex. Tovnp. 4, Diphil. Siphn. ap. Ath. 62 C, Hices. ib. 282 D. Ady. -Aws, Hipp. 598. 28. evxipla, #,=edxvAla, Hipp. 412. 19, Theophr. C. P. 6. 11, 4. etxipos, ov, well-flavoured, Posidon. ap. Ath. 649 D; apds tiv éiwdqv edx. Arist. G. A. 3.11, fin.; Comp., Plut. 2. 690 A. edx oA, 7H, (ebxopar) Ep. form of evyy, a prayer, vow, od’ dp’ by’ ebx@dijs empépperat 006° ExaropuBns ll. 1.65, 933 Ovéecot kal ebywATs ayavjot 9. 499, Od. 13. 3573 edxwrdov ob« Exdve HoiBos Hes. Sc. 68; also in Ion. Prose, cf, evym@Acpatos, and v. Protag. ap. Diog. L. 9. 53, Luc. Syr. D, 28, 29. IL. a boast, vaunt, nj €Bay épeorpls, (Sos, 7, (epévvupt) an upper garment, wrapper, Xen. Symp. 624 4, 38; a philosopher's mantle, Ath. 98 A; a soldier’s cloak, Plut. Lucull. 28; a senator's mantle, Hdn. 4.2; also a woman's robe, Anth. P. 9. 153, etc.: v. Becker Charikl. 441 E. Tr. 2. xAapds ép, Ath. 215 B. eperéov, verb. Adj. of épinus, one must allow, Cic. Att. 9. 4, 2. &pérs, ov, 6, (€pinus) a commander, Aesch, Pers. 80. II. épérat, of, at Athens, the Ephetae, a court of 51 Eupatridae, said to have been created by Draco to try cases of homicide under the “Apywy Baoi- Aevs, Andoc. 10. 43, cf. Plut. Sol. 19: after the creation of the Senate of Areopagus, which took all cases of wilful murder, the Ephetae tried only the lesser cases of homicide in the four courts of Delphinium, Palladium, *Prytaneum and Phreatto, Dem. 643-646, Arist. Frr. 417-19, Poll. 8.125. Eherikos, 7, dv, (epinuu) aiming at, Tivos Clem. Al. 661. II. actuated by desire, Theophr. Fr. 12, 9 Wimmer :—in Gramm., desidera- tive, of Verbs in -oeiw, Lat. -urio, Choerob. in A. B. 1277. éperivia maifey, (Adv.) to play at catch-ball, also dpmacréy and pat- vivéa, Cratin. Incert. 25, who uses it with a pun on épeats, as Ar. puns on éo7paxivda and dorpakos. ¢ Eperph, 4, (&pinus) post. word, like épnuoodyy, a command, behest, Il. 14. 249 (v. mvtdaow); Oey drpuvey Eperpy 19. 299 :—often in pl. behests, esp. of the gods or one’s parents, Il. 5. 508., 18. 216, Od. 3. 11, etc.; but in Il. 1. 495, @éris 8 od Ander’ Eperpav masdds Eod :—also in Pind. P. 3. 19, etc., Aesch. Cho. 300, 685, Eum. 241, Eur. I. A. 634 :— also of demands, prayers, Pind. J. 6 (5). 26. éperds, 7, dv, (€pienat) desirable, Oeidy 7 kat fp. Arist. Phys. 1. 9, 3, ef, Plut. 2. 374. D. Adv. -r@s. épevdlw, =émrevatw, Plut. Marcell. 22, nisi legend. ebatw. Edevipepa, 76, a discovery, invention, cited from Schol, Eur. épetipecis, ews, 47, a discovering, discovery, A. B. 773, Ignat. Epeuperns, 00, 6, an inventor, contriver, Anacreont. 41; Kkaxdv Ep. Rom. 1. 30, Eccl. :—édevperios, 4, dv, inventive, Schol. Hes. épevploxe, Ion. ém—: fut. épevpjow: aor. &pnidpov or eped-; etc. To find or discover, find anywhere, et mov épevpor tndvas Atpévas Te Od. 5. 440, cf. 417 (cf. ebpioxw init.), cf. Plat. Phaedr. 266 A ;—mostly with a partic., dv 8 ad ..Bodavra épedpor Il. 2. 98; Sacvupévous F eb wavras Epedpopev Od. 10. 452; THVd GAdVovcay epetpoper dydAadv lordy we discovered her undoing it, 24. 145, cf. Soph, El. 1093, Plat. Polit. 307 C: —so in Pass., wi) érevpeO mphoowy Hadt. 9. 109; wAémrow Gray Tis .. &peupeOf Soph. Fr. 669; Spay epevpioxer (2 sing.) Id. O.C. 938; Epyu- pnpar xaxds (sc. dv) Id, O. T. 1421, cf. Ant. 281; Sedds dv epnupébys Eur. Supp. 319. 2. to discover besides, v.1. Od. 19. 158; tTivi Te Paus. 3. 12, 10. 8. to bring in besides, baa 8 dv épevpiony [7d TéAn] Xen. Vect. 4, 40. II. to find out, invent, of arts, Téxvnv Pind. P. 12. 13 (and in Med., Ib. 4. 466); copas épedpes Hore pi) Oaveiy Eur, Alc, 2. to find out, discover, épedpe 8 darpow pérpa Kal meprarpopds Soph. Fr.379.8; xpévov duarpiBas Ib. 380; cf.Cratin.’O5. 3. Epepidopar, Dep. to mock or scoff at, Tu, Lat. illudere, reOvn@ri -y' eperidovrat Gnayres Od. 19. 331, cf. 370: V- Kabeyrdoua. éapa, to boil over again, Ath. 656 B; cf. éromrda :—Pass., Epéperat Hdwp boils over, Pallad. de Febr. p. 40. épiPara, 74, (7j8n) the parts about the pudenda, Lat. pubes, Diosc. 1. 3, Heraclid. ap. Ath. 647 A. xos, 5, (epnBos, dpxw) an overseer of the youth, a Raagerate in some Greek cities, as Edessa, C, I. 1997 € (add.) ; Cyzicus, 3660, etc. ; v. Arr. Epict. 3.1, 34., 7-19:—€onPBapxéw, to hold this office, at Beroea, C. I. 7957 (add.); at Teos, 3085-6; at Philadelphia, 3421; at Cyzicus, 3665. dw, Ion. ém-, to come to man’s estate, grow up to manhood, Hat. 6. 83, Aesch, Theb. 665, Eur. Fr. 563, Xen, Cyr. 6. 1, 12. é (a, 4, (épnBevw) puberty, man’s estate, Anth. P. 7. 467. tov, 76, a place for the youth to exercise themselves, Strabo 246 :* hence as an architectural term, Vitruv. 5. 11, I. ebaPevos, a, ov, youthful, dxph Anth. P. 7. 427, append. 148. ebyBetw, to be an epnBos, to arrive at man’s estate, Paus. 7. 27, 5, Artemid. 1. 54; of épnBevoavres those who have become épnBor, C. I. 265, 272 B, 275-6, al,; 70 épnBedov =ot épnBor, Heliod, 7. 8. . hpos, 6, post. for épnBos, C. I. 3538. 24. . ), =epn Beta, Artemid. 1.54. II. épnBeiov, 2 Macc. 4.9. épnBixds, 4, dv, Dor. épaB-, 4, dv, of or for an épnBos, Theocr. 23. 56; rThv..7pixav ri ep. Keipas C. I. 2392. Il. 7d épn- Birdy, 1.=ép7Bo, Luc. Navig. 3. 2. the part of the theatre assigned to the youths, Poll. 4. 122, Schol. Ar. Av. 795. €nBos, Dor. €pGBos, 5, one arrived at puberty (Gen), a youth who was 18 years of age, Poll. 8. 105, Harp. s. v. mbserés ; (Xen. Cyr. 1. 2,8 put the age at 16 or 17 for the Persians): on arriving at this age the Athen. youth underwent his Soxpacta and was registered as a citizen upon the Angiapxiedy of his deme, Lycurg. 157. 18, v. Bockh de Eph. Att. (1819), Dict. of Antiqq.; (Poll. and Harp. defer the registration to the age of 20): cf. mepiaodos, 2. of a young girl, Basil., Hesych. II. a kind of cup, Ath. 469 A. IIT. a throw on the dice, Anth. P. 7. 427. é ivy, 4, the age of an épnBos, puberty, Anth. P. 6. 282. é , nos, 6, =foreg., Byz. é riled Dep. to lead to a place, c. dat. pers., esp. as Att. law-term, éperéov — ediadrw. Edy Sivea, to sweeten, give a relish to, season, Thy tpophy Plat. 2. 668 D:—metaph., Adyors SiarpiBiy ep. Ib. 514 F. ; Ebhkw, fut. go Soph. El. 304 :—to have arrived, Id. Aj. 34, Ant. 1257, etc.; épaxev Huépa Thuc. 8. 61. 2. bcov dv % pdpa épyey so far as it reaches, so much space as it occupies, Xen, Lac. 12, 5. epHALE, Uicos, 6, 9, =epnBos, Anth. P. 7. 427. ; épyAts, Ion, ér-, sdos, also épyAts, (Sos, 7): (fds) :—an iron band on a box’s cover, Philo Belop. 63 F. II. in pl. rough spots which stud the face (from 7Aos), or, acc. to others, freckles (from #ALos), Hipp. Prorrh. 105 C, Theophr. H. P. 9. 20, 3, etc.; cf. Nic. Th. 333, 158. Epydos, ov, (HAos) nailed on or to, Suid. ‘ il. with a white speck on it, dpOadpds Acl. N. A. 15. 18; dpOadpotowy epnros Poéta ap. E. M. 714.6. - &pnAdrys, 770s, }, a white speck on the eye, Sext. Emp. M. 7. 233: ébnAde, fo nail on, nail firmly: metaph., Tavd ephAwrat Topas yop os didpwag the bolt is driven home, i.e. tt is irrevocably fixed, Aesch. Su 4. aya h, ov, (&pnddw) nailed on, Hero Autom. p. 244. Epnpat, pf. pass. used as a pres. (cf. jjuat) :—to be set or seated on, to sit on, kdnidecow ephyevor Od. 12. 215; Opdvy 6. 309; ¢. gen., névrov Owds éphpevos Soph. Ph. 1124:—to be seated at or in, Sépors, ray Aesch. Ag. 1217, Cho. 501 :—also c. acc., (v. sub xaGi{w) Bpéras ephyevos Id. Eum. 409, cf. 440, and v. épéfopar fin. ; rapow Id. Fr. 158:—Bopla epnpevy =Bapd ép. Eur. Supp. 93- II. to act as assessor (cf. épedpos), Madads oi 7’ épjpevor Aesch. Eum. 629. Ednpepevris, 00, 6, a daily watcher or minister, Philo 2. 481. Ednpepevo, fo spend the whole day in a thing, Polyb. 22. 10,6; ¢. dat., tots kwdvvors Diod. 11.8. II. to be president for the day, C.1. 5853. édnpepla, #), a division of the priests for the daily service of the temple, Ev. Luc. 1. 5, cf. Lxx (1 Paral. 23. 6, Neh. 13. 30): called mazpia in Joseph. A. J. 7. 14, 73 cf. Lxx (1 Paral. 24. 4), Suid. s. v. épypeptvos, 7, dv, =sq., Alex. Incert. 34. Edmpépros, Dor. epap-, ov; also a, oy Pind. N. 6. 10: (juépa) :—on, for or during the day, the day through, ov Kev épnuépids ye Bada kara Sdnpv mapeav Od, 4.223: by day, opp. to perd vd«ras, Pind. l.c. 2. for a day only, for the day, &pnpépia ppovéoyres taking no thought for the morrow, Od. 21. 85; «dos ép. lasting but for a day, short-lived, Theogn. 656:—often of men, épnpéptoe creatures of a day, Aesch. Pr. 546, Ar. Av. 687; Ovard Te kal épap. (Ga Tim. Locr. 99 D. 3. for the day, daily, d4pBpocia Pherecyd. ap. Plut. 2. 938 B; Adrpis é¢. hired for or by the day, Theogn. 656; puodés Anth. P. 7.634.—Cf. épqpepos. &pnpepts, i50s, 4, a diary, journal, esp. a military record, as Caesar's Commentarii, Plut. Caes. 22 ; so we hear of Alexander’s épnpepiies, Id. Alex, 23, Arr, An, 7. 25, I. 2. a day-book, account-book, Plut. 24 829 C, Propert. 3. 23, 20; els Tas &p. prdocopetv to profess philosophy for the ledger, Plut. 2. 999 A. 8. a calendar, =peporddy.ov, Synes. II. =épnpepia, Joseph. Vita 1. épapepov, 76, a short-lived insect, the May-fly, Arist. H. A. 5. 12, 26, II. a poisonous plant, Nic. Al. 250. éphpepos, ov, Dor. épdp-, Acol. emdp— Pind. P. 8. 135: (uépa) — more common form of épnyépios, esp. in Prose, living but a day, short- lived, temporary, reprvdy Pind. 1. 7 (6). 57; T¥xat Eur. Heracl. 866 ; bABos od BEéBatos, GAN é&p. Id. Phoen. 558 (ubi v. Pors.); &p. cHpara kat xphpara Thuc. 2.53; xpious Arist. Pol. 1. 2, 53 €p. kat mpowerhj Biov Menand. Mapax. 2; 70 ég. Arist. Eth. N. 1. 6, 4. 2. of men, ephmepo creatures of a day, like épnpéprot, Pind. P. 8. 335, Simon, Iambl. 1. 3, Aesch. Pr. 83; @ TdAas épdpepe Pind. Fr, 128; &pypepe Ar. Nub. 223; & ido: nai drexvds ep, Plat. Legg. 923 A. 3. 7d €p., an insect, perh. ephemera longicauda, Arist. H. A. 1. 5, 16., 5. 19, 26. II. for the day, daily, muperés Hipp. Aph. 1251; tpoph Dion. H. 8. 41; mpages Luc. Pseudol. 17; dSamavn Plut. Pericl. 16, etc. III. pdppaxoy éq. killing on the same day, Lat. venenum praesentaneum (Plin.), Plut. Them, 31: cf, &phpepov IL. €pypepotoror, wy, of, they who live only for the present day, Procl. pataphr. Ptol. p. 225. epnprdAros, ov, less correct form of #pudAcos, Theo. Smyrn. 24, p. 119. Epnpootvy, 7, (epinue)=eperpn, a command, behest, ob5' ds Meve- Adov Epnpuootyns dpérnoer Il. 17. 697, cf. Od. 12..226., 16. 340; so in Pind, P. 6. 20, Soph. Ph. 1144, Ap. Rh. 1. 3. €pyo0a, Ep, and Aeol. for ép7s, also used in Com. dialogue. Ebyoix ate, fut. dow, to acquiesce in a thing, v. 1. Polyb. 2.64,4; Twe Heliod, 6. ve II. to be quiet, Aretae. Cur, M. Diut. 1. 8. EdPaACos, a, ov, (fw) cooked, Phot., Suid. edPappévis, Ady. pf. pass. corruptly, Theol. Arithm. p. 43- EpPEos, a, ov, (pw) to be cooked, Nic. Al. 392. &0-4ipepos, ov, lasting seven days, dvoxai Plut. 2. 223 A. €$0-nptpepys, containing seven halves, i.e. 34; esp. in metre, consisting’ of poe phe de of the first 34 feet of a Hexameter or Iambic imeter, Schol. Ar, Pl, 302, etc.: cf. nS. épOlaro, vy, sub ba Lapa ang &90-1rddtov, 70, a place where dressed meat is sold, cook-shop, Posi- dipp. Maid, 1. é06s, h, &v, verb. Adj. of Ea, boiled, dressed, of meat or fish, Hdt. 2. 77, Hipp. Vet. Med. 13, Eur. Cycl. 246, Ar. Pax 717, Ecphantid, eat I, Plat. Rep. 404 C, etc.; of vegetables, Antiph. ’Ayp. 6; of iquids, Arist. Meteor. 4. 3,8; of a hot bath, &p0dv [pe] .. wemoineev Antiph, Incert. 9. 2. EpOds xpuads refined gold, Simon. 64. . épOdrys, metaph. languid, unnerved, Hipp, 1125 E; and so the Subst. TOS, %, languor, Id. Acut. 392. & epidrAw, v. sub dudddAw, equdArrns — epiornmt. épiddrys, ov, 6, one who leaps upon, the night-mare, Lat. incubo, Phryn. Com. ‘Eu. 2, Strabo 19; Aeol. émdArns, Alcae. 129. épiadria, %, or épidAtiov, 7d, a herb used as a preventive of night- mare, Poéta de Vir. Herb. in Fabric. p. 654. épidpdw, Ion. émdp-, to perspire in addition to or after, nuper@ Hipp. Epid, 1. 941 :—“o perspire slightly over the whole body or on the upper part only, Id.; v. Foes. Occ, épiSpvw, to place or set upon, Philo 1.21, Paul. Sil. Ambo 158. EpiSpwors, ews, 7), superficial perspiration, Plut. Brut. 25, Galen. épifdvw, Hom. only in Il., and always in impf., ¢o sit at or in, deinvy, aldovcnaw 10. 578., 20. 11:—to sit upon, iavos émt Brepapaow epifa- vev 20. 26; vwroow épifave Mosch. 2. 108; c. acc., @@xov Ap. Rh. 1.667 :—later also in pres., Aretae. Caus. M. Ac. 2. 12, Philostr. 810. €p-ifw, Dor. épicda: I. Causal, in Epic aor. épéoom, épéc- cad@at, to set upon, used by Hom. only once in Act., rods p’ éxéAevoa TWaAovée xaracrijcat nat épéooa to bring me to Pylos and se¢ me ashore, Od. 13. 274:—more common in Med,, youvacw olaw épec- odpevos having set [me] on his knees, 16. 443, (cf. Il. 9. 455, where a fut. épéocecar is used) ; imperat., éperoai pe vnds Od. 15. 277; and in tmesi, és AcBinv py’ émt vnds tooaro 14. 295. II. intr. ¢o sit at or by, absol. to sit, Hom. only in Od. and always in impf., épite Od. 3. 411; &6' dp’ epiley 19. 55; evOa .. épiceoxe 17. 331: later also in pres., Bapds 3° épiter Aesch. Supp. 650; wpa epi{oaica yAepapors sitting upon, Pind. N. 8. 4; tmvos.. Brepapoow epifav Mosch. 2. 3; mpos Opp’ GxAds epiCer Critias 2.11; dupt updos Nic. Al. 478; Tavet yap épicde (Dor.) Theoer. 5.97. €inpt, Ion. é—:—of the Act., Hom. uses part. pres. équels, fut. pow, aor, I ind. épjxa, Ep. épénea, aor. 2 imperat. épes, subj. Epeiw, ps, 73 (so, later, in the obl. moods the aor. 2 was preferred, és Soph. El. 554, part. épeis Aj. 495, etc.) :—of the Med., pres. part. éprépevos, fut. ép7- gopat :—he also has a 3 impf. épiet, as if from épréw: cf. tinue. [epinuc Ep., épinue Att.; yet Homer always uses équeis, epier, Epréuvevos with 7, except éple Od. 24. 180.] To send to one, Tptdup .. "Ip éphow Tl, 24. 117; épénwe pe xadéewy sent me to call, Ap, Rh. 1. 712. 2. in Hom. c. inf., to se¢ on or incite to do, HAeds, bar’ &pénke moAvppova mep par’ detcar Od. 14. 464; so, &p. Twa ExOodonHaat, xarenqvat, arovaxfoa Il. 1. 518., 18, 108, 124, cf. Pind. I. 2. 15. 38. of things, to throw or launch at one, 6s Tot mp@ros epHxe Bédos Il. 16. 812 ; dAAOS épies Bédea Od. 24. 180, etc.; Eyxos, pedtny Il. 20. 346., 21. 170; olordv éni rut Eur, Med. 634; &. xeipds rut to lay hands on him, Lat. injicere manus, pynotipow dvaidéor xeipas épjaw Od. 20, 39, cf. Il. 1. 567, ete. 4. of events, destinies, etc., 4o send upon one, roiow dexéa rérpov epijcey Il. 4. 396, etc.; "Apyetout moAvorova Khde’ Epixev 1. 445, cf. 21. 524; pynornpecow deOdov Todor épnaw Od. 19. 576; roiow denéa véorov .. , bv por Zeds pene which he hath granted me, 9. 38; so, wav7’ épjow pépov Aesch. Eum. 501; réxvorow dpds ép. Id. Theb. 786. 5. to send against, in hostile sense, 7@ otpatonédy tiv inmov Hdt. 5. 63; tiv immo émt rods “EAAnvas 9g. 49, cf. Hes. Sc. 307; o7paroy és media Eur. Heracl, 393 :—also to let in water, éreivat Tov morapov éml riy xu&pny Hdt. 7. 130, cf. 2. 100; 7d vdwp ent thy €cob5ov Id. 7.176; so also, ép. deriva OfBas Eur. Phoen. 5; dyéAas ént 7a xwpia Xen. Cyr. 1,1, 2; ayav épixas yA@ooar did’st let loose, Eur. Andr. 954; épyny tim ép. Plat. Legg. 731 D. 6. to throw into, és AEBnr’ Eptjxer EpecOar péAn Eur. Cycl. 404. II. to let go, loosen, esp. the rein, Lat. remittere, ép. nat xadaoat tds Hvias Trois Adyous Plat. Prot. 338 A; macay épels d0dvny [7G dvéuw] Anth. P. 10. 1, cf. Ap. Rh. 2. 934 :—hence, b. to give up, yield, Lat, concedere, tut ti Hyepoviay Thuc. 1. 95; mav6’ epévres Hdov@ Eur. Fr. 568; TaXAa Tois SovAos Arist. Pol, 2. 5, 19: v. sub xelpios. ec. c, inf. to permit, allow, rt moreiv Tt Hat. 1. 90., 3. 113; Tw? wav A€yew Soph. El. 631; fv épfs por (sc, A€ye) Ib. 554, cf. 556, 649; c. acc. et inf., tovs vewrépous ep SuKev Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 24:—Pass., epeOqoeral 71, c, inf., Luc. pro Imagg. 24. d. to command, Pind. I. 2. 13: v. inf. B. 2. to give up, leave as a prey, épijxev édAois lyOtow SiapOopay Soph. Aj. 1297, cf. 495 :—then, seemingly intr. (sub. éavrdy), to give oneself up to, obpia a fair wind, Plat. Prot. 338 A; loxup@ -yéAwre Rep. 388 E; rp Sov Tim. 59 C: v. diSapu Iv. IIL. to put the male ¢o the female, Lat. admittere, Hdt. 3. 85., 4. 30, Arist. H. A. 9. 47,1. IV. as law-term, ¢o Jeave to another to decide, dimas ép. eis twa Dem. 1017. 27., 1024. 22; &p. rwa és 7d Sixaarhpiov to refer him to... , Id. 913. 33; roaira els €repov dx. Luc. Hermot. 30:—and absol. (sub. éaurdév) to appeal, els rods dixaords Dem. 862. 5, cf. 1017. 25; éni twa Luc. Bis Acc. 4; dad twos Dio C. 64. 2, cf. 37. 27: cf. éperns, Epeois. B. Med, to lay one’s command or behest upon (v. éperpy, épnpo- otvn), bpéwy 8 dvipt Exdorm equrépevos rade eipw Od. 13. 7, cf. Il. 23. 82., 24. 300; émorodds ds cor marip épetro Aesch, Pr. 4; mpés Te TOOT’ épiecar; Soph. O. T. 766 :—c. inf., ep. rut morety 7 Id. El. 1x11, Ar. Vesp, 242; épleuat xalpew oe I bid thee have thy will, Soph. Aj. 112, ef. Aesch, Cho. 1039; absol., &s éplecat Id. Pers, 228, cf. Eur. I. T. 1483; &p. és Aaxedaipova to send orders to.., Thuc. 4. 108. 2. to allow or permit one to do, napa Téuvew épetro TH OédovTt Soph. Ph, 619, Xen. An, 6. 6, 31, etc. II. c. gen. to aim at, dyabod twos Arist. Eth. N. 1.1, 1; Tav mpoodmayv, Tov dewv Plut. Pomp. 71, Caes, 45. 2. to long after, desire, Ti por rev Suvopédpaw éple ; Soph. El. 143; 7f.. épievas qidoriulas; Eur. Phoen. 531; a&AAorpiwy Antipho 138. 37; trav xepdav, dpx7js Thuc. 1. 8, 128, cf. 4. 61: c. gen. pers., Xen. Mem, 4.1, 2; in Soph. O. T. 766, for rodr’ Linwood sug- gevtad 7008 :—c, inf., dv .. cod rvxeiv epiepat, dxovoov Soph, Ph. 1315; ‘p. Gpgew Thuc. 6, 6, etc,; c. acc. et inf, Soph. O. T, 1055. ‘ 625 binre, Dor, for épina:, Pind. I. 2. 15. : bikdven, =sq., xaderdy 8 én yhpas tiedver Od, 11. 196. pixvéopat, lon. ér—: fut. épigouar: aor. épixduny: Dep.: I. to reach at, aim at, c. gen., of two combatants, Gua 6’ dAAnAwY edixovTo Il. 13. 613: simply, ¢o reack or hit with a stick, eb wdda pov épucécOae meipacerat Plat. Hipp. Ma. 292 A; Trav dddov bcouv dv éeqinéabas buvnPGarw Isocr. 280 B, cf. Dem. 800. 17, Plut. 2. 267 C, etc, ; opevidvy ote dy éptxoiuny airéce Antiph. ’Agp. yor. 1. 20; Ta BéAn ep. Expt mpos Tov oxonéy Luc. Nigr. 36. 2. to reach or extend, bcov 6 HAtos ép. Theophr. H. P. 1. 7, 1, etc.; &p’ Saov dvOphmav prhun ep, Xen. Cyr. 5. 5, 8; &p. emt rooatrny viv TO ad’ éavrod pdBw to reach by the terror of his name over .., Ib.1.1,5; &. és 7d Aewréraror to reach to the smallest matter, Luc. Jup. Conf. 19 } Swou pi) &p. } AcovTh, mpoo~ pamréov .. riv GAwmexiy Plut. 2. 190E: c. part., ép. pOeyydpevoy Id. T. Gracch. 18; &p. BrAéwovra péxpt twvds Dio Chr. 2. 321. 3. metaph. to hit or touch the right points, Lat. rem acu tangere, TO AOyw ep, rav éxel kax@v Dem. 361. 25; ép. dpi podpevos Polyb. 1.57, 3 ;— so also with a Prep., és rd GAAa A€yow énixeo ddnbécrara Hat. 7. m 4. to reach, gain, attain to, rijs dpers Isocr. 3 B; avdpaya- Gias Aeschin. 81.10; Tod rpinpapxeiv Dem. 465. 24, cf. 494. 3; and c. inf., &—p. dieAOeiy to be able to .. , Plut. 2. 338 D, cf. Polyb. 1. 4, 11:— absol. to succeed in one’s projects, App. Mithr. 102; II. c, ace. to come upon, like épixavw, ef ce poip’ épixorro Pind. I. 5 (4).17; ¢. dupl, acc., émucéoOar paoriys mAnyds Toy “EAAHorovTov to visit it with blows, Hadt. 7. 35. épucrds, 7, by, easy to reach, accessible, Parmen, 42; ot .. dpOad- potaw épixrdy Emped. 389 ; 7d pécov émimay &. Arist. P. A. 3. 4,133 épuixros elxdre Adyw Plut. Thes. 1. II. épuxrdy éort it is possible, c. inf., Polyb. 9. 24,5; xa0écov éduxrédy to the best of one’s power, Lat. pro virili, Arist, Mund, 1,6; ws ov hv queda abrois Acl. N. A. 5. 73 év épixr@ within reach, Theophr. Lap. 25, Ign. 70; év épuar@ Tips éAmibos, TOU gidjoa Plut. 2. 494.E, 496 C; ds epuerdv édOety to come within reach, Dion, H, 2. 38. épipelpw, strengthd. for inelpw, c. ace., Nic. ap. Ath. 683 F; c. gen., Anth. P.5. 269, Nonn. D.14. 355; ¢. inf., Musae. 80:—Med,, Arat. 975. €pipepos [7], ov, longed for, desired, charming, delightful, agreeable, grdérns Hes. Sc. 15, Th. 132; x@pos Archil. 18; tpvos Theogn. 994; paris Aesch, Cho, 840; 4) réxvav dis &p. mpoodetacey Soph. O. T. 1375; THY ép. eounv Anaxil. Incert. 6; &p. dvipacw dypy Opp. H. 4.110. €propkéw, in Delph. and other Inscrr. for émiopxéw, C. I. 1688. 13, al.; v. Bockh 1. p. 808. épimmafopat, Dep. zo ride a tilt at, Ad-yous ep. Cratin. Incert. 131: cf. kaOimmafopat. 2. to ride upon, ént 5eAdivos Luc. D. Marin. 6. 2; sensu obsc., Artemid. I. 79. épurrapxta, 4, a double trmapxia, consisting of 1024 horse, Arr. Tact. 18, 4, Suid. s. v. épirmav. épurmactyp, fpos, 6, =émBHTwp, Apollon. Lex. s, v. émBdropt. épurmetw, to ride against, to attack with cavalry, twi Diod. 17. 19. II. to ride upon, Babr. 76. 10:—to cover the female, Opp. C. 1. 390. a épimmos, ov, (immos) for putting on a horse, kacGs Xen. Cyr. 8. 3, 6; midos Plut, Artox. 11 (ubi épimmetos); 7d &p. oTp@pa a saddle-cloth, Lat. ephippia, Antiph. ‘Imm. 1; and without orp@pa Xen. Eq. 7, 5s II. épimmos (sc. 5pduos), 6, the horse-course, a course of a certain length so called, Plat. Legg. 833 B. épurmov, 76, a car with one horse, Dio C, 63. 13, Poll. 10. 54, etc. Euros, ov, on horseback, riding, Eupol. Aly. 10, Plut. 2. 306 E, etc. ; &p. dvres, opp. to dwArrevovres, Lys. 140. 21 Bekk.; dvdpids ép. an equestrian statue, Plut. Poplic. 19; ép. elx@y xadnf Id. Fab. 22. 2. KAvSdwv Epurmos a rushing wave of horses, Soph. El. 733. ° épumo-rotérys, ov, 6, a mounted archer, v. sub dudummorogérns. €piarapar, late pres. of émeméropat, Mosch. 1.16, Arist. Mirab. 119, 148. éptoda, Dor. for épica. épiordvw, late form for éplornut, to set over, Twa Tie Plat. 2. 2 33 E. II. to stop, check, Diosc. 4. 16. 2. to attend to a thing, Polyb. 11. 2, 5. éptornpt, Ion, ér-: A. Causal in pres., impf., fut., and aor. vi I. to set or place upon, ri rut Thue. 2. 75; Te éml ruvos Plat. Criti. 116 A; te émt rue Xen. Hell. 3. 1, 7; te Emi 7s Dem. 1029. 29: metaph., ép. poipay Big, Lat. finem imponere vitae, Plat. Rep. 498 C; dvdyeny rivi Dion, H. 1. 16. II. zo set over, Lat. praeficere, p’ArddAayv TOS enéarnoey TéAa Aesch. Ag. 1202; épiordva pvdaka Bot Id. Supp. 303; ép. twa trapxdv rat Hdt. 5. 27; otparnydv TO orparonédy Plat, Alc, 1. 122 B, cf. Xen. An. 5.1, 15; Twa Tots mpaypace Isocr, 20 B; masdayoryovs énéornoey abrois Xen. Lac, 2, 1; Tov vépov Arist. Pol. 4. 6, 2; én cuppaxywv tiva Polyb. 2. 65,9; «tva émt mol- pvnv Dem. 807. 3; Twa én rds edOvvas Id, 264. 7: c. inf, éx. Twa Em- percio0a Tis ebxocpias Isocr. 147 B, etc. 2. to bring in, h TUXxN émarnoaga ‘Pwpaious Polyb. 15. 20, 6; Bidurmov ép. Tois mpaypaat to let him have a hand in the business, Dem. 351. 25. 3. to bring in, cause, occasion, kardmAngiv tit Diod. 14. 62; Klvduvéy rue App. Hann. 55, cf. Syr. 10, Polyb. 2. 20, 7. III. to set up, estab- lish, institute, rwt dy@va games in honour or commemoration of him, Hat. 1. 167., 6. 38; c. acc, et inf. to ordain, prescribe, 6 vdpos épiarnac kpivewy rods dpxovras Arist. Pol. 3.16, 5; émgrioare guid facere debea- mus, Plin. Epist. 6. 31, 12. IV. to set by or near to, émary- caves KUKAw 7d ofa (=mept 7d 0.) inméas Hdt. 4. 72; dpods eq. Ext tiv oixiay Dem. 1029. 29; Thy pddayya Tovros Kardmy ed. Polyb, I. 33> 6, cf. 26, 14. V. to stop, make halt, Lat. inhibere, émor- poat TO oTparevua Xen, Cyr. 4. 2, 18; TH 68dv, ry wopelay Diod. 17. j s 626 112, Plut. Cim. 1; rods imméas Tod mpdow Arr. 5. 16,1; &p. THY Spyhy to check it, Polyb, 16. 34, 2; tiv Sifynow to interrupt it, Id. 7. 12, 1: —absol., émornoas (sc. éavriv, rdv immov) having halted, Xen. An. 1. 8, 15. VI. épiornm: TH yvepny Kard 7 to fix one’s mind upon it, attend to it, Isocr. 203 B; tiv Sidvoray wept Twos Arist. Metaph. 1. 6, 2; thy oe mepl tivos Ib. 13. 2, 19; Tov Adyov Id. de Juvent. 6, 4; Tov voby Twi Diod. 12. 1; abrov émarhoas ént rt Arist. Top. 5. 5, De Be émorioa absol,, like mpocéxew, to give attention, Tovros moarnoavres Id. Mund. 1, 5; mepi tvos Id. Gen. et Corr. I. 2, 2; -mepi TH. A. 1. 1, 12; émé rt Polyb. 1. 65, 5, etc.; émorfaact padAov Aexréov one must speak with more care and accuracy, Arist. Pol. 7. 16, 12, cf. Eth, N. 6, 12, 8, al. (hence the words émiorapat, émorhyn, 49. v.); cf. B. Vv. 2. c. acc. pers. to arrest the attention of, Plut. T. Gracch, 17.1, etc.; émorioat twa éni tt to call his attention to, Polyb. 2. 61, IT., 4. 34, 9. : B. intr. in Med. and Pass., épiorapat, aor. I éreoraOnv (Soph. Fr. 708, Eur. Hipp. 819, I. T. 1375), with pf., plqpf. and aor. 2 act.: (the Causal tenses are not found in Hom., the Pass. only in impf. éplararo, Il. 11. 644; elsewhere always aor. 2 or pf. act.). To stand upon, Tetxos .. poar’ épeoradres Il. 18. 515; mipyw epeorqxe 6.373; Sippy éperra- ‘dros 17. 609, etc.; morn Bnd@ Em AGivy Il. 23. 201; 4 -. Emorabeioa 6p9H Arist. Metaph. 8.9, 5; én? tds .. cxedias Polyb. 3. 46, 8. 2. -to be imposed upon, poxOav Tay epecrwrav Enot Soph. Tr. 1170, cf. O. T. 777. 8. to stand on the top or surface, Td émordpevoy Tod yaXaxros, i.e. cream, Hdt. 4. 2; Aura, es dv émordapevat Hipp. 40. 52; dppds épiararat yaAaxrt Diosc. 1.96; so of vapour, to form, Arist. de Juvent. 5, 2. II. to be set over, Lat. praeesse, éplarara mvaAais Aesch. Theb. 538; ofds re moAAois mpoBarlos epeoravac Ar. Vesp. 9553 clot vv épecraat oxomot Soph. Aj. 945; éxi rut Xen. Hier. ie twos Plat. Rep. 460 B, Dem. 436. 28; rarely c. gen., Tov ‘€meoteara THs Scspuxos Hdt. 7, 117; door Oeod xpnudrav epécracay Eur. Andr. 1058 :—absol., S19 dv émicrowvra: wherever they are in com- mand, Thuc. 6. 72; esp. in part., 6 épearneds the person in authority, the officer in command, Xen. Oec. 21, 9; of épeorares, Ion. of émeore- Ores, Hdt. 2. 148., £ 84, Soph. Aj. 1072; of épeornedres Xen. Mem. 3. 5, 193 of epiorapevor Ib. 3. 5, 21. III. ¢o stand by or near, ws muxvol épeoracav adAnadorot Il. 13.133; én dxpw xeiraa éperadres, &p. mapa Tappy 12. 52, 199; Ovppow epioraro 11. 644; ‘80, ép. mUAas Aesch, Theb. 538; émt 7H mdr Hdt. 4. 203; émt rads ‘mbdas, ént rds Ovpas Id. 3. 77, Plat. Symp. 212 E; ént rois mpodvipors Id. Phil. 64. C: esp. of dreams or visions, to appear to, evSovri éméarn -éverpos Hdt. 1. 34, cf. 7. 14, Il. 10. 496., 23. 106; émorivat vuerds ‘Isocr. 215 E, etc. :—absol., Hdt. 3. 78, Soph. O. C. 558, etc. ; of A€BnTes énegre@res Hdt. 1.59; 6 dyridinos épéornee Plat. Theaet. 172 E, cf. ‘Aeschin. 65. 5 :—of troops, to be posted after or behind, xarémw én. Tots Onptas Polyb. 16. 18, 7: cf. émorarns. 2. in hostile sense, fo stand against, Ta ppovéovres épéoragay GAApAow: Il. 15. 703, cf. 5. 624; évOa pévos ppovéovres epéoracay Od. 22. 203, cf. 24. 380: to appear before, of an army, émt rH wéAr Hat. 4. 203; émt 7d Bacidaoy Isocr. 200 E: to come upon by surprise, Thuc. 8. 69 ;. éfaiyns émords Tois~yiyvouevows Isocr. 167 D, cf. Dem. 66. 23, Luc. D. Deor. 17.1; eis rods dxAovs Isocr. 372 D. 8. metaph., of events, to impend, be -at hand, Lat. instare, Kijpes épeoraow Oavaroo Il, 12. 326; mply por tixn Todd énéarn Soph. O. T. 777, cf. Thuc. 3. 82, Dem. 287. 5; mept Tov Bacthéws . . 6 Ad-yos epéarnxe vov Arist. Pol. 3. 16, 1, cf. Metaph. 2. 4,1. IV. to halt, stop, as in a march, équordpevos Xen. An, ‘2. 4, 26 (cf. A. V.); émords mepiépeva Plat. Symp. 172 A:—c. gen., ér. Tod mAOD Thuc. 2. gt. V. to fix one’s mind on, give one’s attention to, oparyj Eur. Andr. 547; ént 71 Isocr. 213 D, Dem. 245. 12; rots mpaypacw .. émorayres Id. 43. 20; émords absol. (sc. Tois mpay- pact) 1d. 305.9; 8a radr’ éyphyoper, épéarnxev Id. 70. 16: cf. A. VI. 1. : C. the aor. 1 med. is used in causal sense, to set up, Tas O¥pas Xen. Ages. 8, 7: to set, post, ppoupods émearnodpny Id. Cyr. 8, 2, 19; Tédos morjcacOa finem imponere, Plat. Legg. 802 A: the pres. is once so used, rod pe HVS eploracat Baow; cur mihi sistis oe Soph. Tr. 339 :—in late Gr., the pf. is used for to set over, riva rtm Polyb. Io. 20, ‘5. 24. 2.5 32.9, I. 2. émornodpevos, intr., having been émardrns, Inscr. Thyat. in C. I. 3498. bio-ropéw, to inquire or search further, Hesych. pAGBov, v. sub PAdtw. _ &podela, %, (Epodedw) a going the rounds, visiting the sentries, etc., Polyb. 6. 35, 8. 2. to guard, watch, patrol, Wessel. Diod. 20, 16. éhodevréov, verb. Adj. one must examine, Sext. Emp. P. 2. 198. TS, OD, 5, one who goes the rounds :—a spy, Aq. V.T. Epodeuticas, Adv. by tracing an argument, advancing to a lusion, Sext. Emp. M. 8. 308. éhodetw, to visit, go the rounds, patrol, to see that watch is kept right, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 24., 5. 3, 22, cf. e@dav; c, acc., &p. pvdaxas Polyb. 6. 35, 11:—Pass., &podeverar the rounds are made, Ar. Av. 1160, ef. Plut. 2. 781 C:—in Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, 16, of an officer who yearly visited the Satrapies of Persia; in Timocl. A085. 1 of the yyuvatkovépos, whose ‘business it was ¢o inspect the cvpréora and see that all wasin order. = 2. rarely c. dat. fo superintend, watch over, dyHaw Aesch. Cho. 728; but Conington’s suggestion épedpedoar is very prob. 3. to visit as a spy, spy out, Aq. V. T. 4. metaph. to trace onwards, examine an argument, Plut. 2. 895 C, Sext. Emp. M, 8. 222, etc. II. to lie in wait for, twi Clem. Al. 4. epdbra, 74, v. Epddiov. Nes : , - Ehobtdlu, Ion. éro8-, fut. dow, to furnish with supplies for a journey, ’ Pal fd Lat, viaticum dare, dnonéprovar trobidoarres és Tas “AOjvas Hat. 9.993 47 oupBdraca Ib, 6. 8, 3; eqioropéws — epopaw. rwé Plut, Cato Mi. 65 :—Med. to supply oneself, &x Tis méAews Polyb. 18. 3, 2:—Pass. to be supplied with, rt LXX (Jos. 9. 12). 2. generally, to supply or furnish with a thing, aérovs adAnp Kal SrAos Diod. 5. 34, cf. Plut. 2. 327. II. Med., c. acc. rei, mevTadpaxpiay éxdorw épodtacdpevos having seen that five drachms were paid to each, Xen. Hell. 1.6, 12. 2. metaph. to maintain, promote, dpyiay Plut. Solon 23; thy dmetOeay Id. Coriol. 16, f = épéb.ov, 74, mostly in pl. é>68ta, Ion, érdbia, 74, (v. fin.) :—Lat. via- ticum; supplies for travelling, money and provisions, esp. of an army, éré&ia Bodva, AaBely Hdt. 4. 203., 6.70; 8: dmoplay epoblaw rots orparevopévors Dem. 34. 10; cf. ournpéovov :—of an ambassador’s travelling-allowance, épdb: ob Exw Ar. Ach. 53; épddia dvadiorev Dem. 441.2; and in sing., xtAlas AaBdvres Spaxpads epddioy wap’ bpar Id. 390. 24, ef. C. I. 107. 35 :—generally, ways and means, maintenance, support, &pdd.a TO yhpg ixavd Dem. 1204. 22, cf. Ar. Pl. 1024; 7a rijs guyis ep. Aeschin. 24. 30, Plut. Arat.6; 7d &p. Tod wodépov Arist. Rhet. 3. To, 7; even, épddra rots immors Andoc. 33.9; of public money, puds Hudpas épdiia év TH KowG Dem. 6go. 8; and in phys. sense, 7d év owpatt indpxovra ép. Arist. Probl. 3. 5, 7- 2. less often in sing., edoeBis Bios weyorov ép. Epich. 152 Ahr.; dpytpidy m1 pyrdv éxovras épddiov Thuc. 2. 70; ode éxov.. ei pi) matéa Kal boov ég. Xen. An. 7. 3, 303 9 xpyordrns .. Oavpacrov ép. Big Menand. ‘Yyv. 1, cf. ‘Op. 2, Incert. 251; ry “IAddda dperijs ép. vopi{ay Plut. Alex. 8. 3. metaph., =dqopyn, Dem. 917. 14, Hyperid, Euxen. 31, cf. Wytt. Plut. 2. 8 C. €hoBos, ov, accessible, Thuc. 6. 66 (in Sup. -Wraros), Polyaen. 1. 49. %hobos, 5, one who goes the rounds, Xen. Cyr. 8. 6, 16, Polyb. 6. 36, 6. Cf. Epodedw, épodos, 4, a way towards, approach, Thuc. 4. 129., 6. 99; adrddev ént rods moAeplous Xen. An. 4. 2, 6, cf. 3. 4, 41 :—in argument, ép. éai wt Arist. Top. I. 12. 2. a means of approach, Polyb. 4. 34, 5: importation, rav émrndelwv Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 3: access for traffic and intercourse, communication, map’ GAAHAovs Thuc. 1.6; mpds Gad. Id. 5. 35. 3. an attempt, plan, method, Arist. Eth. E. 3. 1, 33, Theophr. Sens. 60. II. an onset, attack, assault, Aesch. Eum. 376, Thuc. I. 93, etc.; Tod orparedparos Xen. An, 2. 2, 18; epodov moretobar Thue. 2. 95; déxecOar &p., opp. to pevyev, Id. 4. 126, Plat. Phaedo 95 B; yrwpns maddoy eddy 7H icxdos Thuc. 3. 11:—éf épdbou at the first assault, Polyb. 1. 36, 11, etc.; 7H mparn Epddy Dion. H. 4. 51:— of ships, fs 650v xal épodoy of burden and of war, Polyb. 3. 25, 4:—vueri- modo €podor of the haunting powers of darkness, as subject to Persephoné, Eur. Ion 1049. 2. an attack or access of fever, Hipp. 44. 3. 3. in Rhet. like Lat. insinuatio, an artful exordium, Dion. H. de Isaeo 3, ef, Auct. ad Herenn. 1. 4 (6). : €potrn, Dor. 3 sing. impf. of porrdw. EpoAkatov, 76, (EpeAnw) a rudder, eardv ep. Od. 14. 350. ébdcov, 74, (EpeAnw) a small boat towed after a ship, Moschio ap. Ath, 208 F, Plut. Pomp. 73, etc. 2. generally, an appendage, Anth. P. 7.67, Plut. Pomp. 40., 2. 476 A, cf. A. B. 257. €podkis, %),=foreg., a burdensome appendage, Tit Eur. Andr. 200, H. F. 631, 1424. &podkéds, dv, (epéAxw) drawing on or towards, enticing, alluring, like enaryaryds, épornd rA€yev Thuc. 4. 108; c. gen., mardds epodndy Call. Fr. 291; ep. eis mappyotay Ael. V.H.8. 12: epodndy, 76, a bait, allure- ment, Id. N. A. 7. 10. II. requiring to be drawn on, a laggard, Ar. Vesp. 268 ; 2) mpddcoyos pnd ep. év Adyw not eager to begin, nor yet lagging, tedious in reply, Aesch. Supp. 208. &popapréw, fut. Aow, to follow close upon, absol., Il. 8. 191., 12. 412., 23. 414; c, dat., Ap. Rh. 1. 201, etc. ;-rare in Prose, as Arr. An. I. 19. €hop tw, to company with, live with or among, c. acc., Hermesianax 5.523 c. dat., Nonn. D. 5. 410, ehomAllo, to equip, get ready, ddprov, Sefmvov épowdlooat Il. 23. 55, Od. 19. 419 ; daira yépovow epordifaper Il. 4. 3443 so in Med., dépra T éhotdodpecba we will get ready our suppers, Il. 8. 503., 9. 66; also tyudvous kat dpagay &pordtoa Od. 6. 37, cf. 57,69, ll. 24. 263; [via] épomdlaoavres Od. 2. 295; c. inf., Ap. Rh. 4. 1720. 2. to arm against, rwd tu Opp. C. 3. 2443 and so in Med.,”Epay tppuv épo- mAlcopa Anth. P. 9. 39, cf. Plan. 4.151. II. Med. in proper sense, 4o arm ‘oneself, és dyGva Opp. H. 5. 617 :—to get ready to attack, Aaryaois Id. C, 3. 86. &hbpaors, ews, 4, a looking at, view, Porphyr. ad Marcell. 21. Ehoparixés, 4, dv, sit for overlooking, épyav Xen. Occ. 12, 19. éhopdw, Ion. 3 sing. érop, inf. éropay, Hat. ; 3 pl. éropéovar (Dind.) Hat. 1. 124:—impf, épedpow, Ion. 3 sing. émé&pa Ib. 48 :—fut. eadyo- pat Od., Aesch., etc,, Ep. also émidpopai, v. infr.; aor. 1 érdparo Pind. Fr. 58. fin., émdéaro infr. 11; subj. énévovrar Plat. Legg. 947 C;— but the common aor. is ére?Sov (q. v.). To oversee, observe, survey, of the sun, wav’ &popG nad mdvr’ éraxover Ul. 3. 277, Od. 11. 109, etc. ; so in Trag., as Soph, El. 825 ; émdcas pop péyyos dedlov, post. for Soa «lot, Eur. Hipp. 849 ;—then of the gods or divine ‘Providence, to watch over, observe, take notice of, visit, Zebs.., bare at ddAdous avOpdirovs epopa Od. 13. 214; Geol .. dvOpmrav HBpw Tre Kal edvo- piny Epopivres 17. 487; Leds wdvrov épopa rédos Solon 12 (4). 17; ae yap cot énopéwor Hat. 1. 1243 Zeds ds épophi mavra Soph. EI. 175, cf. 825; Aleny mavta ra tov avOphirav epopay Dem. 772. 29, etc.; so, Aruds (personified) padrOaxdy ag’ éndperat Aesch. Ag. 1642 :—of men, rd mpiynara énopav re kat diénew Hat. 3. 533 TAS modes Eupol. Xpuo. yev. 1; mdv7’ Epopdy Kat Sourav Dem. 38. 12; od diov &popav moddd Tov Eva Arist, Pol. 3.16, 9; apy} epopdoa Tepl of a general going his rounds, Thuc.-6. 67; ph , + e:opeca — €yerxor, Xen. Cyr. 5.3, 593 ¢o visit the sick, Ib. 5. 4,18; Sacra eroydpevos to attend it, Pind. O. 8. 68. 2. simply, to look upon, view, behold, éropépyevos Tirvoy Od. 7. 324; Exacta Tay ovyypaypdrwy to inspect them, Hdt. 1. 48:—often witha partic., émdear .. pev-yovras Il. 14. 1453 Krevopévous pynotipas Od, 20. 2333 éropG pw éeftdvra Hat. 1. 10; ép. Tods pidrous eddaipovas syevopevous Xen., etc.: cf. émefdov :—esp. of evils, Erodpuevos kaxoidtov Od. 19. 260, 597., 23.193 “Ayapuéepvoves oé pny’ érdpecbar pdpov Aesch, Ag. 1246; Ta péAdovra Soph. Tr. 1206, cf. Ar. Thesm. 1059, Xen. An. 7. 1, 30:—Pass., daov épewparo Tis vngou as much of it as was in view, Thuc. 3. 104. II. to look out for, choose, rods dv éyaw éméwopat, of 5 mOécOwr Il. 9. 167 ; emdpopar ris dpicrn Od. 2. 294; 6 Bagtreds émdparo dppnpdpous Plat. Com. ‘EAA. 7, ubi v. Meineke. &hopeta, 7, (Epopedw) the office of Epopos, the ephoralty, Xen. Lac. 8, 3, Lys. ap. Poll. 2. 55, Arist. Pol. 2. 9, 19 sq.; sometimes with vy. l. épopia, Ib. 2. 6, 17, Rhet. 3. 18, 6. 2. in Eccl, a bishopric. Et, (8pos) a frontier, Hecatae. (202) ap. Strabo et Eust. €dhopeiov, 74, the court of the ephors, Xen. Ag. 1, 56, Plut. 2. 232 F. &hopevw, = epopdw, c. acc., Aesch. Supp. 627, 678, Eum. 530; c. gen., Id, Pers. 7; mepi rivos Luc. Charid. to. II. to be ephor, Thuc. 8. 6, Xen. Hell. 1. 3, 1. épopixds, 4, dv, of or for the ephori, Xen. Lac. 15, 6. épdpros, a, ov, (bps) bordering on, ‘Papatwy App. Civ. 5.9 :—on the border or frontier, d-yopd ép., where the people of adjacent states met for market and other purposes, Lex ap. Dem. 631 fin., cf. 632. 24, and Weber's note; ép. médeis Aristid. 1. 219; oTHA7 Poll. g. 8. &poppatvw, fo rush on, dpéuw Aesch. Pers. 208, cf. Orph. H. 33. 743 Tit upon or against one, Opp. C. 3. 367. €poppde, Ion. ér-: fut. how:—to stir up, rouse against one, of pot Epmpynoay mirepoy Il, 3.165; bs por épopuhoas dvéuous Od. 7. 272; enoppijoat rods AvKous set them on, Hdt. 9. 93; S Kat Zeds epopphaor waka Soph. Fr. 611; c. dupl. acc., vatras épopuhoavra.. 7d mAeiv having urged them on to sail, Id. Aj. 1143 (legend. vavrats); c. acc. et inf., Orph. Lith. 26:—for Thuc. 3. 31, v. sub époppyéw. II, intr. to rush upon, atiack, tx Eur. Hipp. 1275, Plut. Pomp. 19, etc.; émé tiva Dio C, 36.7; c. inf. to desire, Opp. H. 2. 94, Orph. Lith. 34:— in Xen, Hell. 1. 6, 21, dpopyhoacay is now restored :—this sense is more freq. in Pass. III. Pass. and Med. fo be stirred up; c. inf. to be eager or desire to do, Oupds époppara modepuiCay de paxeoOat Il. 13. 4, cf. Od. 1. 275., 21. 399, etc.:—absol. to rush furiously on, éyxee poppacbat Il. 17. 465; mostly in part. aor. pass. épopynbeis, 6. 410, etc. ; dxovre &poppadeis Pind. N. 10.129; épopyndévres ef évds fb00v Aesch, Pers. 462 ; and, simply, without hostile sense, to spring forward, tpis piv epapphOny Od. 11. 206, cf. Hes. Op. 457:—c. acc. to rush upon, make a dash at, or’ dpvidow ..derds aldwv eOvos epoppara: Il. 15. 691, cf. 20. 461; so, popphoacba déOdous Hes, Sc. 127 :—rare in Prose, éravaxwpycavras kat épopyndévras for purposes of refuge and sally, Thue. 6. 49. &poppéw, Ion. é—: fut. ow :—to lie moored at or over against a place, to blockade it, Aaday robs émoppéovras having escaped the blockading fleet, Hat. 8. 81, cf. Thuc. 8. 75, Xen. An.1. 6, 20 sq.; eH Te Kat vavalv ép. Thuc. 4. 24; c. dat., €p. 7O Apére Id. 7.33 End TH MARTY Id. 5. 30; émt 7G Apén Xen. Hell. 6. 2, 7; émt rod ordpuaros Polyb. 1. 46, 5 :—c. acc., &p. vavol riy derhy App. Civ. 5. 72; (Thuc. 3. 31, iy &poppHow abrovs, seems to be corrupt) :—generally, to lie by and watch, Soph. O. C. 812; ép. rois xatpois Dem. 30. 18 :—Pass. ¢o be blockaded, Thuc. 1.142., 8. 20; in 6. 49, Schiifer restored époppicdévras. Epoppy, 9, a way of attack, pla 8 otn ylyver’ épopyh only room for one to attack, Od. 22.130, cf. Ap. Rh. 4. 108, Opp. H. 4. 623 :—an assault, attack, époppais AaBeiv Thuc. 6. 90, cf. Giller ad 6. 49; an enterprise, Ap. Rh. 4. 204. ehdppyors, ews, 7), (€poppéw) a lying at anchor so as to watch an enemy, blockading, Thuc. 2. 89 (ubi v. Arnold.); means of so doing, Id. 6. 48., 8. 4H ep. mapéxety Id. 3. 33. Sometimes pdpyors in Mss. Cf. Zpoppos, 6. hoppntixds, 4, dv, capable of urging on, v.1. Poll. 4. 86. €poppife, to bring a ship to its moorings (Spjos), bring to shore, in Med., dupt ravrny Oiva Anth. P. 7. 636:—Med. and Pass. to come to anchor, eis rémov Thuc. 4.8: cf. époppéw fin, :—in Med. also =époppéw, App. Civ. 5. 108. TI. intr. in Act. fo seek refuge in, édapo morapoiow épupycav Anth. P. 9. 244, cf. 254. &poppos, ov, at anchor, at vijes .. €poppor ovcat Thuc. 3. 76. €poppos, 6,=epdpynors, Thuc. 3. 6., 4. 27; és ep. wreiy Id, 4. 32. €popos, 5, (&popdw) an overseer or overlooker, guardian, ruler, orpa- mGs Aesch, Pers. 25; xd&pas Soph. O. C. 145; oparyiwy Eur, Rhes. 30; tav naldwy Plat, Phaedr. 265 C:—as fem., Ael. ap. Suid. s. v. Népe- os, II. at Sparta, popor, of, the Ephors, a body of five magis- trates, who controlled even the kings, Hdt. 1. 65., 6. 82, cf. Plat. Legg. ‘692 A, Arist. Pol. 2. 6, 17., 2. 9, 26, al.; compared with the Cretan Kéopor, Ib. 2. 10, 6 :—also of Magistrates at Thera, C. 1. 2448. IIt. in Eccl. a bishop. ébuBpife, to insult over one, &puBpi(av erero Il. 9. 368; c. dat., Soph. Aj. 1385 ; c. ace., Anth. Plan. 1, 4; and so in Med., px) puBpifecba vexpovs Eur. Phoen. 1663; often with a neut. Adj. added, moAAd ed. twa Id, Heracl. 947; ra devd rar Id, Phoen, 180; els ddedpdr of’ €pvBpioas Id. Andr. 624 ; épvBpifov dAda re kat el .., they gave vent to insulting language, asking especially whether .. , Thuc. 6. 63. II. ‘like émyatpexanéw, to exult maliciously, Soph. Aj. 954. » éu ‘0s, ov, wanton, insolent, Hdn. 6.1; épvBpicra maoxew Id. 2.7. Ady, -rws, Plut. Artox. 30, Hdn. 2.13. épiyooay, Alexandr, 3 pl. aor. 2 of pev-yw. 9 627 épuypalvopat, Pass. ¢o become moist, Arist. H. A. 10. 3, 12; of the bowels, to be relaxed, Hipp. Epid. 1. 948. iby yp es: ov, moist on the surface, Arist. Probl. 9. 46., 23. 34, Theophr, > eae 4597 5 EpuBartos, a, ov, in or of the water, Niudn epidarin Ap. Rh. 1. 1229. €pvdpevw, to water, 7: Theophr. H. P. 2. 7, 1. . &huBprds, d5os, 1), of the water, NUpoy Anth. P. 9. 327, 329. €pvSpos, Ion. ér-, ov, (Sap) wet, moist, rainy, of the west wind, Od. 14.458: cf. Virgil’s Orion ag 2. abounding in water, yj erubpos midagi Hdt. 4. 198, cf. Hipp. Aér. 280, Arist. Meteor. 1. 10, 3, al. 3. dropsical, Hipp. (?) 4. living on the water, vijrra Philostr. 776. >’ G5wp (not épvdup), 4, the keeper of the water-clock («Aeyvépa) in the Athen. law-courts, Poll. 8. 113. ebiAanréw, to bark at, re Plut. 2. 551 C, 969 F. épupvéw, to sing or chant at or after, od yap ds puyp macay’ Epdpvovy Aesch, Pers. 393: to chant or utter over, ti oby pe’ dvaryas THD Epvp- vijoa x8ovi; Id. Eum. go2, cf. Cho. 385; xaxds mpdtas epuprvicaca T@ madoxrévy' Soph. Ant. 1305; 7d mérpiov pédos ep. Plat. Legg. 947 C, cf. 799 A, Symp. 197 E. 2. of music, to sound in accord, €pupvel mnxridos svyxopdia Soph. Fr. 361. II. to sing a dirge or mournful strain, Id. O. T. 1275. III. to sing of, descant on, Ala Id. Ant. 658. épupwdt, to sing as the refrain, Schol. Pind. O. 9. 1. épipviov, 76, the burden or chorus, of a hymn, Ath. yor B, Schol. Pind.: a surname hence derived, as “Inios, Ap. Rh. 2. 713, cf. Call. Ap. 97. éptrrep Oe [0], before a vowel -Oev, Ady. above, atop, over, oropéoct ép. Il. 24. 645, Od. 4. 298, cf. Il. 9. 213: above, kepadrh 7° ép. Te XaiTar 14. 184, Od. 4. 150: from above, Od, 9, 383; later sometimes c. gen., Pind. Fr. 227, Theocr, 23. 59:—also geographically, above, Ap. Rh. 2. 393. éputrvéw, to sleep meantime, Aesop. 173, Hesych. éputvarre, to sleep upon, lie upon in sleep, Julian. Epist. 15. *Edtpa [¥], Ion. -py, 4, Ephyra, old name of Corinth, Il. 6. 152: also of other cities in Elis and Thesprotia, Nitzsch Od. 1. 259., 2. 328. épvon [v], Dor. for épioa, 3 sing. impf. of ducdm. épuorépyots, ews, %, a coming too late, Clem. Al. 201. épuoreplfo, to come later, come after, ra epvorepi(ovra = al iarepod- cat médeis, Thuc. 3. 82, cf. Dion. H. de Thuc. 29. 2 Eptipatve, to weave in or upon, ént phriv bpaivay Opp. C. 3. 415. éptipy, 9, the woof, Plat. Legg. 734 E.. épiw, to rain upon: impers., épver it rains upon, c. dat., Theophr. H. P. 4.14, 8, etc.: absol. i¢ rains after, Id. C. P. 6.17, 7:—part. pf, pass. épuopévos rained upon, exposed to the rain, Xen. Cyn. 9, 5. eh’ G, sh’ Gre, i.e. ent rovrw dare, v. éni B, II. 3. épdpros, ov, (pa) mature, Anth. P. 9. 563. €xGdov, v. sub yavidve. éxéBouov, 74, acc. to Poll. 2. 252, =peadBotor. ve éx-€yyvos, ov, having given or able to give security, trust-worthy, secure, Spor Eur. Med, 388; Adyos Id, Andr. 192; moeiv re éx., Lat. ratum facere, Id. Phoen. 759; (ypla éx. a penalty to be relied on (for the prevention of crime), Thuc. 3.46; éxeyyuwraros pdprus Ath. 398 F: 70 éxéyyvor security, Hdt. 2.13:—éx. mpds or els 7 giving security for, Plut. 2. 595 F, 1055 B; c. gen., coxppoovvns rpémos obros éx. Anth. P. 10. 56; dwoppnrav €x. safe to be entrusted with secrets, Plut. Poplic. 43 dglapa éxéyyvov mpos Hyepoviay equal to conimand, Id. Pericl. 37, cf, Hdn. 3.13: c. inf. sufficiently strong to .., Plut. Aemil. 8, cf. 2. 923 Cc. II. pass. having received security, secured against danger, ixérns Soph. O. C. 284. éxe-yAwrrla, }, a tongue-truce, linguistice, a word coined by Lucian Lexiph. 9, after éxexerpia (armistice). éxe-Seppla, }, a being hide-bound, Lat. coriago, of cattle, Hippiatr. p, 88. éxeSnpla, 2, acc. to Dicaearch. in Plut. Thes, 32, an old name of the Academia, after a hero Echedemos. €xé-Odpos, ov, a master of one's passions, under self-control, Od.8.320; cf. éxéppov. Adv. —yws, Epiphan. éxetStov, 74, Dim. of éxis, a little adder, Suid. éxexnAns, es, (47An) ruptured, Hesych. €xé-KoAAos, ov, glutinous, resinous, Hipp. Art. 799; éAdrn Theophr. H. P. 5.6, 2; adds Plut. 2.966D; 7d éxéeoddov gluten, Ib. 735 E. Ady. —Aws, Diosc. 5. 172. : éxe-Krédivos, ov, with great possessions, Rhian. 1, Nonn. D, 11. ai éxe-pt0éw, to hold one’s peace, be silent, Luc. D. Deor, 21.2; Ta dadp- pnra Kat éxenvOovdpeva things unspoken, lambl. Protr, p. 310; a Pytha- gorean word, Id. V. Pyth. 94. 3 éxepiOla, 7, silence, reserve, Plut. Num, 8, etc.; a Pythagorean word, Id. 2. 728 D, Ath. 308 C. €xé-pi0os, ov, taciturn, like Homer's ovyp pov €xev, Greg. Nyss. éxe-vats, f60s, contr. -vijs, 50s, %, (vais) ship-detaining, Aesch. Ag. 149 (v. drAota) ; @yxupa Anth.P.6.27; yaAnvn Nonn.D.13.114. If. a small fish, supposed to have the power of holding ships back, remora, Arist. H. A. 2. 14, 4; cf. Opp. H. 1. 212, Plin. N. H. 9. 25. éxemevens, és, (weden) Homeric epith. of a dart, BeAos Il. r. §1., 4. 129,—acc. to Eust. etc., bitter, but (acc. to Buttm. Lexil. s. v.) sharp, piercing (cf. even, mxpés) ;—later Poets certainly used it in the sense of bitter, as Nic. Th. Goo, 866, Orph. Lith, 469. éxé-mupos, ov, =foreg., Eust. 42. 33. éxémwAos, ov, having horses, Hesych., Suid. ; éxeppnpooivn, 4, (sjua) =éxenv0ia, formed from an Adj. éxeppyjyav, which is not found, Iambl. V. Pyth, 34. éxé-capkos, ov, clinging close to the body, xiTdv Ath. 590 F. éxeckoy, v. sub éxo, ’ Ss2 628 éxé-crovos, ov, bringing sorrows, lés Theocr. 25. 213. éxérys, ov, 6,=6 €xwy, a man of substance, Pind. Fr. 273. €xérAy, 3, (€xw) a plough-handle, Lat. stiva, Hes. Op. 465, Ap. Rh. 3. 1325, Anth. P. 7. 650. éxerAqas, ecoa, ev, of or belonging to an éxérAn, Anth. P. 6. 41. éxérAvov, 76, (€xw) the hold of a ship, Nic. Th. 825. éxero-yvepoves, of, sluices or pen-stocks to hold up the water at a certain height, Abyd. ap. Eus. P.E. 9. 41. éxétpwors, ews, 4, a plant, the white bryony, Hipp. 574. 52, etc. €xeva, as, ¢, Ep. aor. 1 of xéw, Hom.; med. éxevayny Il. 5. 314. éxeppoviw, to be éxéppav, Anth. Plan. 4. 332. éxehpootvn, %, prudence, good sense, Anth. P. 9. 767. exéppav, ov, gen. ovos, (ppv) sensible, prudent, avijp dyads Kat ex. Il. 9. 341, cf. Od. 13. 332; but in Od., mostly as epith. of Penelopé, 4. Iil,etc. Ady. -évws, Diod. 15. 33. éxqvia, 7a, part of a bridle or bit, perh. a local form of éxivos (v), C. 1. 150 B. 23, v. Bockh I. p. 237. €xns, nTos, 6,=éxérns, Hdn. Epimer. p. 38, E. M. 404. 23. €@alpw, Dor. 3 pl. -ovr: Theocr. 24. 29: impf. #x@a:poy Eur. Supp. 879: aor. I #xOnpa Il. 20. 306, Aesch., etc. ; Dor. #x8apa Timocr. ap. Plut. Them. 21:—Med., Ep. aor. €x@fparo in act. sense, Nic. Al. 539, cf. Q. Sm. 13. 255 :—Pass., Soph. Aj. 458; fut. med. in pass. sense, Id. Ant. 93: (€x90s). To hate, detest, iv’ éxOnpete yépovra Il.9. 452, cf.Od. 4. 692, Hes. Op. 298, and Trag.; as a parody on Ion in Ar. Ran. 1425 ; c. acc. cogn., €xOos éxOnpas péya Soph. Ph. 59; acc. pers. added, ovd ad roaotror €xOos éxOaipw oe I do not bear thee so great hatred, Id. El. 1034:—Pass. to be hated, hateful, rw. Aesch. Supp. 754, Cho.241, Soph., etc.; so in fut. med., éx@apet piv éf éyod Id. Ant. 93 :—Med. in act. sense, Nic. Al. 539.—Poét. word, used by Hipp. Ep. 1285. 21, Arist. Eth. N. 4.6, 5., 10. 9, 12, and in late Prose, as Philo (who used it c. inf., a ms mabety éxOaipet, 2.629), Plut., Dio C.—In Trag. éx@alpw, —apréos, are alone admissible, though the later forms éx@paivw, -ayréos crept into Mss., Pors. Or. 292, Med. 555. &xOapréos, a, ov, verb: Adj, to be hated, Soph. Aj. 679. éxés, Adv. (v. x@és), yesterday, Ar. Nub. 175, Thesm. 616, Antipho ap. Ath. 397 D, etc.; dm éxés Anth. P. 11. 35; wéogpa ro éxGés Theocr, 2.144; od ydp Tt viv re naxO€s to-day or yesterday, Soph, Ant. 450; xOes in mpany, v. sub mpwny. éxOecivis, 7, dv, = xOeowvds, yesterday's, Anth. P. 10. 79. &x9éw, v. sub éx9w. &Onpa, 76, =plonpa Phot., Suid.: hence in Hesych., €x@ya puo- para, LopoxAss Tupot, should be read éxOjpara (Fr. 590). ex Olives, 7, dv, =éxOeowvds, Menand. KuBepr. 3. éxOoros, 7, ov, irreg. Sup. of éxOpds, most hated, most hateful, éxOtoros B VAyiAje Il. 2. 220; ExPoros 5€ por eaort Oedv 5.890, etc.; Tdv Bevis éx@arov .. Aesch. Pr. 37; x0. dp@v Soph. Aj. 818; éx0. yeyws Eur. Med. 467. 2. most hostile, rav hpiv éxSiarwv Thuc, 2.71; ws 5e exSpot wat éx@orot, wavres tore Id. 7.68; c¢. gen., as if a Subst., of éxeivov €x0. his bitterest enemies, Xen. An. 3. 2, 5:—Luc. has also éxOiararos, Tragoed. 245. “€xdiwy, ov, gen. ovos; irreg. Comp. of éxOpés, more hated, more hateful, Aesch, Pers. 438, Soph. O. T. 272, Eur. El. 222, Ar. Av. 370. Adv., €xObves éxew Xen. Symp. 4, 3. <€x0oSomkw, to shew enmity towards, engage in hostility with, bre p ExPoborpoa: épyoes:”Hpy Ul, 1. 518. €x0oSords, dv, hateful, detestable, pas Soph. Ph. 1136; méAeuos Ar. Ach, 226; roia.. dveorivates éx@o5om’ “ArpelSais Soph. Aj. 932; Tis 6809 éx0080m0d: yeyovvias moAAois, tows de ..érépors mpoopidrous Plat. Legg. 810D; of a drug, Pla . Incert. 13 ; exé. Oupacw Ap. Rh. 4.1670. —. (The accent indi that the word is only a lengthd. form of éxOpés, €x8os, as GhAoBards of GAXos, etc., y. sub modamds.) %x0os, eos, 74, hate, hatred, Ads €x0os ddevdpevos Od. 9.277; and in pl., €x8ea Avypa Il. 3: 416; cf. Pind. P. 2.100; éx8os twds hatred for one, Hdt. 9. 15, Aesch. Supp. 331, Thue. 1. 95; Kat’ €xOos ruvds Id. 1. 103., 7.573 & €xOos dmxécOar Tvl to incur his hatred or enmity, Hat. 3.82; els €x80s édAOciv ri Eur. Phoen.879; in’ €xGovs Plut. Poplic. 19. IL. & mAciorov éxGos object of direst hate (like picos 11), Aesch. Pers. 284: cf. ¢y@alpw.—tIn Prose €x@pa is more freq. (Acc. to Buttm. Lexil. v. 6x@9oa: fin., from é«, ef, é«erds, just as the orig. sense of Lat. hostis was stranger.) Opa, Ion. %x Opn, 7, hatred, enmity, Hdt. 5.81, Pind., and Att.; €x4pa awés hatred for; enmity to one, Antipho 119. 20, Thuc. 3. 10; kar’ éx- Opav Twos Ar. Pax 133; €xOpa és twa Hat. 1. 5, Thuc. 2.68; €xOpa mpés Twa Aesch. Pr. 491, Thuc. 2.68; 5: €xOpas podeiy, apixéobar ri to be at feud with one, Eur. Phoen. 479, Hipp. 1164, 307 D, cf. Xen. Hell. 3.5.9; & exOpas yevéoOar Ar, Av. 1412; els ExOpay Baddrcw rd Aesch. Pr. 388; els €. €Adetv, kablcracbai Tur Dem. 534. 24, Plat., etc.; mpods €xOpav from personal enmity, Dem. 274. 4; éxOpay ovpBadrra«Xv, ovvanrew Twi to engage in hostility with .., Eur. Med. 44, Heracl. 459; 2xOpav aipesdar Dem, 558.9: opp. to karahrdacecbat Tas €xOpas, Hat. 7. 145; €x@pay Avew Eur. Tro. 50; diadveo@ar Thuc. 4.19; dve- AéaGat Isac. 36.11; BadAaxOfvac Tis ExOpas Andoc. 23. 3. ; éxOpatve, impf. HxOpawov Xen. Ages. IT, 5; aor. AxOpyva Maxim, 1, karapx. 67: (ex6p03) :—Iater form of éx@aipw (q. v.), to hate, ria Xen, Lc., Plut. Num. 5 :—also, éxOp. til to be at enmity with, Acl.N. A, 5. 2. II. to make hateful or hostile, Twa twwt Maxim. |. c.; €x8pat- vouoa réxvors yovéas Or. Sib. 8. 26. ¢ yréos, Byz. form for éx@apréos:—éxOpavrixés, 7, dv, hateful, le, Nicet. Ann. 184 D. Lo p.ct 76, =€x0pa, Hesych. — Se eS ee exéarovos — €xivos. exOpetw, fo be at enmity with, rn Lxx (Ex. 23. 22, al.). &Opia, 7, late form of €x9pa, Lxx (Gen. 26, 21); cf. GeosexOpia. €xOpixds, 7, dv, hostile, Hermog. in Walz 3. 239, Astrampsychus Onir, 1. éxOpo-Saipwv, ov, hated of the gods, Soph. O. T. 816, éx0po-héwy, 5, an opponent-lion, Epigr. Gr. 96. 3. €x8p6-Eevos, ov, hostile to guests, inhospitable, Aesch, Pr. 727, Theb. 606, 621, Eur. Alc. 558. éxOpomoréw, to make hostile, App. Civ. 5. 60, prob. 1, Stob, 510, 2, cf. Hesych. €x0po-mords, dv, causing enmity, App. Civ. I. 54. éxOpés, d, dv, (€xO0s) hated, hateful, of persons and things, freq. from Hom. downwds. (Hom. has it only in this pass. sense); €x@pds yap poe keivos byes ’Aldao mUAnot Il. 9. 312, cf. 378, Od. 14.156; €xOpdv dé pot éo7w, c. inf., ’tis hateful to me to.., 12.452; Oeoiow €xOpds Hes, Th. 766, Theogn. 601, Ar. Eq. 34; 6 Oeotow éxOpds Plat. Com. Mer, I, etc. II. act. hating, hostile, at enmity with, rw Thuc. 8. 45, Xen. Ages. 6, I,etc.; c. gen., HBpios éxOpdy dddv averse from insolence, Pind. O. 7.165: absol., &, yA@ooa Aesch. Cho. 309; dpyat Eum. 937, etc. IIT. often as Subst., éx@pds, 5, one’s enemy, where the act. and pass, senses often coincide, Hes. Op, 340, Pind., Trag., etc. ; dvhp éxOpés Hdt. 1.92; 6 Avs éxOpds Aesch. Pr. 120; éxOpois éxOpa mopotvov Ag. 13745 el... Twa tor ExOpoy éavrod Thuc. 4. 47; of Exot éx@pot Id. 6. 89, etc-—Acc. to Ammon., éx@pés is one who has been pidos, but is alienated, Lat. inimicus; wod€ucos one. who is at war, Lat. hostis; Bvopevns one who has become a mortal foe to his former Sriend. IV. besides the regul. Comp. and Sup. €xOpérepos, -TaTos, (Pind. N. 1. 98, Soph. O. T, 1346), the irreg. €x@iav, ExOaros (qq. Vv.) were in common use, V. Adv. éx@pas, Plat. Legg. 697 D, etc. ; Comp. éx8porépws, Dem. 61. 26. €xOpodpav, ov, hostile in disposition, E. M. 245. 23. €xOpwdéw, to be hostile, mpés twa Suid. éxOpadns, es, (elds) like an enemy, hostile :—Adv., éxOpwdas Exav tivi Dio C. 43. 10. €x0w (v. ZxGos fin.), to hate, od dixaiws Oavarov €xPovaww Bporot Aesch, Fr. 301; éx@ets Soph. Ph. 510, Eur. Med. 118; €x@ee Soph. Aj. 459, Eur. Andr. 212 :—also (from éx@éw), imperat. €y@et Theogn. 1032; impf. 7x0ee Hermesian. ap. Ath. 598 A:—Hom. has it only in Pass., wat éx@opevds mep AOhyy Od. 4.502; ob yap diw mayxu Oeois .. [adrov] ExOecPa Ib. 7560; frou po .. pyryea ovyaddevra Hx90" 19. 338; HxGeTO Maat Geoiae 14. 366; éx@era: Aesch. Ag. 417; 7xOero Eur. Hipp. 1402.—Only used in pres. and impf., except that a part. pf. pass. #x@npévos occurs in Lyc. 827; the compd. drex@avopat is more in use. éxlB.ov, 76, a young viper, Arist. H. A. 5. 34,23 v.1. éxldmov. éxtBva, 1, (Exis) an adder, viper, Hdt. 3, 108, Trag., Plat. Soph, 218 A, etc.; metaph, of a treacherous wife or friend, Aesch. Cho. 249, Soph. Ant. 531. II. earlier, as in Hes. Th. 297, 301, only as pr. n, of a monster, daughter of Callirhoé. éxtBvatos, a, ov, of or like a viper, Call. Fr. 161, Anth. P, 7. 71. éxSvijets, eooa, ev, =foreg., Nic. Th. 209; dippos. éx. drawn by vipers, Nonn, D. 13. 191. éxBvo-edys, és, snake-like, Schol. Eur. Phoen. 1136. éxtBvo-Kéiidos, ov, snake-headed, Schol, Eur. Phoen, 1136. éx15vd-Kopos, ov, snaky-haired, Nonn. D, 1. 173. éxtBvo-Aoyéw, Zo collect vipers, Eust. Dion. P. 376. éxtBvo-payla, 7, an eating of vipers, Diosc, Parab, 1. 234. éxtBvo-xiipys, és, delighting in snakes, Or. Sib, 5. 168. éxrBvaeSqs, €s, = ex15voedys, Schol, Eur, Phoen. 1136. éxleov, 76, =éxu0v, Nic, Th, 65, 637. éxteds, éws, 5, a young viper, pl. éxefjes Nic. TH. 133. *Exivat, Ov, ai, the islands in the Ionian sea, fl. 2.625, Eur. I. A, 286, etc.: commonly called "Extvd8es, ai, Hdt. 2. 10, etc. éxwatos, ov, =éxidvaios, Pseudo-Nic. Th. 230. éxiv-akomne, exos, 6, hedgehog-fox, Steph. B. 5, s. v. “Aavol, éxivées or éxives, of, a hind of mouse with rough bristling hair, in Libya, Hdt. 4. 192, cf. Arist. Mirab. 28. éxtva (sc. Sopa), }, an urchin’s skin, Arcad. p. 112. éxiviokos, 6, Dim. of éxivos: part of the ear, Suid. éxivo-piyrpa, %, the largest kind of echinus, Arist. H. A. 4.5, 2- éxivé-rrovus, modos, 5, a kind of prickly-plant (literally urchin-foot), perh. the same as éxtov, Poéta ap, Plut. 2. 44 E, cf. Ath. 97 D. exivos, 6, (not éxévos [T], as in An, Ox. 2. pp. 67, 170; in Ar. Fr, 251, éxivou is f. 1. for sxivov, v. Dind.), The urchin, hedgehog, (pro- perly €x. yepoaios), Erinaceus Europaeus, Archil. 83, Ar. Pax 1086, Ion ap. Ath, g1 E. 2. the sea-urchin, Epich. 26 Ahr., Archipp. "Ix8. 5, Plat. Euthyd, 298 D; distinguished as éx. weAdyytos from éx. x€poaios, Arist. H. A. 4. 5, 2, Theophr. Fr, 6. 2, 6. II. the shell of the sea- urchin, often used as a jar or cup for holding medicine, Hipp, 663. 40, al.: hence, 2. like Lat. testa, a pot, jug, pitcher, Lat. echinus, Ar. Vesp. 1436, Eupol. Incert. 23, v. Erot. Gloss. Hipp., Hesych., Poll. 6. 91, Horat. Sat. 1.6, 117: cf. edyyn. 8. the vase in which the notes of evidence were sealed up by the d:aurnrat, in cases of appeal from their decision, Dem. 1180. 24., 1265, I Ee III. the prickly husk of certain seeds, as of the chestnut, Xenoer. 43, Hesych. 2. the neck-vertebra of the xeorpevs, Ath. 306 F. IV. the true stomach of ruminating animals, Arist. P. A. 3.14, 8; so called from its rough coat, cf. Ib. 43 Body éx. Call. Fr. 250: also, the gizzard of graminivorous birds, Ael. N. A. 14. 7. V. in pl. sharp points at each end of a bit, which by a sudden check of the reins were pressed against the mouth (Lat. frena lupata), Xen. Eq. 10, 6: cf. éxnvia, brocrojua. VI. in Architecture, & the moulding along the top of the Doric and Ionic capital (prob. from state, ” exivaddns — eX. its form), ovolo, Vitruy. 4. 3. VII. a kind of cake, Ath. 647 A. (Cf. Old H. G. igil (G. igel); Slav. jezi; Lith. ezys.) extvabSys, es, (€l50s) prickly, like a hedgehog, Arist. Mirab. 28: gene- rally, rugged, Strabo 545. éx6-5yKkT0s, ov, =éx15yd5nKTOS, Strabo 588, Diosc. Noth. 1. 103. éxtov, 76, (€xis) a plant, echium rubrum, Sprengel Diosc. 4.27: our echium is Viper's Bugloss, éxts, ews, 0, gen. pl. éxéov Plat. Euthyd. 290 A: in Nic. gen. éxios, pl. éxleoot, éxuas. An adder, viper, Plat. Symp. 217 E, Arist. H. A. 3. 1, 28 (where it is distinguished from the oviparous dds), etc.; metaph., cvkopavrns Kal exis Tiy pdow Dem. 799. 4; Tmopeverar dd Tis dyopas Gomep éxis Id. 786. init—The éx5va, acc. to Nic. Th. 129, is the fem, of éxis; others think €xis and €x:5va two distinct species: Opp. has €xus as fem., C. 3. 439. (From 4/EX, EIX, come also éy-tdva, éyx-eAus, "Ey-iov; cf. Skt. ah-is; Lat. ang-uis, ang-uilla; O.H.G. une; Lith. ang-uis (anguis); ung-urys (anguilla):—if Teut. forms, A.S. @l, Germ. aal, etc., are connected, they must have been formed inde- pendently.) éxirys [t], ov, 6, a kind of stone (adderstone?), Plin. H. N. 37. 11. éxpa, 7d, (€xw) that which holds; and so, I. a hindrance, obstacle, Il. 21. 259: v. sub dudpn. 2. c. gen. a bulwark, defence against, éxndvoins h. Hom. Mere. 37; BoAdwy Ap. Rh. 4. 201. II. a hold- fast, stay, éxpara wérpns the bands of the earth-fast rock, Il. 13. 139 (so, €xpara youvay Nic. Th. 724); also, éxpara mipyov stays, bearers of the towers, Il. 12. 260; €xpuara vn@y props or cradles for the ships, to keep them upright on land, Il. 14. 410; in Ap. Rh. 1. 1200, éxyata syains of the ball of earth grasped by the roots of a tree. éxpalo, io hold fast, hinder, Eust. 904. 4, Schol. Eur. Or. 265, Hesych.: ef. éx paw, €xopévas, Adv. of éxopat, =epetfs, Apollod. 3. 1,1, Apollon. de Pron. 128 B; éx. rivds next after him, Diog. L. 4. 23. €xo-von, 1, =eis vod, a pretended orig. form of réxvy, cf. Heind. Plat. Crat. 414 B. €xévrws, Adv. part. pres. of yw, in phrase éxdytws vody =vouvexdvTas, Plat. Legg. 686 E; absol., Id. Phil. 64 A. éxtpés, d, dv, (Exw) strong, secure, of Places (like dyupds), Acphy, xwpiov, etc., Thuc. 4. So Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 13, etc.; dd éxupod robév Thuc. 1. 90; é éxup@ elvat to be in safety, Id. 7.77; ev éxupwrary moveiaOat te Xen, Cyr. 1. 6, 26. 2. of arguments, etc., trustworthy, Adyos Thuc. 3. 83; éAmis 7. 41; éxupd mapéxecOat to give good reasons, Id. 1. 325 iv TéApav .. éxupwrépay wapéxeaOau Id. 2. 62; exvpwrépa divapus Id. 1. 42; Todro 6 PdBos éxupdy maperxe Id. 3. 12. 3. of persons, €x. mpds .. secure against, Plut. Sol. 1. II. Adv. —pés, Thuc. 5. 26; Comp. —wrepov, Id. 8. 24. €xiporys, 770s, 7, strength, év olxodopiats Philo 1. 644, v. 1. for dxupd- 7s Polyb. 1. 57, 6. €xtpé-ppav, ov, gen. ovos, (ppyv) strong-minded, Hesych. éxtpow, to make secure, fortify, like éxupéw, Phot., Suid. :—in Isocr. 107 B, éxvp@oar is v. 1. for dpioat. éxUpopa, 76, a fortification, Theoph. Sim. 11. 18. €xo, 2 sing. €xea8a Theogn. 1316, Sappho, v. Greg. Cor. 582; 3 dual éxerov Soph. Ant. 146; 2 sing. subj. éxna6a Il. 19. 180:—impf. efor, Ep. €xov, freq. in Hom. ; 2 dual eixérnv Soph. O. T. 1511; Ion. éxeoxov Il. 13. 257, Hdt. 6. 12:—fut. €w, or (in the sense o hold, commonly referred to laxw) axnow, 2 sing. cxjoeoba, Francke h. Hom. Cer. 366 (al. ¢xjo908a aor. subj.); also an aor. 1 20x04 is found in late writers, Or. Sib. 11 (9). 91, Nonn. D. 17. 177), C. I. 5984 B. 7; and a form éoxa, Ib. 1030. 5, cf. 2264 p (add.), 2942 c (add.), 6316 :-—aor. éoxov (always with augm. even in Hom.); imperat. oyés Soph. El. 1013, Eur. Hipp. 1354 (a false form oxé sometimes appears in Mss. in compds. KaracxXe, péTaTxE, Tapacye, v. Dind. Eur. Hec. 842, Veitch Gr. Verbs p. 252); subj. ox@ Il. 21. 309, Att.; opt. oxolny Isocr. 11 E, etc., 3 pl. oxoinoav Hyperid. Eux. 42; but cxotue (ém-, xara—, wapa-), Eur., etc., 3 pl. oxotey Thuc. 6. 33; inf. cxeiv Il. 16. 520, Att., Ep. cxéxer Il. 8. 254; (in Alexandr. Gr. 3 pl. impf. and aor. efyooay, éoxocay, Anth. P. 5. 209, Scymn. 696): for the poét. form éoxeOov v. sub *o7xé0w:—pf. éoxnka Plat., etc.; Ep. 8xaxa (ovy-) Il. 2. 218 :—Med., impf. elydpnv Pind., Att. :—fut. foua: Il. 9. 102, Att.; oxfoonat Ib. 235, Ar. Av. 1335, More often in compds. (dva-) Aesch, Theb. 252, (wapa-) Lys. I15. 5, etc. :—pf. pass. wap-€oxnpat in med, sense, v. mapéxw B:—aor. éoxduny (twice in Hom. without augm. oxéro Il. 7. 248., 21. 345), Hom., Hdt. 6. 85, but rare in Att. except in compds. dv-, da-, map- eoxdpnv; imper. cxod, cxécbor, oxéa0e (dva—) Eur., etc.; inf. cxéc0ar Od. 4. 422, Hes. :—Pass., fut. med. év-€fopat in pass. sense, Eur. Or. 516, Dem. 1231. 16; later, cxeOjcopat Galen., and often in compds., Plut., etc.:—aor. éox€Ony Arr. An.5.7., 6,11, (€v-, KaT-, ovv-) Plut.2.980F, Id. Solon 21, Hipp. 557. 3: the aor. med. éoyero, Ep. oxéro, part. oxé- Hevos, is used in pass. sense, Il. 17. 696, Od. 4. 705., 11.278, Hdt. 1. 31; cf. karéxw 0. IL :—pf. €oxnpat Paus. 4. 21, 2, (dw-, xaT—) Dem. 1204. 7: ef. égyaro.—From the inf. aor. oxeiy arises the collat. form toxw (q. v.) in a special sense. (The Root, by comparison with kindred dialects, seems to have been twofold, 1. 4/EX, SEX, to have, whence also icy (i.e. ot-céx-w, cf. pluvw, minrw), oxhow, eoxov, éoxnna, oxéats, oxhpa; also éxupds, dxupds; kw, eijs, eins; ioxvds, oxebdv: and 2. 4/ FEX, to hold, whence 6x-0s, 6x-€opat, Ox-npa, éx-erés; dy-ebw; perth. also yx-Aos, dy-A€w: cf. Skt. vah, vah-dmi (veho), vih-asas (6xerds), vah-anam (6x08), vah-ati ( fluvius); Lat. veh-o, veh-i- culum, vectura, also via, velum; Goth. ga-vigan (cadevev), etc.; O. H. G. wag-an (G. wagen), etc.) A. Trans, :—Radic. senses, I, to have, II. /o hold: 629 have, v. xéip. I. 2, 1. to have, possess, of property, the most common usage, Od. 2. 336., 16. 386, etc.; of €xovrés te Hdt. 6. 22; or, simply, 6 xv a wealthy man, Soph. Aj. 157; of éxovres Eur. Alc. 57, Ar. Eq. 1295, Pl. 596; of ob éxovres the poor, Eur. Supp. 240; so, kaxdy 70 p3) *xew to have nothing, Id. Phoen. 405; éxew xpéa to have debts due to one, Dem. 957. 5, cf. 970. 4:—to have received, Kaddos dnd Oey h. Hom. Ven. 77; 7 €« twos Soph. O. C. 1618; wapdé twos Id. Aj. 663; ind twos Xen. An. 7. 6, 33, etc.; iad tux h. Hom. Ap. 191:—c. gen. partit., pavriks éx. réxvns Soph. O. T. 709 :—Pass. to be possessed by, belong to, i Il. 6, 398, cf. 18. 130, 197. 2. to have, i.e. have charge of, éxov marpwia épya Od, 2. 22, cf. 4.737; miAa.., ds Exov“Opat Il. 5. 749., 8. 3933 Tas dyéAas Xen, Cyr. 7.3, 73 Tas dias Dem. 1153. 4:—to be engaged in, gvdakds txov kept watch, Il. 9. I, 4713 oxomnjy Exe Od. 8. 302; ddAaooxomijy elxe Il. 10. 515., 13.10; oxomuyy €x. tds for a thing, Hdt. 5.13; so, Ohpay éxew Tivds Soph. Aj. 564, etc.; éy xepoly éxew m1, v. xelp I. 3. f. 3. c. acc. loci, to dwell in, inhabit, otpayéy, OvAvpwov, Hom.: to haunt, gure éxouc’ dpéwy aimewa Kapnva nat myyds Od. 6. 123; Bpdpos xt Tov xw@pov Aesch. Eum, 24: esp. of tutelary gods and heroes, Thue, 2. 74, Xen, Cyr. 8. 3, 24, cf. Blomf. Theb. 69:—of men, méAw kat yaiay Od. 6.177, 195, etc.; @nBas éoxev ruled it, Eur. H. F. 43 éxes yap x@pov occupiest it, Soph. O. C. 37, cf. Od. 23. 46 :—of beasts, Ta Opn €x. Xen. Cyn. 5, 12. 4. to have to wife (mostly without yovatka), obver’ Exes “EXévny nat opiy yauBpods Aws éoar Od. 4. 569, cf. 7. 313, ll. 3. 53, etc.; Exxe GAAnY adeApeny Hat. 3. 31, cf. Thuc. 2. 29: also to keep as a mistress, Thuc. 6. 57, Anth. P. 5. 186, etc.; éxw Aaida, adn’ ob« €xopat Aristipp. ap. Diog. L. 2. 75, cf. Ath. 544 D:— in Pass., rovmep Ovyarnp éxeG “Exropt Il. 6. 398. 5. to have in one’s house, to entertain, Od. 17. 515., 20. 377, h. Hom. Ven. 232, 274. 6. the pres. part. is often joined with a Verb, almost pleonast., but so as to make it more vivid, abrds €xwv driradrc kept and made much of, i.e. kept with special care, Il. 24. 280; this is freq. in Prose, in such phrases as fie €xwv, he went with.., Hat. 3- 128, cf. 2. 115; of a general with his troops, as, ds dy xp exov orpardv Id. 7. 8, 4, etc.; rare in Poets: cf. AapBdvw I. 11, pépw X. a. 7. of Place, én’ dpuorepa éxew 7 to keep it on one’s left, i.e. to keep to the right of it, Od. 3.171; én dpeorepd yepds ex. 5.2773 éy befia, ev dpiorep ex. Thuc. 3. 106; toraroyv éy. Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 2, etc. 8. of Habits, States, or Conditions, bodily or mental, yfjpas €x., periphr. for ynpaorew, Od. 24. 250; kaxdv 20. 83; Akos Il. 16. 517; Avooav g. 305; pwaxny ex. 14. 573 aperhs wépe dijpw ex. Od. 24. 515; UBpw ex. to indulge in .. , 1. 368, etc. ; "Appo- dirnv 22. 4453; so, ppevas ex. Il. 13. 394, etc.; BovAny 2.344; Oupdv, véov, pévos éxev, etc,:—also to have, suffer, ddyea 5. 895, etc.; dxea Oup@ 3. 412; mévOos pera ppect 24. 105; TEevOos ppect Od. 7. 219; tovov..xat di¢vy Il. 13. 2, Od. 8. 529; ovdev Biaroy Hdt. 3. 15: —-so also in Att., aloxvvqy, émOupiay, ppovrida éx., etc., periphr. for aicxtvecbat, émibupeioOa, ppovrifey, etc.; moO ex. Tiwds=mobeiv, Il. 6. 362; émdevis 2x. Tiwds=embdevecOar, 19. 180; ex. TéeAos=Te- AefoOar, 18. 378; Kérov éx. twi=Koreiobai, 13. 517: cf. poppy, mhdnpa I, etc.:—so also often with a Prep., éxev riva dpyh or &v épyn as we might say, to hold him in despite or at feud, Thuc. 2. 8; év dppwdia te €x. Ib. 89; v. sub dd A. 1. 1.b; dvd ordua, év ordpatt, or da ordparos éx., v. ordpa I. 3.—But these phrases are often trans- posed, and instead of éxw -yfjpas we find -ypas éxe pe, Il. 18. 515; yedws éxe piv Od. 8.344; so, dunxavin, O4uBos, Kr€os, aloa exe Tiva, Hom.; as opeas javxin Tis ToAcopkins toxe Hdt. 6. 135; Blos éxe twa Soph. El. 225; cf. ddanpovin, xadippoodtyn, etc.: also.of external objects, al@pn exer xopupyy Od. 12, 76; pévos HeAloro éxev puy 10. 160; o€ oivos éxe ppévas 18. 331; exer Bédos dfd yuvaixa, of a woman in travail, Il. 11. 269; and in Pass., €xeo@at xaxdrnrt kal GAyeot, axéerot, Oup, kwkuT@ kat oiporyf, like Lat. teneri, Hom.; dypumvinat, épyf Hdt.; ixd muperod Hipp.; év dadépy, év ~updopais, etc., Thuc., Plat., etc. 9. to have mentally, to know, understand, 5ujow innwy Il. 17. 476; réxvnv Hes. Th. 770; wav’ éxes Adyov Aesch. Ag. 582; éxere 70 mpaypa Soph. Ph. 789, cf. Eur, Alc. 51; exes Tt; like Lat. tenes? d’ye understand? d’ye take me? Ar. Nub. 732; €xeis TodTo ioxupas; Plat. Theaet. 154 A:—to know of a thing, Soph. O. T. 311, Eur. Or. 778. 10. 40 have in one, to involve, admit of, Eidei@uae .. ebdivas éxovoa Il. 11,272; xavaxiw exe made a rattling noise, 16. 105, 7943 €xov Bony, of flutes, 18. 495; TéAos éxet Saiyow Bporois Eur. Or. 1545; Tair’ dmoriav, ratr’ dpyhy éxe Dem. 142. 27, etc.: v. sub dyavakrnos, kardpepyis. 11. éxev crabpdr, to weigh, v. sub crabuds III. 2. 12. witha second acc., which isa predicate of the first, "Oppéa dvakr’ éxew Eur. Hipp. 953, v. ém@poros 11; maddy x. Tov exel- vou @avarov Seleuc. ap. Ath. 1 55 E: cf. um. 12. II. to hold: 1. to hold, éx. xepoiv, &v xeEpaiv, pera yxepoir, etc., Vv. sub xelp; pera yaupnApow ex. Il. 13. 200; mpdcbev an donida 13. 157; bod Kapn 6.509; brép macady Od. 6. 107; dmber Il, 23. 136:— éxewv Tivi 7 to hold it for him, as his helper, 9. 209, cf. 13. 600:—to uphold, ovpavov .. kepadry te Kat dxapdrowwt xXépeoor Hes, Th. 517, 746, v. sub duds; so, éxer 5€ re Kiovas, of Atlas, Od. 1. 53. 2. to hold fast, €xev Mevédaov xetpds, KeBpidvny odds to hold him by the hand, the foot, Il. 4. 154., 16. 763, cf. 11. 488 (v. infr. ©. 1); €xew Twa Héaov to grip one by the middle, of wrestlers, Ar. Nub. 1047; €xopat héoos Id. Ach. 571, Eq. 388, Ran. 469: metaph., ppeotv éxew to heep in one’s mind, Il. 2. 33; v@ €y. twa Plat. Euthyphr. 2 B, cf. Rep. 490 A. 3. like pépw, popew, Lat. gestare, of arms and clothes, ¢o bear, wear, ena 8 ex’ aud’ dpoow Ml. 18. 538, cf. 595; mapdarénv i: to §, dpouow €xX. 3.173 aaxos apy 14. 376; Kuvenv Kepadry Od, 24. 231, 630 cf. 17. 122, 450; 748 eluar’ exw. 17. 24, cf. 572, etc.; oToAny dpi o@pa Eur. Hel, 554; orodAny, Srett etc., pea Cyr. 1. 4, 26, etc. 4. of a woman, fo be pregnant, Lat. utero gestare, Hdt. 5. 41, Hipp. 1128 G, Arist. Pol. 7. 16, 14; in full, év eae éxew Hat. 3. 32; also, mpos Eavrijy éxev Hipp. Epid. 1. ggo. 5. to hold out, bear up against, support, sustain, esp. an attack, Lat. sustinere hostem, usually c. ace. pers., Il. 13. 51., 20. 27; once c, dat. fo resist, oppose, 16. 740 ;— Hom. uses the fut. ¢xjow mostly in this sense: also fut.med. oynoopat, c, acc., like Act., Il, 12, 126., 17. 639. 6. to hold fast, keep close, éxijes efxov miAas 12. 456; Ovpyy exe podvos émBAjs 24. 453: to enclose, ppéves hrap €xovor Od. 9. 301; odpxas Te Kal doréa tes eX. II. 219. 7. to hold or keep in a certain direction, like énéxw, diordv exe he aimed it, Il. 23.871; more fully, xetpds te nal éyxea .. dyriov GAApAwy 5. 569; often of horses or ships, fo guide, drive, steer, wediovd éxov dxéas tmmous 3. 263, cf. 11. 760; pdBovde 8. 139; Th fa..éxov immous 3. 752, etc.; mapet exe dippov Hes. Sc. 352; bmn Eoxes .. evepyéa vija Od. 9. 279; mapa Tijy Hretpoy ex. veas Hat. 6. 95, etc.:—then often absol., without tmmous or vfjas, 77 p Exe that way he held his course, ll. 16. 378, cf. 23.422; TWvaAovd’ éxov they held on to Pylos, Od. 3.182, cf. Soph. El. 720:—also (esp. in fut. oxqow, aor. €oxov,) to eet in, land, vées éxov és riv ’ApyoAiba xwpnv Hat. 6. 92; oxeiv mpos Ti Sarapiva 1d.8. 40; TS AjrAw, kara 7d Mocedéivtov Thuc., etc. ; mot oxnoew Soxeis; Ar. Ran. 188:—later also, dpav én’ dAdo ex. turned it upon others, Soph. Ph. 1119; Opp éx. to turn or keep one’s eye fixed, Id. Aj. 193; oc Oppa Oarépa dé vovv ex. Id. Tr. 272; Tov 5é voov éxeio’ Exe: Eur. Phoen. 360; dedpo vody exe atiend to this, Id. Or. 1181; mpds Twa or mpés Tt TOV voww éx. Thuc. 3. 22., 7.19; so, mpds Tia Thy yvmpny ex. Id. 3. 25. 8. to hold in, stay, keep back, immous Il. 4. 302., 16.712; to check, stop, Tid 13. 51., 20. 27., 23. 720, and Att.; xetpas éxetv twvds to hold his hands, 18. 33; but, ob oxjoe xéetpas will not withhold his hands, Od. 22. 70; €x. Saxpva 16, 191; dbuvas éx. to allay, assuage them, Il.11.848, cf.271; éoxe Koya Od.5. 451; pdPov avy} 19.502; (so, exe ovyf Kal Eppace oddevi Hat. 9. 93); pect po0ov Od: 15. 445; oTdua ovyG, tv jovxig Eur. Hipp. 660, Fr. 775.56; wé8ald.I.T.1159; dda ef or éxrds Twos Exey, v. sub mous I. 5. d. 9. to keep away from, c. gen. rei, Ta dyopdwy, veev Il. 2. 275., 13.687; yéwv Soph. El. 375; pévou Eur. H. F. 1005; also c. inf., Fra .. oxnowdpuvepevacll, 17. 182:—in Att. o stop or hinder from doing, Tod wi) Karaddva: Xen. An. 3.5, 11, cf. Hell. 4.8,5; €oxov pi) «raveiv Eur. Andr. 686, cf. Hdt. 1. 158, etc.; pi) ob efermety Eur. Hipp. 658; wore ph .. Xen. An. 3.5, 11; 70 ph adueiy Aesch. Eum. 691, cf. Hdt. 5. 101 :—also c. part., €x. Tv BovduTodvra Soph. O. C. 888; pap- yavra Eur. Phoen, 1156. 10. to keep back, withhold a thing, ds of xph- para ele Big Od. 15. 230, cf. Dem. 867. 26; “Exrop’ Exet.., ob5’ dve- Avaer Il. 24. 115, cf. 136 :—adrds éxe pray keep it, a civil form of de- clining, Eur. Cycl. 270. 11. to hold in guard, keep safe, save, ll. 24. 730; of armour, ¢o | aaa 22. 322. 12. to keep so and so (supr. 1.12), elxov drpéuas opéas avrovs Hdt. 9. 54, cf. 53, Ar. Thesm. 230; éx. éavrdv ar’ otkous Hat. 3.79; éemodmv Aesch. Pers. 344, Xen.; otya van pdardr’ exe Eur. Bacch, 1084; Tovs oTparimras meBopévous éx. Xen. Cyr. 7.2, 11. III. c. inf. to have means or power to do, to be able, freq. from Hom. downwds., mostly with inf. of aor., as Il. 7. 217., 16. 110, etc.; but also of pres., as Od. 18. 364; so Lat. habeo dicere, etc. :—rarely with the inf. omitted, dAA’ otrws ért ele he could not, Il. 17.354; ola x’ Exper so far as we be able, Od. 15. 281; and so in Att., 2 oiwy exw Soph. El. 1379; ap’ dv Exot re wat Sdvarro Id. O. T. 315 ; Saov efyes Eur. I. A. 1453; ws éxw Id. Hec. 614 ;—but in all cases an inf. may be supplied from the context. 2. after Hom., od« éxw, foll. by a dependent clause, J know not.., od« elxov ris dy yevolpay Aesch. Pr. 05, cf. Isocr. 259 C; 008’ éxw mas pe xpi) .. dpavioa Soph. 0. C. 1710; ob« Exov 8 Tm xph Aéyew Ken. Cyr. 1. 4, 243; ob« Exw mod mécw Soph. Tr. 705 ; Orws podrouvped’ ove Exo Id. O. C. 1743 ;—the two constructions are combined in Ant. 270, ob yap elxopev ob?’ dyti- poveiv, ov6 Grws .. mpagaper. B. intrans. to hold oneself, i.e. to keep, so and so, éxov [otras], dare addavra.. kept balanced, like the scales which .., 11.12.4333 &{w, ds dre mis aTepen AlOos I will keep unmoved, asa stone.., Od. 19.494, cf. Il. 13. 679., 24.27; &yxos €x’ drpeuas it kept still, 13. 5573 so in Att., oxés ep el keep where thou art, Soph.O.C. 1169; éxewv xard xdpav Ar. Ran. 7933; did. pudantséxetw to keep on one’s guard, Thuc. 2.81; €x’ hpéya keep still, Plat. Crat. 399 E, etc. ; éxe 54 stay now, Id. Prot. 349 D, Gorg. 460 A (ubi v. Heind.), etc.; €xe abrod Dem. 1109. 6; exe viv, éxe ody, and xe alone, like dye, Ar., Plat., etc. 2. c. gen. to keep from, modképov Thuc. 1. 1125 cf. 0, Iv. 2. 3. c. gen., also, to take part in, have to do with, pavrixis téxvns Soph. O, T. 709: more often with a prep. to be engaged or busy, dup tt Aesch. Theb. 102, Xen, An. 5. 2, 26, etc.; epi 71 Id. Hell. 7. 4, 28. II. simply #0 be, éxds efyov Od. 12. 435 ; SpuBpos exer 13. 2453 ex nar’ olkov Hdt. 6. 395 x. &v dvdéynacot Eur, Bacch. 89, ubiv. Elmsl.; €xovres xuparow év d-yedédaus Ar. Ran. 704; Sov auppopas execs Eur. El, 238; éemodav Exe Id. 1.T. 1226, ete. 3. often with Advs. of manner, ed éxet Od. 24. 245; very common in Att., KaAds Exe, Kands exer, Lat. bene habet, male habet, it is, is going on well, etc.; obrws éxet so the case stands, Ar, Pl. 110; otras éxdvray quum res ita se habeant, Xen. An. 3. 2, 10; ds &8 Lae Soph, Aj. 81; ora bid orépvay ex. Id, Ant. 639; ovrws Xey mepi Twos dt. 6. 16, Xen. Mem. 4. 8, 7; mpds 7 Dem. 122. 26; 770 éx. Soph. Ph. 1336; xoopiws éx. Ar. Thesm. 853; #uov Ex. mpés twa Dem. 127. 8B, etc.; ds eye just as he was, Hdt. 1. 114, Thuc. 1. 134 al.; ds exw I am, Ar. Lys. G10; womep exopey Thuc. 3. 30, ubi v. Duker; 7 data valet, Rar. Or, 308; Tavavtia dx evyadarar — Ayers. doparéws, dvaynalas éxe=doparés, dvaynaisy tort, Hdt. 1. 86.,. 9.27; waras exe No, I thank you, v. kadds C. I. 6, b. a gen. modi is often added, ed éxew rivds to be well off for a_ thing, abound in it; kad@s éxev rhs wéOns to be pretty well drunk, Hdt. 5. 20; ombpou dvakds x. to be busy with sowing, Id. 8. 109 ; ev éxewv ppevav, swparos Eur. Hipp. 462, Plat. Rep. 404 D; cf. feo I. 2. c; so, @s moday elyov as fast as they could go, Hdt. 6.116; ds taxeos elyev Exaoros Id. 8. 107; ws .. THs ebvvoias 5 pvhpns €xoe Thuc. 1. 22; ws épyis éxw Soph. O. T. 345, cf. Eur. Hel. 313, 857, etc.; m@s éxes Bdgns; Plat. Rep. 456D; otrw rpdmov éxets Xen. Cyr.7.5,56; perpiws éy. Blov Hat. 1.32; dyes €x. .. abrov kal cappdvws Plat. Rep. 571 D ;—but also, ed éx. 76 cpa Id. Gorg. 464 A, Xen. Occ. 21, 7; obTws éx. TH pice, TH davoig Dem. 330. 6, Lycurg. 157. 14, cf. Isocr. 191 A. 8. to be the case, be so and so, Adyos €xet the story goes, prevails, Bast Ep. Cr. p. 239. III. of direction, to hold or turn towards, v. supr. A. IL. 7. 2. to stand up, jut out, kioves ixbda’ éxovres Od. a 38; eyxos €oxe 5’ dpov Il. 13. 520. 8. to lead towards, 680i én rov morapov éx. Hdt. 1. 180, cf. 191., 2.17; ex. eis Tt, to point towards, be directed, tend towards, €x0pa éxovoa és “AOnvatovs Id. 5. 81; 7d és Apyeious €xov what concerns them, Id. 6. 19; Ta és tiv dréara- ow éxovra Id. 6. 2, etc. :—also of Place, to extend, reach unto, én’ Saov €noys Tod tepod efye Id. 1. 64. 4. éni rin exewv to have hostile feel- ings towards .. , Id.6. 49, Soph. Ant. 986; cf. ééxo IIT. IV. after Hom., €xw is joined with aor. part. of another Verb, xpUpavres éxovat for xexpUpaci, Hes. Op. 42; daoxAnioas Exes for dmoxexdeckas, Hat. 1.37; eydelcao’ éxet Ar. Eccl. 355, cf. Thesm. 706 ;—éxw sometimes gives a pres. sense to the aor., as, @avudcas éxw I am in a state of won- derment, Soph. Ph. 1326; ds oe viv dripacas éxer who now treats her with dishonour, Eur. Med. 33, cf. Soph. Ant. 22, 32, 77, etc.:— more rarely with the part. of other tenses, pf., Id. O. T. 7or, Ph. 600, Xen, An. I. 3, 14., 4. 7, 1; pres., Eur. Tro. 318.—This seems the first step towards the modern use of the auxiliary Verb to have; cf. eiui B. 2,—But, 2. the part. éywy, with the pres., adds a notion of duration to that of present action, as, ri xumrages €xwv; why do you keep poking about there? Ar. Nub. 509; ri dra diarpiBes Exav; why then keep wasting time? Id. Eccl. 1151; ti ydp earn’ éxwv; Ib. 853, cf. Thesm. 473, 852; or, without interrog., pAvapeis Exav, Anpeis Exov you keep chattering, you keep trifling, Plat. Gorg. 490 E, 497 A, cf. Euthyd. 295 C, Theocr. 14. 8. 3. pleonast., éorly éxov =Eexet, Hdt. 1. 86; éoriv dvayraiws éxov =exer dvayKaiws, Aesch. Cho. 237, Ar. Pax 334. C. Med. to hold oneself fast, cling closely, r@ mpoopds Exdunv Od. 12. 433, cf. Il. 1. 513, Od. 9. 435, etc.; mpds GAAHANGt 5. 329 :— mostly c. gen., 40 hold on by, cling to, mérpns Ib. 429, cf. 9. 4353 Bpe- téov Aesch, Theb.98; éfdpec0d cou Ar, Pl. 101. 2. metaph. fo cleave or cling to, €pyou Hdt. 8, 11, Xen. Hell. 7. 2, 10; Broras, éAmtdos Eur. Ion 491, Ino 21; ris adris yvdpns Thuc. 1.140: to lay hold on, take advantage of, éxeo rv d-yabGv Theogn. 32; mpopdotos éxecOat Hdt. 6, 94: to lay claim to, duporépay rav éravuptewy Id. 2.17: to be zealous for, wdxns Soph, O. C. 424; THs dAnbelas Plat. Legg. 709 C; Tijs cwrnpias Xen. An. 6. 3, 17, etc. 8. to come next to, follow closely, Ib. 1.8, 45 €vecOar éxopévovs .. ray dpparov Id. Cyr. 7.1, 93 Ths mAnyis éxerar follows up the blow, Dem. 51. 27:—of peoples or places, fo be close, touch, border on, Tivos Hat. 4. 169, Thuc, 2. 96, etc. ; of éxdpevor the neighbouring people, Hdt. 1.134: of Time, 7d éxépevov €ros the next year, Thuc. 6.3; 7d éxéueva what follows, Plat. Gorg. 494E, Isocr. 121 D. 4. to depend, éx Tivos Od. 6. 197., 11. 346 ; c. gen, o€0 e€erar Il. 9. 102. 5. to pertain to, doa éxerar Tov aldOhoewv, Tav BibacKkddwy Plat. Legg. 661 A, Prot. 319 E, etc.; the part. in Hdt. is often periphr., ra ray dveipdrav, kaptav, aitiov, olke- tay éxédpeva being in fact=7d dvelpara, etc., Hdt. 1. 120, 190., 2. 77.5 3- 25, 66, etc. II. to bear for oneself, epndepnva Gvra wapecdav oxopévn before her cheeks, Od. 1. 334., 21. 65; domlda mpécd’ érxero his shield, Il. 12. 294, ef. 298., 20. 262. III. to maintain one- self, hold one's ground, 12.126; éxeo xparep@s keep a stout heart, 16. 501., 17. 559. 2. c. acc, to keep off from oneself, repel, 17. 639. IV. to stop oneself, stop, sxéro [éyxos] 7. 248; éoxero pavh 17, 696, etc. 2. to keep oneself back, abstain or refrain from, airhs, paxns 2. 98., 3. 84; Bins Od. 4.422; Exdpeda dyiorijros &« Bedreow Il. 14. 129; Tis Tiuwpins Hdt. 6. 85; Tav aBierwv Soph. O. T. 891, etc.; c. inf, Ap. Rh. 1. 328:—also, xaxa@v do xeipas €xeaat to keep one’s hands from ill, Od. 22. 316; MevéAew oxéo8at xépa Eur. Rhes. 174:—absol., oxéo, oxéaGe, hold! cease! Il. 21. 379-5 22. 416, V. to suffer, dOanrov éoxdpny véuy (sc. evar) Soph. Ant. 466. apadrtrar, Ion. 3 pl. pf. pass. of WaAAw. ibaiAéos, a, ov, (yw) boiled, fit for boiling, Nic. Al. 565. _&b-dv8pa, 7), (dvijp) cooking up men, epith. of Medea, from her renew- ing old Aeson, Anth. P, 15. 26, ubi male é~avdpa. ebdvn, 4, (Glow) = &pnrnpior, Hesych. apiivés, 4, dv, boiled, Hipp. 641. 45, Arist. Probl. 20. 4,5: ép~avd, 74, =tyjpara, Diocl. Caryst. ap. Ath. 68 E, pina 76, oe bog of éynua, Lxx (4 Regg. 4. 38, 39). swevopevws, Adv, part. pf. pass, of Wevdouat, falsely, wrongly, Plat. Legg. 897 A, Beebe 65. me imc ee ethan fe epeo, ade, v. sub dw, &fmpa, 76, anything boiled: pl. vegetables fit for kitchen use, Plat. Rep. a78 ee Diod. x‘ So, oo II. wine boiled down to one » pp. 359. 6, Plat. Com. Supp. 4; Lat. sapa, Plin, 14. 11. &lnparadys, «s, (€l50s) like nua, cet. from Dice. ey Dem. 121, 195% Syyors, ews, 4, a boiling, Hipp. Vet. Med. 10, etc.; &y. Tay Kpeav énrip — EwvT od. Hat. 4. 61; in pl., Plat. Polit. 303 E:—a smelting of ore, Theophr. H. P. 5.9, 1. “pnrip, pos, 6, a dish or pan for boiling, Anth. P. 6. 305. &pnrhptov, 7d, =foreg., Hesych, Ehyris, od, 6, one who boils or seethes, Agatharch. ap. Phot., Basil. &pnrucés, 7, dv, of or for boiling, Gloss. fipqtos, 4, dv, boiled, dfos Xen, An. 2. 3, 14; YSara Nic. Al. II. II. éynroi, dv, of, small fish boiled for eating, Ar. Vesp. 679, Archipp. ‘Ix9. 8, Nicoph. Xep. 4, Arist. H. A. 6,15, 2: cf. émavOpaxis. pla, Ion. -tn, 4, (Wid, Yea) a game played with pebbles: generally, a@ sport, game, Nic, Th. 880: amusement, pastime, Soph. Fr. 4. Api. &pa, 74, in E. M. 406, 8, ubi v. not.; in Hesych., épeta. epdopar, Dep. (évia) to play with pebbles, generally, to amuse oneself, Odpyor KaPhpevar Efraacdov Od, 17. 530; e~idacba podrrf Kat pdp- HUY! 21. 429; dup’ dorpaydroot .. épidwvro Ap. Rh. 3. 118, cf. 1. 459, Call. Dian. 3, Cer. 39.—Ep. Verb, cf. ép-, xa0-eyidopat. cipréw, v. sub Envir, &ppidopévos, Adv, part. pf. pass, of Yrpvdicw, with paint or cosmetics, Schol. Ar. Pl. 1064. épo, 3 sing. impf. Ye Hdt. 1. 48 (Mss. eee, v. infr.), Ar. Ran. 505, Vesp. 239, Fr. 507,548: fut. é¥aw Nichochar, Incert. 1, Menand. Kapy. I: aor. Hynoa Hdt. 1. 119 (vulg. ép-), Ar. Fr. 109, 355, Plat., etc., cf. ovv-éyw: pf. &~nea Philo 2. 245:—Med., imper. gov Aesch. Fr. 321: fut. &/joopa: Plat. Rep. 372 C :—Pass., fut. &n9ncopuat Galen.: aor. HYyHony Hat. 4. 61, Plut., etc.; part. é¥nOels Diosc. 5.100, whence prob. épdévra should be corrected in Parab. 1.148: pf. #ynuévos Arist. Probl. 5. 36, Diod. 2. 9, 饗 Hipp. 628. 25, cf. dpépo 11.—The pres. épéw, from which the tenses are formed, rests on the accentuation of Mss.; but, for Ye éPotor épeiy eee, yw Epovor Epew Hye are restored in the best Edd.; v, Dind. de Dial. Hdt. p. xxxvi; é~oovres, &favres in Diod. 1. 80, 81, have also been corr, by Dind. (For the Root, v. réo- oa.) To boil, seethe, of meat and the like (never in Hom., v. sub érrdw), Hdt. 1. 48, 119, 216, al., Hipp. Vet. Med. 9, Plat. Euthyd. 301 C, etc. ; &p. xdrpay (as we say) to boil the pot, Ar. Eccl. 845, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 290 D; proverb. of useless labour, Ai@ov &pets (cf. rAtvOos) Ar. Vesp. 280, Plat. Eryx. 405 B; c. gen. partit., #Yoper Tov Kopdpov we boiled some pimpernel, Ar. Vesp. 239 :—Med., ou pnd? AvmnOps mpl Aesch. Fr. 321 :—Pass. to be boiled, of meat, Hdt. 4. 61, etc.; of water, to boil, Arist. H. A. 6. 2, 16, Plut. 2. 690 C. 2. of metals, to smelt, refine, épdpevos xpuods Pind. N. 4.133: cf. drepOos. 3. Med., é~jca- o0at xdpny to dye it, Poll. 2.35; cf. Phot., Hesych. 4. metaph., ‘Yipas dvavupov &fev to cherish an inglorious age, Pind. O. 1. 133, v. Dissen, (83), and cf. wéoow III. 3. €w, Ion. subj. pres. of elué (sum). €w, Ion. subj. aor. 2 of inp. €@ya, Epypat, v. sub ofyvupu. isda, taden, y. sub €0w. faOev, Ep. 4a0ev (q. v.), Adv. (éws) from morn, i.e. at earliest dawn, early in the morning, Plat. Phaedo 59 D, etc.; €. ed@vs Ar. Pl. 1121, Eubul. Incert. 1. 8. 2. atpioy €. to-morrow early, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 6, Plat. Lach. 201 B; so €wGev alone, Ar. Ach. 277, Nub. 1195, Plat., etc.; 76 7 €uber Arist. H. A. 5.14, 22. afivés, 7, dv, (€ws) in the morning, early, 5 HAs 5 éwO. Hdt. 3.104, extr.; éwivds eldov orpardy Soph. Fr. 445; ovens .. &xxAnotas éwbivijs Ar. Ach, 20:—10 éwOivdr, as Adv., early in the morning, Hat. ib., init., Hipp. Aér. 282; so, @ éwhvod =wOey, Ar. Thesm. 2, Plat., etc.; éf éwbtvod péxpe SelAns Xen. Hell. 1. 1, 5; edOds ef é. Alex. Svy. 1. 4:— mept riv éwO. pudaxny about the morning watch, Lat. sub quartam vigiliam, Polyb. 3.67, 2; id tiv éwO. (alone), Ib, 43,1; THS éwd, gvdakijs Plut.Pomp.68:—mpocermety 7d éw0. to wish one good morning, Luc. Laps. 1, cf. Macho ap. Ath, 580 D (where 7é 7’ é. is the prob. 1.): —éw9. dixat proverb. for business soon tr ted, A. B. 258. 2. eastern, Dion. P.697:—Comp. -wrepos, Strabo 493; Sup.—wraros, Id. 199. édios, ov, also a, ov, post. for éMos, EwOivds, Ap. Rh. 2. 686, 700: also eastern, Dion. P, 111. €gpket, v. sub Zorea, éodilopar, (€wdos) Pass. to be or become stale, of fish, Galen.6.390F: the Act. is cited from Oribas. éwho-kpacia, 5, (updos) a mixture of all the dregs, heel-taps, and other refuse, with which the drunken were dosed at the end of a revel by their stronger-headed companions; metaph., éwAoxpaciay tid pou THs movnpias KaTacKedacas having discharged the stale dregs of his rascality over me, Dem. 242. 13, where Harp. understands him to speak of the stale stories raked up by Aeschines, cf. Luc. Symp. 3; but in Plut. 2,148 A, éupéver 7d... dvodpeorov, domep Ewr. Tis UBpews 7) dpyis, it is evi- dently = xpaumdAn. €oXos, ov, (prob. from ws, 7s), a day old, kept till the morrow, of meat and fish, stale, opp. to mpéadaros (recens), €wror retnevor bv’ tpépas 7) tpeis Antiph. Mory, 1. 6; aiiptoy €wAov rovr’ éxav [7d réxaxos] Axionic. Kak. 1.15; so, 7d Atpvaior HSwp Arist. Fr. 207; €. vexpds Luc. Catapl. 18 :—4) EwAos tyépa the day after a feast, esp. after a wedding, when the scraps were eaten, Axionic. XaAx. 2 ; €wAos OpvadXis a stinking wick (after the lamp has been blown out), Luc. Tim. 2. 2. of actions, etc., stale, out of date, radinhpara éwra .. eis tpas nal Wuxpa addux- vetrat Dem. 551.13; paywdiar, mpaypara Plut. 2. 514 C, 674 F; fwddy éore 7d A€yetv 7'77 B, cf. Luc. Pseudol. 5. 3. of money, lying without use, hoarded, Philetaer. Kuv. 2. 10. 4. of men, coming a day too late, Plut. Nic. 21; but also, like xpatmados, on the day after a debauch, i. e. suffering from its effects, Lat. hesternus, Id, 2, 128 E; éwdos rais pvhpats Ib, 6x1 E. : 2. gen. and acc. of ws, the dawn. 631 €oAmet, v. sub €Arropat. €Spev, an isolated subj. form, found in Il. 19. 402, érel x’ E@pev Tord Horo when we have enough of war (as the old Interprr. explain it). The sense and construct, is the same with dq intr. to ake one’s fill of a thing, to which Verb Buttm. and Spitzner refer it. The old Iaerpr ei RES ime in the sense of dvinyc 11. 8. b. 1 aah el | €av, Ep. and Ion. part. of eit (sum). hee LEY ake lenis: éoviapny, v. sub dyéopar, UNIVERSI19 €pvoxéet, v. sub oivoyoéw. CAr ic €wka, v. sub ofyvups. oaty gos, a, ov, Aesch. Pr. 25, etc.; also os, ov Eur. Phoen. 169: poét. éditos, Ion. and in Hom. fotos, q. v.: (ws). In or of the morning, at morn, early, maxvnv égav HAwos oxeda the morning rime, Aesch. Pr. 253 éGa pbéypar’ dpvidwr Soph. El. 18, etc.; éGos dordgies Mncpipes Eur. Fr. 999; 000’ "Eomepos o¥@’ ‘Eos ofrw Oavpacrdés Arist. Eth. N. 5.1,153 €@os éfavaoriva to get up early, Eur. El. 786. 2. eastern, Lat. Eous, Xen. Hell. 4. 4, 9; 7a Ga eastern parts, Luc. Charon 5; é égas (sc. xwpas) Arist. Probl. 26. 54,4; ward rds édas Id, Mund. 4, I. €opa, 7, collat. form of alwpa, q. v. II. a festival of Erigoné, also called dAjris, Arist. ap. Ath. 618 E; cf. Interpp. Poll. 4. 55. &apa, édpaxa, v. sub dpaw. éapyet, v. sub dpdw, éwpéw, éopypa, édpnors, éwpllw, collat. forms of alwp-: cf. wet-€ar~ pos, —ifw. ‘ taépratov, v. sub éopratw. éwpro, v. sub delpw. €ws, 4, Att. form of the Ion. Ads, q. v. as, Ep. etws, etos, (v. sub fin.): A. Relative Particle, used like Lat. donec, dum, to express the point of Time up to which an action goes, with reference either to the end of the action, wil, till; or to its continuance, while; (so in Scottish and Northern Engl. while is used for till): P 8 until, till, 1. as a Temporal Conjunction, a, with Indic., of a fact in past time, Oive 5d mpopdyav, eiws pidov Wrece Gupdr Il. II. 342, cf. Od. 5.123; €ws dmmdecév Te katrds wAero Soph. Fr. 225, cf. Aesch, Pers, 428, 464, etc. ;—when an impf, with dy stands in apodosi, the clause with €ws expresses an unaccomplished action, #5éws dy Kaa- Autre? BrereySunv, Ews dwédwxa I would have gone on conversing till I had .., Plat. Gorg. 506 B, cf. Crat. 396 C. b. ws dy or xe with Subj., relating to an uncertain event in future time, payjoopat.., ciws xe TéXOS wOAEBOLO Ktxelw till I find, Il, 3. 291, cf. 24.183, Aesch. Pr. 810, Dem. 135. I, etc.: in Trag. the dy is sometimes omitted, éws Hadjs Soph, Aj. 555; €ws KAnOp Id. Tr. 147; ews dvp 7d hyo Id. Ph. 764; cf. Pors, Or. 141. c. éws with Optat., relating to an uncertain event in past time, dpre .. Bopénv, tus 8 ye Parhxeoar .. prryeln caused it to blow, till he should reach .. , Od. 5. 386, cf. 9. 376, Ar. Ran. 766, Plat. Phaedo 59 D, etc. :—dy or xe is added to the Optat. (not to éws), if the event is represented as conditional, €ws x’ drd mavra dobetn till (if possible) all things should be given back, Od. 2.78; ob« dy dmoxpivaio, €ws dv oxépao Plat. Phaedo ror D, ef. Soph, Tr. 687, Isocr. 361 E:— in Od. éws (without dv) almost assumes the force of a final Conjunc- tion, so that, 5. 386., 4. 800., 6. 80., 19. 367. da. with Inf., only in late authors, Ael. ap. Suid. s. v, (Avom@pevoy. 2. with single words, like dypt, péxpt, Lat. usque, mostly with Advs. of Time, éws dre, Lat. usque dum, till the time when, with indicat.; Xen. Cyr. 5.1, 253 so, ws 00, Hdt. 2.103, Ev. Matth. 1. 24, etc.; €ws drov Ib. 5. 25, etc.: ws mére; Lat. quousque? how long? Ib. 17.17, Jo. 10. 24; also, éws épé till late, Thuc. 3. 108; €ws dp7t 1 Ep. Jo. 2. 93 and of Place, ews be, Lat. hue usque, Ev. Luc, 23. 5 :—also c. gen., €ws rod dworioat till he has made payment, Lex ap. Aeschin. 3. 18, cf. Dem. 262. 5, Arist. H.A. 9. 46, 3, etc. :—also with a Prep., fas mpds waddv éGov dorépa Anth. P. 5.201; and of Place, ws els rdv xdpaxa Polyb. 1. 11, 43 &ws ént ry Otdagoav (v.1, ds) Act. Ap. 17. 14;—c. acc., Georg. Syncell. 7 A, etc. II. while, so long as, mostly at the beginning of a verse in Hom. with Indic., efws év Tpolp modrcpiCopey Od. 13. 315, cf. 17. 358, 390; ews 8° ér’ Eudpow elwt Aesch. Cho. 1026, Pers. 710; Ews ere édmris br] Thuc. 8. 40 :—in this sense answered in apodosi by réws, Ep. retws, Od. 4. 90; Téppa, 12. 328, Il. 18. 153 Téppa 5é, IO. §07., 20. 413 dé alone, 1. 193, Od. 4. 120. b. in Att. sometimes fos dy with Subj., when the whole action is future, ob Hot .. éAnis, fas dv aid mop Aesch. Ag. 14353 Aye Te xpi) kal épwrdy, ews dv eHow Plat, Phaedo 85 B, etc. c. ws with Opt. in case of repeated action, Id. Theaet. 155 A. a B. in Hom. sometimes Demonstr.,=réws, for a time, eiws piv... Spvvov* abrap érera .., Il. 12. 142; eos piv GmeiAa ..* GAN Sre.., 13.143; ews pev..érovro* avrap émel.., 15. 277., cf. 17. 727, 730 Od. 2.148: continually, 3.126; in Hadt. 8. 74 it is prob. an error of the Copyists for réws. . [éws, with its natural quantity of iambus, only once in Homer, viz. Od. 2} 78; as a monosyll., II, 17. 727, Od, 2, 148, etc.; as spondee in the form ¢idis, Il. 3. 291., 11. 342, etc.; as trochee in the form efos, —elos 5 rav0’ &ppave 10. 507; elos éyd .. Od. 4. 90, cf. 7. 280., 9. 233, etc.—When it was a spondee or trochee, Curt. would write jas, fos, i.e. fos, Dor. &Fos, ds, cf. Skt. yavat (quamdiu).] éwoa, v. sub dew. éwor, Ion. for dot, 3 pl. pres. subj. of elué (sum). €wormep, strengthd. for €ws, even until, Thuc, 7. 19, Plat., etc. ‘Ewo-pépos, Dor. "Awodédpos, 6, Bringer of morn, Lat. Lucifer, the Morning-star, i.e. Venus, Il, 23. 226, Hes. Th. 381, Pind, I. 4. 40 (3. 42): cf. pwcpdpos. [In Hom, always trisyll. by synizesis. ] \ $ éwurod, éwvtréwv, Ion. for éavrod, etc. JON \ & 632 Z Wet: ffjra, 7d, indecl., sixth letter of Gr. Alphabet: as numeral ¢’= éxra and €Bdouos (the obsol. s’, i.e. F, vau, the so-called digamma, being retained to represent €, eros), but {= 7000. The Gramm, regarded ¢ as a mixed sound, composed of o and 5; but, as the following examples will shew, the o sound was not so strongly marked as in our z, and sometimes disappeared altogether : I. o appears : 1, in Aeol. where ¢ becomes 08, as Sdevs, kwpdodw, pedicdw, yOupicdw for Zevs, kopdatw, etc., Ahr. D. Aeol. § 7. 3 :—te- versely, in Att., 5 becomes ¢, ’AOjvale, Odpate ; but v. —Ce. 2. in Dor. (Tarent.), where ¢ becomes o@, as Aaxricow, cadricaw, ppacow, cf. Lat. comissari =kxmpaceyv, Atticissare=’Arrixifev ; Ahr. D.D. § 12. 5 :—teversely, in Aeol. and perh. in.some Der. dialects, aa becomes ¢, as mrd{w for mrjoow (Alcac.), rAa{w for rAnoow (Sapph.), Ahr. D. Acol, 4.2, D.D. § 13.3. 3. in some words, where ¢ becomes o, o:Bdvn = CBivn, Saguntum =ZanuvOos:—reversely, in old Att. (acc, to Ael. Dion. and Eust.) Cuimpds, (u@de, Cuepdadéos, Cuiyya, Cuvdn were written for opuxpds etc., cf. Sext. Emp. M. 1. 169. II. o more or less disappears : 1. in Acol., where (a = dia, i. e. dya, see (4 and the words compounded with it. 2. in Boeot., Aeol. and Dor., where ¢ becomes 8, as Aevs, Ady for Zevs, Zav (or Zds), Svydv (Svorydv acc. to Plat. Crat, 418 C sq.) for (uydy, SaAos for (HAos, Sopeds =Copxas ; Ahr. D. Aeol. § 37.1, D.D. § 12. 2; and this change appears without dialectic influence, as dpi¢yAos for dpiSndos, Copf for dépé, Lat. zeta for Siarra ; cf, also dAamadvés from dAana{w, macdvés from Taifo. b. in the middle of words, it becomes 68, as Oepiddw for -i(w, wadda for wala, D. Aeol. § 37. 2, D. D, § 12.3. 8. where the Gr. ¢ represents y (i or j) in kindred dialects, as (ea ((eFd) =Skt. yavas (hordeum), (éw=S. yas, vyév =S. yugan, Lat. iugum or jugum; (wpds=S. ytis, yiishas, Lat. tus or jus. 4. where ¢ represents a sound like the Engl. j, as in Gidupor, jujuba; cf. CHAos, Ital. gelosia, jealousy. 5 in Arcad,, where it sometimes stood for B, as (€AAw for BaAAw, CépeOpov for Bépe- Opov, Bapabpor, énzCapéw for emPBapéw; Ep. also Ad¢opa for 4/AAB, AapB-ave; cf. Pors, Phoen. 45. Zeta, being a double conson., made,a short vowel at the end of the foregoing syllable long by position; yet in Ep. poetry there are some exceptions, Homer used the vowelshort only beforetwo prop.names, which could not otherwise come into the Hexam., dovv_ZeAcins Il. 4. 103, 121; -oi Té ZaxvyOov, bAnecoa ZaxvyOos, etc., often in Od. The negligence of later versifiers made this licence not unfrequent, Herm. Orph. p.761, Spitzn. Vers. Her. p. 99. {4 [ci], Aeol. for dd, but rarely used as a Prep., (a rdy ody ldéay Theocr. 29. 6, Meineke; (a vuerds ap. Jo. Gramm. de Dial. p. 384: so also in the Aeol. compds. (aBddAw, (aBaros, (d5ndos, (aedefauny, Canus, (avexas, Cvypa (y. sub voce.) ; so in later Latin, zabolus for dia- bolus, zeta = Biarra. II. fa—insep. Prefix, =5a-, like dpr—, épi-, aya-, very, used,by Hom. in the Adjectives (afs, (a0cos, (axoros, Cape- wns, Carpepys, Capreyhs and (axpyns, perhaps also in ém{agpedos. Hes. also in deriv. Verb (apevéw; by Hadt, in the Adj. (amAouros. faBddAw, Acol. for 5:aBGAdw, Hesych., E. M. £éBaros, ov, Acol. for &a4Baros, Sappho 150 Bgk. {4Boros, ov, (Bdaxw) =rorvpopBos, ToAvKTHVOS, Hesych. LaBpés, dv, for (4Bopos (?) =roAvparyos, Hesych., Phot., Suid. tayKAn, 7, =sq., Nic. Al. 180. II. an ancient name of Messené, from the shape of the natural mole which forms the harbour. LayKdov, 76, a reaping-hook or sickle, Lat. falx, Thuc. 6, 4: acc. to Strab. 268, Cayedtov is=oxodrdy (and so akin to dy«vaAos), and Thuc. 6. 4 says it was Sicilian for Spémavoy: cf. Curt. Gr. Ez. p. 606. Zaypevs, éws, 6, a personage of the Orphic mythology, son of Zeus and Persephoné, slain by the Titans and resuscitated by Dionysos, Call, Fr. 171, Nonn. D. 10. 294; identified with “Avdys by Aesch. Fr. 229: v. Grote I. p. 25 sq. La5yAos, ov, for duddyAos, of a sail with holes in it, Alcae. 18 (2). 7. facdckapny, =diedcfayny, I discoursed with, rt Sappho 88 (53). Lampr, =didnuc, part. (aévres Hesych.; 3 sing. (der, Ib. tans, és, (Ca-, aque) Ep. Adj. strong-blowing, stormy, {ahs dvepos Il. 12.157, Od. 5. 368; @pae 3 émt (any dvepor [for (ata, Caf] Od. 12. 313; (aods Nérov Anth, P. 9, 290:—cf. also (4m. ribeos [a], a, ov, also os, ov Eur. Tro. 1075 :—poét. Adj. (used by Att. Poets only in lyrics), very divine, sacred, of places favoured by the gods, like #y4Geos, Il. 1. 38, etc. (but not in Od.), h. Hom., Hes.; so, ¢. TvAos, "IoOpds Pind. P. 5. 94, I. 1.453 Kpyra Eur. Bacch. 121 (lyr.), etc.; “Orevos Aesch. Fr. 996:—of things, dvewor Hes. Th, 253; «Aqdes, oedavat Eur. Tro. 256, 1075 ; worapot Ar. Nub. 283; podmai Id. Ran. 382; rimal Poéta ap. Ath. 542 E:—of persons, "AméAAov Anth. P. 9. 525; and, in Christ. Epigrams, sainted, like pa«ap, Ib. 1. 10., 8. 57, 83, 150. tabephs, és, (Bépos) scorching, kadpa Anth. P. 6.120, tawaddts, és, («dddos) very beautiful, Hesych. faxeAriBes, ai, Boeot. for yoyyvAlses or xodoKvvrat, Ath. 369 B. Gxopevw, to be a (axopos, C.1.431 b (add.), 481, 2298. Laxopickos, 5, Dim. of gaxopos, Aglaias Byz. in Revue de Philol. (1846) 2.1. p.17, ¥- 23. Sree fer %, an attendant on the tem, Je, much like vewxdpos (but acc. to Thom. M. ceuvdrepdv 71), ¢. "Appodirns Hyperid. ap. Ath. 590 E ; Plut. Cam, 30; Anods C. 1. 491; absol., ¢. xa? fepéas Hierocl. ap. fe Pa: Als é. 3, Aeux. 4, ubiv. Meineke. (Prob. a dialectic form of Sidxovos, didueropos ; v. sub (4= 6:4.) , téxoros [a], ov, very wrathful, exceeding wroth, ll. 3. 220, Pind.N. 6. gt, Theocr. 25. 83. taxuv0lbes, ai, fruits from Zacynthus, Hesych.; cf. A. B. 261. fadalvw, =pwpaivw, Hesych. é téAdw, to storm, surge, Nic. Th. 252, in Ep. part. (aréwoa. fadevkos, ov, very white, Zosim. p. 70 Bekk. Lady [G],.%, the surging of the sea, surge, spray, Aesch. Ag. 656, Soph. Aj. 351, etc.; Kovcoprod kal (aAns brd mvevparos pepopevou Plat. Rep. 496 C; (adn mvevparov by storms of rain, Id, Tim. 43 C; ¢. dvé- pov Plut. 2.993 E; BéAcot mupmvdov (aAns, of the fiery rain from Aetna, Aesch. Pr. 371:—metaph., (dAa: storms, distresses, Pind, O. 12. 16. (Prob. from the same Root as (éw, Curt. no. 567: hence also (dAos, Garam, (adrdecs.) faApés, 5, Thracian word for a skin, Porph.V. Pyth. 14. fadoadys, és, («f50s) =sq., Eccl. fadASers, eco, ev, surging, stormy, Schol. Nic. Th. 252. Lados, 5,= Cady, (ados iAvders muddy foam, Nic. Th, 568. tados, LaAdw, [adwdhs, Ladwrds, Dor. for (7A0s, etc. Laipevew, to put forth all one's might, Hes, Th. 928. fapevijs, és, (uévos) post. Adj. very strong, mighty, raging’, h.Hom. Merc. 307 (in Sup. (ayevéorare) ; then often in Pind. (ap. Kévravpos, #Atos P. 9. 64, N. 4. 22), and late Ep, as ¢. xdAos Opp. C. 3. 448; once in Soph., ¢. Adyos word of violence or enmity, Aj. 137 :—neut. as Adv., én (apevés koréovoa Nic. Th. 181. fapeptras, a, 6,=Siapepirns, Dor. word for paxapirns, Phot. fapla, Lapse, etc., Acol. and Dor. for (np-. Ziv, Zavés, 5, Dor. for Ziv, Zyvés, v. sub Zevs. Lavexéws or favexds, Adv., Acol. for dsavex@s, restored in Corinna 9 :— a corrupt gloss of Hesych. alludes to this form, al(nvexés* dinvenés, aidviov. LameSov, 74, = Sdredov, Xenophan. 1. 1. famipedos fl, ov, very fat, Hesych, GiadnOys, és, (wAjOw) very full, ¢. yeverds a thick, full beard, Aesch. Pers, 316; ¢. Movons orépa full-sounding, Anth. P. 7. 75. lamAouttw, to be very rich, Jo. Chrys. tamdourtos, ov, very rich, Hdt. 1. 32, Eur. Andr, 1282. lamérns, ov, 6, a hard drinker, Hesych. lampéra, restored by Dind. for d:ampémw (metri grat.) in Aesch. Pers. 1006. Lasiipos [a], ov, (rp) very fiery, duces arepomijs Aesch. Pr. 1084. larevw, Larpetov, farpevw, Dor. for (n7-. Larpedrs, és, (rpépw) Ep. Adj. well-fed, fat, goodly, ravpav (arpe- péow Il. 7.223; pwwas Carpepéas Od. 4.451. farpixvov, 7d, the game of chess, Schol. Theocr. 6,18; v. Ducang. :-— farpiciLo, to play at chess, Achmes Onir. 241. fauxl-rpodos, ov, (cavids) tenderly reared, Hesych., acc. to Ruhnk, ladeyyns, és, very bright, Hesych. ludedns, és, violent, with Adv.—A@s, Hesych. ; cf. émapedds: acc. to Suid.,=mdvu dpedqs. In Nic. Al. 568 we have mupds (apéAoio (from fadeAos, ov, which is quoted in E. M.), but with y. 1. CapAeyouo. luddeyns, és, Ep. Adj. full of fire, of men at their prime, dAAore pév Te Capdreyées TeACovaty .. ,adAdOTE 5 ad POwvOovaww aujpror Ul. 21. 4655 of fiery horses, h. Hom; 7. 8. Il. shining bright, Hesych. geboper, ov, = ToAvopos, Hesych. £4xoAos [a], ov, (xoAN) = (axoros, Anth. P. 9. 524, 7, cf. dxodos. faxperns, v. 1. for (axpnhs: Adv. Caypetés, violently, Nic. Th. 290. faxpetos, ov, (pela) very needy, c. gen., Caxp. 6500 one who wants to know the way, asks eagerly after it, Theocr. 2 5.6: cf. xpetos, ov, I. faxpris, és, only used in pl. attacking violently, furious, raging, wévos Bopéao kai GAdAwv (axpnay dvéuwy Il. 5. 525; of warriors, (axpyeis .. xara Kparepas toplvas 12.347, cf. 360., 13.684. (From (a-and xpdw B; cf. émypdw B.) faxpioos, ov, rich in gold, Eur. Alc. 498, I. T. 1111. ey },=(adn, a storm, Cratin. Jun. Incert. 3, Euphor. 2, ef. Clem. . 073. fd, contr. ae, ae into 7, chs, Ch, Cire; imperat. ¢ Soph. Fr. 181, Eur. I. T. 687, later ¢96¢ Menand. Monost. r91, Anth. P. 10. 43 (condemned by Hdn. p. 316 Herm.); opt. (qv; inf. (jv :—impf. Cov Soph. El. 323, Ar. Ran. 1072; &{yv in Mss. of Dem. 702. 2 is prob. a corrupt form suggested by é(ys, é(n, €€yre (contr. from é(aes, etc.); 3 pl. é{av Ar. Vesp. 709, Plat. Legg. 679 C:—fut. (jaw Ar. Pl. 263, Plat. Rep. 465 D, Menand. Monost. 185; or (joopat Hipp. 247. 27, Dem. 794. 20, Arist. Pol. 7. 6,7 :—aor. é(yoa Hipp. 36.16, Anth. P. 7. 470, Plnt., etc.:—pf. &(qea Arist. Metaph. 8. 6, 8, Dion. H. 5. 68, etc.; but in Att, the aor. and pf. are mostly supplied from Bidov. Except the part. (@v7os, Il. 1, 88, Hom, always uses the Ion. pres. Low (which also occurs in Pind., Hdt., and Trag. chorus, as Soph. El. 157, O. C. 1213, Fr. 685); inf. (wépevau, —yev Od. 7. 149., 24. 436: impf. €(wov 22. 245, Hes. Op,112, Hdt. 4.112; Ion. ¢wecKov Hes. Op. 90, Bion I. 30: aor. {aoa (ér-) Hdt. 1. 120: pf. &ana C. I. 3684.—An inf. (dev in Simon, lamb. 1. 17, Anth. P. 13. 21; and a pres. (w@ (—{w) in C. I. 8846 ; (dw), Ib. 8792. (Prob, the orig. form was 5i-dw (dw spiro) ; .cf. Skt. yiv (vivo), cf, Z.£. 11. 3.) : be properly of animal life, to dive, Hom., etc.; (but also of plants, Cay wow dv civat patverat kat rois purots Arist. Eth. N. 1. 7,12); @A€y- xtore (adyraw vilest of living men, Od. 10. 72; Chew Kat Spay paos jeriowo Il. 24.558; (@vros kai ent ov depxopévano 1. 88, cf. Od. 16. 4395 (@v nat Br?rwy Aesch, Ag. 677; (we re al éoriv Od. 24. 263; , avraw Kat dvrov Dem. 248.25; Tov elval re kal Cay évexa Plat. Rep. Basie cts Hosot, Inscr. in Keil p. 164, Plut. Sull. 7, etc., Menand. 369 D; (Goa Kal éypnyopuia Id, Legg. 809 D; (av Kal éuyuxos —Ce — Cevryvume. Phaedr. 276 A; pela Chovres living at ease, of the gods, ll, 6. 158, al.; (@v karaxavOjvat to be burnt alive, Hdt. 1. 86:—c, acc. temp., ¢. ijmara mayra h. Hom. Ven. 222, etc.; ddcya érea Hdt. 3. 22 :—c. dat. modi, du@es .. , GAAa Te TOAAG, olaiv 7 ed Cwovor whereby men live in comfort, Od. 17. 423., 19. 79; KoAdKww movnpia Ar. Thesm, 868, cf. Dem, 1390. 11; so, ¢. émé rem Andoc. 13. 30, Isocr. 211 D ;— also, (fv daé rivos to live on a thing, Theogn. 1152, Hdt. 1. 216., 2. 39., 4. 22, Ar, Pax 850, etc. (cf. dwofaw); &« twos Id. Eccl. 591, Dem. 1309. 26 :—c. part., (jv ovgopayray Andoc. 13. 253 épyaépmevor Arist. Pol. 4. 6, 2:—c. dat. commodi, (jv éavr@ for oneself, Eur. Ion 646, Ar. Pl. 470, Menand. Incert. 257 :—r0 (jv = (wm, Aesch. Pr. 681, Plat. Phaedo 77 E, ete.; and without Art., eis €repov (jv Id. Ax. 365 D:—(yrw 6 Baotreds long live the king, used in cheering, Lxx (1 Regg. 10. 24); Baorred, cis Tov ai&va. (HO Ib. (Dan. 2. 4). 2. =Bide, to live, pass one’s life, c. acc. cogn., Kwes 3° d-yabdv Biov Od. 15. 4913; ¢. Blor HoxOnpéy Soph. El. 599, cf. Eur. Med. 249, Ar. Vesp. 506, etc.; “addr Bioroy Aesch. Fr. 7743 Cénv tiv abrhy Hat. 4. 112, cf. Plat. Rep. 344 E; rv Biov dopadd@s Philem. Incert. 1.53 dvOpwmav Bioy Soph. Fr. 517; vuppiow Biov Ar. Av. 161; also, ¢. d8AaBet Big Soph. El. 650, cf. Tr. 168; €b ¢hy Id. Ph. 505; xax@s Id. O. C..799; ¢. d00dos Id. O. T. Io:—in a quasi-trans. sense, é« T@v GAAav dv ens (=a ev 7d Bly €mparres) from the other acts of your life, Dem. 559. 1; movetoOae pOdvov e dv Chs Id. 577. 253 v. sub Bide. 3. Coa, Causal, Lxx (Ps. 40. 2,al.). II. metaph., like Lat. vivere, vigere, to be in Jull life and strength, to be fresh, to abide, dABos (wer paocowy Pind. I. 5.85 drys OvedAAa (Hot Aesch. Ag. 819 ; Cavrt xpwpévy modi Soph. Fr. 751; [navreia] det (Qvra wepimwrara Id. O. T. 482; det (fy Taira [vopcpa] Id. Ant. 457; tds guppopds trav BovAevpdrov Cwoas pddiora dave most living power, or abide longest, Id.O.T. 45 ; xpévy TO (@vre «al wapdy7t Id. Fr. 1169; (aoa prdé living fire, Eur. Bacch, 8:—hence, opp. to Bidar (to pass life), Bods pev érn téca, (noas 5t ern énrd Dio C, 69. rg, cf. Xen. Mem, 3. 3, 11. -fe, inseparable Suffix, denoting motion towards:—properly it repre- sents -a6e, as in ’Adqvate, OnBale, Ovpate for "AOnvacde, OnBacde, Ov- pacde :—but it is sometimes found with sing. Nouns, as ‘OAvpmia¢e, Movvuyxiate. Léa, %, = Cert, Dion. H.2. 25. II. the roof of a horse’s mouth, Hippiatr. Seyépies, without mark of gender in Hdt. 4. 192, a Libyan word = Bovvoi, but used as a name for a kind of mouse: in Hesych. (eyepiat. Sed, 7, almost always in pl. (eral (like dAvpaz), a kind of grain, prob. spelt, a coarse wheat, Lat. far, Hom. only in Od., where it is fodder for horses, wap 8 €Badoy Cerds, ava 5 xpi AevKdv Emtay 4. 41, cf. 604; in Il. dAvpar takes the place of Cecat,dmmot.. xpt AevKdv épenrdpevot Kal édupas 5.196., 8. 564; and Hdt. expressly asserts their identity, adding that in Egypt this grain was used for making bread, amd dAvpéwy rovedv- Tat aria, Tas (eds peretérepor Kadéovot 2. 36, cf. 2.'77, Asclep. ap. Galen, 9. 3; yet Cerd and dAvpa (here-used in sing.) .are distinguished in Theophr. H. P. 8.x, 3, Diosc. 2.113 :—much grown in the country of the Mosynaeci, Xen. An. 5. 4, 27: the form ¢éa in ‘Asclep. l.c., Strabo, etc. (Properly (éFa, cf. Skt. yava (hordeum); Lith. jawas; v.Z ¢. 11. 3.) §et-5wpos, ov, zea-giving, as epith. of the earth, (eiSwpos dpovpa fruit- Jul corn-land, Il. 2. 548, Od. 3. 3, Hes.; ¢. dpduds Nonn. D, 26, 185 ; c. gen., dxpds .. ¢ ommpys Anth. P.-9. 4. II. some authors evidently derived it from (aw, = Bidbwpos, life-giving, ’Appodirn Emped. ap. ees 2.756 E; €perpy Nonn. Jo. 12. v. 49.—Cf. Hesych., Eust. 283. 18. feipd, %), a wide upper garment, girded about the loins and falling over the feet, worn by ‘Arabians, Hdt. 7. 69; by Thracians, Ib. 75; distinguished from the yAapus, as covering the feet of the rider, by Xen. An. 7. 4, 4. Also written (ipa, Hesych., cf. Valck, Adon. 224 B. (The word, as well as the thing, was of foreign origin:) feipo-dpos, ov, wearing a Cepa, "AiShs Antim. 88. fetw, late Ep. for (éw, as mveica for mvéw, Ap. Rh, 1. 734, Call. Dian. 60. féda, 76, Thracian for ofvos, Choerob. in Theod. p. 124, who assumes a nom. (Ads, gen. edd: but the Fragm. of Eur. (Incert. 193) he quotes shews that it was indecl., cf. Hesych. et Phot. v. ¢iAat, CeiAa. f€AAw, aor. €edAov, Arcadian for B4dAAw, Hesych., E. M. 408. 42. féna, 7d, ((éw) that which is'boiled, a decoction, Diosc. Alex. 7, Geop. 8. 37,35 in Galen, also Léppa or Léopa,'Lob. Paral. 424 not. 36: Dim. Leppdrrov, Galen. few, = Céw, Oribas. 1. 396:—Pass., Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 104. £e6-ripov, 74, a grain, between (éa (Ced) and mupés, Galen. 6. 320. ipaipov, 76, Arcad. for BépeBpov, Bapabpor, Strabo 389. feo-eharo-rayns, és, cooked in boiling oil, Philox. (Symp. 19) in Meineke Com. Fr, 3. p. 636, who in v. 14 reads feo-eAavo-fav0-emray- Katrupwros, all browned and baked and dressed in boiling oil. féows, ews, H, (Cém) a seething, boiling, Plat. Tim. 66 B, etc. ; péxpe (écews up to boiling heat, Plut. 2. 690 C:—metaph.,-¢. rijs Puxfjs Plat. Crat. 419 E, cf. Arist. de An. 1. 1, 16. feoro-Aovoia, 4, a washing in hot water, Galen. 6. 208. feords, 4, dv, (Céw) seethed, boiled, xpéa ¢. wat dard App. Hisp. 5 II. boiling hot, tdwp Nic. Fr. 3.11; v5ara ¢., of hot springs, Strab. 578, Diosc. 1. 39 :—burning ‘hot, Yappds‘Diog. L. 6. 23. feorérys, nT0s, %, boiling heat, Paus. 10. 11, 4. ferpata, 7, Thracian for xU7pa, Poll. 10. 95. fevyapuov [a], 74, Dim. of (edyos, a puny pair or team,-esp. of oxen, Ar. Av. 5825; ¢. Boeéy Id. Fr. 163; Booty Ib. 344. fevy-eharns, ov, 5, =Cevyndarns, Hesych. fevynAdota, 7, the driving a yoke of oxen, Eust. 361. 13. fevynAiiréw, fo drive a yoke of oxen, Xen, An. 6. 1, 8. gal.; and i 633 Sevy-nrdrys [4], ov, 6, the driver of a yoke of oxen, teamster, Sopk. Fr. 545, Xen. An..6. 1, 8:—a fem. fevynAdrpis, idos, Soph. Fr. 883. fevyfirts, f..1. for.Cevyiris in Call. Apoll. 47. fevyifw, fut. ow, to yoke in pairs, unite, Aquil. V.T feuytamns, f.1. for (evyirns in Diod. 19. 106. fevyicvov, 74, the rating of the (evyirat, prob. 1. for -Hatov, Poll. 8. 130; v. Bockh P. E, 2, Me Sevyirns {t], ov, 6, fem. Levytris, wos: (Ced-yos):—yoked in pairs, Gevyirides imo Call. Apoll. 47; Hplovor Cevyirat Diod. 17. 71; of soldiers, in the same rank, Plut. Pelop. 23; «dAapos ¢. a reed of which were made the double flutes (Ced-yn), Theophr. H. P. 4. 11, 3. II. (evyirat, oi, the third of Solon’s four classes of Athenian citizens, so called from their being able to keep a team (Ledyos) of oxen, Arist. Pol. 2. 12, 6, Fr. 350 Lex ap. Dem. 1068. 2; cf. Thirlw. H. of Gr. 2. 38, Grote 3. 156. CeGyAG, 4}, post. for sq., Anth. P. 9. 19, A. B. 1378. fevyAn, 4, the strap or loop of the yoke, (¢vydv) through which the beasts’ heads were put, so that the (uydéy had two (edyAau, cf. Il.17.439., 19.406 (where a horse’s mane is described as (ed-yAns é£epimodoa mapa Cuydv) ; {evga .. dv Cvyotor xvidada CevyAatoe Sovdevovra Aesch. Pr. 463; brodivar ind rhy ¢. Hdt. 1. 31; Boas meAdew CevyAg Pind. P. 4. 404; irayev robs immous rh ¢. Luc. D, Mar. 6. 2.—Not found in good Att. Prose, II. the cross-bar of the double rudder, v. sub mndaAcov. LevyAnfev, Adv., for é« ris Ced-yAns, Ap. Rh. 3. 1319. LevyAnou, Ep. gen. or dat. of CevyAn, Call. Dian, 162. febpheBiogers 76, = (vyddecpov, Hesych, fedypa, 7d, (Cev-yvupe) that which is used for joining, a band, bond, 70 ¢. Tod Atmévos the barrier of ships moored across the mouth of the harbour, Thuc. 7. 69, 70 (cf. 59), Diod. 13. 14: cf. régevpa. 2. a bridge of boats, Simon, (?) in Anth. P. 9.147; 7a Cevypara t&v mora- par Dion. H. 9. 31, cf. Plut. 2. 174 E, etc.:—a pier or platform formed by lashing several vessels together, Polyb. 3. 46, 2, Plut. Marcell. 14, 15. 8. metaph., Cedypar dvdyxns the straits of necessity, Eur... LA. 443. II. in Gramm., a figure-of speech, wherein two subjects are used jointly with the same predicate, which strictly belongs only to one, as in Il. 1. 533, where €87 must be supplied with Zevs: cf. ovAAnYus. Levyvipn, (ev-yviior Aesch. Pers. 191, (b7o-) Plat. Polit. 309 A; imperat. Cevyvire Eur. Rhes. 33; inf. -dvae (uera-) Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 213; part. Cevyvis Hat. 1. 206., 4. 89; impf. 3 pl. éCevyvioay Hadt., Ep. (evyv— Il. 24. 783: also Levyviw Hdt. 1. 205, Polyb., etc.: impf. éCevyvvor Hat., (Ep. Cevyv-Il,): fut. (edgw: aor. eCevga: late pf. eCevxa (é1-) Philostr. 64:—Med., Ep. impf. 3 dual (evyvda@ny Il. 24. 281, 3 pl. Cedyvuvro Od. 3. 492: fut. (evgouar Eur. Hec. 469, etc.: aor. éCevgauny Hdt., Eur.:—Pass., fut. Cevy@joopat (Sta-) Galen.: aor. 1 éCevxOnv Pind. O. 3. 10, Hdt., Trag. and Plat. Polit. 302 E; more commonly aor, 2 &(vynv [0] Pind. N.7.8, Trag., (cvv-) Plat. Rep. 546 C.—Hom. most freq.-uses aor. act.; but in Il. 16. 145 must be remarked the irreg. form Cevypev,or, acc. to Buttm., (evyvtper, inf. pres. act. for Cevyvdpevat, Cevyvivat, with 3,—a singular exception to the rule that v is long only in sing. of pres. indic., cf. Buttm. Lexil. v. y@i9. The simple Verb is rare in Att. Prose. (From 4/ZYT' come also (vy-dv, (vy-fvat, ob-dug: in Skt., Lat,, etc., the equiv. of Cis y (or), ¥.Z¢.11.3; cf. Skt. yug, yunag-mi (jungo), yuk (conjunctus), yug-am (par), yug-yam (jumentum) 5 Lat. jung-o, jug-um, con-jux, jug-erum, ju-mentum; Goth: juk, ga-juk (Cedyos), jukusi ((uyés) ;:O.H. G. jock (yoke). To yoke, put to, tmmous, hyd- vous, Bas Hom.; sometimes with the addition bp’ appara, ip’ dppacw, in’ byeoquy, bm’ dudgnow Tl. 23. 130., 24.14, 782, etc. ; Kagevga mpOros év (vyoict kvwdada Aesch. Pr. 462 ;—so also the Med. is used by Hom. (esp. in Od.), irmous (ev-yvuc0ar to put to one’s horses, put them to for oneself, Od. 3. 492, etc., Il. 24. 281; Cevgouar Gppare mwdous Eur. Hec. 469; so of camels, Hdt. 3. 102:—and of riding horses, to harness, saddle and bridle, (eifa Tlayacoy Pind. O.,.13. 91, cf. Ar. Pax 128, 135 :—of chariots, to put to, get ready, ¢. Gppa, Oxous Pind, P. 10. 102, Eur. Andr. org; and in Med., ré@pimma Id. Alc. 428. 2. to bind, bind fast, doxods Secpois Xen. An. 3. 5, 10:—Pass., apy .. eCevypévar mépracow having them fastened .. , Eur. El. 317. 8. metaph., rérpm Cuyels in the yoke of fate, Pind. N. 7.9; vyels év Gpyact mnudrav Aesch. Cho. 7943 dvayen uyels Soph. Ph. 1025 ; (evx@n was tamed, Id. Ant. 955; Oeoparos .. Cvyets Eur, Supp. 220; Vs oerpacpdpos :—Med., rév8 év Sprois fevgouat Ib. 12293; Pass., dpeious Cvyets Id. Med. 735. II. to join together, cavides .. paxpat, eiferra, eCevypevat well-joined, Il. 18. 276 (elsewhere in Hom. only in signf.1); Cedar dddvras, in setting a fractured jaw, Hipp. Art. 799; Tw 1d5e ¢., of the ancient sculptors who made their statues with joined feet, Heliod. 3. 13. 2. to join in wedlock, éwedav edppdvn (even pia yoked her in wedlock, Soph. Fr. 517- 11;-of the parents or authors of the marriage, ris radrny &Cevge; Eur. I. A. 698; ¢. riv Ovyarépa rivt App. Civ. 2. 14, cf. Ath. 554 D :—but in Med., of the husband, Zo wed, deorw (evgaca Eur. Ale. 9943 map- Aévetov eCevgw A€xos Id. Tro. 671; (so in Act., yapous ECeug” “Adpdarov naida I married his daughter, Id. Phoen. 1365; 6 Seuédny Cevgas yapors Id, Bacch. 468) :—Pass. to be married, e{evypévn, opp. to xdpy, Soph. Tr. 536; yapos CevxOjvac or (vyqvat Id. O. T. 826, Eur. I. A. 907, ete. 5 ey yapots Id. El. 99; els ebvfy Tivos Id. Supp. 823 :—metaph., ¢. wéAos épyzact Pind. N, 71. 10, cf. I. 1. 6 (like Milton’s ‘ married to immortal verse’), ( to join opposite banks by bridges, worapov (edgae Hat. 1,206; Tov "EMAjorovror Id.'7.33,al.; anxavais eCevger “EAAns mopOudv Aesch. Pers. 7£2, cf. Lys, 193. 233 also in Med., Cevyruoda Toy Béa- mopov Hat. 4/83 :—Pass., Id. 7. 6, 34; S@put eevypévn mroiors Xen. An, I. 2, “b. yepupay Cedfar Hat. 1. 205., 4. 118, 4. to furnish ships with cross-benches Pass., 4. 85. 634 ((vyév mm), Hes, Fr. 37:—but, (evgavres rds wadaids [vais], wore mAoipous eva having undergirded them with ropes, Thuc. 1. 29, ubi v. Schol., and cf. imé(wpa. 5. to pair or match gladiators, Arr. Epict. I. 29, 37. fevyo-morla, 7), the making of a pair, esp. the making of a double flute, Theophr. H, P. 4. 11, 6. fedyos, cos, 76, (Cevyvupr) a yoke of beasts, a pair or team of mules, oxen or horses, Il. 18.543; ¢. trmwv Andoc. 32. 27; Boendy Thuc. 4. 128. 2. the carriage drawn by a yoke of beasts, a chariot, Cev-yet xoulCecOar Hat. 1. 31; emt Cedyeos édatvew Ib. 199; emt Cev-yous dyew Andoc. 7.13, Hyperid. Lyc. 5: a racing-car,=ré@pimmov, Thuc. 5. 50; ¢. réOpimmov Aesch. Fr. 368; opp. to ouvwpis, Plat. Apol. 36 D, but v. Plut. 2.146D; ¢. pioOov a hired chariot, Id. Anton.6; Aevxdv ¢. with white Aorses, Dem. 565. 27 :—in Plat. Apol. 36 D, # fuvmptt 4 Ceb-yer veviennev, Gedyos must be =TéOpummoy ; v. infr. IIL. II. a pair or couple of any things, ipjxav Hat. 3.76; medéwv Ib. 130; of the Atridae, Aesch, Ag. 44; €uBddow Ar, Eq. 872; rady Antiph. Spar. 3: absol. a married couple, like Lat. conjugium from jugum, cf. Valck. Phoen. 331; 70 ¢., 6 waretrar OpAv Kat appev Xen. Occ. 7, 18; rd épwrixdy ¢. Luc. Amor. 11:—xard (edyos or xara Cevyn in pairs, Plut. 2.93 D; és Gedyea Luc. Syr. D. 12 :—pl. Gedy was used for the double flute, Lat. . tibiae pares, Theophr. H. P. 4. 11, 4 and 6. III. incorrectly also of more than two things or persons joined together, Cet-yos Tpimdp- Oevoy three maiden sisters, of the Graces, Eur. Fr. 3593 cf. tpi¢ug ;—so, ¢. rpiSovdoy Ar. Fr. 484; ¢. vexp@v, where parents and children are spoken of, Eur. H. F. 454. IV.=Lat. jugerum, Basilic. Levyotpopéw, to keep a yoke of beasts, Poll. 8, 132. fevyo-rpddos, ov, keeping a yoke of beasts, Plut. Pericl. 12. Sevyodopéopar, Pass. to be drawn by a yoke of oxen, Eus. P. E. 35 D. Levxrerpa, %, fem. from sq., of Aphrodité, Orph. H. 54. 3. feuxrip, pos, 6, one who yokes: the strap of the yoke, Hesych. feuxriptos, a, ov, jit for joining or yoking, yépupa yatv Svoty ¢. Aesch. Pers. 736; mdrep..Mawadav Cevernpee Id. Fr. 350. 2 eT Subst., Cevernpiov, 7é,=Cuydv, a yoke, Id. Ag. 529; (evernpia, 7), = GevyAn Il, v. sub mdddcov. feuxrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of Cevyvuju, yoked, harnessed, Plut. 2. 278 B, etc.: joined in pairs, kaAapo Plat. Epigr.21.4Bgk.; oréxos hpgiw ¢. modi, of the pentameter, Anth. P. 7. 9. 2. joined, yepipa Ceverds Strab. 452. II. Ceverdv, 76, a body of soldiers, two in line, Anon. ap, Ducang. evk{-hews, w, 6, subjugator of men, of a king, Soph. Fr. 136. beds, ews, 7), (Cevyvupe) a yoking or manner of yoking oxen, Cevfc ToavTy xpewpeve Hdt. 3. 104. II. a joining, as by a bridge, Td. 4. 88., 7. 35. Zevs, 6, voc. Zev: the obl. cases formed from Afs, Hdn. Epimer. 6. 4 gen. Avs; dat. Aud, also At [i], Pind. O.13. 149, N. 10. 104, C. I. 16; acc. Ala:—in Poets also (though not in Comedy, except in Trag. phrases) Zqv (a form traced in Aesch. Supp. 162), Znvds, Znvi, Zijva, in later Dor. Zdy, Zavds, etc., Philox. in Meineke Com. Fr. 3. 636, Theocr.:—a nom, Zs or Zas Pherecyd. ap, Hdn. |. c., Clem. Al. 741, acc. Ziv (restored by Herm. for Ziv’) at the end of the verse in Il, 8. 206., 14. 265; Dor. vocat. Zdév Ar. Av. 570; and on Cretan coins TAN, i.¢. Zdy, v. Eckhel D. N. 2. 301; written Z@y in Pyth. ap. Porph. V. P.17:—Boeot. Aets, Ar. Ach. 911; also Ajy, Hdn. |. c.:—the obl. cases Zeds, Zet, Zéa, cited by Sext. Emp. M. 1.177,195, E.M.: Zedy f.1. for Ziv’ Aeschr. ap. Ath. 335, Anth. P. 7. 345, 5, ¥. Jac. p. 500:—the pl. Ales, Zives, Plut.2.425E, ap. Eust. 1384.27. (Z is represented by dy orj in kindred dialects, cf. Skt. dydus, Lat. Fu-piter, Fov-is, also Zds or Zav, Zavés with Lat. Ya-nus: v. Z ¢. W.°1, and cf. dios.) Zeus, king and father of gods and men, son of Kronos and Rhea, hence often called Kpoviéns, Kpoviwy, husband of Hera:—Hom. makes him rule in the lower air (4qp): hence rain and storms come from him, Zeds Het, etc., v. sub tw, vigw, cvvvépw, Bpovraw, duBpéw, Vdap, Aavan :— freq. in exclam., Zed dAAot Te Geol Il. 6. 476; & Zed wat maytes Geol, & Zeb nat Ocol, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 10, Ar. Pl. 1, etc.; Zed Zed Aesch. Cho. 246, Ar. Vesp. 3233 & Led rhs Aewréryros Tav ppeviiy Id. Nub. 153 :— the oath od ua Ziva in Hom. only Il. ae 43, Od. 20. 3393 but very _ freq. in Att. Comedy and Prose, ob pd Ala, pad Aia, vi) Ata, also with the Art., ob pad rdv Ala; the form vi Ala, being much used in common life, was apocop. into y7at, as in Ar. Eq. 319 («ape v7dt rob7’ édpace), and elsewhere, v. Dind. ad 1.: proverb. of enormous wealth, 7@ Ad mrovrov mépe épivew Hat. 5. 49.—Cf. awrhp, dudyvios, “EXAjMOs, etc. ; for the attributes of Zeus, v. Miiller Archiiol. d. Kunst § 349 sq.; and for the various names under which he was worshipped, v. Indice. C, I. p. 23. II. Zeds xaraxOdnos, Virgil's Jupiter Stygius, Pluto, Il. 9. 457- III. by the flattery of courtiers, Zevs became a name - of the Maced. kings of Syria, SeAedxou Atds Nuxéeropos C.1. 4458; and of the Roman emperors, Dion. P. 210, Opp. C. 1. 3, Christod. Ecphr. 96, and often in Inscrr.; cf. Suet. Domit. 13, Martial. 5. 8, etc. ;_ whereas Gorgias was ridiculed for bose the ~_ ane i ne Tlepadv, Longin. 3. 2. ‘edupiios, 7, ov, =Cepupios, Nonn. D. 48. 517. ete ‘bos, pecul. fem. of (epvptos, Posidipp. ap. Ath. 318 D. 2; of the god Zephyros, yevé0An Nonn. D. 37- 335, Cf 47+ 341- ZLehipty (sc. tv07), }, nas the west wind, Od.7.119. [Zep- long in arsi, as in deus, oxdqpos. ‘ Lehiipids, natn Arist. Meteor. 2. 6, 13, Theophr. H.P.8. 7, 7. ‘Ledvpros [i], ov, sometimes also a, ov (cf. Zepupin) :—of the West or west wind, westerly, Theophr. C. P. 2. 3, 15 Tots ¢. (se. dvépors) at the period of west winds, Arist. H. A. 9. 28, 2. II. ddr ¢. a wind- &, also évepiatov, imnvésuov, Ib. 6. 2,13, G. A. 3.1, 5. 7 , , =foreg., Call, Ep. 5, Opp. H. 80. 1. Cevyorraiia — Cyd. Zéhipos, 6, Zephyrus, the west wind, Lat. Favonius, but in Hom. any westerly wind, Bopéns kat Z., THTe OpHendev ayrov Il. 9. 5; also joined with Néros, 21. 334; also opp. to E¥pos, Od. 5. 332., 19. 206:— often represented as stormy and rainy, 5. 295., 14. 458; but also as clearing, émére vépea Z. oTupedtéy Il. 11. 305; as soft and gentle, Od. 4. 567 (so mostly in later Poets) : ZLépupos was the swiftest of all winds, Il. 19. 415; and so, as a person, was married to the charpy Podargé (swift-foot), 16. 150: y. Nitzsch Od. 2. 420:—in Arist., Zépupos is the due West Wind, opp. to dmnduvrns, Meteor. 2. 6, 6; but in Mund. 4, 12 it is also the N. West, cf. Pol. 4.3, 73 and this range will account for the diff. descriptions of it in Hom., as also in Arist. Probl, 26. 31 (eddtervos kat Hdi0T0s), and 26. 52 (yvxpds). (From (dos, as Etpos from éws, cf, Arist. de Vent. 8.) féw, contr. 3 sing. (ef even in Hom.; late Ep. Lefw (q.v.); in late Prose févvups (q. v.): impf. eCee Il., Hes., {ee Soph. : fut. (éom (éfava—-) Aesch. Pr. 370 :—aor. é(eoa Hat. 7. 188, of. ém(éw; Ep. (éooa Hom, :— Pass., aor. €(é00nv (dm-) Diosc. 1. 3, (év-) Aretae. Cur. M, Diut. 1, 2: —pf. eCeopas (e¢—-) Geop. 10. 54. (From 4/ZE come also (éc-ya, (eo-rés; cf. Skt. yas, yas-yami, yas-ami (annitor), pra-yas-tas (bmepCéwy) ; O.H.G. jes-an :—hence prob. also (4An, (7jAos, and (ium, (080s.) To boil, seethe, of water, éwerd) Céocev tdwp Evi ivom xadk@ Il. 18. 349; Od, 10. 360; ws 5¢ A€Bns Cet Evdov when the kettle boils, Il. 21. 362, cf, Eur. Cycl. 343; rarely of solids, to be fiery hot, xOdv e{ee Hes. Th. 695, 8473 xaAxés Call. Dian. 60. 2. metaph. ¢o boil or bubble up, THs Oaddacons fecdons Hat. 7.188; aia eCece did xpwrds Anth, P. 7. 208; (ef 6 olvos Plat. Legg. 773 D. b. of passion, like Lat. fervere, dépyis Ceovons eiaty iarpot Adyo: Aesch. Pr. 378; qvix’ Cee updos Soph, O. C. 343, cf. Interpp. Ar. Ach. 321, Plat. Rep. 440 C, al. 3. c. gen. to boil up or over with a thing, Atyyyn (€ovea HSaTos nat mydod Id. Phaedo 113 A; miOos ¢. [oivov] Theophr. H. P. 9.17, 3; media (etovr’ *Ayapnvav boiling, teeming with.., Anth. Plan, 4. 39; but also of persons, ¢. cxwAnnov (cf. dvatéw, Ex{éw, pOepidw), Luc, Alex. 59; and c. dat., ¢. pOepoi Luc, Saturn. 26; aiwar: Aristid. 1.142, Lyc. 690. II. Causal, fo make to boil, to boil, roy 5 Aoerpa mupt (éov Ap. Rh. 3. 273 3 Oupov én Tpoin mécov éeoas; Anth. P. 7. 385: cf. éxCéw. 2. to exhale, dirrunv (v.1.-p) Ap. Rh. 1. 734. £4, £40, imperat. of (aw. {nAatos, a, ov, ((HAos) jealous, Anth. P. 9. 524, 7. fnAeuris, od, 6,=(yXwrqs in vulgar language, Eust. 1527. 29. fnAevw, = (nAdw, Democr. ap. Stob. App. t. 3. 34. {nAéw, = (nAroruTéw, in Gramm. as Root of (yAnpor. fHdn, 4, a female rival, Xen. Eph. 2, 11, Aristaen, 1. 25. EqAnpootvn, 7, poet. for (pros, Q. Sm. 13. 388, in pl. SHApov, ov, gen. ovos, ((nAéw) jealous, cxéTAL0l eae, eo, (HAnpoves é€oxov dd\Aowy Od. 5.118; and late Ep., as Call. Dian. 30, Opp. C. 3. 191, Musae. 36, 37, Anth. P. 3. 7: cf. Sva¢naAos. Sndo-Sornp, jpos, 6, giver of bliss, Anth. P. 9. 524, 7- fnAo-paivns, és, mad with jealousy, Auth. P, 5. 218, Nonn. D, 41. 211. fijAos, ov, 6, later cos, 75, Ep. Phil. 3. 9 (in best Mss.), etc.: (prob. from (éa), Eager rivalry, zealous imitation, emulation, a noble passion, opp. to pOdvos (envy), Plat. Menex. 242 A, Arist. Rhet. 2. 11,1; but in Hes. Op. 193, =0évos, jealousy; they are coupled by Lys. 195. 13, Plat. Phileb. 47 E, 50 B, and (in pl.) Legg. 679 C; eis ¢mAov iévac Rep. 550E. 2. c. gen, pers. zeal for one, Soph. O. C. 943; KaTd (RAov “Hpaxdéous in emulation of him, Plut. Thes. 25; ¢. mpés twa Luc. Demon. 57. 8. c. gen. rei, (Aor .. yauwv exovoa causing rivalry for my hand, Eur. Hec. 352; ¢. r@v dptorwy emulous desire for .., opp. to guy?) Tav xetpdver, Luc. Indoct. 17; dvdparyabias, evegias, rAovTov, etc., Plut. Cor, 4, etc.; so, ¢, mpdés ru Id. Pericl. 2. 4. personified as son of Styx, brother of Bia, Kparos, Nixn, Hes. Th. 384. II. pass. the object of emulation or desire, happiness, bliss, h , glory, Soph. Aj. 503; (jAos xal xapd Dem. 300. 23; Tov avrov exer (HAov 6 orépavos Id. 267.14; (prov xal ryphy TH wddAE Péper Id. 641. 8, cf. 317-9. 1399. 21. ITT. of the style of Asiatic Orators, extravagance, Strab. 648, Plut. Anton. 2 :—also, fierceness, ¢. tupés Ep. Hebr. 10. 27. {nAoown, %, post, for CjAos, h. Hom. Ap. 100. EnAoriréw, to be jealous of, to emulate, rival, c. acc., (ndorumay pe kal pOovady Plat. Symp. 213. D; rv atrod yuvaika Ath, 532A; ¢. dod- Aqv ént 7@ dvopi in regard to her husband, Plut. 2. 267D; c. dat., (ndor. Tit érawvovpévy Dem. Phal. 292. 2. to envy, Cic, Att. 13. 13, in Pass, . II. c. acc. rei, to regard with jealous anger, Aeschin. 9. 4: 2. to pretend to, affect, ea@appa (ndotumovy aperhy Aeschin. 84. 15 :—Pass., 4) (pAorumoupévn rupavvis Plut, Arat. 25. 3. to be zealous for, Thy ddjnbeay Eccl. fndorimia, %, jealousy, rivalry, envy, Aeschin.65.16; ¢. cat p0dvos Plut. Pericl. 10; xara rhv réxvny ¢. Luc. Calumn. 2; ¢. mpés rive. Plut. 2.276B. fné-rimos, ov, (rir) jealous, Ar. Pl, 1016; ddvvar Anth. P. 5. 152; ¢. €xev mpés twa Diog. L. 2.57. Adv. —1ws, Strabo 640. EnAsw, ((7Aos), I. c, acc pers. to rival, vie with, emulate, Lat. aemulari, twa Thuc. 2. 37, 64, Plat., etc.; so (if dy tls be read) Soph, O. T.1526; in bad sense, to be jealous of, envy (cf. (jAos I. 5), Hes. Op. 23, h. Hom. Cer. 168, 223, Theocr. 6. 27; tiv avrod -yuvaixa Lxx (Sirac. 9. 1) ;—absol. to be jealous, 1 Ep. Cor. 13.43 (ndwoavres through Jealousy, Act, Ap. 7. 9. 2. to esteem or pronounce happy, admire, praise, Twa Twos one for a thing, Soph. El. 1027, cf. Isocr. §9 B; (nA@ ge THs ebBovdias At, Av, 1010; THs ebyAwrrias Id. Eq. 8373 THs SOTEXEDE TOM, rpéaBuv Id. Vesp. 1450: more rarely, ¢. revé. 7¢ Soph. Aj. 552; ¢. ge dBotvena ++, Aesch. Pr. 330; O7.., Xen. Hell. 6. 5, 453 TOANG Ge (AG Blov, padvora 8’ el .., Soph. Fr. 516; c. part., ¢. ce ¢ Savévra mplv KaKk@v iBety Baos Aesch. Pers, 712, cf, Eur, Or, 52 :— Cioma — GyyiBeprs. ironical, (7A@ ge happy in your ignorance! Eur. Med. 60, cf. Valck. Phoén. 405, Thuc. 5. 105. TI. c. ace. rei, to desire emulously, strive after, 6 pev ddgns embvpe? wal rodro éChAwxe Dem. 22. 18, cf. 500. 2:—Pass., Plat. Phaedr. 232 A, etc.; 7 dper?) (ndovrar Lys. 193. 12; 7d (yAovpeva Arist. Rhet, 1. 5, 5. 2. Pass. also of persons, to be impelled by zeal, Ep. Gal. 4. 18. fyAwpa, 76, that which is emulated: in pl. high fortunes, Eur. 1. T. 379, ef. Dion. H. 7. 55. II. in pl. also emulous efforts, rivalries, Lat. contentio, ra trav véow ¢. Aeschin. 27. 13, cf. Dem. 424.17, Anth. P. 7. 219. 2. emulation, (yAwpa Tis Tv “Pwyaiwy dperjs App. Civ. 5.113; in pl., Lyc. 355. , fhAwors, ews, 7, emulation, imitation, Trav BapBdpoy Thue, 1. 132; Heyday avyypapéwy Longin. 13. 2. IL. zealous pursuit, ai moAruTporo: Tod Biov ¢. Philo 1. 362: a custom, fashion, Ib. 353, al. III. jealousy, LXx (Num. 5.14). {ndwréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be emulated, Diog. L. 5. 74. II. (nrwréov one must emulate, Polyb. 4. 27,8; veo ¢. Tods yépovras Plut. ap. Stob. 586. 1. EnAwrhs, od, 6, ax emulator, zealous admirer or follower, pipnris Kat ¢. rijs dperijs Isocr. 4B; ¢. xa épacrat ris Aaxedaipovioy maideias Piat. Prot. 343 A; THs HAuctas rod petpaxiov Aeschin. 50. 26; Tav Kadav Bovevparwy Id, 51.8; trav dya@v Ta eis THY TOAW papTU- poupévew C.1. 2448. 80; Oouxvdi5ov, “AvtiaGévous Luc, Hist. Conscr. 15, Hermot.14. 2. jealous, Oeds ¢. LXX(Ex. 20.5). II. a zealot, used to translate Kavavirns or Kavavaios (from the Hebr. gana, to glow, be zealous), Ev. Matth. 10. 4, Marc. 3. 18, Luc. 6. 15, Act. Ap. I. 13. EnAdwrikds, 4, dv, emulous, Arist. Rhet. 2. 11, 1; mepi te Ib. 3. tnAwrés, 7, dv, also os, ov Eur. Andr. 5, Med. 1037: Dor. £4A— Pind. : ((nAdw) :—to be emulated, worthy of imitation, Plat. Hipp. Mi. 368 B; Kaad Kai ¢. énvypdppara Dem. 615. 28; Comp., Isocr. 135 C. 2. to be deemed happy, to be envied, of persons, Theogn. 455, Soph. Ant. 1161; Tit by one, Aesch. Pers. 710, Plat. Symp. 197 D, etc.; ind Tivos Isocr. 96 A: c. gen. tei, O7Ké pv (adwrov dudppovos edvas Pind, O. 7. 10; ¢. rs edvoias Plat. Pomp. 61; c. dat., Id. Lucull. 38. 3. of conditions, enviable, blessed, aiwy Simon. 71, Eur. Med. 243; (ydrwrd- tatos Bios Ar, Nub. 462; ydapos Plut. 2. 289 B. Enpta, Dor. fapta, 4, loss, damage, Lat. damnum, Epich. 150 Ahr. ; opp. to «épSos, Lys. 109. 23, Plat. Legg. 835 B, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 4, 5 sq.3 (nplay AaBetv to sustain loss, Soph. Fr. 884, Dem. 155.12; ¢. qoveiv Tut to cause one Joss, Ar. Pl. 1124; ¢. épydCec@at Isae. 58.19; ¢. pepew TH wore Plat. Legg. l.c.; ¢. voptCecv, pyeioOar to consider as Joss, Isocr. 37 B, Isae. 65. 39. II. a penalty in money, a fine, mulct, Cnutny amorivew Hdt. 2. 65; éxrioa: Plat. Legg. 774E; dpetdew Hat. 3. 52; xaraBddAev Dem, 727.4; meTa.. xpnyataw (nplas a fine in money, Plat. Legg. 862 D; but also, (yula érinecrar orarnp a fine of a stater .., Thuc. 3. 70; ¢nulav dpeidev radavrov Plut. Lysand. 27; THs Cnpulas apedjvat Id. Aristid. 4: cf. dmoxphyaros. 2. generally a penalty, ¢. émerévae ri Hdt. 1.144; Cnulay moely to cause punishment to be inflicted, Ar. Pl. 1124; ¢. éreort rit Hat, 2.136; mpdowecrat rx Xen. Vect. 4, 21; cf. Aesch. Pr. 329, 382; with the penalty added, Oavaroy (npiav émcribecOat, rporiWévat, rarrev to make death the penalty, Thuc. 2. 24., 3.44, Dem. 498. 7; Odvaros % ¢. éméeras Hat, 2, 38, cf. 65; but, ep’ ofs .. Odvaros # ¢. Plat. Prot. 325 D; @avarov ¢. mpooxetrar Thuc. 3- 45 :—also c. gen. criminis, ¢. ddiuias penalty for.., Plat. Theaet. 176 D, cf. Legg. 860 E. IIL. a word of reproach, but always with Adj., as, pavepd (aula a mere good-for-nothing, a dead Joss, Ar. Ach. 737; xaBapa ¢., Aapmpad ¢. Alciphro 3. 21, 38, cf. Alex. Aopx. 1. 6. (It seems to be connected with dapdw—=Skt. yam (coercere), v. Z¢. II. 3; perh, also with Lat. dam-num, cf. Z¢. 11. 2.) Enyiio-mpaktéw, to exact punishment from, Twa Peyron Pap. Gr. 2. p. 35- typrde, fut. dow Eur.: aor. é(nuiwoa Eur., Thuc., etc.: pf. é(nuloxa Dem. 530. 12:—Pass., fut. (npuwOyoopar Lys. 181. 37, Isae. 81. 24, Xen. Mem. 3. 9,12; but more often med. (ynyrwoopar in pass. sense, Hdt. 7. 39, Andoc. to, 11, Thuc. 3. 40, Isocr. 378 C, Dem. 17. 3, Arist. Pol. 6.5, 3: aor. €¢numOny Plat. Legg. 855 B, Isocr. Antid. § 171 (160): pf. é(npiwpar Dinarch. 110. 19, Arist: To cause loss or do damage to any one, Tiva Plat, Legg. 846A; méduw Lys. 185. 37; c. Adj. neutr., obey ¢. ra Isocr. 117 B; mAciw ¢. twa Xen. Cyr. 3. 1, 30; so in Pass., peydra Cnudmoerat will suffer great losses, Thuc. 3. 40; TOAAG Plat. Legg. 916 E; absol., opp. to xepdaivew, Id. Gorg. 490 C, etc. -—also, Tocauras jpepas Cnusody tiva to cause one the loss of -., Ael. V. H. 3. 23. IL. to fine>amerce, mulct in a sum of money, c. dat rei, ¢. Tia xiAlnor Spaxpfor Hdt. 6. 21, cf. 6.136; xpnedow Thue, 2. 65; pvais tpioi Plat. Legg. 936 A; also, ¢. Twa tws Tpidxovra pvds Lycurg. Fr.; els xphuara Plat. Legg. 774 B:—Pass. to be fined or amerced in a thing, c. dat. rei, xphyace Antipho 120. 2; Spaxun THs hpépas Plat. Lege. 766 C; péxpe Tocotrou Ib. 855 B :—also, c. acc. rei, ¢. wevrioyra Rirous Arist. Fr, 436; metaph., Tod évds rod meptéxeat Badora Thy poxiv Cyusdoec wilt lose, Hdt. 7. 39; THY PuxIy abrod Ev. Matth. 16. 26; éavrdv Ev. Luc. 9. 25; Ta wepara Ael. N. A, Io. I. 2. generally to punish, Hat. 7. 35., 9. 773.74 Oavdrw Id. 3.275 Twa gvyp, wAnyais Thuc. 4. 65., 8. 74 :—Pass., Cnprotiobae apis écxdras Lys. 189.16; Oavdrw Antipho 123.24; @avar@ Kai maar Tots écxaros Plat. Polit. 297 E; xphpact xat dripia Id. Legg. 721 B. EyurmSys, es, (ef50s) causing loss, ruinous, Plat. Crat. 417 D, Legg. 650 A, Xen. Mem. 3. 4,11. Adv. -d0s, censured by Poll. 8. 147. ptopa, 745, (Cyd) that which is lost, a penalty, fine, Luc. Prom. 13, etc.; ths dratias for their disorder, Xen. Hell. 3. 1, 9. 2. ¢: €or dorvvdpos let them have the right of imposing penalties, Plat. Legg. 764 C. : 635. Enulwors, ews, %, infliction of penalties, Arist. Pol. 4. 16, 2. Enprwrns, o9, 6, one who punishes, Schol. Aesch. Pr. '77:—an execu~ tioner, Eust, 1833. 53. Ziv, 6, gen. Zvos, post. for Zevs, q. v. mvo-mroaedav, 6, Zeus-Poseidon, a joint divinity worshipped in Caria, Macho ap. Ath. 337 C, cf. 42 A, C. I. 2700 (add.). Znvb-ppwv, ov, gen. ovos, (Zqv, pphv) knowing the mind of Zeus, epith. of Apollo as revealing Zeus’ will in oracles, Anth. P. 9, 525, 73 so also Znvo-Sornp, fpos, Ibid. {nt-Gpernorddns, ov, 6, Comic word in Anth. P. app. 288 (Ath. 162 B), @ virtue-seeker (virtut-aucupida, as Scaliger renders it). Syrevw, post. for sq., Hes. Op. 398, h. Hom. Ap. 215, Merc. 392: Dor. farevw, Aleman 17, Theocr. 1. 85. {nréw, Dor. part. farefoa Theocr. 1.85: impf. é¢jrouv, Ep. 3 sing. (nree Il, 14. 258 (nowhere else in Hom.), h. Merc. 22: aor. (4704 Isocr. 349 D: pf. €¢qrnxa Dinarch. 107. 26:—Med., aor. é(yrnodpny (dv-) Longus prooem. 2 :—Pass., fut. (yrn6jcopat Sext. Emp. P. 1. 60, M. 8. 16; but (yrfoopa: in pass. sense, Id. M. 1. 28. To seek, seek for, euet 8 eoxa mavtov Chret Il. l.c.3 ¢. mnudrav draddayhy Aesch. Pr. 316, cf. 262; ebphoes (ray Ar. Pl. 104; pa) (nra@v without seeking, Xen. Ages. 8,1; 76 (nrovpevoy Gdwrdy what is sought for may be found, Soph. O. T. 110. 2. to enquire for, rods dpxovras Xen. An, 2. 3, 2: to ask about a thing, Id. Cyr. 8. 5, 13. 3. to search after, search out, Tov abréxepa Soph. O. T. 266; peyddras pyvitpos tov Spdoavra Thue. 6.27; of huntsmen, ¢. tov Aayw Xen.Cyn.6,25. 4. to search or inquire into, investigate, examine, of philosophical investiga- tion, oft. in Plat., etc.; ¢. 7a Oeta Xen. Mem. I. 1,15; Tadr’ ody ¢. «at épeur® xara Tov Oedy Plat. Apol. 23 B; (yroupevns dperfs 6 m early Id. Meno 79D; 70 (nrovpevov the matter of inquiry, the question, Id. Theaet. 201 A, etc.: cf. (yrqrucds:—also of judicial inquiry, ¢. mept Gdvenpdrwv Dinarch. gi. 20; évoxos elvar Tots (yroupévois Id. 97. 15 :— generally, ¢. wérepoy .., Plat. Phileb. 27 C; ¢. mpds éavrdy Luc. Lexiph. 17. 5. to require, demand, trav mpageov mapd Tot orparnyou Adyov Cnrodvres Dem. 49. 18. II. to seek after, desire, duhxava Eur. Alc. 203; éuot (nrav ddeOpov Soph. O. T. 658 :—of natural ten- dencies, 6 Oeppds tpappov (nret xwpav Theophr. H. P. 8, 11, 8. 2. c. inf. 2o seek to do, éxpabeiv rm ¢. Hdt. 3.137, Aesch. Pr. 776; pera- AaBeiv Ar. Pl. 370: cf. Cprnors 3: also c. inf. fut., (yrets dvameioey Ib. 5733 c. acc. et inf. to seek or desire that, Plat. Rep. 443 B. IIT. to have to seek, feel the want of, Lat. desidero, iva pa) bbs ovria Hat. I. 943; Népwva Plut. Galb. 8. firnpa, 76, that which is sought, Hipp, Vet. Med. g; od fdbiov ¢. a thing not easy to find, of Pentheus’ mutilated limbs, Eur. Bacch. 1139. II. an inguiry, question, Soph. O. T. 278; esp. of a philo- sophical nature, 7d wept vdpous ¢. Plat. Legg. 630 E; 7a rept ses fe Ib. 891 C; also, todr’ .. ob rvyxdver ¢. Id. Crat. 421 A; éxeivd y' hy 7d ¢. ap@rov, mérepov ..Id. Soph. 221 C: a search, puplos (yrhpaow eipwy Eur. Bacch. 1218; pnrpdés after her, Id. Ion 1352. Eqrnpdrvov, 74, Dim. of foreg., Arr. Epict. 2. 16, 20, Liban. 4. 639. fnrHowpos, ov, to be searched, ra ¢. places to be beaten for game, Xen. Cyn. 6, 6. Recess, ews, }, a seeking, seeking for, search for, kat’ Evpamns (n- thow éxmr@oa Hdt. 2. 44; a7d Blov re al vis ¢. Id. 1. 94, cf. 2. 543 dvdpds nara (nrnow in quest of him, Soph. Tr. 55; rh ¢. rev dpacdvtav Thuc. 8. 66; ¢. émarnuns Plat. Theaet. 196 D, etc.; ris tpophs Thuc. 8. 573; THs dAndeias Id, 1. 20. 2. a searching, search, roeioOa Chrnow tev veav to search the ships, Hat, 6. 118, cf, Lys. 122. fin., Aeschin. 6. 45. 8. inquiry, investigation, esp. of a philo- sophic nature, Plat. Crat. 406 A, Apol. 29 C, al.; mept ris Tod mavrds ptoews Id. Tim. 47 A; ) TeV euppdvew ¢. ToD pédAovTos the inquiry of rational beings into the future, Id. Phaedr. 244 C; in pl., Phaedo 66 D, al. 4. a judicial inquiry, Dinarch. gt. 20: v. ¢nréw I. 4. tnryréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be sought, Soph. Aj. 470, Ar. Thesm. 604, etc. IL. (yrnréov one must seek, Ar. Nub. 760; % rw” érépay [Stvapu] .. juiv ¢. Plat. Phileb. 58 E. fqryrhpiov, 76,=Bacaviorhpioy, Anon. ap. Suid. {qrqrhs, od, 5, a seeker, inquirer, Plat. Rep. 618 C; twos of or for a thing, Id. Charm. 175 E. II. at Athens, the (yryrat were commissioners to inquire into state-offences, such as cases of embezzle- ment, Lat. guaesitores, Andoc. 3. 6, etc., Lys. 163. 6, Dem. 696. 9., 703- II, Plat. Com. UpéoB. 5; cf. Herm. Pol. Ant, §§ 133, 151. fnrntiucés, 4, bv, disposed to search or inquire, searching, inquiring, Plat. Meno 81D; twos into a thing, Id. Ax. 366 B; mept re Id. Rep. 528 B. 2. oi ¢. didAoyor Plato’s dialogues of search or investigation, opp. to of dpyyntixol, Thrasyll. ap. Diog. L. 3. 49; 70 ¢. €xovan waves of Tod Swxpdrous Adyo are devoted to search or inquiry, Arist. Pol. 2. 6, 6, cf. Grote Plato 1. 169. 3. of (nrntixot, a name given to the sceptical philosophers, Diog. L. 9.69; % — neut, pl. #yicea, in later Att. ulon, v. Dind. Dem. praef. xi:—the Ion. fem. juicéa, gen. —éas, dat. —éa, etc., also occurs in old Att., C. I. 103. 13 sq., and as y. l. in Thue, 8. 8, Plat. Meno 83 C; whence Buttm. and others restored it in these passages ; if rightly, it should also be restored . in other places, as Thuc. 5. 20, 31., 8. 35, and in Plat.; prob, also jyuoéas should be restored for #uloeos (fem.) in Hipp. Acut. 16, Thuc. 4. 104. (For the Root, v. #p-.) Half, Lat. semis, used both as Adj. and Subst. : I. simply as Adj., jutoees Aaot half the people, Il. 2x. 73 Ru. 8 dpa Aaol épnrvovro .. , Hu. 8 dvaBavres éhavvopev Od. 3. 155 sq.; (elsewhere Hom. only uses neut. fou as Subst., v. infr. 1); Tods huiceas dmogréddew Hat. g. 51, cf. Thuc. 3. 20, Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 6, etc.; jmaus Adyos half the tale, Aesch. Eum, 428 ; 7d jysov tefxos Thuc. 2. 78; 6 Hy. dpOpyds Plat. Legg. 946 A;—c. gen., like a Comp., 70 Tetxos Hpov éredéa0n ob dievoeiro half of what he intended, Thuc. 1. 93 :— metaph., réAcov kal ob8 fusovy def Tov vopobérny elvac and not half and half (in his measures), Plat. Legg. 806 C, cf. 647 D. 2. in Prose also with the Subst. in gen. and giving its gender and number to Tyuous, TOY vow Tas hploeas Hdt. 2.10; trav avipanddov 7a. Hyicea Id, 6. 23; émt rH tyucéa ris ys Thuc. 5. 313; al huloea Tov vey half of the ships, Id. 8.8; of juices trav dprav Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 43 6 Husovs Tod apiOpod Plat. Phaedo 104A; Tod xpdévov Dem. 459. 14; the gen. omitted, of ju. half of them, Thuc. 3. 20. II. as Subst., 1. neut. Subst., fuicv, 7d fjyuov Tipfs, evdpwv, dperas Il. 9. 616., 17. 231, Od. 17. 322; 70 pev.., 70 8 fwuov Il. 13. 565; mA€éov fpiov mavrdés Hes, Op. 40, cf. Plat. Rep. 466 D; imtp fo mavrov Xen. Cyr. 3. 3,473 jyiov ov Sef Plat. Phaedo 77 C, etc.; but mostly with the Art., 70 #4. Tod orparod Thuc. 4. 83, so Plat., etc.; also, Odjpucv (i.e, Td Hyuov) Hes. Op. 557 ; Ofpuou Ar. Lys. 116 ;—in pl, Ta hpicea Tis xopeias Plat. Legg. 672 E; dprov jpyicea Xen. An. 1. 9, 26 :—used after Numerals, dexarerrdpwy xa Hyicous fourteen and a half, Strabo 134; pv@v .. dhdexa kal jyicous Dion, H. 4.17; and without xat, pupidday éxrd hyicous Plut. Mar. 34; also, rpav fyuov oradioy Strabo 379, cf. Plut. Cato Mi. 44:—also used absol. like an Adv., juou pev vipony .., hyov 8 abre dpw Hes. Th. 298, cf. Pind. N. 10. 163, 1655 and in pl., Ta pev Hylcea giddrovos, ra 5 Hyloea arovos Plat. Rep. 535 D:—with Preps., ovd’ eis jyucv not half, Ar. Thesm. 452; &p’ pyi- cews half-done, Plat. Rep. 601 C (vulg. hploews as Adv.). 2. as fem., 4 juiced (sc. poipa) TH Hytoelg THs ys Thuc. 5. 31; Hp. Tod Tiphparos Plat. Legg. 956 D; ép’ jyucelg up to one half, Dem. 430. 8; &€ jpucetas Luc., etc. : 4 Tprov-rptrov, 76, a third half, i.e. one and a half, Hesych. Hprov-xotvE, cxos, 7, =jytxoivg, Hdn. in Cramer. An. Ox, 2. 83. jprehayys, és, half-slain, Gloss. jprodatprov, 74, a hemisphere, Alex. Incert. 1. 7, Plat. Ax. 371 B, etc. jyptoxeros, ov, possessing half, Olymp. ad Plat. Phaedon. typloxowov, 76, halfa schoenus, A. B. 263, C.1. 5774. 29, 30, al. prraAavriatos, a, ov, in which the prize is half a talent, dyav C. I. 2810. 20, FperdAavrov, 76, a half-talent, as a weight, xpuood Il. 23. 751; tpla jurddavra three half-talents, Hdt. 1. 50; but with ordinal numerals, tplrov hyrddavrov two talents and a half, €Bbopov jp.=6}, évvarov jp. =84, (cf. Lat. sestertius, Germ. anderthalb, i. e. 14, drittehalb, i.e. 24, etc.), Hdt. 1.50, 51; v. Poll. 9.54, E. M. 744. 25 sq. purdptxos, ov, half-salt, Archestr. ap. Ath. 117 A, Ael, N.A.13.2. hyperé ia, 7), (TéAos) a remission of half the tribute, jp. Tov KaKkoy é5e5oro Luc. Necyom. 14. FyprréAeoros, ov, (reAéw) half-finished, Thuc. 3. 3, Dion. H. 1. 59, ete. : of a child, Nonn. D. 1. 5. HyprteAts, és, (réA0s) half-finished, épos Hy. a house but half complete, i.e. wanting its lord and master, of the house of Protesilaus, Il. 2. 701, cf. Strabo 296, Luc. D. Mort. 19. 1, Ruhnk. Tim. p. 225 ; #4. @4Aapos Anth. P. 7.627; Hy. vien Dion. H. 2. 42; of a child, Luc, Sacr. 5 ; #ueredés re karaadcirev Xen. Cyr. 8.1, 3, etc.; dprévar Dion, H. de Thuc. 9 :—Hpz. dyhp, opp. to TeAeiws dyabds, Xen. Cyr. 3.3, 38; Hu. wept Ad-yous Dion. H, de Dem. 23. Adv. —Ad@s, Longin. Fr. 6. 2. Fprrerpdyovos, Dor. Gpt-, ov, half a square, Tim. Locr. 98 A, B. Hyprrexmov, 76, a half (i.e. trivial) art, A. B. 651. fyperpné, fyos, or jpurpyhs, Fos, 6, 7, =%ulrouos, Manetho 4. 6, Paul. Sil. Descr, S. Soph. 243. Fpltpyros, ov, (réuvw) =rulropos, cited from Schol, Lyc. jyprroplas, ov, (6, Town) half an eunuch, Schol. Theocr. 3. 4. fiplropos, ov, (réuvw) half cut through, cut in two, Mosch, 2. 88. II. as Subst., jptropos, 6, a kind of ewp, Pamph. ap. Ath. 470 D. 2. Hplropov, 7d, a half, Hdt. 7. 39..9- 373 Merona way Alex. Incert. 1. 10 :—also fpurdpiov. b. a kind of bandage, also called #yippduBrov from its half-lozenge shape, Hipp. Offic. 742. T\ptroviatos, a, ov, isting’ of a semitone, Aristox. p. 51. jypiréviov, 76, a half-tone, Plut. 2: 1020 E sq. jypirpayos, 6, a half-goat, Planud. Tptpys, firos, 6, %, half-bored, Choerob. in A. B. 1379. , 8, (rpiBw) half worn out, Schol. Ar. Pl. 729. 652 prrplywvos, Dor. &pt-, ov, half a triangle, Tim. Locr. 98 B. jyperptraios, a, ov, half every three days, muperos tu. a semi-tertian fever, Hipp. Epid. 1. 930: —rptratkés, 9, dv, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 277. jpltptrov, 7d, the sixth part (of a mina), C. 1.8535. TyprTvBrov [0], 76, a stout linen cloth, towel, napkin, Sappho 116, Hipp. Art. 802, Ar. Pl. 729. (An Egypt. word, Poll. 7. 71:—in Mss. sometimes b , which is interpr. by Suid, a half (i. e. small) grave; but prob. this form is due to the copyists, who wished to find a meaning in the word.) jprrupmavcros, ov, half beaten to death, Poll. 6. 160. jptunvos, ov, half-asleep, Gloss. avros, ov, half-woven, Aen. Tact. 29. Tprdars, és, half-shining, =huparys, Anth. P. 7. 478. ageanag ov, half-bald, Anth. P, 11. 132. prpivas, és, (palvopat) half-visible, Strabo 807. Tprddprov, 746, (papos) a half-robe, Aristaen. 1. 4, Suid., Hesych.: written fprpdprov in Phot. iros, ov, half, formed like diparos, Hesych. davdos, ov, half-knavish, Luc. Bis Acc. 8. ipldavortos, ov, half-lighting, Poll. 6, 160. jploAccros, ov, half-burnt, App. Civ. 5. 88, Luc. D. Deor. 13. 2; by Theocr. 2. 133. jyptppaxtos, ov, half-fenced, Poll. 6. 160. Hprpuys, és, (put) halfgrown, Menand. Incert. 395. jytdovos, ov, half-pronounced, Aristaen. 1. 10 :—jplipavoy, 74, a semi- vowel, as p a, Arist. Poét. 20, 3; —pwvia An. Ox. 3.87: cf. pavijets. , TO, a kind of garment, Ar. Fr. 616; v. pacowv. jptxAwpos, ov, half-green, Gloss. Fyprxoatos, a, ov, holding a half-xéos, Theophr. H. P. 9. 6, 4. Typrxowilkvov, 7d, a half-xoimgé, Hipp. 572. 5., 580. 26, C. I. 123. 21. Tprxotvitos, ov, holding a half-xoing; To jyx. a half-xotvig, Theophr. H. P. 8. 4, 5, Poll. 6. 160. Hprxotvé, tos, 6, a half-xoivig, Hipp. 497. 12., 580. 27; cf. Lob. Paral. 286. Ayptyoov, 74, a half-xdos, Hipp. §55..15, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 55. Tprxdprov, 74, a half-chorus, semichorus, Poll. 4.107. The form #yl- xopos is not Greek, Seidl. Eur. Tro. 153. xXpynoros, ov, half-good, Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 34. 1 xpucots, 6, a half-stater, Anaxandr. Ayx. 2; Hpixpvaos in C. I. 2855. 31. : ea ov, (xavvupn) half in ruins, Gloss. ibuxros, ov, half-cooled, Strabo 692 :—i\pubiyys, és, Diosc. 3. 100. pLwBoAratos, a, ov, worth half an obol, Ar. Ran. 554: as large as a half-obol, Xen. Mem. 1. 3, 12. Avov or —wBéArov, 74, a half-obol, Eupol. Kod. 16, Xen. An. 1. 5, 6, Arist. Rhet. 1. 14,1; also pwmBodov, 74, Theophr. Lap. 46 (Cod. -dBoros), Hdn. Epim. 204: a Dor. form yprmSeAov Inscr. Delph. in C. I. 1690. 6, 26. ee (pa) a half-hour, Menand. Incert.400, Strabo1 33, Poll.1.71. poprant . v. sub Gro. popos, ov, =dasorpos, Hesych., Phot.: fem. %popis, é5os, Aesch. Fr. 162. Fpos, Dor. &pos, post. Adv. of Time, correl. to rijyos, as bre to Tére, via to Tnvixa, at which time, when, often in Hom., always in protasi with Tipos, THpos «+, Thpos 57 .., in apodosi, v. sub THOS; so, Gyos.., Tapos.. Theocr. 13. 25; muos.., 6) Tore Il. 1. 475, etc.; by ror énerra Od. 17.1; wat rére 5H Il. 8. 68; Kat rér’ Erera 1, 477; kat rote 54 pa 16.779; dpa or fa alone, Od. 2. 1., 19.428; ry xara Hat. 4. 28; tére Soph. Tr. 156; oe, without some particle in apodosi, as Od. 3. 491, Eur. Hec. 915 ;—#qHos Gre joined, Ap. Rh, 4. 267, 452, 1310, Orph., etc. :—rarel with Subj.,withoutdy, j0s8’ HéAL0s . . obpa- vov dudiBeBHen Od. 4.400; Hos 8 fjAcos burn Hipp. 599. 40. 2. with the pres., while, so long as, Soph. Tr. 531; or impf., Id. O.T.1134, Aj.935. 4, dv, v. sub dpds. octvy, %, (uo) skill in throwing or shooting, Hesych. ww: aor. #Huvoa: pf., v. brepvnpuxe:—cf. €x-, Kat-nutw :—Ep. Verb (orig. uncertain), to bow down, sink, drop, Hom.., only in Il.; érépwo’ Hjpvae eapn mhdnx Bapuvbév, of one mortally wounded, 8. 308; jyvce art bowed with his head, of a horse, 19. 405; so, of a corn-field, éni 8 jyver doraxtera: it bows or waves with its ears (v. émnutw), 2. 148: metaph. of cities, to nod to their fall, totter, TG Ke Tax’ jpioee wens Tpidpovo dvaxrbs 2. 373+, 4. 2903 rare in Att. Poets, xpiyp 3’. ijpve oréyos Soph. Fr. 742:—Iater, simply, to fall, perish, otvopa 8 ove Huvoe Acwvidov Anth. P. 7. 715. [In Hom. @ in pres., 0 in aor. 1; but in pres., Ap. Rh. 3. 1400, Opp. H. 1. 228, Nic. Al. 453; 0 in aor., Anth. P. 7. 715., 8. 96., 9. 262.] : pat Yon, for aip—; also Att. acc. to Moeris. pav, v. sub dude. , ovos, 5, (input) a thrower, darter, slinger, jpoves dvbpes Il. 23. 886: cf. fua, jpootvn. Vv, Rg dy and éd4v, Hom., Hdt., (who never use édv), and Att. his as Interject. see! see there! lo! Lat. en! iv, obx 950; Ar. Eq. 26; fy, peOlepev Id. Pl. 75; GX’ Hy xerdv cor Menand, ‘Eavr. 8; also, jv idod Eur. H. F. 867, Ar. Ran. 1390, Pax 327, Luc. D. Mort. Io. to, Anach, 1, Alciphro Fr. 6:—also 4vibe (i.e. iy Be) Plat. Epigr. 19 Bgk., Theocr. I. 149., 2. 38-5 3- 10, Call. Del. 132 :—‘vl seems to be merely afl. in Ar. Pl. Lc. : , rand 3 sing. impf. of elut (sum); 3/pl., Hes. Th. 321. , ¥. sub pre. eae , ace, sing. fem. of relat. Pron. ds, and of possess. Pron. ds, éds. , Adv. part. pf, pass., perforce, Dion. H. ad Pomp. 15. v. sub dvaivopat. PRE i eee iypaT plyeovos — jvloxos. fiveyxa, fveykoy, fveuca, v. sub pépo. qvera, y. sub aivéw. ‘ ; t j jvexns, és, bearing onwards, i.e. far-stretching, jvexeerat rpiBors Nic. Al. 605 :—Adv. -Kéws, like dinvends, (avevéws, continuously, without break, Ib. 517, Emped. 439; So, jvexés Arat. 445; and of Time, Call, Fr. 138, Nic. Al. 517, etc. Found in earlier writers only in the compds. invents, KevTpyverns, qq. V- envoy, 76, =dvepdvn, Diosc. 2. 207. venders, Dor. dvepdes, eaoa, ev, (dvepos) windy. airy, of high hills or places on hills, 5: dxpias jvepoécoas Od. 9. 400; often of Ilium, mport “Ikcov jvepdecay Il, 3. 305, etc.; mrvxes qvepdecoar windy ravines, Od. 19. 4323 of trees, épiveos Il. 22. 145 3 so in Tyrtae. 1. 3, Pind. O. 4. 11, Eur. Heracl. 781, etc. 2. of motion, rapid, rushing, aiyides Aesch. Cho. 591; atpa Soph. Tr. 953; Aaywds Nic. Th. 453; dvepdev ppdvnua high-soaring, airy thought, Soph. Ant. 354. 3. filled by the wind, tortov Pind, P..1. 177. Tyvepd-ortos, ov, walking on the wind, Bpovry Nonn. D, 2. 24., 37-85. > yo. ov, sounding like the wind, Jo, Gaz. vero, vy. sub dvw=dvia. vOov, es, €, Dor. for #AOov, v. sub épxopat. ay, f. 1. for qv (Interject.). fia, iwy, 74, (y. sub fin.) reins, often in Hom., who always uses this neut. pl. form, Il. 5. 226, Od. 3. 483, etc.; so Hes. Sc. 95, Pind.: whereas Att. writers always use the fem. form jvia (q. v.); é£ dvruyos jwia reivas having bound them tight to the chariot rail, Il. 5. 262, 3225 kara 8 jvia reivay émicow drew them backwards, so that the charioteer could hold them, 19. 394, cf. 3. 261. II. sing. qviov, 74, a bit, Poll. x. 148. (A Dim. in form and accent, implying a Noun jvos or fivov : the Skt. Root. is yam (tenere, coércere), cf. yantr (auriga).) fivia, Dor. dvia, %, the bridle (in riding), the reins (in driving), like the Homeric #via (ra), and like it mostly in pl., Pind. P. 5. 43, Aesch. Pers. 193, etc.; mpds #rias pdxeoOar Aesch, Pr. 1010; els rovmiaw éd- xioat Tas Hvias Plat. Phaedr. 254. C; but also in sing., émoxay xpu- odvewrov hviay Soph. Aj. 847; #viay xaday Eur, Fr. 713; the sing. for one rein, €weira Avav hviav apiorepay Soph. El. 743. 2. metaph., épws .. hvias evOuve maduwrdvous Ar. AV. 1739; epetvan nal xaddoa Tas jwias Tots Adyos Plat. Prot. 338 A; THs woAEws Tas Hvias mapadafeiv Ar. Eccl. 466; rijs Tlvevds rds jvias mapadodval ra Id. Eq. 1109 ; yaorpos macay Hviay Kpareiy Menand. Monost. 81; 7@ dhuw Tas jvias éviévat Plut. Pericl. 11; évd:dévar tut rds Hvias Dion. H. 7. 35. 3. as a military term, é' #viay wheeling Zo the left (the left being the bridle hand), Polyaen. 4. 3, 21; [Tov immoy] repiondoas eq’ jviay 7) xakWe Plut. Marcell. 6. II. any leather thong, esp. a sandal-thong, vias Aaxwrikat Ar. Eccl, 508. iveypéves, Adv. part. pf. pass. (aivicoopat), as in a riddle, Clem. Al.985. avide, v. sub jy (Interject.). jyvika [1], Dor.dvina, Adv. of Time, relat. to rnvixa (cf. interr. mpvixa),as Gre to Tore, at which time, when, Od. 22. 198 (nowhere else in Hom.), 'Trag.: also causal, since, Pind. and Att.: c. gen., #vixa Tov xpévou.at which point of time, Ael.N.A.12.25: 1. mostly with Indic., to denote a single occur~ rence, Od, l.c., Soph. Aj. 1144, 1273, al., Thuc. 7..73:—rarely while, hv. Hv ér’ &y padet Eur. Ion 726. 2. jvix' dv, like Stay, with Subj., of fut. time, whenever, Soph, Ph.880,O.T.1492; also after 2 verb to denote repeated oc- currence in present tense, Id. Ph. 310; so, often, in Ar. and Att. Prose; ay is sometimes omitted in Trag., Aesch. Fr. 305. 7. 3. jvixa with Opt. in orat. obl., or to denote an uncertain or repeated occurrence in past time, whenever, Soph. Ph. 705, and Att. Prose :—also in orat. obl., of future time, jwika .. dein when he should have been absent, Id. Tr. 164. iiviov, 7d, v. jvia, 74, iyv1o-Troteiov, 76, a saddler’s shop, Xen. Mem. 4. 2, 8. jyroarpodéw, to guide by reins, Eur. Phoen. 1723; cf. sq. Tyio-o7podos, 6, one who guides by reins, a charioteer, Soph. El. 731. II. jridorpodos, ov, pass. guided by reins, jvioatpépou dpépov Aesch. Cho. 1022, where Stanl. restored Aricatpop® Spdpov. iwoxela, }, chariot-driving, Plat. Gorg. 516, al.; in pl., Id. Legg. 795 A; iv. dppdrow Hdn. 1.13, 17 :—generally, conduct, management, Tis BNXavijs Plut. 2. 966 F. jvroxevs, éas, Ep. jjos, 6, post. for vloxos, bd 8” Eorpepor Wvioxijes Il. 5. 505; Opacdy “Exropos jmoxja 8. 312. oxeutixés, 7, dv,=%pvi0xixds, Schol. Pind. O. 10. 83. Adv. -Kas, Et. Gud. 672. jjwoxetw, Dor. dv-, fut. ow, post. form of juoxéw, fo act as charioteer, 6 pev vdos Hvidxevey Il. 11. 103, cf. 23.641, Od. 6. 319: —metaph. to direct, guide, steer, mdadri .. dvidxevev Alex. Aetol. ap. Ath. 283 A; Baowrevew cal jy. Plut. 2. 155A; c. gen., THS Euqs Yuxijs ty. Anacr, 43 orc. acc., réAuw hy. Anth. P.9. 696, cf.779; cf. eparéw and sq. Fyrox ew, prose form of tvtoxede, to hold the reins, dvwrépw, .. KaTo- tépw Tats xepatlv higher up or lower down, i.e. longer or shorter, Xen. Eq. 7, 10: c. acc. to drive, guide, dppara Hat. 4. 193; A€ovras Luc. D. Deor. 12.2: metaph., Movodv ordpal? ah ee, Ar. Vesp. 1022 ; Thy didvoray Luc. Amor. 37; €0uea .. ppeoiv jv. Epigr. Gr. 922; rarely ¢. gen., 7pav Plat. Phaedr, 246 B:—Pass..do be guided, Ib. 253 D, Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 29, Anth, P. 7. 482. qyrdxn, %, fem. of #vioxos, a name of Hera, Paus. 9- 39) 5+ Aoxnors, «ws, 7}, =svoxela, Plat. Phaedr. 246 B, Philo 2. 174. Aoxucés, 7, ov, of or for driving, tmmos Plat. Phaedr. 253 C, sq. 3 XiTay jy. a driver's coat, Callix. ap. Ath. 200 F: # -«7 (sc. réxvy) the art of driving, Plat. Ion 538 B. Adv. —Kas, Eust. 1303. 35. yvt-oxos, Dor. dvioxos, 5, (€xw) one who holds the reins, a driver, & charioteer, often in Il., where #vioxos is sometimes opp. to mapa:Barns , jviTaTre — (the warrior by the side of his charioteer), Il. 23. 132; whence the latter as subordinate was called iv. Oepdmav 5. 580., 8. 119;—not that he was a slave, but a free soldier, indeed often a hero, as Meriones was charioteer to Idomenens, Patroclus to Achilles; nay in 8. 89 Hector appears as #vioxos, cf. 18. 225., 23.460; though elsewhere he has a charioteer, 8, 119., 12. 91; so, tapaBéBnxe 5€ of Hv. Hat. 7. 40. 2. generally a chartot-driver, as in the games, Pind. P. 5. 66, Ar. Pax 904, Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 21, Plat., etc.; éwomrépwv timmy jy. Id. Criti. 116 E :—in Theogn. 260, a rider. 3. 6 qv. rhs veds the helmsman, Poll. 1. 98 ; cf. vav«Anpos I. 3. 4. metaph. one who guides, sways, governs, directs, xepos nal icxdos dv. Pind. N. 6. 111; madaicpoodvyns jy. Simon. 151; Hv. Téxvns tpayieqs Epigr. Gr. 39, cf. 498. 2; Hv. «.Odpas, of a harper, ap. Steph. B.s.v. MiAnros; as fem., aiyidos %v., of Athena, Ar, Nub. 602:—so in Prose with ofoy or &omep prefixed, Plat. Polit. 266 E, etc.; of love, Plut. 2. 759 D, cf. Hermesianax 84. 5. as Adj. guiding, yvmpn Carm. Aur. 69 ; dvexor Manetho 5. 153. II. jvioxor, of, at Athens, a class of rich citizens who had to furnish chariots for public service, Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 576. 42, Phot. III. in pl. also=€xpopo: (€xpopos 111), Phot. Iv. a constellation, Arat. 156. “avlarditre, v. sub évinra, fivis, 7}, used by Hom. only in acc. ‘sing. and pl.; gen. #y1os Ap. Rh. 4.174: (os) :—a year old, yearling, Bots .. Hvis jxéoras Il. 6. 94, 275, 309; Boty Rr ebpupérwmoy adunrnv [where also ¢ is made long] 10. 292, Od. 3. 382. FWvov, v. sub dvw =driw, jvopén, Dor. dvopéa, %, (avhp), Ep. word for dvBpela, manhood, jvo- pén wiovvor kat Kdpret Il. 8.226., 11.9; Kapret re oOével Te weroiOdras jvopén TE 17. 329; bmmoodyy Te Kal jvopéende weTOAOds 4. 303; GAKA Tijvopén Te Kexacpevor Od. 24. 509: manly beauty, jv. éparewhy Il. 6. 156: B5aros jy. its strength, Epigr. ap. Ael. N. A. 10. 40:—in pl. praises of manhood, Pind, N. 3. 34. For, onos, 5, 9, in Hom. Il. 16. 408., 18. 349, Od. 10. 360, always in phrase, fjvomt xaAn@ with gleaming, glittering brass. The Ancients took it to be=dy-oy, too bright to be looked at, dazzling, cf. vapoy. Suid. s.vv. évbios, fvoy, cites it also as epith. of odpayéds, and of mupds wheat. jvrrep, related to elmep, as fv (dv) to ef, Xen. An. 3. 2, 21. foe, Lacon. 3 sing. impf, of dvOew, Ar. Lys. 1258. fvuorpov, 76, (dviw) the fourth st h of ruminating animals, in which the digestion was completed, Arist. P. A. 3. 14, 8, H.A. 2. 17, 103 a favourite dish at Athens, like ¢ripe, Ar. Eq. 356, 1179, Alex. Incert. 2. 8 :—written évvorpov in Lxx (Deut. 18. 3). Tvaeyea, Aveyet, v. sub dvarya. nvexAouv, v. sub évoxAéw. fa, v. sub dicow, doow :—but Fifa, v. sub dyvupt. Ets, ews, 7), (fea) a coming, arrival, cited in A. B. 99 from Eur. Tro. 396, ubi nunc ifts. Hotos, a, ov, lon. Adios, =éGos morning, dorhp Ton ap. Ar. Pax 837:— 4 tjotn (sc. pa), the morning, macav 8 yoinv .. Od. 4. 447, cf. Hesych. Ss. Vv. 2. toward morning, eastern, Lat. orientalis, 7@ mpds hota 7) éorepiav dvOpimav Od. 8.29; mpds Oadrdcans joins Hdt. 4. 100; mpds Tods holous Tay A:Buwy Ib. 160; mpds Holny (sc. yhv) towards the East, Call. Del. 280. II. ai ’Hofa: was a poem of Hesiod, so called because each sentence began with 7 oi7 .., Paus. 9. 31, 5, Ath. 428 B. Torey, r pl. impf. of fut (ibo). ovios, a, ov, contr. from 7idvios, on the shore, Anth. P. 7. 383. araivaw and —€w, to be in want, Hesych.: a rare Dor. word, akin to ondvis, onavia, and, acc. to Curt. 354, to mévopa, etc.:—in E, M. we also me Amavla, %, want, restored in Anth. P. 5. 239., 9. 521, cf. Jac. p- 108. Hyrdopat, v. sub Arpcacba, : Fh Gros, 76, (v. sub fin.) the liver, Hom., etc.; the liver of various animals was a favourite dish at Athens, xdmpou Ar. Fr. 302, etc.; «a- mpioxov Crobyl. Yevd.2; épipov Euphron’A8.1.23; xyvds Eubul. Srep. 5; cf. Ath. 106 F sq., Poll. 6. 49, and v. amaroy :—regarded as a vital part, obray ria xad’ Hrap ll. 20. 469; matey i’ rap or mpds Hrap Soph. Ant.1315, Eur. Or. 1063; ig’ Hap wenAnypérn Soph. Tr. 932:—bp’ Hra- Tos pepe, of pregnant women (as the Germans say unter dem Herzen tragen), Eur. Supp. 919 :—often in Trag. as the seat of the passions, anger, fear, etc., answering therefore to our ‘ heart,’ Aesch. Ag. 432, 792, Eum. 135, Eur. Supp. 599, ef. Archil. 118; xwpef mpds Hap ..dvn Soph. Aj. 937; of love, xadema yap éow Oeds rap duvocey Theocr. 13. 71; a pev Oupoedis wept ray Kapdiay, 7d 8 émOvparindy wept 1d arap Tim. Locr. 100 A, cf. Plut. 2. 450 F. II. like otap, fruitful dand, Agroetas ap. Schol. Ap. Rh. 2. 1248; see the legend in Diod. 1. 19. III. =fraros, Plin. H. N. 32. 53. (From same Root as Skt. yakrit, Lat. jecur; cf. wévre quingue, immos equus; the Lith. akn-is may be compared with jecin-oris.) ararnpévws, Ady. part. pf. pass. of dwardw, mistakenly, Basil. Wrariatos, a, ov, =%rdrieds, Hipp. 279. 43. Ayrirlas, ov, 6,=7marixds, Poll. 2. 215. jwitllw, to be like the liver, liver-coloured, Diosc. 3. 25. Francés, 4, dv, of the liver, wa0os Plut. 2.773 C:—1rd Hrarixdy divination from the liver, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 484. ILI. afflicted in the liver, ill of a liver-complaint, Diosc. 2. 78. inanov, 74, Dim. of #ap, a common dish at Athens, Ar. Fr. 421, Alex. Kpar. 1. 16, etc.: cf. rap. Aarts, sds, 4, of or in the liver, Svoevrepia Galen. 18.1.145; 7 jmariris (sc. prep) the vena cava ascendens, Hipp. 276. 54., 1034 G, 653 II. as Subst. /iver-wort, as synon. of edma- , , yrjcac Oat. Plin, H. N. 37. 71. Twprov, Diosc. 4. 41. miro-adas, és, liver-shaped, Diosc. 5. 100. ar&iros, 6, a fish of uncertain kind, Eubul. Aax. 2, Arist. H. A. 2. 17, 27, cf. Ath. 300 E sq. ' Irarockotéw, to inspect the liver for soothsaying, LXX (v.1.Ezek. 21,21). jrirockonia, %, an inspecting of the liver, Hdn. 8. 3, 17. Fratrockom«y, 4, =%H7aTocKonia, Phleg. Trall. de Longaey. 4. Hywiro-cKbtos, ov, inspecting the liver, soothsaying, Lat. extispex, Artemid. 2.69; #m. fepd Hesych. s.v. pura. Awaroupyés, dv, liver-destroying, epith. of Perseus, who killed the sea- monster by leaping down its throat sword-in-hand, Lyc. 839; cf. darpds hrarov, Id. 35. Py gab Pass. to have one’s liver eaten, ind -yundv Sext. Emp. . I. 286. Hmdide, v. sub dwadionw. tredavés, 7, dv, (v. sub fin.) weak, weakly, infirm, of Nestor’s charioteer, Il. 8. 104; unsound, halting, as Hephaistos calls himself, Od. 8. 311; dvdpes, xépes Ap. Rh. 2. 800, etc.; Aéwy Poéta ap. Suid.; also in the Prose of Hipp., #7. wip a slight, trifling fever, 592.4; of a child, Gor. 29, cf. 624. 41. 2. c. gen. void of, papas éooeat jmedava Anth. P. 9. 521. II. act. weakening, Seiwa Orph. Lith. 376. (The Ancients derive it from vm, médov, whence the reading vnmedayés in Opp. C. 1. 534: but it seems to be merely a lengthened form of #mos.) ‘iyrerypéves, Ady. part. pf. pass. of émei-yw, Dionys. de Av. 2. 7, Eccl. ‘yrrecpo-yevns, és, (yevéoOar) born or living in the mainland, of the Persians, Aesch. Pers. 42, v. Blomf. Gloss. and cf. #mecpos III. Hrevpd0ev, Ady. from the mainland, Arat. 1094. areipos, Dor, dr- [4], 7, terra-firma, the land, as opp. to the sea, Od. 3. go., 10. 56, Il. 1. 485, Hes., etc.; nar’ Hmetpov by land, Hat. 4. 97., 8.66; hr ev Oadrdrrp phir & jreipw Ar. Ach. 534 :—hence in Od. 5. 56, even an island is called #recpos :—but, II. in Od. 14. 97, 100., 21. 109., 24.378, it is the mainland of Western Greece, as opp. to Ithaca and the neighbouring islands (afterwards called “Hmetpos as n. pr., Thuc, 3. 114, al., cf. #metpwrixds 11); Hretpdvbe to ihe main, Od. 18. 84 :—then, generally, the mainland, as opp. to islands, Hdt. 1. 148, 171., 8.66, al., Thuc. 1.5, Xen. Hell. 6.1, 4. III. later, a Continent: Asia was esp. called the Continent, Hdt. 1. 96., 4. 91, Aesch. Pers. 718, Xen. Hell. 3. 1, 5, Dem. 1392. 6, v. Morus Isocr. 68 A and cf. iyweipwrns I11:—but also Europe, Aesch. Pers. 790, etc., whence Soph. speaks of d:cal #retpor (Tr. 100), TH Sv’ Hrelpw (Fr. 760), i.e. Europe and Asia, acc. to the oldest division of the world by which Egypt was made part of Asia, cf. Schif. Mel. p. 37, Voss Virg. G. 2.116; so, 颒 éxarépas Tis Hrelpou Isocr.47D; Hr. Sorat, Sidvpar, dupérepar Mosch. 2. 8, Anth, P. 7. 18, 240; Pind. adds Libya asa third #mepos, P. 9. 15,cf. 4. 84. IV. the inland parts, as opp. to the coast: hence 7reppwrns, ut. (The deriv. from d-me:pos [with a], boundless, cannot be maintained.) Arepsw, to make into mainland, opp. to @adarréw, Arist. Mund. 6, 32, Anth. P. 9. 670:—Pass. to become so, Thuc. 2. 102. AreipSrys, ov, 6, fem.—Grrs, Bos :—of the land, d-yew dmeiphrny [tx Ovv] to treat it as a landsman, Theocr. 21. 58 (e conj. Herm.). II. of the mainland, living there, opp. to vnowwrns, Hdt. 6. 49, cf. 1. 171: ab Hreipwrides AloAides 7éAtes, opp. to those in islands, Ib. 151, cf. 7. 109, Thue. 1. 5, al. ;—also, #7. fuypaxia alliance with a military power, opp. to vavriey, Ib. 35, cf. 4.12; Todas TH TapacKkerA 7mepwribas Id. 6. 86. III. of or onthe mainland of Asia, Asiatic, Eur. Andr. 159, 652, Isocr. 68 A; cf. frespos II. 2. “Hreiprys, 6, an Epirote, Arist. Fr. 452, Luc. Indoct. 19. Arepwrtds, 4, dv, of or for an iyreprys, continental, Xen. Hell.6. 1, 4. II. of Epirus, wav 1d "Hretpwrixdv Thuc. 3. 102, etc. arevra, a supposed post. form of érera, formerly read in several places of Hom. and Hes., where 57 ére:ra is now read for 8 #mrera, v. Il. 15. 163., (20. 338, Od. 1. 290, etc. rep, poet. nérep, (7) than at all, than even, after a Comp., Hom., Hdt. rep, in the same way as, v. sub 7. amepoTreupa, 7d, a cozener, ‘yuvatk@y Critias 7. 3. iymeporrets, dws, Ep. fjos, 6, =irepomevrhs, jmeponnd 7° nev wal éri- kdomov Od. 11. 364; of Bacchus, Anth. P. 9. 524; of dreams, Ap. Rh. . 617. (Curt. regards the word as a compd. 7)mep-omevs, 7rép being = git, apar-a, Goth. afar (from api, af=dmé), otherwise, differently, and én-evs (*érw) speaker.) Ameporrevrys, ov, 5, a cheat, deceiver, of Paris (cf. sq.), -yuvaipavés, hyreporevra (Ep. vocat.) Il. 3. 39., 13. 769, h. Hom. Merc, 282, etc. Hrepotrevw, (7j7eporevs) Ep. Verb only used in pres. and impf., fo cheat, cajole, deceive, cozen, c. acc. pers., of the seductive arts of lovers cf. foreg.), yuvaikas dvdAudas iyrepomeveas ll. 5. 349; TA TE ppévas hymeporedes Ondrvrépnar -yovaigi Od. 15. 421; so of Aphrodité, ri pe Tadra AtAalet Hreporevay ; Il. 3. 399:—then in a general sense, 23. 605, Od. 14. 400., 15. 418; Ends ppévas 13. 327, Hes. Op. 55. ; Amepommis, ios, 7, pecul. fem. of zrepowevs, yr. Téexvn cheating arts, Poéta ap. Strabo 17. fywhoacGat, (aor. 1, with no pres. #réouat in use), to mend, repair, kéoxwov Ar. Fr. 28; payévra indéria, brodppara Galen. ; part. pf. pass., tudria ymnpéva Aristid. 2. 307.—Hence we have the Subst. forms Hrpors, ews, %, mending, Eust. 1647. 60; Anyrhs, o0, 6, a mender, cobbler, Batr. 184, Xen. Cyr. 1. 6, 16 (vulg. dxeorai); fem. irhrpra, Hesych., Moer.; neut. yryriprov or Hrqtpiov, 74, a needle, Eust. l.c., Suid—These are all rare forms; the usual words being dxécac@a, Arist. H, A, 3. 2, 7. 2. liver-coloured : as Subst. hepatitis gemma, ¢ bdxeorhs, dxéorpia, etc., Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 1,c., Lob. Phryn. 91. 654. Fmidlw, 20 have a fever or ague, Ar. Ach, 1165, Arist. Probl. 27. 2. AmdAys, yrs, 6, = épudArns, night-mare, Sophron 72 Ahr., Phot., etc.; an acc. #midAnra Hdn, ap. Eust. 561.17. Cf. #mtddns. os, 6, a fever attended with violent shivering, Galen, 7. p. 132; am. wuperds in Hipp. 266. 35; or, the shivering-fit which precedes ague, muperov mpddpopos Ar. Fr. 315, cf. Theogn. 174; jm. kat muperot Hipp. 281. 49 :—metaph., dnidvey jm. ague to nightingales, Comic name of a bad poet, Phryn. Com. Incert. 1. II. =7maAns, night-mare, Ar. Vesp. 1038, as explained by Didym. ap. Schol., cf. Eust. 1687. 52. YMAAGBys, €s, (el5os) like the #mtados, aguish, Hipp. 1127 A. Amdo, to assuage: aor. pass. #mHOnv, Hesych. ; cf. Hymdw. 4ato-Sivyros [1, ov, softly-rolling, BAépapa Anth. P. 5. 250. 4ym6-5apos, ov, soothing by gifts, bountiful, fond, phyrnp ll. 6. 251; Kumpis Stesich, 17, Modoa Opp. H. 4. 7, etc. Aymo-BaTys, ov, 6,=foreg., Orph. H. Mus. 37. am6-9ipos, ov, gentle of mood, Anth. Plan. 65, Orph. H. 58. 15. AméoAys, ov, 6,=iriados, A, B. 42, Eust. 1687. 52. AméAvov, 76, Dim, of jyriados, Hesych. aes 6, a moth, Arist. H. A. 8. 27, 2. mrL6-y.oLpo0s, ov, of kindly fate, Poéta ap. Ath. 542 E. ym6-pi00s, ov, soft-speaking, Maxim. 7. Seti 68. qmlos, a, ov: but os, ov Hes, Th. 407, Eur. Tro. 53, etc. (Origin uncertain.) 1. of persons, gentle, mild, kind, as a father to his children, tar)p 8 ds mos Hev Il. 24.770, Od. 2. 47, 234; of a paternal monarch, dyavds kal fm. 2. 230., 5. 8, cf. 14. 139; of a charioteer, Il. 23. 281;—so that the word properly implies the kindness of a supe- tior:—c, dat. pers., €0éAw 5é rou Hmwos elvar 8. 40, cf. Od. 10. 337, etc. ; ir. dvOpwron Kal GBavarorct Oeotor Hes. Th. 407; so in Hdt., #ymw- Tepos TOD marpds 5. 92, 6; and in Trag., of the gods, owrfpas .. irlous @ jpiv poreiv Soph. Ph, 738; Oeds dvOpmrovow amdraros Eur. Bacch. 861, cf. Ar. Vesp. 879. 2. of sentiments, «ef yor xpelwv "Ayapépvov ima eldein had kindly feeling towards me, Il. 16. 73; dp@s 5€ To ma oidev of the swineherd’s feelings to his master, Od. 13. 405., 15. 39, cf. 5573 also, #ma Shvea older Il, 4. 361; poOos Hr. Od. 20. 3273 Hr. épyal, ppéves Eur. Tro. 5, Fr. 364.6; mpds 7d imdrepov naracrical twa to bring him to a milder mood, Thuc, 2. 59; so of persons, ob5é mo mos nor is she yet appeased, quiet, Eur. Med. 133; éxfdvys ovdiy fymuwrépa Id. Alc. 310. 3. of heat and cold, mild, less intense, Plat. Phaedr. 279 B, Tim. 85 A; Hmdrepar ai Oépyar of a fever, Hipp. 1207 A; 7a Tod muperod Hma Id. 1157 F. II. act. soothing, assuaging, ima pappaxa Il. 4. 218., 11. 515; so in Hdt., opp. to lcxupd, 3. 130, cf, 7.142; and in Trag., qm. dwéopara Aesch. Pr. 482; pvAAa Soph. Ph, 698. 2. imov pap, c. inf., a day favourable for beginning a thing (like Gppevoy just above), Hes. Op. 785. III. Adv. jriws, Hdt. 7. 105,143, Soph. El. 1439; 77. duelBeoba Hdt. 8. 60, Comp., 7mwrépas €xerv mpds trva Dem. 1296. 8. TNS, NTYS, 7, gentleness, Hecat. Abd. ap. Joseph. c. Apion. 1, 22. , ovos, 6, %, gentle-minded, aymippow gidcrnros .. dpph Emped. 201; ’AoxAnmés Epigr. Gr. 1027. 2. ams-xXep, etpos, 5, ), with soothing hand, Anth. P. g. 525, 8. Xetpos, ov, =foreg., Orph. H. 22. 8., 83. 8. ‘mde, intr. to feel easier, iymiwoe TH owpart Hipp. 1147 D :—Pass., aor. #m@Onv Schol. Ven. B. 1.146; cf. qmdw. 4yrou or (as Wolf) 4 ov, =%, in both senses, or and as, modified by mou, or perhaps, as perhaps, etc., Il. 6. 438, Od. 11. 459. mou or (as Wolf) 4 tov, I suppose, I ween, mostly to confirm what has been said, Il. 3. 43., 16. 830; with an ironical sense, Soph. Aj. 1008, etc., cf, Elmsl. Med, 1275: after a negat., much less, Thuc. 1. 142., 8. 27; with a negat., Andoc. II. 40. II. to ask a somewhat hesitating question, is it possible that ..? can it be that ..? what, I sup- pose! Od. 13. 234, Aesch. Pr. 521. bn, %), @ voice, sound, Hesych.; whence Herm. reads, metri grat., aq for dirads in Aesch. Theb. 146. arira, 6, Ep. for yrbrns (which however is not found), cf. imméra, etc.: (jrbw):—calling, crying, jrbra Kijpué the loud-voiced herald, ll. 7. 384; am. cdpryé the shrill pipe, Q. Sm. 6.170; mévros Opp. C. 2.136. , Dor. & [a], as in Trag. (for they only use the Verb in lyrics, except Eur. in Rhes. 776): fut. vow [0]: aor. fica: (perh. akin to ros, eimeiv). To call to, call, c. acc., 86: mopéva roiphy Frver Od. To. 83; GAAG pe Tiv6d .. dmv Pind. P. 10.5; davey Eirptawvay called on, invoked him, Pind. O.1. 116, cf. P. 5.140; Avraiot oe .. dmvovca Aesch. Theb. 144; iadéuw tods Oavdyras dmves Eur. Tro. 1304:—c. dupl. acc,, Ti pe T65€ xpéos dmves ; why callest thou on me for this? Id. Or. 1253:—c. dat. pers., #mvoa 8 abrois ph weAd(ecOa called.to them not .., Id. Rhes. 776. 2. absol. to call out, shout, adrap 6 Kix- Awras peyar’ iprvev Od. 9. 399; of the wind, to roar, otr’ dvepos réc- cov mort Spualy iyindpoow Arve Il. 14. 399; of the lyre, to sound, ev SE re pbppryE Arde Od. 17. 271:—to sing, Avdios dmbav ey addois Pind, O. 5. 453 c. acc. cogn., wéAos dadovres Mosch. 2. 120. 3. to utter, speak, rarpos bvop’ dmbes Aesch. Pr. 593 ; th wor’ dmvow; Eur. Hee. 155; dmvcar’ dvripoy’ éudv orevaypdtoy Id. Supp. 800; mpd gov yap dave (a burlesque phrase) Ar. Eq. 1023. 4. foll. by a relat., wis dy dabot ef ..; would tell whether :.? Soph. Aj. 887; dmice ris &5e ..; Eur. Bacch. 984. [@ in pres., except in Mosch. |.c.; for in Aesch. Theb. 144 Herm. has restored dirodoa: metri grat.) , contr. for éap. es 3 sing. impf. of épae, med. of aipw, Ar. Ach. 913. Apa, 1 sing, aor. 1 of atpa:—bui Spa’, i.e. jpao, Ep. for ipo, 2 sing. aor. I med, of aipw, Od. 24. 33. : II. Boeot, for ijpw, 2 sing. aor. 1 @ ‘HpakAjjs, HriaA\ew —* Hpaxdjs. fjpa, a neut. Adj. pl., used by Hom., once with the Verb pep and five times with émpépw (in tmesi), much in the same sense as xapifopa, to bring acceptable gifts, to do a kindness or service, to gratify ; @up@ ipa époves Il. 14.132; pyTpt pidy emt Fpa pépwy 11.572; warpt piry Te dpa pépor Ib. 578; en’ ’Arpelip "Ayapépvove Fipa pépovres Od. 3. 164; &' piv pa pépovow 16. 375; én’ “Ipw ipa pépa 18. 56; so, fipa wopitew Orph. Lith, 755.—In Il. 1. 572, 578, €minpa pépew was formerly written, and in the three last passages émt was taken as separated by tmesis from jpa; but in the first passage there is no émi, and the compd. éminpa is now discarded, vy. Buttm. Lexil. s.v. pa, and cf. éninpa. II. late Poets took #pa as equiv. to yap, and joined it c. gen., for the sake of, on account of, for, pa prrofevins Call. Fr. 41, cf. Dosiad, Ara-18 (in Anth, P. 15. 26); rivos pa; wherefore? Anth, Plan. 4. 299. | (Hdn. makes it acc. of a Subst. 7p; Aristarch. neut, pl. of an Adj. jjpos. Whether it can be referred to 44AP, which appears in dpapickw, dppevos, ipavos, émhpavos, is doubtful, since in Hom pa has the digamma ; y. supr.) “Hpa, Ion. “Hpy, %, Hera, the Lat. Juno, queen of the gods, daughter of Kronos and Rhea, sister and wife of Zeus, Il. 16.432; in Hom. repre- sented at strife with him, and friendly to the Greeks; v7} Tv “Hpav, an oath of Athen. women, Xen. Mem. 1. 5, 5: cf. réAecos I. 2. applied to the Empresses of Rome, as Zevs to the Emperors, C, I. 1775, 39566 (add,), cf. Tac. Ann. 5. 2. (The common assumption that "Hpa is connected with Lat. Aéra is rejected by Curt. (p. 119), on the ground that it is dub. whether the old Lat. 4 is ever equivalent to the Gr. spir. asper: he refers the word to the Skt. svar (caelum), cf. getptos.) ‘Hpaios, a, ov, of Hera: “Hpaioy (sc. iepov), 76, the temple of Hera, Heraeum, Hat. 1. 70, etc.: ‘Hpaia (sc. tepd), 7a, her festival, Paus. 2, 24, 2. II. “Hpaios (sub. wpv), 6,2 month at Delphi, Anecd. Delph, 27: whence corr. ‘Hpamiov in C. I, 1706. “HpaxAéns, contr. —«A‘js, 6, the former in Ep., Pind., Hdt., and Eur. Heracl. 210, Ion 1144, H. F. 924; the latter also in Eur., Soph., and Att. Prose :—the orig. forms of the obl. cases “HpaxAéeos, —A€ei, heed nowhere appear in use; but in Att. the shortd, forms ‘HpdiAéous, “HpaxAée Eur. Heracl. 8, 988, Ar. Av. 567, “Hpaxaéa (also in h. Hom. 14. I, Hes. Sc. 448, Theocr. 24.1); in Ion, and Ep., “HpaxAfjos, —«Aje, -kAjfja, (also in Pind. I. 5 (4). 47, Eur. Heracl. 541) :—these forms are still further shortd., ‘HpaxAéos Hdt. 2. 42 sq., Pind., Eur. H. F. 806, Theocr. ; “HpaxAdi Hdt. 1.145; ‘“Hpawded Id. 2. 42 sq., Pind. O. 10 (11). 20, Call. Ep. 65. 5; and then again contr., “HpaAevs Pind, P. 10. 4; ‘HpaixAf (v. sub fin.), Plat. Phaedo 89 C:—irreg. acc. ‘HpaxAény Theocr. 13. 73, Ap. Rh. 2. 767 ; contr. “Hpa«Ajy Paus. 8. 31, 3, v. Lob. Phryn. 156.—Vocat. ‘HpdAees, Archil. 106, Pind., Eur. H. F.175; in Att. commonly ‘Hpd«Aes, and in late Greek “HpaxAes, Lob. Phryn. 640; v. infr.—PI. “Hpaxdées rare, e. g. Plat. Theaet. 169 B, ~éas Ar. Pax 741: Dual “HpaxAée, Philostr. 190. Heracles, Lat. Hercules, son of Zeus and Alcmena, the most famous of the Greek heroes, Hom., etc.: the name signifies Hera’s glory, from the power she obtained over him at birth :— “Hpaxdéous orpdat (vy. sub “Hpddetos), proverbial of going to the furthest point, Pind. O. 3. 79, I. 4. 20 (3. 30); “HpaxAgous dpyqv mv” éxew a temper or ambition like Hercules, Ar. Vesp. 1030, Pax 752; proverb. of close friendship, dAAos “‘HpaxAfjs, GAAos abrdés (MSS. otros) Arist. Eth. E. 7. 12, 12; but, dAAos obros “HpaxAjs ‘a second Hercules,’ Paroemiogr.—The voc. ‘Hpd«Aes is often an exclamation of surprise, anger or disgust, like Lat. Hercle, Mehercle, Ar. Ach. 184, Nub. 284. II. the luckiest throw with the dice was called ‘Hpa- «his, as well as’Adpodirn and Midas ; cf, dorpdyaaos. [a in second syll. is short, though the Ep. also make it long by position; and so Eur., v. Pors. Med. 675. Soph. uses ‘Hpd«Aéous with a synizesis of the two last syll., as if ‘Hpd«Aods, Tr. 406, Ph. 943; and in Tr. 233, 476, Ar. Thesm. 26, ‘HpaxAéa must be a trisyll., or “Hpa«Af must be written. ] eres oi, the Heraclidae or descendants of Hercules, Hat. 1. 7, 13, al. ‘Hpdkdevos, a, ov, also os, ov Soph. Tr. 51: Ep, —metos, in Ion. Prose ~hLos, 7, ov :—of Hercules, Lat. Herculeus, Bin “HpaxAneln, i.e. Hercules himself, Hom, :—Hp. orijka the opposite headlands of Gibraltar and Apes’ Hill near Tangier, Hdt. 2. 33., 4. 8, al.; called o7@Aar or xioves Hpaxdéos by Pind. N. 3. 36, O. 3. 79 :—Ady. ‘HpaxaAclos, like Hercules, Luc. Peregr. 33. II. “Hpawdexoy or ~etov, Ion. —jrov (sc. fepdy), 76, the temple of Hercules, Hdt. 2. 44, al.:—also a huge drinking-cup, such as Hercules used, Ath. 469 C. 2. “HpdxaAera (se. lepd), 7a, his Jestival, Ar. Ran. 651, Dem. 368, 11. 3. ‘HpaxaAcia, %, Hera- cleum, a plant, Theophr. H. P. 9. 15, 5. III. véaos ‘Hpaxdein, epilepsy, Hipp. 593. 30, Galen.: but, “Hp. 1400s, elephantiasis, Aretae, Sign. M. Diut. 2, 13. IV. ‘HpdxAeta Aovrpa hot baths, Ar. Nub. 1051, ubi v. Schol., cf. Ath. 512 F, V. Al@os ‘HpaxAcia or “Hpd- ea, 4, the magnet, Plat. Tim. 80C, Io 533; so called, acc. to Buttm., from its power of attraction :—v, Méyrys IT. VI. ‘Hp. (sub. Hav), 6, a month at Delphi, C. 1. 1707, Anecd. Delph. 3. 17, 33- HpakAciteos, a, ov, of Heraclitus, Plat. Rep. 498 A:—Hp., ol, his disciples, Id. Theaet. 179 E, Diog. L.g. 6. ‘HpaxAcurifw, to be a follower of Heraclitus, Arist. Metaph. 3. 5, 18; formed like @cAurmitw, etc, ‘Hpaxenorhs, of, 5, a follower of Heraclitus, Diog. L. 9. 15. “Hpakhedrns, ov, 5, a man of Heraclea, Arist. Pol. 7. 6, 8, al.:—Ad}. ‘Hpakhewrixds, n, bv, of Heraclea, Id. H. A. 4. 2, 3 ;—but, ondeos Hpa- wreorrucdy is said to derive its name directly from Hercules, Ath. 500 A. Anis, los, %, the Heracleid, a poem on Hercules, Arist. Poét. 8, 2« 6, contr. from “Hpaxdéns, q. v. ‘Hpaxdoxos — tips. “HpakAloxos, 6, Dim. of ‘Hpaxajjs, title of Theocr. Idyll. 24: a form “HpaxAeioxos mentioned as dub. by Choerob, in An. Ox. 2. 268. yp-dvOepov, 76, =dvGepis, Diosc. 3. 154. apavos, 6, a keeper, watcher, (BonOds acc. to E. M., as also Hesych. expl. the Verb Apavéw by Bonbeiv, xapt(ecOar), whdov Ap. Rh. 2. 513; yains Paul. Sil. Ecphr. 44; whereas Hermesian. 5. 16 calls, Musaeus Xapirav ip. friend of the Graces, and Ib. 22, Hesiod, mdons ip. toropins Jriend of all wisdom. Cf. émfpavos. Hpape, v. sub dpapiona, jpardpny, v. sub épaya, Apuro, v. sub aipw. ApGro, v. sub dpdopat. ‘peed, and *Apépiis before a vowel in Ap. Rh. 3.170: (v. sub fin.): Ady. :—like drpéyas, stilly, quietly, gently, softly, Rovyos, jpéua quiet ! gently! said as to a horse, Ar. Pax 82; yyyew ipéua roy Bovképadov Id. Fr. 135 3 qpéua émvyeAGy Plat. Phaedo 62 A; exe jpéua keep still, Id. Crat. 399 E; fp. Apdpny Id. Prot. 333 E. 2. a little, slightly, opp. to opddpa, np. pryovv Id. Theaet. 152 A; dyavaxreiv Id. Phileb. 47 A; SdervrAor .. Hp. dinpOpwpévor Arist. H. A. 3. 9,6:—sometimes with an Adj., év jpéua mpocavre Plat. Phaedr. 230 C; wp. Aevnds Arist. Meteor. 3.4, 28; mp. €pyos Id. Gen, et Corr. 1.8, 16; Hp. madnrixds Ib. 10,15; mp. duotos Id. Top. 3. 2,73; mp. pexrds Id. Eth. N. 4.5, 143 hp. kat yedotoy rather ludicrous, Luc. Merc. Cond. 28. 8. slowly, opp. to raxuora, Plat. Rep. 617 A.—The Adj. #pepos is found only in later Greek, as Theophr. Lap. 62, Luc. Tragoed. 207 (Apéuq modi), TEp. Tim. 2.2; jpeyov éavrdy mapéxew Inscr. Olbiopol. in C. I. 2059. 24 ;—pepatos being commonly used instead; for the Comp. also v. sub jpepatos. (The Root appears in Skt. ram, ram-é (gaudeo), cf. d-ram-imi (desino, quiesco), Goth. rim-is (jjovxia) :—hence also jpeu-t, -aios, —ia, —éa.) Hpepalo, to be still, silent, esp. from grief, LXx (2 Esdr. 9. 3). Apepatos, a, ov, Adj. of qpéua, still, quiet, gentle, AUmat, Hdoval Plat. Legg.733E; yéveots Id. Polit. 306 E; ip ip. a slight fever, Hipp. 606. 21: mpeyata as Adv.,=7péua, opp. to opddpa, Plat. Legg. 733 C:— Comp., médw ipepaorepay moveiv Plut. Sol. 31; also irreg. mpeuéorepos Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 63, Theophr. de Vent. 29. Adv. -alws,=7péua, Xen. Eq. 9, 5; Comp. -airepoy (v.1. -a:drepov) Arist. Meteor. 2. 8, 32; —eaTépws Xen. Cyr. 3. I, 30. Apepardrys, nros, }, rest, Hipp. 26. 29. pepéw, Dor. dpepéw Tim. Locr. 95 D:—to be still, keep quiet, be at rest, opp. to xvéopat, Hipp. Fract. 755, cf. Arist. Phys. 6. 8, 8., 8. 1, 3, al.; €y rots vépous Hpepodvres Stapéevery Xen. Ages. 7, 3, cf. Plat. Legg. 891 A,956D; ap. rH davota Arr. Epict. 2. 21, 22 :—Hpepyréov, verb. Adj. one must keep quiet, Philo 1. 89. 2. to be unmoved, remain Jixed, pdvos obros jp. 5 Adyos Plat. Gorg. 527 B; 7d Apepeiv Id. Phaedo 96 B. Apépqors, ews, 7, a becoming still, a being at rest, opp. to xlvnots, Arist. Phys. 8. 1, 7, al. 2. quietude, of men, Tim. Locr. 104 B; rijs épyis Arist. Rhet. 2. 3, 2, cf. de An. 1. 3, 21. Apept [7], Adv. for jpéua, Ar. Ran. 315; ef. drpept. tpepia, 7, stillness, rest, opp. to Kivnows,=dxwnola, Arist. Phys. 3. 2,4, cf. 5.6, 1, Metaph. 1. 7, 4, al. 2. of the mind, rest, guietude, Hp. puxijs Def, Plat. 412 A, cf. Arist. de An. 1. 3, 6; émt roads Hp. bnar leaving you entirely at rest, Dem. 168. 15.—V. sub #pepia. jpepilw, to make still:—Pass. to be still, be at rest, Arist. An. Post. OTe a 2. to make quiet, inmoy Xen, Eq. 7, 15, cf. Arist. Eth. E. 2.8, 9:—Pass. to be quiet and calm, Id. Phys. 7. 3, 15, al. II. intr. =jpepéw, Xen. Lac. 1, 3. Hpepos, ov, V. Hpépa. Apeporns, nros, 7, =%pepia, Eucl. Intr. Harm. p. 21 Meib. npeotdes, ai, priestesses of Hera at Argos, E. M. 436. 49; cf. Miiller Archiiol. d. Kunst. § 69. Hpevv, Ion. impf. of aipéw, Hes. Sc. 302. “Hp», lon. for “Hpa, Hom, Apiper, v. sub dpapioxw B. aApypeoro, v. sub épetda. —hpns, an Adj. termin., 1. from 4/AP (dpap-civ, dpap-icxw) as in épi-qp-ns, Ovpaphs. 2. from 4/EP (épéoow), as in dup-qpns, dAl-Hpys :—Tpt-hpns, TeTp-hp-ns, etc., are commonly referred to. this Root, but Curt. considers these words also to belong to 4/AP, cf. d:npns, Gr. Et. no. 492. . pt, Ep. Adv, early, Hom., who joins it with pdAa, fpe nar’ Il. 9. 360; * pt Od. 20. 156; 7@0ev 5& par’ Fpe 19.320. (Curt. regards it as belonging to the Root of jds, jéptos, not as dat. of Hp, spring; cf. Hpryeveca.) Apr-yevera, 4), (pt, yevéc@ar) early-born, child of morn, in Hom, always epith. of “Hws; also absol.,=’Hws, Morn, Od.22.197., 23.3473 Kadapas Gmep jpvyeveias as at clear morn, Theocr. 24. 39; yevéOAcov 7pryevecay a birthday morning, Anth. P. 9. 353- 2. in later Ep. a day, Nonn. D, 38. 271, Q. Sm. 10. 478. II. (Hp) bearing in spring, Aéawa Aesch. Fr. 357. ‘ypt-yevs, és, =foreg., Hws, Ap. Rh. 2. 450., 3. 1224, ete. ‘pi-yépwv, ovros, 6, early-old, name of groundsel, from its hoary down, Lat. senecio, Theophr. H. P. 7. 7, 1, Diosc. 4.97. . *"Hpidavés, 5, Eridanus, a river famous in the old legends, first in Hes. Th. 338; said to flow into Ocean in the extreme West of Europe, Hadt. 3-115. Later authors mostly took it for the Po, as first in Eur. Hipp. 7373 others also for the Rhone or the Rhine, and some have even tried to identify it with the Radauhe near Danzig, y, Interpp.ad Hdt.1,c. rr, a river in Attica, Strabo 397, Paus. ‘ 655 fpvepyis, 6, a grave-digger, Hesych. ‘“pievs, ews, 6, (Aptov) a corpse, Hesych. *Hptxdrratos or “Hpucer-, 6, mystic epith. of Bacchus or Priapus, Orph. Hymn. 6. 4; v. Bentl. Corresp. 1. pp. 14-18, Lob. Agl. p. 479. Ajpike, v. sub épetxw. ‘pwo-hbyos, ov, talking in spring, rérrigé Hesych. jpivés, 7, dv, (Hp) éapivds, Solon 12. 19, Pind. P. 9. 82, Eur. Supp.. 448, Ar. Av. 683, Xen., etc.:—neut. Adv., in spring, yi 7’ dpe @adAovea Eur. Fr. 318. 3; bray hpiwa .. puri xedtdev Ar. Pax 800. Aplov, 76, a mound, barrow, tomb, monument, év@ dp’ *AxtAdeds ppdccaro Tarpékky péya jpioy Il. 23. 126; apla vextav, “Aidao Theocr, 2. 13, Nic. Fr. 21; eicaro Bopdv.., hpiov dppa yévorro C. I. 4284; cf. Epigr. Gr. 214. I., 574, al.; also in Prose, Dem. 1319. 27, Dinarch. 107. 16 (so Vales, for fepé), Lycurg. ap. Harp., Plut., ete.—Cf. Nike Opusc. p. 176. (Acc. to Harp. and others from épa, and in Anth. P. 7. 180 we have xara xOovds ijpia reDXoy ; but that it was a raised mound appears from Ap. Rh. 1. 1165, Call. Fr. 251, etc—It has the digamma in Hom.) pt-rdAy, 1), (wokéw) early-walking, then, like ijpryévea, the morn, dawn, Auth. P. 5. 228, 254. apt-oadmyé, cyyos, early-trumpeter, name of a bird, Hesych. aploripev, v. sub dpiorde. iiplotpov, 74, a spring-garment, formed like Oepiorptoy, Hesych. TPBEvas, Adv, part. pf. pass. of atpw, loftily, Poll. 9. 147. Tppoopéves, Ady. part. pf. pass. of dpudtw, fitly, Diod. 17. 19. , ypo-dvO.a, 7a, a feast of the Peloponnesian women at which they wore spring flowers, Phot.; jpoodvOeva in Hesych. typo-eAeyetov (sc. pérpov), 76, a distich, consisting of an hexameter and a pentameter, Gramm. jpotxés, 4, dv, in late Poets for #paxxds, Manetho 1.13, Epigr. Gr. 279. pra, v. sub dpapioxw A. \puyytov, 74, v. sub Apuyyos. ipvyyis, tos, 7, of or belonging to the hpvyyos, Nic. Al. 577. 0S, 7, a plant, the eringo, Nic. Th. 645, 849: more commonly as Dim., qpvyyov, 76, Theophr. H. P. 6. 1, 3 (ubi male #piyyior), Diosc. 3. 24, Plut. 2. 700 D:—also aptyyy, 7%, Plin. 22. 8, Phot. IL. Hpvyyos, 6, a goat's beard, Arist. H. A. 9. 3, 3. apie, v. sub éped-youar Il. HpuKdke, v. sub épvcw, je, poét. dat. sing. of pws: Fpw, gen. and acc. of same. Tpacov, 74, =7p@or, q. v. Hpo-tapBos, 6, a poém isting of h ters and iambi Tpwtlw, to write heroic verse or an epic poim, Eust. 4. 1. Hpwuds, 4, dv, of the heroes, kara tods hp. xpévous (Vv. Hpws I. 1) Arist. Pol. 3.14, 11; # xAaiva tp. pdpnya Id. Fr. 458, etc. 2. of or for a hero, heroic, pddov Plat. Crat. 398 E; dpery Arist. Eth. N. 7-1,1; tpwixd ppoveiy Luc. Amor. 20 ;—Adv. —xdis, like a hero, TeAev- Tay Diod.2.45; Comp. jpwixwrepoy, Theophyl. Cf. jpoikds. II. metrically, hp. orixos the heroic verse, the hexameter, Plat. Legg. 958 E; Hérpoy Arist. Poét. 24, 8; els THY hp. Taw enaydyew to bring into an Epic poem, Dem. 1391. 22. Hpotvy [7], 9, fem. of fpws, a heroine, Theocr. 13. 20., 26. 36, Calle Del, 161, Dion. P. 1022; contr. Apdvy, Ar. Nub. 315, Anth. P. app. 51. 55. 2. a deceased female (cf. jpws 11. 2), C. 1.2259. Fpawos, 7, ov, =Hpaxrkds, Suid. s. v. “Halodos. . Tpavos, a, ov, =%paukds, Pind, O. 13. 71, N. 7. 68 [with » short by position] : cf. #p@os. 6 se ee, 3 , Tzetz. pols, l5os, },=%Hpwlyn, Pind. P. 11. 13, Call, Fr. 126. II. as fem. of #pwikds, Ap. Rh. 1. 1048, Anth. P. 9. 504. 2. (sub. évvearnpis), a nine-yearly festival at Delphi, Plut. 2. 293 B. 3. of heroic verse, Christod. Ecphr. 419. Apotcoa, contr. }pGoca, =%hpwivy, Ap. Rh. 4. 1309, 1358, C. I. 1455. fpwo-yovia, 7), a poem of Hesiod (cf. @eoyovia), v. Procl. Chrest. p. 9. Typwo-ypados, ov, an Epic poet, Tzetz. Fipwo-Aoyéw, (Aéyw) fo tell of heroes, Strabo 508. Tpeo-Aoyla, %, a tale of heroes, Anaximand. ap. Ath. 498 B. ApSov, Ion. —wiov, rd, 1. (sub. fepéy or é50s) the temple or chapel of a hero, such as were dedicated to Adrastus, Hdt. 5. 67, cf. 47, Thuc. 2. 17, etc.; Onp@ov, i.e. 7d Ap@ov, Ar. Vesp. 819:—a form #pweov (cited by Hesych.) appears in C. I. 4278 a, 6, e, 4418, al. 2. (sub. Hérpov), an hexameter, Plut. Num. 4, etc. 8. hpda. (sc. fepa), 74, the festival of a hero, Id. 2. 811 D. TpGos, a, ov, contr. for #pdios (q.v.); 6 wp. (sc. pubpds), the heroic measure, hexameter, Plat. Rep. 400 B, cf. Arist. Rhet. 3. 8, 4; Hp. we tpov Id. Poét. 24,12; mods hp. the dactyl, Anth, P. 7. 9, etc. Hpws, 6, (also % in signf. 111): gen. #pwos (as a dactyl in Od. 6. 303), but in form #pw Dem. 419.22, Paus. 10.4, 10:—dat. fjpwi, mostly in form ip Il. 7. 453, Od. 8. 483, Ar. Av. 1485, Plat. Com. dev 2. 18, Orac. ap. Dem. 1072. 25 :—acc. fpwa Plat. Legg. 738 D, Dem. 288. 17 (as dactyl in Anth. P. append. 376), but inostly in form #pw, Plat. Rep. 391 D, Ap. Rh. 2. 766, etc.; also fpwy, Hdt. 1.167, Ar. Fr. 283 :— Plur., nom. fpwes, rarely contr. jpws, as in Ar. Fr. 283, dat. qpwow Aesch. Fr. §2: acc. ijpwas, rarely fjpws as in Id. Ag. 516, Luc. Dem. Enc. 4:—v. Lob, Phryn. 159. (Cf. Skt. viras, Lat. vir, Goth. vair, Lith. vyras.) In Hom. #jpws, hero, is a title of honour, given not only to warrior-chiefs, and above all to the Greeks before Troy (jjpwes Aavaol, *Axatol, Il. 2. 110., 19. 34, 41, 78); but to warriors generally (orixas dvipay tpwav Od. 1. or, etc.) ;—but also to men who had nothing to do with war or command, as in Od. 8. 483 to the minstrel Demodocus ; gin Od. 18, 423 to the herald Mulius (cf. Hdt. 7.134); nay, in Od. 7. Ws ret g caecca 656 , 44, the unwarlike Phaeacian people are so called:—so that jjpws was orig. applied to any freeman of the ante-Hellenic age (though chiefly even then to warriors), and Arist., Probl. 19. 48, is not quite accurate in saying of ayepudves TOv dpyatav pdvor Hoay Hpwes, of 5¢ Aaol dvOperror. —On the Heroie Age, v. Apollon. Lex. Hom. p.403 Toll., Serv. Virg. Aen. I. 200, Thirlw. Hist. Gr. 123 sq., Grote c. 2. 2. as the Heroic age gained dignity by antiquity, the heroes were exalted above the race of common men; there is a trace of this thought in Hom. himself, if Il. 12. 23 (where the heroes are called #pi0éwv -yévos avip@v) be genuine; v. Hes. Op. 170, where the Blessed Heroes are the Fourth Age of men, who fell before Thebes and Troy, and then passed to the Islands of the Blest. These must not be confounded with the daiuoves, who stood one step higher, between the Heroes and the Gods, cf. Hes, Op. 124, 154, Plat. Crat. 397 D, Legg. 738 D. 8. heroes, as objects of worship, first in Pind., who makes them a race between gods and men, demigods, #uideot, dyridex P. 1. 103., 4. 102; hpws Oeds N. 3. 38; cf. Aesch. Ag. 516, Fr. 49; (these and Eur. Fr. 449 are the only passages in which the word is used by Trag.) :—the term was first so used of such as were born from a god and a mortal, as Hercules, Aeneas, Memnon, Hdt. 2. 44, Pind. N. 3-37, etc.; then of such as were honoured for services done to mankind, as Daedalus, Triptolemus, Theseus, Simon. in Anth. Plan. 4. 84, etc. ; and of other notable persons of mythical times, as Sisyphus, Theogn. 711: —eois Hpwotv, as a transl. of the Roman Diis manibus, C. I. 3272. i. 4. later, the heroes are inferior local deities, patrons of tribes, cities, guilds, etc., as at Athens, the jpwes émavupor were the heroes after whom the pudat were named, Hat. 5. 66, Paus. 1. 5,1; and founders of a race or city (a4pynyérat, kricrat) were worshipped under this name, having small temples or chapels dedicated to them by the state (7jp@a) with offerings and festivals, but always distinct from the national gods, v. Hdt. 1. 167, 168, Thuc. 4. 87., 5. 30, Arist. Pol. 7.14, 2; oUre Oeous, 000” fpwas, ovr’ dvOpumovs Antipho 114. 20. 5. in the historic times, persons who had done great services to a state were honoured in like manner, as Brasidas at Amphipolis, Thuc. 5. 11; sometimes enemies who had been slain, by way of propitiation, as Onesilus at Amathiis in Cyprus, Hat. 5. 105, cf. 7. 117 :—hence late Greek writers used jjpws to express the Lat. divus, Dio C. 56. 41. II. in late Greek, also, for paxapirns, the late, the deceased, Alciphro 3. 37, Heliod. 7. 13; often in Inscrr., fjpws xpnoré, xaipe C. 1. 1723, 1781-83; even of women, 1784-89 ; cf. jpwlyn 2. IIL. Hpws rokiros =orTryparias, Hesych., Phot. IV. Bods fpws, = co ne C. 1.1688. 32. ipooca, , = hpwlvn, Ap. Rh. 4. 1309, etc., Anth. P. 6. 225. Fpe-dpos, ov, bearing heroes, E. M. 230. 40. 2. Dor. 3 sing. impf. of elyé (sum), Theocr. 5. 10 ;—also 3 pl., Epich. Sy Dor. for one, Theocr. 11. 33. aor. I of dw: but, II. fea, aor. 1 of 75a. prov, Att. for 7decay, 3 pl. plqpf. (used as impf.) of ofa, Aesch. Pr. 451, Eur, Cycl. 231. Il. for #icay, 3 pl. impf. of ef (ibo), rare and only poét., in compd. émpoav Od. 19. 445; elojoay Agath. ap. E. M.; perpoav Ar. Eq. 605, , ¥. sub #dopat. Aeol. and Att. for #s, 2 sing. impf. of eiui (sum) :—the form js only in late Prose; for #s, in Anacr. 7, should be 406’. HoOnpa, 76, (HBouat)=H5or7, Eupol. Anu. 45. q7npéevws, Ady. part. pf. pass. of aicBdvopat, with a sense or feeling, vivos Kus. H. E. to. 9, fin. bk (inus) throwing words, i.e. a babbler, E. M. 669. 7. otodos, 6, Hesiod: in Boeot. Inscr. Eiciodos, v. Ahr. D. D. p. 152. Fors, ews, }, (jdouar) delight, Suid. joke, for Hoxeer, 3 sing. impf. of doxéw, Il. 3. 388. joknpévws, Ady. part. pf. pass. of dowéw, Poll. 1. 157. opev, Att. for fdepyer, v. sub *eidw. jn0, v. sub Hua. jooa, in later Att. Frra, 75, 9, a defeat, discomfiture, opp. to vixn, huc, 5. 13., 7.72, Plat. Legg. 638 B; woAépov in war, Id. Lach, 196 A; a... Todépou Kat dixay Kal dé-yopav Aeschin. 69. 16, cf. Plut. 2.840D; atl mpocteaOat to let oneself be conquered, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 45:— ¢. gen. rei, a yielding or giving way toa —_ jSovav, emOupidy Plat. Legg. 869 E; % év rovovros Dem. 1486. 3; # i190 rOv Aurapoty- Tov HrTa Plut. Brut. 6. begs i heccts Be oodopat, Att. hrr-, Soph., Thuc.: fut. 70 agopxa: Eur. Hipp. 727, oe #rr— Lys. 161. 3, Xen. Cyr. 3. 3, 42; but fut. med, Qrrhcopar in pass. sense, Lys, 161. 4., 180. 19, Xen. An. 2. 3, 23: aor. HoonOnv Eur., etc.: pf. foonpuat Soph., etc. :—in Ion. we find the form érodopat, part. écootpevos Hat. 1. 82; impf. ésgotro (without augm.) 7. 166., 8. 75: aor. écouOny 2. 169, etc.: pf. Erowpat 7. 9, 2., 8. 130:—Pass.: (fo- gov). To be less or weaker than another, to be unequal or inferior to him, c. gen. pers., Eur. Alc. 697, Ion 1117; ¢, gen. pers. et part., GoGat tivos eb movodvros Xen. An. 3. 2, 23, cf. Cyr. 5. 4, 323 #r7a- obat rivés Tit or &y Tim in a thing, Ib. 3. 3, 42., 8. 2, 13, ctc.; also c. gen. rei, Hoo. phuaros to yield to the power of a word, Thuc. 5. 111, cf. Lys. 180. 19, 28; ee c. neut. Adj. in oe. é hn eee he had ed inferior, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 5- . as a real Pass, to be Diet daoatak worsted, beaten, ind, ros Hat. 3. 106, Andoc. 32. 40, Thuc. 2. 39; in’ éparros, bm’ éxOpas Plat. Phaedr. 233C, Polit. 305 C, etc.; mpds Tivos Hdt. 9. 122; apés 71 Plat. Legg. 650 A; but also c. gen, ers., Eur. Hec. 1252, Ar. Av. 70, etc.:—c. dat. modi, #ocao@a Haxy Hat. 5. 46, etc.; To’s bAos Dem. 127. 21, etc.; also c. acc., waxy 4. 53 dyava Dio C. 63. 9—hoo. Te upd to be m in spirit, Hdt. 8.130; éocaBévres TH yroHN pos Kupov ld. 9. jpocca — HOVX Ij. absol., of joodpevory opp. to of xparobyres, Aesch. Theb. 516, cf. Soph. Aj. 1242, Hdt. 7. 9, 2. 3. as law-term, /o be bealen in a suit, Lat. causa cadere, Soph. Aj. 1242, Ar. Pl. 482, and Oratt.; #77. év rots duca- aornptows Xen, Mem. 4. 4,17; Sixnv, wapaypapyy Plat. Legg. 880 C, Dem. 1117. 5. 4. in Att. often, fo give way or yield, c. gen. (like focov 11), of picavres Haodvra réxvaw Soph. Fr. 674, cf. Eur. Hipp. 976 :—to give way or be a slave to passion and the like, vndvos Hoonpevos Id. Fr. 284.5; 700 mapévros Sevou Thuc. 4. 373 Ta poBow Plat. Legg. 635 D; ray j5ovav Xen. Ages. 5,1; mvov Id. Cyr. 1.5, 113 xpywatov Lys. 180. 19; and often Epwros, Eur., etc. (also bm’ Epwros, etc., v. supr.); c. gen. pers. fo be in love with .. , Plut. 2. 771 F :—then of other things, arr. bdaros Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 5; Tod Sieaiov Ib. 4. 31; Tis adndeias Dem. 317.10; 70 pt) dikavov rhs Sixns joonpévoy Eur. Ion 1117; 7d dixaroy Arr. ToD POdvov Dem. 792. 25. 5. c. dat. to be overcome by .., dxohs Adovp hocwpevor Thuc. 3. 38, cf. 7.25; TO Urvy Acl. N. A. 13.22; Tots datos Plut. Cato Mi. 16. II. the Act. #rrdw, to beat down, weaken, is used in late Prose, fut. -fow Theod. Prodr. 5.1745 aor. #rrnoa Polyb. 1. 75, 3+. 3-18, 53 pf. ir7nea Diod. 15. 87. fjoontéos, a, ov, neut. pl. goanréa, verb. Adj. one must be beaten, yuvaixds by a woman, Soph, Ant. 678, cf. Ar. Lys. 450. jjoobves, Ady. of sq., Joseph. A. J. 19. 1, 15. jsowv, ocov, gen. ovos: Att. Httwv: Ion. €rowy Hdt.: Comp. of xaxds or puxpds (but formed from 7«a, softly, so that the orig. form was Hie or Reyov, with Sup. Hxo7os, q. v.): I. c. gen. pers. dess, lower, meaner, inferior; esp. in force, weaker, less brave, Hom., etc. ; aid’ Scov jacwy cipl récov a€o péprepos einy Il. 16. 722; of horses, 23. 322, al.; popn eocoves Tay TMepoéwy Hat. 8. 113, cf. 9. 62; -yuvaukaw jjocoves Soph, Ant. 680; Kumpidos Eur. Andr. 631; €is vt in a thing, Hdt. 3. 102; c. inf. modi, €scwy tuwds Oeiv not so good at running, Ib. 105; obdevds joocwv yvGva ‘second to none’ in judging, Thuc. 2. 60; inmevew Hoowy Tey HAixwy inferior to them in riding, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 15. 2. absol., of jacoves the weaker party, Aesch. Supp. 203, 489 ; Haocous yevécGae to have the worst of it, Thuc. 4. 72; 7a Tv HrTdver the fortunes of the vanquished, Xen. An. 5. 6, 32; ¢. dat. modi, éocov vavpaxin Hdt. 5.86; also c. acc. modi, Tov voy HrTwy Soph. El. 1023, ef, Xen, Cyr. 1. 4, 4:—so of things, tov frrw Adyoy xpeltTw ToLELV ‘to make the worse appear the better reason,’ Plat. Apol. 18 B, cf. Ar. Nub. 114; and in pl., of #rrovs Adyor Ib. 1042, Isocr. 313 B:—7rd Hrrov rit vépew Eur. Supp. 379; 7d Alay Hocoy, opp. to 7d dyav, Id. Hipp. 264. II. c. gen. rei, giving way or yielding to a thing, a slave to.., Tod Tod Epwros Soph. Tr. 489; Tay algxpay Id, Ant. 7473 Spyis Id. Fr. 668; yauow Eur. I. A. 1354; «épdous Ar. Pl. 363 ; ydovav Plat. Prot. 353 C; yaorpds 4 otvou appodiciay 7) mévou i} imvov Xen, Mem. 1. 5,1; xpy“drwv Theopomp. Hist. ap. Ath. 252C: —then generally, yielding to, unable to resist, Tob mempapevou Eur. Hel. 1660; vécev xa? ynpws Lys. 198. 5; of #rrous Tav move [immo] Xen. Eq. Mag. 1, 3; cf. yoadopa 1. 4. III. neut. Racor, Arrov, as Ady., less, dAvyov 5€ ri pw Recor ériva Od. 15. 365; Hoody Te Thuc. 3. 753 Hocov érépwv Id. 1, 84 :—mostly with Verbs, but also with Adjs. dap:- oroxpatia .. ai pev paddov, ai 58 Arrov pdvipot Arist. Pol. 5. 7, 6, cf. Meteor. 1. 3, 20; even with a Comp., #rrov duptBéorepoy Id. Probl. 31. 2; rrov evAnmrorépa Dion. H. 3. 43 :—often with a negat., obx Fagor, ov Hacov, not the less, not a whit less, just as much, Aesch. Cho. 181, 708, Soph. Aj. 672, 1329, Thuc. 1. 8, etc. :—for “@AAov «al 7TTOY, Y. sub yada Ir. 6 and 7. ere, Att. for 7dere, v. sub *eiSw. Horhy, for #rnv, 3 dual impf. of eal (sum). nem, for 75eirny, v. sub *eidw, HotuKos, 4, dv, (Sonat) pleasing, agreeable, Sext, Emp. M. 6. 33. Ady. —x@s, Id. M. 10, 225. fierov, for jrov, 2 dual impf. of eipi (sum). jorés, 7, éy, verb. Adj. of #5opat, glad, Suid., Hesych. Jetwca, aor. 1 of dictéw, Soph. Aj. 515. Hovxa, adverbial neut. pl. of Havxos, q. v. Hotxalw: fut.—dow, Thuc. 2. 84, -dcoua: Luc. Gall. 4: aor. favyica: (qovxos). To be still, heep quiet, be at rest, ov 8 havxaCe Aesch. Pr. 327; 34439 dropia Tod py havxaCerv the difficulty of Jinding rest, Thuc. 2. 493 of moA€utor HovxaCov Xen. An. 5. 4, 16; Tods vépous ovK ea houxacay ev ripwpiais Luc. Abd. 19; %c. mpos Gupay, of a lover, Anth. P. 5. 167:—often in part., jovydwy mpocpévw Soph. O. T. 620, cf. Eur. Or. 134; hore ph hovxacaca aignbjvat by resting from war, Thue. 1. 12; Hovxalovody ray ved Id. 1. 49 ; uddus hovxdoayres Id. 8. 86; houxatovoay ri bidvoay éxew Isocr. 87 B; 7d hovxacoy ris vuKrds the dead of night, Thuc. 7. 83:—#o. dwé rivos to keep away from.., Anth, P. 5. 133 :—dAA’ Hovxace only be tranquil, calm thyself, Eur. H. F. 98, 1. A. 973- II. Causal in aor. 1, 40 make still, lay to rest, opp. to «véw, Plat. Rep. 572 A:—Pass. in impers. sense, jovxaterar ent THs-yNs there is quiet, LXX (Job. 37. 16). " Hoixates, Dor. dovy-, a, ov, post. for favxos, Soph. O. C. 197, Eur. Med. 808, Plat. Polit. 307 A, Legg. 775 C:—r0 havxaiov quietness, inactivity, Soph. Fr. 678.6; or the quiet sort of people, Ib, 556. Aetxatrepos, -TaTos, itreg. Comp. and Sup. of qavxos. Aouxdve, = jovxa tw, Charito 1. 14. youxaoreov, verb. Adj. one must keep quiet, Philo 1. 2. XaoTe0s, a, ov, to be kept secret, unsaid, ld. 2. 5. Hovxaorh plov, 76, the retreat of an javyacrns, Byz. > ala ag ei hermit, Eccl.: fem. qouxaorpia, a nun, Ib. qovyactikés, 7, dv, quieting, Aristid. Quint, p, 43. hi hermit, Boel. 7), OV, J ig, Aristid. Quint. p. 43 Il. like a 2. jov- wopny Thue, 6. 72; hoo. mepi tr Plat. Soph. 239 B:— 4, fotix#, Dor. dovya, Adv. stilly, quietly, softly, gently, Pind. P.11.84, yovXia — HXETHS. etc.; Ho. karaxetobat Ar. Pl. 6923 perépxecdai 7 Eur. Hipp. 444; Havx7 keep quiet, Plat. Hipp. Ma. 298 C; io. éxe 77)v obpay to keep it stiJl, Xen. Cyn. 3, 4; Ho. yeAaoa: Plat. Phaedo 115 C; Badicer, ypapey, diaréyerOat, etc., Plat. Charm. 159 B, C, etc.; Ho. dvapepvh- axec@a to recollect quietly, at one’s ease, Aeschin. 33. 1; edoeBety Eur. . Fr. 288. 9. 2. by stealth, secretly, Plut. Alcib. 24, cf. Thue. 8. 69, and v. Havxos. 8. with an Adj. slightly, jo. Enpds Hipp. 1132 H; ypumds Ael. N. A. 3. 28. Fovxla, Ion, -in, Dor. dovxia, %, stillness, rest, quiet, ease, as opp. to motion, noise, labour, etc., Od. 18. 22; personified in Pind. P. 8.1, Ar. Av. 1321; often in Hdt. and Att.:—c. gen. objecti, #0. ris moAcopxins rest from.., Hdt. 6. 135; Tis jdovijs Plat. Rep. 583 E; rod Aumei- ca Ib. C; % dd ris elpnyns he. rest consequent upon the peace, Dem. 63. 10; in pl, Plat. Theaet. 153 C. 2. silence, stillness, Eur. Alc. 77- 8. with Preps., 5: javxins eivat to keep quiet, Hdt. 1. 206: —éy jovxia in quiet, opp. to év todéum, Thuc, 3.12; ey fo. exew Te to keep it quiet, not speak of it, Hdt. 5. 92, 3; év 4a. éxew éavrdv Ib. 933 & ho. darpiBew Hdn. 2. 5 :—颒 jovyias Ar. Vesp. 1517; pévew ént hovxig Hdn. :—xar’ jovxiny woAAHY quite at one’s ease, Hdt. 1. 9., 7. 208, Dem.; xa6’ jovxlav at leisure, Ar. Lys, 1224, Thuc. 3. 48, etc.; opp. to dd omovbis Xen. Hell. 6, 2, 23:—pe6" Hovxlas quietly, Eur. Hipp. 205. 4. with Verbs, a. hovxtav dyew to keep quiet, be at peace or at rest, Hdt. 1. 66., 7. 150, Plat., etc.; pds twa with one, Lys. 180. 11; bmép revos about a thing, Isocr. 217 D; mrfoewv from movements, Plat. Tim. 89 E :—also fo keep silent, Hdt. 5.92, Eur. Andr. 143, Ar. Ran, 321 ;—rarely, tiv Hovxtay dyev Ellendt Arr. 1. 14, 8. b. jouxiay éxew=Ho. ayew, but generally implying less continuance, Hdt. 2. 45., 7. 150,\Att.: to stand still, Xen, Hell. 3. 2, 133 ho. éxew mpds twa Lys. 180.10: to keep silent, Isocr. 116 A; 7a Seva about them, Dem. 1341. 5. II. solitude, a sequestered place, h, Hom. Merc, 356, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 21. houxibas, 6, = Hovyxos, Synes. Hymn. 8. 31. jar Dor. dovx-, ov, =iavxos, dpepa Pind. O. 2. 58. bxtos [J], Dor. dovx-, ov,=fovyos, still, quiet, at rest, at ease, Hob x.ov F dpa juv wodépou Exmepme Il. 21.598; eipdva Pind. P. 9. 40: also in Prose, rpdmov jovxtov of a quiet disposition, Hdt. 1.107; 008 Ho. 5 o&ppov Bios Plat. Charm. 160 B; 7d Ho. HOos Id. Rep. 604 E; of Hodxiot Antipho 121, 12, Plat. Charm. 159 B; 7d jodxeov ris eiphyns Thuc. 1.120. Adv. -iws, h, Hom. Merc. 438, Plat. Theaet. 179 E. Fovx.d7ys, Tos, 4}, =1Hovxia, Plat. Charm. 159 B, sq.; ho. Twds his quiet disposition, Lys. 175. 27. doar, Pass. to keep quiet, be at rest, cited from Lxx. jtxos, Dor. ruxos, ov, (v. sub fin.):—like #ovxeos, still, quiet, at rest, at ease, at leisure, opp. to moving, talking, labouring, etc., jo. dvorpéperar Hes. Th. 763; Hlovxot epya vénovro Id. Op. 119; fo. .. 65dv épxeo go thy way in peace, Theogn. 331; fa. xadevdew Anacr. 88; ho. Oaxeiv, Odocev, xa0fc0a Soph. Aj. 325, Eur. Hec. 35, etc. ; Hovyxot éore Hat. 7. 13, cf. 1. 88; €x’ Hovxos keep quiet, keep still, Id. 8. 65, Eur. Med. 550; pév’ fio. Ar. Av. 1199, Thesm. 925; yiyvecde Eur. Cycl. 94, cf. Bacch. 1361; xareOedro Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 55; hovxe modi xwpeiv Eur. Or. 136; jovxy Bac ppevay, i.e. in thought, Aesch. Cho. 452; fo. Aaxeiv Eur. Hec. 1109; év jodx@ quietly, Soph. O. C.82; Hjovxos Sopt inactive with it, Eur. Incert. 63. 2. quiet, gentle, of character, Aesch. Eum, 223, Eur. Supp. 952, etc.; rods dd’ javxou Todds those of quiet life, Id. Med. 217; duparos map’ yo. Aesch. Supp. 199 ; yAdooa Soph. Ant. 1089; dpyp imddes fovxov mé6a moderate thy wrath, Eur. Bacch. 647; 70 ¢dvnes fjovyxor their accustomed quietness, Thuc. 6. 34; tjovxairepa more gentle, less severe, Id. 3. 82:—also cautious, Eur. Or. 1407, Supp. 509. II. the common Att. Comp. and Sup. were jovxairepos, —airaros, as in Aesch. Eum. 223, Thuc. 3. 82, Plat. Phileb.24C, Xen. Cyr.1.4,4,, 6. 2,123 but the regular form —wrepos is also found, Soph. Ant. 1089, Plat. Charm. 160 A. III. Adv. —xws, Aesch. Supp. 724; Kdpr’ dy xov jatyos Eur. Supp. 305; Ho. valew Id. Heracl. 7: gently, cautiously, Id. Or. 698, Xen. Cyr. 5. 3, 53, etc. -— Ion. Comp. jovxéorepoy Hipp. 338. 12, 50; Sup. jovyairara Plat. Charm. 160 A.—The neut. #avxov, Dor. dovyoy, is also used as Adv., Theocr.14.27; and pl. dovxa, Id. 2.11, 100., 6.12; like jouxq. (Acc. to Benfey from , huat, settled, quiet, cf, Lat. sedatus.) Arhadtopévws, Adv. part. pf. pass. of dopadttw, securely, Eccl. oXuppevos, v. sub alcxvvw. ra, 70, the letter n, Hipp. V. C. 895; v. sub Hy. te, or also, Il. 19. 148; Buttm. Lexil. s. v. edre 3. re, or, as Wolf in Hom., 4 re surely, doubtless; v. sub 7. Te, yTHV, Att. 2 pl. and 3 dual of ele (bo). nTipwpévws, Ady, part. pf. pass. of dridw, dishonourably, Eccl. Aro: I.=7 rot, now surely, truly, verily, a Particle often used in Ep., properly to confirm a statement, Il. 6. 56 (v. 1. 9 cor), h. Hom. Merc, 368; but often merely in passing from one clause to another; also to begin the apodosis, #rox pév (after Ste), then indeed, Il. 3. 213; after GAA’ ef .. , nevertheless, 16. 641.—Properly it begins the sentence, Hro by ds elmdy Il. 2. 76, etc.;—yet Hom. often puts it affer one or more words; after a Pronoun, tiv Hrow 2. 813; Tov Hroe 4. 237; THs Hrot Od. 12. 86; in which case 5é may be inserted, of 3 #roc Il, 12. 141, etc.; or fa, as, rév p’ Hroe 18. 237 ;—after a Conjunct., GAA’ Hroe 1. 140, etc.; €6’ Hroe 16. 399, Od. 3. 126, etc.; Opp’ ror Il. 23. 52, Od. 3. 419; os roe 5. 24; more rarely, kal viv row, vdv 8 jro 4-151, ll. 19. 23, Herm. h, Hom. Ven. 226. 2. in Gramm. with an exegetical sense, like #youv, Lat. scilicet, when it is better written # Tot. Il.=% Tot, either in truth, properly #ro .. , H, as in Aesch, Cho. 497, Soph, Ant, 1142, Tr. 150, Plat. Phaedo 68 C, Cte. 5 op 657 often also #ro..ye,..# .. Hdt. 1. 11, etc., cf. Thuc. 2. 40, etc.:—the re- verse form #) .., #70 .., is rejected by Apollon, in A.B, 486, but occurs in Pind. N. 6.8, Fr. 103 :—also #ro.., # Tot .., for #.., #.., in late authors as Galen., cf. Schiif. Greg. Cor. p. 643. Arop, 76, in Hom, always in nom. or acc.; dat. #rope Simon. 44.6 (v. 1. 9062). The heart as a part of the body, only in ll. 22. 452, év éuot airy ornbeot madera: Hrop ava ordpa my heart beats up to my throat: —then, as the seat of life, life, pirov H. dd€ooa Il. 5. 250, etc.; AvTO yoivara Kat pidroy H. 21. 114, etc.; avéyuxov pidov F. 13. 84 :—then, most freq., as the seat of feeling, as we say the heart, much like @upds (q. v.), @yéAaaae 5€é of pidov - 21. 389; KkaremAnyn pidoy 7H. 3. 313 axet BeBoAnpévos 7H. 9.9; mivbOe 5€ por evdo0er 7. Od, 4. 467, etc.:— also as the seat of the desires, morijros dcacOat pidov $ Il. 19. 307; nodéovea pidov kararnxopat 7. Od. 19. 136; of the reasoning powers, év 5é of 7. orndecow .. didvicxa pepynpiger Il. 1. 188, cf. 15. 252.— That Hom. regarded it as something tangible and corporeal, appears from the passages, which represent the #rop as placed év or7Oecr; in Il. 20. 169 it is placed év xpadip, which here must have a wider sense, though Hom, generally uses it just=qrop.—Ep. Noun, used also by Simon. and Pind., and in a chorus of Aesch. Pers. 992. Arpratos, a, ov, (Arpov) of the stomack, Com, Anon. 316, Luc, Lexiph, 6: 70 qrpiaiov the stomach, paunch, Ar. Fr. 302; also Arprala, 7, itd 421, Ath. 4C, HTpLov, Dor. drprov, 746, the warp in a web of cloth (the woof being xpxn), Plat. Phaedr. 268 A, Theoer. 18. 33, Anth. P. 6. 288 :—in pl. a thin, fine cloth, such that one could see between the threads, #rpia mén- Aww Eur. Ion 1421; #rpia BUBAwv leaves made of strips of papyrus joined cross-wise, Anth. P. g. 350. (Prob. from 4/F HT, cf, Skt. va, vayami (to weave); cf. also drr-opat, d-a¢-oua, di-ac-pa.) Atpov, 76, the part below the navel, the abdomen, Hipp. Aph. 1245, Plat. Phaedo 118 A, Xen. An. 4.7, 15, Dem, 1260. 23, Arist. H. A. 1. 13, 1: metaph. of a pot, Ar. Thesm. 509. II. the pith of a reed, Nic. Th, 595. TTA, rTdopar, Hrd, Hrrav, Att. for Hoo-. rrpa, 75, LXXx (Isai. 31.9), I Ep. Cor. 6, 7:—so Hrtqors, 77, Suid. Tw, for €oTw, 3 sing. imperat. of eipl, N, T.; dub. in Plat. Fv-yeveros, —yevijs, —Kdpyvos, -Kowos, —trupyos, etc,, Ep, and Lyr. ed-. wEnpéves, Ady. part. pf. pass., cited from Eust. hee, neut. 70, Ep. for éis, good, brave: Hom. uses only masc. nom. and acc. qs, 7dv, neut. nom, and acc. #4; in phrase qs Te pé-yas Te Ll. 2. 653, etc.; 7ds Ocpdmawv 16. 464,653; wévos qu 17. 456, etc. wore [0], 3 sing. aor. I of aiw. mre, Ep. Particle, as, like as, ire kodpn HU. 2.872, etc.; often in Hom. in similes for ds bre, Il. 1. 359,, 2,87, etc. :—in Il. 4.277 after a Comp., T@ 5€ 7° Gvevdev tbvre peddvTepoy ire wicca paivera [the cloud] ap- pears to him while afar off blacker, even as pitch, v.Schol., and cf, raxe- tos; so also in Ap. Rh. 1. 269, qjUre may retain its common sense; though in both these places it is commonly taken as=%, blacker than pitch, v. Spitzn. Exc. Il, xxvii—That jére cannot be put for ede is proved by Buttm, Lexil. v. etre, qvre; but ere is once found for HUE, Il. 3. 10 (and v. 1. 19. 386), in which case Buttm. would write it contr. nore [—u], as he is inclined to do also in Od. 16. 216. niropiiriopéves, Ady. part. pf. pass. of free will, Procl. 5. p. 78 Cousin. *vXopos, ov, Ep. for ebxopos, with fair dances, Auth. P. app. 217. 7. “Hpatoreios, a, ov, of or belonging to Hephaestus: ‘Hpaioretov or ‘Hpaioreoy (sc. fepdv), 76, temple of Hephaestus, Hdt. 2. 110, 121, 176, Dem., etc.:—‘Hpaiorea (sc. lepd), Ta, his festival, the Lat. Vulcanalia, Andoc. 17. 20, Xen, Ath. 3, 4. “Hoatoré-rovos, ov, wrought by Hephaestus, Sada Eur. 1. A. 1072. "Hoavoros, ov, 6, Hephaestus, Lat. Vulcanus, son of Zeus and Hera, lame from birth, Il, 18. 397 (cf. dupeyunes, qmedavds) ; god of fire as used in art, and master of all the arts which need the aid of fire, esp. of working in metal: hence, he makes the thrones of the gods, the sceptre of Zeus, the Aegis, the arms of Achilles, etc.; all works in metal are called his works, Il. 8. 195, Od. 4. 617, Hes. Sc. 123, etc.; fire is pAdg “Hpaloroo Il. 17. 88; and he himself is xAvroepyds, kAvToTéxyns or xaAxevs, 15. 309.—For his ill-starred marriage with Aphrodité, v. Od. 8. 267 sq. II. meton. for wip, fire, Il. 2. 426, Soph. Ant. 123, 1007, Poéta ap. E.M. 241.57. (Perhaps from 4/A®, which appears in dnrw, to kindle fire.) : ‘Hoaoré-revx tos, ov, wrought by Hephaestus, oédas Soph. Ph. 987, cf. Simon, 206, Antim. 9, Diog. L. 1. 32 :—also “Hoatoro-reuy‘js, és, 5éras Aesch, Fr, 66, where Herm. ‘Hpaororixés, metri grat. pt, Ep. - fi, Il. 22. 107. — Le, aptouv, Adierav, v. sub dpinu. bag panne in a gl. of Suid., not found in the best Mss. (Cf. axny, Lat. egeo, egenus.) Akers, evoa, ev, poet. for 7xHe1s, mentioned by Hdn. m. poy. Ag. p. 14. 17, and restored in Archil. 69, for 7xNevTa. x Axetov, 7d, (7x0) a kind of loud hettle-drum or gong, like xaA«etov or Tupmavov, Plut. Crass. 23, Apollod. ap. Schol. Theocr, 2, 36; also 7xefov épyavov, Philo 1. 588 :—vessels of like kind were Jet into the walls of the theatre, to strengthen the sound, Vitruv.; or, to imitate the noise of thunder, Schol, Ar. Nub. 292. II. in the lyre, =xdAxqpa, ap- parently a metallic sounding-plate, Hesych. : 4axems, ov, 6, Ep. Axérd, Dor. dxéras, dxér&: (Fxéw) :—elear-sound- ing, musical, shrill, Aivos Pind. Fr. 103* ed. Donalds.; ddvag dxéras Aesch. Pr. 575; «vxvos Eur. El. 151:—as epith. of the grasshopper, chirping, ixéra rérri€ Hes. Op. 580, Anth. P.7. 201; dxéra 7. Ib. 2133 and absol., dxéras, 6, the chirper, i.e. the male or aha Anan. I, u 658 Ar. Pax 1159, Av. 1095, cf. Arist. H. A. 4. 7, 13., 5. 30, 2!:—Orph. Arg. 1256 has heterocl. acc. jxéra mopOpdy, the sounding strait. _ xéo, Dor. axéw [a]: fut. fow: I. intr. to sound, ring, peal, axet 58 apn .. Odvpmov Hes, Th, 42; Stay 4xqon wodtds Bvdds Mosch. 5. 43; often of metal, qxeoxe (Ion. impf.) 6 xadnds Tis domidos Hat. 4. 200; dxovow mpowddwv xépes Eur. Supp. 72; 72 xadneia mAnyévra paxpoy 7xet Plat. Prot. 329 A, cf. Menand. ‘App. 3; of the grasshopper, to chirp, Theocr. 16. 96; of the lyre, Ar. Thesm. 327 on Ti Hxe 51d. ri Eupatverat ; impers. of an echo, Arist. An. Post. 2.15, 1. II. c, acc. cogn., dxeiy (al. iaxeiv) Hpvor to let it sound, Aesch. Theb. 868; konurdév Soph. Tr. 866; -yéous Id. Fr. 469; péAos Eur. Ion 883; xadxiov dxet sound the cymbal, Theocr. 2. 36:—Med., dxefa6ai twa to sound his praises, Pind. Fr. 45. 18 :—Pass., #xefrae ervmos a sound is made, Soph. O. C. 1500.—The Trag. used the Dor. forms dyxeiv, axa, dxnpya even in anapaestics: these forms have been constantly changed by the Copyists into iayxeiv, iaxd, i4xnpa, Elmsl. Eur, Heracl.'752, Dind. Ar, Thesm. 327: v. sub laxéw. 4X1, Dor. 4x4, %, a sound or noise of any sort, Hom., Att.; of the confused noise of a crowd, Il. 13. 837; the roar of the sea, 2. 209; of trees in a wind, 16. 769; of a falling rock, Hes. Sc. 438; often in dat., Xf} with a noise, Il. 2. 209; XD Ceomealy 8. 159, etc.; in Trag., like ‘axh, a cry of sorrow, wail, Aesch. Theb, 915, etc.; but, oéAmyyos 7x7 Eur. Phoen. 1387; éy éyol 4 7x7) TOv Adyov BopBet Plat. Crito 54 D, cf. Tim. 37 B:—of the grasshopper, Long. 1. 23 :—rarely of articulate sounds, Eur. Phoen. 1148, Plut. Cato Ma. 22, Opp. C. 1. 23. Cf. #xos. “For the confusion of dya and iayd, v. #xéw fin. Axtets, coca, ev, sounding, ringing, roaring, 0édagca Il.1.157; 54- para hxnhevra high, echoing rooms or halls, Od. 4.72; ddpoe hyxnevres Hes. Th. 767; xadxds Ap. Rh. 1.1236; Opdos addAwy Poéta ap. Plut. 2. 654 F; térmgé Anth. P. 7. 196:—of the ears, Parmen. ap. Diog. L. 9. 32: and v. sub 9xéeIs. 4xnpo, Dor. dx-, 7d, a sound, sounding, Philo 1. 4443 pedrwia axf- para Eur. 1. A. 1045; vulg. iaxnuara, v. 7xéw fin, fives, of, =mraxot, Hesych.; cf. dxf. XNTLS, Ews, 7, a sounding, sound, Eccl, ATH, OD, 6, =HXxETNS, Hesych. TUKOS, 7, Ov, ringing, E, M.216.50. Ady.—«@s, Hesych.s.v. kavay 754. ‘o, impf. of dx@opar, 2. impf. pass. of €x@w. t (not 4Xt), Ep. for 7, Adv. where, Hom.; Axi wep, xt Te Dion. P. xucds, 4, dv, (AXOS) =7xNTUGS, Epigr. in Welck. Syll. 236. 4. ‘ous, 5, }, mouv, 75, Lat. sonipes, of horses, Eust. 918. 20. os, 6, later form of 4x7, Arist. Audib. 67, al., Theocr. 27. 56; mayas Mosch. 5.12; avdod Ib. 2. 98; THs parts 6 Hxos év rats dxoais mapa- péver Luc. Nigr. 7; distinguished from pov7 by Plut. 2. 903 A :—ijxos év doi, or absol. #x0t, HXOS, a ringing in the ears, Hipp. Coac. 149, Prorrh. 68. 2. echo, Arist. Probl. 11. 8; mévre fxous dmepyaCeabae Plut. 2. 903 A. AX, Dor. 4x@: H: gen. (7)x40s) Hxo0s, Dor. dxas Mosch.6.1: acc. 7x, Dor. adxw Ib. 3. Like 4x4, Hxos, a sound, noise, but properly of a returned sound, echo, h. Hom. 18. 21, Hes. Sc. 279, 384, Trag., etc.: personified in Ar. Thesm. 1059 (‘Hx&, Adyar dvtwbds émoxnacrpia), Paus. 2. 35, 10:—in later legends represented as an Oread who repeated os Hedyl. ap. ] ed in oF forms, unless in Pind. N. 6. 88 (where Boéckh restores Aods) :—Att. €ws, =| by paar (splendens), ushasé (aurora); Lat.aurora (peth,for ausosa); Axe — Oaxos. Thuc. 2, 90., 4.72 :—mpd Ths ew Id. 4.31; Ep. 400 mpé Il. 11. 50, Od. 5. 469., 6. 36:—emt Thy Ew Thuc. 2. 84:—els Thy émoveay €w Xen. An. I. 7,13 &¢ 4@ to-morrow, Theocr. 18. 14. 2. since the Greeks counted their days by mornings, as reversely the old Germans and Scan- dinavians by nights, jas often denoted a day, ul. I. 493-5 I 3. 794, 24. 31, 413, 781, Od. 19. 1923 has 5€ pot éorw Ade Svwdexdrn, bre .. Il. 21. 80; hence, xarhiev és Svorv 7s Musac. 109; peoarn jaws Orph. Arg. 652; though in Hom. it never so entirely passed into the sense of juap:—metaph. for life, Q. Sm. 10. 4315 pws Atmes jovs C. L 6258. 3. sometimes also the East, Hom. (v. sub #Atos) ; dard zoids mpos éoxépyy Hat. 2. 8; 7a mpds ri) 7@ Ibid ; 70 mpds tiv €w (sic) Id. 4. 40, cf. Plat. Legg. 760 D, etc. ; mpds &w ris woAEws, TOD ToTapod to the East of .. , Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 49, Plut. Lucull. 27. II. as prop. n. "Has, Eos, Aurora, the goddess of morn, who rises out of ocean from the bed of her spouse Tithonos, Il. 11.1, cf. Eur. I, A. 158 :—ace. to Hes. Th. 372, she is daughter of Hyperion and Theia ; mother of Zephyrus, Notus, and Boreas, Ib, 377+ 8 O, 0, O4ra, 7, indecl., eighth letter of the Gr. alphabet: as numeral & =évvéa, évartos, but 8 =go00. I. 6 is the aspirated dental mute, related to the tenuis 7 and the medial 6. In the Indo-Furop. languages, the Gr. 0, Skt. dh, =Goth., O.Norse, and A.S. d, =O. H. Germ. t:—as Oapaéw, S. dharsh, dhrishnémi (audeo) = Goth. ga-daursan (Bap- peiv), =O. H.G. gi-tar; 0¢, ri-Onut, S. dha, da-dhami,=Goth. ga-deds (O€o1s), déms (plots), =O. H.G. tém (thun), tat (that), tuom (doom) ; Odopat, S. dhd, dhaydmi (sugo), =Goth. daddja (@nAd(w), =O. H. G. tau (lacto) ; 00s, 70s, S. svadha (vis), =Goth. sidus (00s), =O. H. G, situ (Sitte); od0ap, S. ddhar,=A.S. dder, =O.H.G. titar (Euter), ete. 2. 6 is sometimes represented by ¢, as OAdw pdrdw, OALBw priPw; esp. in Lat., as @dopat, felo (to suck); Onp (Acol. php), fera; 6vpa, fores ; some- times by 6, as épvOpds, ruber; ovOap, uber. 3. in Lat. and Skt. sometimes by d, as Ouvyarnp, duhitd =Goth. dauktar, =O. H.G. tohtar ; neiOw, Lat. fido; muOuny, Lat. fundus, II. changes of @ in the Gr, dialects: 1, the pronunc. of 6, as kept by the modern Greeks, comes near the English ¢h in ¢hin, but so that ¢ is followed by a very soft s sound ; hence, in the broader Doric, as the Lacon., @ was often changed into ¢, as odAagoa ceios ot ’Acdva mapoévos for Oddacaa Oetos bed *AOava mapbévos, vy. Ahr. D. Dor. § 7: so sometimes in Ion., Buoads for BvOés; and even in Att. before the term. —pds, as kaTaBagpds for —Bad- pos. 2. 0 was changed Aeol, and Dor. into @, as 7p prdw PriBu for Onp OAdw OdiBw. 3. for the Aeol. into 6,v. Ad11. 4. 4, Aeol. and Dor. sometimes into 7, as atris évredOev for avdis évred- Ger. 5, rarely into A, as Owpné, lorica, v. A 6 11. 6. 6. when 6 was repeated in two foll. syllables, the former became 7, as *ArOis. III. on the ballots used in voting for life or death, © stood for @avaros, Casaub, Pers. 4. 13, Martial. 7. 36; and on Roman gravestones, © was a common cipher, Orell. Inscrr. Lat. 2555, 4471 sq-3 but it seems not to occur in Greek Inscriptions. —Ga, insep. affix in adverbial forms, e. g. €vOa :—see also -o8a. @adcow, Ep. radic. form of @4c0a, only used in pres, and impf., ¢o sit, Aumdy Eos, évOa Odaacer Il. 9. 194, cf. 15.124; ovde Cover .. év Barr? Baaccéuey Od. 3. 336, cf. h. Merc. 172; per d@avérorr Oadooes h. Hom. Merc. 468. Cf. Oaxéw, Ooatw. - Odeo [G], imperat. of Pdopar. II. in Hom. a sitting in dyoph yéver’ obde Odaxos’ Od, 2.26; Oarauat — Oarebw. és Bdxov .. Shpowd re PHywv 15. 461; OdxKdvde to the council, 5.3; &v OaxKp KaThpevos sitting in council, Hdt. 6. 63.—Cf. Buttm. Lexil. v. Oadoow I. OGAdpak, dros, 6, =Oadtpirns, Ar. Ran. 1074. OGAGpeupa, 76, =Oadrayun, O4dapos 11, Koupyrwy Eur. Bacch, 120. OGAGpedtpia, %,=vuypedrpia, a bridesmaid, Poll. 3. 41. O&AGpetw, to lead into the O4dapos, i.e. to take to wife, Heliod. 4. 6: —Pass. of women, fo be shut up, kept at home, Aristaen. 2. 5: of lizards, to keep in their lairs, Synes. 16 D. OaAGEy [a], , @ lurking-place, den, hole, mostly of fish that live in tocks, movAvmobos Oadduns éfedkopévoro Od. 5. 432; and so used by Arist., as of the cwAny, 4. 8, 32; of the polypus, 9. 37, 21, cf. 8. 15, 4, etc.; so, of the Theban dragon’s den, Eur. Phoen. 931; of the cave of Trophonius (in pl.), Id. Ion 394; of the grave, Id. Supp. 980; of the cells of bees, Anth, P. 6. 239., 9. 404. 2. of cavities in the body, the chamber or ventricle of the heart, Arist. de Somn. 3, 28:—pl. the sockets of the joints, Hipp. 6. 38; the pores of sponges, Arist. H. A. 5. 16, 2; the nostrils, Poll. 2. 79. II. =OdAapos m1, Luc, Navig. 2. Oadapnyéds, dv, (dyw) having a Oddapos: as Subst., Oad., 6, an Egyptian state-barge, Lat. navis cubiculata, Strabo 800, Ath. 204 D, Diod. 1. 85 ; also Qadapnyév, 76, App. praef. ro. Oarapyiddys, ov, 6, son of the Oaddun or hole, comic Patron. of the tunny, Matro ap. Ath. 135 E. O&AGpHLOs, 7, ov, of or belonging to a Oddapos, fit for building one, dotpa Hes. Op. 805. OGAGpHToAEw, fo be a Oadapnrdros, Schol. Lyc. 132 :—to take to the pairing of animals, Opp. C. 1. 393. OarapymoAla, 1, the office of Oacaunnddos, Theod. Prodr. p. 458. O&AGpy-7Xos, %, (woAgopat) an attendant in the lady's chamber, a waiting-maid, Lat. cubicularia, Od. 7. 8., 23. 293, Aesch. Theb. 359- 2. OaX., 6, in late Greek, a eunuch of the bed-chamber, Plut. Alex. 30:—of the Galli or eunuch-priests of Cybelé, Anth. P. 6. 220; but also 4, a priestess of Cybelé, Ib. 173. II. rarely, a bride- groom, Soph. O. T. 1209. III. as Adj. bridal, éppvn Musae. 231; epith. of Aphrodité, Anth. Plan, 177. O&AGpids, 4, dv (not OadAduos Arcad. 40. 13), of or belonging to the Oadapos :—as Subst., I, @adapids, 6,=Oadapirns, Thuc. 4. 32. IL. @adaped, Ion. -1 (sub. ern), %, the oar of the Oada- pirns, Ar. Ach. 553. 2. (sub. 77) the hole in the ship’s side, through which this oar worked, 5d Oadaputjs dedecy Twa to place a man so that his upper half projected through this hole, Hdt. 5. 33; so, metaph., in Ar, Pax 1232. Oadapis, dos, }, =Oadrapedrpia, An. Ox. 2. 376. OaAGpirys [7], ov, 6, (PdAapos 111) one of the rowers on the lowest bench of a trireme, who had the shortest oars and the least pay, App. Civ. 5. 107 (vulg. @aAapiar), Schol. Ar, Ran. 1074; cf. Cvylrns, Opavirns, Oadd- Hag, Oaraptds. II. as Adj., of the OdAapos, Tzetz. Oadapévbe, Adv. to the bed-chamber, Od. 21. 8., 22. 109,161. > OGAGp0-Trovds, dv, preparing the bed-chamber ;—@Oadaporo.ol, name of a play of Aesch. O4AGpos, 6, an inner room or chamber, surrounded by other buildings : freq. in Hom. 1. generally, the women’s apartment, inner part of the house, like puxés, Il. 3. 142, 174, Od. 4. 121, etc.; behind the mpé- Sopos, Il. 9.469; so in pl., €« Tay dvipedvaw .. és rods O. Hdt. 1,34. 2. @ special chamber in this part of the house, a. a bed-room, esp. of the lady of the house (cf. ragrds 111, wagrds), Il. 3. 423., 6. 316., TI. 227, Od. 10. 340, cf. Hdt. 1. 12., 3. 78: esp. the bride-chamber, Il. 18. 492; (which sense became later almost universal, Pind. P. 2. 60, Soph. Tr. 913, Eur. Hipp. 540, etc., cf. Becker Charicl. 267): but, also, the bed- room of the unmarried sons, Od. 1. 425., 19. 48. b. a store-room, in which clothes, arms, valuables, also wine and meat, were kept under the care of ‘the rayin, Il. 14. 191, cf. Xen. Oec. g, 3 (where however it is only used for a store-room of bedding, etc.) ; at the far end of the house, Od. 21.8; often called ivdpodos, high-ceiled, 2. 337., 8. 439, Il. 3- 423, etc.; SABou d:olyov OddAapoy Eur. Fr. 287. 8. ce. generally, a chamber, room, Od. 23. 192. d. the house or mansion itself, Il. 6. 248., 9. 582, cf. Pind. O. 5. 30., 6. 2; Bacio 6. Eur. Ion 486. II. metaph., 6 maryxotras 0. of the grave, Soph. Ant. 804; tupBnpns 0. of the ark of Danaé, Ib. 947; O4Aapor bd yijs the realms below, Aesch. Pers. 624; yas @adapo Eur. H. F. 807; 0. Mepoepoveias Id. Supp. 1022; 0. ’Audurpirns of the sea, Soph. O. T. 195; moAvdév- Specow ’OdAdvprov Gaddpos Eur, Bacch. 560; dpvav @. their folds or pens, Id. Cycl. 57; of bees’ cells, Anth. P. 9. 404. III. the lowest, darkest part of the skip, in which the @adapirar sat, the hold, Ath. 37 D, Poll. 1.87; cf. @aAdpn I. IV. used of certain mystic shrines ot chapels, sacred to Apis, Ael. N. A. 11. Lo, cf. Plin. 8. 71: the innermost shrine, Luc. Syt. D, 31: a temple, Anth. P. 1. 32: cf. Lob. Aglaoph. 1. p. 26 sq. ékacca [0%], later Att. -rra, #: (perh. from 4/TPAX, rapdoow, v. Curt. p. 655):—the sea, Hom., etc.; when he uses it of a particular sea, he means the Mediterranean, for he calls the outer sea ’Qxeavds, and holds it to be a river, as in Od, 12. 1 ;—H«dt. calls the Mediterranean 95¢ 4 OdAacca (as the Latins call it nostrum mare), 1. 1, 185., 4. 39, etc.; so, map’ uiy Oa, Plat. Phaedo 113 A; ) xa6’ Huds Oar, Polyb. 1. 3, 9; 7 €ow 4A, Arist. Mund. 3, 8; whereas the Ocean is 4 é{w OdA., Id. Meteor. 1. 13,14, Mund. |. c.; or 4 ’ArAav7inn 6. Ib. 3, 3, etc.; 4) weyadn 0. Plut. Alex. 73; also a salt lake, Arist. Meteor. 1. 13, 26:—we also find és @adkaccay riv Tov Evfeivov révrov Hat. 2. 33; méAayos Oaddaons, v. sub méAayos; Kara OdAaccay by sea, opp. to 7e(H by land, Hdt. 5. 63; 659 A; xépoov Kat 0. éxwepdv Aesch. Eum, 240; ris 0. avOexréa éori one must engage in maritime affairs, Thuc. 1. 93; of wept rijv 0. sea-faring men, Arist. H. A. 8.13, 12; 0. «al rip xat yuv)}—rpirov kaxéy Menand. Monost. 231, cf. 264:—metaph., xax@v 0. a sea of troubles, Aesch. Theb. 758; sovAz) 0., of a theatre, Com. Anon. 95 a. 2. sea-water, Oadarrns adjpys Moschio ap. Ath. 208 A, Polyb. 16. 5, 4: generally, salt water, as in modern Greek, Diphil. Siphn. ap. Ath. 121 D, cf. Diosc. 2. 105. 8. a well of salt water, said to be produced by a stroke of Poseidon’s trident, in the Acropolis at Athens, Hdt. 8.55; called@.’Epexénts, Apollod. 3. 14.—For the Lacon, form odAagaa, v. cadacoopeduv. Qahaco-alyAn, 7%, name of a plant in Plin. 24. 102. OiAacoaios, a, ov, =Oaddoatos, Simon. 6, Pind. P. 2. 92:—also Qadde- oetos, Oribas. 351 Matth.; O@aAarriaios, C. I. 1166. 2. dyed purple, Tryph. 345- Oadaccepés, 6, a kind of balsam, Alex. Trall. 147. Qiracceds, éws, 6, a fisherman, Hesych. OGAaccevw, to be in or on the sea, to be at sea, vijes TocodTov xptvov Oadragcevovoa Thuc. 7. 12: to go by sea, App.’Civ. 1. 62; 7d adar- Tevovra THs vews pépy the parts under water, Plut. Lucull. 3. Oadacota, %, a name of the plant dvSpécaxes, cited from Diosc. Qadracot-yovos, ov, (yevécat) sea-born, Nonn. D. 13. 458. Caidaccifa, fut. cw, to taste of sea-water, Ath. 92 A. to make like sea-water, riv -yedow Xenocr. p. 112. O&ddoovos, later Att. -rrt0s, a, ov, also os, oy Eur. I. T. 236: (04- Aacoa):—of, in, on or from the sea, belonging to it, Lat. marinus, od oqu Oaddoora epya pepnadet, of the Arcadians, Il. 2. 614; xop@vat elvadiat, Tholv Te Bad. épya péunrer, i.e. which live by fishing, Od. 5. 67; Oar. Bios Archil. 46; 0. dvéuov frmat, kAviwv Pind. N. 3. 101, Eur. Med. 28; 6 @aA, Mocedéy Ar. Pl. 396:—of animals, opp. to xepoata, Hat. 2. 123, cf. Plat. Euthyd. 298 D, Arist. H. A. 1.1, 15; meCot re kat @axr. landsmen and seamen, Aesch, Pers. 558; OaA. éxpinrey twa to throw one into the sea, Soph. O. T. 1411; @aA. vexpds, of one drowned, Theogn. 1229. 2. skilled in the sea, nautical, Hdt. 7. 144, Thuc. I. 142. 3. like the sea, in colour, 7H xpéq Plut. 2. 395 B. 9 Oadragctat, ai, name of certain priestesses at Cyzicus, C. 1. 3657. 4. OGAaccitys oivos [7], 6, wine kept in sea-water, to ripen it, Plin. H.N. 14. Io. Cthacc0-Bihéw, to dye in genuine purple, Philo Byz. de vm Mirac. 2. OaAacco-Biwros, ov, living on or by the sea, App. Pun. 89. OiAacco-yevijs, és, (yevéo0ar) sea-born, Archestr, ap. Ath, 92 E. Qaracco-ypados, ov, describing the sea, Tzetz. Hist. 1. 843. idacco-eSis, és, like the sea, sea-green, Democr. Eph. ap. Ath. 525 D. Qaraced-KAveros, ov, dashed by the sea, Schol. Baroce. Soph. Aj. 695. QGAacco-KoTréw, (Kdm7w) to strike the sea with the oar, make a splash, metaph, in Ar. Eq. 830; cf. maarvyitw. Oadracco-KpapBy, 7), sea-kale, Geop. 12. I, I. QiAacco-Kpirew, to be master of the sea, Hdt. 3. 122, Thuc. 7.48 :— ~ Pass. to be beaten at sea, Demetr, Com. Sue. 2. OaAacco-Kpiitia, 4, mastery of the sea, Strabo 48. Oaidkacco-Kparwp, opos, 6, %, master of the sea, Hdt. 5.83, Thue, 8. 63, Xen. Hell, 1. 6, 2. QGdAacco-péSwv, ovros, lord of the sea, Nonn, D. 21.95:—Lacon. fem, cadacoopédoioa, Alcman 73. Oadraccs-peAt, 50s, 76, a drink of sea-water and honey, Diosc. 5. 20. Oaracco-ptyis, és, mixed with sea, Hesych. s. v. dAuclaves, Qakaces-pobos, ov, fighting with the sea, Nonn. D. 39. 370. OiAacco-vépos, ov, dwelling in the sea, Emped. 300, Nonn. D, 37. 265. Oadaccé-mats, raidos, 6, 7, child of the sea, Lyc. 892. Oidaced-rhayKros, ov, (TAd¢w) made to wander o'er the sea, sea-tost, of ships, Aesch, Pr. 467; of a corpse, Eur. Hec. 782. O&Aacad-rAnKTOS, ov, (TAHTIe) sea-beaten, Aesch. Pers. 307. Q%Aaccd-mA00s, ov, contr. —tAovus, our, sailing on the sea, Byz. Oidaccoropta, fo traverse the sea, Call. Ep. 62. Q&Aaaco-ropos, ov, sea-faring, Anth. P. 6. 27., 9. 376, Musae. 2. OaAacco-ropHiipos, ov, =dAmdéppupos, Suid., A, B. 379. Oadacc6-roKos, ov, sea-born, Nonn, D. 39. 341. OirAaccoupyéw, to be busy with the sea, Polyb. 6. 52, 1. QaAaccoupyia, , business on the sea, fishing, etc., Hipp. 366. 28, al. OaAuccoupyés, 6, (*Epyw) one who works on the sea, a fisherman, seaman, Charon Fr. 10, Xen. Oec. 16, 7, Polyb. 10. 8, 5. QaAaces-xpoos, ov, sea-green, Psell. Lapid, 20; al. —xpas. OirAaccdw, to make or change into sea, iymelpous Arist. Mund. 6, 32; Neidos 0. tiv Alyurrov Heliod. 2. 28. II. Pass., vats @adar- tovrat she leaks, Polyb. 16. 15, 2. 2. to be washed in sea-water, Hesych. :—but, ofvos reOaragowpévos mixed with sea-water, Theophr. C. P. 6. 7, 6, Ath. 32 D, cf. Hor. 2 Sat. 8. 15, Plin. 14. Io. Iii. Med. to be a sea-faring man, Luc. Nero 1. CirAacasdys, es, =Padacooed5ys,Hanno Peripl. p. 30, Tzetz. OtiAdoowors, ews, 7, an inundation, submersion, Philo 2. 174. Oddatra, —rrevw, —TTLOs, etc., Att. for OdAacaa, etc. Odrea [@], 74, good cheer, happy thoughts, of the sleeping Astyanax, Oadreoy eumAnodpevos Kip Il. 22. 504; ev cddecoe (Lacon. for 0aAect) modAois fjpevos Alcman 70; Oadéecow dvarpépe riva Incert. ap. Suid. —In form (though not accent) neut. pl. of a nom. *@adds: cf. @aAeta. OAw, poet. lengthd, for O4AAw (cf. BAW), to bloom, used by Hom. only in part., Odpvos édains .. Oadébwv Od. 23. 191, cf. Ap. Rh. 2.843: —of men, 7/cor OadcOovres Od. 6. 63; 80, Padréovra Téxov C, I. 6203. 9; Oardbeones év ciap: Anth. P. 11. 374; det OadéGovT: Big Posta ap. Plut. 2. 116 C:—of swine, OadéOovres dAorpy swelling, wantoning in fat, II. trans. to xara ys, Thue. 7. 28; xara te yhv Kat Kard 0. Plat, Merex. 241 $ | Il. 9. 467., 23. 32; c. ace., wofny AetpOves PadOovew Theocr. 25, 16. Uun2 ~ y. sub *0dm.) Baye. ee a 660 OdAera, 7, blooming, luxuriant, goodly: in Hom, always of banquets, dedi év Sati Oarein Od. 8. 76, Hes. Op. 7403; Oeod és Satra Oddetay Od. 3: 420; [pdppyryé] Sacrt cuvhopos.. Baden 8. 99; Tidevro be Saira Oad. Il. 7. 475; cf. eAanivn reOadvia: so also later, dals O4AcLa Soph. Fr. 539; ént daira 0. Pherecr. Xep.2; mivew év Sati 6. Hermipp. Pop. 2. 11; Oddrcay dpriy ayaywpey Anacr. 54; poipay Oddeav a goodly portion, Pind, N. 10. 99.—In all these places @aAeca is plainly an Adj.; but both quantity and accent forbid its being fem. of @dAetos (a word which first occurs in Anth., and no doubt was itself formed from @ddera). It belongs to the small class of independent fem. Adjectives, like méztvia. Its masc. ought to be @dAus, which is now represented by OjAus or Oadrepds; cf. Oddea, TA. II. as Subst., v. sub @adia sta IIT. as prop. n, @dAeia, 7, one of the Muses, strictly the blooming one, Hes. Th. 77; later, the Muse of Comedy, @aAé7 (sic }. pro @dAea) in Anth. P. 9. 505, cf. Plut. 2. 744 F, 746. 2. one of the Graces, patroness of festive meetings, Plut. 2. 778D; @aAin in Hes. Th. 909. Cf. Etgppootvn, - OaXep-dpparos, ov, with blooming eyes, Orph. H. 79. OGAepo-rrévds, dv, making full of bloom, Schol. Hes. Th. 138. OidAepés, d, dv, (OdAAw, OtidEiv) blooming, fresh, properly of plants, but used by Hom. of persons, Oadepot aifnot Il. 3. 26., 11. 414; 9. méats, mapaotrns 8, 190., 6. 430; Oadrep) mapaxorris 3. 533; 80, @. ydvos h. Hom. Ven. 104; roeds Hes, Th. 138; 0. duos the marriage of a youthful pair, Od. 6. 66., 20.74; Oadrepds HBns xpévos Eur. El, 20; mpw- OnBns éapos Oadrepwrepos Alex, Actol. ap. Patthen. 14. 7. an of parts of the body, fresh, vigorous, pnpw Il. 15. 113; xairn thick, luxuriant hair, 17. 439; 0. Gdowph rich, abundant fat, Od, 8.476 ;— then of other things, @aAepdv ward bdxpu xéovoa shedding big tears, Il. 6. 496, cf. 24. 9, 794, etc.; 0. dé of Exmece Baxpu 2. 266; Parepwrepa Sdxpva Mosch. 4.56; (so, @adepwrepov KAaiew Theocr. 14.32); 9. ydos the thick and frequent sob, Od. Io. 4573 Oarepry 5€ of ExxeTo pov his full, rich yoice was mute, Il. 17. 696., 23. 397, Od. 4. 705; Oadepw- Tepov mvedpa a more genial wind, opp. to a storm (cf. OeAeuds), Aesch. Theb. 707; in Eur. Bacch. 691 @. imvos is, acc. to Herm, deep, Elmsl. "haa s, 150s, 4, (di) =Oarepipparos, Anth. P. 7. 204. OaXéw, Dor. for @nAéw, Pind. OGAEw, = PaA9w, Q. Sm. 11. 96, Nonn. D. 16. 78; @adéaw Hipp. 378. 36; Oarcecke v.1. for Oad€Oecxe in Mosch. 2. 67. Oadjjs, 6, gen. OdAew, dat. OadF, acc. Oadjv; gen. also @adAod, Strabo 7; and in Poets @dA7rTes, etc., Call. Fr. 94, 96, Epigr. in Diog. L. 1. 34, 39 :—Thales of Miletus, Hdt. 1. 74, etc. aia, Ion. -t, %, (Q4AAw) abundance, good cheer, wealth, rpéperat Garin évi modrrF Il. g. 143, 2853 in pl. festivities, wer’ GOavdro.or Oeotar Tépmerat év Oadins Od. 11. 603, cf. Hes. Op. 415, Archil. 8, Pind., 'Trag., etc.; &v Oadinow elvar Hat. 3. 27: of a funeral-feast, dup’ doin Carin «- dvaxros Orac. ap. Plut. Arat. 53:—in Plat. Rep. 573 D some Mss. incorrectly 6dAeat for Badia, IT. =64Ad0s, Theophr. H. P. 2. 2, 12, C. P. 5.1, 3;—in C. P. 1. 20, 3., 3. 5, 1, written @dAeca ; and OadAia in Diosc. 2. 75, Ath. 459. fin. III, as prop. n., v. sub @dAea 111, OaALdLo, to enjoy oneself, make merry, Plut. 2. 746 E, etc.; v.1. Oadre- agw, Ib. 357 E, 712 F; éopriy Oad. Polyaen. 4. 15. @dAuKrpov, 76, prob. Thalictrum minus, meadow rue, Diosc. 4. 98: ea in Galen, 13.177 D. : ta, }, =xdarapis, Diosc. 2. 204:—but 9adAAtov, 74, Dim. of O4AAos, Diosc. Parab. 1, 187.° @4AAtvos, 7, ov, (adAAds) Of twigs or shoots, Schol. Ar. Av. 798. OadXés, 6, (O4AAw) a young shoot, young branch, Od. 17. 224, Soph. El. 422, etc.:—of the young olive-shoot carried by suppliants, éorepavd- cOa eains PadkAG Hat. 7. 19; éAalas 6. Eur. I. T, 1101; and often without éAafas, Aesch. Cho. 1035, Soph. O. C..474, Eur., etc. ; ixrip 0. Eur. Supp. 10, cf. Aesch. Eum. 43; also, OadAod orépavos the olive- wreath worn at festivals, Aeschin. 80. 37, cf. Plat..Legg..943C; orepa- voov Twa OadAG Ib. 946 B; orepavacat twa Oaddod orepdvy C. I. Tol. 8., 102. 18, 109, al. :—proverb., @adAdv mpoceiew Tivi to entice, as one does cattle, by holding out a green bough, Plat. Phaedr. 230 D; OadAAG TpoderyGévte dxodovbeivy Luc. Hermot. 68. IL. @adAoi, of, palm-leaves, which were plaited into baskets, Geop. 10. 6. Gaddo-piyéw, to eat young olive-shoots, Ath. 587 A. @adAodopéw, to carry olive-shoots, Cratin. And. 2, Pherecr. Ema. 6. @ahdo-popos, ov, carrying young olive-shoots, as the old men did at the Panathenaea, Ar. Vesp. 544; as a name of Hercules, C. 1.:5985. @4AAw, Hes. Op. 173, h. Hom, Cer. 402, Att.: fut. @adrAhow (but v. Ondéw I): aor. I €énda (dv-) Ael. N. A.'2. 25.,.9. 21: aor, 2 OdA€ in h, Hom. 18. 33 is corrupt, for the sense requires «éAe (as Lob. Paral. p, 5517) or some such Verb; dv-€0aAov Lxx, Ep. Philipp..4. 10: pf. ré6nAa, of which Hom. uses only part. in pres. sense reOnAws, Ep. fem. reOGAvia, and 3 sing. plgpf. reOhAe (Od. 5. 69); but: Hes. has also 3 sing. indic. réOnre Op. 225, cf. Soph. Ph. 259; Dor. ré@@Aa Pind. Fr. 95. 5, C. I. 512.9; subj. 7e04Aq Epigr. ap. Plat. Phaedr.-264.D; inf. redyréva Plat. Crat. 414 A; part. re0GAds Aesch. Supp. 105 (as Bothe) :—Pass., fut, @aAjcoua (dva-) Anth. P. 7. 281. (Perh, akin. to 69%, Onda, To abound, to be luxuriant or exuberant, esp. of fruit- trees, Epiveds .. pUAAoiat TEONAGS Od. 12. 103; TEOHAEL SE oTapvdAfar of a vine, 5.69; dvOect yaia OadAe h. Hom. 1.c.; xpurég noug OddAdAwY Aogias Pind. I. 7 (6). 69: absol., P4AAe Kar’ Fuap ded vapriaaos Soph. 0. C. 681, cf. 700, etc.; often in part. pf. as Adj., like @adepés, abundant, Iuxuriant, exuberant, reBadvia 7 drdspn Od. 11. 191; TeBadvid 7’ ddan ard, 6, v 2933 $0, kaproy rpts Ereos PdAdovra Hes. Op. 171; f bévipe’ EOaddAev x@pos the place grew no trees, | Oarea — bau Byars. Pind. O. 3. ro, cf, Anth, P. 9. 78; é pvAAoiat Baddotons Biov favd7s édaias (where Dind. ivov), Aesch. Pers. 616 :—cf. barédu. b. of other natural objects, re0aAvia 7’ €€pon the fresh or copious dew, Od. 13. 2453 of a fat beast, pau TeOadviay ddoupy rich with fat, Il. g. 208, cf. Od. 13.410; eiAanivp TeOadvin at a sumptuous feast, II. 414. ee of men, to bloom, 6. xpéa Archil. gt: to flourish, to be happy or pros- perous, eipfvn tebadvia Hes. Th. 902; Oddrcca eddaipovia, dperd Pind. P. 7. 21, 1. 5 (4). 213 marpds @4AAovTos Soph. Ant, 703, cf. Ph. 420, etc.; (hv Kat 8. to be alive and prosperous, Id. Tr. 235, cf. Plat. Symp. 203 E; @aAAe Kat eddacpover Id. Legg. 945 D:—c. dat. modi, OdAXovow 8 dyaOoiar Hes. Op. 234; ayAatp Id. Sc. 276; roiae (sc. dvdpdor) réOnde modus Id. Op. 225; 9. dperais Pind. O. 9. 26; evyevet réxvev onopa Soph. Ant. 1164; mappyoia Eur. Hipp. 422; 0, émt yup- vabos épyous C, I. 2240. 3. of disease and the like, in bad sense, to be fresh and active, vécos det TéOnre Soph. Ph. 259; mhuata.. det @ddAovra Id. El. 260; eps O4AAe Eur. Phoen. 813; cf, dvdew. @4Aos [a], eos, 7d, like @adAds, but only used in nom. and acc., and in metaph, sense of young: persons, like épvos (q.v.), gdov OdAos dear child of mine, Il. 22.87; Aevogdvrwy rolovbe Oados so fair a scion of their house, Od. 6.1573 so, véov 9. h, Hom. Cer. 66, 187, cf. Pind, O. 2. 81., 6.115, Eur. El. 15, etc.—For the pl., v. @aAca, Th. Oadtrewvés, 4, dv, =Oadnvds, E. M. 479..22. Oadmelw, Ep. for 04Amm, E. M. 620. 46. OéArmpt, rare post. form for O4Aqw, only in 3 sing., yAumei” dvdyxa kudlkov Oadnnot Ovpdy Bacchyl, 27. 2. Oadmidc, (O4Amw) to be or become warm, eb Oadrmiav right warm and comfortable, Od. 19. 319, cf. Arat. 1073. Oadxvés, 4, dv, warming, fostering, adnvérepov dorpov Pind. O. 1.8. O4Aros, cos, 76, warmth, heat, esp. summer-heat, opp. to Xela, Aesch, Ag. 565, 969; év weonpBptas 0. Id. Supp. 747; 9. Ocod the sun’s heat, Soph. Tr. 145, etc.; peanuBpivoior OddAneowv with the meridian rays (cf. Lat. soles), Aesch. Theb. 431, 446; and in Prose, @4Amos kat Ydxos, plyn wat O4dry, Hipp. Aph. 1246, Xen. Occ. 7, 23, Cyr. 1. 2, 10. 2. metaph, a sting, smart, rofevpdrev Soph, Ant, 1086; of love, Anth, P. 6. 207. Oadzréov, verb. Adj. of OdAmw, Alex. Trall. 1. p. 28. Oadmriptos, ov, warming, cdvdada ..nodav 6. Anth. P. 6. 206. O4A1w, fut. Yo: (Root uncertain, cf. épa):—to heat, soften by heat, Od. 21.179, 184, 246 :-—Pass., érfqcero, kacotrepos &s .. Oadrpbeis Hes. Th. 864, cf. Soph. Tr. 697: metaph. to be softened, deceived, ai Ke 2) OarpOp.Adyous Ar. Eq. 210. II. ¢o heat, warm, without any notion of softening, ‘it was mid-day, «al xadp’ €0adne (sc. Hpas), Soph. Ant. 417; Sepp ..deris 0. Ar. Av. 1092;—Pass., O4Ameabar Tov Oépous to be warm in-summer, Xen.Cyr.5.1,11; TO mupt O4A~opat Alciphro 3. 42:— metaph., ért GAig O4AmecGar to be alive, Pind. N. 4. 22. 2. to warm at the fire, dry, 0dAmerat faxn Soph. Ph. 38, cf. Fr. 400, Eur. Hel. 183. 8. in Arist. Probl. 4. 25 OaArovow seems to be intr. are fresh and lively; @adat rpeis mods to live three summers, Anth, P. 7. 731. III. metaph. of passion, to heat, inflame, %} Avs OdAmee Kéap port Aesch, Pr. 590, cf. ivo8dAnw ; Cader drys onacpés Soph. Tr. 10823 and in Pass., iu€pov BédAcr reOdApOat mpds twos Aesch. Pr. 650; @aAme (2 sing.) dvnxéorw mupi Soph. El. 888. 2. to cherish, comfort, foster, love, Theocr. 14. 38, Alciphro 2. 4; Tv méduv 8. to tend it with fostering care, C.1. 4717. 5. 8. to vex, torment, Lat. uro, obdey 0. eve 7 ddga Alciphro 2. 2; éue obdéy 0. xépdos Aristaen. I. 24. Gadmwpy}, 4, warming : metaph. comfort, consolation, source of hope, od yap é7 GAn Badrwpt -Il. 6. 412, cf,1o. 223, Od. 1. 167; in pl., Tryph. 128, Epigr. Gr. 464. Sarrwpds, 4, dv, warm, only in Nicet. Ann. 195 A. OaADKpSs, a, dv, hot, glowing, 0. névrpov épwpavins Anth.P.5.220:— Dep. Sadukpéopar, =qevdouat, Hesych. Oadtive, = Oddrrcw mow, Hesych. (Cod. 04dmev). Gadvarw, =eédrnw, Hesych. s.v. Oadvpat: v. dxpoOddumros. O&Avora [®], 74, (@4A0s) the Jirstlings of the harvest, offerings of first- fruits, made to Artemis, Il. 9.534; but later, it seems, only to Demeter, Theoer. 7. 3, cf. Spanh. Call. Cer. 20. 137. 2. @addoros pros bread made from the first-fruits, Ath. 114A. aAords, ddos, fem. Adj., covpy 0. a priestess of Demeter (cf. @advata), Nonn. D, 12.103; @, d8és a journey to the Oaddova, Theocr. 7. 31. Badiiw, Oarvicow, =OdAmw, Hesych, OGAYrs, ews, , (CdAmw) a warming, fomenting, Hipp. Acut. 387:—but opp. to pugs, of seasons, Id. Aph. 1246. Gina, Adv. often, oft-times, Il. 16. 207, and Od.; so in Pind., Trag., Ar., and Att. Prose, as Xen. Mem..2, 1, 22, Plat. Phaedo 72 E. On the form, v. Béckh Pind. Nott. Crit. p. 384. (Hence Oapydmis, Oapecds, Oapuvds, Oapife, etc.) OGpanis [a], Adv.,=Oapyd 1, Pind, I. 1. 37, N. 10. 71. SapBaiver, =OapBéw, to be astonished at, h. Hom. Ven. 84, in one Ms. for Odvpaiyw; so Herm. in h, Hom. Merc. 407. SapBadtos, a, ov, astonished, Nonn. D. 1. 126. Gap Béw, fut. now, (4uBos) to be astonied, astounded, amazed, Lat. ob- stupesco, ot dé iddvres OapBnoay Il.8. 77; of 8 dvd Ovpdv 20dpBeov Od. 4, 638, etc.; so, xabrds reO4uByk’ Soph. Ant. 1246; e0apBynoev 5e ped iets oe I aa 2. c. 1 to be astonished at, marvel at, és opvidas Od, 2. 155, cf. 16.178; Tov eOapBeev “Aprepus Pind. N. 3.86; répas 8’ 2@4yBouv Aesch. Supp. 570. ‘ II. later also Causal, to surprise, frighten, LXx (2 Regg. 22.5) :—Pass., TePapi~ Anyévos astounded, Plut. Brut. 20; 8d Tivos Id. Caes, 45. O4pBnpa, 76, a monster, Manetho 4-559. Cap Bnors, ews, 4, astonishment, Manctho 4. 365; | OapBryrepa — Oaperaréos. wpa, 7), the fearful one, of the Furies, Orph. Arg. 971. yrds, 7, dv, astonishing, Lyc. 552. PapBos, cos, 76, also 6, Simon. 238: (4/TA®, 7é0n7a) :—astonishment, amazement, Lat. stupor, just like the Ep. ragos (q. v.), OauBos 8 exe eicopéavras Il. 4.79; SapBos 5 kre mavras iddvras Od. 3. 372, etc.; also in Pind., Trag., Ar. Av. 781, and in Att. Prose, Thuc. 6. 31, Plat. Phaedr. 254 C. 2. in objective sense, a wonder, 6 yap Kodoaads 0. Fv C. 1.8703, cf. 8655. O&pées, of, dat. Oapeot, acc. Opeéas (as if from Bapvs, Apoll. Dysc.in A.B. 563); fem. nom. and acc, @aperat, —ds (as if from Oaperds) :—poét. Adj. only used in pl., crowded, close, close-set, thick, Lat. frequens, dddvres .. bas Oapées éxov Il. 10. 264; ddévres muevol «at 0. Od. 12.92; Oapées yap axovres .. diocovor Il. 11.552., 17.661; txpa..dpapOv Oapéct orapiv- eoot Od.5.252; mupat..xatovro Oaperal Il. 1.52; AlOot mwra@yTo Oapecat 12.287, cf. 14.422, etc.:—Comp. dapvyrepos in Hesych. ; Oaperdrepos Nic. Al. 594:—Adv. @apéws, =Oapa, Hipp. 262. 54, Maxim. m. carapx. 600. Capito, (aud) to come often, Lat. frequentare, mapos ye pev obTt Oapi- {es Il, 18. 386, 425, Od. 5. 88., 8. 161; later with Preps., 0. els rémov Plat. Hipp. Ma. 281 B; éwé twa Xen. Cyr. 7. 3, 2; xeioe Ap. Rh. 2. 451; év dovaxecot 8. to haunt them, Nic. Al. 591. 2. to be often or constantly engaged with or ina thing, dua vnt rodveAndt Oaplfeor Od. 8. 161; goptas én’ dxporor OapiCew Emped. ap. Plut. 2.93 B; with a part., obre kopiCdpuevds ye OdpiCev he was not wont to be so cared for, Od. 8. 451; 085 Oapifes Huiv KaraBatvey nor do we often see you coming down, Plat. Rep. 328 C; reversely, puvdperar OapiCovoa padior’ ab&y mourns most often or constantly, like @ayd, Soph. O.C. 672: absol., did 7d Oapivew because of their frequent occurrence, Plat. Legg. 843 B. TI. Med, ¢o be constantly with or near, Twi Soph. Fr. 446. Oaptvaxrs [GZ], Adv., =Oapdns, Oaya, Hipp. 671. 12. Oapives, 7, 6v,=Oaperds, only found in neut. pl. @apuvd as Adv. = Oapd, Pind. O. 1.85, Ar. Pl. 292, Xen. Mem. 3. 1, 5:—Comp. Oapuvwraros cited by Suid. ; Adv, -va@s by Hesych. Sdpva, %, Lat. lora, wine from pressed grapes, Geop. 6. 13. Gapvas, ddos, %, (Oapvos) = pita, E. M. 442. 23. Papviov, rd, Dim. of Odpvos, cited from Diosc.:—also -iotos, 6, Oribas. 167 Matth. Gapviris, Sos, 1), shrubby, payvos Nic. Th. 883. @apvo-crSys, és, of the shrub kind, Theophr. H. P. 3. 17, 3, Diosc. 3. ¥30., 4. 110, Sapvo-pyKns paBdos, 6, a long stick cut from a bush, Ion. ap. Ath. 451D. Odpvos, 6, also 7) Diod. 2. 49: (Oapevds) :—a bush, shrub, Lat. arbustum (between d€v5poy and Bordvy, Arist. Plant.1. 4,7), Karanrhtas tnd Oapyy Il. 22. 191; Odprw bm’ dupicduw 17. 677; Odpvors ey muewoior in the thick copse, Od. 5. 471 (cf. 476)., 6.127; 0. éAains a pollard olive, 23. 190; also in Aesch. Ag. 1316, Soph. El. 55, Ar. Pax 1298, Plat., etc. Sapvo-payos [a], ov, eating shrubs, Sext. Emp. P. 1. 56. Oapvadns, ¢s,=Oapvoedqs, Theophr. H. P. 3. 12,1, C. P. 5. 12, 5. Gapipite, to assemble; and Odpipis, 4, an assembly, Hesych. Odpiprs [4], gen. cos or cos; dat. @apvpr Poll. 4.75: acc. Odpuupw Nl. 2. 595 :—Thamyris, 2 Thracian bard;—called Oaptpas, in Plat. Rep. 620 A, etc. Oipipés, d, dv, frequented, 656s Hesych. Gapus, v. Oapées. Oavaotpos [va], ov, (Oaveiv, Odvaros) deadly, Hipp. Aph. 1244, etc. ; rixat Aesch. Ag. 1276; méonua Soph. Aj. 1033; xelpwpa Id. O. T. 560; mémdos Id. Tr. 758; apyaxa Eur. Ion 616, etc.; Onpia 0., of poisonous reptiles, Polyb. 1. 56, 4:—Adv., Oavaclyws rimrew to strike with deadly blow, Antipho 127. 32. 2. of or belonging to death, Gay, ala (as we say) the life-blood, Aesch. Ag. 1019; péAvasa 0. yior having sung my death-song, Ib. 1445. II. of persons, near death, Soph. Ph. 819; 6. 75n dvra Plat. Rep. 408 C: subject to death, Ib. 610 E. 2. dead, Soph. Aj. 517, O. T.. 959. Oivardw, Desiderat. of Oaveiv, to desire to die, Plat. Phaedo 64 B, Ax. 366 C, Alex. Suvam. 3. Oavar-nyés, dv, death-bringing, dub.; v. sub Odpyndos. Gaivarnows, ov,=Oavactpyos, rejected by Poll, 5.132; but found in Jul. Afr. Cest. c. 14, 16, and read by Dind. in. A. B. 14 (for —rfpios). Another form @avatypés, like xaparnpéds, in Eust. 1336. 20. Oavarnpopla, , a causing of death, Anth. P.5. 114, Gaivarn-opos, ov, death-bringing, mortal, aloa Aesch. Cho. 369; of hurts or accidents, Hipp. Art. 815; yéveOAa.. Oavaradpa Keira causing death by contagion, Soph. O. T. 181 (lyr.); waoar peraBodai moktraay Oavarnpdpa Xen. Hell. 2. 3,32; Oavarnpdpov Gbewv to sing a death song, Anth. P. 11.186. Cf. @avaropédpos. Oaviiridw, =Pavarde (perhaps f.1.), Luc. Peregr. 32. Oaivarinds, 4, dv, deadly, 0. éykAnua a capital charge, Diod. Excerpt. 610. 39; dien Plut. Per. 10, Alex. 42 :—Oavarixdy, 70, a plague, Byz. Ady, —«@s, Eust. 321. 41. Oaivarseas, ecoa, ev, deadly, duaprhpara, Soph. Ant. 1262; pdpos Eur. 1. A. 1289. Oaviirs-mvoos, ov, death-breathing, Eccl. Oavairo-movds, dv, causing death, Schol. Soph. Tr. 869. Gdvaros, 6, (4/OAN, rs Bint death, whether natural or viclent, Hom., etc.; 6. twos the death threatened by him, Od. 15.275; @s Odvov oixriorp Oavary 11. 412; Odvardvbe to death, Il. 16. 693., 22. 297 5 Gavdrou rédos Aesch. Theb. 906; potpa Id. Pers. 917, etc.; Oavdrov mépe wat (was for life and death, Pind. N. 9.68; 0. % Biov pépe Soph. Aj. 802; Oavaros pev rd dove Id. O.C. 520, cf. Aj. 215; é dy- xévais Odvarov AaBeiv Eur. Hel. 199; médews éorr 0., dvdorarov yevéaOarit is its death, Lycurg. 155. 35; Odvaror Ovnonety, dmoOvhoxew, | Det 661 drAvoba, TeAevTav Lob. Aj. 1008, Paral. 515. 2. in Att., also, death by sentence of law, Oavatov narayryvwoKey tivds to pass sentence of death on one, Thuc. 3. 81; @avarov KpivecOa to be tried for one’s life, Id. 3. 57, cf. Xen. Cyr. 1. 2, 14; also, wept Oavdrov Siwxew Id. Hell. 7. 5,6; mpds éxOpovds .. dyavicacOa wepi 0. Dem. 53. 27; 9. 4 (npto. émue?rae the penalty is death, Isocr. 169 C:—in Hat. ellipt., rH émt Oavar@ Kexoopnpévos (sc. oroAny) 1. 109; so, dhcai Twa Ti ént Oavdrov (sc. d€otv) 3.119; but, Thy emt Oavdrw eodov moretobac to go to ewecution, 7. 223; and, én Odvaroy dyecOa 3. 14; Tots *AOnvaias émrpépar wept opav aitay mAiy Cavarov for any penalty short of death, Thuc. 4. 54, cf. bréyyvos; eipydpevov Oavarou Kal Tov dvamnpov tmojoat short of death or maiming, Aeschin. 26. 16. 3. pl. davarot, kinds of death, Od. 12. 341; or the deaths of several persons, Aesch. Cho. 53, Soph. O. T. 1200, Eur. Heracl. 629; or of one person, Soph. O. T. 496, El. 206; obx évds, odd? Svoiv dgta Oavdrow Plat. Legg. 908 E; modA@y Oavarwv agios Kal ody évds Dem. 521. 24, cf. 345. 25, Ar. Pl. 483:—also emphatically of violent death, Aesch. Ag. 1572, Theb. 877, Plat. Rep. 399 A. II. as prop. n., Odvaros Death, the twin-brother of Sleep, Il. 14. 231., 16.672; pdvos Gedy yap ©. od Skpav ép@ Aesch. Fr. 156; dv [idv] réxero ©. Soph. Fr. 834; brought upon the stage. by Eur. in the Alcestis. III. =vexpds, a corpse, Auth. P. 9. 439, cf. Burm. Propert. 2. 13, 22, and v. s. péyvos. Oaivarovora (sc. iepd), 74, a feast of the dead, Luc. V. H. 2. 22. Oaiviro-pdpos, ov, =Oavarnpdpos, a0 Aesch, Ag. 1176. Caivarow, fut. dow, etc.:—Pass., fut. -w87coua: Lxx; fut. med. in pass. sense Oavarwooro Xen. Cyr. 7. 5, 31: aor. avarwOny Id. An. 2. 6, 4, Plat.; pf reOavdrmpar Polyb. 24. 4, 14. To put to death, Twa Hdt, 1,143, Aesch, Pr. 1053, Antipho 123. 40; esp. of the public execu- tioner, Plat. Legg. 872 C, etc. 2. Pass., of flesh, to be mortified, Hipp. Fract. 768: and metaph. in Act. to mortify, Ep. Rom. 8.13, cf. 7. 4. II. to put to death by sentence of law, Plat. Legg. 868 C, 872 C:—Pass., Ib. 865 D, Xen. An, 2. 6, 4. Oviirddys, es, (ef50s) like death, indicating death, Hipp.Progn.37. II. deadly, fatal, jp Id. Aph. 1247; omacpol Ael. N. A. 7. 5. Oivarwors, ews, }, a putting to death, Thuc. 5. 9. nouncing sentence of death, Plut. 2. 291 C. Odopar: aor. 2nodpynv: Dep. (From 4/@AF come also Dor. 04-pat, Oa-éopat (Ion. On-€opat), Oe-dopar (q.v.), 0-€a, 0€-aTpov, Be-wpds, Oad-pa; cf. Slav. div-esa (Oavpdora), Lith. dyv-as (@adpa), etc.) To wonder at, admire, duBpora 5Mpa didov iva puv Onoatar’ *Axmot Od. 18. Igl. 2. later, to gaze on, see, mostly in Dor., 1 pl. 64e8a Sophron 42 Ahr.; 2 pl. 0Go00e(Megar.) Ar. Ach. 770; imperat. Odeo Anth. Plan. 306; @aceiode read by the Schol. in Call. Dian. 3; part. fut. @aodpevos Theocr. 2. 72., 15. 23; aor. imperat. @@aae Epich. 78 Abr., Ar. Thesm. 280, Theocr. I. 149., 3.12; and (with diphth. elided) @@o° ws .. Ar. Pax 906 ; inf. @d4cac@ar Theocr. 2.72; part. @agdpevos Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 118. II. the Act. is only found in the Lacon. 1 pl. impf. écapev (i.e. €OGpev) = Cewpodper, Hesych. Odrros, acc. to Eust. 468, a dialectic form of rdos, OayuBos ; cf. Hesych., Odmrav. (Parov) péBov. Oamréov, verb. Adj. of sq., one must bury, Tid Soph. Aj. 1119. : Oda (strengthd. from 4/TA®, which appears in fut. and aor. 2 pass., in rdgos, etc.): fut. @ay~w: aor. ap~a:—Pass., fut. rapjcopat Eur. Alc. 632, Lys. 134.1; also reOdWopuar Soph. Aj. 577, 1141, Eur.: aor. CapOnv Simon. 170, Hdt. 2. 81., 7. 228; more often éragny [4] Id. 3. To, 55, and always in Att., part. év-Oagels C. I. 2839 :—pf. ré@appar, Ion. 3 pl. rebdparat Hat. 6. 103; imper. TeOdpOw Luc. Dial. Mar. 9. 1; inf. ze- Oapbat (so Ahr. for réBayar) Aesch. Cho. 366, Lycurg. 164. 7, rerapOar Plut. 2. 265 A; plqpf. pass. éré0amro Od. 11. 52, Hat. To pay the last dues to a corpse, to honour with funeral rites, 6re pv Odrrovaww ’Axarot Il. 21. 323, cf. Od. 12. 12., 24. 417, Hes. Sc. 472; which in early times was done by burning the body and burying the ashes, cf. Od. 11. 74 (HE Kakkhat ov Tevxeot) with 52 (od ydp mw éréOarro dnd xOovds); Odnrew .. ys piAas karacKapais Aesch, Theb. 1008, cf. Eur. Supp. 543 sq.3 0. és réwov Hat. 2. 41, cf. Thuc, 8.84; 0. & oixias to carry out to burial from a house, Isae. 7%. 13; Karadelper pndt rapjvat not even his burial expenses, Ar. Pl. 556; 7@ 8 elvar pyde raphvat Id. Eccl. 591; cf. évrdgios.—When the custom of burying the body entire was in- troduced, the old mode was designated as mupt Odwrev, Plut. 2. 286 E, cf. Wessel. Diod. I. p. 223, Becker Charicl. 390 sq. E.-Tr. OapynAva (iepa), wy, 7d, a festival of Apollo and Artemis held at Athens in the month Thargelion, Hippon. 28, Archil. 102, Lex ap. Dem. 518. 1:—OapynAuov, Svos, 6, the 11th month of the Attic year, from the middle of May to the middle of June, Antipho 146. 17, etc. OdpynAos apros, 6,=Oadrdawos, Ath.114 A; Odpyndos xvrpa Timocl. Avy. 1, as Meineke for 0avarnyés. OappaAtos, Sappéw, Oappytixds, Pdppos, Pappivw, Att. for Papo—. Gapoadéos, Ion. and old Att., new Att. Oappadéos, a, ov :' (Oapaos) :-— bold, of good courage, ready, daring,,undaunted, rodeniorhs ll. 21. 589, etc.; Hrop 19.169; povy Pind. N. 9.117; Amides 0. confident, Aesch. Pr. 536; c.inf., Oapp. dnd r&v immo rodAepelv Plat. Prot. 350A; 9. mept 7 Arist. Rhet. 2. 5,16; Comp. —wrepos, Id. P. A. 3. 4, 27 70 Oap- caréov confidence, év TO Oapoaréw elvat Thuc. 2. 51, Lys. 164. 4:— so in Adv., Oappadéws éxev to be of good courage, mpés Tt Plat. Apol. 34E; mpés twa Xen. An, 2. 6, 14. 2. in bad sense, overbold, audacious, Sapo. kat dvadjs Od. 17. 419; Sapcadrén, Kiov addeés 19. o1:—Adv., Oappadréws Aéyey Pevdy Isae. 49. 12. II. that which may be ventured on, 7a @., opp. to Ta dewd, Plat. Prot. 359 C, Lach- 195 B, al.; raAn6% -. Aéyew Gopades Kal Sapp. a thing safe and which one may venture on, Id, Rep. 450 E. II. a pro- 662 OapotiAcérys, new Att. Oappad-, q70s, , boldness, confidence, Plut. Aemil. 36., 2. 443 D, etc. Oapoéw, new Att. Oappéw: fut. yaw: (dpaos) :—to be of good courage, take courage, Il. 1. 92, etc.:—in bad sense (cf. Opdcos), to be over-bold, audacious, UBpe 0. Thuc. 2.65; dvev vod, parny 0. Plat. Meno 88 B, Theaet. 189 D.—Construct. : 1. absol., often in Hom., and Att. ; Odpoe take courage! cheer up, Hom., Aesch. Supp. 732, etc.; Oapoeire Ib. 792, cf. ebOapcéw; Odpper Ar. Pl, 328, al.; often in part. in an Ady. sense, Oapofjoas pada eime with good courage, Il. 1. 85, cf. Aesch, Cho. 666 ; xépmacoy Oapo@y Id. Ag. 1671, cf. Pr. 916, Soph. O. C. 491 ; Oapaéovres épifere Hat. 5. 49; wiht Oappav Alex. Tox. 3; A€éye Toivuy @appayv Plat. Phaedr. 243 E; Oappav psa Over 7 dxvay nixeto Xen. Ages. II, 2 ;—also, 7d teBappnxds confidence, Plut. Fab. 16 ; 70 Oappody Ths dpews Id. Cat. Mi. At: 2. c. acc., Odpoe révbe 7 deOdov take heart for this struggle, Od. 8.197; so, later, fo feel confidence against, to disdain, have no fear for, mavra Hat. 7. 50; 0. yépovros xeipa Eur. Andr, 993, cf. Soph. O. C. 649; @avaror Plat. Phaedo 88 B; 7d rotodrov capa ..oi pev éxOpot Oappovow. - Id. Phaedr. 239 D; 0. 7d droxpivecOa Id, Euthyd, 275 C; otre Sidummos €Odpper rovrous ovre obro: PiAurmov Dem. 30.16; 6. udyny to venture a fight, Xen. An. 3. 2, 20 (cf. Hell. 2.4 ,9):—c. acc. cogn., 0. Od4ppos Plat.Phaedogs5C; alaxpa Odppy @. Id. Prot. 360B :—in Epitaphs, Oapoe .. , ovdels GOavaros C. I. 4463, 5200, al. b. c. ace. pers., also, to have confidence in, twa Xen, Cyr. 5. 5, 42, Dem. 30. 15, Dio C. 51. 11:—Pass. to be confidently trusted, Philostr. 788 3. Oapcety tux to have confidence in or on some one or something, Hdt. 3. 76. 4. with Preps., 0. wept or imép twos to be conjident about .. , Soph. Aj. 793, Plat. Rep. 574 B, 566 B; ded rx Isocr. 38C; ént ru Ib. 128D; apds re Plat. Prot. 350 B, Rep. 574 B; mpds éyavrov in myself, Ar. Eccl. 1060; so, ép éavr@ Plut. 2. 69 C. 5. c. inf, to believe confidently that .. , Soph. Ant. 668 ; so, 0. d7¢.. , Thuc, 1. 81, etc.; 6. 7d efeAéyEerv Dem. 342. 5; but also, to make bold or venture to do, Xen. Cyr. 8. 8, 6, Plut. Pericl. 22. els, egga, ev, =Oapoadéos, Nonn. D. 13. 562. Odponsis, ews, %, confidence in a thing, rats vavat Thuc. 7. 49. Oapanréov, verb. Adj. oxe must have confidence, cited from Jambl. Oapontikds, Att. Gapp-, 7, dv, courageous, Arist. Probl. 27. 3, 2. Oapcotrovéw, to make confident, Athanas. 2. 452, and Byz. Qapoo-moids, dv, making confident, Eust. 1344. 12. Odpoos, new Att. Odppos, 7d, (Opacis) courage, boldness, Hom. and Att.; 0. twés courage to do a thing, Aesch. Cho. gt, Soph. O. C. 48; but also, courage against .., Tav Todeplow Plat. Legg. 647 B; also, mpds Tods cranes Xen. Cyr. 4. 2,15; 0. toxe take courage, Soph. Ph. 807; 0. éxew epi twos Id. El. 412; 0. déferv Hes. Sc. 96; aipev Eur. I. A. 1598; AapBavew Act. Ap. 28.15; but, 0. AapBaver rva Thuc. 2. 92 :—also, 0, d:ddvat, éumveev, ev xpadin BaddAcy, evi ppect Ocivar, evi orHPerat evievac Hom.; mapéxerv, euBadrrew, éuroreiv rin Thuc. 6. 68, Xen., etc.; 0. eyylyvera, éumimre ivi Id. ;—éAmidos Odpoos [éo7i por] ds .. Eur. Hec. 370:—pl., pd8or wat Odppy Arist. Eth. N, 2. 7, 2, al. 2. that which gives courage, ddohvypov .., Odpoos gidots Aesch. Theb. 270, cf. 184 ;—so in pl. Odpon, grounds of con- Jidence, Eur. 1. T. 1283, Plat. Prot. 360 B. II. rarely in bad sense, =Opdoos, audacity, Odpaos anrov éxovea Il. 21. 395; pulns Odp- gos to represent the reckless daring of Hector, 17. 570.—On the diff. of Odpaos and Opacos, v. sub Opacos. rouvTws, new Att. app-, Ady. from gen, part. pres. of @apaéw, boldly, courageously, Xen. Symp. 2, 11; 9. es Dio C. 53. 3. Odpatvos, ov, =Oapaaréos, Il.16. 70; c. dat. relying on a thing, olevg 13. 823. japovve [d], new Att. Gappivw, Causal of Oapséw, to encourage, cheer, Odpouvoy (aor. imper.) 5€ of Frop Il. 16. 242; Oapodvecne (Ion. impf.) mapioTapevos enxéecow 4. 233; Oapovvé re pUOy 10. 190; Oap- auvas énéeoot Od. 13. 3233 Sapa. Adyous, opp. to poBetv, Aesch. Pers. 215; epyw Kat Adyw Xen. Cyr. 6. 3, 27; also in Hdt. 2.141, Thuc. 2. 59, etc, II. intr. =@apcéw, GAr’, @ pidrn, Odpovve Soph. El. 916.—On the diff. between @apaiva and Opacive, v. sub Opdcos. Oapovs, cia, ¥, courageous, Philo 2. 665, v.1. Thuc. 7. 77: v. Opdoos, Oapo, ods, 4}, name of Athena, Schol. Hom, Il. 5. 2. OGcar, Pdo%e, v. sub Odopat. ‘ @acvs, a, ov, of or from Thasos, Thasian, Odotos (sc. olvos), Thasian wine, Hermipp. Popp. 2. 3, Ar. Fr. 301, etc.; by metath., @dorov oivov orapviov Ar. Lys. 196, cf. Eccl. 1160 :—Odota (sc. xdépva), 74, almonds, Plut. 2. 1097 D, cf. Chrysipp. Tyan. ap. Ath. 647 F :—) @acia GApn pickled sea-fish, Cratin. “Apx. 3 and without GAyy, dvaxucav Oaciav to make this pickle, Ar. Ach. 671. Oaacov, Att. Parrov, v. sub taxds. Qdcow, Ep. Sadeow (q. v.), to sit, sit idle, orpards 5& Odooe Eur. Supp. 3913 fouxos 9. Id. Bacch, 622; dupt Boudry Id. Rhes. 509; én’ d«rais Id, Hec. 36, I. T. 1253; mpds BaOpos Id. H. F. 715 ;—also c, ace. sedis, Pdacev Opdvov Soph. O. T. 161; 0. rpimoba Eur. lon 91; 0. daredov Id, Andr. 117 :—but c. acc. cogn., 0, Svarqvous Edpas to sit in wretched posture, Eur. H. F. 1214, cf. Ar. Thesm. 889: v. Boda II, Oaxéw, Pdcouy, Att. Odrrwv, v. sub taxus. Odrepov, v. sub Erepos. Oarie. jpos, 6, Dor. for Oeargp, =Searts, Hesych. @arus, vos, %, Dor. for Oearvs, =Oewpla, Hesych, Oadpa, 7d: Ion. Odtpa or rather Odpa, like Capata, Oapicvos, etc., Dind. Dial. Hdt. p. xxxvii: (Odopat) : I. of objects, whatever one regards with wonder, a wonder. marvel, Hom, and Hes. always in Oapoadeorns — Oavpaxrpov. of Hercules, Soph. Tr. 961, etc. :—often c. inf., @adya i6o0a a wonder to behold, Od. 9. 190, etc.; Oadpa idety h. Hom. Ven. 206, Hes. ; Oaip idety evcooptas Eur. Bacch. 693; Gadpa dxodca Pind, P. 1.50; 8. padeiv Soph. Tr. 673, etc.;—@ap’ dr .. strange that .., ‘Theocr, 15. 23 ob Gadpa [éo7] no wonder, Pind. N. 10. 94; so, Kat Gadpa ovdév and no wonder, Ar. Pl. 99; Oadpua ovdév, c. inf., Plat. Rep. 498 D, etc.; ti rovro @.; Eur. Hipp. 439; so in Hom., } pada Satya mov 83e Keira Od, 17. 306; 0. cogioriefjs a wonder of sophistry, Plat. Soph. 233 A:—Oapa moreiodal 7 Hat.1. 68., 9. 585 or, Papa moveiabai rwvos Id. 3. 23., 7. 99:—after Hom. also in pl., Oavpar’ Euot mde Aesch. Ag, 1166; Oadpar’ dvOphmos Spay Eur. Ion 1142; Oavpd- twv xpelocova or wépa things more than wondrous, Id. Bacch. 667, Hec. 714. ‘2. in pl. also jugglers’ tricks, Plat. Rep. 514 B, Legg. 658 B: mountebank-gambols, Xen. Symp. 2, 1, cf. 7, 2, Casaub. Theophr. Char. 6. 2, Ath. 22. II. of the feeling, wonder, astonish- ment, Oadpa p’ exe ds.., Od. 10, 326, etc.; but also, érxov Gatpa Soph. El. 897; 0. 8 Supaciw mépa Aesch. Eum, 407; 0. pw bwodverae Soph. El. 928; 0. »’ éAapBavev Ar. Av. 511; Oavparos dgsos worthy of wonder, Eur.Hipp.g06,etc.; év @@part elvas or yiryveaOa to be astonished, Hat. 1. 68, al., Thuc. 8.14; év Odpare éxecOat or evéxeoOar Hat. 8. 135., 7.128; twds ata thing, Id. 9. 37; 9. movetoOar wept Tivos Id. 3. 23; é bavpart roeioOa Plut. Pomp. 14; 5d Oavparos éxew Hdn. 2. 2,17 :—pl., Oavpdrov érdgia Eur. Bacch. 716, cf. Plat. Legg. 967 A. Oavpadto, Ion. Owip— or rather Owp— (Vv. Gada): Att. fut. Pavpdcopae Aesch. Pr. 476, Eur. Alc. 157, Plat., @avpdooopa Il, 18. 467; fut. Oavpdow Hipp. 246. 9, Plut. and late Prose, (in Xen. Hell. 5. 1, 14, Oavpdtovor is restored for -covot, in Cyr. 5.2, 12 Oavpdoarre for —ceTe): aor, @atpaca Att., Ep. davpaca h. Hom. Merc. 414: pf. reOavpaxa Xen. Mem. 1. 4, 2, etc.:—Med., Galen., Procl., etc.:—Pass., fut. -acOjoopa Thuc., etc.: gor. @avpdoOny Id.: pf. TeOatpacpae Polyb. 4. 82, I. 1. absol. to wonder, marvel, be astonied, Il. 24. 394, etc. ; cf. Oavpas. 2. c. acc. to look on with der and a vent, to wonder at, marvel at, ll. 24. 631, Od. 1. 382; 0. méAeudv TE paxny TE Il. 13.11; freq. in Hdt. and Att.; Tvx7 Oavpdcat py dgia Soph. O. T. 777, cf. O. C. 1152, El. 393. b. to regard with wonder and reverence, to honour, admire, worship, Lat. admirari, observare, only once in Hom. (but cf. @avyaivw), otre 7 Oavpdeav.., ot7 dydacbat Od, 16. 203; but often later, as Hdt. 3. 80, Aesch. Theb. 772, Soph. Aj. 1093, etc.; 8. r¥uBov marpés Eur. El. 519; pnde Tov mAOUTOY pnde TV bdgav Tiv Tobira Oavpatnre, GAN buds avrovs Dem, 582.5; pndev @. Lat. nil admirari, Plut. 2. 44 B; applied by Arist. to the attendance of small birds on the owl, H. A. 9. 1, 15 :-—0. twa Tivos for a thing, Thuc. 6. 36, Isocr.137D; 0. rid ém codia Plat. Theaet. 161 C, Xen. Mem, I. 4,2; 5:4 7 Isocr. 52D; dad twos Plut. Rom. 7. c. to say with astonishment, iva pnoels..eira tér’ obk edeyes TadTa.., Oavpacn Dem. 349. 3. 3. c. gen. to wonder at, marvel at, Thuc, 3. 38, Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 53, Isocr. 27 B; with a part., 0. god A€yorros Plat. Prot. 329 B, cf. Crito 50C; 0. trav mpodévraw adiis Aéyey Thuc. 3. 38; Gap. i twos to wonder at a thing in a person, Soph. Ph. 1362, cf. Eur. Hipp. 1041; 8 @avudtw rod éraipov Plat. Theaet. 161 B, cf. Rep. 376; also c. dupl. gen., 0. rovrou rijs davolas Lys. 100. 16 :—these phrases are used in Att. as a civil mode of expressing dissent. 4. rarely c. dat. rei, to wonder at, Thuc. 4. 85., 7. 63. 5. foll. by Preps., 0. mapd modAd Il. 10.12; wept revos Plat. Tim. 80C; 0. mept Tivos Ti TH TExvD ovpBadderar Sosip. Karay. 1. 37. 6. very often foll. by a relative sentence, Oavpd oper, ofoy érvxOn Il. 2. 320; 8. boris ora 6 dvrepav Thuc. 3.38; Oavpdcovres Ti corto TodiTela Xen, Hell. 2.3,173 8 ws ov mw mapaor Thuc. I. 90, cf. Xen. Cyr. I. 4, 20, etc.:—in Att., 0, d71 I wonder at the fact that,., Plat. Rep. 489 A; but this is more commonly expressed by the dubitative form @avydatw ei.., I wonder if..or whether.., as a more polite way of saying Z wonder that.., Hdt. 1. 155, Soph. O. C. 1140, Plat. Phaedo 97 A, Symp. 215A; 8 Kat Oavpatw, ci.., Dem. 368.12; 0. e ph.-, Lat. mirum nt.,, Ar. Pax 1292.—This construction is often combined with one or other of the foregoing, b. c. acc., foll. by a Relat., Satpal’ Ax:Aja, boos Env ofds re Il, 24. 629, cf. 2. 3923 TAcuaxov Gatpator, § Oapaadréws dydpevey they marvelled at ‘Telemachus, that he spake so boldly, Od. 1. 382., 18. 411., 20. 269; 70 5& Oavpdteoxor (lon. impf.), @s.. 19. 229; 6. cod yA@ooay, ws OpactaTopos Aesch. Ag. 1399, etc.:—sometimes also with ds omitted, dAAd 7d Gavpate idov.., Od. 4. 655; Oavydoas exw réde* xphy yap--, Soph. Ph. 1362 :—sometimes with an inf., Oavpatopev “Exropa Siov, aixpnriy Eyevar (for olds éom) Il. 5. Gor. ce. c. gen. in same manner, Gaup, twéds, fyriva yvepny ~éxav err. Antipho 112. 7; 0. Tav.. exévrow bmws ob r€éyoucw Isocr, 27 B; Oavp. abrod—ri ToAuhoe A€yew Dem, 721.27; Oavpdtw twds brt.., Isocr. 41 A; Gavp. Tov SuvacrevivTwy el hyodvra: I wonder at men in power sup- posing, Id. 76 B; tpay 0. ei yr) Bondhoere Xen. Hell. 2. 3, 52:—also, 0. airov .. rovTo, ws .., Plat. Phaedo 89 A. 7. c. acc. et inf., 0. oe mevOciv Eur, Med. 268, cf. Alc. 1130; but also c. gen. pro acc., Bavydta 5é cov .- Kupetv héyoucay Aesch. Ag. 1199. II. Pass. to be looked at with wonder, Hat. 4. 28; Savpacerar pn) wapmr, i.e. I keep wondering that he is not present, Soph. O, T. 289. 2. to be admired, Hat. 3.82., 7,2043 xapis 8 de’ judy ddropévwy Oavpaterar Aesch. Theb. 733 ; 7a eixéra 0. to receive proper marks of respect, Thue. r. 38. Pompe, Ep. fut. Oavpavéw,=Oavpdtw 2, to admire, gaze upon, avupaveovres Od. 8, 108; dévdpea Oavpawe Pind. O. 3.57 :— Pass., Oavpaivoyrat Callicr. ap. Stob. 486. 42.—Cf. dapBalve. sing., as Il. 13. 99, etc.; Oadp’ érérvero meheptov, of Polypheme, Od. g. 190; Satya Bporotat, of a beautiful woman, 11. 287; domeriv tm 0., 4 Garpartpov, 7d, the money paid t | * tri DE. M. (cf. Gada 1. 2), ‘y paid to see conjurors’ tricks, Sophron ap- Oauparéos — Oeaouat. £08, @, ov, wondrous, Hesych. Gavpas, avros, 5, the mythic sire of Iris, Hes. Th. 265; alleged b Plato to illustrate the principle ob« GAAn dpx}) progodias } 7d Oavpa- €ev, Theaet. 155 D, cf. Arist. Metaph. 1. 2, 9, Rhet. 1. 11, 21, al. Oaupicia, %, wonder, Galen. 12. 943 :—dub., v. Lob. Phryn. 509. Oavpdoros, a, ov, Ion. Owip— or rather Owp-: (v. Gada); rarely os, ov, Luc. Imag. 19 :—wondrous, wonderful, marvellous, do¢a, h. Hom, Merc. 4433 xapis Hes. Th. 584; Oavpacimrépy Hdt. 2.21; @avpdora wonders, marvels, Ib. 35, cf. 0. 47; @avpaowa épyd¢ecOa Plat. Apol. 35A; Brrov Cavpacra, ‘kaimep dvra Oavpacta less admired, though admirable, Plut. 2. 974 D:—e. inf., répas 0. mpootdéa0at Pind. P. 1. 49; ob Oavpdoidy [éorr], -c. inf, Ar. Thesm. 468; éo7ly 82..TodTO.. Oavpdciov, Snws..Id. Pl. 340; Oavpdoros Td Kaddos marvellous for beauty, Xen. An. 2. 3,9; also, mpds Tv TéApay Bavpaciwraros Aeschin. 75- 17:—eften with a relat. added, @avpdovoy dcov wonderfully much, Plat. Symp. 217A; Oavgdowe Aika Dem. 348.28; cf. Oavpacrds :— 70 @avpaciwratov what is most wonderful, Diod. 1. 63. 2. Adv. —iws, derfully, i.e. dingiy, Ar. Nub. 1240; often with ws added, @. Gs d@Avos marvellously wretched, Plat. Gorg. 471 B; 0. dv as A, etc. II. like aypa, the beasts taken, spoil, booty, prey, game, aipa 8 Swe Oeds pevo- exéa Onpny Od. g. 158, cf. Aesch. Cho. 251, Eur. Bacch. 1144, Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 253 Onpayv Kadjy, of a prisoner, Soph, Ph. 609; in pl., @ rravat Ofjpat, of birds, Ib. 1146; rv 0. ent rod pécov Typodoa watching its prey, of a spider, Arist. H. A. 9. 39, 4. III. in Roman times, the games of the Circus, Epigr. Gr. 351.3; so, Onpea ordpara the entrance of the Circus, Ib. 885; Onpedropes dvdpes men engaged in these games, Ib. Onp-aypérys, ov, 6, a hunter, Eur. Bacch. 1020, Anth. P. 6, 184: also Oeaypevrns, Theod. Prodr. p. 213. paypla, 7, the chase of wild beasts, Poll. 5. 12. Onp-aypos, ov, (dypa) for catching wild beasts or game, wé5n Ion ap. Ath. 451 E:—name of a hound, Anth. P. 7. 304. Onpaixsv or Ofpatrov, 74, a dress worn in the satyric drama at Athens, invented in the island Thera, v. Ath. 424 F, Poll. 7. 48. Ojpipa, 7d, (6npdw) that which is caught, prey, spoil, booty, Eur. Bacch. 869, Hel. 192, Anth. P. 6. 105, Plut. Lucull. 17: metaph., dperd .., 0. nad Tov Bi Arist. Scol. (Fr. 625). O@npapxos, 6, an elephant-driver, Ael. Tact. 23; cf. (@apxos. Onpacipos [a], ov, (Onpdw) to be hunted down, Onpevovres od Onpa- gipous yapous Aesch. Pr, 858, Onparetpa, fem. of Onpnrnp, a huntress, Call. Del. 220. Onparéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be hunged after, sought eagerly, Soph, Ph. 116, Xen, Mem. 2. 6, 8. II. Onparéov one must hunt after, Xen, Cyr. 2. 4, Io. Onparp, Ion. —yrHp, pos, 6, post. for Onparns, Il. 5.51, etc. ; Onpy- Tijpos Gvdpés 21.574; dvdpes 08.12.1703 Kovpor 0.17.720; Tay ddjhav 6. Philostr. 864. Onpariptos, a, ov, =Onpatirds, c, gen., épwros Soph. Fr. 421. Onparis, oD, 6, (Onpde) a hunter, Acl. N. A. 13.12: metaph., 0. Adyar, Lat. auceps verborum, Ar. Nub, 358; dégns Diog. L. 8.8, etc. Onparikds, 4, dv,=Onpevrixds, épya Acl.N. A. 14.53 0. onpeta of the traces left by animals, Plut. 2. 593 B. 2. jit for winning, Ta 0. tav piroy the arts for winning friends, Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 33. 3. skilled in the chase, Plut. 2. 960 A, 965 B. ; arés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. to be caught, Polyb, 10. 47, 11, etc. > ne 2 x2 _ dprmedos Geop. 4. 8, Plin. 14. 22. ae 3, ea, %, capture of wild beasts, Sym. Vals ¢ 676 Ofpatpov, 74, an instrument of the chase, a net, trap, etc., Xen. Mem. 2. I, 4., 3. II, 7, etc. Onpdrwp, Ion. -Arwp, opos, 6,=Onparhp, Onphropas dvdpas Il. 9. 544 (540); «dav Onpdrwp Nicol. Dam. p. 47: metaph., 0. Aeferdiav Democr. ap. Clem, Al. 328. prov, 70, Dim. of @nptov, of insects, Damocr. ap. Galen. 13. 892. Onpdw: fut. dow Soph. Ph. 958, Eur. I. T. 1426, Xen. An. 4.5, 24, etc.: aor, €0jpaca Eur. Bacch. 1215, Xen.: pf. reOnpaxa Xen. Cyr. 2. 4, 16:— Med., fut. @npdgopat (which, acc. to Moer., is the true Att. fut.) Eur. Bacch. 228, I. T. 1324: aor. €@npaodpnv Soph. Ph. 1007, Eur. Hipp. 919 :—Pass., fut. -d0jcopnar Geop.: aor. @npdadny, v. infr. mr: (On, @npa): cf. cvv-Onpdo. To hunt or chase wild beasts, mostly with a notion of catching or taking them, Aaydus, opijxas Xen. |.c., Hell. 4. 2, 12, etc.; wai p’ ods &Onpay mpécbe Onpacover viv Soph. Ph. 958; of fishermen, Arist. Fr. 66:—also of men to catch or capture, kai o° élde Onpav’ % THxn Soph. O. C. 1026, cf. Ph. 1007, Xen. An. 5. I, 9; also to captivate by manner, words, etc., Xen. Mem. 2. 6, 28., 3. 11, 7:—0. médw to seek to destroy it, Aesch, Pers. 233. 2. metaph., like Lat. venari, to hunt after a thing, pursue it eagerly, rupavvida Soph. O. T. 541; Onpav ob mpéwe raunyxava Id. Ant. 92; puplar xépar Onp@ar Aéx- Tpov Tovpdv Eur. I. A. 960; Huaprov 4} Onp® 7; have I missed or do I hit the quarry? Aesch. Ag. 1194; ti xpjua Onp&v; Eur. Supp. 115: simply, ¢o reach or attain to, 7 Pind. I. 4. 77 (3. 64). 3. c. inf. to seek or endeavour to do, Onp& yapety pe Eur. Hel. 63; and in Med., &s pe Onparar AaBeiv Ib. 545 ; sdbopncd ge .. dptéca: Onpwpevor Soph. Aj. 2. TI. Med. much like Act. to hunt for, fish for, éyxédets Ar. Eq. 864; absol., of Onp@pevor hunters, Xen. Cyn. 11, 2: but, 2. mostly metaph. ¢o cast about for, seek after, &uérowss Onphpevor Tiv iyceinv Hdt. 2.77; paorois edeoy 6. Eur. Or. 568; dégav Dem. 1407. 17, etc.; 0. mupds mynv to find, discover it, Aesch, Pr. 109 :—c. inf., v. supr, 3. III. Pass. to be hunted, pursued, mpos drys Onpadeioa Aesch. Pr. 1072; tm’ dvip@yv Eur. Bacch. 732; ’AAxBiddns did KaAdOS ind yuvarkdv Onpwpevos Xen. Mem. 1. 2, 24.—Cf. Onpedw. Onpetos, ov, also a, ov Plat. Phaedr. 248 D, Anth. P. 5. 266: (@7p):— of wild beasts, Lat. ferinus, déppa Onpeov A€ovros Panyas. 8 ; Onpeov ypapny the figures of animals worked upon the cloak, Aesch, Cho. 232; 0. Saxos = OHp, Eur. Cycl. 325; 0. Bia, periphr. for 5 Onp, the centaur, Soph. Tr. 1059; 0. xpéa game, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 6; 0. pvors Plat. |. c.; 6. avr4ds (& veBpod KwAwY eipyacpevos) Poll. 4. 75. TI. v. Ofpa m1. Onpetras, ov, 6, Lacon. name of Ares, Paus. 3. 19, 8, Hesych. p-err@dés, dv, charming wild beasts, Suid., Eccl. eupa, 76, (Onpevw) =Onpapa, spoil, prey, Eur. 1. A. 1162. in pl. hunting, Plat. Legg. 823 B. Onpevors, ews, 7, hunting, the chase, Plat. Legg. 824 A: metaph., dvo- parov Onpedoas Idz Theaet. 166 C. Onpevréov, verb. Adj. one must hunt after, Polyb. 1. 35, 8. Onpe » Rpos, 6, =sq., Opp. C. 1. 449. Onpeuris, ov, 6, (Onpetw) =Onparys, a hunter, used by Hom. (only in Il.) always as Adj., xdvecot xat dvdpaor Onpevrjow hounds and huntsmen, IL. 12.41; év «vot Onpevrpjor 11.325; and so Hes. Sc. 303, 388, Theogn. 1254, Xen. Ages. 9, 6; also of a fisher, Hdt. 2.70; 0. mépdié a decoy partridge, Arist. H. A. 9.8, 8; 0. igs birdlime, Anth. P. 5. 100. 2. metaph., 0. véwv xat mAovalwy Plat. Soph. 231 D; xaddAlorwy dvopdrwv Ath, 122 C. 4 6s, %, ov, of or for hunting, kives 0. hounds, Ar. Pl.157, Xen. Lac. 6, 3; Bios @. the life of hunters, Arist. Pol. 1. 8, 8 :—% —Kf (sc. téxvn), hunting, the chase, Plat. Polit. 289 A; metaph., Id. Euthyd. 290 B. 2. c. gen. hunting after, Tis Tpopys Arist. H. A. 1, 1, 27. Lepevrba: h, Ov, =Onpards, Arist. Pol. 7. 2, 15. Onpevrpra, fem. of Onpeurnp, Hesych. ; 0. edves Themist. 220 B. Onpevrwp, opos, 6, y. Ohpa IIT. bw: fut. ow :—Med., fut. couar Plat. Soph. 222 A: aor. eOnpev- odpny Id. Theaet. 197 D, Euthyd. 290 C:—Pass., aor. €OnpevOnv Hat. 3. 102, Aesch. Cho. 493, Plat.: (cf. Onpaw). To hunt, Onpevovra while hunting, Od. 19. 465, cf. Hdt. 4. 112; Onpevey 5d Kevijs is used by Hipp. Progn. 38, of the motions of the hands of dying persons. II. c, acc. to hunt after, chase, catch, drred€Bous Ht. 4.172; Onpia, dpyvidas dypias Xen. An. 1. 2, 7, Plat. Theaet. 197 C; ly@is Arist. H. A. 8. 20, 3, al. :—of men, to hunt them, Aunt them down, Hat. 4. 183; 0. dvOpé- mous ém Oolvny % Ovotay Arist. Pol, 7. 2,15: to lay wait for them, Xen. An. 1. 2, 13; Tirvdy Bédos Ofpevaty it hit, struck him, Pind. P. 4. 161:—so in Med., Ar. Fr. 146, Plat. Rep. 531 A, etc.:—Pass. to be hunted, Hdt. 3. 102: to be preyed upon, Ib. 108: to be caught, ré5as Aesch. Cho. 493. 2. metaph. to hunt or seek after, xepdéov pérpav Pind. N. 11. 62; ‘yapous Aesch. Pr. 858; dperdy Eur. I. A. 5693 0. véous wAouvalous dpiavots Aeschin. 24. 26; H5ovds, emorhuny, piriay, ebSofoy Blov Isocr. 5 C, Plat. Theaet. 200 A, al. ; evdarpoviay Arist. Pol. 7.8, 5; dvdpara, phyara Plat. Gorg. 489 B, Andoc. 2. 23, cf, Antipho 143. 30; Tas dpxds Ty avAdoyopay Arist. An. Pr. I. 30, 2, al. :—so in Med., Plat. Gorg. 464 D, Euthyd. 290 C.—The Trag. preferred the form Opt, except where the metre demanded Onpevw, pe-ovos, ov, = Onpopdvos, E. M. 502. 3. Onpyya, OnpyThp, —Hretpa, —hrwp, Ion. for Onpapa, etc. , Pass, fo pass into a beast, of the soul, Hermes. Trism. II. ae Ce . Ojpatpov — Onpiwsis. Onpi-dAwros [a], ov, caught by wild beasts, Lxx (Lev. 5. 2). Onpt-Bopos, ov, v. sub OnpdBopos. Onptsrov, 74, Dim. of Onpioy, in pl. animalculae, Theophr. H. P. 2, 8, 3. OnpixActos, a, ov, or os, ov, Thericlean, made by Thericles, a famous Corinthian potter (Eubul. AoA, 2, Kapr. 2), 0. «UME, KpaThp Alex. ‘In. 2, Kuxv. 1; but often OnpixAela (or -os) alone, Id. "Ayaw. 4, Menand. @cop. 4, Myv. 2: it seems to have been a large, broad cup, described as 1) weyaAn by Dioxipp. iA. 1; TH Onpicretav evavkdrwroy donida Aristopho &:A, 1; v. Bentl. Phal. § 3. ; Onprd-BAnTos, ov, of being thrown to wild beasts, Ttuupla Theophyl. Onpvs-Bpwros, ov, = OnpdBopos, Diod. 18. 36; xirdv Greg. Nyss. Onpro-yvapov, ovos, 6, 7, of bestial mind, Eccl. ; Onpro-Betkrar, of, exhibitors of wild beasts, Basilic. Onpré-Syypa, 74, the bite of a serpent, Diosc. 2. 97; v. Lob. Phryn. 304. Pash bacnee, ov, bitten by a wild beast, esp. by a serpent, Damocr. ap. Galen. 13. 902, Diosc. 4.24: —Snerikés, 4, dv, Epiphan. Onpro-cdns, és, like a wild beast, Adamant. Phys. I. 1. Onpro-Onpas, ov, =Onpobnpas, Byz. Onpro-Kdpos, 6, a keeper of wild beasts, Procop. Onpio-Krévos, ov, =Onpoxrdvos, Eust. 1416. 14. Onpropaixéw, to fight with wild beasts, Diod. 3. 43, Artemid. 2. 54. Onpro-paxns, ov, 6, one who fights with wild beasts, esp. in the Roman amphitheatre, Lat. bestiarius, Diod. Excerpt. 537. Onpropaxia, %, a fighting with wild beasts, Strabo 131, Philo 1. 602. Onpro-paxos, ov, fighting with wild beasts, Luc. Lexiph. 19. Onpro-ptyns, és, half man half beast, as Scylla, Tzetz. Lyc. 45. Onprd-popdos, ov, (Hopp) in the form of a beast, Eust. 1139. 57, Procl., etc.:—and Subst. @qpropopdia, 7, Epiphan. \ Onpiov, 74, in form a Dim. of O4p, but in usage equiv. to it, a wild animal, beast, esp. of such as are hunted, pdAa yap péya Onploy jjev, of a stag, Od. 10, 171, 180 (never in Il.); it is in fact the prose form of Onp, but, like ma:dloy, it is never used by Trag. (for the Fragments of Eur. from which it is cited are spurious) :—of savage beasts, Hdt. 6. 44, Xen. An. I. 2, 7, Isocr. 267 B, etc.: but, 0. Hecoy Plat. Rep. 535 E; of a dog, Theocr. 25. 79 :—in pl. beasts, opp. to men, birds, and fishes, h. Hom. Ven. 4, Hdt. 3.108: wild animals, game, opp. to ‘Bord, Plat. Menex. 237 D:—proverb., 7) Onplov 7) eds, either above or below the nature of man, Arist. Pol. 1. 2, 14, cf. Eth, N. 7.1, 2; so, eis Onpiov Bidy aqunvel- o0a Plat. Phaedr. 249 B. 2. an animal, like (@ov, Hat. 1. 119; vevomiora Top elvar Epivvyxov Id. 3.16; even of fishes, Arist. H. A. 8. 13, 7, Antiph. Ave. 1.7; ov« éorw oddtr 6, Tay ixOtwy aruxéoTepor Id. Morx. 1; opp. to plants, Plat. Symp. 188 B. 3. a poisonous animal, reptile, serpent (v. Onptakds), Diosc, 1.135, Act. Ap. 28. 4. It. also as real Dim. a Jittle animal, insect, Arist. H. A. 9. 39, 6; in pl., of bees, Theocr. 19. 6;-of worms in the bowels, Hipp. ap. Galen. IIt. as Medic, term, = @npiwpa, Hipp. Coac. 192. IV. as a term of reproach, beast! like Lat, bel/ua or French béte, @ Se:Adrarov od Onpiov Ar. Pl. 439, cf. Eq. 274, Nub. 184; xéAam, dev@ Onpiy Plat. Phaedr. 240 B; poverty is called Bapvraroy @., Menand. Incert. 497; music is said det tt xawvov Onptov ricrey, Anaxil. “Cax.1; Th 8, ef adrod rod Onplov dxnedare; said Aeschines, speaking of Demosthenes, Plin. Epist. 2. 3. Onpro-vapKn, 7, a plant chat benumbs serpents, Plin. 24. 102, etc. plo-trovéw, to make into wild beasts, Tzetz. Lyc. 818. Onpro-mperis, és, beast-like, Eccl. Onpié-crepvos, ov, with the breast of a wild beast, Nicet. Eug. 4. 178. Onprdrys, 770s, ), the nature of a beast, savageness, brutality, Arist. Eth. N. 7.1, 1, Metop. ap. Stob. ro. 11. Onprd-rpomros, ov, of the nature of a wild beast, Eccl. Onpro-tpodeiov, 7d, a place where wild beasts are kept, menagerie, Hortens. in Varro R. R. 3. 13. Onprotpodéw, to keep asa wild beast in a den, Alciphro Fr. 5. Onpro-rpéos, ov, abounding in wild beasts, of a country, Strabo 131: —heeping wild beasts, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 250. 11. II. pro- parox. Onpidrporos, ov, pass. fed on wild animals, Galen. 10. p. 391. Onprd-puxos, with the soul of a beast, Theod. Prodr. p- 25. Onpidw, to make into a wild beast, Greg. Naz. :—Pass., of the com- panions of Ulysses, C. I. 6130. II. Pass. to come to the full size of a beast, mply Onpioticda tov ~yévov Eubul. Spryy. 1. 14. 2. to become brutal or savage, Onprovipevos Plat. Legg. 935 A. 3. of seeds, like (wodc@at, to be infested with worms, Theophr. C. P. 5. 18, I. 4. as Medic, term, reOnpiapévoy €dxos=Onpiwpa, Diosc. 3. 11. Onpiras, ov, 6, = Onpeiras, q.v. Anprddys, Li! (€f50s) full of wild beasts, infested by them, Lat. belluosus, of countries, 7) 8. A:Bin Hat. 4. 181; ovpea OnpiwdéoraTa 1. 110; é&y TH Onp@der [x&pa] 4. 174, cf. 181., 2. 32; Onpwdecrarns eovons THs Garacons ravrns full of ravenous fishes, 6. 44. II. of beasts, oe Arist. P. A. 3. 2, 5: 70 0) wild or savage nature, Id. H. A. 8. A y14, 2. of men, beast-like, wild, savage, brutal, Lat. belluinus, ‘avra Hipp. Vet. Med. 9 ; Boros Eur. Supp, 202; #504 Plat. Rep. 591 C; 6 6. €v dvOphmots omavios Arist. Eth. N, 7- 1,33 of Aakdves .. Onpiw- des dwepyafovra [rods aidas} Id. Pol. 8. 4, 1, cf. 5:—7d 0. the animal nature, Eur. lon 666; brutality, Plat. Crat.394E, al., cf. Arist. Eth.N.7. 1, ET alld sted eros mpés tive Isocr. 226C. III. as Medic. » ma gnant, of ulcers, Diosc. 2.131, Plut. 2.165 E; cf. Onpiwpa. Onprobla, 7}, =Onprdrys, Arist. Eth. N. 7.1, 2 (Bekk, OnpudiBet). Onptopa, 7, a malignant ulcer (cf. Onpiov 111), Cels. 5. 28, Colacine ov, named after a wild beast, Eust. ad Dion. P. 976. PLaots, ews, 7, a turning into a beast, Luc, Salt. 48. savageness, brutality, Greg. Nyss. a OnpoBorew — Oiacos. OnpoBodtw, fo slay wild beasts, Soph. Ph. 165, v. 1. Anth. P. 6. 186. @np6-Bopos, ov, eaten or torn by wild beasts, xpéas Pseudo-Phocyl. 136 (al. OnpiBopov) ; 0. Oavaros death by wild beasts, Manetho 4.614. Onpo-Botos, ov, where wild beasts feed, épnuoctvny Anth. P. 9. 4. €np6-Bpwros, ov, =OnpdBoros, Strab. 263, with v. 1. OnproBp-. O@npd-SyKxTos, ov, stung by a serpent, Schol. Soph. Ph. 717. Onpo-SidacKuAta, 4, a taming of wild beasts, Manetho 4. 425. Onpo-StaKrys, ov, 5, a hunter of wild beasts, Manass. 6304; so —Stwe, wos, 6, Choerob. in A. B. 1381, E. M. Onpo-eSys, és, having the forms of wild beasts, Hesych. Onpo-Lvyo-Kapt-pérwmos, ov,=6 Ofpas (vyav Kal kdurrov 7a péto- wa, a word formed to bring all the letters into a verse, Anth. P. 9. 538. Onpo-Onpas, ov or a, 6, a hunter, Hesych.; v. Lob. Phryn. 627. Onpd-Gdpos, ov, with brutal mind, brutal, Anth. Plan. 3. 25. His to keep wild beasts, Nicet. Ann. 80 D. Onpo-Kop0s, ov, keeping wild beasts or camels, Heliod. to. 27. Onpo-Kparap, opos, 6, lord of beasts, Philes de An. 35. 23. Onpoxrovéw, to hill wild beasts: and Subst.—«rovia, 7, Byz. Onpo-Krévos, ov, killing wild beasts, as an epith. of Hercules, C. 1.1531; éy povais Onpoxrévors, i, e. in the chase, Eur. Hel. 154. Onpodekréw, Epiphan.; @npo-AéEns, ov, 5, Hesych., etc. ;=AeeiOnpew, ActiOnp. O@npodheréw, fo destroy wild beasts, Eust. 561. 3. Onyp-oAemns, ov, 6, slayer of beasts, Hesych.; dos 6 0., of the club of Hercules, Anth. Plan, 4. 104: fem. @npodérts, 150s, Hesych. Onp-dAeTOs, ov, slain by beasts, Anth. P. 8. 210. Onpo-pixia, }, a fight with beasts, C. I. 4039. 49, 4040. VIII. 7. Onpo-ptyns, és, half-beast, pdda O., of centaurs, Opp. C. 2. 6:—Onp. 7s wpuyh a cry as of beasts, Plut. Mar. 30. Onpd-pixros, ov, =foreg., daiuwr Lyc. 963. Onpo-popdta, 4, =Onpropoppia, Dion. Ar. @npo-vépos, ov, feeding or tending wild beasts, of a mountain, Anth, P. 6.111; of Pan, Castorio ap. Ath. 455 A. 2. guiding them, paorig Nonn. D. 11. 122; cf. Lob. Path. 518. Onpé-memAos, ov, clad in the skins of beasts, Orph. H. 68.7; Onp. pavia the mad fancy of wearing skins, Timae. 80. OnpotAacréw, to make beasts, Tzetz. Lyc. 673. Onpé-mAacTos, ov, changing into beasts, of Circé, Lyc. 673. ns Set ov, looking out for wild beasts, h. Hom. 27.11, Anth. P. 6. 240. Onpocivy, 4, tke chase, Opp. C. 4. 43, Anth. P. 6. 167. Onpo-réKos, ov, producing beasts, dAon Anth. P. 6. 186. Onp4-rpotos, ov, =Onpidrporos, Eccl. Onpotpodpéw, = Onpiorpopéw, Aristaen. 2. 20. Onpo-rpidos, ov, feeding wild beasts, of places, Eur. Bacch. 556, Ap. Rh. 4.1561; of Tethys, Orph. H. 21. 6. II. proparox. @npd- Tpopos, pass. feeding on beasts, Spaxwv Eur. Phoen. 820. Onps-ritros, ov, in the form of a beast, Orph. H. 23. 5., 38. 8. Onpo-havis, és, appearing like a beast, Procl. ad Hes. Op. 151. Onpodoveds, éws, 6, slayer of beasts, Opp. O. 1. 538. , Onpodovéw, to slay beasts, Opp. C. 4. 24. Onpodovia, 4, slaughter of beasts, Greg. Naz., Eust. Opusc. 356. 29 (where wrongly —efar). 8npo-dévos, ov, also 7, ov Theogn. 11:—killing wild beasts, 1. c.; nbves Eur. Hipp. 216; “Apreuis Id. H. F. 378, Ar. Thesm. 320; “AméAAwv Anth. P. 9. 525, 8. II. 6., 76, wolf’s bane, aconite, Diosc. 4.77. Onpo-hévrns, ov, 6, =Onpoporeds, Byz. Onpo-hépos, ov, producing game, prob. 1, Anth. P. 14. 24. Onpo-pvAdxvov, 74, a menagerie, Themist. 91 C. @np6-xAawos, ov, clad in the skins of beasts, Lyc. 871. Oipaov, crasis, for 7d HpHov, Ar. Vesp. 819. Ons, Onrds, 5, seems, properly (v. sub fin.), to have been a serf or vil- lain, bound to till his lord’s land, Lat. ascriptus glebae, villanus, opp. to a mere slave, Ofrés te Sudés Te Od. 4. 644 (cf. revéorns, émdpoupos) : but as early as Hes., it seems to be a 7 i y lb or bailiff, Lat. villicus, Ojra 8 domoy moetcbat to get a bailiff without a family, Op. 600; picOwrods Kal Oras Plat. Polit. 290 A; distinguished from dodA0, Arist. Pol. 3.5, 4; cf. Onrevw, Ontinds. 2. at Athens, by the constitution of Solon, the @77¢s were the members of the fourth and last class, which included all whose property in land was under 150 medimni (the lowest assessment of the (evy@rar), Plut. Solon 18: like the capite censi or pro- letarii at Rome, they were commonly engaged as hired labourers, Arist. Fr. 351; Bdvavoo kal Ofres Id. Pol. 3. 5,4; but, though excluded from all political rights, they were employed as light-armed and seamen, and, in case of need, as heavy-armed, Thuc. 6. 43; cf. Béckh P. E. 2. 259 sqq., Herm. Pol. Ant. § 108. II. fem. Ofooa, new Att. Ora, 7), a poor girl, one obliged to go out for hire, opp. to émixAnpos an heiress, Plut. Cor. 25 ; 0. yur Ap. Rh. 1. 193- 2. as Adj. =Onrinh, Ojoca tpaneCa menial fare, Eur. Alc. 2; @. éoria Id. El. 204. (From HOE, riénu, like our settler, Germ. Sasse, Insasse, Landsasse, cf. Onceds ; y. Buttm. Lexil. s. v. Oadooew: Curt. refers Lat. famulus to the same Root.) Oycalato, Ojcacbat, v. sub Ode to suckle. Onoavpttw, to store or treasure up, ev dopadnty 0. 7a xpnyara Hat. 2. 121, 1; Ono. Tov vexpdy év olenpate to lay it by, Ib. 86; pappaxa, otra 9. map’ ait@ Xen. Cyr. 8. 2, 24, etc.; of fruits, to lay up in store, preserve, pickle, kavdods év GApn Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 12; 7d éAaiov 0. rds dapds preserves its smell, Id. C. P. 6. 19,3; Bern 0. riv xpéav gains a lasting colour, Id. H. P. 4. 4, 6:—Pass., pag eb rebn- ‘ gavptopern Soph. Fr. 464; 76 Onoavprader C, I. 5640. 11. 37. 2.5 677 metaph., 0. ebruxlay to lay up a store of .., App. Samn. 4. 3; 0. xdpi- tas to store up in memory, Diod. 1. 90:—Med. ¢o store up for oneself, éavr@ bmopvjpara Plat. Phaedr. 276 D, cf. Isocr. Antid. § 244:—Pass., TeOncavpiopévos Kard twos pOdvos Wess. Diod. 20. 36. Oncatpiopa, 76, a store, treasure, Lat. penus, Soph. Ph. 37, Eur. El. 497, lon 1394 :—metaph., @. xax@v Democr. ap. Plut. 2. 500 D. jcavpiopés, 6, a laying up in store, xpnuarov Arist. Pol. 1. 8, 13; écpav Theophr. de Odor. 14. Oycavpiorys, od, 6, one who lays up in store, Poll. 3. 115. Oncaupiorikés, 7, dv, accustomed to lay up in store, (@a Tpophs Onvav- prorind, e.g. ants, Arist. H. A, 1. 1, 27. Oycavpo-doréw, to give treasures, Eccl. Oncavpo-pavia, 7, mad desire of riches, Eccl. O@ncavpo-rrovéw, to make stores, Poll. 3. 116. Onoavpo-roids, dv, laying up in store, Plat. Rep. 554 A. O@ncaupés, 6, (from 4/OE, 7iénu, with the term. —avpos as in KévT- aupos, Ador-aupos) :—a store laid up, treasure, Ar. Av. 599, etc.; 0. xOovds, of the silver-mines of Laureion, Aesch. Pers. 238; 0. etpeiv Arist. Pol. 5. 4, 43 dvOpaxes 6 @., proverb. of a disappointment, often in Luc., e. g. Zeux. 2; so, arodds of @. yevnoovra Alciphro 2. 3, 13, ubi v. Bergler:—metaph., 0. yAwoons pedwAjs Hes. Op. 717; 0. tpvov Pind. P. 6.8; «ax@v Eur. Ion 923, cf. Hipp. Lex 2; xépas.., ixthpiov 6. Soph. Aj. 1175; Acds @., of fire, Eur. Supp. 1010; olwvois yAucdy 0., of a dead body, Soph. Ant. 30; so of learning, 0., ods karéAumov év BiBAiows Ken. Mem. 1. 6, 143 copias 6. Plat. Phileb. 1 5E; tTipav Id. Menex. 247 B; xadds 0. wap dvipt crovdaiw xapus Isocr. 8 B. II. a store-house, treasure-house, magazine, Hdt. 2. 150: the treasury of a temple, Id. 1. 14, etc., cf. Xen. An, 5. 3, 5, Strabo 188, etc. A any receptacle for valuables, a chest, casket, Hdt. 7. 190, cf. 9. 106; 0. Bed€eoouv, of a quiver, Aesch. Pers. 1022. OncavpoptAdKéw, to be a OnoavpopvAag, Diod, 19. 18, Philo r. 338. OnoavpopiAdkiov, 76, a treasury, Artemid. 1. 74, Eust. Opusc. 71. 10. Onoavpo-piAak, 6, a treasurer, Diod. 18. 58. Oncaup-ady , 5, filled with treasure, Taco Philostr. 303. OnoelSar, of, sons of Theseus, i.e. the Athenians, Soph. O. C. 1066. Onceiov, 74, the temple of Theseus, a sanctuary (davAov) for criminals to seek shelter in, Ar. Eq. 1312, Fr. 477.:—a form Oyovov is cited in An. Ox. 2. 219. II. 7a Onoeia (sc. icpa), the festival of Theseus, Ar. Pl. 627. Oncad-rpup, (Bos, 6, (rpiBw) one who is always in the Theseium, i.e. a runaway slave, Ar. Fr. 3943 v. Onoeiov, Oqoevpeba, Dor. fut. med. of r/Onuc. Onoevs, 6, gen. Oncéws [trisyll., Soph, Ph. 562, O. C. 1593, 1657, but disyll., Ib. 1003, 1103] :—Theseus, the famous ancestral hero of Athens, first mentioned in Il. 1. 265, etc.; of @naées, Plat. Theaet. 169 B. (Prob. from 4/@E, tion, the Settler, Civiliser ; cf. Ohs, TiOnys A. TIL.) Ononis, dos, contr. Ones, 750s, fem. of Onceos, of Theseus, xOav Aesch. Eum, 1026. II. as Subst. the Theseid, a poem on Theseus, Arist. Poét. 8,2, Diog. L. 2. 59. 2. name of a mode of hair-cutting, first used by Theseus, Plut. Thes. 5. O7jo0ar, inf. pres. pass. of Odw zo suckle. Ofjooa, fem. of On, q. v. II. Greek form of Lat. ¢hensa, a sacred car, Plut. Cor. 25. Ofjra, 76, indecl., v. © 6; but gen. 6A7aTos, like éAraros, Democr. in A. B. 781:—also a name of Aesop (who was a 043), Phot. Bibl. 151. 23. Onreta, 1, (Onrevw) hired service, service, Soph. O.'T. 1029, Isocr. 306 A; in pl., Ib. 228'E, Dion. H. 2. 19. Onretw, to be a serf or labourer (vy. Ons), Aaopédovre .. Onrevépev eis évauréy Il. 21. 444, cf. Od. 18. 3573 Onrevévev GrAw, dvdpi map’ dxAhpy 11. 489, cf. Eur. Alc. 6, Cycl. 77, Plat. Euthyphro 4 C, Rep. 359 D; 0. émt puo0@ mapa Tr Hat. 8. 137; 0. els 70 retxos to labour at it, Philostr. 721; @. IaAAdée eal Madin to serve, Anth, P. 5. 293, 12. Onrixéds, 7, dv, (64s) of or for a hireling, menial, épyov Arist. Rhet. 1. 9, 26; Bavavoos nai 0. Bios Id. Pol. 3. 5, 53 Ontiarépa epyacia Ib. 8. 6, 15; 0. wat Sovdiedv mparreyw Ib. 8. 2, 6. 2. 7d Onrudy, = of Ores, the class of Ofres, Ib. 2. 12, 6., 4. 4, 10., 6. 7, I: also the tax paid by Ofres, Lex ap. Dem. 1067. 27. 8. like a Ons, servile, mavres oi xédaxes, @. Arist. Eth. N. 4. 3, 29, cf. Luc. Fugit. 12. OTA, %, new Att. for Ojcca. £ Ont-dovov, 7d, (dvos) jire, wages, Suid.:—in OC. I. 123. 54, Bockh restores Ontwveiy to take wages. Oi, originally a termin. of the gen., as a locative case, as in “TAcd@c mpd Il. 8. 5615; 7)@0 mpd 11. 50:—then, II. insepar. Affix of several Substs., Adjs., and Pronouns, to which it gives an adv. sense, denoting the place at which, dypb0t, oiw0c, GAd0O, apporépan, avd, etc. Orayav, dvos, 6, an Aetol. sacrificial cake, Nic. ap, Ath, 114.C, Hesych. Outs €w, to be a Oacdpyns, C. 1.146. 11, 2099. Oiic-apyys, ov, 5, the leader of a Siacos, Luc. Peregr. 11. Oriorela, 1, the act of a Giacos, revelling, Procl. h. Sol. 21. Oicetw, to bring into the Oiacos or Bacchic company, ds He .. képais e6idcevo’ Eur. Ion 5525; so, 0. xdpois Id. Bacch. 378 :—Pass. to be of the Bacchic company, to be hallowed by Bacchic rites (v. dyoredw), Ib. “We II. to celebrate Bacchic rites, Strabo 562. Oaolrns, ov, 5,=Oacérns, Inscr. Ten, in C. I. 2338. 60, Poll, 6. 8. Giaoos, 6, (sometimes @dacos in Mss., Elmsl, Bacch. 670, v. sub fin.) — a band or company, that marches through the streets dancing and sing- ing, esp. in honour of Bacchus, Hat. 4. 79, Eur. Bacch. 680, Ar. Ran, 156, etc.; 0. dyev, elAlacev, dvaxopevey Eur, Bacch, 115, etc.; Tovs -. Odaous dyov bid. rev SBaY Tos éaTEpavapevous TH papddy Kal TH Aeten Dem, 313. 233 ef. Ath. 185 C, 362 E:—it seems sometimes to have been a sort of religious brotherhood, such as the ovy@vTat Movoawy _G.1. 1888 we find mapa Beiv’ adds. 678 in Inscrr. Boeot. p. 94 Keil, the Mava0qvairrai and Acoyyaracral in a Teian Inscr., C. I. 3073, cf. 3101, 3112, the "AyaOodapovacrai in ome Jeers. Paes 282 a chiefs of such @iago were dpxGactrar, nscr, Del. in C, I. 2271. 46 sq. 2. generally, any party, company, troop, Kevravpay Eur. I. A. 1059; ahher Id. LT. 1146; Movo@y Ar. Thesm. 41; evorAos 0., of warriors, Eur. Phoen. 796; Kevravpixds nat Zarupicvs Plat, Polit. 303 C; rod god @. of your company, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 31; ‘Acvav@y dxpoapdrwy 6. Plut. Ant. 24. II. the feast or banquet of such companies, Plut. 2. 301 E, Cleomen. 34- (The sense points to a connexion with OY, @uas; and fors=v, cf. purevw pireda, Spis Spia, dweppuns imeppiados.) Oicaddns, es, (eld0s) like a Oiagos, festive, dpdimodor Bpopiov Nonn. D. 45. 270; Gpar Id. Jo. 4. 45. Oicdy, dvos, 6, the meeting-place of a Siacos, Hesych. Oiiicwrns, ov, 5, the member of a Blagos, Ar. Ran. 327, Isac. 77. 45, Arist. Eth. N. 8. 9, 5, C. I, 1og-10, al. 2. c. gen., Qacdra rot Epwros worshippers, followers of Love, Xen, Symp. 8,1; 6 €40s 0. Eur. Bacch. 549. 3. of Bacchus, leader of Oiaco:, Anth. P. 9. 524, F 4. generally, a follower, disciple, Luc. Fugit. 4, Themist. 33 C. Oacwrikds, 7, dv, of or for a Macwrys, Arist. Occ. 2. 4, I. Oiicdris, c5os, 7, fem. of Kardwrns, Opp. C. 4. 298. OiBy, %, a wicker basket, ark, LXx (Ex. 2. 3), Hesych., Phot., etc. (Cf. Hebr. thébah.) OBpds or MpBpos, 4, dv, a word used by Alex. Poets, wed 0. xeAdyns, (which the Schol. interpr. éy0évra in’ dvOpaxay, Hesych. by éuupa), Nic. Al. 568, cf. Th. 35. II. in Call. we have 0. Kumpis, Fr. 267, and 6, Seuipayis Euphor. 97; to which passages refer the other interpr. ot Hesych., awadds, rpupepds, dBpuvrinds, etc. (Signf. 1 indicates a connexion with Oepuds. Hence the Laced. name OfSpuy (for GipSpav), for the first syll. is short, Philosteph. Ama. 1.) Oryyave, fut. Pifoua Eur. Hipp. 1086 (and Elmsl. restores mpoodige for —es, Heracl. 652): aor, €0Uyov, Oiym, Oiryouut, Ovyeiy (Lacon. otyny, Ar. Lys. 1004), yay (often wrongly written Oiyerv, Oiywy, as if from a pres. 6i-yw, which is only used by very late writers, Elmsl. Soph. O. C. 470, Eur. Bacch. 304):—Pass., aor. @:xO7vat Sext.Emp.M.9.258. (From OIL, which appears in aor. Ory-eiv; cf. Skt. deh, déh-mi (to besmear) ; Lat. fig-ulus, fig-ura ( fingo), cf. @0.1.2; Goth. deig-a (tAdoow), daig-s (pvpaya), dig-ans (darpaxwvos), ga-dik-is (mAdopa); O. Norse deig, A.S. dig (dough); O.H. G. teig':—the orig. sense therefore seems to be to handle, knead, mould, stronger than mere touch, which is expressed by ATATL, Lat. tang-o, te-tig-i, y. sub Terayuv.) To touch, handle v. supr.) :—Construction, @. Tivés to touch a person or thing, Aesch. Ag. 63, etc.; xepot or xept Oyy. Tids Id. Theb. 44, Eur. Bacch. 1317; &: dotew xeipav Soph, O. C. 470: also c, acc., 0. xeipa Archil. 25 G, (in Soph. Ant. 546, & ua ’Oryes stands for radra dy ..); 9. wort xeidos éudv Theocr. 1. 59:—Pass. to be touched, Arist. H. A. 1.16, 5. 2. to take hold of, Twds Soph. Aj. 1409, etc. ; wA€vais 0. Twds to embrace, Eur. Phoen. 300; .0. yuvaikds to have intercourse with .., Id. Hipp. 1044; 9. ebvijs Ib. 885, cf. Soph. O. C. 329; and absol., Eur. El. 51. 3. to touch, attempt, mavrds .. Ad-you Kakod yAwaon 9. Soph. Ph. 408; ph prot Aerr@y Giyyave pay Eur. Fr. 916 :—in hostile sense, to attack, Onpds Eur. Bacch. 1183; Tod cod odparos Id. I. A, 1351. II. metaph. of the feelings, fo touch, Eur. Hipp. 310; Yuxijs, ppevay Id. Alc. 107; oAAd 0. mpos rap reach to the heart, Aesch.Ag. 432. 2. to touch upon, in speaking or discussion, Arist. Metaph. 1. 7, 1 and 7., 2. 4, 13, Pol. 7. 1, 13. 38. to reach, gain, win, twvds Pind. I. 1. 26, etc. :—Pind. also uses it inthis sense, as he does Wav, c. dat., P. 4.528., 8. 334 9. 75 :—to reach, hit, ScaBodr 0. Twds Plut. Alex. 10,—Rare in the best Prose (dwroyac being the common Verb), but used by Xen. Cyr, I. 3, 5-5 5« 1, 15-5 6. 4, 9, and Arist. Oiynpa, 74, a touch, as Jac. for piAnudrow in Anth. P. 12. 209. Oiypa, 74, touch, C. 1. 3546. 11:—Hesych. expl. it by placpa. OpBpds, a, dv, v. OBphs Oipovid, 7, v. s. nuova. “ Oivadns, es, (el50s) like a sandy beach, sandy, Strabo 344; OvGdes &yxiorpov an anchor on the sand, Trag. ap. Plut. 2. 446 A. tis, ews, %, a touching, touch, Arist. G. A. 3.1, 27, Phys. 3. 2, 4. Gis [7], Orvds: 4 in Il. 23. 693, Od. 12. 45, Ar. Vesp. 694; # in Soph. Ant. 591, Ph, 1124, Call., and late Prose: (v. sub fin.). A heap, wodds dared pu bis Od. 12. 45; Oives vexpdv Aesch, Pers. 818; metaph., Oives anpérov Lyc. 812; but generally, from Hdt. downwards, of sand-heaps, sand-banks, either with a word added, Oives Yappou Hat. 3. 26; dypov, “iis Plut. Fab. 6, etc.: or absol., év rots @aiv Arist. H. A. 5. 16, 4, ef. 4.10,9; so, Oives of the sand-steppes of Libya, Ap. Rh. 4.1384; Naca- piéovey .. Bodtxas Oivas Call. Fr. 126, 2. mostly (as always in Hom., except I. supr. c.) the beach, shore, but always in oblique cases, with ¢he sea in genit., mapa iva .. Oaddcons Il. 1.34; emi Ot Oaddcons 4. 248; ent Oiva Oadrdcons Od, 6, 236, etc.; mapa Biv adds drpu- yérouo Il. 1. 316; Gtr’ ep’ Gdds moArts Ib. 350, etc. oF alone, émt Ovi Od. 7. 290; mapa Piva 9g. 46; Oi’ ev pumdete Th. 23. 693; so later, iv’ GAds Ar. Vesp. 1521; mévrou Soph. Ph. 1124; GadAdoons Eur. Andr, 109; @adarria Dion. H. 3. 44. 3. sand or mud at the bottom of the sea, oldpa..xvdivda Buoodder wedaway Giva Soph. Ant. 591; metaph., &s pou roy iva raparress, i. e. trouble the very bottom of my heart, Ar. Vesp. 696, v. Schol. 4. shore-weed, Arist. H. A. 8. 13, 2; Gwods ote Ib. 9. 35. IL. dupys [médAros} Bis the temple that crowns the Acropolis, Call. ap. Schol, Il. 5. 422. In a Corcyr, Inscr, in (Cf. Skt. dhan-us (a sand-bank, A.S. dun (a down); O. H.G. din (a promontory); Low G. : )-) Ocarwdns — Ovicko. OASlas, ov, 5, (Odden) an eunuch, cui elisi sunt testiculi, LXx (Lev. 22. 24), Philo 2. 261:—@Aabidw, to make one an eunuch, Hesych. dois, ews, 1), (QAdw) a crushing, bruising, Arist. Meteor, 4. 9, 10, Probl. 9. 4,33 cf. @Adorns. [@: long only in Paul. Sil.] i OAdopa,7d,(0Adw), abruise, Arist. Mirab. 117, Diosc. 2.200; cf. pAdopa. OAdom, 74, =sq., Diosc. 2. 186, @Aaomibtov, 74, Dim, of Adams, v. Diosc. 2. 186. OXdoms, ews Ion. ros, 7), (@Adw) a sort of large cress, the seed of which was bruised and used like mustard, perhaps our shepherd's purse, Hipp, 628. fin., 629, etc.:—OAdem, 74, Diosc. 2. 186. OAdorys, ov, 6, (QAdw) a crusher: esp. a medical instrument = €uBpvo- OAdarns, Galen. 7. 28 (vulg. @Adots). Pracrikés, 7, dv, able to crush, crushing, Arist. Probl. 5. 37, 3- Odaorés, 7, dv, crushed, bruised, éAda Ar, Fr. 345, Diphil.”"AaAnor. ‘a 2. capable of being crushed or compressed, opp. to Opauards (frangible), Arist. H. A. 4. 1, 3, cf. Meteor. 4. 9, 18, H. A. 4. 1, 3. @Adrrw, late form of sq., Galen. 4. 539, Paul, Aeg. p. 213. OAdw, inf. @AGy, part. PA@oa Galen.: 3 impf. €Aa (svyxar—-) Macho ap. Ath, 348 F: fut. @Adow (év-) Hipp. 556. 22: aor. €@Adoa, Ep. §\doca :—Pass., fut. PAacOAoopuat Galen.: aor. €0AdaOnv Hipp. 873..2 (as Littré emends from Galen.): pf. Té@Aacpat (ovy-) Alex. Incert. 12, TéOkaypat Theocr. 32. 45. To crush, bruise, OAdace 5é of KoTUAnv Il. 5. 307; d07éa 8 cicw COAacey Od. 18. 97; ovr’ Eppyge Raddy oir’ dace Hes. Sc. 140; v. sub o¥s:—Pass., Arist. Probl. 9. 4, 3. (praw is another form, cf. @0. I. 2; cf. also Opava.) OAtBepds, d, dv, (OAiBw) squeezed, close, Paul, Aeg. p. 218, Eust. Opusc. 90. 65 :—oppressed, Achmes Onir. 200, 259. II. act. oppressive, Ib. 233. OALBy, 9, a rubbing, Galen. 12. 113. OATBias, ov, 6, = OAadias, Strabo 623. OAtBw [i]: fut. OA&~w Or. Sib. 3, 182, Eust.: aor. €Aupa Plat. Tim, 60 C, Call.: pf. ré0Atpa Polyb. 18. 7, 3 :—Med., fut. @Atpopat, v. infr. : —Pass., fut. (dv71)OATBjoopar Eumath. 3.4: aor. €@AipOny Plat. Tim, gi A, Arist. Probl. 20. 23; but part. aor. 2 @ArBels Arist. ib., subj. Eo @AtBR Hipp. 411. 48: pf. réOAcupar Arist. L.c., Anth.P. 7.472. (pAiBba is another form, as pAdw of OAaw; cf. also TpiBw.) To press, squeeze, pinch, OAiBe Tov bppov 6 O&pag Ar. Pax 1239, cf. Lys. 314; Tods Opes OAiBav Dem. 313. 25; Sov pe OALBec where [the shoe] pinches, Plut. 2.141 A:—Pass. of a person heavy-laden, &s @AiBopac! Ar. Ran. 5, cf. Vesp. 1289 :—Med., moAAfiot pAtjot mapacras OAl~erar wpous he will rub his shoulders against many doorposts, of a beggar, Od. 17. 221:— xelAea OAiBev, of kissing, Theocr. 20. 4. II. to pinch, com- press, straiten, Plat. Tim. 60 C, etc. :—Pass. to be compressed, Ib. 91 A; OA:Bouéva xadvBa a small, close hut, Theocr. 21.18; 650s TeOAtupevy, opp. to ebpvxwpos, Ey. Matth. 7.14; Bios reOA. a scanty subsistence, Dion, H. 8. 23, cf. Anth. P. 8. 742. 2. metaph. fo oppress, afflict, distress, dvaynn OX. Trvd Call. Del. 35, cf. Arist. Eth, N. I. 10, 12 :— Pass., 0A. 51d roy 7éAemoy Id. Pol. 5. 7, 4.—Once in Hom., never in Trag. OALB-GBys, es, (€l50s) oppressive, Nilus. Ohippds, 6,=OARis, Lxx (Ex. 3. 9). Sgt vay h, Ov, oppressive, Eccl, Adv.-xKas, by pressure, Sext. Emp. . To. 83. OAtYrs (not PAixis), ews, }, pressure, Arist. Meteor. 4. 4, 5, Probl. 9. 4, 2, al. 2. metaph. oppression, affliction, often in N. T. and Eccl. Qvackw, Ovards, Dor. for 6vn-. OvacelBios, ov, and Ovycipatos, a, oy, (Ovioxw) Lat. morticinus, mor- tal; Ovqotpaiov, 75, a carcase, LX (3 Regg. 13. 25, al.); also Ovngt- patoy, Clem. Al. 175; Ovnotpatey dxéxeoba to abstain from the flesh of animals that have died, Hierocl. p. 218, cf. Diog. L. 9. 333 éoOjuara €« Ovncediov clothes made of the skin of a beast that has died, Philostr. 333, cf. Ael. N. A. 6. 2. exw, Dor. Ovdckw, fut. Sivodpar Simon, 85. 9, Soph. Ant. 462, Tr. 160, Eur. Tro. 1056, Ep. inf. -€ecOax Il. 4. 12 :—aor. €avov, inf, Ep. and Ion, Oayéerv, as always in Hom., except in Il. 7. 52, Oavéuey Pind. P. 4. 126 :—pf, réOvyca Il. 18. 12, Att.; plapf. éredvqxew Antipho 137. 34, Lys. 156. 11, 3 pl. -feoay Andoc, 8,5; of the pf. there are many syncop. forms, 3 dual ré@vuiroy Xen. An. 4. 1, 19, 1 pl. TéOvapev Plat. Gorg.492E, 3 pl. reOvdou Il, 22.52, Att.; 3 pl. plapf. éré@vacay Antipho 137. 30, Andoc. 8. 42, Xen.; imperat. ré0vd@ Il. 22. 365, TeOvarw 15. 499, Plat., etc. ; opt. re@vainy Il. 18, 98, etc.; inf. reOvdvac [a] Hdt. 1. 31, Ar. Ran, 1012, Plat. Com. Aax. 3, Thuc., etc. ; re@vavat (si vera 1.) Mimnerm, 2, 10, Aesch. Ag. 539; Ep. reOvapevat, —dyev Il. 24. 225., 15. 497, etc.; Acol. reOvdxny Sappho 2.15; part. reOveds Hdt. g. 120, Ar. Ay. 476, etc., fem, reOvedoa Lys, 189. 2, Dem. 1016. 26 (reOvnevia Hip- pon, 21, Eur. Or, 109), neut. redveds Hdt. 1. 112, Hipp. 571.15 (reOvnKcs Plat. Phaedo 71 D, pl. reOve@ra 72 C); gen. TeOve@Tos, etc., Hom., Att., poet. reOvedros Anth.P.append. 14, Q. Sm.7.66; Ep. reOvnus (v.1.—erds) Il. 17. 161, ~nvia Od. 4.734., 11.140; gen. reOvn@ros Il. 9. 633 (629), etc. ; also, metri grat., reOvndr70s 17. 435, Od. 15. 23, al. [redveds as disyll. in Ar. Av. 476, reOvedr« as trisyll. in Od, 19. 331, and reOvewray in Eur, Supp. 272 jin which cases, some write reOvas, etc., as in Babr. 45-9]:—from réOvyca arose in Att. the fut. forms TeOvitw, TeOvfto- pat, the former in old, the latter in new Att., Dawes M. C.151sq., Elmsl. and Dind, Ar. Ach. 590; the act. form is required by the metre in Aesch. Ag. 1279, Ar. Ach. 325, but is censured as archaic by Luc, Soloec. 7.— a this Verb, Prose writers hardly use the simple except in the pf. and plqpf. (which are seldom compounded), whereas for the pres., fut., and 30Ts they use dmobvicKkw, drobavodpat, dnéOavov: KaTabyhaKw also being poét.: v. Veitch Irr. Verbs. (The 4/OAN, found in aor. Pavey, Odv-aros, Ovy-rds, has not been identified in the cognate lan- OvnraOvyros — Bods. guages.) In pres. and impf. to die, be dying, as well of natural as of violent death ; and in aor. and pf. ¢o be dead, first in Hom.; @avéew wat mérpov émoneiv Il. 7. 52, etc.; olericty Oavdrw Oavéew Od. 11. 412; (ads 2 Sard alive or dead, 4. 553, cf. 15.350; GAA’ Hdn TéeOvnKeE 4. 834; Bovdoluny xe .. reOvaper 7) .. dpdacbat 16.107; ds dpevor ety TeOvavae wGdAov 7) Cwew Hat. 1. 31, cf. 7.46; TeOvdvae Kpeirrov 7 .. , Dem. 127. 28, cf. 138.7; dos reOvdvar Ar. Ran. 1012, etc. ;—often in part., vénvos mépt TeOvn@ros Il. 18. 173; véxpoy .. TeOvnwra a dead corpse, Od. 12. 10; so in Att., of reOvnxdres or TeOvedres, of Oavdvres the dead; so, ovre TeOvedra ovre (@vra Hdt. 4.143 ofyera Oavdy (v. otxopat); Oavdv ppotdos (v. ppoddos); Oavdyrt cvvOaveiv Soph. Tr. 798, Fr. 690; 6 @avwy, opp. to 6 xravwr, Id, Ph. 336 :—the pres. some- times takes a pf. sense, Ovhaxovar yap, for TeOvqxact, Id. O.T. 118, cf. Eur, Hec. 695, Bacch. 1041, etc. 2. often used like a pass, Verb, xepoiv in’ Aiavros Oavéev to fall by his hand, be slain by him, Il. 15. 289; simply, 6v. ié twos, Lat. perire ab aliquo, Pind. O. 2. 36, cf. Plat. Euthyphro 4 D; é« rivos Pind. P. 4. 128, Soph. O. T. 1454; mpds twos Ib, 292, Eur, Hec. 773; Oeois reOynxe Soph. Aj. 970; and often c, dat. instrumenti, @v. xept, Sopl, Bpdxw, papyanots, etc., Trag.:—the word is used in a singular manner by Dem.,—oi 5¢ odpuaxo: TeOvaor T@ Béer rods ToLovTous dmogréAous 53.11; Hore [adrdy] reOvavac TO ~6Bw rods OnBaious Id. 366. 26,—where reOvdvar TO Béet, 7. TH bBo must be taken as if they formed a single Verb, ¢o be in mortal fear of ; cf. mpoolmiov cxorevov Kal reOvnKds Setdiq Aeschin. 32. 41:—Luc. D. Mort. 7 has Ov. éwi tit to die leaving one as heir. II. metaph. of things, to die, fall, perish, @vdcKe kaddv épyov Pind. Fr. 86; Adyor OvicKovres parny Aesch. Cho. 846; Ov. riots Soph. O. C. 611; 7d Tp¥- Brtov réOvnké por Ar. Ran. 986; also in Prose, réOvnke 70 Tods ddixovv- tas pucely Dem. 434.7; TeOvnkds Te pOéyyeOat Dio C. 40. 543 TeOvn- wos dpav Callistr., etc. Ovnt-dOvntos, ov, mortal without dying, Epiphan. Ovyro-yapta, 4, marriage with a mortal, Eust. 20. 17. Ovnro-yevis, Dor. Ovar-, és,of mortal race, Soph. Ant.835,Eur.H.F. 799. Ovyro-edqs, és, of mortal nature, Plat. Phaedo 86 A, Plut. 2. 1002 C. Ovnrés, 7, dv, also ds, dv Eur. Ion 973, I. A. 901, 1396: Dor. @varés : (6vqoKw) :—liable to death, mortal, opp. to a0dvaros, often in Hom., etc.; Ov. avipes Hes. Th. 967; odder .. Ovnrody édv Hat. 8. 98; (ga mavra Ov. kat pura Plat. Soph. 265 C :—then as Subst., @vnrot mortals, like Bporot, Od. 19. 593, Trag.; @vnrai women, 5. 213; mdvTwv Tav Ovnray of all mortal creatures, Hdt. 1.:216., 2. 68.—The word can only be used of men yet_alive, and therefore in Eur. H. F. 491, ei tis PObyyov eicaxovcera OvyTay map’ “Aldp, Ovyrav should prob. be construed with p@déyyor, not with tts. 2. of things, befitting mortals, human, €pypara Eur. Bacch. 1069; @vard Ovaroior mpére Pind. I. 5 (4). 20; @vard xph Tov Ovardy .: ppoveiy Epich. ap. Arist. Rhet. 2. 21, 6, cf. Soph. Tr. 473, Fr. 515, etc.; dfAov Ore H wev Yux7 TO Ociy, To 5¢ Opa TS OvyTG (sc. €orxe) Plat. Phaedo 80 A, Ovyrorns, yTOs, 4, mortality, Eccl. Qvnré-puxos, ov, maintaining the mortality of the soul, Eccl.; ot Ovy- rotpuxtrat, a sect who held this tenet, Ib. OodLw, (Gods) trans. to move quickly, ply rapidly, wrépuyas Eur. I. T. 1141; Tis 68 dywv ..00d¢av ce; what task is thus hurrying thee on ? Id. Or. 335; Ooa{w Bpopig mivov dvv urge it on, Id. Bacch. 65; 0. otra yévuow to dispatch it quickly, Id. H. F. 382. 2. intr. to move quickly, hurry along, rush, dart, like Ow, O0d(wv alPépos ave wamvés Id, Or. 1542; & Te daciiows pect 0. Id, Bacch. 219; 0. Spdum Id. Tro. 307; «ijros Ooagor e¢ ArAavtixhs adds Id. Fr. 949. II. =Oaicou, 0acow, Oaxéw, Owxée, to sit, im’ dpxas otrivos 00d fay [Zevs] xparive. Aesch. Supp. 595; Tivas mo6’ Spas Oodtere; why are ye in this suppliant posture? Soph. O.'T. 2 (like édpas Oaocev, Oaxeiv, mpoo- Oakey, v. sub voc.), ubi v. Dind., cf. Plut. 2. 22 E—Herm. however refers these passages also to signf. 1; so that €dpas 9. should mean come in haste to this suppliant posture or sit ix earnest supplication: while the words of Aesch. signify, Zeus, not being subject to any one, rules im- periously. (Buttm., Lexil. v. @adcow, assumes a two-fold Root for 0oa¢w, viz. OEF, Oods for signf. 1, and OK, ri@nye for signf. 11.)—Cf. émBoa cer. OSacpa, 74, a place for dancing, etc., Orph. H. 48. 6. Ooipariov, Ooiparifsiov, Att. crasis for 7d iuar-. Qotva, %, v. sub Ooivn. Oowalw, rare form for Oowvdw, Xen. Ages. 8,7, Ael. ap. Suid. v. Mdpxos. Goivapa, 76, a meal, feast, Eur. Or. 814, lon 1495; cf. Ootvnpa. Qow-apydorpia, #, the lady-president of a feast, Inscrr. Lacon. in C. I. 1439, -46, -51; @vvappdorpia, 1435-6; so, Odv-apxos, for Gow-, 6, Tnscr. Boeot. ib. 1569. Qowarip, fpos, 6, one who gives a feast, xademds 0. lord of a hornd feast, Aesch. Ag. 1502. Gowdarhprov, 75, =Oolvn, Eur. Rhes. 515. Gowers, 7, dv, of or for a feast, Xen. Occ. 9, 7. Oowdrwp [4], opos, 6, =Oowarhp, Eur. lon 1206, 1217; cf. Oowhrap. Powdw, fo feast on, eat, deApives Coivmy ixOds Hes. Sc. 212. Il. to feast, entertain, pious Eur. lon 982; 70 detnvov, Td piv Exeivos capét rod madds eOoivyce (v. 1. -twe) the feast, which he gave him with or upon his son’s flesh, Hdt. 1. 129. 2. more freq. in Med. and Pass.; fut, dooua Eur. El. 836, Cycl. 377, joopar (é*-) Aesch. Pr. 1045: aor. COowhOny (v. infr.) ; but -yoapyv Nonn. D. 5. 331, Anth. P. 9. 244: pf. reOolyGpar (v. infr.): a. absol. to be feasted, to feast, banquet, once in Hom., és 8’ abrods mporépw aye BowwnO7vat lead them in to feed, Od. 4. 36; mapa pidrois Oowaoba Eur. Alc. 542; Oowaobat «a@s Cratin. HAour. 1; v. sub wevornptos. b. c. acc. to feast on, » Oodruwrés, 4, dv, built like a Oddos, Procop. de Aed. 91 A, etc. 679 550 3;—also c. gen., ddus Aedvrwv éari por Oowwpévm (where however Acdvrov might be taken with GArs) Ib. 248; Sowhaaro Ofpys Anth. P. 9. 244; also of an eating sore, adpea Oowdrar odds Eur. (Fr. 790), censured by Arist. Poét. 22, 13. Soivn, Dor. Ootva (and later @otva, Moer.), %, a meal, feast, banquet, dinner, Hes. Sc. 114, Hdt. 1. 119., g. 82, Aesch. Fr, 281. 7, etc. ;-and in pl., Id. Pr. 530; Ootvys 5% «al eidamivpor Theogn. 239; ex Ooivns after dinner, Epich. 99 Ahr.; els 0. xadeiy twa Eur. Ion 1140; én Ooivny iévae Plat. Phaedr. 247 B; mapaxadeiv ént tiv 0. Arist. Fr. 508; oxeva- (ouévns 0. Plat. Theaet.178D, cf. Arist. Pol. 3. 11,14; év 0. Aéyew Twé to count as a guest, and generally to take into account, Plat. Legg. 649 A:—metaph., Id. Soph. 251 B, Phaedr. 236 E; cf, Xen. Cyr. 4. 2, 39- (Curt. connects it with @vw, @vota: cf. poiva), lotvnpa, 76,=Golvapa, Posidon. ap. Ath. 153 B. : Oowrjrwp, 5, =Oovérwp, Oowarnp, Anth. P. 7. 241, Nonn. Jo. 6. 55. Oowilfo, v. sub Gowdw. Qoiro, for Oefro, 3 opt. aor. 2 med. of riOny. Oodepés, a, dv, (OoAds) muddy, foul, thick, troubled, opp. to Kabapés or Aapurpds, properly of troubled water, Hdt. 4. 53, Hipp. Aér. 285, Thuc. 2. 102; 0. zal mpAwbns Plat. Phaedo 113 A; so, metaph., Aap- mpov 5 Oorep@ oGpa ovppigas Eur, Supp. 222; also, 00d. ovpa Hipp. Epid. 1. 945; dnp Plat. Tim. 58 D (in Sup.-@raros) ; alua Arist. Somn. 35 273 vepédac Anth. P. 9. 277; xpws Acl. N. A. 14. 93 AlOos Theocr, 16. 62: Comp. -&repos Theophr. C. P. 6. 3, 4:—70 OoAepdy dirtiness, Plut. 2. 670 A. II. metaph., like Lat. turbidus, troubled by passion or madness, Oordepot Ad-yot troubled words of passion, Aesch, Pr. 885 ; OoAEp@ xetu@ve voojoas with turbid storm of madness, Soph. Aj. 206: passionate, Nic. Th. 131.—Ady. -p@s, Com. Anon. 131 6. Oodepitns, yros, 4, muddiness, Hipp. 1028 D. Qodepé-xpous, ov, of dirty colour, prob. |. for Podepddpor in Hesych. BorepHSqs, €s, (€f50s) dub. 1. for OoAwdys, Theophr. Ign. 24. Goria, %, (@6A0s) a conical hat with a broad brim to keep the sun off, or perhaps a parasol, Theocr, 15. 39. IL. a chest with a conical lid, Poll. 10, 138. Ooducds, 7, dv, with a dome, arod Suid, s.v. Aapuavis. Qoro-erdhs, és, (el50s) like a OdAos, Theophr. H. P. 3.9, 6, Ath. 205 E; of the Roman Pantheon, Dio C. 53. 27. Adv. -das, Diog. L. 2. 9. Qodo-ptyjs, és, mixed with dirt, Onat. in Stob. Ecl. 1. 98. O5dos, 7, a round building with a conical roof or cupola, a rotunda (Hesych.), Od. 22. 442, 459, 466; where it is placed in the adAq and used to keep provisions and kitchen-utensils in,n—a yvaudlted kitchen, acc. to Voss. 2. at Athens, ‘he Rotunda, in which the Prytanes dined, ~ Plat. Apol. 32 C, Andoc. 7.11, etc.; and the ypayparets, Dem. 419. 27, cf. Paus. I. 5,1: a similar building at Epidaurus, of splendid charac- ter, Id, 2. 27, 3 II. @éA0s, 6, in public baths, the vaulted vapour-bath, Asclep. ap. Ath. 501 D, Alciphro 1. 23, Vitruv.:—pl. @dAa, 7d, in Jo. Malal. 2. a bandage put round the head, Galen. 12. 477. Oodés, 5, mud, dirt, esp. in water, Ath. 298 B; of menstruation, Orph, Lith. 484. II. the thick, dark juice of the cuttlefish (sepia), which it emits to trouble the water, and so hide himself, Lat. Joligo, Arist. H. A, 4. 1, 11 and 19., 9. 37; 19, al. 2. the vessel in which this juice is retained, Id. P. A. 4. 5, 11 and 54; cf. wn«xwy 11.—On the accent, v. Suid, s. v, Oodés, 4, dv, for Oodepds in Mss. of Theophr. C. P. 4. 11, 3, Ath. 420D; cited also by Hesych. ; Oodow, fut. dow, to make turbid, properly of water, 0oA. drayra, of the cuttle-fish, Antiph. “AAcev. 1; of fishermen, Arist. Fr. 294 :—Pass., Te90- Awpévoy Vdwp Hipp.. Aér. 283; 7¢0. dnp Philyll. Incert. 1. 2. metaph., like Lat. perturbare, @odAot 5? xapdiay Eur. Alc. 1067; TePoAw- pévos confounded by joy, Pherecr. Mupp. 7. Cf. xadxaivw, mopdipw, also dva-, dia, ém-, xara-, tapa-, iro-BoAdw. OoAtvw, =00Adw, Jo. Chrys. ; OoAdSys, es, like mud, muddy, turbid, of water, Hipp. Aér. 285 (in Sup. -€oraros); éy Trois dupwdeor 7) Oodw@beor Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 2. OsAopa, 74, muddiness, Eust. Opuse. 239. 55. Qddwors, ews, 7, (O0Adw) a making turbid, troubling, especially of water, Arist. P. A. 4. 5, 12. aes (OorAéw) troubled, vods Eccl. * Qoés, 7, dv (v. sub fin.) :—poét. Adj. guick, nimble, active, mostly of action (wd’s or raxvs being commonly used of swiftness of foot), epith. of warriors, Il. 5. 430, 571, etc.; c. inf., @ods udxec@ar Ib. 536 :—also, of things, xelp 12. 306; Bédos Od. 22. 83; Gpya Il. 17. 458; paorig Ib. 430; and as constant epith. of ships of war, @oal vjes, perhaps, as opp. to merchantmen, Il. 14. 410, etc.; vqvol Oojat .. memoiWdres wrely- aw (where dvs implies swift in motion, O0ds quick, nimble), Od. 7. 343 often also 00%) v¥é swift Night, because she was supposed to drive a car, or because it came on suddenly, Il. 10. 394, Od. 12. 284, Hes. Th. 481, cf. Herm, Soph. Tr. 94; Oohy dAeytvere daira prepare a hasty meal, i.e. in haste, Od. 8, 38; also in later poets, of horses and dogs, Pind. P. 4. 30, Eur, Bacch. 977; Ooat payar Pind. P. 8. 37; wdives Fr. 58; yAwooa N. 7. 106; O0d Bags Acsch. Ag. 476; 0. (vyév, of rowers, Soph. Aj. 243; wrépug Eur. Ion 123, cf. Aesch. Pr. 129; mvoal, adpat Eur. Andr. 479, Tro. 454:—also (as in Od. 8, 38) used like an Adv. with Verbs of motion, éempoArmotca Body Sépor quickly, in haste, Antim. in An. Ox. 1. 200; ody vippay dyaryes Soph. Tr. 857, cf. Od. 2. 257, Ap. Rh. 4. 201.—Adv. —&s, quickly, in haste, Hom. ; soon, Od. 15. 210: also in Aesch. Pr. 1060, Pers. 392; Sodrepoy Ap. Rh. 3.1406. Jt. in Od. 15. 299, vijvor Ooai the Echinades with their pointed or prickly Pav reBoivara pidcus; Eur. Cycl. 377; ot torepov Cowdcopar Ib. 5, outline (like the Needles), whence indeed they derive their names of / 680 *Exwdbes and ‘Ofetai, cf. Strab. 351, Dict. of Geogr. s. v. Exuddes ; so in later Ep., 0. yéuor, dd6vres, wedX€xers Ap. Rh. 2. 79., 3. 1281., 4 1683, and cf. dodw. (The Root of @0ds 1 is OE, O€w (Gev-copar), cf. Skt.dhav-dmi (curro):—@oés 11 is prob. connected with the Root of 67yw.) G06, fut. dow, (Bods » to make sharp or pointed, like dfuvw Od. 9. 327; TeBompévos Nic, Th. 228. II. metaph., 0. iayBous to make pointed iambi, Christod. Ecphr. 359. 2. Pass. to be provoked, nara twos Ib. 28; Avcon, pavin reOowpévos Opp. H. 1. 557., 2. 525, cf. Hermesian. El. 11. Qopatos, a, ov, (Odpos) containing the seed, piv Nic. Th. 583 :—é Gopatos, epith. of Apollo as god of growth and increase, Lyc. 352. Odpe, Yopeiv, v. sub OpwoKw. Oopn, 7, = Oopés, Hdt. 3. 101, Plut. 2. 907 A. Oopikovbe, Adv. to Thoricus, h. Hom. Cer. 126. Gopicés, 7, dv, of or for the seed, wbpor 0. ductus seminales, Arist. G. A. 1. 14, 3, al.; 7d Oopied partes seminales, Ib. 3. 5, 4. Oopiokopar, Pass. to receive seed, Anton. Lib. 29. Odpvupar, Dep., =Opwoxw I, Poéta ap. Clem. Al. 716, Nic. Th. 130; 3 pl. subj. éredv Oopytwyra Hdt. 3. 109. Oopédes, cooa, ev, in embryo, Bpapos 6. Opp. C. 3. 522. Oopo-trovés, dv, producing seed, E. M. 453. 52 Oopés, 5, the semen genitale of the male, Hat. 7, al.: also @opy. (Cf. Opwoxw It.) ‘opar, Pass. to be troubled, Ev. Luc. 10. 41 (v. 1. rupBa¢n). OoptBéw, fut. 7am, (OdpuBos) to make a noise or uproar, of a crowded assembly, Hipp. 1275, Ar. Eq. 666, Vesp. 622, etc.; BAémwy eis Tov _det OopyBodvra rémov THs éxxAnolas Dem. 577. 10. 2. like Lat. acclamare, to shout in token either of approbation or the contrary: a. to cheer, applaud, Isocr. 288 C, Plat. Euthyd. 303 B:—Pass., Adyos Te- OopuBnyévos a loudly cheered speech, Isocr. 281 C, ef. Arist. Rhet. 1. 2, Io. b. more often ¢o raise clamours against, c. dat., Plat, Apol. 17D, 20E, Dem. 60. 27; also, 0. ép. ofs dv A€yw Plat. Apol. 30C; 0. aps twa Thuc. 6.61; opp. to #éAw dxovew, Andoc. 30. 2; absol., Plat. Prot. 319 C:—so in Pass. to have clamours raised against one, ind Towvtav dvdpav SopuBel Soph. Aj. 164, cf. Thuc. 8. 50. II. trans. 40 confuse by noise or tumult, to trouble, disturb, Plat. Phaedr. 245 B, al.: to throw [troops] into confusion, in battle, Thuc. 3. 78:— Pass. to be troubled, to be thrown into disorder or confusion, Hat. 3. 78., 4. 130, Thuc. 4. 129, Plat., etc.; iad twos by one, Soph. Aj. 164; bd Tov eyopevww Plat. Lys. 210 E; 71 at a thing, Dem. 237.6; él zit Bato Incert. 1. 2; mept rt Thuc. 6. 61; mpés ve Plut. Cam. 29. pace le 76, name of the plant Aeovrorérador, Diosc. 3. 100. Gop: 6s, 7, Ov, uproarious, turbulent, Ar. Eq. 1380. Gopi we, to make an uproar, Diod. 13. 111, App. Civ. 2. 74. 16s, dv, making an uproar, turbulent, Plut. Mar. 28. OspiBos, 6, (Opdos, Opeouar) a noise, esp. the confused noise of a crowded assembly, uproar, clamour, Pind. O. 10 (11). 88, Eur. Or. 905, Thuc. 8. 92, etc.; @dpyBos Boys a confused clamour, Soph. Ph. 1263 ; @. orpariwrav Ar. Ach. 546; Anvatrns Id. Eq. 547. 2. esp. in token of approbation or the contrary (Plat. Rep. 492 B, C): a. -applause, cheers, Ar. Eq. 547, Plat. Prot. 339 D, al.; @dpvBov Kat xpdrov énxornoare Dem. 519. 10: . groans, murmurs, Andoc. 21. 30; so, peyaadot ObpuBot Karéxova’ Huds great murmurs prevail against us, Soph. Aj. 142. IL. tumult, confusion, 0. mapéxew Tivi Hdt. 7. 181; és 6. dmixécOar 1d. 8. 56, 87, cf. 4.134, Thuc. 4.104; éyévero 6 0. péyas, in a battle, Ib. 14; pl. troubles, Menand. Monost. 239. III. c. inf., és OdpuBov HAGoy .. AevaOFvar I came into danger from the tumult of being stoned, Eur. I. A. 1350. A OoptBabys, es, (clos) noisy, uproarious, turbulent, Plat. Legg. 671 A: confused, Arist. H. A. 9. 49 B, 1; OopvBwdea evummdtecOa Hipp. Vet. Med. 12 :—Adv, -das, Poll. 5. 123. IL. causing alarm, ro inny 0. pndev mpoopepew Xen. Eq. 9, 15. , €5,=Oopaios, Nemes. Nat. Hom. 25. Oov-, Att. for Beo-, v. sub Bed popos. G00, imper. aor. 2 of riOnut. Oov-Kudibys, i.c. Oco-KudlSys, v. sub Oevpopia. _ @oupaios, a, ov,=Oodpos, violent, lustful, Lat. salax, Hesych, :—fem. ~ Poupds, dios, Nic. Th. 131, Lyc. 612. Ooupdw, to rush or leap upon, c. acc., Lyc. 85. Oouphes, ecca, ¢v,=Ooupaios, Hesych. Govpys, ov, 6, the male, of animals, Lat. admissarius, Hesych. wris, ews, 6, a Thurian prophet, in allusion to the seer Lampon who led the ng to Thurium in 443 B.C., Ar. Nub. 332; y. Schol. ad 1., Plut. Pericl. 6. Govpros, a, ov, in Att. Poets for Oodpos, Aesch. Theb, 42, Pers. 73, 118, Ag. 112, Eum. 627, Soph. Aj. 212, 612, Ar. Eq. 757, Ran. 1289. pus, t5os, %, fem. of sq., q. Vv. Godpos, 5, ((4/OOP, Opuiaxw) rushing, raging, impetuous, furious, Hom. (but only in 11), always as epith. of Ares, 15. 127, etc. ; Tupay Aesch. Pr. 354, cf. Fr. 196; dépu Eur. Rhes. 492 :—fem. Oodpts, tos, 7, mostly as epith. of dd«q, Od. 4. 527, and often in Il. ; also Ootpis doris, prob. the shield with which one rushes to the fight, Il. 11. 32., 20. 162. @swxos, 56, Ep. lengthd. form of @@xos; v. sub Oaxos. OS5wora, 4, (Bods) speed, only found as prop. n., Od, 1. 71, Emped, 24. ,0, acrackling ot crashing, Sext.Emp.P.1.58. (V.sub Opatw.) akn, 4, Thrace, Ar., Thuc., etc.: Ion. Opyixyn, Hdt.; Ep. contr. @prxn, Il. 13. 301, etc., and so in Trag., Aesch. Pr. 509, Eur. ; but in Ar. Ach. 136, al.:—Opykqdev, from Thrace, Il. 9. 5, 72:— , to Thrace, Od. 8. 361. ~, 10 imitate the Thracians, Apollon. de Adv. 572, Steph. 3. 2. 93; Arist. H. A. 3. 1, b Oodw — Opacupndys. Opgxixds, 4, dv, =sq., Luc. J. Trag. 21. Opdktos, a, ov, Thracian, Thuc., etc. : Ion. Opnixtos, 7, ov, Il. 10. 559, Hdt.; contr. Opyktos, a, ov, Trag., Aesch, Ag. 654, Eur. Hec. 36; —Sdpos Opnixin =Zapobpden, Ul. 13.12. [Opytcios in Hom. ; Opytccos Phanocl. in Stob. t. 64. 14, Ap. Rh. 4. 903-] Opaxiort, Adv. in Thracian fashion, Theocr. 14. 46; ef. ketpa. Opaxo-hotrys, ov, 5, one who keeps going to Thrace, like “Adopotrns, Ar. Fr. 198. Cptivesoas, Pass. with fut. med. -evcouar: (Opavos) :—to be stretched on the tanner’s board, to be tanned, Ar. Eq. 369: cf. Opaviocw. Opiivias, ov, 6,=Opavis, Marcell. Sid. 29. Opavidiov, 74, Dim. of Opavioy, Ar. Fr. 352. Opaviov, 74, Dim. of Opavos, Ar. Ran. 121, Ael. N. A. 16. 33: the rower's bench, Poll. 1. 94. 2. a close-stool, Hesych. Opavis, (50s, }, the sword-fish, also gupias, Xenocr. Aquat. 8, Plin. Opavirns [7], ov, 6, (Opavos) one of the rowers on the topmost of the three benches in a trireme, who had the longest oars and most work, and sometimes received extra pay, a top-rower, Thuc. 6, 31, Ar. Ach, 161, v. Schol. Ran. 1101 :—cf. (vyirns, Oadapirns. IL. Adj. of the top- most bench, okadpods Op. the topmost bench, Polyb. 16. 3, 4:—fem., Opaviris néomn the oar of a Opavirns, E. M. 454. 12. Opaviriés, 4, dv, of a Opavirns, kawn Ath. 203 F. Opavo-ypados, 6,=rorxoypapos, Polyb. ap. C. Miiller Fragm. Hist. 2. p- xxx, Hesych. Opavos, 5, (Opdw) a bench, form, Ar. Pl. 545 (leg. Opdvov, pro Opa- vous). 2. a close-stool, Hipp. in Galen, II. Opava, of, the beam-ends in building, Poll. 10. 49. Opavut, vxos, =Ophvus, Corinna in A. B. 1381. Opaviccw, to break in pieces, Lyc. 664. (Like @pavéw, which only occurs in compd. ovv@pavéw, from Root @pavw; not connected with Opavedm from Opavos.) pat, Opaxds, 6, a Thracian; Ion. Opytt, ixos, pl. Opyixes, Il. 4. 533, etc., Hdt. 1. 28, etc.; Ep. contr. OpHE, Oppxds, Il. 24. 234, ete., and so prob. always in Trag., for in Eur. Hec. 428, Fr. 362. 48, Opnéi, @ppé should be restored for Opgét, Opaé:—fem, OpGoca, q.v. [Tin obl, cases Opihicos, Ophtkes, Hom.: but Ophixes in Ap. Rh. 1. 24., 6. 32, ete.] Opagar, OpGtov, cf. sub Opaccw. Opic-auyxny, évos, 5, 4, stiff-necked, trmos Nicet. Ann. 366 A. @packtas, od, 6, the wind from NNW., Arist. Meteor. 2. 6, 9 sqq., Mund. 4, 13, Theophr. de Vent. 42, C. I. 6180 ;—prob. because it blew from Thrace; indeed it is written Opqxias in Arist. Vent. 9, Theophr. de Sign. 2, Io sq. Opdcos [a], eos, 75: (Opacus) :=Odpaos (q. v.), courage, boldness, Il. 14. 416, Pind. P. 5. 148, Aesch, Pers. 394, Soph. Ph. 104, El, 479, Eur. Med, 469, ubi v. Elmsl.; 6p. woA€uwy courage in war, Pind. P. 2. 116; Op. iaxdos confidence in strength, Soph. Ph. 1043; Opdcet amiorw émat- popevos Thuc, 1, 120. II. mostly in bad sense, over-boldness, daring, 1 » audaci , impudence, eis TodTo Opdaous dyher Hdt. 7. 9, 35 cf. Aesch. Pr. 42, etc.; mappaxw Opace Bpiwy Id. Ag. 168, cf. Pers. 831; mpoBaa’ én’ éxyaroy Opdcous Soph. Ant. 853; TOA- pais kal ppevay Opdce Id. Aj. 46; men¥pywoar Opdce Eur. Or. 1568 ; mavoupyig Te Kat Opdce Ar. Eq. 331, cf. 6373 Tov Opdgous émaxéabac tia Plat. Hipp. Ma. 298 A; 76 rv Tod BeAtiovos ddgay pr) poBeiabac did Opacos Id. Legg. 701 B; Op. wat dvatSea Aeschin. 27. 1, etc.—It is laid down by Ammon. and others that @apcos or Odppos properly meant courage, Opacos reckless daring (Opdcos piv yap eat Gdoyos Spun, Odpaos Be EAXoYos Spph). ‘This distinction certainly holds in Att. Prose, cf. Opacds 1. 2: but Hom. used Odpaos in both senses, and Opdaos in the sense of Oapaos; the Att. Poets also used Opacos for Papaos, to suit their metre. Of the Adj. and Verb. forms, @paods is almost exclus. in use, Gapovs only in late writers; @apcéw or Oappéw has no correl, form Opacéw; Oapotve and Opacivw seem to be used indifferently. Opicoa, 7, Att. OpArra, Ar. Ach. 273, al., Plat. Theaet. 174A; Ep. Opijicoa, Nic. Th. 45; Trag. Opfjooa, Soph. Ant. 589, Eur. Alc. 967; Dor. Optiooa, Theocr. Ep. 18. 1:—a Thracian woman, Thracian slave. Opdoow, Att. Opdrrw: fut. fw: aor. inf. Opdgar (not Opagac) Aesch. Pr. 628 :—contr. from rapdcow, to trouble, disquiet, Pind. 1. 7 (6). 56, Aesch. 1. c., Eur. Rhes. 863, Plat. Phaedo 86 E, Phaedr. 242 C, etc. ; v. Ruhnk. Tim. : aor. pass. €@pax6n, Soph. Fr. 812. 2° to destroy, ruin, Anth. Pl. 255. 3. for pf. rérpnyxa, v. sub rapacow II, Opacv-Bovdos, ov, bold in counsel, Arist. Rhet. 2. 2 3, 29. SpiicvyAwrria, 7%, boldness of tongue, Poll. 2. 108. Spaict-yAwrros, ov, Pisid.; and in Manetho 4.184, 9pacvyAwooys, és, bold of tongue. gf pa ov, strong of limb, KAeropdxoo vita Opacv-yumos Pind. ote BBs Opiicd-Behos, 6, 4, an impudent coward, braggart, poltroon, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 7, 9. II. name of a gem, Pseudo-Plut, 2. 1158 B. Opaov-epyés, dv, bold of deed, Nonn. D, 35- 365. Opaot-Pipos, ov, bold-hearted, Manetho $5 529. Opdcv-Kdpbi0s, ov, bold of heart, Il. 10. 414, 13. 3433 restored in Anacr. 1. 4 (from Walz Rhett. 6. p. 129) for Opeoxdpaios. SpacvAcyéa, to speak boldly, Schol. Soph. Ag. 1258. Opacvdoyia, #, bold speech, Basil. Spacy-héyos, ov, bold of speech, E, M. 133. 42. shact-uisxos, ov, bold in battle, Arist. Rhet. 2. 2 3, 29. puov-penvav, ov, bravely steadfast (cf, pé ith. f Il. 5. 639, Od. felt iy ifast (cf, wépvwy), epith. of Hercules Spaov-ph5qs, es, bold of thought or plan, daring, resolute, Pind. P. 4. 254, N. 9. 31:—in Hom. only as pr, n, Opaciunris — Opycy. Optiot-pytis, dos, 6, ,=foreg., Anth. P. 6. 324. Opicv-piqxtivos, Dor. -pdxavos, ov, bold in contriving, daring in design, “Hpakdéns Pind. O. 6.114; A€ovres Id. N. 4. 101. Optict-pi0os, ov, bold of tongue, saucy, Pind. O. 13. 13. Cpicive, (@pacds)=the older form @apotyw, to make bold, embolden, encourage, Aesch. Ag. 222; mAnOea Thy auablay Opacivovres lending * courage to their ignorance by number, Thuc. 1.142, cf. 7. 76:—Pass. and Med., aor. @pacuvO7jvat Aesch. Supp. 772; @0pactvaro Isocr. 43 C, 87 A:—to be bold or ready, take courage, Aesch. Ag. 1188, etc.; ndtv Opacdvov Eur. Hec. 1183 ; ob .. dAdyws OpacvvdpeOa Thuc. 5. 104; mply dpuy vaiy OpacvyOjva: before the ship was confident of safety at her moorings, Aesch. Supp. 1. c. II. Pass., in bad sense, to be over~ bold, audacious, to speak boldly or insolently, Soph. Ph. 1387, Ar. Ran. 846, Isocr. l.c., Dem. 272.12; émé tut Ar. Ach. 330, Isocr. 87 A; mpés 7 Luc. Merc. Cond. 6. III. Opacivew tr to brag of a thing, Polyb. 4. 31, 4. Optiov-tevia, 4, the boldness of a stranger, Plat. Legg. 879 E. Opaict-movos, ov, bold or ready at work, Pind. O. 1.156. Opacvu-mrédenos, or, bold in war, Anth. P. append. 201. Opaiovs, cia, v: fem. Opacéa, metri gr., Philem. Tap. 4: (v. sub fin.) :— bold, spirited, of good courage, Lat. audax, Homeric epith. of Hector, Il. 8. 89, etc.; of Ulysses (infr. 2); of Laogonos, 16. 604; also, Op. tédepos 6. 254., 10. 28, Od. 4.146; Opacerdav and xepav 5. 434, Il. 17. 662, al.; Op. xapdia Pind. P. 10. 69; movs Ar. Ran. 330; é&y 7@ épyw Opacts Hdt. 7. 49; Op. régoror Aesch, Pr. 871; 4 eAmls Opaceia Tov pédAovtos full of confidence, Thuc. 7.77; Opacds Td HOos Arist. Pol. 5, 11, 27. 2. mostly in bad sense, over-bold, rash, ven- turous, Lat. audax, abv 8 6 Opacds einer’ ’Odvaceds Od. 10. 436 (Schol. mpomerys) ; Topyéves Pind. P. 12. 13;—so mostly in Att., audacious, arrogant, Aesch. Pr. 178 ; “Apns .. mpds GAAnAous Op., of civil war, Id. Eum. 863; yAdoop Opacds Soph. Aj. 1142; év Tots Adyous Id. Ph. 1307; én Tav Adyov Dem. 1441.19; dvopia Opacds Eur. I. T. 275; movnpos ef kat Op. Ar. Eq. 181; Opaceis wat ddixor wal bBpiorat Plat. Legg. 630 B; 6 Op. ddaay «rd. Arist. Eth. N. 3..7,8; dpoidy te Exe «+6 Op. TO Bapparéw Ib. 7. 9, 2:—7d pt Opacd modesty, Aesch. Supp. 197. II. of things, to be ventured, c. inf., Opacd pot 745° eimeiy this I am bo/d to say, Pind. N. 7. 74; ob« dp’ éxeivw mpoopita Opacd ; Soph. Ph. 106. III. Adv. -éws: Comp. @pactrepor, too boldly, Thuc. 8. 103: Sup. Opacdrara (or —drws) Diod. 17. 44. (From VOAPS or OPA come Odpcos, Oapoéw, Opdcos, Oapadve, etc., and perh. @epairns ; cf. Skt. darsh, drshnémi (audeo), drshtas (audax) ; Goth. ga-daursan (Oappeiv); A.S. dear (dare); O. H.G. gi-tar (to dare).) Bs it ap a ty ov, bold-hearted, Eur.Hipp.424. Adv.-ws, Aesch. T. 730. Opacucropéw, to be over-bold of tongue, Aesch. Supp. 203, Soph. Ph. 380, Eur. Hec. 1286. Opicucropia, 4, insolence, Anth. P. 12. 141. Optict-cropos, ov, over-bold of tongue, insolent, Aesch. Theb. 612, Ag. 1399, Eur. Fr. 3. Opaicirns, nros, }, over-boldness, audaci , Hipp. Lex 2, Thuc. 2. 61, Lys. 100. 21; 0p.=70 opddpa Oappeiy Arist. Rhet. 2.14, 1, cf. Eth. N. 2.8, 5 ;—pl., Isocr. 56 B, Dem. 1452. 18. Opict-dpwv, ov, gen. ovos, bold of mind, Opp. H. 1. 112. Opicupevia, %,=Opacvoropia, Poll. 2. 112. Opaict-dwvos, ov, =Opaciaropos, Poll. 2. 112, 113. Opiou-xdppns, ov, 5, bold in fight, Q.Sm. 4. 502. Optiot-xeip, xe:pos, 6, 4, bold of hand, Anth. P. 7. 234. Optiov-xerpta, %, boldness of hand, Poll. 2. 148. Optic, dos contr. ods, %, boldness, name of Athena, Lyc. 936. Opdcwv, wvos, 5, a name of a braggart soldier (Bobadil) in New Com. Oparra, ns, 7, Att. for Opdcca. Oparra, 7, a small sea-fish, Arist. G. A. 5.6, 2, Antiph. Tupp. 2, Mnesim. *Inr. 1. 41:—Dim. Oparribvov, 74, Anaxandr. Ave. 1. Oparrw, Att. for Opacow, Opatros, 7, ov, (not Opavdds, Arcad. p. 53. 10) :—frangible, brittle, Incert. ap. Suid :—in Hesych. also Opatpos. Opatpa, 74, (Opatw) = Opaidopa. 6pa os, 6, a shrub, perhaps the guelder-rose, Viburnum, Theophr. H. P. 3.6, 4; as fem., Ib. 4. 1, 3. Opavmis, iSos, %, a small bird, Arist. H. A. 8. 3, 6 (v.1. @Aumis). Opavo-dvruk, tos, 5, 7), (Opatw) breaking wheels, Ar. Nub. 1264. ~ eng ews, }, (Opatw) a breaking, Arist. Meteor. 4.9, 9., 12, 8, Plut. 2. 893 D. Opatcpa or Opatpa, 76, (Opatw) that which is broken, a fragment, wreck, piece, Aesch. Pers. 425, Diod. 3. 12, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 25 :—for Aesch. Ag. 1166, v. sub Oadpya, Opavopés, 5, a breaking, rijs Oaddoons C. I. 6187; apdias Lxx (Nah. 2. 10). Qpaverss, 7, dv, frangible, brittle, Tim. Locr. 99 C; cf. @Aagrés. Opatiw, fut. ow, Ar. Av. 466: aor. €0pavoa Soph. El. 745, Eur. H. F. 780 :—Pass., fut. @pavoOjcopua Galen.: aor. @pavaOny (v. inft.), (KkaT—) Plat. Tim. 56 E: pf. ré0pavopat Theophr. Sens. 11, (svy—) Xen. Ages. 2, 14, (wapa-) Plat. Legg. 757 E (where the Mss. give —re@pavpévov) : cf, d:a-Opator, (Prob. from 4/OPY, whence Opvrra; cf. Lat. frustum, frustra:—reipw, t1-rpwoxw prob. are akin, Curt. no. 239; cf. also Opaypds, Opavicow.) To break in pieces, shatter, shiver, Hdt. 1. 174, Simon. 6, Aesch. Pers. 196, 415, etc., often in Eur.; 0p. odpxas Eur. Hipp. 1239 :—Pass., Opavopévns ths mérpns flying into pieces, Hit. 1.174; ol8npov Opavobévra Kal payévra Soph. Ant. 476; Opavovrar mrepa have their wings broken, Plat. Phaedr.248B; cf. @Aaards. II. $ Opykn, %, 681 metaph., like Lat. frangere,=Optmrw, to break down, enfeeble, pr Opatcat xpdvos odPor Pind. O. 6. 163, cf. Eur. H.F. 780; éos.., 5 71 thy robrwv Space Yuxny Ar. Av. 466; Op. Tiv Sbvayu Plut. Alcib.23; éAnida, etc,, Hdn. 3.2, etc.:—Pass., mé00s Opavobeis Aspas. ap. Ath. 219E; Opavdpevos Tov Aoyopdr, Lat. animo fractus, Plut. Anton. 17.— Rare in Att. Prose. Opdw, fo set, only found in aor. med. Opfoacat, to set oneself, sit, Philet. Fr, 21. (The Root of Opavos, Opjvus, Opdvos, perh. also of adepi(w: cf. Skt. dhar, dhatami (fero, sustineo); Lat. fretus.) Opéiooa, %, Dor. for Ophicca, v. sub Opacca. Opexrixés, 7, dv, (rpéxw) able to run, Moer. p. 187, Hesych. Opexrés, 7, 6v,=Tpoxaios, Opexrotor vopos Soph. Fr. 414, but with v. |. epexrotat. Opéppia, 7d, (rpépw) a nursling, creature, Op. Nnypeiday, of dolphins, Arion in Bgk. p. 567; mostly of tame animals, cattle, esp. sheep and goats, Xen. Ages. 9,6, Oec. 20, 23; Ta éy Tais dyéAas Op. Plat. Polit. 261 A; 7a dyedata Op. Ib. 264 A; dnva Op. Id. Legg. 819 A; of domestic fowls, édpvi@wy Op. Ib. 789 B; generally of all animals, rots hepas nat dypios.. Op. Id. Criti. 118-B, al. 2. of men, Soph. O. T. 1143, Ph. 243; Xapirwy Op. Ar. Eccl. 973; Svoxodov Op. 6 GvOpwnos Plat. Legg. 777 B, cf. Theaet. 174 B; in Inscrr. often of domestic slaves, 7d Xpucinrov Op. his born slave, Lat. verna, C.1.17098, cf. 3113, 3266, al.; cf. @peupariov, Operrds, Opemrdprov. 3. in various senses, of wild beasts, as a lion, dAaroy Op. xampootyyopoy Soph. Tr. 1093 (cf. Plat. Charm. 155 D); of Cerberus, Ib. 1099; of a swarm of gnats, Anth. P. 5.151; Op. SeAcovvros, of a fish, Archestr. ap. Ath. 328C; Kapvcrov 6p., comic for a cup made at Carystus, Antiph. Mapac. Te3. 4, as a term of reproach, a creature, Opéupat’ ovK dvacxeTa Aesch. Theb. 182; & Opéuy’ dvaidés Soph. El. 622, cf. Ar. Lys. 370. 5. in periphr., Spas Op., for Spa, Soph. Tr. 574; Opéupara maldwy, for matdes, Plat. Legg. 790D; Kaptarovu Op., for Kapvoros, Antiph. Mapac. 1.3; Opéupara madAdKov, for méAAakes, Plut. Sol. 7. Opeppariov, 7d, Dim. of Opéupa, a young slave, C. I. 2733. Opeppiiro-rpodpéw, to keep cattle, Diod. 2. 54, Strabo 704. Opétackov, Opetopar, v. sub tpéxw. Opeo-KdpStos, ov, with wailing heart; but cf. OpacuKdpdios. Opéopat, Dep., used only in pres. to ery aloud, shriek forth, always of women, Opéopar poBepa peyar’ dyn Aesch. Theb. 78; elsewh. only in part., puvupd Opeopévas Ag. 1165; (Cho. 970 is corrupt); mea pédea Opeopéva Id. Supp. 110, cf. Eur. Hipp. 364; adr? Opeopéevy cavTn Kaka Id. Med. 51. (From 4/OPE come also 6pé-os, Opij-vos, Opd-Aos, Odp-uBos, rov-Oop-U(w: cf. Skt. dhar-a (vox), dhra-ndmi, intens. dandhr-anmi(sono); Goth.drun-jus(p0éyyos); Germ.drin-en, drihn-en ; Engl. to drone.) Opénra, wy, 7a, softer form of Opéemzpa, q. v. Operrraprov, 7d, = Openpariov, C. 1. 4299 (cf. addend.), 4303 A. 6 (add.). Opémretpa, 7, fem. of Operrjp, Eur. Tro. 195, Anth. P. 5. 106., 6. 51: metaph., di«n Op. toAjwy Opp. H. 2. 680. : Opemrréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of tpépw, to be fed, Plat. Rep. 403 Cc. II. Operréov, one must feed, Plat. Tim. 19 A, Xen, Lac, 9, 5: but, 2. from Pass., dd tay eipyacpévov Openréoy one must live on what has been earned, Xen, Eq. Mag. 8, 8. Operrnp, jpos, 6, a feeder, rearer, Anth. P, 12. 137, al. Operrfptos, ov, able to feed or rear, feeding, nourishing, paorés Aesch. Cho. 545. II. mAdKapos "Ivaxy Op. hair let grow as an offering to Inachus, Aesch. Cho. 6, cf. Eust. 165. 6, Schol. Pind. P. 4.145. Iit. Operrnpia, 74, rewards for rearing’, such as are made to nurses by the parents, h, Hom. Cer. 168. 223 (cf. @pémrpa) ; but also, the returns made by children for their rearing, like Att. tpopeia, Hes, Op. 186, Anth. P. 1. 7, Ael. V. H. 2. 7. 2.=7popy, nourishment, Td .. vndvos Op. Soph. O. C. 1263. Operrixés, 7, dv, (Tpépw) able to feed or rear, feeding, Twos Plat. Polit. 267 B, cf. 276 B, C; Opemrinmrepa pda Diphil. Siphn. ap. Ath. 82 F ; -wraros olvos Mnesith. ib. 32 D. II. of or promoting growth, % Sivapus THs Yuxijs Op. Kat -yevynrien Arist. de An. 2. 4,14; % Op. Yuxh Ib. 2; 70 Operrixév the principle of growth, 1d. Eth, N. 1. 13,14; 7 Op. kat aifnruciy Con Ib. 1.7, 12, etc. Operrrés, 7, dv, verb. Adj. of rpépw: as Subst., Operds, Operrh, a slave bred in the house, Lat. verna, Lys. ap. Poll. 7.17, Pherecr. Mupp. 12 (ubi v. Meineke) ; often in Inscrr. and Lxx; rdv iSiov Op. C. I. 1608 d, cf. 2044, 21 14 bb (add.), al.; also fem. Operrh, 1991-4, al. Opémrpa, 74, like Operrjpia, the returns made by children to their parents for their rearing, ov5é roxeDow Opénrpa pido dwéduxe Il. 4. 478., 17.302: Opéwra seems to be a corrupt form in Q, Sm, 11. 89, Hesych., etc. :—cf. Operrnptos. Opémrpa, 1), =Opénreipa, a nurse, C.1. (add.) 4300 d. Opéckos, —Ketw, —Kela, v. Opfoxos, etc. OperraveAd, a sound imitative of the cithara (as tra lira of the horn), Ar. Pl. 290. ; Opérre, 7d, only in Ar.Eq.17, ob év pou 7d Opérre, acc. to Schol.=7d Oapparéoy, 7d Opact, the spirit’s not in me: prob. a barbarism. Opedpar, post. contr. for @péopar, but no certain example occurs. Opaha, v. sub Tpépw. Opers-Aveop, opos, 5, 4, man-nourishing, Bats Apollin, Psalm. 106. 36. OpeW-iwas, ov, 5,=immorpdpos, Apollod. 2. 7, 8. Operis, ews, 1), nourishing, nourishment, Sext. Emp. M. 11. 97. Opyikin, Opyixcos, 7, ov, Ep. and Ion. for Opdktos, q. v. Opiate, ixos, 6, Ep. and Ion. for Opaé, q. v- Opiicoa, %, poét. for Opacaa, q. v. jKnGev, Oprknvbe, v. sub Open. 682 Opytos, v. sub Opditos. Opiv-epws, wos, 4, }, a querulous lover, Poll. 6.189; cf. dicepws. Opnvevw, = Opnvéw, C.1. 4000. 12. Opyvéw, fut. -yow, Aesch., Soph.: aor., Eur. Tro. 111:—Med., v. infr. 2: fut. —joopa: (év-) Or. Sib, 2. 158:—impers. in pf. pass., v. infr.: (Opijvos). To sing a dirge, to wail, Motca 3 évvea maga, dperBd- pevat dnt xadp, Ophveov Od. 24.61; ris 6 Opyvjtwy; Aesch. Ag. 1541; tis ..é08 6 Opnvay Ar. Nub, 1260; Op. mpds TUuBov Aesch. Cho, 926; mpos éavrév Isocr, 155 A:—c. acc. cogn., orovdercay dod .. €Opy- veov were singing a doleful dirge, Il. 24. 722; “yéov Op. Aesch. Fr. 420; dgurévous gdds. Soph. Aj. 631; émmdds, Ib. 582; Guvous Op., of the nightingale, Ar. Av, 211; hones GAvpous Alex, OAUVO. I. 6 :—Pass., Gis oor TeOphyvnrar Adyos Soph. Ph. 1400; ixav@s reOphvyrar Luc. Catapl. 20. 2. c. ace. objecti, to wail for, lament, Op. movous Aesch, Pr. 615; Odvaroy Plat. Phaedo 85 A; dca Tov épdv Opnvd warépa Soph. El. 94, cf. 530; tov pivra Eur. Fr. 452 ;—so also Med., révde Opnvet- a0a Aesch. Pr. 43 :—Pass. to be lamented, Soph, Aj. 852, Fr. 585. Optvnpa, 76, a lament, dirge, Eur. Or. 132, Hel. 174, etc. os, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be lamented, Greg. Naz. one must lament, Apollon. ap. Stob, 617. 55. Opyvytip, fpos, 5, a mourner, wailer, Aesch. Pers. 937. Opnyyriptos, a, ov, =Opnvytixds, gdal Op. Eust. 1372. 26. Opnvyrhs, od, 6,=Opnynrhp, Aesch. Ag. 1075. OpyvytiKés, 7, dv, inclined to lament, querulous, Arist. Eth.N.9. 11, 4 2. of or for a dirge, abAnpua, addds Poll. 4.73, 753 TO Op. matter for lament, Plut. 2.623 A. Ady. —x@s, Poll. 6. 202. Opnvyrpia, %, fem. of Opnvnrnp (v. Opny@dds), Theophylact. , opos, 6,=Opyvnrhp, Manetho 4. 190, OpyvoAocyéw, to lament, twa C. 1, (add,) 2113 c. Opfivos, 6, (@péopar) a funeral-song, dirge, lament, like Lat. naenia, Gaelic coronach, Il. 24. 721, Hdt. 2. 79,85, and Trag.; Opivos obpds for me, Aesch. Pr. 388; elmeiv .. Opiivov Boke épov rov adrijs Id. Ag. 1322. 2. a complaint, sad strain, h. Hom. 18. 18, Pind., etc., and often in Prose :—in pl. lamentations, wailing, Pind., Trag., etc.; Ophvav @das Soph. El. 88.—Fragments of @pHvor remain in Pind. Frr. 95-103. OpiivvE, =sq., Euphor. 35 ; Dor. @pa@vut, Corinna in A. B. 1381. Opivus, vos, 6, (Opt) a footstool, iromdbiov, ind St Opivuv roaty Hoe Il. 14. 240, cf, Od. 19. 573 v. bromddtov. II. in Il. 15. 729, Op. érrandins the seven-foot bench, is the seat of the helmsman or the rowers. Opnvedéw, to sing a dirge over, Twa Eur, I. A. 1176. OpnveSnpa, 74, a dirge, lament, Schol. Soph. El. 92. Opvadys, es, (€f50s) like a dirge, fit for a dirge, dppoviat Plat. Rep. 398 D, 411A; POdyyos, péAos Plut., etc.; 70 Op. THis puxijs mournful mood, Plut. 2. 822 C. 2. =Opnvnrucds, of persons, Plat. Legg. 792 A, cf, Rep. 606 A. Opnvedia, %, lamentation, Plat. Rep. 604 D, Plut. 2. 657 A. Opnv-pdés, 4, 4, one who sings a dirge, esp. of Carian women (prae- Jicae), Arist. Fr. 561, cf. Poll. 6. 202. Opie, neds, 6, Ion. for Opa, Il.; fem. Opfaca, 7, q.v. Opyoxeta, Ion. —ntn, 3, (Opnoxetw) religious worship or usage, Hdt. 2.18, 37 (in some Mss. Opyaxin, for -ntn) ;—religion, Act. Ap. 26. 5, Ep. Jac. 1. 26; Op. rav dyyéAwv worshipping of angels, Ep. Col, 2. 18: in pl., Dion. H. 2. 63, etc. Opyckeupa, 74, religious worship, Eccl. OpnoKevdorpos, ov, of, belonging to worship, Eus. H. E. 7. 13. Opyckeurnprov, 74, a place of worship, Schol. Pind, O. 7. 33. OpynoKe , 0b, 6, a worshipper, a monk, Synes. 167 C. Opycketw, (Opfaxos) to introduce and hold religious observances, observe religiously, Hdt. 2. 64, 65, Dion. H. 7. 62, 67. TI. c, acc. to worship, adore, O. ig only i one's own kind, opp. to Kowwoyovia, i816-ypaios, ov, written with one’s own hand, Eccl., Byz.: 70 18. an ices Gell. 9. 14. tovo-Vavew, to die in a peculiar way, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 277 :— Savaréw, Achmes Onir. 141, 151 Adj. iSecbisanaes ov, eee iB.o-edGs, Adv. by self-will, Eccl. iSto-Onpeutixéds, 4, Ov, hunting by or for oneself: % isoOnpevTixy (sc. TEXY); private hunting, Plat. Soph, 222 D; so t8o-Onpla, %, Ib. poarene., to be on one’s own throne, Ptol. Tetrab. p. 51. rere iae4 sei ta, 4, a peculiar temperament, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 13. i&t6-Kpiros, ov, (cod. ~kovrov), =tdidppv0j40s, Hesych. - iSto-Krijpwv, ov, possessing: as one’s own, Hephaest. Astrol. 18.6-KrqTos, ov, held as private property, Hipp. 1291. 25, Strabo 684; i. mavevtuxin won all by himself, Epigr. Gr. 443. iStoAoyéopat, Dep. to converse i wi re ? ’ : n private with, rivi Plat. Theag. 121A, Philo 1.197 ; mpés ttva Charito 6. 7. Hipp. Aér. 295, Phryn. nversation, Charito 4.6: a special discussion, tSto-Adyos, ov, managing special affairs, name of a magistrate in Egypt under the emperor, Strabo 797. idto-pqKns, €s, of their own length, i.e. of the same length each way, of the square numbers, Nicom. Arithm. 2. 59. i8t6-popdos, ov, of peculiar form, Strabo 207, Plut. Mar. 25, tStov, 7d, v. sub Tis. + tSrokevia, 1, private friendship, Anon. ap. Suid. i8t6-Eevos, ov, a private friend, or a friend in a private capacity, opp. to mpdfevos, Dion. H. 1. 84, Diod. 13. 5, Luc. Phal. 2, etc.;—like idia éévos in Andoc. 19. 3; or Bos €évos in Dion. H. 7. 2. idvdopat, (f5.0s) Med. to make one’s own, appropriate to oneself, Plat. Rep. 547 B, Legg. 742 B, cf. Ephor. 27. 2. to make one’s friend, twa Dio C. 39. 29. iStomdfera, 7), feeling for oneself alone, opp. to svumddea, Galen. 7. 454, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 2. 35. iStomi0tw, to be peculiarly affected: generally, =Lat. aegre ferre, Lob. Phryn. 620. iSto-riOys, és, affected for oneself or in a peculiar way, Galen. t816-mAacros, ov, -self-formed, Secund. iGtomovéw, to make separately, énidegiv tw Galen. 2. 672. II. Med. to appropriate to oneself, like idiw, ididopat, Diod. 5.13: to win over, Id. 15.29, Lxx (2 Sam. 15. 6). iBtorrotnpa, 76, an act of appropriation, Gloss. iBtorroiycts, ews, 3, a making one’s own, appropriation, Eccl. iSto-rovds, dv, making for oneself or separately, Damasc. iSto-mpayéw, to act independently, Polyb. 8. 28, 9, Diod. 18. 39, 64:— fo mind one’s own affairs, Strabo 555. iSto-mpayla, 9, a minding one’s own affairs, mAcovetia Kat id. Plat. Legg. 875 B. IL. independent action, Clem. Al. 803. iStompaypovew, =idiompayéw, Schol. iSto-mpdypwv, ov, gen. ovos, minding one’s own business, opp. to modv- mpeypa”, Diog. L. 9. 112, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 226. Stompoowmew, to have a peculiar look, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 74 :— itomporwnla, 7, peculiarity of aspect, Ptol. Tetrab. p. 155 :—i8to- ampbawros, ov, of peculiar aspect, Ib. p. 50. iBtoppvOpla, 4, a peculiar way of life, Byz., Eccl. iSté6p-puOpos, ov, living in one’s own way, Eust. Opusc. 64. 63, Thom. M. 123. iStos [75], a, ov, Att. also os, ov Plat. Prot. 349 B, Arist. H. A. 4. 8,1., 9. 40, 30: (vy. sub fin.) : I. one’s own, pertaining to oneself: and so, 1. private, personal, opp. to owds or Shpuos, opp. to rows (public): in Hom. only twice (in Od.), mpiitis 8 48 idin ob Shytos this business is private, not public, 3. 82; dnmov 4 tov 4. 314; dios éy now oradels embarking a private man in a public cause, Pind. O, 13. 69; idiy orddAw xpaoOa, opp. to dyuooiw, Hdt. 5. 63; yijs.. vooovans tha xowobvres xaxd Soph. O. T. 636; xowwdr é€ idias dvotas «axdv Eur. Hec. 740, cf. Or. 766; tS:a mpdoowy 4 orparod Taxbels tro ; Id. 1. A. 1364; idia xépSn Hat. 6.100; avppopd Antipho 116.15; mpdc- obos Andoc. 30. 25; 7a ida Sidpopa Thuc. 2. 37; mAodros tdi0s Kat Snpdaros Id. 1. 80, cf. 2. 61, Plat. Rep. 521A; t&os ob Kowvds wédvos Ib. 535 B, cf. 543 B; tia gvpBdddia Ib. 443 E; idta 4 wodrrixh mpagis Id, Gorg. 484D; médes Kat tdror ofa Id. Legg. 890 B, cf. 796 D, etc. ; 7a ipd Kat ra. ida temples and private buildings, Hdt. 6. 9., 8.109; 7d év idios discussion among private persons, Plat. Soph. 225 B. 2. one’s own, in property, opp. to dAAérpios, Pind. N. 6. 55; % 5. édev- Ocpin Hdt. 7.147; Zeds idiows vouos xpativey Aesch. Pr. 404; idia ywopy Ib. 543 (but v. sub adrdévoos) ; otro 7a xphpar’ tha Kéernvrar Bporoi Eur, Phoen. 555; pidav ovdty thov,=Kowd 7d Tov pido, Id. Andr. 376 :—with a Pron., 7d airod tia Theogn. 440; 70 tuérepov tiov Dem. 1274. 7, etc. 3. ra ida, in Att., either private affairs, private interests, as opp. to public, Thuc. 1. 82., 2. 61, etc.; or one’s own property, Id. 1. 141, etc.; t6:a mparretv to mind one’s own affairs, treat on one’s own account, Eur. I. A. 1363; also, els 70 tdtoy for oneself, Xen. An. 1. 3, 3, etc. —these forms, acc. to Phryn., are less Att. than rad éxavrod, Ta éavrod, etc.; but we often find the Adj. and Pron. joined, robpov téiov my own personal opinion, Isocr. 117 D; 7a end ida Dem. 1226. 24; 70 tov 70 aibrod, ra abrod tia Antipho 136. 27, Isocr. 184 E; 7d bpérepa tha Dem. 439. 25; Ta ihia apy airay, ra 18. rd opérepa aitay Andoc. 20, 4., 28.9; v. Lob. Phryn. 441; éyaye Tobpov tdiov I for my own part, Luc. Merc. Cond. 9. 4. of persons, personally attached to one, t5:01 Sedevxou Polyb. 21. 4, 43 Tais edvolas iiot Diod. 11. 26. II. peculiar, separate, distinct, e0vos t8. kat obdayas SxvOinedv Hdt. 4.18, cf. 22; iiot revés oor [Oeot]; Ar. Ran. 890; Exdorw imdxerat ris tds odcia Plat. Prot. 349 B; modes .. Bap- Bapous xat idias Dem. 289.19; 6 Barpaxos idiay exe Thy yA@rrav Arist. H. A. 4. 9, 10 :—also foll. by %, tdiov 7) dAAo peculiar and different from others, Plat. Gorg. 481 C; so, téov mapa rad ddAAa Theophr. H. P. 6. 4, 10. 2. strange, unaccustomed, idiocaw tpevatoror Kodyi od@ppocw Eur. Or. 558; tdtov nal wepirréy Arist. G. A. 3. 10, 18: strange, peculiar, eccentric, of persons, Plut. 2. 57 E; tds ms Id. Them. 18. 3. peculiar, appropriate, ida évépara proper, specific words, opp. to 7d mepiéxovra general, Arist. Rhet. 3. 5, 3; dvopa iidy tivos Plat. Rep. 580 E; 70 tiv rod énaivov Luc. pro Imagg, 19. IIL. idior Adyou humble prose, as opp. to Totnois, Plat. Rep. 366E; v. infr. vi. 2. ¢. IV. in Aristotle’s Logic, 7d té:ov is generally the characteristic property of a species, Top. I. 5, 4., ¥. 8, 2; but sometimes, more loosely, of an attribute peculiar to one idtororyta — (dons. 693 though not always predicable of him, Ib. 5. 1, 3. V. regul, Comp. is l@repos, Isocr. 247 C, Theophr.; Sup. ii@raros, Dem. 641.17: but idvairepos, iiiairaros, Arist. P. A. 2. 10, 8., 16. 2, Theophr. H. P. 1.14, 2., 6. 3, I, cf. Thom. M. 466. VI. Ady. i8tws, especially, pecu- liarly, Plat. Legg. 807 B, Isocr. 104 A; Comp. id:arrépws, Theophr. H.P. 1.13, 43 or idtalrepov, Hdn. 7.6; Sup. idialrara, Diod. 19.1; idiws kadeiy to call by a special name, Arist. Mund. 4, 13 :—often in Scholl., of words, in a peculiar sense or usage ; also separately, extra versum, Schol. Ar. Nub. 41. 2. also t8{g, Ion. -ty, as Adv. by oneself, privately, separately, Ovovrs idin povvw Hat. 1. 132, cf. 192; ove idia obre év xowG Thuc. 1,141; kal idig Kal nuooig Id. 3. 45; ldiq Exacros Id. 8.1; oft. in Plat., etc.:—c. gen., idig ris ppevds apart from.., Ar. Ran. 102. b. on one’s own account, Ar. Eq. 467. c. in prose, opp. to i1d monty, Plat. Rep. 366E; v. supr. m1. 3. xar’ idtay in private, Philem. Incert. 76, Plut. 2.120 E; «ar’ idiav eimeiv Tut Diod. 1,21; kar’ l. AauBavewv tivd to take him aside, Polyb. 4.84,8. (Orig. it had the digamma, Fidtos, as written in the Tabb. Heracl., Ahr. D. D. § 5. 2, and the Root was €, Fe or ofe, so that the orig. form would be of €-dros :—the form xa6’ idiay, with spir. asper, occurs in Inscrr., C. I. 2329. 6., 2335. 3., 2347 ¢. 8.) t6.6-onpos, ov, peculiar in signification, évéuara Walz Rhett. 7. 195. i8t6-oroAos, ov, equipt at one’s own expense, Tpihpys Plut. Alcib. 1: hired for one’s own use, mhotov Ath.521 A; 1d, émAevae sailed in his own ship, Plut. Thes. 26. iSto-cvyKpacla, %, (xpdows) a peculiar temperament or habit of body, idiosyncrasy, Ptol. Tetrab. :—also -otykpdous, ews, 7, Ib.:—but tdto- ovykptota, 4, Sext, Emp. P. 1. 79; ivootykprots, ews, %, Diosc, Pharm. praef. iSvo-cvykKptros, ov, peculiarly composed, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 938. iSto-ctoraros, ov, of independent substance, Eccl. Adv. -rTws, Ib. iSvérys, qros, %, (idtos) peculiar nature, property, Damox. Suvrp. 1.415; # i8, rijs Hdovis Xen. An. 2. 3,16; Tay mpdgewy Plat. Polit. 305 D; rod moArredvparos Polyb. 1. 13, 13, etc.; elxav rhs dias idiidrnTos Lxx (Sap. 2. 23):—in pl. peculiarities, ai i6. ’"AvviBov Polyb. 9. 22,' 7. 2. in Gramm., eis idiéry7Ta in its proper sense, Schol. Il. 18. 3195 or as a proper name, Steph. B. s, v- OerTaAta. iStorpomta, 7, a peculiar fashion, Cleomed, 2. p. 104, Eust., etc. i8v6-rpotros, ov, of a peculiar kind, pots, vico Diod. 3. 35., 5. 10: of a peculiar species, 6 vuxrucdpag Strabo 823. Adv. —mws, Diod. 3. 19. iSto-rpédos, ov, feeding individuals, Plat. Polit. 261 D. It. idtb-rpopos, ov, feeding on particufar things, opp. to mapparyos, Arist. H. A. 1.1, 26. af i816-riitros, ov, a peculiar form, Hermes in Stob. Ecl. 1. 938. idto-dméoraros, ov, self-existent, Schol. Epict. Enchir. 17. iSto-eyyis, és, self-shining, of the moon, Antipho in Stob. Ecl. 1.556. tr0-purs, és, of peculiar nature, Archel. ap. Diog. L. 2. 17, Diod. 5. 30. t816-irov, 76, =Acovrorddiov, Diosc. Noth. 4. 131. i816-wvos, ov, with one’s own voice, Eccl.: by word of mouth, Boisson. Anecd. 2. p. 350. iSt5-xetpos, ov, written by one’s own hand, Boisson, Anecd. 3. p. 350: 70 15, an original manuscript, Byz. Adv. —pws, Ib. i6t6-xpwpos, ov, of peculiar colour, Artemid. 2. 3 :—-xpoos, ov, Ptol. Tetr. p. 103. iSt6w, only used in Med. ididopar, q. v. (Stors [75-], ews, %, a sweating, perspiring, Arist. Probl. 35. 4. iS{@ [T5-], aor. ‘Sica Arist.: (@0s):—to sweat, of the cold sweat of terror, tS:ov, ds événoa Od. 20.204; mply ay idins nal iiadrvoys dpOpwr tvas Ar.Pax85, cf.Ran.237:—also-in Hipp.606.42, Arist. H. A. 3. 19,8, Theophr. H. P. 5.9, 8, but in Prose more commonly fSpdw, iSlopa, 7d, (idudw) a peculiarity, property, Arist. Plant. 1.7, 8, Polyb. 2.14,3, Ath. 696E; 10 xaé’ abrod id. rnpety Polyb. 2. 59,2; Ta meph Tiv xwpav, wept airovs lidmpara 2.14, 3., 6.3, 3. II. a peculiar phraseology, idiom, Dion. H. Ep. ad Pomp. p. 783. iBtwparicds, 7, dv, peculiar, characteristic, Clem. Al. 80. iStwvopéw, to name by a proper name; ib\-avipos, ov, so named, Byz. iSiwors, ews, 7, (lid) distinction between things, opp. to Kowwvia, Plat. Rep. 462 B, Plut. 2. 644 D. iSwwreta, 4, private life or business, Xen. Hier. 8,1; opp. to Baoirela, Plat.Legg.696A; impl., opp. to dpxat, Id.Rep.618D. IL. uncouth- ness, want of education, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 27, Abd. 7. iStwretw, fo be a private person, i.e. to live in retirement, without public business or political power, Plat: Apol. 32 A, Rep. 579 C; opp. to apxw, Xen, Hier. 8, 5 ; to Tupavvetw, Isocr. 15 D, cf. Aeschin. 27. 32:— of a country, to be of no consideration, Xen. Cyr. 8.7, 7. II. to practise privately, of a physician, opp. to 6 dyuooredwy, Plat. Polit. 259 A, cf. Gorg. 514 E sq. III. c. gen. rei, rijs dperfjs 15. to be unpractised, unskilled in .., Id. Prot. 327 A. iBiarys, ov, 6, (idi0s) a private person, an individual, opp. to the State, fvppépovra Kat wédrcot wal idiraus Thuc. 1. 124, cf. 3. 10, Plat. Symp. 185 B, Xen. Vect. 4, 18, etc. II. one in a private station, opp. to one holding public office, or taking part in public affairs, dvijp 15. Hat. 1.32, 59, 70,123, al., cf.Decret.ap. Andoc, 11.31; opp. to BaotAeds, Hat. 7. 3; to dpxay, Plat. Polit. 259 B, cf, Thuc. I. 115., 4. 2, Lys. 103. 1; to dxaorHs, Antipho 144.13; to moAcrevdpevos, Dem, 150.8; to birwp, Hyperid. Euxen. 37; to orparnyés, a private soldier, Xen. An. 1. 3,11; 18. Geof Ar. Ran. 891. 2. a common man, plebeian, oi i6. xat névyres Plut. Thes. 24, Hdn. 4. 10, etc. 3. as Adj., i5. Bios the life of such people, a private station, homely way of life, Plat. Rep. 578C. III. one who has no pri fessional knowledge, whether of term (as distinguished from others), or to a given person at a given time, Pa politics or any other subjecty as we say ‘a layman,’ iarpds Kat ididrys 694 Thue. 2. 48, cf. Hipp. Vet. Med. 9, Plat. Theact. 178 C, Legg. 933 D; idemrns Hh Tia réxvqv Exov Id. Soph. 221 C, cf. Prot. 312 A; so, opp. to mowmrhs, a prose-writer, Plat, Phaedr. 258 D, Symp. 178 B; id. «at pdtv abdjoews énalwy Id, Prot. 327 C; also opp. to a professed orator, Tsocr. 43 A; to a trained soldier, Thuc. 6.72, Xen. Eq. Mag. 8,1; toa regular athlete, Id. Mem. 3. 7, 7., 12, 1, Arist. Eth, N. 3. 8,8; to a skilled workman (Syucoupyds), Plat. Soph, 221 C, Theag. 124 C:—as Adj., 6 i. éxAos, as opp. to the artificers, Plut. Pericl. 12. 2. c. gen. rei, unpractised, unskilled in a thing, Lat. expers, rudis, tarpucfs Plat. Prot. 345 A, cf. Tim. 20A; épyou Xen, Occ, 3,9}; also, id. xara rm Id. Cyr. 1.5, 11; i5. rd GAAa Hdn. 4. 12; 65. ds mpds hpas dyartfecda Xen, Cyr. 1. 5, 11, cf. Luc. Hermot. 81. 3. generally, a raw hand, an ignorant, ill-informed man, opp. to memaidevpévos, Xen, Mem. 3. 12,1; dy re devol Adxwow dy Te idi@rat .. Dem. 50. 7:—an awkward, clumsy fellow, opp. to doxnrhs, d0Anrhs, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 2343 dpadis «at 15. opp. to rexvirns, Luc. Indoct. 29: cf. tSuerucds IT. Iv. idiarat one’s own countrymen, opp. to gévot, Ar, Ran. 459. iSvwrife, to put into common language, Eust. 145. 10. iSiwricds, 7, dv, of or for a private person, private, opp. to what is public (Snudctos), otros ka éwiirod wat is, Hdt.1.21; mvpyos 4.164; opp. to BaotAreds, Plat. Criti. 117 By; to mwoActitds, Id. Phaedr. 258 D; is. rpinpys, opp. to the Paralos, Dem. §7o. fin.; olwvds od i6., i.e. indicating royalty, Xen. An. 6, 1, 233; 15. Adyot, causae privatae, Dion. H. de Dem. 56. II. not done by rules of art, unprofessional, unskilful, rude, Plat. Euthyd. 282 D; gadAov xat id. 1d. Hipp. Ma. 287 A, Ion 532 D, Sext. Emp. M. 1. 234; 70 18. év 7H Aéger Arist. Poét. 22.7 sq.:—in Ady., pi) pavaAws pnde idiwrikds Plat. Legg. 966 E, cf. 839 E; idiwrinds eat yeAotws Id. Euthyd. 278 D; -Kds pas Id. Crat. 294A; so, idiwrikds 7d o@pa exe, i.e, to neglect gymnastic exercises, Xen. Mem. 3. 12, 1 :—cf. i&iwrys 111. iStHris, Sos, 7, fem. of iddrns, inconsiderable, Joseph. A. J. 8. 11, 1; i5, réXus, opp. to wyepovis, App. Civ. 4. 16 and 95. II. unskilled, Luc, Imagg. 13; inexperienced, Alciphro 2. 4. iBroriopos, 6, the way or fashion of a common person, Sext. Emp. M. 1.67: in language, a homely or vulgar phrase, Longin. 31, Diog. L. 7. 59- II. private life, Byz.: a private conversation, Jul. Rufin. de Fig. p. 203. iSt-apedjs, és, privately profitable, opp. to KotvexpeAts, Stob. (?) iSpev, Ion, and Dor. for fo pev :-—iBpev, iSpevar, Ep. for eidévac: v. of5a. Bpooivy, 7}, knowledge, skill, Anth. Plan, 4.273; in pl., Hes. Th. 377: ~—in Hesych. also (Spy. Wypav, ov, gen. ovos, (tSuev,—eldévar) skilled, skilful, réxvn, Bovhh Nonn. Io. 7. 56., 8. 143; Twés in a thing, Ib., Anth. P. 7. 575. iSvéopar, Pass. to bend oneself, double oneself up, shrink up, esp. for pain, i707, of Thersites, Il. 2. 266; ldvhOn 52 wecwy 13.618; idvwbels éricw bent back, of one throwing up a ball perpendicularly, 12. 205, Od, 8.375; of the womb, éray .. idyw67 Hipp. 589.16; lvotvra Id. 595.9. *I80-yevys, és, born on Ida, Orac. in Paus, 10. 12, 3- *TSo-pevets, éws, Ep. fos, 6, the chief of the Cretans, properly zhe strength of Ida (in Crete), Il. Sos, eos, 76, sweat; in pl. sweats, Hipp. 132 C. 2. violent heat, as of the dog-days, Hes. Sc, 397. Dion. P. 966. (From the same Root come 15-iw, id-péw, 15-pws :—this Root was FIA, cf. Skt. svid, svid-yami, svéd-as, = Lat. sud-o, sud-or ; O. Norse sveit-i; A.S. swat; O. H. G. sveiz.) ‘Socav, Alex. for eldov Lxx; cf. #A@ocay for #ADor. i800, imperat. aor. med. eldéuny :—but, II. tS00 as Ady. Jo! behold! see there! with all sorts of words, even of hearing, ido dodmoy av «Avw Twa Soph. Aj. 870:—Spec. usages, 1. in giving or offering a thing, like 7, there! take it! Lat. en tibi! id0b 5éxou mat Soph, Ph. 776, cf, Tr. 1079, Eur. Or. 143, Ar. Nub. 825, Pax 2. 5, etc. :—1well! as you please! Ar, Eq. 121, 157. 2. in repeating another’s words quizzingly, as, i50¥ +7’ dxparov oh yes, wine! wine, quoth'a! wine, marry! Ar. Eq. 344, cf. Nub. 873, Pax 198, Eccl. 133; tov ye Id. Eq. 87, Thesm, 206, Eccl. 136. iSpeta, Ion. -ely, §, (V8pcs) knowledge, skill, iSpelp wod€noro Il. 16, 3593 oddE re lOpetp (vulg. obd€ 7° didpeip) 7. 198; so Ap. Rh. 2. 72, Q. Sm. 4. 226.—In Theocr. 22. 85 there is a dub. form, ddd’ l5pip (al, iSpeip omisso GAA’). -iBpts, gen. ZSpios Att. Wpews, 6, %, neut. {Spe: voc. tSpe Anth.: pl. tSpres:—the forms tpida, tSprds, Tipedes (used no doubt metri grat. by Sappho, Soph., and Phryn.) are censured by Eust. 407. 38, Schol. Il. 3. 219, E. M. 42. 40: (4/ FIA, of6a) :—poét. Adj. experienced, knowing, shilful, t6pis dvnp Od. 6. 233., 23. 160; ¢, inf., pies .. vija Sony et névrw éhavvévev 7. 108; c. gen. rei, Hes, Sc. 351, Pind. O. 1, 167, Trag., etc.; with Preps., card yvdpny ps Soph. O. T. 1087; oddev ips Id. O. C. 525 5 év woAépors Dion, P. 857. 2. t8pis alone, in Hes, Op. 776, the provident one, i.e. the ant; (as in 522, dvdcreos the boneless one, i.e. the polypus; 569, pepéorwos, the house-carrier, i.e. the snail) ; cf. dv@epoupyds. iBpiras, ov, 6, =tdp:s, dub. 1. Anth. P. 6. 182, cf. Lob. Path, 381, 523. {8pée(Z], v.sub fin,: fut. da Il, 2.388: aor. Hpwoa Il., Xen.: pf. fpaxa Luc. Merc. Cond. 26:—Pass., pf. (pwra Id. Hermot. 2: (750s). To sweat, perspire, Hom. (esp. in Il); from toil, rov 8 lépdovra Il. 18, 3723 Urmous ind {vyod idphovras 8. 543, Od. 4. 39, cf. Il. 2. 390., II. 598; of a hunted deer, qife .. ove Sove’, i a Il. 119; ipdce.. reAapov appl arnbecat it shall reek with sweat, 2, 388; c. ace. cogn., {5p@0° dy iSpaca péyy 4. 27:—later, ip. bid ri 1d mpd~ gumov ..tdpodow; Arist. Probl. 2. 17, cf. 2. 2., 2. 31, 32-—This Verb, its oppos. prydm, is contracted irrey. into w and w instead of ov and gat Il, 11. 598 (lengthd. fdp@ovea Ib, 119); masc, . iduwriCe — idpwroroéouat. wade oe lengthd. {5phovra, -ovras; 3 pl. tdpaot oo 36; opt. lpn Hipp. Aér. 285; but in Xen, the best Edd. hay ovr, not ipayrt, Hell. 4. 5, 7, An. 1. 8, 1, Cyr. 1. 4, 28; and dpodge in Arist, Il. c.:— a pres. fSpmw in Luc. S. Dea Io. 17. _ * (pipa, 74, (liptw) a thing founded or built, am establishment, founda- tion, Idaovos idSp. Strabo 252, cf. Plut. Marcell. 20, 2. like €5os,, a temple, shrine, Oe@v Hat. 8. 144, Aesch. Ag. 339, Cho. 1036, Eur, Bacch. 951, Plat. Legg. 717 B, etc.; and even @ statue, Sarpdvey idp. Aesch. Pers. 811, cf. Dion. H. 1. 41, Art. Epiet. 2, 22,7. 8. 7d coy iSpupa wéAews the stay, support of thy ¢ity, of the chiefs, like Lat. columen rei, Eur. Supp. 631: cf. épeopa. Wpiors, ews, }, a founding, foundation, building, esp. of temples, Plat. Rep. 427 B, Legg..gog E; idp. fodvav inauguration of statues, Dion. H. 2. 18; ip. méAews Plut, Rom. 9. 2. ‘Epyéw iSpvores statues of Hermes, Anth. P. 6. 253. II. a settlement, seat, abode, Strab. 383, Plut. 2. 408 A: metaph., od« éxew idp. Ib, 651 D, ete. [0 only in late Poets, Jac. Anth. P. p. 242.] iSpiréov, verb. Adj. of lSptw, one must inaugurate a statue, Ar. Pax 23. II. pass., odx iSpuréoy one must not sit idle, Soph. Aj. 809. iSptw, fut. dow Eur. Bacch. 1339: aor. iépiaa Hom., Att.: pf. Spica (xa0-) Arist. P. A. 3. 4, 6:—Med., fut. -voopat Eur, Heracl. 397, Ar Pl, 1198: aor. ldptcauny Hadt., Att.:—Pass., fut. i5pv@jcouar Dion. H. de Comp. 6: aor. idpv@nv (not fSpuvOny, v. infr.): pf. tptpar, used both in pass, and med. sense, y. sub fin. [Tt by nature, Eur. Bacch. 1070, but commonly long by position. % by nature, even in iSpy, Eur. Heracl. 786; though Hom, makes it short in thesi, 7Spve Il. 2, 191; waidpie Od. 20.257:—W in fut. and aor, 1, except in late Poets, as Anth. P. 7. 109, Nonn., etc, :—pf. pass. iépdyat, Aesch. Supp. 413, Eur. Heracl. 19, Hel. 820, Theocr. 17. 21, etc.,—so that the inf. should be written idpdc@a1,, not fSpvc@ar. The aor. pass. is often written lipvv@ny in Mss. of Hom. and other authors, see Lob, Phryn. 37, Veitch Irreg. Verbs s.y. Perhaps late writers, regarding v as short, used these forms; but in Hom. and Trag., lipivOnv cannot be justified by comparing é«AtvOny, éxpivOny ; for there » belongs to the Root, and v is long by nature in fdpv- Onv. Causal of Copar (cf. iw, ifavw), to make to sit down, to seat, avrds Te Ka9noo Kal Gddovs idpve Aaovs Il. 2. 191; tSpvce Opdvw evs Oodpov ’Apija 15. 142, cf. Od. 3. 37., 8. 373 Sp. Twa eis Opdvous Eur. Ion 1573; O{wv ém Id. Bacch. 1070; iSpuce thy oTparujy emi moTap@ encamped the army, Hdt. 4. 124, cf. 203 :—Pass. to be seated, sit still, be quiet, Tot 8 tipvOnoay anavres Il. 3.78; wat’ olwoy iSpurac yuvn Eur, Hipp. 639; of an army, Zo lie encamped, Hat. 4, 203, al.; dopadas iSpupévos seated, steady, secure, 1d, 6. 86, 1; év Oc@v edpacow Wd idpu- pévas Aesch. Supp. 413; %) orparid BeBalws Sogev idpucda: seemed to have got a firm footing, Thuc. 8. 40. 2. like Lat. figere, to fix or settle persons in a place, eis révde Sépoy Eur. Alc. 841; “Apn éupvaAcov idp. to give a footing to, i.e, excite, intestine war, Aesch. Eum, 862 ; idp. modAods év réAc Plat. Pomp. 28:—Pass. to be settled, Hdt. 8. 73; mod KAves viv idpdcba xOovds; Soph. Tr. 68; & KoAwrds iSpubels Thuc. 1. 131; also, fdpic0at ofkoy (cf, €Cowar) Eur. El. 1131; peragd ppevav dupadrod re idpura: Plat. Tim. 77 B; of local diseases, idpubets névos és or700s Hipp. 169 A; 7d év wepadf .. iSpvdev kaxdy Thue. 2. 49. 3. in Med, fo establish, rwa dvaxra yqs Eur. Phoen. 1008 ; Tid és olxdy Tivos Id. Hel. 46; iSptcasba rods Bious to choosé settled modes of life, Dion, H. 1, 68. 4. pf. pass. iSpupa, of places, to be situated, to lie, Lat. situm esse, of a city, Hdt. 2. 59; of nations, Id. 8, 73; cf. Aesch. Pers, 231, Plat. Legg. 745 B. IL. to set up, Sound, esp. to set up and dedicate temples, statues, Valck. Hipp. 313 trophies, Eur. Heracl. 786 ; fdpioa ‘Eppijy to set up a statue of .., At. Pl. 11533 7dv WAodroy Ib. 1192; Elpyyqv Id. Pax 1091:—Pass., often in pf, ipdv, Bapds iSpurar Hat. 1. 69., 7. 44, Ar. Fr. 245; at Athens, Hpwes kara rédAw idpupévor the heroes who had statues erected to them, Lycurg. 147-43:—Med. /o set up for oneself, to found, iSpicavro Mavds ipdy Hat. 6. 105, cf. 1.105, al.; vad Spas iSpvcdpecda Eur. Cycl. 294 (v. Dind.), ef. I. T. 1453, Plat. Prot. 322 A, al.; so the pf. pass. in med, sense, Hdt. 2. 42, Plat. Symp. 195 E, Menand. ‘Hy. 2. iSpwa or t8pHa, 74, (f3pus) heat-spots, pustules, Lat. sudamina, aestates, Hipp. Aph. 1248, Galen. g. 116, iSpabns, es, (€ldos) apt to perspire, Hipp. 1157 D, 1225 B. Wpwpa, 7d, sweating, Arist. H. A. 10. 3, 7. pas Iv. fin.], Gros, 6, and Aeol. 4, Bgk. Sapph. 2.13: dat. l8pa72, acc. iSpHra, but Hom. has the shortd. forms, dat. tdp@ (or idpO, cf. yedws, €pws) Il. 17. 385, 7453 acc. iSp@ 11. 621., 22. 2: (150s) :—sweat, per- spiration, Hom. (esp. in Il.), and Att,; ward 8 tSpds eppeev ex pedéwy Od. 11. 599; tSpads dyer xpwri Soph. Tr. 767; o7dCev iSpare (v. sub ord¢as) 3 pecoOar idpdir: Plut. Cor. 3:—of sweat as the sign of toil, ris dperis iipara cot mpomdpoev 2Oneav Hes. Op. 287; idp@ra wapéxev Xen, Cyr, 2. 1, 29:—in pl., Hipp, Aph. 1250, Arist., etc.; fpw@res énpol, as opp. to the effect of baths, Plat. Phaedr. 2 39 C. 2. the exsudation of trees, gum, resin, opipyys Eur. lon 1175 ; dpuds Ion ap. Ath. 451 D; Bpopuddos idpaHra myyhs, of wine, Antiph. ’Adp. I. 12. IL metaph., anything earned by the sweat of one’s brow, Ar. Eccl. 750 (v. sub, Tos). {tin Hom.; ¢ in Att., Eur. lc. v. Meineke Com. Fr. 3. 251, though long in fos, taf] iSpwriprov, 74, a sweating-bath, Lat. sudarium, Gloss. Bpwrkds, 4, dv, sudorific, Hipp. 370. 31, Oribas, 18 Matth. iT. of persons, apt to perspire, Galen, 14. 290:—Ady., lipwrixwrépws dia- weioOat Arist. Probl. 2. 40. iparioy, 76, Dim. of iipés, Hipp, 1210 G, iSpwromorgopat, Pass. to be made to perspire, Arist. Probl, 2. 42: -mrovta, bt, Ib, e , e , idpwromowds — tepoOpyoxeia. > 18 » OV, (morew) sudorific, Diosc. 3. 79. iSvia [7], %, Ep. for eidvia, part. fem. of ofSa, iSvin mavra Il. 1. 365; elsewh, in Hom. in phrase tévino: mpartderov, and always of Hephaestus. iBvtor, =auvicropes, paprupes, Ar. Fr. 1, Eust. 1154. 35; cf. Bidiazor. “"ISvpts, 6, name of a wind, should be read in Theophr. Vent. 53, for Adpis, Meineke ad Steph. B. 327. te, tev, Ep. 3 sing. impf. of efju (ibo). teu, Ion. and Att. 3 sing. impf. of ine. iein, Ep. for Yor, 3 sing. opt. pres. of efue (ébo). i-€datov, 74, (tov, édacov) violet-oil, Synes. Medic. de Febr. iguev, téwevar, Ep, inf. pres. of tyuc:—tépevos, part. pres. pass.; hence Ady. tepévas, eagerly, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 890. tev, Aeol. 3 pl. impf. of type :—ef. te. tepa, 7%, a kind of serpent, Arist. H. A. 8. 29, 5 (Bekk. fepdv). II. a name for many medicines in the Greek pharmacopoeia, Galen.: vy. fep7. tep-dyyeAos, ov, one who proclaims a festival, Hesych. lep-iywyds, dv, carrying offerings, piora Hedyl. ap. Ath. 497 D; vaus Polyb, 31. 20, 11. ; tepdfw, to serve as priest, rois Arocxovpois C. I. (add.) 2374 e. 57 — Bocot. tape.dd5o, Ib. 1568, cf. 1576. icpaxetos; a, ov, of or like a hawk, mpdownov Eus. P. E. 116 D. tepaxideds, éws, d, a young hawk, an eyass, Eust. 753. 56. tepaxifw, to scream like a hawk, Theophr. de Sign.6.1, 16, Ael.N.A. 7.7. lepdxtov, 76, hawkweed, but not the same as our hieracium, Diosc. 3-72 sq.: lepaxuds, ddos, 7, Alex. Trall. 1.145; tepaxta Bordv7 Horapoll. 1. 6. iepaxtoxos, 6, Dim. of iépag, Ar. Av. 1112. tepaxirys, 6, a stone of the colour of a hawk’s neck, Plin. N. H. 37. 60. didicefowels: 6, a hawk-feeder, a falconer, Ael. N. A. 7.9. tepGxo-eSys, és, = fepaxddns, Anon, in Boiss, ad Marin. p. 132. tepako-Krévos, ov, hawk-hilling, Hesych. iepax6-popdos, ov, hawk-skaped, of the Egyptian god Phré (the Sun), represented with a hawk’s head, Philo ap. Eus. P. E. 41 D, Horapoll.1. 6, Sext. Emp.; v. Miiller Archiiol. d. Kunst § 232.3, A. tepixo-mddtov, 74, a plant, Diosc. Noth. 3. 115. tepaxo-mpocwmos, ov, hawk-faced (v. iepaxdpoppos), Eus. P. E. 116 D. iepaxo-cbdiov, 7d, a treatise on the management of hawks, ed. by Rigalt. Lutet. 1612. iepaxo-rpddos, ov, =fepaxoBooxds, Eunap. Excerpt. tepaxadbys, es, (efS0s) hawk-like, Eunap. in Phot. Bibl. 54. 14. lépak, dios, 6, Ion. and Ep. tpyé, nos, (the longer form first in Alc~ man 16, Eur. Andr. 8141, Ar. Eq. 1052):—a hawk, falcon, dkimrepos ipngé Ul. 13. 62, cf. 819; Weoros merenvay 15. 237; éAapdéraros Ter. 13.86: cf. xipxos, pazaopévos, and on other kinds, v. Arist. H. A. 9. 36; sacred to Apollo, Ar. Av. 516. II. a kind of fish, Epich. 45 (in Dor. form idpaf), Ath. 356 A. (V. sub fepés.) tep-aoiSés, 6, a sacred bard, Hesych. tepdopar, Ion. ip-: fut. dcouar [@]: Pass.:—to be a priest or priestess, Ocod Hat. 2. 35, 373 Oc@ Paus. 6.11, 2; absol., Thuc. 2. 2; c. acc. cogn., fepwotvnv lepdoacbat Aeschin. 3. 33 ;—ipacdpevos 7H marpid:, etc., often in Inserr., v. Ruhnk, Tim. tepitrodéw, to be a ieparddos, C. 1.1169, etc.: tepatoAta, Ion.—tn, %, priestly office, Synes. 327 B:—tepGamédos, 6, (wodew) the chief priest in some Greek states, C. I. 1793 a, c. tepapxéw, to be supreme in sacred things, Dion. Ar. iep-apxys, ov, 6, a steward or president of sacred rites, a high-priest, kierarch, C.1. 1570 a. 13, Dion. Ar. iepapxla, ), the power, rule of a iepdpxns, ee C. I. 8668, Eccl. tepapxixds, 7, dv, of or belonging to iepapxia :—Adv. —K@s, Dion. Ar. tepdpxtos, ov, in the manner of a hierarck, Auth. P. 1. 88. lepareta, 7, the priest’s ofice, priesthood, Arist. Pol. 7.8, 7, C. I. 2059. 23., 2909, al., N. T.: lon. tepyreta, C. I. 2656. 5. leptetov, 74, a sanctuary,C. 1.8609, Procop. Aed.14 A, Epiphan. II, Lat. sacerdotium, the clergy, C. 1. 9263. lepdreupa, 76, a priesthood, Lxx (Ex. 19.6), Ep. 1 Petr. 2. 5. lepdrevpaticés, 7,6, priestly, Inscr. Murat. p. 632, Plut. Marc. 5. leparevw, Ion. tepyr— (which occurs also in a Boeot. Inscr., C. I. 1603; in a Phocian, 1725 ; in a Thessal., 1775)a To be priest or priestess, Oeod C. I. 1587, 1603, 1775; Oe@ Ib. 1725, Hdn. 5.6; absol., C. I. 481, 1593, 2077, al., Lxx (Ex. 28. 1 sq.), N. T, :—also as Dep. tepared- opar, C. I. 3823. 2. in Christ. writers, to be bishop. epariés, 7, be of or for the priest’s office, priestly, sacerdotal, Ovotat Arist. Pol. 3. 14, 12, cf. Plut. Marcell. 5., 2.34 E, 729 A: 9 leparien (sc. réxvn) =tepareia Plat. Polit. 290 D: of ieparixol the priestly caste, Heliod. 7. 11. IL. devoted to sacred purposes, Luc. Philops. 12; 7a ieparica the sacred fund, C. 1. 4595: v.teporyAupucds. Adv. -«@s, Eccl. tep-atdns, ov, 6, a flute-player at sacrifices, C. 1.184, 187 sq. iepadopia, %, the bearing of the holy vessels, Dion. H. 16. 7. tepa-opos, ov, bearing the holy vessels, Plut. 2. 352 B, C. 1. (add.) 2384 5: tepodédpos, Ib. 1793 b. lépera, 1, Ion. tpeva (as Dind. writes for fpytn in Hat. 2. 53 sq., 5. 72; for fepein, 1.175; for ipein, 8.104); in Trag., also, metri grat., iepia Soph. Fr. 401, Eur. Or. 261, I. T. 34, cf. Elmsl. Bacch. 1112; so also in C. 1. 5799; but tepéa, Ib. 1446, 2167 d. 24 (add.), 3459, Ep. tepéy Call. Ep. 42; tepq C. I. 2108, 3003; Dor. tpéa, Pind. P. 4. 9; tapéa Inscr. Cyr. in C. 1. 5143; tapta, Inscr, Boeot. in Keil. p.73:—fem. of lepeds, a priestess, Tiv .. COnnav AOnvains tépeay Il. 6. 300, and Att. ; cf, Ar. Thesm. 758, Thuc. 4. 133, Plat. Phaedr. 244 B, al. tepeta, 7, (fepedw) a sacrifice or festival, Lxx (4 Regg. to, 20). II. =lepareia, C. I. 3491. 23. lepetov, 74, Ion, tepyjvov or ipfiov (the former in Hom., the latter in 4, 695 Hdt.) :—a victim, an animal for sacrifice or slaughter, ipevew iephov Od. 14. 943 tepqia wodrAd mapetxov Ib. 250; dyew i. Kadd 17. 600; érel obx i. odd Bocihy dpyicOny Il, 22. 159; which became proverb. for ‘no light task,’ v. Cic. Att. 1.1, 4;—then in Hdt. 1. 132., 6. 57, Ar. Lys. 84, Pax 1091, Andoc. 16. 32; opp. to Ovuara, Thuc, I. 126. 2. in Od. 11, 23 used of an offering for the dead, for which, acc. to Schol., Tésuoy or €vTowoy was more correct. II. of cattle slaughtered for food, mostly in pl., Hdt, 2. 69, cf. Poppo Xen. Cyr. 1. 4,17. tepevrevw or -irevw, =icparedw, C. 1. 5131,-4, -5. lepetris, v. fepiris. iepevs, éws, Ion. jos, 6, Att. pl. fepfs: Ion, nom. tpets Il. 5. 10,, 16. 604, Od. 9. 198 and Hdt.: Dor. tapevs, Inscr. Arg. in C. I. 1178, acc. pl. os fepés Inscr. Cyr. ib. 5131, cf. 5144: also lépews, C. I. 2058 A. 23, A. B. 1197: tépys, Ib. 1513. 27 and 30: (iepdés) :—a priest, sacrificer, to whose office the divination from the victim’s entrails also belonged, Il, 1. 62., 16. 604, Pind. P. 2. 31, Hdt., Andoc. 16. 32; én’ fepéws Tob deiva, asa date, C. I. 2525 6. 0. 1., 5483, al. 2. metaph., iepeds tes arns a minister of woe, Aesch. Ag. 735; and, comically, Aerrordray Anpow teped Ar. Nub, 359; lep. Acovicov, of a wine-bibber, Eupol. Aly. 19. iepetoipos, ov, fit for sacrifice, Plut. 2. 729 C. tepevor, Ion. tpevw Od. 14. 94., 17. 181., 19. 198., 20. 351: Ion. impf. ipevecxov 20. 3: 3 plapf. pass. iépevro, Il. 24. 125: (epds). To slaughter for sacrifice, to sacrifice, Bods .. Hus qxécras iepevoeper Il. 6. 943 Tadpous Oe 21.131; rotor de Body i€pevoe .. Znvi Od. 13. 24 :— parts of the victim were used by the sacrificers, v. esp. the last-cited pas- sage. _ 2. to slaughter for a feast, Bods lepedovres .. eiAamwa- (ovow Od. 2. 56; aged bav tov dpioror, iva feivy lepevow 14. 414, cf. 8. 59; also, deizvov 8 ai~a avay iepedcare, Satis apioros 24. 215; so in Med., Bods icpevcac@at, oxen to slaughter for themselves, 19. 198. 8. to consecrate or devote to a god, cited from Paus. :—to sacrifice, i, e. murder, Philo z. 34. . icpy, 7,=Lepea (like Bact for BactAaa), C. I. 2108, Anth. P. 7. 733) Att. tpl Plat. ap. A.B. 100. Cf. weAAcépn, maprépn. tepyitov, 76, lon. for iepetov, Hom. icpyis, post. for ipea, contr. acc. ieppda C. I. 1064. ‘Tepyroktn, %, v. sub fepamrodia. lepnreta, tepnretw, Ion. for lepar—, iepta, Ion. —(n, v. sub idpeca. icpife, to consecrate, purify, Hesych., s. v. dyvirns. iepis, (50s, %, =iépera, a priestess, Plut. 2. 435 B. iépicoa, 7), =lépera, C. 1. 4009 b. lepioris, of, 6, a purifier, Hesych. e conj. Kuster. lepiris, dos, 9, =ixéris, Aesch. (Fr.87) ap. Hesych., where the Ms. iepeirny for iepetrw (i.e. -trcv). tepo-Bordvy [%], 7, holy-wort, a name of vervain, Lat. verbena, be- -cause used in sacrifices, purifications, and as an amulet; in Diosc. 4. 61, iepd Bordyn, as synon. for meptarepedy. tepoyAtéw, to engrave hieroglyphics, Horapollo 2. 34. tt to engrave hieroglyphically, Eust. 632.52. iepoyAtiduds, 4, dv, hieroglyphic ; iepoyAudurd (sc. ypappara), 74, a mystic way of writing on monuments practised by the Egyptian priests, Plut. 2. 354 F, Luc. Philop. 21, cf. Hermot. 44, etc.:, these records were copied on papyri in a different character (feparixd), Clem. Al. 657; and this was again simplified, for common purposes, into the &nuori«a (Hdt. 2. 36), which Porph. V. P. § 12 calls émaroAoypagucd, and Clem. 1. c. % &r. pé0o5os; v. Miiller Archiol. d. Kunst § 216:—the ipd ypdupara of Hdt. prob. comprehended both the fepoyAugued and pala tepo-yAudos [0], 6, a carver of hieroglyphics, Inscr. Aegypt. in C. I. (add.) 4716 d 19, cf. Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 251. tep$-yAwooos, ov, of prophetic tongue, Anth. P. append. 371. tepo-yvwota, 4, knowledge of holy thing's, Dion. Ar. tepo-yordia, 7, (yduos I. 2) =lepoyAugixd, Synes. 114 C. icpo-ypappatets, éws, 6, a sacred scribe, a lower order of the Egyptian priesthood, who kept the sacred records, taught the forms and rites, and took care for their observance, Inscr. Aeg. in C. I. 4697. 7, Luc. Macrob. 4, Joseph. c. Apion. 1. 32, Clem. Al. 657; fepds yp. in Luc. Philops. 34. tepé-ypamros, ov, written on or in a temple, Eccl. lcpd-yp&a, 74, representations of holy things; and tepoypidéw, Eccl. icpo-ypapta, %, representation of holy things, Eccl. 2. in pl. the Holy Scriptures, Byz. tepoypiducés, 4, dv, for the representation of holy things, ypaupara Manetho ap. Syncell, 2. of Holy Scripture, Eccl. lepo-ypados, 6, a writer of Holy Scripture, Eccl. lep6-Saxpus, v, gen. vos, epith. of frankincense, with hallowed tears or gum, Melannipid. (ap. Ath. 651 F) Fr, 1. tepo-5tSdoKdhos, 6, a teacher of holy things, Dion, Ar.;—at Rome, the Pontifex, Dion. H. 2. 73. ' tepo-Sékos, ov, receiving sacrifices, or tepd-SoKos, received in temples, Aesch. Supp. 363. tepd-Sovdos, 4, 1), a temple-slave, vewxdpor kai tep. Philo 2. 420; esp. of the public courtesans, or votaries of Aphrodité at Corinth, Strab. 272, ef, Pind. Fr. 87; at other places, C, I. 2327, 5082; v. E. Curt. Anecd. Delph. pp. 16 sq. :—tepoBovAcia, 4, a campany of iepddovdor, C. I. G00. tepo-Spdp0s, ov, v. ipodp-. iepo-epyds, dy, v. icpoupyds. : iepo-PaddArs, és, blooming holily, Orph. H. 39.17 3 Herm. -@nA7js. icpoBeréw, to institute sacred rites, Arist. Fr. 404: tepo-Sérgs, ov, 6, (ripe) an ordainer of sacred rites, and Geta, 4, Dion. Ar. iepo-OxKn, %, a depository for holy things, sanctuary, Gloss. iepo-Opnoxeta, %, divine worship, Edict. ap. Eus. H. E. 9. 7. II. icp. 696 tepodtcrov, 74, a place of sacrifice, Paus. 4. 32, 1. itéw, to offer sacrifices, Heraclit, de Incredib. p. 82, C. 1. 5546. ey [®], ov, 6, a sacrificing priest, Paus. 8. 42, 12, C. I. 1297, 1536, al. 6-9tros, ov, devoted, offered to a god, iep. kamvds smoke from the sacrifices, Ar. Av. 1265; fep. @avaros death as a sacrifice for one’s country or any holy cause, Pind. Fr. 225 :—rd lepd6ura sacrifices, Theo- pomp. Hist. 79, Arist. Oec. 2, 20. tepo-karnyopos, 6, accuser of the saints, Eccl. tepo-kauréw, ¢o sacrifice as a burnt-offering, A. B. 51 :—Pass. to be burnt as a sacrifice, Diod. 20. 65. iepoxnpixedio, fo be a icpoxtpug, C.1. 2982 ; —éw, Ib. 4303 7, 2. tepo-«ijput, vxos, 6, the herald or attendant at a sacrifice, Dem. 1371. 16, Hermias ap. Ath. 149 E, C. 1. 184,-5, -8 b, 190-4, al.; Dor. -Kapué, Ib, 2525 0. 31. tepo-Kopos, 6, one who takes charge of a temple, C. 1. (add.) 5763 b, cf. 66566; —Képas in Hesych, tepo-révos, 6, murderer of the saints, Eccl. tepo-Kapn, 7, a sacred village, Inscr. Nub. in C. I. 5069. tepddas, 6, =iepevs, Soph. (Fr. 55) ap. Hesych.; v. Schmidt. tepé-Anmros, ov, inspired, Manetho 4. 227. tepodoyéw, Ion. ipoA-, to discuss sacred things, Luc. D, Syr. 26, E. M. 468. 14. II. to give the benediction, Eccl. iepoXoyta, Ion. tpodoyly, 7, sacred or mystical language, Luc. Astrol. Io. II. a benediction, Eccl. tepo-Abyos, ov, one who gives the blessing, Eust. Opusc. 64. 85. tcpo-pavia, %, religious frenzy, lep. dye Clem. Al. 11. lepo-paprus, 6, a holy martyr, C. 1. 8853. tepopnvia, %, (unv, wnvn) the holy time of the month, during which the great festivals were held and hostilities suspended, fep. Neyéas, of the Nemean games, Pind. N. 3. 4; & 4 Mu@sds Inscr. Delph. in C. I. 1688. 44; & omovdais wal mpogére tepopnvia Thuc. 3. 56; év onovdais xat iepounvias Ib. 65; iep. &yetv Dem. 710. 1 :—also tepopyvia, 74, of the Carneian festival at Sparta, Thuc. 5. 54. tepopvnpoviw, to be icpopynpav, Ar. Nub. 623, C. 1. 1689, 1694, al. tepo-pvqpwv, Dor. —pvapev, ovos, 6, mindful of sacred things, prov Alciphro 2. 4. II. as Subst., 1. the sacred Secretary or Recorder sent by each Amphictyonic state to their Council along with the mvdaydpas (the actual deputy or minister), Dem. 276. 22 sq.; often mentioned in Amphictyonic decrees, C. I. 1688. 10 sq., 1689, -89 6, 1711: —generally, a recorder, notary, Arist. Pol. 6. 8, 7. 2. a magistrate who had the charge of religious matters, minister of religion, as at Byzantium, Decret. Byz. ap. Dem. 255. 20, cf. Polyb. 4. 52, 4:—at Rome, the Pontifex, Dion. H. 8. 55., 10. 57. - tepo-pévixos, 6, a holy monk, C. 1. 8729, 8764. iepb-puptos, 7, =, al e ~~ s 4 immocurn — ts. tirrro- s, ov, 6,=trmoyapyns, Pind. O. 1. 35. ska Si (€f0s) horse-like, Xen. Eq. 1, 11, Poll. 1. 192. tmmav, vos, 6, a place for horses: 1. a stable, Xen. Eq. A fo Moschio ap. Ath, 207 F, etc. 2. a posting-house, station, Xen, Cyr. 8.6, 17. é : tnmovela, 4, a buying of horses, Xen. Eq. Mag. 1, 12 (with v.1, imma- via), Id, Eq. I, I., 3, 1:—iwmevia, Poll. 1. 182. inm-wvéw, (dvéopar) to buy horses, Xen. Eq. Mag. 1,14, Eq.11,13- trrapat, Dep., a form of the pres. téropat, used by Mosch. 3. 43, Babr. 65. 4, Luc., and other late writers; v. Lob. Phryn. 325. V. meTOpAt. inropat, fut. tpopar: Dep.:—to press hard, oppress, peéya tao Aady *Ayaioy Il. 1. 454., 16. 237; Taxa iWerat vias Axai@y 2. 193: generally, to hurt, harm, like- BAamwrw, Theocr. 30. 19, cf, Strabo 370.—Hesych, cites the act. forms, Twat, t~as. (The Root is II, tos, iméw, etc.) inva, #, Dor. for.curda, Hesych.; v. Lob. Phryn. 301. Umpappos, ov, 6, in Hesych. prob.=inmappoorns. tmwots [Z], ews, 9, (ldw) a pressing hard or tight, Hipp. Art. 813. imwriptov, 74, a pressing-place, press, im. Anvod Gloss. ipd, 7a, Ion. and Ep. for fepa, Hom. L ws ipal, tpar or tpar, ay, af, v.1. Il. 18, 531, for efpar~ v. etpy. ipdopat, Ion, for fepdopat. ipéa, tpén, tpela, ipyin, v. sub fépeca, ipepos, v. 1. for etpepos. ipeds, ipetw, ipijtov, Ion. and Ep, for fep-. ipjy, évos, 6, Ion. for elphy, Hdt. 9. 85. ipnt, nos, 6, Ion; and Ep. for iépag, Hom., Hes. iphretpa, 7, (fepdopat) a priestess, Hesych, ipiveos, a, ov, =ipwos, Nic. Al. 203, 241. iptvé-pxros, ov, mixed_with iris-oil, Philox. 2. 41. iptvos [7], 7, ov, made from the iris, v. tps 11. 3. *Ipis, sdos, %, acc. “Ip, voc. "Ip :—Iris, the messenger of the gods among themselves, Il. 8. 398., 15. 1443 oF, more often, from gods to men, 2. 786., 3. 121, etc.; but conversely in 23. 198 she is the carrier of Achilles’ wishes:- in 5:-353,-398 she is the helper and attendant of Aphrodité: her epithets all point to swiftness, raxeia, deAAdmos, mody- vepos, rédas Kéa, xpvadmrepos: in the Od. she is never named, Hermes being there the sole messenger of the gods; Hes. Th. 780 calls her daughter of Thaumas. (Some passages indicate the loss of the F or an initial conson., &«éa *Ipts Il. 2. 786, 790., 5. 368; Adon’ 10, "Ip raxeia 8. 398; Ogovca 5e "Ips 23. 201.) II. as Appellat. tpts, 7: gen. ipt5os, also ews, Alex. Trall. p. 225, Geop. 6. 8, 1: acc. ip, Plut. 2. 664 E; tpida Nic. Al. 406: Ep. dat. pl. tpcotv :—the rainbow, iris, in Hom., as in the Bible, a sign to men, Spdwovres .. , tpesowv éouxdres, dare Kpoviow éy vépei orhpite Tépas pepémav dvOpamow Il, 11. 27; though Hom. commonly impersonates Iris as messenger between Heaven and Earth (vy. supr.) :—Arist. examines it as a natural phenomenon, Me- teor. 3. 4, 9. 2. any bright-coloured circle surrounding another body, as the halo of the moon or candle, Arist. 1, c., Theophr. Sign. 1, 13; round the eyes of a peacock’s tail, Luc. Dom. 11; the iris of the eye, Galen. 8. the plant Iris, of which the commonest in Greece is the purple Iris with a yellow centre, I. Germanica, eddvOepov tp Anth. P. 4. 1, 9; 70 dvOos moAAds éxer év Eavr@ moimAias Theophr, Fr. 20, 30: but the most important is the white Iris, I. Florentina, the aromatic root of which produces ¢ke orris-root of commerce, Theophr. H. P. 1. 7, 3, C. P. 6. 11, 13, etc., cf. Diosc. 1.1: from this was made the ipvov yupov mentioned by Plat, Com. Aax. 1, Cephisod. Tpo¢. 1, Alex. Eic, 1. 8, Theophr. H. P. 9. 9, 2:—in this sense some of the an- cients wrote it oxyt. ipts, (Sos, Eust. 391. 33, Schol. Nic. l. c. iptodns, es, (ef50s) like the rainbow, Arist. Meteor. 3. 4, 15. ipo-, Ion. and Ep. contr, for fepo-. tpo-5pépos, 6, post. for lepodp-, running in the sacred races, Philox. (35), in a P. 9. 329; lepodpdpov tSwp, of a sacred fountain, Epigr. . 835. 6. tpév, 74, Ion, for fepdv :—tpopytn, v. sub fepoupyia. ipo-édos, 6, 7), a priest or priestess, Epigr. Gr. 957, 1044. tpés, Ion. and Ep. for iepds, but also in Att. Poets, v. iepds sub fin. pos, 6, Zros, a name given by the suitors to the Ithacan beggar Arnaeus, Od. 18. 5 sq.:—hence, later as appeliat., an Iros, i.e. a beggar, Liban. 1. 568; pl. “Ipor, Luc. Nay. 24. tpo-havrns, 6, Ion. for fepop-. ipé-x8av, 5, %, of sacred earth, BOXos Epigr. Gr. 1046. 86, ipwort, Ion. for iepwori, in sacred fashion, Anacr. 146, . ipwoivy, 7}, Ion. for iepwotvn, priesthood, Hat. 4. 161. ts [7], }, gen. ivés, acc. iva, nom. pl. ives, dat. tveot Il. 23.191, or low v. infr.: (v. sub fin.) :—a muscle, used by Hom. only once in sing., like (mov, the muscle at the back of the neck, ws 8 br’ dv ..dvip..tva ray 81a maoay Il, 17. 522 :—but in pl. the muscles, ob yap ért adpxas Te Kat boréa ives Exovow Od. 11. 219, cf. Il. 23. 191; T@Y Oavdvraw Tow odk évear’ ixpas (so Nauck for elaw) Aesch. Fr. 230; tves dpOpwy Ar. Pax 86, cf. Archil. 127: metaph., heroes are the Tves of Troy, Pind. I. 8 (7). 113. 2. later (vedpa being reserved for muscles), tves are the Fibrous vessels in the muscles, Lat. fibrae, Plat. Tim. 82 C, Arist. H. A. 3- 6, 1, al.; tves aipyaros fibrine, Id. P. A. 2. 4, 1, cf. Plat. Tim. 84 A; in Theophr, H. P, 3. 12,7 the vessels of plants; cf. ivudns :—metaph. of metals, Plut, 2. 434 B. 3. Aer? is, of the cross-stroke in ©, Galen. 354. II. in sing. mostly strength, force, nerve, ddd’ dpa xat is €o0NH Il, 12.320; émépece 8% Wy dméAcOpoy 7. 269, etc. ; ef por Er early is, oin mdpos .. Od. 21, 283, cf. 11. 393., 18. 3 :—freq. in periphr. like Bin, icp?) ts Tyrepaxovo the strong Telemachus, Od.; xparep? ts p Odveqjos Il. 23.720; ts “HpaxAjos Hes, Th. 951; and in twofold peri- - toaryabos — iroyanos. phr., ts Bins ‘HpaxAneins Hes. Th. 332; so, ts dvéyov or dvéuoro Il. 15. 383.17. 739, Od. 9.71; ts worapoio Il, 21.536. (From 4/FI ; for the F appears in Hom., as also in tz, tptos, Lat. vis, vires: hence also isxus, Lacon. Bioxus (i.e. Fisxus) Hesych, But the etymol, is not ‘without difficulties, v. Curt. no. 615.) ig-ayaQos, ov, equally good, Eccl. io-dyyeNos, ov, like an angel, Ev. Luc. 20. 36, Eccl. Adv.-Aws, Eccl. ig-d5eAdos [Tod], ov, like a brother, of Pylades, Eur. Or. 1015. todfw, fut. dow :—Pass., fut. icac@jcopae Arist. Eth. E. 7. 10, 26: aor. iado@nv: pf. icacpuat: (ios). To make equal, to balance, of a person holding scales, oraOpov.. duis dvédAre isafovo’ Il. 12. 435 ; ia, rds erhoes to equalise them, Arist. Pol. 2. 6,10; io. 7d dor Id. Eth. N. 5. 4, 4, cf. 9, I, 1:—Med. to make oneself equal to another, obvex’ dpa Anrot igdoxero (sc. NidBn) Il. 24. 607 :—Pass. to be made or to be equal, Oeots Plat. Tim. 41 C, Arist. Eth. N. 5. 5, 9, al.; modds ixvos in step, Nic. Th. 286. II. intr. in Act. to be equal, Plat. Legg. 773 A, Arist. Eth. N. 7.14, 8, Pol. 5.4, 11, al. [fin Hom.; Yin Nic. Th. 286, 886.] icatopat, po2t. for icd¢opat, Nic. Al. 399, Fr. 2. 56, Arat. 235, 513. ivatos [7], a, ov, late post. form of ios, Nic. Th. 360:—% icata (sc. Hoipa), equality, Call. Jov. 63, Philostr. 867. cattepos, lratraros, Comp. and Sup. of faos. ivdkts [You], Adv. from ioos, ihe same number of times, as many times, Strabo 174; toos iodxs, of a number multiplied into itself, a square number, Plat. Rep. 546 C, Theaet. 147 E, 148 A, Eucl. 7. 17. io-durios, ov, like the Actian games, C.1. 4472. 11; cf. isoAdumos. iodpépros, ov, Dor. for ionuéptos, lasting an equal time, Soph. Fr. 692. toapr, Dor, for tonut, q.v. to-apwddos, ov, equal in the race, Cyrill.: neut. pl. as Adv., loduudda Spapecy tux Anth. P. 9. 311. io-dppopos, ov, equal in misfortune, Hesych. ivay, they went, 3 pl. impf. Ep. of efju (tbo), Hom. 3 pl. plapf. Ep. of ofa, Il. 18. 405, Od. 4. 772. ic-avadopos, ov, of equal height, Paul. Al. Apotelesm. ic-avSpos, ov, (dvjp) like a man, Hesych. io-dvepos [a], ov, swift as the wind, Pseudo-Eur. I. A. 206. to-dv@pwos, ov, like man, Eccl. to-dtvos, ov, of equal worth, Eccl. ig-amécroXos, 6, equal to an Apostle, C. 1.8742, Eccl. ~ to-dpytipos, ov, worth its weight in silver, noppupas to. xnxiba, Aesch. Ag. 959; looardows yap hv % mwoppupa mpds dpyvpoy éferaCopévn Theopomp. ap. Ath. 526 D, cf. Achae. ap. Ath. 689 B. : + ivtipOpéw, Zo be equal in number, rt Tzetz. Hist. 1. 939. tadpchios [tod], ov, equal in number with, rots dorpos trvi Plat. Tim. 41D, cf. Legg. 845 A, Arist. Eth. N. 8.3, 1, al.; so also Call. Del. 175, but in Ep. mostly ionp:Oyzos, Anth. P. 6. 84, 328, Lyc. 1258 ;—also c. gen., Movody ichpipov C.1.6245. Adv.—pws, Themist. 367 B. ig-dprnros, ov, (dprdw) in equipoise, Philo 1. 462. - todoero [7], Ep. 3 sing. impf. med. of icd(m, Il. 24. 607. io-dorepos, ov, like a star, bright as a star, Joseph. Macc. 17, 5. icaorixés, 7, dv, equalising, rwav Philem. Gramm. p. 128 Osann. ivdtis, ios, 7), a plant producing a dark blue dye, woad, Lat. isatis tinctoria, Hipp. 874 H, Theophr. Sens. 77, Diosc. 2. 216. toarabns, es, like woad, Hipp. 1137 B, Aretae. Caus. M. Diut. 1. 15. ic-avSys, es, (av54) sounding like, Theocr. Fist. 9 (in Anth, P. 15. 21). ivaxas [i], Adv., (loos) in the same number of ways, Arist. Metaph. 4. I, 2, al.; io, twit in as many ways as, Ib. 9. 2,9, Eth. N. 1.6, 3, al. “Toea [7], wy, 74, a feast of Isis, Diod. 1. 14, 87. *Ioevov [7], 74, a temple of Isis, Plut. 2. 352 A. ivevviw, (évos) to be of the same age, isevviovor Hipp. 638. 42 (as re- stored by Foés., from Galen. Lex., for iat viv éodaar) ; Schneid, tvevor €ovcat, in the same sense. ionyopéw and - , icodaluwy — iroToNreta. toé-hpos, ov, like the lyre, Schol. Soph. Tr. 645- ivo-pdtwp, Dor. for -piyrap, 6, %, like one’s mother, Theocr, 8. 14. iob-paxos, ov, equal in the fight, Dion. H. 3.52, Diod. 17. 83; padayé io. Xen, Ages. 2, 9 (as Leuncl. for io-bpados ; al. icd-rados). too-peyéOns, es, equal in size, Xen, Cyn. 5, 29, Polyb, 10. 44,2. Ady. —Ows, Aristid. Quint. 123. “A ico-pepts, és,—=lodporpos, Ath. 143 E. Adv. —pés, Greg. Nyss. too-pérpyros, ov, of equal e, ate, Plat. Phaedr, 235 D, Arist. Fr. 377; Tut with one, Dio C. 59.11. Adv. -rws, Theod. Metoch. iooperpla, 7, equality of measure, Arist. Fr. 43. toé-perpos, ov, =icouérpnros, Ephipp. Navay.1. Adv. -ws, Cyril. igo-pérwtos, ov, with equal forehead or front, Xen. Hell. 4. 5, 16. too-phins, es, equal in length, Plat. Rep. 546 C, Arist. H. A. 2.15, 145 twit Strabo 400, etc. ; ico-pAnovos, a, ov, of Milesian fashion, inariov Diod. 12. 21. icopoipéw, to have an equal share, Thuc. 6. 39, Xen. Cyr. 2. 3,173 twés of a thing, Isae. 35.9, Dem, 1172. 27; Tivos mpds Twa or TUL Of a thing with another, Thuc. 6. 16, cf. Isocr. go A, Dion. H. 6. 66. icoporpta, Ion, -{n, %, an equal share or partnership, Twés in a thing, Thue. 7.75: of climates, emperateness, Hipp. Aér. 288. 2. =io- vouia, Nymphod. ap. Schol, Soph. O. C. 337, Dio C. 52. 4. iodpotpos, ov, (uotpa) sharing equally or alike, c. gen. rei, mavTav Xen. Cyr. 4.6, 12, etc.; c. dat., Timais icdporpov €Oneev Trav éuddexTpov iipwowv C. 1. 2439 :—iodpotpor, 7d, an equal portion, Nic.Th.592. 2. coextensive, oxdTw pdos taduorpoy [where the 7 led Erf. to restore dvri- potpoy, regarding icduorpoy as a gloss, v. igos sub fin.] Aesch. Cho. 319 ; iodpotpa .. &v To Kdopw pas Kat oxdros Diog. L. 8.26; & pdos ayvov kat ys iodpotp’ dnp earth’s equal partner air (the one being coextensive in surface with the other), Soph. El. 87 (cf. Hes. Th. 126, Tata .. éyei- vato taov éavri Obpavdy). Adv. —pws, Eust. 161. 20. ic6-popos, ov, =ladpoupos, used by Poseidon of himself as tedpopos with Zeus, Il. 15. 209: generally, like, rut Anth. P. 6. 206: lodpopov an equal portion, Nic. Th. 105, Androm, ap. Galen. 14.41. [Ta-, v. tgos sub fin.] ic-éveipos, ov, dream-like, empty, Aesch. Pr. 549 [where the 7 led Reisig to restore dvrévecpos, v. tos sub fin.]. iod-vecus, vos, 6, %, dying equally or alike, Eur, Or. 200, ubi v. Schol, toro-véunros, ov, equally distributed, Greg. Naz. igvo-voéw, to understand in like manner, cited from Jo. Chrys. ivovopéopat, Pass, to have equal rights, pera Tivos Thuc. 6. 38. tcovopta, Ion. -ty, 4, an equal distribution, equal proportion, equili- brium, Alcmaeon ap. Stob. 542. 30, Tim. Locr. 99 B, Epicur. ap. Cic. N. D. 1.19. II. equality of rights, the equality of a Greek democracy, Hdt. 3. 80,142; to. movety Id. 5. 37, cf. Thuc. 4, 78; ic. mohirinh Id, 3. 82; io. ey yuvargt mpds dvdpas Kal dvdpdce mpds yuvaixas Plat. Rep. 563 B. ivovopicds, 7, dv, devoted to equality, dvnp Plat. Rep. 561 E. igd-vopos, ov, of states, where all have equal rights, icovdpous 7° "AOjvas éroinoarny Scol. Gr. 1 Bgk.; dixaros xal ic. wodrreia Ep. Plat. 326 D; év igovduw modrrreve App. Civ. 1.15; (@ov ic, Oe@ M. Ant. 8, 2, iod-Evdos, ov, like wood, Hesych. s.v. dfvAor, io6-rrats, 6, #), like a child, as of a child, toxds Aesch. Ag. 74. ivo-médaicros, ov, a span long, Anth. P. 6. 287. [7 .. a] ivomatw, to be a match for, Eccl. ivo-nidis, és, equal in the struggle, well-matched, paxopéevor .. kar yevouévay icomadéwy Hat. 1. 82, cf. 5. 49. 2. generally, equiva- lent, equal, Parmenid. 104, Thuc. 2.39; 7AjOe ia. Trai Id. 4.943 vdE ic. jyart Anth,P.9. 384, 18, cf. Orph. Arg. 1017 :—Ady.-A@s, Schol. Arat. iv6-miidos, ov, =foreg., Luc. Navig. 36, Dio C. 40. 42, Poll. 3.149. 5- 1575 Hesych. ; cf. iconépados, ioduaxos. ioo-maixys, és, equalin thickness, Arist. H.A. 4.2, 23, Theophr. H.P. 3.5, 6. ioé-medov, 74, level ground, a flat, Il. 13.142, Xen, Cyr. 3.1, 53 Pv- Adrrew ént rod loomédou Eavrhy Luc. Imag. 21. ioé-me5os, ov, of even surface, level, flat, tf iconéSov xwplov Hipp. V. C.g02, cf. Luc. Hipp. 4; io. xp@para laid on flat, opp. to xoiAa, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 49. 2. c. dat. level or even with, xodv moira: TH addy yp lodmedov Hat. 4. 201, cf. Diod. 19. 94. ivo-méAeOpos, ov, of the same number of whéOpa, Hesych, igo-mevOys, és, in equal distress, Schol. Aesch. Eum, 783. ivo-mrépacros, ov, equally bounded, Schol. Od, 1. 98. ivo-mepipérpyros, ov, =sq., Justin, M. ico-mepinerpos, ov, of equal perimeter, Synes. 71 C, Procl. igo-merijs, és, flying with equal speed, Scho}, Eur. Or, 321. igd-merpos, ov, like a rock, Schol. Soph. O. C. 192. icd-mnxus, v, of the same number of cubits, Opp. H. 1. 213. ieé-rhacros, ov, =avrtimdaoros, Hesych. sub h. v. igo-mharis, és, egual in breadth, Arist. Oec. 1. 6, 9, Archimel. ap. Ath. 209 C; dpros io, Ath. 128 D (vulg. -Aartus), cf. Anth. P. app.153 ¢. dat., io. 7@ reixes Thue. 3. 21. tro-mhatwv, wvos, 6, another Plato, Anth, P. 11.354. [i -. @] igé-mAeupos, ov, equilateral, rplywvov Plat. Tim. 54A,E; éimedov Ib. 55E. II. of numbers, sguare, opp. to érepopnens, Id. Theaet. 147 E, Arist. An. Post. 1. 4, 3. igo-mAnyis, és, of equal beats, Mus. Vett. Edis s, és, equal in number or quantity, yap Hipp. 462. 48 ; innets Aen. Ages. 2,9; Ti to a person or thing, Thuc, 6. 37. 2. equal in magnitude, Eucl.:—Ady. —0ds, Id. 12. 5. _loomoNtreta, %, equality of civic rights, Arist. Fr. 5373 granted to individuals, eluev abrG ioomodrrelay Inscr. Boeot. in C. J. 1567, cf. 1772-3. 2. esp. a treaty between two states for a reciprocity of such rights, Inscr, Cret, in C. I. 2554. 190., 2558, Polyb. 16. 26, 9, etc.; icoroXirns — icoréAeoros. AcBadedaiv écrw io. mpds ’Apkadas Plut. 2. 300A; so, af icomoAiriBes méXes cities that had entered into such a treaty, C.1. 4040 11. 16 ; hence of the Roman municipia, App. Civ. 1. 10 :—cf. Niebuhr R. H. 2. note 101. ivo-mokirys [AT], ov, 6, a citizen with equal rights, io. rely Td Tots dyyéAos Eccl. 2. one who had a reciprocity of rights, a citizen of one of the municipia of Rome, Dion. H. 8. 76, Joseph. A. J. 12.1, etc. ; cf. isowoArreia, ivo-mpatia, }, a faring equally, like condition, Eust. 662. 35. ivd-mpeoBus, v, like an old man, Aesch. Ag. 78. lodé-mrepos, ov, swift as flight, Schol. Aesch. Ag. 276. to6-mrwros, ov, (wrmats) with like cases, Apollon. Pron. 375 B. ioé-mupyos, ov, like a tower, Hesych. s. v. dvrimupyos. io6-rupov, 746, a plant, perhaps a kind of corydalis, (acc. to others, menyanthes or bog-bean,) Sprengel Diosc. 4. 121. tooppemms (i), 4; =ladppomos, Nic. Th. 646, Poéta de Herb. 98. ivopporréw, to be equally balanced, be in equipoise, Plat. Tim. 52 E, Legg. 733D, 794E; rum with .., Polyb. 1.11, 1. ivoppory, 7, eguipoise, equal inclination, Greg. Nyss. ivoppémyots, ews, 7, =sq., Hero in Math. Vett. p. 153. ivoppomia, }, equipoise, equilibrium, Plat. Phaedo 109 A, pomud, ra, a work on equilibrium by Archimed. todppomos, ov, (Jorn) equally balanced, in equipoise, of the balance, Plat. Phaedo 109 A, Polit. 270 A, etc.; rdAavra Bpicas ove icoppdrm toxn Aesch, Pers. 346; lordvres rov mixvv Tod (vyou ic. C. I. 123. 32. 2. generally, in equipoise, well-balanced, well-matched, to. abrds éavr@ of a man with his legs of the same length, Hipp. Fract. 765; of a nose, flattened, but not awry, Id. Art. 803; of a bone, cylin- drical, Ib. 800; Séppa ic., opp. to mepipperfs, Ib. 817; to. dyov evenly balanced (cf. Shaksp. ‘so equal is the poise of this fell war’), Eur. Supp. 706 ; waxy Thuc. 1.105; dvvays Plat. Tim, 52 E; Bios Id. Legg. 733. C; tn Arist. Eth. N. 9.1, 7:—c. dat., 7d -yévos 7d "Arruxdy éov 7 7T@ éwirav being equally matched with their own, Hdt. 5. 91; to. ‘Pwpatos Hdn. 6.7; ic. karaorival tux C.1. 2059.18; lodpp. 6 Adyos Ta&Y Epywy in precise equipoise with .., Thuc. 2. 42; so, io. mpds 7 Hdn. 6. 3. II. Adv., icoppémws adpuévat Hipp. Art. 808 ; roped- €c0a: Plat. Phaedr. 247 B; dywvifec@at Dio C. 41. 61. toos, 7, ov, Ep. toos and €ivos: (vy. sub fin.) :—egual to, the same as, in appearance, size, strength or number, and sometimes much like 6pov0s, like, mostly c. dat., xJpara toa dpecow Od. 3. 290; toos dvavdw to. 378, etc. ;—yet often used absol’ tony «. Biny kat «dBos Il. 7. 205; icov Oupov éxew to have (or be of) like mind, 13. 704., 17.720: so in neut. as Adv., fcov éuot ppovéovoa 15.50; Oeotaww fo’ bere ppovéev 5. 441, cf, 21. 315, etc.:—also, toov Swudrwy an equal share of .., Eur. Phoen, 550 (but the construct. c. gen. pro dat., as in 6potos and Lat. similis, is very dub., v. Thom. M. p. 649) :—ioos tut 7d péyaOos, typos Hdt. 2. 32,124; 70 phos, 7d mAdTos Xen. An. 5. 4, 32; apiOudv Eur. Supp. 662; toa roy dp. Plat. Rep. 441 C:—the dat. is often put in an elliptic mode of speaking, where the real object of comparison is omitted, and the subject or person possessing it substituted, ob méy cot more loov éxw yépas (i.e. TO o@ yépat) Il. 1.163; Totes toa vais (i.e. rats r@vbe) Eur. I. A. 262; toa rots viv orparnyots ayaa Dem. 172.17; cf. Gpowos B. 2:—after Hom., foll. by a relative word, éyol lcov .., Scovmep bpiv the same to me as to you, Ar. Eccl. 173; 7a éxe? toa, womep Ta évOdde Lys. 155.15; 7a toa boawep.., Lex ap. Dem. 634. 14, V. infr. IV. I. 2. the word is often repeated to denote equal relations, toa mpds toa ‘measure for measure,’ Wess. Hdt. 1. 2; too mpds tous Soph. Ant. 142; toous tcowot .. dvtiBels Eur. Phoen. 750; toa dvrt tcwv AapBaver, exdodvat Plat.Legg.774C; so, of the mixture of wine with water, tcos ofvos iow tdart Kexpapévos, Comici ap. Ath. 426 B, 473. C3; KvAutos tov tow lenpapevns (where tgoy is adverbial), Ar. Pl. 11323 so, &ddvac yada Kal oivoy mivey icov tow Hipp. to40D; metaph., pydty icoy iow pépov not mixing half and half, i.e. not giving tit for tat, Ar. Ach. 354, ubi vy. Elmsl. 3. of persons, Bovbrerat 9 Tors &f tow evar Kat dpotev Arist. Pol. 4. 11, 8. II, equally divided or distributed, equal, ton poipa Il. 9. 318; also ton alone, one’s equal share, Od. 9. 42 (cf. ios 1); Thy tony Exowy Cratin. “Op. 43 ob pny tony ence (sc. riow) Soph. O.T. 810; axpe THS tons up to the point of equality, Dem. 61. 15 :—7a ica, an equal share, fair measure, Ta toa vépew Hdt.6.11; Tay too tvyxdvew Tivi, opp. to mreovexreiv, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 20; mpooruxely trav icwy to obtain fair terms, Soph. Ph. 552 :—toar (sc. Whpor) votes equally divided, Ar. Ran. 685. 2. at Athens, of the equal division of all civic rights, ton nat évvopos modureia Aeschin. 1.25; Tv modirelay loatrépay Kabt- arava Thuc. 8. 89; ws THs modurelas ecopéerns &v Tots tous wat dpotois Xen, Hell. 7. 1, 45, cf. 7.1, 1; én rotas tons wat dicatas mpopacews ; Dem, 320. 14:—7a toa, equal rights, equality, often joined with 7a 6puota or 7a Sixata, as, TaV towv Kal THY BiKalwy Exagros wyyerra EavT@ pereivan ev 7h Snpoxparia Dem. 536.12; od péreort Tov toow Kai TeV Spolwy mpds rods mAovatous Id. 551.11; Tov toww perelye Tots GAXots Id. 545. 27:—also, 4 ton wat dpola (sc. den), THs tans Kat dpolas ‘peréxew Thue. 4. 105; én’ ton re wat dpotn on fair and equal terms, ‘Hdt. 9. 7, cf. Thuc. 1.145; émt rp top wat dpoig Id. 1, 27, cf. C. 1. 3137-44. 8. of persons, fair, impartial, Soph. Ph. 685, cf. O. T, 677; icos diaorhs Plat. Legg.957 C3; too nat xowol dxpoarai Dem, 844. 8, cf. 227. 23., 1274.10; toov Kal kowvdv dixagrhpiov Dem.85. 25; Kowvovs piv .. , tous dé ph Plat.Gorg.337 A; toos to xpivwy Menand. Movoor. 266, cf.257; kpttns tacos Kat Sixatos Polyb. 25. 5, 3, etc. 4. % ton gpovpt the regular garrison ( teraypévn Schol.), Thuc. 7. 27. III. of ground, even, level, flat, Lat. aequus, els 1d ioov 711 but, év law mpoorevat to advance with even step, Ib. 1.8, 11; els 70 tcov kadioracOai rive to meet any one on fair ground, 1d.Cyr.1. 6, 28; 50 igov at equal distance, Plat. Rep. 617 B. IV. Adv., tows, y. sub voc. :—but there are many other adverbial forms, 1. neut. sing. and pl. from Hom. downwds. (y. sub init.), ?vov .. dmx Gero Knpi pedaivy even as Death, Il. 3. 454; Tov éuot Bactdeve be king like me, 9. 616; Toov yap ce OG ricovaew *Axatol Ib. 603; Tooy éup xepadrf 18. 82; tov .. toa 0G .. elcopdwow Od. 15.520; loa pidort réxecow Il. 5.71, cf, 13.176, Od. 1. 432, 11. 304, etc. :—so later, absol. alike, deiAate TOU vou Tis TE Guupopas toov Soph. O. T. 1347, cf. Hdt. 8.132; c. dat., icov vaots Oe@v Eur. Hel. 801; toov 7@ mpiv equally as before, Eur. Hipp. 302 (vulg. rv amply); toca rots wavy Dio C. Exc. Peiresc. 77. 23 often followed by xat, toa xat.. like as, as if, Lat. aegue ac, Soph.O.T. 1187, cf. Eur. El. 994, Thuc. 3.14; also, icov ds.., Eur. Ion 13633 Gonep.., Soph, El. 532; wore.., Eur. Or, 882; dre.., Id. H. F. 667; bcovrep .. , Dem. 191. 3. 2. with Preps. :—dmd rijs tons, equally, Lat. ex aequo, Thuc. 1. 15., 3.40; dn’ tons evar Dem. 179. 21 :—év iow equally, Thuc. 2. 53; €v iow éort it matters not, Eur. I. A. 1199; év iow éo7t wal el .. , Thuc, 2.60; év 7@ tow elvar Id. 4. 10, cf. 65 — ef ions Plat. Legg. 860 E; more often éf igov, Hdt. 7. 135, Soph. O. T. §63,etc.; é£ ivov ri Id, Ant.516, 644, Antipho129.26; é tcou xat.. Soph. O. C. 254, ds ..Id. O. T.61; of é¢ icov persons of equal station, Plat. Legg. 777 D, 919 D; 6 é tcov xivduvos Polyb. 9. 4,4; &« Tod ioou yiryveoOai run Thue. 2. 3; &« Tod icov udxeoOat Lat. aeguo Marte pugnare, Xen. Hell. 2, 4,16; @& tov wokepety Dem. 101. 21:—ént tons, later émions, émt tons diapépew rov wéAcuov Hat. 1. 74, cf. 7. 50, I, Soph. El. 1061, etc.; also, ém’ icov Polyb. 1. 18, 10; é’ icoy Dem. 261. 26, etc.; y. supr. 11. 2:—«ara toa, én Toa Il, 11. 336., 12. 436 (v. sub teivw), of an undecided battle. V. Att. Comp. icatrepos Eur. Supp. 441, Thuc. 8. 89, Xen. Hell. 7. 1, 14, (The word had the digamma, as appears from the Homeric usage, and from the form €Figos, and FigoreAla appears in Boeot. Inscrr., C. 1. 1562-3; cf. Skt. vishu (aeque), vi: guinoctium).). {From the gloss. of Hesych., yoyov (i.e. FisFév): toov, it seems that orig. there was a second F after Fto—; and this may account for the fact that ¢ is always long in Hom. and Hes., excepting in Op. 750 (a dub. passage); so also late Ep., though these Poets do not scruple to use Y when needful, v. Call. Dian. 53, 211, 253, etc.; and sometimes even use both quantities in one line, éxocav ioov xétw toov dvwbev Theocr. 8.19; mpéoBuv icov Kovpas, toov ddévra xépais cited from Anth.:—i also in old Att., Solon 15 (5). 1 :—but as the F fell out of use, « became short, as first in Theogn. 678, always in Pind. (save in the compd. icodaiuav), and always Att. (for in Aesch. Fr. 214, ef pot yévorro papos too obpay@, Herm. restores ofoy), except that in the Homeric epithet icd@cos the Trag. made 7 in dactylic verses, just as they made @ in G@davaros, etc., Aesch. Pers. 80, Soph. Ant. 836, Eur. Tro, 1169, I.A.626:—4 in ladépotpos, iedvetpos is questionable, v. sub voce. ] ivooGévera, 7), equivalence, equipollence, Diog. L. 9. 73- ivooGevéw, to be in equal force, Galen. icvo-ofevis, és, equal in force, a meviay io. wrovT@ mo.eiy cited from Democr. ; d5dpavros ia, dop Opp. H, 2, 466; && rpuravys tc. Clem. Al. 141. ivooGevia, 4, =icoabévera, Clem. Al. 877. ; igo-cKeAns, és, with equal legs, tplywvov Plat. Tim. 54 A; so, 7d igooxeXés Arist. An. Post. I. 4, 7- 2. of numbers, ¢hat can be divided into two equal parts, even (as 6=3 +3), opp. to oxadnvds odd (as 7=4+ 3), Plat. Euthyphro 12 D. isookeNa, 7), a having two sides equal, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 178. io-dampios, ov, bean-like; dvos la. an insect that rolls itself up like a bean, called also fovdos, Soph. Fr. 334. icoarddyy, Adv. (iors) equally matched, Suid. s. y. dvrayonorns ; but prob. f.1. for #) cveradny, as in one Ms. icorrapéw, to be equal in weight, Suid. io 0s, ov, evenly balanced, even, opvypds Galen. 7. 336. ivo-ordovos, ov,=foreg., in equipoise with, run Plut. C. Gracch. 17: equivalent to, rw Hipp. 1278.23, Luc.D. Mort. 10.5,etc.; cf. iadpyupos. Adv. —iws, Poll, 8.11; neut. pl. as Adv., Philo 1. 462. ivo-craréw, =icoorabpéw, Clem. Al. 141, Liban. 4. 798. ivoorotxéw, to correspond, of letters, A. B. 811, 812. ivo-oroixia, 7, equality of rows, Byz. ivé-crotxos, ov, equal in rows, and so=dyricrocxos, Schol. Eur, Andr. 745: also, with even, regular rows, Dionys. in Eus. P. E. 777 D. iod-orpodos, ov, equally twisted, even, xopdy Iambl. V. Pyth, 26 (116). icocvAAGBéw, to have the same number of syllables, Choerob. in A. B. 1218 :—tooovAAGBla, 7, equality of syllables, Ib. :—too-otAA Gos, ov, having the same of syllables, Plut. 2. 739 A, Walz Rhett. 6. 328, etc.: Adv. —Bws, E. M. 552. 34. ivo-capatos or —cwpos, ov, of a like body, Schol. Eur. Andr. 745. too-raAavros, ov, of like weight, equally balanced, Eust.Opusc. 158. 40. ivoriixéw, to go equally swiftly with, rw Philo 1. 463, Heliod. 8. 17. ivo-raxis, és, equally swift, Arist. Phys. 4.8, 15., 7-4, 9» al.; reve with one, Ib.6.9,6. Adv.—x@s, Id. Mechan. prooem. 10, Polyb. 34.4, 6, Strabo 25. ivoréActa, %}, the condition of an taoredhs, equality in tax and tribute, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 25, Vect. 4, 12, C. I. 2053 6, ¢; written Feooredta in Boeot. Insctr., v. tos s. fin., leoreAds fin. ivoréXerros, ov, (TeAéw) made exactly like, exact, to. pipnua Nonn. Dz. 18. 247. 2. fulfilled alike; in Soph. O. C. 1220 Death is called 6 énixoupos ta., the ally or friend that comes to all alike, “Aidos being joined with the following word potpa, like @avdrov potpa in Aesch, karaBatvey, of an army, Lat. in aeguum descendere, Xen. An, 4.6,18:— & Pers. 917, Eur. Med, 987. 12 ' tooreAns, és, (reAos) paying alike, bearing equal burdens: at Athens,’ the looreAcis were a favoured class of wérouxor, who enjoyed all civic rights except those of a political nature; they ranked after the mpdéfevou, needed no mpoordrns, paid no peroixoy, and, in return for these privi- leges, were subject to the same burdens as the citizens, Lys, ap. Harp., Arist. Fr. 387, C. I. 809-10; cf. Bockh P. E. 2. 316 sq.: but they were -not put on the list of citizens, nor enrolled as members of a demos or phylé. On the general relation of iooréAe:a, v. Niebuhr R. H. 2. note Jol: it was sometimes extended to citizens of a friendly state, Inscr. -Boeot. in Keil rv }, 22. : , €s, equally stretched, Paul.S. Ambo 150, 230. tod-rexvos, ov, egual in art or skill, rut C.1. 2025. lodrns, 770s, 7, (io0s) equality of all kinds, numerical, physical, moral, -and (above all) political, Eur, Phoen. 536, 542, etc.; in dual, Plat. Legg. -757 Band E; in pl., Ib. 733 B, Isocr. 152 A. II. fairness, impartiality, Polyb. 2. 38, 8. » toortpla, 4, equality of privilege, t€- icotipias diaréyecOat Tit to converse with him as Ais equal, Luc. Pisc. 34, Philo 1. 160; cf. dudripos. -_ t6-tipos, ov, held in equal honour, having the same privileges, Luc. D. .Mort. 2. 4, 3, Plut. Lys. 19, etc.; pérptos kai io. Hdn. 2. 4; io. waxn equal, Ael. N. A. 10. 1; i. mioris I Ep. Petr. 1. 1:—79 ic. =icortuia, Hdn. 2.3. Adv. —yws, Ath. 177 C, C. 1. 4031-2. igé-roixos, ov, with equal walls or sides, of ships, Hesych. 6~rovos, ov, equally stretched, Galen.: of equal tension or tone, Mus. Vett.; whence toorovia, Ib, :—Adv. -vws, equally, Diosc. 1. 83. 3 melos, ov, equal to the table, i.e. large enough to fill it, ndx- _kaBos Antiph, Tlapag, 1, Philox. 2. 15. ioo-rpiBis, és, in Aesch. Ag. 1443, geAudray ico _pro tarorp-) pressing the benches dike others. _ toé-rpomros, ov, of like character; Adv. -mws, Eccl, :—itootpotéw, igorponta, Cyril. igé-rimos, ov, shaped alike, Nonn, D.1. 448. Ady, -mws, Eccl. loo-ripawvos, ov, despotic, absolute, dpx7 Arist. Pol. 2.9, 20, Dion. H. 5.70. tgoupyéw, to do like things, Eccl. ; ‘ vos, dv, (*épyw) doing like things, Phot., Cyril. _ loo-ipys, és, equally high, rut with another, Polyb. 8. 6, 4, Strabo 805. to6é-tipos, ov, =foreg., Galen. 18.1, 757. _ teo-pars, és, shining equally, Greg. Naz. ; , €s, appearing like, Nonn. D. 9. 2 ivopipilo, = dvripepi(w, dvripepopat, to match oneself with, vie with, ovd€ ris of divarat pévos laopapife Il. 6.101; épya 3 ’APnvaly . . ico- papt{or 9. 390, cf. Theocr. 7. 30:—generally, to be equal to, rwi Il. 21. 194, Hes, Op. 488, Simon, 149. II. trans. to make equal, Nic. h. 572- _ lao-héptoros, ov, equal to the best, Greg. Naz. _ leb-p8oyyos, ov, sounding equally, Nonn, D. 6, 202. to6-dovos, ov, =dyriovos, Schol. Aesch. Theb. 895. ivopopta, 7, equal ot regular movement, dpxnorod Poll. 4. 97. 7 piBHs (e conj. Pauw. 3. pos, ov, bearing or drawing equal weights, equal in strength, Pes .. HAtwes, loopdpa Od. 18. 373. II. proparox. moving _regularly, Poll. 4. 97- : ivo-ums, és, 9 the same substance, Arist. H. A. 1.13, 2, Nonn, Jo, 1. 2. Ady. —@s, Eccl, : also naturally, opp. to rum“@s, Greg. Nyss. ' Ino-yetijs, és, level with the brim, xpiOat ivoxe:Aets grains of malt float- ing level with the brims of the vessels, i.e. on the surface of the liquor, Xen. An. 4.5, 26; (wpdv xepdoas isoxe:déa Anth. P.6. 105 ; looxedj Tiv Karo ovaydva monoas 6 Barpaxos level with the surface of the water, Arist, H. A. 4.9, 123; c.dat., Etpparns ic, 7h yp Arr. An. 7. 7. . led-xerdos, ov, =foreg., Twi Geop. 12. 19, 4. tod-xetp, xetpos, 6, 4, egual-handed, Cyril. . txb-xvoos, ov, equally woolly with, rwt Anth. P. 6. 252. ioé-xophos, ov, with like strings, Hesych. s. v. dvtixop5os. tooxpovéw, to be as old as, rt Luc. Syr. D. 3; ic. xabamep .., Theophr. C. P. 4. 11, 9. II. in Gramm, to have the same number of times. . lgoxpévos, ov,=sq. Adv. -tws, Ptol. _ toé-xpovos, ov, equal in age or time, kard 7 Theophr. C. P.1. 18, 3 (vulg. wepiaadypovos) :—a contemporary, twos Vit. Theocr.:—Adv. vos. IL. in Gramm, consisting of the same number of times, ee de Constr. 257. 6-xptoos, ov, like gold, worth its weight in gold, Archipp. Incert. 8, Archestr. ap. Ath. 305 E, C: I. 1227. iod-p , ov, equal to sand in number, Byz. _ too , H), equality of votes, Dion. H. 7. 64. to vote, equal franchise, Plut. C. Gracch. 9. io ov, with or by an equal number of votes, iv io. xp0p Aesch, Eum. 741; dé«n io. Ib. 795. II. having an equal vote ‘with others, equal in authority, g¥ppaxor Thuc. 1. 141, cf. 3.11, 79; roeiv riva lodynpdy Tux Plat. Legg. 692 A: of whole states, egual in franchise, tdevOepucas tHvd ladynpov modu Eur. Supp. 353. IIt. equal in numerical value, of words in which the letters added together make up the same sum, as in Anth, P. 11, 334, Aapaydpay wal Aorpov ladynpdv ms dxovoas—both words make up 270 ;—for other examples, vy. C.I. 3544-6, Anth. P. 6. 321-329, cf. Artemid. 3. 34., 4. 26, Gell. 14. 4. igowpuxia, as, 4, equanimity, Jo, Chrys. : iod-\pixos, ov, of equal spirit, uparos ic. Aesch. Ag.1470:—Ady. —xas, Eust. 831. 52. 2. of like soul or mind, Ep. Phil. 2. 20. toéw [Tr], fut. todow, to make equal, twi 7 Soph. El. 686 (v. sub dipeots), Ar. Vesp. 565, Xen. Cyr, 7. 5, 65:—Med., dvuxas xeipds Te lowsavro they made their nails and hands alike, i.e, used them in like manner, Hes. Sc. 263:—Pass. and Med. to be made like or equal to, | Il. equal right $ opupyAaros év 'Odvunia ordOyrt Plat. Phaedr, 236B; ora0fvat xadnoos _igoreAys.— torn. rototy Kev ev ddyeow lowouluny Od. 7. 212 ;° Ocoior pev viv ob« ivor pevov o° .. xpivoyres Soph. O. T. 31, cf. 581, Plat. Phaedr. 239 A. tooa, exclam. of triumph over another’s distress, Plat. Com. Aau. 4, cf. Meineke Menand. ’Avari0. 6. (Onomatop.; cf. oirra.) iooéda, irOéda, v. sub i¢ad7. tordve, late collat. form of tornu, Orph. Arg. 904, Ath. 115 F, Ep. Rom. 3. 31, Arr. Epict. 3. 26,17; impf. teravoy (ovy—) Polyb. 4. 82, 5; (&:-) App. Hisp. 36; cf. also ép-uordvw. This form has been intro- duced by the copyists into Lys, 25. 3, Isae. 2. 29, etc. tordpiov, 74, Dim. of iords, Menand. ‘Eau. 3. tordw; collat. form of fornm, used by Hdt. in 3 sing. pres. and impf. tora, tora, 2. 106., 4. 103., 6. 43, v. Dind. de Dial. Hdt., p. xxxviii; occasionally also found in Mss. of Att. writers, iorgs Ar. Fr.445; ioray Plat. Crat. 437 B; freq. later, Diosc. 4. 43, Aesop., Themist., etc. ioréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. of of8a, to be known, Ath. 699 E. ioréov, one must know, Plat. Symp. 217 C, Theaet. 202 E. toredv, dvos, 6,=ierdy, Poll. 7. 28, Phryn. p. 166. lornpe, I. Causal Tenses, to make to stand, pres. tornpe (cf. tordw, tordvw), imper. torn Il. 21. 313, Eur. Supp. 1230, xa6-iora Il. 9. 202: impf. torny, Ep. ioracxe Od. 19. 574 :—fut. orjow, Dor. oraoe Theocr. 5. 54:—aor. I éornoa, Ep. 3 pl. éordoay for éornoay Il. 12. 56 (where 3 pl. plqpf. €oracav must be distinguished from 3 pl. aor. éoracay, Ib. 55), Od. 3. 182, etc.; hence, in late Poets, éoricas, éortice Anth. P. 9. 714, 708 :—so also aor. 1 med. éoryodyny, v. infr. A, 11. 1 and 2; (where this tense has an intr. sense, it has been corrected, cf. mepiiornu B. I. 2):—for the late pf. éord«a; v. sub voc. II. intr. to stand, 1. of the Act., aor. 2 éornv Ep. ordoxoy Il. 3. 217; 3 pl. €ornoav, or more often in Hom. éorav, ordv [a]; imper. o776t, Dor. ora Theocr.; subj. ora, Ep. 2 and 3 sing. ornns, orn (for orfs, orp) Il. 5. 598., 17. 30, I pl. orémpev (as disyll.) 22. 231, and oretoper for or@perv, 15. 297; opt. oraiev, Ep. 3 pl. oraincay 17. 733, inf. orfvat, Ep. orqpevat 17. 167, Od. 5. 414, Dor. orGuev Pind. P. 4. 2; part. ords:—pf. ornna: plqpf. éorjxerv, and in Att. sometimes with strengthd. augm. elorheew Eur. H. F, 925, Ar. Av. 513, Thuc., etc.; Ion. 3 sing. éorneee Hadt. 7. 152:—from Hom. downwds, the syncop. dual and pl. forms of the pf. are preferred, €ordrov, éoripey, éorire (or in Il. 4. 243, 246, ornre, unless this should be aor 2 éornre), éordot, in Hdt. éoréaor; also imperat. 07%; subj. €o7@; opt. Eorainy; inf. éordva, Ep. éordpev, éordpevat, ornxévat only in late writers, as Ael.; part. €orws, (Eornicds is rare in the best writers, Hdt. 2.126, Plat. Meno 93 D, Legg. 802 C, Alex. AcB, 4.16, v. infr. B. 11), fem. éor@oa (not éorvia), éards (not éor@s), cf. Dind. Ar. Eq. 564; gen. €or@ros; lon. éorews, Eateds, Bos: Ep. éornws Hes. Th. 747; Hom. does not use the nom. ; but gen, éora- éros, acc. éorddéra, nom. pl. éorddres, as if from égrads:—so also syncop. plapf., éorarny, tordper, ordre, Ecrdcay, v. Spitzn. Excurs. v. ad Il.:—there is a late pres. éorjxw, formed from pf., Anth. P. app. 65. 2. Pass., torapat (for Eorjew, v. sub orjKw): imper. torado Hes. Sc. 449, tarw Soph. Ph. 893, Ar. Eccl. 737: impf. torduny: fut. ordOjcopat Andoc. 27. 43, Aeschin. 68. 23; but orAoopar Il. 20. go, often in Att.; also (from pf. €ornxa) a 3 fut. éorngw and éorhfopuat, v. Elmsl. Ach. 597 (590), cf. @vjoxw, TeOvitw, TeOvAEopar:—aor. éord- Ony Od. 17. 463, Pind., Att. (@orqodpny is always causal, y. supr.): pf. €orapat (d—-) Plat. Tim. 81 D, xateoréarae v. 1. Hdt. 11.196. (From WTA come also ord-a1s, ora-rhp, ora-Opds, ora-ply, oTd-pVv0s, oTH-AN, and with redupl. torn (for ai-oTnpt) ; so from Skt. stha comes the tedupl, ti-shthi-mi; cf. Zd, hi-Sta-mi (sto), stha-lam (locus, i.e. stlocus, stall); from Lat. sta comes sto (stare), si-sto, sta-tus, Sta-tor, sta-tno, sta-men, sta-bulum, sta-bilis; cf. Goth. sta-nda, sta-ths (rémos), O. Norse sta-dr, A. S. ste-de (home-stead) ; Slav. sta-ti, Lith. sto-ti (stand), O.H.G. stam, stedi:—comp. also i-o7-6s, orf-pwv, sta-men, with Skt. stha-vis (weaver).) A. Causal, to make to stand, set, Hom., etc. :—to set men in order or array, meCods 3° éédmbev orijae Il. 4. 298, cf. 2. 525, etc.; so in Att., orjoat Twas Tedevraious Xen. Cyr. 6. 3. 25, etc. II. to make to stand, stop, stay, check, Aadv Be arjooy Il. 6. 4333 véas, trmous, jypsovous ornoa Od. 3. 182, Il. 5. 755., 24.350; pvAnv orhoat to stop the mill, Od. 20.111; orfcev dp’ (sc. #ycdvous) 7.4; oTioe 8 ev ’Ap- vicw [abrév] 19. 188; (from such passages even Damm Lex. p. 2246 concluded that aor. 1 was sometimes intr.):—so in Att., orfoat 72v parayya to halt it, Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 5; pov orfoa Plat. Crat. 437 B, etc.; or, 7a Gupara to fix them, of a dying man, Id. Phaedo 118; o7. 7) mpdcwmoy, Lat. componere vultum, Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 93 oT. Thy Yuxiv én rots mpdypacw Plat. Crat. 1. c. III. to set up, wed€xeas efeins Od. 19. 5743 &yxos pev fp’ €ornoe pepaw mpds klova he set it against the pillar, 1.127., 17. 29; which also must be the sense of €yxos 8 €ornoe Il. 15.126 :—ior. iordy to set up the loom, or fo raise the mast (v. sub fords I and It, where it will be seen that, generally, in the former sense Hom. preferred iordv orhcacOat, in the latter iordv OTHTAL) ; kpyTipas arhoacba to have bowls set up, as a sign of feasting, Od. 2. 431; Ocots .. xpnrijpa arhoacéa in honour of the gods, Il. 6. 528 :—so also later, orjjcat iva ép0dv, or. dp0dv Kapdiay Pind. P. 3. 95,170; opdo or. ént opup@ Id. I. 7 (6). 19; és dp0dr tor. Twa Eur. Supp. 1230; ioravat Adyyas, for battle, Soph, Ant. 146; esp. fo raise buildings, statues, trophies, etc., io7. dvipidvra Hat. 2.110; Tporaia Soph. Tr. 1102; so, orjoagOa rpomata Ar. Pl. 453, Xen. Hell. 2. 4, 7; 7a paxpa Teixy Thue. 1. 69 :—also, in Att., ioravar Twa xadrkouv to set him up in brass, raise a brazen statue to him, Dem. 172. 18., 425.1, 493-17; (so in pf., obros €ornee Al@wos Hdt. 2.141; and in Pass II. e 4 e , LF TLATWOPD — loTos. Arist. Rhet. 3. 9,9): v. infr. B, 111. 1, and cf, dvderpar. 2. to make to rise, to raise, rouse, stir up, kovins .. toradorv dplyAny 11.13.3363 torn be péya Kopa 21. 313; vepeAny eornoe Kpoviav Od. 12. 405, cf. Il. 5. 5233 of battle, etc., puAdmba ornoey to stir up strife, Od. 11. 314; pw orhcavres 16, 292; (so intr., piAoms Eorne the fray begins, Il. 18.172): also in aor. med., orjoac@a pdxny Il. 18. 533, Od. 9. 543 wodépous Hdt. 7. 9, 2; so, tardvat Bony Aesch. Cho. 885; xpavyny Eur. Or. 1529; (and in Pass., @dpuBos icrara: Bows arises, Soph. Ph. 1263): also of passions and states of mind, phy, édnidas orfoas, etc., Erf. O. T. 692. 3. to set up, appoint, Twa Baciréa Hat. 1. 97; tupavvov Soph. O. T. 940, cf. O. C. 1041, Ant. 666; Pass., 6 id Aa- pelov orabels trapxos Hdt. 7. 105. 4. to establish, institute, xopovs, navvuxidas Hdt. 3. 48 ; (so, orheagOa vdpous Id. 2.35; a&y@va h, Hom. Ap.150); orjoat, xopév, OAupmasa, éopray Pind. P. 9. 200, O. 2. 5., 10 (11). 70; Kreplopara Soph. El. 434; xopovs Dem. 530. 27; and in Pass., yop?) iorarat rut Hat. 6. 58. 5. to bring about, cause, dunvody Pind. P. 4. 3543 orijoa: décxndoy xOdva to make its case desperate, Aesch. Eum, 825 ; and in aor. med., Plat. Rep. 484 D, Dion. H. 1. 61. IV. to place in the balance, weigh, ll. 19. 247., 22. 350., 24. 232, Ar. Vesp. 40, Xen., etc.; iordvar ti mpds 7 to weigh one thing against another, Hdt. 2. 65 ; dya0ds iordvar good at weigh- ing, Plat. Prot. 356 B; 10 éyyds kal 70 aéppw orjoas ev TO (vy@ Ib., cf, Lysias 117. 40; ém 7d toravat édAOeiv to have recourse to the scales, Plat. Euthyphro 7 C: Pass., torac@at éni (vyod Arr..Epict. 1. 29, 15. - B. in Pass. and in intr. tenses of Act. to be set or placed, to stand, often in Hom., dyxod or dogor Il, 2. 172., 23.97; dvra Twéds 17. 303; és péocov Od. 17. 447; so, é pécov Hat. 3. 130, and Att.; dvrior or évayrlot éoray Il. :—proverb. of critical circumstances, éal fupod torarat dxpijs Il. 10.173 :—often merely a stronger form of efvat, to be there, to be (like Ital. stare), dpytpeot orabpot év xadnéw Eoracay ov6@ Od. 7. 89, etc.; so, éorarw for éorw, Soph. Aj. 1084; 7a viv. éor@ra=Ta voy, Ib. 1271; enol & adxos Eoraxey Ib. 200; in Att. also with an Adv. to be in a certain state or condition, iva fupopas or xpelas Eoraper . in what case or need we are, Id. Tr. 1145, O. T. 14423 wod rUxns éornxev; Id. Aj. 102: later also, ddixws, dp0@s, evAaBAs. tarac0a: to behave wrongly, etc., Polyb. 17. 3, 2., 33- 12, 3, etc. :—in pregnant sense, ornva és... Hdt. 9. 21; or. és dinny Eur. I. T. 962; or. mapa teva Il. 24. 169:—also (like t(ec@a:, xabitw) c. acc. loci, ti Toir’ aiepiav éarnee wéerpav ; Eur. Supp. 987; orire révde rpiBor Id. Or. 1251: but c. acc. cogn., molay pw’ dvacraow Soxeis .. or fvat; Soph. Ph. 277. 2. to lie, be situated, xara Bopéay Thuc. 6. 104. II. to stand still, stop, halt, GAN dye 5% oréwpey Il. 11. 348, Od. 6. 211., 10.97; opp. to pevyw, 6. 199, etc.: to stand idle, Il. 4. 243: to stop, cease, be at rest, 5. 485., 10. 480; éordva: to be stationary, opp. to xivetoGat, Plat. Theaet. 183 D, cf. Rep.436 D; also, xara xwpnv éordvar Hdt. 4. 97; ofthings, ob phy évradé’ €ornxe 70 mpaypa does not rest here, Dem. 547. 24, cf. 141. 3; dy 4 xoAla orf if diarrhoea be stopped, Arist. H. A. 7.12, 13; c¢. part., ob ornoera: diixhQv Dem. 134. 4:—impers. torara there is a stop, one comes to a stop, Lat. sistitur, Arist. An. Pr. I. 27, 4, al. 2. metaph. ¢o stand firm, Xen. Hell. 5. 2, 233 77 Biavoig Polyb. 21. 9, 3; in part. éornds, fixed, firm, ‘stablé, solid, Arist. G. A. 4.8, 4, Eth. N. 2. 2,3, Metaph. 8. 3, 6 ;—of age, éornevia HaAucia Plat. Legg. 802 C. III. to be set up or upright, stand up, rise up, toravrat xpnyvot ll. 12. 553 dpOat rpixes Eorav 24. 359; torara xovin 2.151; Kdpa 21. 240; of a horse, toracba 6p9ds to rear up, Hdt. 5. 111; toracGar BdOpaw from the steps, Soph. O. T. 143 :—to be set up, erected, or built, orHdn, Hr .. éorHey Ul. 17. 435 3 €ornee rpomaioy Aesch. Theb. 956; pvnuetoy Ar. Eq. 269, etc. ; y. supr. A. Il. 1, and cf. dvaxerpae. 2. generally, to arise, begin, vettos, pvdoms torarat Il. 13. 333-, 18. 171; cf. A. IIL. 2. 3. in marking Time, éapos véov icrapevoio as spring was just beginning, Od. 19. 519; EBddpos éorqret pels the seventh month began, Il. 19. 117; Tov pev pbivovros pnyds, Tod 5’ iorapévoro as one month ends and the next begins, Od. 14. 162., 19. 307, cf. Hes. Op. 778; where, as in Hom., the month is plainly divided into vo parts, phy iordpevos and pbivey ; but in the Att. Calendar, it fell into three decads, phy iordpevos, peowy, p0ivay, first in Hdt. 6. 57, 106, cf. Andoc, 16. 7, Thuc. 5. 54 ;—oxeddv Hon peonuBpia iorara Plat. Phaedr. 242 A. 4. to be appointed, oriva és dpxny Hat. 3. 80; v. supr. A. IL. 3. toridrwp [4], opos, 6, Ion. for éoridrwp, at Ephesus the chief officer, Lat. epulo, rex sacrorum, Paus. 8. 13, 1. iorin, Torin, Ioriata, v. éoria:—toriyroprov, v. éoriardpiov. iorio-Spopéw, to run under full sail, Hipp. 1279. 30, Polyb. 1. 60, 9, Diod. 3. 28. ioriov, 74, (Dim. of fords in form only), any web, cloth, sheet, LXXx (Ex. 27. 9, 15) ;—but in Hom. a sail, and mostly in pl. foria (vy. sub avanerdvvypt), Edxov 8 toria AevKd .. Boedar they hauled them up with ox-hide ropes, Od. 2. 426; réra6’ ioria the. sails were spread, 11. 11, cf. Pind. N. 5.92; ioria orédAcobat, pnptecbat, Kabedciv to lower or furl sail (v. sub vocc.); also Avew, Od: 15. 496; so, later, forioot Xpaada Hdt. 4. 1103 depose xphaGat iariows Ar. Ran. 1000 (y. sub Gxpos) ; mAhpeow or bAois ioriots under full sail, with all one’s might, proverb. in Suid. :—rarely in sing., év 3 dveyos mphaev pécov ioriov Il. I. 481, cf. Pind, P. 1.178; ioriy xararerdoa tia Plat. Parm. 131 B; cf. mémAos I. 2. torto-roréopar, Pass, to be furnished with sails, of ships, Strabo 691. isrioppddos [a], 5, (pdmrw) a sail-patcher, C. I. 9175, Poll. 7. 160. 2. metaph. a meddling, tricky, cheating fellow, Ar. Thesm, 935. iorio-pépos, ov, carrying sails, vais Planud. Ovid. Met. 15. 719. toro-Boets, éws Ion. fos, 5, the plough tree or pole, Hes. Op. 433s ef. 4 as 713 Ap. Rh. 3. 1318 :—proverb., ioroBohi yépovTs véav moriBadde kophyvnv he put a new tip on the old plough, of an old man mairying a young wife, Orac. ap. Eus. P. E. 225 D.—Acc. faroBdny, prob. f.1. for foroBon, Anth, P. 6. 104. toro-86Kn, 4}, the mast-holder, a piece of wood standing up from the stern, on which the mast rested when let down, Il. 1. 4343 v. Schol., who expl, it by ioro@j«n. toro-Kepata, 7, a sail-yard, Orph. Arg. 694, Artemid. 1. 35. a toro-méSn, Dor. —1éSa, 7), a piece of wood set-in the keel to which ihe mast was bound, or, a hole in the keel for stepping ihe mast, Od. 12.51, 162, Alcae. 18. 6. toré-modes, of, =xedcortes, the long beams of the loom, between which the web was stretched, Anth. P. 7. 424, cf. Poll. 7. 36. toromovia, 4, weaving, Clem. Al. 269. , toro-révos, ov, working at the loom, Anth.P.6. 48,247, Manetho4. 423. toropéw, (istwp) to inquire into or about a thing, to learn or know by inquiry, Tt Hdt. 2. 113, Aesch. Pr. 632, Soph. O. T. 1156, etc.; epi tivos Polyb. 3. 48, 12:—to examine, observe, xwpay, médw Plut, Thes. 30, Pomp. 40; tiv ovveciv tivos Id. Cic. 2, etc.:—hence in pf. sense, to know, Aesch. Pers. 454, Eum. 455. 2. c. acc. pers. to inquire of, ask, isropéwy airods “jvrwa divapy éxe 6 Neidos Hat. 2. 19, cf. 3.77: to inguire of an oracle, Eur. lon 1547 :—Pass. to be questioned, xAndévras icropéeaOa «i .. , Hdt. 1. 24; iatopodpevos Soph. Tr. 415, Eur. Hel. 1371. b. fo inquire about one, Aiyobov év0 @xynxev torop& Soph, El. 1101, cf, O. T. 1150, 1156, Eur. Or. 380, Tro, 261. 3: c. dupl. acc. ¢o inquire of one about a thing, Eur. Phoen. 621, Lyc. 1. 4. absol. to inquire, often in Hdt., dxop ior. 2. 293 esp. in part., loropéwy etipicxe 1. 56, cf. 2. 29, etc.; 006 dpay ov igrop&v Soph, O. T. 1484; followed by a relat. word, iordpedy re bTEw tpémq mepryévorro Hat. 1. 122. II. ¢o give a written account of what one ‘has learnt, to narrate, record, Arist. Plant. 1. 3, 13, Theophr, H. P. 4.13, 1, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 7, etc. :—Pass., foropetrax wept Topyous Tae Plut. 2.227 E, cf. Id. Cic.1; cf. isropia 11. TIT. in Pass., toropetaat amedOdvras are represented as having gone, Strabo 464 :— and in Byz. to be represented or portrayed by painters, Suid. s. v. : torépypa, 76, matter for inquiry, question, Anacreont. 4. 9. a narrative, Dion. H. 2. 61. : toropta, Ion. -ty, 9, @ learning or knowing by inquiry, inquiry, ioro- pinot eldévar te mapa Twos Hat. 2. 118, cf. 119; 7 wept pucews ior. Plat. Phaedo 96; and so Arist. called his Natural History at rept ray (dav ior. P. A. 2. 1, 1, al. 4 for. 4 wept ra CGa Ib. 3. 14, 8; 4 Carmi) ior. Ib. 3. 5, 18, etc.; and Theophr. his work 4 try ior.; absol. of science generally, GABios Sorts THs tar. Coxe waOnow Eur. Fr. 902; of geomeiry, Pythag. ap. Iambl. V. P. 89. 2. the knowledge so ob- tained, information, Hdt. 1. 1, Hipp. Vet. Med. 16; joined with dys and yvwpn, Hdt. 2.99; mpos icroptay Trav koway for the knowledge of «., Dem. 275. 27; 4 THs wuxas tor, Arist. de An. I. I, I. II. awritten account of one’s inguiries, a narrative, history, (a sense first traceable in Hdt. 7. 96), al trav wept ras mpages ypapdvrwy tor. Arist. Rhet. 1. 4, 13, Poét. 9, 1, Polyb., etc. ;—properly, acc, to Verr. Flaccus, an account of things seen by oneself, Lat. rerum cognitio praesen- tium. III. in Eccl. the historical, literal sense of Scripture, opp. to dvaywyn I. 4, GAAnyopia. IV. in Byz. portraiture, painting... toropikés, 4, dv, of or for knowledge or inquiry, Plat. Soph. 267 E; Tay mapa Tois GAA ebpnueve tor. well-informed respecting .. or able to recount .., Arist. Rhet. 1. 4, 8. II. belonging to history, historical, mpaypareta cited from Dion. H.; 7a toropiea histories, Plat, Themist. 13:—as Subst. a historian, Arist. Poét. 9, 2, etc.; -wraros Plut, Sertor, 9:—Adv. —xés, in detail, Arist. G. A. 3.8, 1, Strabo 6. toroptoypadéw, fo write history, Dion. H. de Thuc. 42. toroptoypadta, 7, history-writing, Joseph. c. Apion. 19. toroproypadikés, 7, dv, =ioropixds 1, A. B. 734. toropro-ypados, 6, a writer of history, historian, Polyb. 2. 62, 2, Doid. 1.9, C. 1. 2905. 2 (A). 13; but distinguished from the narrator (ovyypa- pevs), as the inquirer into historical facts, Plut. 2. 898 A. toréprov, 76, (iorwp) a’ fact learnt by inquiry: an argument, proof, Hipp. 239. 32., 245. fin. toropt-ans, es, like history, Tzetz. torés, 6, (tarnpe) anything set upright: I. a ship's mast, iordy .. arhoay delpaytes they stepped the mast, Od. 15. 2809, ef, Il, 23. 852; iorods arnodpevo Od. 9. 77, cf. Il. 1. 480; so, fordv aipeoOar Xen, Hell. 6. 2, 29; opp. to #a@apeiv, nd5 8 édov iordy took it down, un- stepped it, Od. 15. 496:—generally, a rod or pole, tards xaAneos Hat. 8.122. II. the beam of the loom, web-beam, which stood upright, instead of lying horizontal as in our looms; (hence a web is said kara- Bijvas dg’ iorod, Theocr. 15. 35): then, generally, the /oom, Il. 6. 491, Od. 1. 357, etc.; lordy ornoac@a to set up the beam and so begin a web, Hes. Op. 7773; lord érotxec0a to traverse the loom, because the weaver was obliged to walk to and fro, Il. 1, 31, Od. 5. 62; v. sub madipBapos—Later, when the horizontal loom came in, the vertical loom was called iords épos, Artem. 3. 36: the latter is still used in India for tapestry, as also at the Gobelins manufactory. 2. the warp that was fixed to the beam; and so the web itself, iardv tparve Il. 3. 125, etc.; iuarin pv bpatvecner péyay torov, vinras 8 dddveoke, of Penelopé, Od. 2. 104; fordv peraxepifec@a Plat. Phaedo 84 A; 6 éxrerpnpévos f. the web cut from the loom and finished, opp. to 6 mpos éxropny, Artemid. |. c.:—also a web of a certain size, a piece, boviwy larot tpirxidtor Polyb. 5. 89, 23 pets isTovds KabeAciv Strabo 378 :— hence orhywv the warp :—for the several parts, v. sub piros, mviov, Kaipos, Kava, avTiov, ayvudes, 3, ig. dpaxvay spiders’ webs, ra 714 Bacchyl. 13. 4. the comb of bees, Arist. H. A. 9. 40, 8. the shin-bone, leg, Opp. C. 1. 408. ioré-rovos, ov, stretched in the loom, mnvicpara Ar. Ran. 1315. toro-rpiBis, és, busied with the mast; but v. ioorpiBys. teroupyeiov, 74, =lorwy, Gloss. toroupyéw, to work at the loom, Soph. O. C. 340, Ath. 618 D. yia, 9, weaving, Plat. Symp. 197 A, Alciphro 3. 41. toroupyucds, 4, dv, of or for weaving, Poll. 7. 35., 10.126; % ior. (sc. réxvn) =foreg., Greg. Naz. Adv. —xds, Poll. 7. toroupyés, 6 or #, a worker at the loom, a weaver, Joseph, B. J. 1. 24, 3, Dion. Alex. ap. Eus. P. E.774 A. , ov, bearing a mast, Hesych. totpiwyv, wvos, 6, the Lat. histrio, C. 1. 6659 ¢. “Iorpos, 6, the Ister, Danube, first in Hes. Th. 339 :—Adj. Iorptavos, Ton. —yvés, 4, dv, of or from the Danube, Scythian, Hat. 4. 78, etc. ; ‘Iorpiava mpdowna tattooed masks, like the faces of Scythian slaves, Ar. Fr. 44; ‘Iorpiavat Seipal bright-coloured Scythian tunics, Theognost. in Lob. Aglaoph. 1258; “Iorptavibdes in Hesych. tore, 3 sing. imperat. of ofda; cf, irrw. , @vOS, 6, @ weaver’s room, Lat. textrina, VarroR.R.1I. 2, 21. torwp or terwp, opos, 5, 4, (v. sub fin.):—a wise man, one who knows law and right, a judge, mt ioropt meipap édéoGat Il. 18. 501; toropa & *Arpeldnv “Ayapeuvova Oclouev dupe 23. 486; Floropes arbitrators, Inscr. Boeot. Keil 3.12; O¢ods mavras ioropas movedpevos Hipp. Jusj. init., cf. Poll. 8.106; dxewv iorwp Anth. P. 8. 24. II. as Adj. knowing, learned, Hes. Op. 790; torwp in it, @dAs h. Hom. 32. 2; xaya Todd’ tarwp bmepiotwp Soph. El. 850, cf, Eur. I. T. 1431, Plat. Crat. 406 B.—Cf. cvviorwp. (The Gramm. direct it to be written forwp, as in ioropéw, etc., Schol. Il. 18. 501, Lex. m. mvevpdrov : it no doubt comes from the Root FIA (ef5w), for it has the F in Hom. and is so written in Boeot. Inscrr., v. supr.; Curt. com- pares Skt. vid-vas (gnarus), Goth. veit-véds (udprus).) ioxdbiov [a], 7d, Dim. of ioxds, Ar. Pl. 798. IIt. 5. loyaGbo-kdpuov, 76, a mixture of figs and almonds, Arr. Epict. 4. 7, 23; also in pl., Ib. 3: 9 22., 4. 7,22. &o-meAns, ov, 6, a dealer in figs, Pherecr.’A-ya0. 3, Nicoph. ap. Ath. 126 E :—fem. toyxaS6mwAts, s5os, Ar. Lys. 564. toyado-pdyos, ov, eating figs, Hesych. s. v. kpadopayos. toyad-avys, ov, 6, a buyer of figs, Pherecr.’Ayad. 4. toy-arpos, ov, (tax) staunching blood, Theophr. H. P. 9. 13, 1: 70 icx. a styptic, Luc. Tim. 46 :—ioxa:pos, }, a plant used as a styptic, Theophr. H. P. 9. 15, 3, Schol. Il. 11. 846. toxatve, f. 1. for icxvaive, q. v. toyadéos, a, ov, poet. for laxvds, thin, kpopvoto Admos Od. 19. 233 :— thin, paltry, wepévat Manetho 6. 434 :—later, ioxvadéos, Eust. Od. 1. c. toxavaw, Ep. lengthd. form of icxdave (cf. sq.): Ion. impf. icxava- ackoy Il. 15. 723. To hold back, stay, stop, 5. 89 (v. sub -yepupa) ; viv 8 émet loxavdas (sc. pe) Od. 15. 346:—Pass. to hold back, wait, vnvotv ém.. cedpévor ioxavéavro Il. 12. 38; ody piOov moridéypevor loxavéavrat Od. 7. 161, cf. Il. 19. 234. II. intr., c. gen., to cling to, and so to long after, desire eagerly, péya Spépov ioxaviwcay Il. 23. 300; loxavéav quddrnros Od. 8. 288; also c. inf., puia ..icya- vag danéew Il. 17. 572; loxavdwow idsiv Procl, h. Ven. 2. 6: cf. éxo- pat, dvréxopat.—Several glosses of Hesych. recognise a form lyavda, cf. E. M. 478. 44; and Dind. prefers this form in signf. 11: it occurs in Babr. 77. 2 (tupod 8 adamant ixavdoa); and “Iyava, the name of a Sicil. town (in Steph. Byz.), is of the same Root ; cf. also fyap. ioyxdve [a], Ep. lengthd. form of icxw (v. foreg.):—to check, hinder, déos, iaxdver Evbpas Il. 14. 387; Atavr’ ioxavérny 17. 747; cf. Kart oxdva :—c. gen. to keep back from, xptos dvépas Epyov ioxave Hes. Op. 493 :—also in Theophr. C. P. 4. 13, 6 (ubi olim icxaiver). ds, dos, 4, (loxvds) a dried fig, Ar. Eq. 755, Comici ap. Ath. 27 F, 75 B, etc.; those of Attica were famous, cf. C. I. 123. 24, and v. mapd- onpov:—also of over-ripe olives, Eust, 1963. 55- 2. a kind of spurge, Euphorbia Apios, Theophr. H. P. 9. 9, 6. II. (laxw) that which holds, an anchor, Soph. Fr. 669, cf. Luc. Lexiph. 15. : ioyuaiixés, 7, dv, (loxtov) of the hips, pOicts Hipp. 139 F. of persons, subject to lumbago, Diosc. 1. 35, Galen. for lumbago, énimdacpa Diosc. 2. 205. toytdlw, to walk with much motion of the hips, to straddle, Byz. Pass, to be parted (like the hips), Galen, loxuiixés, 4, dv, =ioxtadieds, Theophr. ap. Ath. 624 B. toyids (sub. vécos), ados, }, pain in the hips, Hipp. Aph. 1248, Aér. 293. II. a kind of thorn, Galen. etd 76, (v. igds) the hip-joint, in which the thigh turns, car’ icyiov, év0a re pnpds iaxig erpisersi, KorvAny 5€ TE pay Kad€ovaw Il. 5. 305, cf. 11. 339, Od. 17. 234. 2. in pl. the fleshy parts round the hip-joint, the haunches, hams, of a boar, ioyta re -yAovrovs re Il. 8. 340; of a lion, mAeupds re wal loxia 20. 170; but commonly of men, « Tay pypav és te 7a loxla Kal rds Aamdpas Hdt. 6. 75; so in Plat. of the haunches or hams of a horse, émt 7a loyia dupw Kabi- oat Phaedr. 254 C, cf. E; so of men, loxiaw piow.. pds rds dva- mavoes xphotpov Arist. P. A. 4.10, 55; 7a loxia capeddn énoincey fh gvots| Ib. 543; hence, birds and other animals are said to have no oxta, Ib. 52, 58, cf. dvicxios. II. in later Anatomy, ioxfor is the projecting part of the os innominatum, upon which man rests when sitting, Galen. 2. 772., 4. 252 (Kiihn). toxroppwyixéds, 7, dv, (Aut) with broken hips, limping, orixos icx. au iambic line with spondees in the 2nd, 4th, or 6th places, Gramm, ap. _ Tyrwh, Diss. de Babrio p.17: of. xwAlapBos, 4 II. III. good Il. Pe istérovos — isxuporrabéw. tis knowing a thing, skilled ioxvatve, fut, -a@ (ovv-) Eur, I. A. 694: aor. toxvava Aesch. Eum, 267, Ar., Ion. -yva Hat. 3. 24, Hipp.:—Med. (v. Karta xvaivw):—Pass., aor. loxvdvOnv Hipp. 176 E, 184 G: (ioxvés). To make dry, withered, lean, to dry up, éredv Tov vexpov loxvjvact, of a mummy, Hdt. 3. 24, cf. Hipp. Aph. 1253, Aesch. Eum. 267, Plat. Gorg. 521 F, ete. ; ioxy. 7d o@pa Hipp. Art. 799, cf. Plat. Polit. 293 B, Arist. Metaph. 8. 6,7: to drain, émwe Bpirov icxvaivev Aesch. Fr. 123. 2. metaph. ¢o reduce a pain, Hipp. Aph. 1254; opvdavra Ovpor laxvaivew to bring down a proud stomach, Aesch. Pr. 380; 73 devov Kat dapOopay ppevav toxvaive Eur. Or. 298; tiv TéExvqv oldodcay ioxvava I refined the art (Tragedy), Ar. Ran. 941.—In the metaph. sense, icxaivw is a constant y. 1. (as in the compds, xanioxvaive, cvvicxvaive), but v. Pors. Or. 292 and cf. ioydve fin. toyvaidéos, v. sub loxadéos. isyvavots, ews, }, a making thin or lean, Eust. Opuse. 129. 23. icyvavrixés, %, dv, fit for reducing, Arist. Probl. 5. 40, 4. ioxviota, %, thinness, leanness, Arist. Metaph. 4. 2, 3., 8. 6, 7- ioxvacpés, 6,=icxvavors, Hipp. Fract. 762. ioyvo-eréw, to dispute subtly, Eccl. toyvo-Kidtipadys, es, (el50s) with slender reed, Eust. 1165. 12. toxvé-Kwhos, ov, with thin limbs, Antyll. ap. Orib. p. 142 Matth. toyvo-Aéoyys, ov, 5, a subtle disputer, Posid. ap. Suid. v. émorarys. toxvo-oyéw, (Adyos) to dispute subtly, Cyrill. ioxvopi0ew, =icxvoroyéw; toxvo-pi0ia, 7, subtle dispute, Cyril. ioyvo-mdpetos, ov, with withered cheeks, ypats Anth. P. append. 336. toyxvo-rovés, dv, making lean, Eust. Opusc. 128. 33. icyvé-ous, mod0s, 5, 4, thin-footed, Schol. Od. 9. 464. toxvés, %, dv, dry, withered, pvddcia Ar. Ach. 469 ; laxvds tupds, opp. to xAwpds, Poll, 6. 48. 2. of persons, thin, lean, meagre, Hipp. Aph. 1246, etc.; loxvol ead opnxddes Ar. Pl. 561; loxvol at dovroe Plat. Legg. 665 E; so also, iox. ets a spare habit of body, Plut. Lycurg. 173 of the voice, icxvdy pOéyyer0ar to speak thin or small, Luc. Nigr. 5 oe 3. weak, feeble, mvedpa Hipp. 1131 G. 4. metaph. of style, thin, dry, plain, icxvds yapaxryp, the Lat. tenue dicendi genus, Dion. H. ad Pomp. 2, cf. Dem, Phal. 190 :—Adv., icxvd@s eimeiv to speak plainly, drily, Polyb. 1. 2, 6; also, isyv@s idetv Lycurg. 157. fin.; ioxvas éornxas slight, Hipp. 196 B. (From icxavw, for isxavés, com- vey squeezed up, cf. Hipp. Fract. 765: hence isxvaivw, ioxvaréos, oxas. ioxvo-creAns, és, lean-shanked, Diog. L. 5. 1, Galen. toxvo-civberos, ov, thinly or loosely put together, Eccl. toxvérys, 770s, 7, thinness, leanness, Hipp. Aér. 293, Arist. H. A. 7.1, II. 2. of style, plainness, Lat. tenuitas, ioxv. ppdcews, of Lysias, Dion. H. de Vett. Cens. 5.1: ef. ioxvds. 3. thinness, weakness of pronunciation, opp. to mAareacpéds, Quintil. 1.5, 32. iexvoupyijs, és, (*épyw) finely wrought, Schol. Soph. Tr. 64. loxvodwvew, fo have a thin voice or to stammer, Epiphan. ioyvé-wvos, ov, thin-voiced, shrill-voiced, much the same as Aewrd- govos Hipp. Epid. 1. 955, cf. Galen. g. p. 73, Plut. 2. 89 B, 721 C:— but, II. in other places it seems to mean checked in one’s voice, stuttering, stammering (in which sense icyépwvos might be expected ; but the Mss, and Gramm. are unanimous for isxvo-, and Arist. says of of icxvdpovor, that trxovrar Tod pwveiv, Probl. 11. 35, cf. 10. 40. II. 55, A. B. 100), icxv. kat rpavdds Hat. 4. 155:—so toxvodevia, Ion. -{y, Hipp. 1040 B, Arist. Probl. 10. 40., 11. 30, etc. ioxvéw, =icxvaiva, to make dry, Arist. Probl. 5. 40. ioxvoticés, 7, dv, of or for drying, divapus Diosc. 5. 126. ioxopévos, Adv. (trxw) with checks or hindrances, Plat. Crat. 415 C. icx-oupéw, to suffer from retention of urine, Aretae. Sign. M. Diut. 2. 4. toxoupla, 7, retention of urine, Galen. ioxdqwvos, v. lexvdqawos I, ioxupyors, ews, 7%, bold affirmation, Hipp. 26.19: (qu. textpiots?). icxipretw, Desiderat. from sq., to venture to affirm, Hipp. Art. 780, Galen. 12. p. 290, ioxipifopar, fut. Yodua Lys. 106.17, Isocr. 363 D: aor. ioxipiod puny Thue. 5. 26, Plat.: Dep. To make oneself strong, to be strong, T@ cwpart Plat, Gorg. 489 C; ioxupitiuevos ig’ trnav olinpos gaining force from the impetus of the horses, Xen. Cyr. 6. 4,18; tox. els TOUS dabeveis to use one's strength, Arist. Eth.N. 4.3, 26,cf.Probl. 28.11. IL. mostly, to use one’s whole force, contend stiffly or stoutly, eis Twa against one, Arist. Eth. N. 4. 3, 26; twtp d0Awy Acl. N. A. 15.15: to persist or continue obstinately in doing .., c. part., Thuc. 7. 49: esp. by word of mouth, ¢o affirm, maintain stiffly, obstinately, c. acc. et inf., Thuc. 3.44, Isae. 83. 2; 7e Plat. Gorg. 495 B; so, lay. Ort .., ws... Thuc. 4. 23., 6. 55, Plat. Theaet. 172 B; wept ros Id. Soph. 249 C. 2. to put Jirm trust in a thing, hold fast by it, rO5e Lys. 137. 433 Tats Badhjxas Isae. 35-13; TO voy, 7H mapackevp Dem, got. 8., 1081. 16, cf. Hy- perid. Euxen. 20: absol., Antipho 138. 23. ioxipurés, , ov, stiff, stubborn, obstinate, Plat. Theaet. 169 B; so Meineke in Alex. Mpooxed. 1, for icxuptoxos. toxtproréov, verb, Adj. one must maintain stoutly, Plat. Rep. §33 A. toxtprorixds Exw, =icxupoyvwpovéw, Galen. 12. p. 290. icxipo-yvopwv, ov, stiff in opinion, Arist. Eth. N. 7. 9, 2, Diog. L. 2. 24:—hence isxipoyvopovéw, to be stiff in opinion, Eust. Opusc, 252. 51; and toxtpoyvwpoctvn, 7, obstinacy, Joseph. c. Apion. 1. 22. loxiipé-Beros, ov, fast-bound, Schol. Aesch. Pr. 148. toxipo-Qdpak, Gos, 6, }, witha strong breastplate, Hesych, ioxipo-KdpSios, ov, stout-hearted, Hesych. icxipé-pixos, ov, obstinately fought, maxn Byz. ) loxtpo-miléw, =dSermvonadéw, Schol, Arat. 71, ° U bout LoXUPOTARKTNS — (Teds loyxipo-rAnKrys, ov, 6, wounding severely, Hesych. loxtpoovéw, fo make strong, strengthen, Thy divamv Diod. 17. 65 ; tiv émxparedy Tivos Polyb. 28. 17, 7; absol., of arguments, Clem. Al. 427 :—Pass., iaxupomoteirar Td Oeppdv Arist. Plant. 2.9, 43; 79s Suva- arelas icxupomooupévys Diod, 14. 9. icxipotrotyats, ews, 7), asseveration, Clem, Al. 601. icxipo-rrovds, dv, strengthening, E. M. 480, Schol. Aesch. Cho. 416, etc. loxipo-mérns, ov, 6, a hard drinker, Hesych. toxipé-mous, todos, 6, %, strong-footed, Hesych. icxipo-mpaypov, ov, doing mighty deeds, Schol. Il. 5. 403, Paul. Alex. toxipopprfos, ov, (sifa) with strong root, Theophr. C. P. 2. 12, 3, etc. toxipés, 4, dv, (laxvs) strong, mighty, of personal strength, opp. to doGevns, Soph. Ph. 945, Eur. Fr. 292, etc.; so of things, iox. Bédos Alcae. 15; fedpa Hdt. 8. 12; of armies, loxupd paday~ Xen. Cyr. 7.1, 30; of places, strong, like éxupdés, Hdt. 1. 76, Thuc. 4. 9, Xen. An. 4. 6, 11, etc.; 70 loxupdv strength, vigour, Thuc. 3.6, Xen. Eq. Mag. 8, 24; 7a icxupérara your strongest points, Thuc. 5.111; 7a THs TéAEws tox. that in which the strength of the state lies, Aeschin. 63. 9 :—hard, x0av Aesch, Pers. 310; and of food, indigestible, Hipp. 817 C. 2. mighty, powerful, ddoxos Ards Aesch. Supp. 302; méAcs Eur. Supp. 447; eds Ar. Pl. 946; ix. 7d modAdv Hdt. 1. 136; of ioxupot év Tots méAcow Xen. Ath. 1, 14. 3. forcible, obstinate, stiff, stubborn, inveterate, excessive, avrodnin, YOxos Hdt. 1.94., 4.29; dvaryraln Id. 1.74; af Alay ix. Tipptat violent, ive, Id. 4.205; Opkos, dvayxat Antipho 140. 33-144. 15; vdonua Hipp. 396. 34; Bye Thuc. 2. 49; yéAws, émbv- pia, etc., Plat. Rep, 388 E, 560 B, etc.; vdpos tox. severe, Hdt. 7. 102, Lyc. 145.93 €x@pa Plat. Phaedr. 233 C; yvmpn ioxuporépy stronger, more positive, Hdt. 9. 41; tpémm @ dy Suvnobe icxuporarw Thue. 5. 23; ward loxupdy by main force, opp. to ddA, Hdt. 4. 201., 9. 2. II. Ady. -pas, strongly, with all force, éyxeto@at Thuc. 1. 69, etc. 2. very much, exceedingly, with Adjs., Hdt. 4.108; €@vos isx. péya Ib. 183; d:@put ivy. Badeia Xen. An. I. 7, 15, etc.; with Verbs, icx. 5ecOa, dvidoOat, poBeicOa Id. Cyr. 8. 3, 44, etc.: Comp. —orépas or —drepov, Hdt. 3. 129, Xen. Cyr. 4.5, 12, etc.: Sup., in answers, loxupérara ye most certainly, Lat. maxime vero, Id. Occ. I, 15. isxipo-cdparos, ov, able-bodied, strong, Schol. Opp. H. 1. 360. toyxiporys, nT0s, }, strength, might, Dion, H. 3. 65, Philo 1. 128. toxips-dpwv, ovos, 6, %, strong-minded, Dio C. in Mai Coll. Vat. 2. 540. ioxtps-pwvos, ov, strong-voiced, Antyll. ap. Orib. 97 Matth. icxdps-xpws, wros, 6, 7, =icxupocwparos, Schol. ll. 5. 289. toxips-pixos, ov, strong-souled, Hesych. loxipow, fut. wow, to make strong, strengthen, LXX (Isai. 41. 7): in Joseph. A. J. 13. 1, 3, &xUpwoe is restored. toys [v. sub fin.], vos, 4, (perh. akin to éxw, taxa) strength of wih Hes. Th. 146, 823, and Att.; d«pat loxvos Pind. O. 1.156; devdv laxvos Opacos Soph. Ph. 104; tiv loxiv dewd kat Thy popny Plat. Symp. 190 B;_ mpds ioxdy dpora mepuews Xen. Symp. 5, 5: in pl. loxves Kat doOévera Plat. Rep. 618D; xara owparow icxvs Kai eb- poppias Id. Legg. 744 B; also, icxds yas Soph. O. C. 610; of a fortified place, Thuc. 4. 35 2. strength, might, power, force, @cGv Aesch. Theb. 226, Soph. Aj. 118; i. BaotAefa Aesch. Pers. 590, cf. 12; Smov yap Ll. cvfvyovar wat Sinn might and right, Id. Fr. 311 a; pvaews t., of Themistocles, Thuc. 1. 138; ém péya eAGeiv icxdos to a great height of power, Id. 2. 97, cf. 1. 85, etc.; mapa loxdy rijs Suvd- pews beyond the amount of its power, Id. 7.66; t. waxns fighting power, Id. 2.973 Ll. rHs éAmlbos Id. 4. 65, cf. 2. 62. 8. main force, brute force, nar’ isxtv perforce, opp. to déAw, Aesch. Pr. 212; mpds iaxvos Kpdros Soph. Ph. 594; mpds loxvos xapw Eur. Med. 538; bd rHs toxvos Epicr. “AyTir, 2. 10; loxvi Thuc. 3. 62, Plat. Prot. 332 B. 4. motive force, Arist, Phys. 7. 5, 3, Cael. 1. 7, 16, al, II. a force of soldiers, Xen. Cyr. 1. 4, 19. [# in gen., etc.: in nom. and acc. sing. 0 in Pind. N. 11. 41, but always 0 in Att., e.g. Aesch. Theb. 1074, Cho. 721, Soph. Aj. 118.] ioxiots, ews, ), a being strong, strength, Philo 1. 354. ioyxdriptos, a, ov, strengthening, papyaxa Hipp. 416. 38; but Erotian. &. 384) read ioxnrnpios =toxatpos: y. Littré 4. p. 312. xv [v. sub fin.]: impf.tcxvoy Ar. Vesp. 357: fut. loxvow Batr. 280, Att.: aor. foxioa Soph., etc.: pf. textxa Aeschin. 23. 33:—Pass., aor. kat-taxvOnv Diod.: (iaxus). To be strong in body, Soph. Tr. 234, Xen., etc.; ds péyorov toxvce arpatod Soph. Aj. 502; iax. Tots ow- pacw Xen. Mem. 2. 7,7; 7 o@pa toxder Antipho 140. 29; toxviv 7’ abrds énavrod, i.e. laxupdrepos Fv 4 7a viv, Ar. Vesp. 3573 lox. & vécov to be recovering, Xen. Hell. 6. 4, 18. 2. to be strong, mighty, powerful, prevail, Aesch. Pr. 510, etc.; mAéov, petCov tox. Eur. Hec, 1188, Ar. Av. 1606 :—iox. Twi to be strong in a thing, copia av?) irtp dvipds loxday Pind. Fr. 33; Opdoe Eur. Or. 903; lox. tut mpds rwa Thuc. 3.46; lox. é« movnpias Dem.20.26; 80ev or Hep laxvover Thuc, 1. 143., 2.133 lox. wapd tit to have power or influence with one, Id. 8. 47, Aeschin. 28. 9, Dem. ggo. 21, etc.; év maou Id. 983. 18. b. not of persons, ¢o prevail, Spxos iox. Aesch. Eum. 621; TaAnbes yap ioxDov Tpépw Soph. O. T. 356; Adyos Arist. Pol. 5. 9, 5 s—impers., loxvee ri por xara Twos it avails me somewhat against him, Dem. 416. 20, cf. 791. 20:—c. inf., 6 katpds lover .. mparrecy Id. 214. 5, cf. Plut. Pomp. 58. 8. to be worth, Lat. valere, v. sub icxo ur. 2. [0 always in Att., Soph. Aj. 1409, O. T. 356, Ar. Vesp. 357, Av. 488, 1607; later, # sometimes in pres. and impf., Anth. P. 5, 167, 212; even toxitea Theod. Prodr. p. 89.] toxw, a form of éxw (only found in pres., and in impf. act. and pass., Ep. inf. inyévevat, ioyévev Od. 22. 330, Il. 17. 501), but in Hom. and Hes. with a limited sense, to hold, check, curb, keep back, restrain (but ’ 46, 715 v. infr. 11), 5éos toyer Twa Il, 5. 812, 817, etc.; %. rd dvdyen Od. 4. 558; Oupdr ¢. évt orndecar Il. 9. 256; ioxer dv pévos Hes. Th. 687; ov5 &rt anxol taxovor (the calves) Od. 10. 413; [pay] ioxe pecOpa Il. 17. 750; tmmous 7. 15. 456, etc.; so also Hdt. 3. 77, and Att.:—c. gen., xeiuappov ..toxer dAwdoy keeps it from.., Il. 5. 90; gtpos ft. tds to keep it from him, Eur. Hel. 1656; icy. rijs pois, Tod iévae Plat. Crat. 416 B, 420E; so, tox. twa ph mpdooey Eur. I. A. 661, cf. éxa A. 11,8; toxe daxdv ordépa ody Id. H. F.1244; 70 toxoy the hindrance, Xen. An. 6. 3, 13. 2. intr., trxe hold, stay, stop, Aesch. Cho. 1052; of ships, ¢o lie at anchor, Thuc. 2. 91, cf. 7. 353 of rivers, to stop, Arr. An. 5. 9:—but in this intr. sense the Med. or Pass. is used by Hom., icxec6 ’Apyetor, pi) pevyere Od. 24. 54, cf. Il. 3.82; ioxeo check thyself, be calm, 1. 214., 2. 247, Od. 22. 356, etc.; and also hold! be still! 11. 251 :—c. gen., toxeaOak twos to desist from a thing, Od. 18. 347., 20, 285., 24. 323, 531; but, toxero év rovry, impers., here it stopped, remained as it was, Xen. An, 6. 3, 9. II. to hold fast, hold, [navéva] ayx60 orf Geos ll, 23. 762, cf. Soph. Aj. 575, Ph. 1111 :—metaph. to hold, keep, maintain, ebpnpiay Id. Tr, 178; eaniow t. re Ib. 138; tadrny yaar Id. Ph. 853; émorheny Plat. Theaet. 198 A: of outward matters, d50vn toxe thy yaorépa affects it, Hipp. 567. 38; tov aio’ dmdaros toxe Soph. Aj. 256:—Pass., pOdy toxeo@at Isocr. 386 D. III. after Hom., like éxw, fo hold or have in possession, Hdt. 2. 39, Thuc. 3. 58: to have a wife, Hdt. 5. 92, 2:—of women, icy. éy -yaorpi or simply toxew, to be pregnant, Hipp. 1014 F, etc.; also, werd rodrov toxe: KAeduBporoy she has Cl., Hadt. 5. 41:—then also, toxe xapod prvjotw Soph, Aj. 520; Ajorw 7. to be for- getful, Id.O.C. 584; Gdyos i. Id. O. T. 10315 yrmwpny t.=yvavar, Id. El. 214; 1. 5odAov Biov Id. Tr. 302; vodv Plat. Symp. 181 D; érwvupiay, Oapaos, déos, etc., Id. Parm, 130 E, etc.:—c. dupl. acc., iox. tiv. fdvevvov Soph. Aj. 1301; Ocdv ob Anfw mpoordray icxev Id. O. T. 882. 2. to have in it, involve, pOévoy t. GABos Pind. P. 11. 45 :—so, al YHpor tdédravrov icxovow are worth, Polyb. 5. 26, 13; % 5¢ pra toxe Aivpas bdo kat Huscov Joseph. A. J. 14. 7, 1; but prob, ioxvovar, ioxve should be restored in these places, v. icxvo 3. 3. intr. to be, like éxw, dmorépos toxev Plat. Polit. 307 E; «6 tox. Id. Rep. 411 C; ade Id. Phil. 38 C; xaderwrepov Thuc. 7. 50. ic-wvia, 7), (dvi) sameness of price, fair price, Ar. Pax 1227. ivwvipta, 4%, sameness of name, Apoll. de Pron. 269 C. ic-dvipos, ov, (Svoua) bearing the same name as, c. gen., Kadeiv Ta igdvupoy éupev parpwos Pind. O. 9. 96. [#-, Nic. Th. 678.] tows, Ady. of ioos, equally, in like manner, Soph. Ph. 758, Plat. Legg. 805 A, etc.; ws loalrara Ib. 744C. II. equally, with reference to equality, tows AaBetv 7 Arist. Pol. 3. 13, 12: fairly, equitably, tows kat Kad@s Dem. 59.19; ove i. o5t wodcrin@s Id. 151. 4; 1. wat dieaiws Dion. H. 10, 40; ov tows Polyb. 24. 2, 7. III. according to appearances, probably, perhaps, Hdt. 6. 124, Aesch. Pr. 317, Soph. Ph. 144, etc.; od« tows, GAA’ dvrws Plat. Legg. 965 C;—in Att. often joined with dy or 74x’ dy, e.g. Soph. Aj. 691, 1009, Plat. Apol. 31 A; auguo- Bnrotvres mpooriWéaow det 7d tows wat taxa Arist. Rhet. 2. 13, 2 (cf. raya); and acc. to Mss. of Aesch, Supp. 727, Eur. I. T. 1055, fows is put for ay with the optat., but merely by error of the Copyists, v. W. Dind. in Steph. Thes. :—tows pév .., tows 5€.., perhaps so or so, Xen. Cyr. 4. 3, 2; tows, tows Ar. Nub. 1320, Dem. 37. 23:—often used, not to express doubt, but modestly to soften or qualify a positive assertion, Soph. O. C, 661, Plat. Phaedo 61 C, 67 A, Phaedr. 233 E, al., and often in Arist. IV. with numerals, about, Ar. Pl. 1058, Damox., ap. Ath, 15 B. igwors, ews, 4, (lodw) a making equal, comparison, Gloss. Tradia, Ion. ty, }, Italy, Hdt. 1. 24, etc. [First syll. made longein dactylic verse, Soph. Ant. 1119, Call. Dian. 58, as Z¢alia in Virgil.] Tradtdlw, fut. dow, to live in Italy, Hesych., Phot. s *TraXt8ys, ov, 6, post. for “Iradiwrys, Anth. P. 9. 344. Traktxés, 4, év, Italian, Plat. Legg. 659 B, etc.:—pecul. fem. TraAls, ios, Anth. P. 7. 373 :—%) ‘IraAis (sc. yi) ="Iraaia, Dio C. 54. 22. I s, ov, 6, an Italiote, i.e. a Greek inhabitant of Italy, Thuc. 6. 44, etc., cf. SameAuhrns :—fem. -Grs, cos, Adj. Italian, Thuc. 8. 91, Strabo 243; —wrucés, 7, dv, Ep. Plat. 326 B, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 15, *Tradés, 6, an Italian, Strabo 210:—as Adj., Anth. P. 7.741, etc. [Y, but @ metri grat., Jac. Anth. p. 505; as also in “IraAls, ‘Iradia.] iridés, 5,=7aidpos (Hesych.), whence Italy is said to be called, Timae. 12, cf. Varro R, R. 2. 5, Festus s. v. "IvaAla. (Orig. Feradds, cf. Skt, vatsas, Lat. vitulus; Oscan Vitelitt (Italia) ; Slav. tele.) trdpevopat, Dep. fo be irapdés, Julian. Or. 7. p. 210, Jo. Chrys. tripta [7], , =lrapérns, Lxx (Jer. 49. 15). trapés [T], 7, dv, (ue ibo, trys) headlong, hasty, eager, kives Aesch. (Fr. 234) ap. Ar. Ran. 1292: bold, ready for anything, reckless, like Lat.. audax, irapdv rat roApnpoy % tovnpia Dem. 777. 3; ir. mpés Tt Arist. Probl. 30. 6, Plut. Galb. 25 ; trapwrepos mpds Adyous Id. 2, 1041 A; 7d trapdy =irapdrns, Id. Fab. 19, etc.; 70 tr. rijs puxijs Id. Rom. 7; iva~ pov 71 dedopKés Luc. Fugit. 19 ; ir. dvriBAdwew Acl. N. A. 17.12. Adv. —pas, Alex. Kvi5. 1, &aidp. 2; Comp. -wrepoy, Plat. Legg. 773 B; irapwrepov 7 Big xpioOa Dem. 414. 1: Sup. -wraros, Luc. Icar. 30. irapérys, nros, }, headlong boldness, recklessness, Lat, audacia, Plat, Polit. 311 A, Plut. 2.715 D; ovyypapéws Polyb. 12. 10, 4. ; tréa [v. trvs fin.], Ion. tréy, also trety (Ap. Rh. 4. 1428), %, @ willow, Lat. salix, Il. 21. 350 (cf. @Aecixapmos), Hdt. 1. 194, etc. ; Aeven and HéAawa Theophr. H. P. 3. 13, 7- II. a wicker shield, covered with gypsum, ox-hide, or copper, a ¢arget, Eur. Heracl. 375, Supp. 695, Tro. 1193, Cycl. 7, Ar. Fr. 720. TII.=iwmovpis, Diosc. Noth. 4. (Cf. frus, olgos, oiova; the F appears in Irvs (v. sub y.) as also 716 in Skt. vitika (a band, etc.); Lat. vitex, vimen, vitis, vitta; A.S. widde (withy) ; Lith. vitols (willow); O.H. G. wida (weide) :—the Root is to be found in Skt. vé, va-ydmi (texo), Lat. vi-eo.) _tréivos [tr], 7, ov, of willow, Lat. salignus, ir. paBdos Hat. 4. 67, Theophr. H. P. 5. 3, 4. Il. made of withy rods, wicker, ir. cdnea Theocr. 16. 79., 22. 190. iréov, verb. Adj. of efyi, one must go, Hipp. Acut. 390, Plat. Rep. 394 D, Legg. 803 E. -tredy [7], dvos, 6, (iréa) a willow-ground, Geop. 3. 6, 6. trphos, 7, ov, expl. by Hesych. éxpovos, ob« éfirndos Aesch. Fr. 37. Urys, ov, 6,=lrayés, Ar. Nub. 445, Plat. Symp. 203 D; tzas ye ép & of morrol poBodvra: lévat Id, Prot. 349 E, cf. 359 C. , =iréov, Ar. Nub. 131, Diphil. ap. A. B. 100. _imnnikés, 4, 6v,=irapds, irnrudraroy 5 Ovpods mpds Tods wuvdvvous most ready to encounter dangers, Arist. Eth. N. 3. 8, 10. irov, 76, a kind of mushroom, Theophr. H. P. 1.6, 13. trés, 7, dv, (elt ibo) passable, Anth. P. 7. 480. irpia (not izpia, Arcad. 119. 18), 74, certain cakes, Anacr. 16, Solon 37, Soph. Fr. 199, Archipp. “Hp. 11; made of sesamé and honey, Ath. 646 D; yet distinguished from onoapuodyres by Ar. Ach. 1092; and from peAirrw@para by Diose. 4. 64; in Dion. H. 1. 55, made of wheat, and yet distinguished from rupapodyres by Ephipp.”Epn8. 1. Again the Roman Jibum is said to have been composed é« yaAakros irpiwv wal pédcros, Ath. 125 F. Properly, therefore, they seem to have been cakes of meal (v. Hesych.), varied by different admixtures. - itpiveos, a, ov, like irpa, Anth. P. 6. 232. P _ Urpto-addys, ov, 6, a dealer in irpia, Poll. 7. 30; cf. xeSpomuaAns. _ tra, Boeot. for torw, 3 sing. imperat. of ofa, esp. in phrase irrw Zeds Zeus be witness! says Cebes the Theban in Plat. Phacdo 62 A; O7Badev irrw Zebs, and irre “Hpaxdfjs, says the Boeotian in Ar. Ach. 911, 860; cf. Ep. Plat. 345 A, Valck. Phoen. 1671 (1677), and v. torwp. » itis [v. fin. ], vos, }, like dvrug, a circle or rim made of willow (cf. iréa) : used by Hom. (only in Il.) always of the felloe of a wheel, dpa truv képyy Il. 4. 486, cf. 5. 724 :—the outer edge or rim of the shield, Hes. Sc. 314, Hadt. 7. 89; or the round shield itself, Tyrtae. 11, Eur. Ion 210, Tro. 1197, cf. Xen. An. 4. 7, 12:—frus BAepapwy the arch of the eye- brows, Anacreont. 15. 17; dyxiorpoy ir. Anth. P. 6. 28, cf. Opp. H. 5. 133; tr. ris wAevpas a rib, Galen. 2. p. 681. 9. [tris Il. ll. c., but tréat 21. 350.) *Irvs, vos, 6, I/ys, son of Tereus and Procné, Trag.: in trisyll. form *TIrtdos, son of Zethos and Aédon, Od. 19. 522. ([Usu. tris, Blomf. Aesch. Ag. 1113; but in dactylic metres also 0, Soph. El, 148, Dind. Ar. Ay. 212. : ; trw [7], 3 sing. imperat. from eft, let him or it go, Hom.; in Att. al- ‘most an exclam. Jet it pass ! go to! Soph. Ph. 120, Elmsl. Med. 780. - Travia, as, or -tds, tddos, ts a name of Athena, from Jton in Thessaly, Xpucaryisos Irwvias Bacchyl. 22; “Irawidbos Call. Cer. 74. ~ té, exclam. of surprise, Theognost, Can. 161, Jo. Alex. rov. wap. 37. ivyyucés, 7, dv, (fuyg) magical, picts Damasc. de Princip. 351, 370. i popew, = Bonbpopuéw, Bondéw, Boeot. acc. to Hesych. _ tuyn, 3, cs leenets, a howling, shrieking, yelling, as of men in pain, Orac, ap. Hdt. 9. 43, Soph. Ph. 752: the hissing of snakes, Nic. Th. 400, Opp. H, 1. 565. La Ep., but t-in Soph. 1. a ivypés, 6, (iv{w) a shouting, shout of joy, Il. 18. 572: also a cry of pain, shriek, Aesch. Cho. 26, Eur. Heracl.126; cf.ivyn. [i in Ul.; tin Trag.] ~ tuyé, ivyyos, 4, (iw) the wryneck, Iynx torquilla, so called from its cry, while the Engl. name comes from the movements of its head, Arist. H. A. 2.12, 4, P. A. 4. 12, 35, Ael. N.A.6.19. The ancient wizards and ‘witches used to bind it to a wheel, which they turned round, believing that they drew men’s hearts along with it and charmed them to obedi- ence; hence it was much used to recover unfaithful lovers. This opera- tion was called €Awew tvyya éni ri to set the magic bird or wheel a-going against some one, Xen. Mem. 3. 11, 17 (ubi v. Schneid.); so, tuyf Axe twa worl 6Opa Theocr. 2.17; and, metaph., €Axopa tvyye Hrop as by the magic wheel, Pind. N. 4. 56; &omep amd ivyyos TO Kddre édxdpevos Luc. Dom. 13; so, in Pind. P. 4. 381 ivyya rerpaxvapoyr is prob. the wheel with the wings and legs of the wryneck spread out so as 4o form four spokes, spread-eagle fashion, cf. Anth. P. 5. 205. 2. metaph. a spell, charm, TH om AnpOévres ivyy: Ar. Lys. 1110, cf. Lyc. 310, Diog. L. 6. 76 :—also, stronger word for 1400s, a passionate yearn- ing for, dyaév érdpaw Aesch. Pers. 989. [7 Ep. and Pind. ; T Att.] ivfw, aor. tvfa Pind. :—to shout, yell, wohAd pad’ ivfovaw Il. 17. 66; of 8 Wovres éxoyro Od. 15. 162 :—in both places of people shouting to scare away a wild beast, cf. Call. Fr. 507 :—later ¢o yell or cry from grief or pain, fo cry out, shout, tvgev dpovhry dxe Pind. P. 4. 422; used by Aesch. only in imper., iv¢. dmorpoy Body Pers. 280, cf. 1042, Supp. 808, 873; part. id{wv Soph. Tr. 787. . (From the Interjection ii, qv.) [%, Ep. and Pind.; fin Soph. Tr. 787; « uncertain in Aesch.] ~ tuxris [f], 08, 6, (iva) one who shouts or yells: also, a singer, whistler, piper, Theocr. 8. 30, in pot. form iverd. ipos, 7, ov, also os, ov: (ip, tpios):—stout, strong, mighty, stal- wart, of bodily strength, and therefore dors ip8. H. 18, 204; Kpart ex’ iO. 3. 3363 19. worapdv 17. 749; Body tp. képnva 18. 23; but mostly as epith. of heroes, 3. 336., 18. 204, etc.; and so, 10. poyai, xepadal 1. 3., 11.553 of Hades, Od. 10. 534., 11. 47::—also, of women, stout, comely, goodly, such as heroes’ wives. should be (see Od. Io. 105, 106), ip0. Bacirea 16. 332; GAoxos mapdxorrs Il. 5. 445, Od. 23. 92, etc.; Ovyarnp 15. 364; Unpw 11. 287.—When Hom. has it of women he uses the fem. termin. ipdipy: but he says tpOipor Yuxat, reparal, speaking of men, : ™ : iréivos — ixOvoraAtov. Te (perh. an old dat. of ts, q.v.), Ep. Adv. strongly, stoutly, mightily, often in Hom., but only with four Verbs, ips dvaoceyv to rule by might, Il. 1. 38, etc.; Toe paxecOar to fight valiantly, 1. 151; ige Sapjvae to be tamed by force, 19. 417, Od. 18.156; tp wrapevos Il. 3. 375 ;—s0, ie Binodpevos Euphor. 61; and in late Ep., Lehrs Q. Ep. p. 306.— Freq. in prop. names, e.g. ‘Ipdvacoa, ‘Ipryéveca, “Ipiysvn, Ipidapas, *Idtedos, etc. iptyévera, 7), strong-born, mighty, epith. of Artemis, Paus, 2. 35, I, Hesych, IL, as prop. n. Iphigeneia, Agamemnon’s daughter, the Homeric “Ipidivacca, Stesich. 28, Trag., etc.; though the two are distinguished by Soph. El. 157:—also called ‘Ipryévn, Eur. El. 1023 ; *"Iqus, Lyc. 324. [tp-. Aesch, Ag. 1526 has ~yevela, as dvoia for avo evedcia for evedea.} ipi-yévyros, ov, produced by might, dp Orph. Fr. 2. 28. "Idtxparides, ai, a kind of shoes, called from the Athen. general Iphi- crates, Diod. 15. 44, Alciphro 3.57, Damasc. in Phot. Bibl. 342. 31. idvos, a, ov, (idx) Ep. Adj., often in Hom., but only in phrase pa pia fat, goodly sheep, Il. 5. 556, al. ipvov [Z], 74, a kind of herb, perhaps spike-lavender, Ar. Thesm. 910, Fr. 473, Theophr. H. P. 6. 6, 11. ixavaw, v. icyavdw sub fin. ixap, 76, vehement desire, Aesch. Supp. 850, ubi v. Schol. ixOva, Ion. vy, 3, (ixOvs) the dried skin of the fish pivn, like our shagreen, Hipp. 914 D, Galen. II. a pot, perh, for pickled fish, C. 1.8345 c. ixOvdfopat, Dep. =sq., Anth. P. 7. 693. ixOuvdw, (ids) to fish, angle, mostly used in Ep. pres. and impf., iyOudacKov yvapmrois dyxiorpoiot Od. 4. 368: c. acc. to fish for, abrov & ixouda.. deAdivas 12. 95, cf. Opp. H. 1. 426:—also in Med., Lyc. 46. II. to sport (like fish), deAgives .. €Oveov lyOvdovres Hes. Sc. 210. III. Pass. to be made of fish, txOum@pevos dpros (vulg. dpyés) Horapoll, 1. 14. - ixOvBodets, éws, 5, =ixOuBddos, Nic. Th. 793, Call. Del. 15, Anth. P. 7.504.,10.9, cf. Ath. 116 A. ixOuBodéw, to strike fish, harpoon them, Anth. P. 7. 381, 635. ixOu-Bddos, or, striking fish, catching fish, ix9. unxav7 of the trident, Aesch. Theb. 133; at@uat Anth. P. 6. 23. 2. as Subst. a fisher, angler, Ib. 7. 295., 9. 227. II. pass., x8. Oppa a spoil of speared Jish, Ib. 6.24; i6. defrva Opp. H. 3. 18, ix8v-Bépos, ov, fish-eating, Anth, P. 7. 652. ix6U-Boros, ov, fed on by fish, Opp. H. 2. 1, Nonn. Jo. 21. 8o. ixOu-yévos, ov, producing fish, Nonn. D. 26. 275, ixOvBrov, 7d, Dim. of ixOvs, a little fish. [¥, Ar. Fr. 344.8, Theo- pomp. Com. #v. 1. 3, Anaxil. May. 1, al.; but 0 in dactylics, Anth. P. II, 405, Archestr, ap. Ath. 311 C.] ixOv-Békos, ov, (5éxopar) holding fish, omupls Anth.P. 6. 4. ixOun, %, Ion. for ty @va, ixOufpara, 74, (iva) fish-scales : hence any small substances, filings, Hipp. 877 D, 880 F, G, etc; the sing. only in 880 F. ixOunpés, a, dv, (ixOus) fishy, scaly, i.e. foul, dirty, mvaxtoxot Ar. Pl. 813, Fr. 449; (wpds Luc. Lexiph: 5; ov éarw ixOunpdv nothing A Ley a Diphil. Eumop. 1. 21 :—2) mvAn 7) ix@. the fish-gate, LXX eh. 3. 3). ixOuta, 7, (ix us) fishing, Procl. V. Hom. p. 9. ixOvixés, 7, dv, =ixOunpds, 7a ixO. (dia Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 215, Lxx (2 Par. 33. 14) :—also ix@uivés, 7, dv, Ael. N. A. 17. 32. ixOv-Kevtpov, 74, a trident, Poll. 10.133; ix@vdxevtpov, Hesych., Suid. ixOu-péBwv, ovros, 6, a king of fish, Marc. Sid. 54. ixOu-vopos, ov, ruling-fish, Opp. H. 1. 643. ix0vo-Bodets, ixOuoBédAvs, =ix6vB8-, Phot., Eust. 191. 33, etc. ix0u6-Bpwros, ov, eaten by fish, Plut. 2.668 A. ixOvo-edis, és, fish-like, Nemis Hdt. 7. 61. ixOvéets, eco, ev, (ix OUs) full of fish, fishy, mévros, “EMAjoTovros Il. 9. 4, 300; ixOvdevra KéAevda, i.e. the sea, Od. 3.177; puxds ixO., of the Bosporus, Ar. Thesm. 324: jishlike, 5éuas Opp. H. 3. 543. II. consisting of fish, Opn Opp. H. 1.666; Bédos Anth. P. 6. 223. ix0vé-Cnp, Onpos, 6, the fish-beast, of the crocodile, Eccl. ixOvo-Ofjpas, ov, 6, a fisherman, Cyrill.; so tx@vo-Onpeuris, od, 6, Manetho 4. 243; -Onpyrhp, fipos, 6, Anth. P. 7. 702. ixOvo-Onpia, 7, jJishing, Eust.(?): % tx@voOnpirn (sc. réxv7), Poll. 1. 97. ix0ué-Onpov, 70, =xvedAdjuvos, Diosc. Noth. 2. 194. ixOvo-Kévraupos, 6, , half-man and half-fish, of Triton, Tzetz. Lyc. 34. : ix0ué-KoAha, }, fish-glue, i.e. isinglass, Diosc. 3. 102, Galen. 2. in Plin., the fisk which, produces it, a kind of sturgeon, 32. 27. ix0vo-Krévos, ov, fish-hilling, Philes Anim. 8o. 6. ix0u0-Aoyéw, to speak of fish, Ath. 308 D, 360 D. ixOuo-Avpns [Ad], ov, 6, the plague of fisk, comic epith. of a fish-eater, at $s pernicies macelli, Ar. Pax 814. ’ txOvo-pavris, ews, 6, one who pr i . f hel. c AB. 5. prophesies by means of fish, Ath. 333 D, ix0ud-popdos, ov, fish-shaped, Eccl. ixOv-onris, (Bos, fem. Adj. for broiling fish, écxépa Poll. 6. 88., 10. 95. ixOvo-médarva, irreg. fem. of sq., Pherecr. Inv. 1. ixOvo-neAqs, ov, 6, a fishmonger, often in Com., as Ar. Fr. 344. 10, Antiph. Bovr. 1.7, Alex. Aopx. 1, al, :—fem. ty@vémwAts dyopd the fish- market, Plut. 2. 849 D :—tx@vorwAéw, Poll. 7. 26. ix@vo-mwdta, %, Jishmongering, Ath. 276 F, Plut. 2. 668 A; unless in both Places 7a tyOvordmdua should be read with Schneid. ixOuo-rrddrov, 76, the fish-market, C. 1. 2058 B. 4; -amwActov in Plut. & 2. 668 A, Hesych.; both forms occur in Schol. Ar, Ran, 1100. ix Oveppoos —"Iwvrri. tx Ovdppoos, ov, contr. -pous, ovr, (féw) running or swarming with fish, norapés Timocl. 1. ixOvo-rpodetov, 74, a fisk-pond, Moschio ap. Ath. 208 A, cf. 541 F. ixOvo-rpodikéds, 7, dv, of or for keeping fish, Geop. 20. I. ixOv0-rpddos, ov, feeding fish: full of fish, Plut. Lucull. 39. ixOvovAkés, 4, (EAxw) an angler, Phot., Suid.: in Hesych., and Theo- doret. Epist. 76, written eticlochas ix0vopiiyéw, to feed on fish, Arist. H. A. 9. 14, 4. ixQuopiyia, 4}, a fish diet, Eust. 135. 19. ixOvo-payos [a], ov, eating fish, Ath. 345 E:—oi ‘Ix0. dvdpes the Fish- eaters, a tribe on the Arabian Gulf, Hdt. 3. 19, cf. Strabo 769 sq., Paus. I. 33, 4; another on the Persian Gulf, Strabo 720, ixOvohopéw, to produce fish, E. M. 117. 26. ix0v0-popos, ov, producing fish, xpynvides Ctesias in Phot. Bibl. 46. 32. 2. carrying fish, thoia LXXx (Job. 40. 26). ixOu-miiyys, és, piercing fish, dyxorpoy Anth. P. 6. 27. ix@us [v. sub fin.], dos, d: acc. iy@dv, in late Poets also ix@va Anth. P. 9. 227, v. sub fin.: voc, ix6v Erinna 2, Crates Onp. 1. 9:—pl. ix Aves, acc. lLy@vas, contr. ix@ds Od. 5. 53, both forms being used in Com., cf. Teleclid. "Ap. 1. 6, Archipp. “Iy@. 14, with Antiph. Bour. 1. 12, Ephipp. iA, 21, so also in Arist., etc.:—dual ix@0 Antiph. TIpoBA. 1. 15: cf. opps. A fish, pnorns Il. 24, 82, cf. 21. 122, 203, Od. 14. 135, etc.:—proverb., dpavérepos t&v ixOvav Luc. Gall. 1, Indoct. 16, cf. €\Aés :—metaph. of a stupid fellow, Plut. 2. 975 B. II. in pl., of ix@ds the fish-market at Athens, mapa rods ix6ds Ar. Vesp. 789; &v trois tx@vor Ran. 1068, Antiph. Kvoio@, 2: cf. Adxavoy, pupov, etc. [d in disyll. cases ; % in trisyll. cases and in all compds.; the exception ixOiv, Theocr, 21. 49, is removed by Meineke’s emendation ix@v’.] ix0tou-Aniornp, jpos, 6, a stealer of fish, Anth. P. 7.295; al. ix@voa-, but v. Lob, Phryn. 687. ix0v-réKos, ov, producing fish, cited from Nonn. ix0t-payos [%], ov, =tyOvopdyos, Anth. P. g. 83. ix0u-dovos, ov, killing fish, Opp. C. 2. 444. txOuabys, es, =i Ovoedis, Arist. P. A. 4. 13, 29, al. :—Adv. -8as, Id. H. A. 4. 9, 10. IL. full of fish, Mpyn Hat. 7. 109. ixpa, 7d, prob. corrupt for i@ua, Hesych.; v. Koen. Greg. 218. ixvatos, a, ov, (ixvos) following on the track, of Themis and Nemesis, h. Hom. Ap. 94, Lyc. 129, Anth. P. 9. 405:—Strabo (435) seems to have derived it from Ichnae in Thessaly, where was a temple of Themis. ixvdopat, Dep., =ixvetw, Hesych., Suid. ixveta, 1, a casting about for the scent, of hounds, Xen, Cyn. 3, 7. ixv-ehdrys, v. sub ixvnAarns. ixveupa, 76, a track, Poll. 5. 11. ixvetpov, ovos, 6, the tracker; hence, 1, an Egyptian animal of the weasel-kind, which hunts out crocodile’s eggs, the ichneumon, Pharaoh's rat, Herpestes ichneumon, Arist. H. A. 9. 6, 5, Nic. Th. 190, Plut. 2. 966 D; also called ixveurfs, Hdt. 2.67, Nic. Th. 195. a.small kind of wasp, that hunts spiders, Arist. H, A. 5. 20,°1., 9. I, 13, cf, Plin. 10. 95. ixvevots, ews, 7), a tracking, Xen. Cyn. 3, 4., 10, 5. ixvedrepa, 7, fem. of ixveurjp, C. I. 1907- ixveuréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be searched out, cited from Philostr. ixveurap, fipos, 6,=sq., Opp. C. 1. 76, 449, 467; as Adj., ixv. rapads Nonn. D. 46. 115. ixveuras, od, 6, a tracker, hunter, Poll. 5. 10, 17: ixv. «dav a hound that hunts by nose, cf. Anth. P, 5. 16:—Iyvevrai was the title of a satyric play by Sophocles. IL. =ixvevpov I, v. sub voc. ixveutixés, 7, dv, good at tracking, ndoy Acl. N. A. 6.59, Arr. Epict. I, 2, 34. Adv. -«@s, by scent, Eust. Opusc. 174. 51. ixvetw, (ixvos) to track or trace out, hunt after, seek out, Soph. Aj. 20, O.T. 221, 475; ixy. Ofpas kvoi Eur. Cycl. 130; «dves ixvevovoar hunt- ing by scent, Plat. Legg. 654 E: metaph., xara aod thy Yipov ixy. seeking for a vote of condemnation, Ar. Eq. 808; ixv. 7a AexOévra. Plat. Parm. 128 C; riv Tod Kadod piow Id. Rep. 401 C; ixvedes .. ris ip’ éyw ..; Epigr. Gr. 227. 2. ixv. dpn to hunt the mountains, Xen, Cyn. 4, 9.—In Pind. P. 8. 48, Béckh reads ixvéay (following in the traces of) metri grat., but Hermann’s olxvéwy is better. : ixvnAdréw, to track out, Philo 1. 12., 2. 475, Eust. Opuse. 128. Io. ixv-nAdrys [@], ov, 6, (CAatvw) one who hunts by the track, a tracker, GAnOeias Plut. 2. 762 B:—poét. iyveAdrys, Anth. P. 6. 183, Plan. 289. Hoes Pea ews, }, a following on the track, Eust. Opusc. 301. 59. ixvnAdrla, 4, =foreg., Poll. 5.11; leg. ixynAacia, Lob. Phryn. 507. ixvnAattkés, 4, dv, =iyvevrixds, Schol. Soph. Aj.8. Adv.-«as, Tzetz. ixvov, 7d, Dim. of ixvos only in form (v. Chandler, Gr. Accents § 340), a track, trace, footstep, ixve épevv@vres kbves ticav Od. 19. 430; per’ ixvia Baive Oeoto followed on her track, 5.1933 pet’ dvépos ixve’ épev- vov Il. 18. 321; ar’ tyvid Twos Baivew Ap. Rh. 1. 5753 érecOai Tit nar’ txviov Q. Sm. 8. 361; ixviov é5pacac0a to plant one’s step, Anth, P. 6. 70. 2. metaph. a trace, remnant, ayAains Ib. 58. ixvo-Barys [2], 5, going on the track, name of a hound, Ov. Met. 3. 107. ixvo-BAGBis, és, hurt in the foot, Manetho 4. 500. ixvo-ypadia, %, a tracing out: a ground-plan, Vitruv. I. 2. § 20, ixvo-mé5n, }, a kind of fetter or trap, Anth. P, 6. 109., 7. 626. ixvos, evs, 74 (v. sub fin.) :—a track, footstep, Od. 17. 317, Hes, Op. 678, Hat. 4.82, Pind., etc.: metaph. a footstep, track, trace, kar’ ixvos mharay dpavroy Aesch. Ag. 695; é5 ravrov éhOav ..tyvos Adywv Id, Pr. 845; tyvos caxav punraroven Id. Ag. 1184; ixvos wadadas Svar éx- Haprov.airias Soph, O. T. 109; ixvos Tetxéwv Eur. Hel. 108 ; ixvn Tav mAnyav Plat, Gorg. 524 C; Ta Tay KovdiAwv 1. Aeschin, 84, 22:— Phrases, ixvos odbs Gcivat, Lat, vestigia ponere, Bur. Or. 234, 1. T. 752; 717 Oéo0ar Anth. P. 7. 4643 Aewroy ¢. dpBuAns ridere step softly, Eur. Or. 140; &. évavréAAew modds Id. Phoen. 104; ¢. épeidecv Anth. P. 5. 301; év ixveai tivos 65a vépew Pind, N. 6. 27; war’ ixvos docew, diwKev Soph. Aj. 32, Plat. Rep. 410 B, cf. Eur. Hec. 1059; eis ixvn riwds iévac Ep. Plat. 330 E; t. persévat, peredOeiv Id. Phaedr. 276 D, Theaet. 187. E; txvous mpoadmreaOat to keep close to the track, ld. Polit. 290 D; ixvn browias els riva péper Antipho 119. 7, cf. Xen. Cyn. 6, 15, etc. 2. poét. a foot or leg, opp. to wAévn, Eur. Bacch. 1134. 3. the hard sole of the foot, Galen. 12.195 A: the sole of a shoe, Hipp. Art. 827, cf. Arr. Indic. p. 330. ixvo-cKoméw, to look at the track or traces, év oriBowwt rots epois Aesch. Cho. 228 ; ixy. «at orpiBevew 7d wédAov Plut. 2. 399 A. ixvockonta, 1), a looking at the tracks, Plut. 2. 917 F. ixap [i], Gpos, 6, ichor, the etherial juice, not blood, that flows in the veins of gods, Il. 5. 340;—Ep. acc. ix@ for ix@pa, -yéAw for yéAwra, ipa for idp@ra, Il. 5. 416:—later simply for blood, Aesch. Ag. 1480. LE the watery part of any of the animal juices, Lat. serum; of the blood, Plat. Tim. 83 C, Arist. H. A. 3. 19, 12 (in pl, Ib. 9), P. A. 2. 4, 8; of gall, Hipp. 396.8; of milk, like dppds, Arist. H. A. 3. 20, 6; the gravy of underdone meat, Archestr. ap. Ath. 399 E; the juice of leaves, Diosc., 1.172; but also, 2. of corrupted juices, a discharge, matter, Lat. pus, Hipp. V.C. 911; iy@pes bdapets trwypor, from women in childbirth, Arist. H. A. 7. 9, 2. III. the pcison of serpents, Id. Mirab. 141; of naphtha, Ib. 97. ‘ ixwpo-edqs, és, like serous matter, atpa Hipp. ap. Galen., Arist. H. A, . 19, 8. ixwpoppotw, (jéw) to run with serous matter, Hipp. 200 E; later, txwp- poéw, Diosc, 3. 26, Erotian, etc. ixwpadys, es,=ixwpoedys, Hipp. 494. 3, Arist. H. A. 7. 7, 3. th (not Gp), 6, gen. inds [7], nom. pl. tres: (frropat):—a worm that eats horn and wood, Od. 21. 395; also, that eats vine-buds, a kind of cynips, like i¢, Theophr. H. P. 8. 10, 5, C. P. 3. 22, 5, Strabo 613. tao, v. sub tropa. " thor, tmAos, Acol. for tyor, tYnAos, Sappho, v. Ahr. D. Aeol. p. 81. _ tos or tipés, 6, a tree, the cork-tree, or perhaps the Pyrus Cretica, Theophr. H. P. 3. 4, 2. 2. in Hesych., =sigads, tw, subj. of e2ue (ibo). i@, contr. for idov, imper. of idopat. i, an exclamation, as in Lat. io ¢riumphe !—put single or double, rarely three times, as Aesch. Supp. 125; esp. in invoking aid, id pdmapes, iw Gcot Id. Theb. 96, Soph. Ph. 736; i id Mardy Id. Tr. 221; id Baeyar Eur. Bacch. 578. 2. often also of grief or suffering, oh! id Svora- vos Soph. Ant. 850; id pot po Id. O. C. 119, etc.; and c. gen., id, marép, ood ..TaY Te Téxvow Aesch. Ag. 1305; iw pot wévov Eur. Phoen. 1289; i& id rpavydror Ar. Ach. 1205. II. with other Interj., id if Aesch. Ag. 1485 ; id & & Soph. O. C. 224; @& iw Id. El. 840. [T; yet sometimes 7, in anap. and dactyl. verses, Aesch. Ag. 1455, 1537, Soph. EI. 150, Eur. Alc. 741.] I [f], "Iods, 4; acc. Iody Hdt. 1. 1; voc. "lof Aesch. Pr. 635, etc.:— Jo, daughter of Inachus. . IL. a name of the moon at Argos, Eust. ad Dion. P. 92. iwd, =i, Aesch, Pers. 1070. idya, v. lov; idvya. ; iwyf, %, Ep. word like oxénas, shelter, Bopéw in’ laryp under shelter from the north-wind, Od. 14. 5333. ¢f. émmyat, eupararyn. (Prob. akiné to dyvupu, like pyypiy and perh, d«r7, cf, Schol. Od. 5. 404). ‘ imBns, es, (tov, «ldos) violet-like,dark-coloured, Hipp. Progn. 40: smelling like violet, Diosc. 5.171. iddys [7], €s, (lds, €250s) rust-like, rust-coloured, Theophr. Lap. 37, Callias’ ap. Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 41, Diosc. 5.92. II. acrid, Hipp, Vet. Med. 16: poisonous, Ath. 42 A: 70 iddes, of envy, Plut. 2. 565 C. ; iwt, %, (v. atw) any loud sound: the shout or ery of men, mept ppévas HAv0' ivf Il. 10. 130, Ap. Rh. 3. 708; the sound of the lyre, wept 5é opeas HAvO’ lon) pdppuyyos Od. 17. 261; of the wind, i7d Zepipoio iwijs by the roaring blast of Zephyrus, Il. 4. 276., 11. 308 ; of fire, aupds dijoro iwhy 16, 127; of footsteps, Hes. Th. 682; ¢he clang of arms, Coluth. 56; i. éuorBds, of Echo, Nonn, Io. 21. 90; i. Aarwis the Latin tongue, Ib. 19. 102 :;—Ep. word, used also by Soph, Ph, 216, in a chorus, Bod tndwndv lway. iwxh, 9, (Sidew, cf, AS I. 10):—rout, pursuit, odre Blas .. imedei- icayv obre iwnds Il. 5. 521.—Iwxh is personified with “Eps and ’AA«h, 5.740. ‘There is also a metaplast. acc. (as if from iw), wévov aindy idkd re Saxpvdeccay 11. 601:—cf. iwxpds, twfts, mariwfes, mpolwéis. iwAla, }, (ia) =pjpyn, Hesych. tav, idvya, Boeot. for éyw, &yarye, Apoll. de Pron. 324 B. 4 *Twv, wos, 5, Jon, the son of Xuthus (or Apollo) and Creiisa, from whom sprung the Ionian race, Hdt. 7. 94., 8. 44, Eur. Ion, etc.:—“Iwves, ot, the Ionians, v. Clinton F. H. 1. pp. 53 sq.:—Iwvia, 4, their country, Aesch, Pers. 771. tovd, as, f (fov) a violet-bed, Lat. violarium, Ar. Pax 577. 2. the violet-plant, Theophr. H. P. 1. 9, 4, etc. II. = xapaimrus, Apollod. ap. Ath. 681 D, Schol. Nic. Al. 56, v. Schneid. Ind. Theophr. *Tevilw, to speak Ionic or use Ionian fashion, Phot., Schol. Clem. Al. "Iwvixés, 4, dv, Ionic, Ionian, i.e. effeminate, Ar. Pax 46, Plat. Com. Aax.1.14, etc.; Adv.-Kas, in the Ionic fashion, i.e. softly, effeminately, Ar. Thesm. 163 :—r0 "Iwvixdv pérpov a metre consisting of lonic verses, as Horat. Od. 3. 12 :—pecul. fem. Iwvis, é50s, Jonian, Paus. 6. 22,7, etc.; also "Iwvuds, 450s, Ath, 681 D, and cited from Strabo, iwviokos, 6, Ephes. name for the fish xptoodpus, Archestr.ap. Ath, 328 C. "Iwnori, Ady. in Ionic, like Taort, A.B. 572. 718 *Tovo-Kdy , ov, 5, one who sings wilh scft Ionic modulations, Plut. 2.539 C: cf. aoparoxdunrns. ‘wv6-kicos, a debauchee, Cratin. Incert. 68; cf. cutoAdnav, twkis, ews, ),=laxn (q. v.), Hesych., Suid. bs, 6, (dpa, odpos v. It. 11. 5):—a keeper, watchman; proverb., évrds or é«7rds twpod elvat to be in or out of safety, Hesych., Suid.; Att. word acc. to Apoll. de Pron. p. 330. i@ra, Callias ap. Ath. 453 D, v. sub ¢:—proverb. of anything very small, the smallest letter, a jot (the Hebr. yéd), Ev. Matth. 5.18. iwraktopos, od, 6, a laying too much stress upon the t, e.g. to say Troiia, Maiia, Spald. Quintil. 1. 5, 32, Isid. Etym. 1. 32, 5. II. repetition of t, as unio Funo Fovi jure irascitur, Marc. Capell. § 514. twrite, to write with an iota, Moschop. m. oxéd. p. 55 :—s0, lwroypa- éw, Schol. Ar. Vesp. 921, etc.; often in Gramm. twxpds [7], 6,=iaxh, HAOov dv’ lwxpdv through the rout, Il. 8. 89, 158 ; lai dowérov iwxpoto Hes. Th. 683, cf. Theocr. 25. 279. tow, anos, 6, a small fish, Dorio ap. Ath. 300 F, Nic. ib. 329 A. K K, *, Kata, 76, indecl., tenth letter in Gr. alphabet: as numeral «’=20, but *=20,000. The numeral #d (21) is used as one syll. in a metrical Inscr. published by Keil in Bergk’s Philol. Journal (1846), p. 934, like (hoaca érn ¢’, at the end of an hexam. I. « is the tenuis guttural mute, related to the medial y and the aspir. x. In the Indo-Europ. languages, the Gr. «, Lat. ¢ (#), g, Skt. &, kh, & or $=Gothic and Germ. initial #, and (sometimes) medial g:—as, wapdia, xéap, Lat. cor, Skt. kyid=Goth. hairto, O. Norse hjarta, A.S. heorte, O. H. G. herza ;—xddapos, L. calamus, culmus, Skt. kalamas =0.H.G. hkalam, halm ;—xavvafis, Skt. ganam=O.N. hanpr, A.S. hgnep, O. H. G. hauf ;—nepaadn, L. caput, Skt. kapalas=Goth. haubith, ON. hifud, A:S. heafod, O. H. G, houpit ;—Kxvw («vv-ds), L. canis, Skt. Svi (for svan),=Goth. hunds, O.H. G. hund, etc. ;—vvg (vuxr-ds), L. nox (noct-is), Skt. nak, naktis, = Goth. nahts, A.S. niht, O. H. G. naht ; —béka, L. decem, Skt. dasan, =Goth. taihun, O.H.G. zehan';—dxro, L. octo, Skt. ashtéu=Goth. ahtau, A.S. eahkta, Germ. acht. II. changes of « in the Gr. dialects, etc. : 1. Ion. « replaces x, as KiOdv béopar BaPpaxos KvOpn for xiTd@v Béxopar Bdrpaxos xiTpa :— so the older Att. changed xvdos yvdrrw péyxw into xvdos Kvawrw péey- Kw. 2. Ion. « sometimes represents 7, as Kou KoTe Kws, etc., for mov Tore ws, etc.; so, toxe=éonev, twos Lat. equus, cxddAov Lat. spolia, nwdAny Lat. poples; cf. also al-méAos, mas and €-xao-ros. 3. Dor. « is interchanged with 7, as Sa, GAAoxa, Tijvos for bre, dAdAore, xeivos. 4. in Thessaly, « was prefixed to some words, as kawavy for daqvn, Ath. 418 D. 5. + before « (as also before -, x, é) is pronounced like our ng.—Cf. xérma, «a, Dor. for Ion. xe, =Att. av, (as yu, Dor. for ye), Ar. Ach. 737, 799, Eq. 201, Lys.117, Thuc. 5.77, Theocr. [On the d, v. Elmsl. Ach. 806.] ka-Baivwv, Dor. for kataB-, Aleman 22; cf. eamerov. 0s, 6, (KaBos) a gluttonous fellow, Cratin. Madd. 7. KaBAAANs, ov, 6, a nag, Lat. caballus, Germ. Gaul, Plut. 2, 828 E:— — rr 6, a horseman, and kaBadAapicés, 7, dv, of or for cavalry, Byz. K4PBaXe, Ep. for xaréBare, aor. 2 of karaBdddw. waPBaduKcbs, 7, dv, Lacon. for karaBAnrinds, good at throwing, ovdels éyévero kaBBarixwrepos, of a Lacedaemonian, Plut. 2. 236 E, ubi v. Wyttenb., cf. M. Ant. 7. 52 :—«aBBadrixh (sc. téxvn), %, the art of wrestling, Galen. 6. p. 38. is, v. sub karaBalvw :—KaBBacta, v. sub xaraBaocla, ot, oi, the Cabeiri, divinities worshipped by the Pelasgians in Lemnos and Samothrace, whence these ancient mysteries spread over all Greece: they were represented as dwarfs with large genitals, and were called sons of Hephaistos, as being masters in the art of working metals, Hdt. 2. 51., 3. 37, Strabo 470 sqq. The origin and progress of the Cabeirie worship has been examined by Lob. Aglaoph. pp. 1202 sq., Welcker Aeschyl. Trilogie—KafPewpibes, ai, and KaBeipa, %, the sisters and mother of the Cabeiri, are mentioned by Strabo 472.—Steph. Byz. cites the Adj. forms KaBepatos, a, ov (also in Paus. 9. 25, 5-7), KaBe- pixés, 7, dv, fem. KaBetprds, ados, Cabeiric ; also the Dep. Kupeypud- fopat, to hold the Cabeiric mysteries :—also KaBetpetrat, oi, Paus.9. 25, 8 ;—KaBeiptov, 7, their temple, Id. 9. 26, 2; (pva, 74, their mys- teries, Hesych. obvpa, 7), a swing-door (from Lat. cavea, @dpa), Math.Vett. p.47. KdBos, 6, a corn-measure, answering to the Greek xoivi¢, LXx (4 Regg. 6. 25), Geop. 7.20. (Prob. from Hebrew Kab.) Kay, rare poet. form for Kara before y, nay yoru for kara yévy, Il. 20. 458; Kady yévev Sappho 25 (50). Kaykaive and kdyKw, to parch, dry, Hesych., who expl. xaykaive: by Oadmet, Enpaiver, and Kayxopévns by Enpas' 7B piBw. Kéykapov, 7d, an Arabian gum used for fumigating, Diosc. 1. 23, Plin. 12. 44, in-Hesych. K&ykaAov. KdyKdvos, ov, (kalw, Kayxalvw) fit for burning, dry, {ida kdyxava Il. 21. 364, Od. 18. 308, Theocr. 24. 87; xayxava nada h, Hom. Merc. 112; oraxvs Lyc. 1430.—In Hesych. we have kaykadtos: xaraxexav- Hévos: and kaykdveos occurs in Matietho 4. 324. ka os, 6, the Lat, cancelli, a grating, Schol. Theocr. 8. 57, Hesych.; el "Twvoxdumrns — xabayiaCo. de Mag. 3. 36:—kdykeAov, 74, Schol. Ar. Eq. 638, 672 :—hence Kay- Keho-etbas, Adv., like a grating, Hippiatr. 254 :—kaykedo-Bipls, ios, }, =Kvyenls, E. M. 513. 33 also KaykeAwry dpa Schol. Ar. Vesp. 124, Poll. 8,124 (with double A), KaykvAn, %, Acol. for «nis, Hesych. kayxélw, later form for Kaxata, q.v. : . KayXdAda, to laugh aloud, Lat. cachinnari, karyxadcaot Il, 3. 433 Kary- xaddwv 6. 514., 10. 565; Kayxaddwoa Od. 23.1, 59; Kayxaddaoxe Ap. Rh. 4. 996 :—cf. kaxaw. kayxaAifopar, kayXaopat, =foreg., Hesych. kdyxapos, 6, in Crotoniate dialect = moods, Hesych, kayxds, Gvros, 5, Lat. cachinno, the laugher or merry-andrew of the Dorian stage, Miiller Dor. 4.7, 33 cf. also Xapivos. Kkayxacpes, 5, loud laughter, Clem. Al. 196, Poll. 6. 199; ¥. naxao pds. Kayxaorys, od, 6, a loud laugher, A.B. 45, Poll, 6. 29. kayxAdlu, =xayxa(w, Ath. 438 F, Hesych. : Kayxpvbtov, Kdyxpus, etc., v. sub Kaxpv&.ov, Kaxpus, etc. Kayo [4], Att. crasis for eat ey. «45, Ep. for card before 5, a5 dhpara Od, 4.72; Kad Sdvapwv Hes. Op. 334; elsewh. before dé, Il. 2. 160, etc. ; «ad 5’ €Bade by tmesis for naréBare 5é, Od. 4. 344: cf. Ka-Baiva, Ka-Cere, Ka-vagas. KadSaAgopat, Dor. for xata5nhéopat. K458tx0s, 6, a Sicil, measure, perh. the same as the jpiexrov, Tab. Heracl. in C. I. 5774. 53 (v. Franz p. 707):—hence a Verb KaSdi Lopar, to be rejected by vote. These words should prob. be restored in Plut. Lycurg.12: rdv dwodoxipacdévra KeKaddix Gat (MsS.xexaddeic bar) A€youor* Kad5:x0s (MSs. Kadd0s) yap wadeirar 7d dyyelov eis b rds dmopaydarlas éuBaddovot. Kaddpabérny, v. sub Karadapbdve. KadSSdcar, Ep. nom. pl. fem. part. aor, 2 act. of xaradvw. xdBtov, 76, Dim. of xddos, LXx (1 Regg.17. 40): KaS8tov Dion. Thr. in Bast. Greg. 28. kadloxkvov, 7d, Dim. of sq., one part of a spice-box, Nicoch. Tad. 1. K&Sloxos, 5, Dim. of xé5os, Cratin. Mur. 16. Il. the urn or box: in criminal trials there were usually ¢wo, in which the dicasts placed their votes of guilty or not guilty, 6 5é kadionos .. 6 piv drodvwy ovbTos, 6 8 dmoAdds 68: Phryn, Com. Moda. 2, cf. Ar. Vesp, 853, Lysias 133, 12, Lycurg. 169. 12, etc. (v. sub «nuds) ;—but in civil causes, when a question was to be decided which admitted of more than alternative answers, there were as many boxes as might be required, e. g. four, Dem. 1053. 3, cf. Schémann Isae. de Hagn. hered. § 21 :—cf. xaddcxos. kadpela or kadpta (sc. yf), , cadmia, calamine, Diosc. 5. 84, Galen. Kadpetos, a, ov, Cadmean, Hes. Th. 940, Trag.; poét. KabSpéios, Pind. I. 4. 88 (3. 71), Soph. Ant. 1115 :—Kadpeto, of, the Cadmeans or ancient inhabitants of Thebes, Hom., Hes., Trag.; also KaBSpetoves, Il. 4. 385, etc. :—%) Kadpela the citadel of Thebes, Xen, Hell. 0. 3, 11: —proverb., Kadyela vin a victory involving one’s own ruin (from the story of the Swaprol, or that of Polynices and Eteocles), Hdt. 1. 166, cf. P Legg. 641 C, Plut. 2. 488 A, Suid.; also, Kadpetov xpdéros Anth, . 5. 179. Kadpevny, 4, daughter of Cadmus, i. e. Semelé, C. 1. 6280 B. 59. KaSdpijios, 7, ov, Ion. for Kadpezos, Hdt., (v. Kd8pos) ; also found in a tragic senarius ap. Galen. 13. p. 641 :—fem. Kadpyis, 50s, h. Hom. 6. 57, Hes. Op. 161; also in Att., Thuc. 1. 12. . Kabdpo-yevis, és, Cadmus-born, Aesch. Theb. 302, Soph. Tr, 116, Eur. Kadpos, 6, Cadmus, Od. 5.333, Hes. Th. 937, etc.; son of the Phoeni- cian king Agenor, brother to Europa, founder of Boeotian Thebes ;—a post-Hom. legend, for in Od. 11. 262 Amphion and Zethus are its founders. Cadmus is said to have brought from Phoenicia the old Greek alphabet of sixteen letters, hence galled Kadujia or Powmenia ypappara (Hat. 5. 58, 59) ; which was afterwards increased by the eight (so called) Ionic, 7 w Od x ¢ £ W, cf. Wolf Prolegg. pp. lii sq. (The man from the East? cf. Hebr. Qedem (East).) t kdSo-rovds, dv, making pails or vessels, Schol. Ar. Pax 1201. KaSos [a], 6, a jar or vessel for water or wine, Lat. cadus, Anacr. 16, Archil. 4, Hdt. 3. 20, Soph. Fr. 479, Ar., etc.; said to be Ion. for xepd- puoy, Clifarch, ap. Ath. 473 B. 2. a liquid measure, =dpopeds, Philoch. ap. Poll. 10. 71, Anth. P. app. 28, Arist. Fr. 426. II an urn or box for collecting the votes, like xadicxos, Lat. situla, Ar. Av. 1032.—The metre usually requires xa5os, never xa58os, and the double 6 . is only established in the Dor. forms xddd:xos, Kabd5diCopar, KGBos, Dor. for «7j5os. KaéSovAor or KéSwAou, of, boys used in the worship of the Cabeiri, compared by Dion. H. 2. 22 to. the Roman Camilli. kadvras, ov, 6, a parasitic plant, dodder (?), a Syrian word (cf. Cadytis), Theophr. C. P. 2. 17, 3. Kdewpa, , fem. from Kép, a Carian woman, Il. 4.142. Adj. fem, = Kapixn, e. g. Kdeipa éoOys Hat. 5. 88, kdels, Kaqpevat, v. sub Kalo. wa-fehe, Arcad, for xar-éBade, Hesych. KaLopat, vy. sub xoivupar, k&04 [a], Adv., used for a0’ &, according as, just as, Menand. Monost. 551, Polyb. 3. 107,10, Lxx, etc.; written «aé’ &@ in Xen. Mem. 4.'6, 5, Hell. 1.7, 29. II. in earlier writers ka0daep, Ion. karasrep, Hat. 1. 182, al., Ar. Eq. 8, Eccl. 61, etc.; with a part., like ds, dre, Dio C. 37. 54:—strengthd., xaOdmep i (Ion. xaramep el, Hdt. 1.170), like as if, exactly as, Plat. Phileb. 22 F, 59 E, al.; ka®amep dv Dem, 633.17; KaOdmep dy ci Plat. Legg. 684 C, Arist. H. A. 4. 2, 16, ete.— Cf. xa06, adds. II. kéykehAos, Byz.; whence kavkehdpros, 6, =Acyoderss, Jo. Lyd. b Kadayuibwo, —sq., Lxx (Ley. 27. 26., 2 Macc, 1. 26). cabayiCw — cabapetos. Kabayife, fut. iow, Att. 1: Ion, kar-, Hdt. 1. 86. To devote, dedi- cate, offer to a god, rivi 71 Hat. |. c., Ar. Av. 566, cf. Lysistr. 238, Plat., etc.:—of a burnt offering, Ovpujpara x. Hdt. 2. 130; x. wupi Ib. 473 x. ent mipys 7.167; émt rod Bupod 1,183; absol., 2. 40, etc.:—io make offerings to the manes, Lat. parentare, Luc. Luct. 9g. II. gene- rally, to burn, karayiCopévov Tod Kaprod rod émPaddopévov [em 7d nip] Hdt. 1. 202 :—to burn a dead body, and even fo bury, Plut. Anton. 14, cf. Brut. 20; so, prob., in Soph. Ant. 1081, dcav omapdypar’ i) Kives xaOjyoav whose mangled bodies dogs have buried, i.e. devoured, (Cod. L. xadjyvicav; but the Schol, interprets it perd dyous éxdpucav; Dind. follows Wunder in supposing vv. 1080-1083 to be spurious). eee ety 6, dedication :—funeral rites, Lat. parentalia, Luc. uct, Ig. kabayvite, fut. ow, Att. , to purify, hallow, rov rémov Oeiw Kat Sadi Luc. Philops. 12; parnp mupt na@yyviorat déyas, i.e. has been: burnt on the funeral-pyre, Eur. Or. 40. IL. to offer as an expiatory sacrifice, xa0, méXavov ént mupi Id. Ion 707.—On Soph. Ant. 1081, y. wabayi¢e II. kaPaipakrés, dv, bloodstained, bloody, Eur. Or. 1358. KaPapdoow, fut. fw, to make bloody, sprinkle or stain with blood, rw Aesch. Eum. 450; xpéa, 5épnv Eur. Hec. 1126, Or. 1527 ; oxhmrpy x. «dpa Id. Andr. 588 ; rv yA@rray Plat. Phaedr. 254 E. Kalaiparow, =foreg., Eur. Hel, 1599, H. F. 234, 256, Phoen. 1161, Ar. Thesin. 695. «40-aipos, ov, bloody, rpavyara, oira Eur. I. T. 1374, H. F. 384. KaOatpeots, ews, %, a putting down, destroying, killing, slaying, Stesich. ap. Suid., Plut. Anton. 82: a pulling down, rasing to the ground, Thuc, 5. 42, Isocr. 153 B, Xen. Hell. 2. 2,15; 7 ris €fovalas its oubateet, Hi. 2. 4,9, cf. 2 Ep. Cor. 10.8; 7% «. rod Aaod =6 Aads 6 aOatpeGels, LXX (1 Mace. 3. 43):—ai xadaipéces the ruins, Athenio de Mach. 92B. 2. reduction, diminution, opp. to avfn, mpéo@eots, Arist. Phys. 3. 6, 9, sq. :— in Medic. a bringing down superfluous flesh, lowering, reducing, Wipp. 1174G; r&v cwpdrow Arist. G. A. 2. 4,11; Tv dyxwv Plat. Tim. 58 E:—cf. caOacpéw 11. 6, 3. a deposition from office, Eccl. 4, a drawing down of the sun and moon, Schol. Ap. Rh. 3. 533. KaOatperéos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be put down, Thuc. 1.118. Kaatpérns, ov, 6, a putter down, overthrower, wodeuiow Thuc. 4. 83; Kaicapos Dio C. 44. 1. xaSatpetixds, 7, dv, destructive, c. gen., Cornut. 184. 2. reducing, lowering, pappaxa Galen. 13. p. 130; «. THs Yuxis Philo 2. 148. 3. 7a Kx. (sc. ypappara) letters of deposition, Eccl, IL. Ady. -xés, so as to remove, twos Origen. c. Cels. 25 B. Kabatperés, 7, dv, fo be taken or achieved, 5 éxetvor émorhpn mpod- Xovot, Kabaiperov Hpiv ort pedéryn Thuc. 1.121, where Mss. aaipe- Téov, but cf. Dio C. Excerpt. Vat. p. 181 ed. Mai. kaQatpéw, Ion. kat—: fut. jaw; fut. 2 xaded@ Anth, Plan. 334: aor. 2 Kabetdov, inf. xadeAciv: aor. I in Byz. xa@ypnoa. To take down, xaeiopev taria Od. 9.149; Kad 8 ard taccadddu Cvydv Hpeor Il. 24. 268 ; x. dxOos to take it down, i.e. off one’s shoulders, Ar. Ran. 10; x. 70 onpetov (cf. onpeiov I. 3) Andoc. 6. 4; «. TaY ée THS OTOGs STA some of them, Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 8; «. 7wva, from the cross, Polyb. 1. 86, 6 :—so in Med., xaOaipeioda 7a réga to take down one’s bow, Hat. 3. 78; robs tarovs Polyb. 1. 61, I. 2. to put down or close the eyes of the dead, dace xaatphoovor Oavovre mep Il. 11. 453; dpOadpods Ka- Gedo0ca Od. 24. 296; so, xepot Kar’ dpOadpods Ed€ewv II, 426. 3. of sorcerers, ¢o bring down, Lat. caelo deducere, aeAhvnv Ar. Nub. 750, Plat. Gorg. 513 A; «ad. eledva Lycurg. 164. 29. 4, nara pe wédov “yas €Xor may earth swallow me! Eur. Supp. 829. II. to put down by force, destroy, bre Kév puv Moip’ dA) KabéAgat Od. 2. 100., 3. 238., 1g. 145, etc.; pi) wadédAoe py aidy Pind. O. 9. 90; gar’ ddikov xadatpet Aesch. Ag. 398; poipa roy picavra xabetde Soph. Aj. 517, cf. Eur, El. 878, etc.: simply ¢o hill, slay, radpov Ib. 1143, cf. Soph, Tr. 1063. 2. in a milder sense, to put down, reduce, kar. Kipov kat tiv Tlépoeow divamy Hat. 1. 71, cf. 1. 4, 95., 2.147, etc., cf. Dem. 20. II, etc.; esp. to depose, dethrone, Hdt.1.124., 7. 8, etc.; x. 70 Anott- kov €« THs Oadkdgons to remove it utterly from .. , Thuc. 1. 43 k. UBpw tbs, brBov, rd dgiwpa Hat. 9. 27, Soph. Fr. 572, Plut. Them. 22; KaOnpnpévos riv alcOnoww bereft of sense, Id. Pericl. 38. 3. to rase to the ground, pull down, ras médets Thuc. 1. 58, cf. 2. 14., 5- 393 TaY Tex@v a part of the walls, Xen. Hell. 4. 4,13; xaOnpéOn .. Olyadia dper Soph. Tr. 478, etc. 4. to cancel, rescind, 7) Meyapéov ynpiopa Thuc, 1. 140, cf. 139, Plut. Pericl. 29; Epyov x. Ady Philem. Incert. 18. 5. as Att. law-term, to condemn, 7) kaOatpodoa Wipos a verdict of guilty, Lys. 133.12; ¢. inf., €ué maAos xaOatpet.. AaBeiv Soph. Ant. 275; and so prob., card pe .. Aldas €dor ratpi fuvOavety Id. O. C. 1689, cf. Eur. Or. 862: simply, to decide, 6 re dv ai wAclovs Yijpor xadaipiot Dion. H. 7. 36, cf. 39. 6. to reduce, lessen, opp. to aifw, Arist. Rhet. 1. 15, 20, cf. Phys. 6. 6, 9:—to reduce in flesh, 7d cpa x. Kalras Plut, Anton. 53; cf. xadalpeats 2. III. to overpower, seize, na3 5€ uv invos jpet Od. 9. 372; Ka. Twa Hat. 6. 29, Xen.; xa. rrva éy dppootrn to catch in the act of folly, Soph. Ant. 333: c. gen. partis, «. trav @row to seize by.., Theocr. 5.1325 cf. Kadevpicxw. IV. to fetch down as a reward or prize, kaatpeiv dyGva or dydvicua Plut. Pomp. 8: metaph. ¢o achieve, d-ywvioy .. edxos épyy kabedwy Pind. O. 10. 75; soin Med., pévq xabacpetad’, ob Adyy, 7a mpaypara Eur. Supp. 749; in Pass:, Hdt. 7. 50; § 2: cf. alpéw 11. 3, ovyKabatpéw, VV. more rarely like the simple afpeiv, to. dake and carry off, seize, Hdt. 6. 41, cf. 5. 36. KGPaipw: fut. xaddpa Xen. Occ. 18, 6, Plat. Legg. 735 B: aor. 1 éxd- Onpa, later €xa40Gpa (Moer, p. 101),—which form has been introduced by ! 719 the Copyists into Antipho 145. 37, Xen. An. 5. 7, 35, etc.: pf. wexd- @apka (€x-) Schol. Ar. Pax 753:—Med., fut. eaapodat Plat. Crat. 396 E: aor. éxaOnpapny Aesch, Fr. 376, Plat. :—Pass., fut. eadapOjoopae Galen.: aor. éxa@apOnv Hadt., Att.; aor. 2 dwoxaSaphvat Arr. Ven. 27. I (Miiller): pf. wexd0appar Plat., etc.: («adapés) : I. of the person or thing purified, to make pure or clean, cleanse, clean, purge, xaOnpare 5& Kpyripas Od. 20. 152; tpanélas vdart .. kabalpeav 22. 439; Ka@npavres xpda Kaddy vSaTi 24. 44; &. olxiav Antipho 145. 37; ¢. gen., immov abxpnpas rprxds Soph. Fr. 422: also, «. otrov Xen, Oec. 18, 6., 20, 11; «. xpuady to purify it, Plat. Polit. 303 D: |'—to purge, clear a land of monsters and robbers, Soph. Tr. 1012, 1061, Plut. Thes. 7; «. Anornpiwy tiv émapxtay Id. Mar. 6 :—Pass., v vnddv KadapOetcay Hat. 4. 71. 2. in religious sense, to cleanse, purify, [Sénas] éxaOnpe Oceiy purified it by fumigating with sulphur, Il. 16. 228; «a0. rid pévov to purify him from blood, Hdt. 1.44; AjAov x. Ib. 64, cf. Thuc. 1.8; ordAov x. classem lustrare, App. Civ. 5.96 :— Med. to purify oneself, get purified, Hdt. 4. 73; of prdocopia naOnpa- pevot Plat. Phaedo 114 C, cf. Phaedr. 243 A; waOaipec@ar xadappovs Id. Legg. 868 E; xadjpacbar ordua to keep one’s tongue pure, Aesch, Fr. 376:—so in Pass., kexadappévos wal teredcopevos Plat. Phaedo 69 C, 3. to purge by medicines, v. sub broxaGatpw:—Pass. to be so purged, Hipp., etc. ; v. Foés. Oec., and cf. xd0apots, kabaprixds. 4. to prune a tree, i.e. clear it of superfluous wood, Ev. Jo. 15. 2. 5. metaph. in Theocr. 5: 119,=paorTvyéw, like our vulgar phrase ‘to rub one down ;’ cf. amodéw. II. of the thing removed by purification, to purge away, wash © ay, Adpara mavra KaOnpev Il. 14. 1713 éret wAdvay Te KaOnpav Te piva wavra Od. 6. 93: to clear away, Ta Anorind Dio C. 37. 52:—and metaph., pdvov nad. Aesch. Cho. 74. III. c. dupl. acc., aiya ndOnpov .. Saprndédva cleanse him cf blood, wash the blood off pith, Il. 16. 667:—Pass., xaOatpopat ynpas Iam purged of old age, Aesch. Fr. 42.2; pdvov xaOapbeis Hdt. 1. 43. Ki opar, fut. -dAodua: aor. —yAdunv: Dep.:—to leap dewn, dnd Tov lets: dn’ 6xOev Xen. Hell. 4. 5, 7, Eq. 3, 7: metaph., of a storm, to rush down, nabaddAopévn ioetdéa mévrov dpive Il. 11. 298. , KadaApis, és, (GA) salt, saltish, Nic. Al. 514. ‘ Ka0GXos, ov, (GAs) full of salt, over-salted, Diphil. ’AwoAcw. 1. 13; comically, of the cook, Posidipp. ’AvaBA. 1.7; cf. «drofgos. Ka0dpatedw, to wear with wheels: part. pf. pass. kaOnuatevpévos, 7, ov, metaph., like Lat. tritus, hackneyed, stale, Artemid. 1. 31 (MS. xarny-) ; yivaiov Kad. ind navrds Tod mpoctdyTos, of a common prostitute, Ael. ap. Suid.; «a0. dvriAoyiat stale objections, Dion. H. 10. 41; 7a ob Kad, Tois mporépos Id. de Or. Ant. 4, de Thuc. 11. 2; so Adv. xa@npuagev- pévas, in a trite way, Ael. Dion. ap. Eust. 1387. 9. Kd0appa, 7d, (Kabdarw) anything tied, a knot, nid. dew Adyou to loose a knotty point, Eur. Hipp. 671; «. Avev, proverb from the Gordian knot, to overcome a difficulty, Paroemiogr., Suid. KaPappile, to cover with sand, éavrd Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 5- KaQavue, Att. for karaviw, v.1. in Soph. El. 1451, A. B. 14. KaOdmav, Adv. on the whole; better divisim xa0’ dray, KaQdmat, Adv. once for all, Od. 21. 349, Dem. 304. 22 :—then, like dmdas, once for all, absolutely, ot x. €x@pot Id. 294. 11; Tots x, dri- pos Id. 779. 6; otrw xn. ménpakev éavrdy 377. 7, cf. 542. 24 :—ovde Ka0dmag not even once, Polyb. 1. 2, 6., 20, 12, etc. ; KaOdrep, kaarepel, kafanepavel, v. sub Kaba. KaatrAéw, fo unfold and spread over, twos Aristaen. 2. 4. kaSanrés, 7, dv, bound with, equipt with, Oipoo.or nat veBpOv Sopais Eur. Fr. 752, cf. Ar, Ran. 1212. II. 4a0. épyavoy a cymbal or drum, Ath. 174 C. ka0dmrw, Ion. xar-, fut. yo. To fasten or fix on, put upon, kadjwer dpois..dppiBrynotpov Soph. Tr. 1051; so, «. Tt é ru Eur. Ion 1006 ; éni 7: Xen. Cyn. 6, 9; 7 ets Te Polyb. 8. 8, 3; Tt & Tevos Plut, 2. 647 E; dyxvpay waddyas having made it fast, Philem. Incert: 1. 10; 7a daréa Kabdnre Ta vevpa Arist. Spir. 5, 10:—Med., xuady ént xpart xadanrecGat Theocr.Ep. 3.4:—Pass., Bpdx@ kaOnupévos Soph. Ant. 1222, cf, Theocr. 30. 11. 2. to dress, clothe, in Med., oxevj o@p! enor xaddpopar Eur. Rhes. 202, cf. Anth. P. 9. 19: Pass., aOnupevor ve-~ Bpidas clad in fawn-skins, Strabo 719; v. xadanrds. 3. intr. to attach itself, «is 71, mpés Te Arist. H. A. 3. 4, 9 and 12:—later even rarely in sense of Med. (11), to lay hold of, Twvés Act. Ap. 28. 3, Arr. Epict. 3. 20, 10, Poll. 1. 164. II. used by Hom, only in Med., xaddrrecOai tiva én€ecor, in good or bad sense, as, od réy y' énéeoot KaddrrecOat padaxoict do thou accost or address him .. , Il. 1. 582; padaxoia Kabanrépevos énéecow Od. 10. 70; petixlows éméerat Ka0. 24, 293: but also, dvriBlos éméeoor Kabamrduevos assailing or attacking .., Od. 18. 415., 20. 323; xaAemoior nad. éréecor Hes. Op. 330: also without a qualifying Adj. to accost or assail, éméecot kabanrero Bodpov “Apna Il..15. 127, cf. Od. 2. 2403 and lastly even without éréeoat, yépovra Kabamrépevos mpooteey 2.39, cf. 20. 22, Il. 16. 421. 2. after Hom., always c. gen. to assail, attack, upbraid, Hdt. 6. 69, Thuc. 6. 16, Plat. Crito 52 A, Xen. Hell. 1. 7,4; absol., Thuc. 6. 82; also, KabanrecOat Tis ovparyias Polyb. 1. 19, 14:—but in Hdt,, also, like Lat. antestari, OeGv .. karatrépevos appealing to them, 6. 68; Anuaphrov kal GAdAwy papripwy 8. 65. 8.to lay hold of, rvpavvidos Solon 30; Bpépeos xelpecot Theocr. 17.65; Tod tpaxnAov Arr. Epict. 3. 20, Io. 4. to be sensitive in respect of, yopou Hipp. 68 D. : KuOdperos, and xaPdptos, ov, para of persons, cleanly, neat, nice, tidy, Lat. mundus, rods kaBapetous rept cyuv, mepl dprexovny, mept ddov tov Biov Arist. Rhet. 2. 4, 153 kabapwratév éoTt 70 (@oy (i.e. the bee), Id. H. A. 9. 40, 405 Ka@apcos dxodovdicxos Posidon. ap. Ath. 550 A; Ka0dpios TH dairy Diod. 5. 33; of xa0apiwrepo Hierocl, ap. Stob. \: Some ee 720 an 491.2: so of things, édy 1 omevacia kabapios 7 Menand. Paop, 2; xabapibrepa (or -€iorepa) StAa Polyb. 11.9, 53; Apwpara kadapibrara Plut, 2. 106 ©, cf. 663 C; Bios, Siarra xadapetos Ath. 74 D, Pythag. C. Aur. 35; els 7a xadpea (vulg. xa@apd) Meineke Menand. Incert. 290: —so in Ady., cleanly, naBapelws éyxéovow Xen. Cyr. 1. 3, 8, cf. Ath. 152 A; pi) ToAUTEAGs, xa@apeiws Eubul. Ter. 1, Nicostr. “Ay- TUAA. 33 Exe Kadapios Amphis Ber. 1; Kabapiws wat drr@s Strabo 154. II. of style, pure, Schol. Ar. Ach. 244.—Cobet V. LL. p. 82 believes xaddperos, not -10s, to be the true Att. form ; in Nicostr. and Eubul, Il. c. this form is necessary for the metre, but xadpios never so. Kaiperdrys, %, =«abapidras, C. I. (add.) 21396. 9, Eust. Opusc. 279.11.” KiOGpeuréov, verb. Adj. one must keep oneself clean, twos from a thing, Luc. Hist. Conscr. 6, Epict. Enchir. 33, 8 (?), Clem. Al. 238. KaDGpetwo, (Kafapds) to be clean or pure, Plat, Phaedo 58 B, Legg. 759 C:—c. gen. to be clean or free from guilt, pévov Ep. Plat. 356E; anap- rnudray Plut. Cato Mi. 24; dvetSous Luc. Amor. 22:—x. da’ abrod (sc. rod a&paros) Plat. Phaedo 67 A; also, xa0. yvmpy to be pure or clear in mind, Ar, Ran. 355; mept te Polyb. 6.56, 15. 2. in Rhet., of style, fo be pure, Dion. H. de Lys. 2; also, #. Ty povijy to be pure in pronunciation, Byz. 8. in Gramm., of one vowel preceded by a vowel, as a in codia, to be pure, Eust. 1859.13, E. M. KaPGprevw, to be xadpios, Porphyr. de Abst. 4. 6: y. Valck. Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 22, Stallb. Plat. Phaedo 58 B. KibiptLe, to make clean, to cleanse, dyyera Ev. Matth. 23. 25, cf. Act. Ap. 10. 15. II. to cleanse, purify, dd dpaprias Lxx (Sirac. 38. 10); dwd mavrds podvopod Clem. Al. 539 :—Pass. to be or become clean from disease, Ev. Matth. 8.3; and of the disease, to be purged away, Ib.:—fut, med. —prodae in Hipp. 267, acc. to Littré (8. 508). K&Mdptos, v. sub xaddperos. KEPGpidrys, 770s, 1), cleanliness, neatness, Lat. munditiae, Hdt. 2. 37, Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 22; purity, duapépea 7) dcyus apfs waOapiryre Arist. Eth. N. 10. 5, 7; ¢f. 10. 7, 3; Tod dépos Theophr. Sens. 48: decency, simplicity of life, opp. to Td moAvreAés, Plut. Crass. 3, Ath. 542 C; so of conversation, Plut. Lycurg. 21. Cf. xaOdapetos. Ki0dpicpds, 4, later form for eadappds, Ev. Luc. 2. 22, Jo. 2. 6, Luc. Asin, 22. Kiiprornprov, 76, a place for purifying, Harpocr. kdSappa, 74, (Ka0aipw) that which is thrown away in cleansing ; in pl. the offscourings, refuse of a sacrifice, Aesch. Cho. 98:—the residuum of ore after smelting, Strabo 146 C. 2. metaph. of worthless fellows, a castaway, outcast, Ar. Pl. 454; alpovpevor kaddppara orparnyous Eupol. Anu. 15; Tods pey éx@Opovs, rods Bt Kabdppara, rods 5 ovdev brodkapBavow eivar Dem. 578. 19, cf. 269. 26., 578. 20, Aeschin. 84. 15. It was the custom at Athens to reserve certain worthless persons, whom in case of plague, famine, or other visitations from heaven, they used to throw into the sea, saying mepi/nya juay -yevod, in the belief that they would cleanse away or wipe off the guilt of the nation: these were called waddppara, mepicabdppara, mepupnuara, pappaxol, Snudc.ot: v. Schol. Ar. l.c., Eq. 1133- II. in pl.=«d6apors, purification, Eur. 1. T. 1316; wovriwy xadapparoy .. duorBds in return for clearing the sea (of pirates), Id. H. F. 225. III. in Ar. Ach. 44, évrds xaOdpyaros within the purified ground; cf. Dict, of Antiqq. p. 363. « polo, fo join or fit to, Bpdxov bépa Eur. Hipp. 771; wAdwapov ind pirpa Id. Bacch. 929 :—for Rhes. 210, v. sub mpda@tos. , 6, (kabalpw) a cleansing, purification, from guilt, vipa Kabapp@ thvde Ti oreyHv Soph, O. T. 1228 :—hence, a means of puri- Jication, ifying sacrifice, atonement, expiation, Kaappoy Tis xupns movetaOat Ta to take him as an expiation or atonement for his country, Hat. 7.197; pucos éAatvvew xabappois, like dyos éAatvew, Aesch. Cho. , ef. Theb. 738, Eum. 277, 283, Soph. O. T. 99; 000 viv radappody daypdvev avert their wrath by purifications, Id. O. C. 466; kadappodv Ovew to offer a purifying sacrifice, Eur. I. T.1352; Avoes re eat xaGap- pot adixnyarov from crimes, Plat. Rep. 364E; 6 wept rv didvoar x. Id. Soph. 227 C; x. moretoOar ris Svvdpews, Lat. lustrare exercitum, Polyb. 22. 24, 9, Plut. Caes. 43. 2. applied to rites of initiation, prob. of the lowest grade, Plat. Phaedo 6g C (ubi v. Stallb.), Phaedr. 244 E; duords ard rov kaappod Dem. 313. 18, cf. Plut. 2. 47 A. 3. Kabappot, songs of purification, by Empedocles, Epimenides, etc., Ath. 620D; v. Grote Hist. Gr. 1. p. 87. II. purging, purgation, discharge, Arist. H. A. 7. 10, 6 (cf. G. A. 2. 4, 11), Plut. 2. 134 + TIL. =«a0apye 111, Plut. 2. 518 B. a3 , to write clean, Eccl. 1 ov, living purely, Eccl. Kalapo-Aoyew, to speak purely, Eust. 352. 35. K&D po-movéw, to purify, Clem. Al. Strom. 5. 8, 56, Schol. Ar. Ach. 506: —srovés, Boiss. Anecd. 4. p. 368. Kapo-nériov, 74, an inn where pure wine is sold, Boiss. Anecd. 3. 78. KiOdpés, 4, dv: (v. sub fin.) : 1. opp. to furapés, clear of dirt, clean, spotless, unsoiled, eipara Od. 6. 61, etc. (but not so in Il.) ; so in Archil. 6 Gaisf., Hdt. 2.37, Eur. Cycl. 35, 562, etc. :—of persons, = xabdpios cleanly, x. wept €oO7ra Arist. de Virt. 5,5, cf. Rhet. 3. 15, 5 2. opp. to wAnpns, peords, clear of objects, clear, open, free, vy kabap@ (sc. Témw) in a clear, open space, év kabap®, dre 5) vexdov diepatvero x@pos Il. 8. 491., 10.1993 &y KabapG, bre Kipar’ én’ Hidvas KdrvCeoKov 23. 61; KedeiOy & kabapG Pind. O. 6. 39; but in O. ro (11). 55, of a space clear of trees; cf. Hdt. 1.1325; €v nabap@ Riva to leave the way clear, Soph. O.C. 1575; &v k. oixeiv to live in the open air, Plat. Rep. 520D; a xaBapod peew, of a river whose course is clear and open, Hat. 1. 202; év Kkadap® Aetwave Theocr. 26. 55; év cabapd : y in the < en sun, Opp. to aid, Plat. Phaedr. 239C; &s ou 70d oa caOapedtns — xabaprpor. { gumoddy eyeyivee abapév was cleared away, Hdt. 7. 183; «adapas rouicbat Tas dpxvaoraotas to set up the nets in open ground, Xen. Cyn. 6, 6:+c. gen., yA@aoa Kabap? Trav onpniwy clear of the marks, Hdt. 2. 38; Kaapdy Tar mpoBbrwy, of a fort, Arr. An. 2.25, 7. 3. in moral sense, clear from shame or pollution, honourable, nabap@ @avérw Od. 22. 462; cf. Philo 2, 610, Bavarov ob k., tov Bt ayx6- vns :—but mostly, opp. to puoapés, clear of guilt or defilement, clean, pure, véos Theogn. 89; xetpes Aesch. Eum. 3135 xa@apos xetpas Hat. I. 35, Antipho 130. 30, Andoc. 12. ult.; #. mapéxev twa Kata 7d capa nat nara tiv yuyxqy Plat. Crat. 405 B; esp. of persons purified after pollution, ixer}s mpooHAdes x. Aesch. Eum. 474, cf. Soph. O. Cc. 548, etc.; also of things, Bapol, P¥para, ddpor, pedabpa Acsch. Supp. 655, Eur. I. T. 1163, etc. :—c. gen. clear of or from .. , kK. &yxAnpaTov Antipho 120. 24; adiclas, KaK@y, etc.; Horace’s sceleris purus, Plat. Rep. 496 E, Crat. 403 E, Xen. Occ. 20, 20, etc. ; 6 Tay Kaka x. TémOS Plat. Theaet. 177A; «. Tas xeipas pédvov Id. Legg. 864 E; KépwvOov .. dmodeitar Trav piapdvey Kabapdy Xen. Hell, 4. 4, 6; also, «. dad rwvos Dio C. 37. 24:—Ka@apat Ayépat, Lat. dies fasti, opp. to dwoppades, Plat. Legg. 800 D. 4. opp. to OoAepés, clear of admixture, clear, pure, esp. of water, féet xaSapds mapa. Oodepotar Hat. 4. 53; «. dara Eur. Hipp. 210; dpdcor Id. Ion 96; x. kat dapavy bda7:a Plat. Phaedr. 229 B; so, «. pdos, péyyos Pind. P. 6. 14., 9. 1593 mvedpa x. obpavod Eur. Hel. 867; «. dpros Hdt. 2. 40; xpuads Ib, 166; otros Xen. Occ. 18, 8; dpytpiov Theocr. 15. 36; dxparos at x, vods Xen. Cyr. 8. 7, 30; xpoat Arist. Sens. 3,12; povat Id. Audib. 25; etc. 5. ot birth, opp. to ¢évos, pure, genuine, owépua Ocod Pind. P. 3. 27; moAts Eur. Ion 673; Trav ’A@nvalay Orep éorpareve Kafapdy efHAOe, i. e. were citizens of pure blood, Thue. §. 8, cf. Schol. Ar. Ach. 506, and v. infr, | 73 waOapdv a real, genuine saying, Id. Vesp. 1015; x. Tivov a Timon pure and simple, Id, Av. 1549; &. do0A0s (darnxptBwpévos A. B.), Antiph. “Aypotk. 10. 6. of language, pure, Dion. H. de Lys. 2, ad Pomp. 2:—but in Gramm., of one vowel preceded by another, pure, Draco de Metr. 22. 7. without blemish in its kind, spotless, faultless, 6 x, oTpa~ tds, 70 Kabapdy Tod oTpaTod the sound portion of the army, Hdt. 1. 211., 4. 1353 V. supr. 5. 8. clear, exact, dv kaapat dow at YHpor if the accounts are clear or square, exactly balanced, Dem. 303. 22, ubi v. Dissen. Il. Ady., dyva@s wat xaBaps h. Hom. Ap. 121, Hes. Op. 3353 Ka0ap@s -yeyoveva to be of pure blood, Hdt. 1. 147. 2. with clean hands, purely, honestly, abv: dix .. cat x. Theogn. 198; ducalws kat x. Dem. 127. 5; simply, x. Te kat perpiws rdv Biov dref= edOciv Plat. Phaedo 108 C. 3. clearly, plainly, Aéyew Ar. Vesp. 631, cf. Eur. Rhes. 35; Aégis #. Kat dupiBds ~xovoa Isocr. 83 A; x. ywavat, eldévat Ar. Vesp. 1045, Plat. Phaedo 66D, E; sadapdrara Grrodeigat Id. Crat. 426 A. 4. entirely, Dio C. 36. 8. (From 4 KA® come also xaf-aipw, xa0-apats, etc.; cf. Skt. sudh, sudh-dmi (purifico, lustro); Lat. cast-us; O. Sax. hed-ar, O. H. G. heit-ar.) kafapé-reuxtos, ov, made pure, Jo. Damasc. KaVpétys, ros, 7, cleanness, purity, in moral sense, Plat. Phaedo 111 B, Legg. 778 C; % wept 7a xphyara x. Polyb. 32. 11, 9:—asa title, % o7) K. Eus. V. Const. 3. 61. II. clearness, opOadrpav Hipp. 152G. KaVGpoupyla, 7), pure, perfect work, C. I. 4558. KaPdpoupyids, 7, dv, (*Epyw) made pure, sifted, Geop. 20. 35. kaSaprdlo, to snatch down, redxn macodhoy, ex defras Eicon Eur. Andr. 813, 1122: ¢o carry off, ra GAAdrpia Strabo 761. KiPdporos, ov, (KaSaipw) cleansing from guilt or defilement, purifying, Zevs Hdt. 1. 44, Arist. Mund. 7, 3, etc.; of Bacchus, moAeiv xaPapoiy modi Soph. Ant. 114.4:—of sacrifice, afua Aesch. Eum. 449, Theb.680; 7p, padg Eur. H. F. 927, 1. A. 1112, Hel. 869; mpoxdrac I. A. 1472. 2. c. gen., Ka0. pdvou cleansing or purifying from .., Aesch. Eum. 578; Aogias Swpdrwv Kad. Ib. 63; but, «. otxwy purifying them, Eur. H. F. 923. TI. as Subst., 1. xaddporor (sc. iepdv), 76, a puri- Jying sacrifice, also the victim, Aeschin. 4. 10:—hence, purification, ex- piation, kaOapotov edéero xuphoa Hat. 1. 35, cf. Elmsl. Ach. 44. 2. (sub. pdppaxoy) a purge, Alex, Trall. I. p. 111. Kd0apors, ews, }, (xafalpw) a cleansing from guilt or defilement, puri- Jication, Lat. lustratio, Hdt. 1. 35, Plat. Crat. 405 A, ete. ; in Plato of the soul, xd@0apois..7d xwpitey rr padota éxd Tod cwpaTos Tiy yuxny Phaedo 67 C, cf. Soph. 227 C; of the effect of tragic poems, x. Tay Tabnpdrov Arist. Post. 6, 2, cf. Pol. 8. 7, 3, cf. eadaprixds. TI. in Medic. a clearing off of humours, a discharge, evacuation, whether .| natural or by the use of medicines, Hipp. Aph. 1254, cf. 402. 6, etc. ; x, larpurh Plat. Legg.628 D; xaddpoes Eupnvot, the menses in women, Hipp. Aph. 1255; xa0dpoes xarapnvioy Arist. H. A. 6. 18, 20; so «d@Oapots alone, Id. G. A. 4. 6, 16, al.; also, «. pera réxov Hipp. Aér. 284; # & ré«ous x. Arist. H. A. 6. 20, 53 . aiaros abroparn po .. auvéBn Dem, 1260, 24. III. a pruning of trees, Theophr. C. P. 3. 7, 123 cf. SeaxdOapars I. kaPapréov, verb. Adj. one must purge, Hipp. 417, Geop. 10. 77, 2- Ka0aprhp, Fpos, },=Kalapris, Plut. 2. 302 A, Manetho 4. 251. Ki0apriptos, ov, purificatory, @vota Dion. H. 9. 40; 7a Kad. Poll. 1. 32. KiSaprhs, od, 6, (xabatpw) a cleanser from guilt or defilement, purifier, Hipp. 301. 38; ood yap €pxouat .. x. Soph. El. 70; arparod x. Id. Fr. 325 Tijs xupas Ar. Vesp. 1043; dogav .. rept puxny x. evar Plat. Soph. 231 E. KiSaptiKds, 7, dv, of, fit for cleansing or purifying, Plat. Tim. 60 D; 7a pédn Ta Kad. (v. KaBapats 1), Arist. Pol. 8.7, 5: ¢. gen., Kad. puTa~ piv Cebes Tab. 14 :—) -Kn (sc. Téxvn), Plat. Soph. 231 B. II, in Medic, purgative, pdppaxoy Kk. a catharbic, Plut.2.999F; 7d Kad. alone, Hipp. Fract. 766; also, a9. ofvos Diosc. 5. 76. xaldprpia, 7), fem. of eadapris, Schol. Pind. P, 3. 139. » Kéfaptpov, 74, a means of cleansing, Tzetz. caQapudXos — Kabyyeudy. KaPapvAdros, ov,a Com. Dim. of xabapds, tidy, dprou Plat. Com, Nvé. 1. Adv. —AAws, Cratin. AnA. 7. ‘ kaSapabns, es, (eldos) clear, Supa Hipp. 1162 C. kaavatve, v. sub caravaivw, KdBarpis, ews, %, a shampooing’, after the bath, Oribas, 288 Matth. kaQé5pa, 7, a seat, x. ToD Aay@ a hare’s seat or form, Xen. Cyn. 4, 4: a chair or seat, Hdn. 2. 3; opp. to «Aivy, Plut. 2. 714 E: of rowers’ seats, Polyb. I. 21, 2:—also a privy, eivedOeiv eis xafédpas Ath. ap. Theodoret. H, E. 1. 14. 2. the sitting part, posteriors, Hipp. 557. 48, cf, Poll. 2. 184. 3. the foot of a column, Strabo 816. II. a sitting, the state or posture of sitting, Arist. Categ. 7, 3, P. A. 4. 10, 55, Theophr. Fr, 7. 5, Plut., etc.; €v 7 xaédpe while they were sitting idle, Thuc, 2. 18, cf, Plut. Camill. 28, III. the seat of a bishop, Eccl. KaQéSpios, ov, of or for sitting, Oribas. p. 115 Matth., etc, :—Ka- prov, 7d, Dim. of xabédpa, Med. Ka0eLopor: impf. éxaeCuny in Prose (as if the Verb were not a compd.), Xen. An. I. 5, 9, Cyr. 5. 3, 25 (but often as aor. 2, asin Thuc. 4. IIo, Plat., etc.); in Poets, #aGe(dunv Hom., Trag., and even Ar. Lys. 1139 :—fut. xadedoduar, Ar, Ran. 200, Ay. 727, Andoc, 15. 8, Plat. Theaet. 146 A; later, xadedjoopar Diog. L. 2. 72: also late, fut. xabe- cOjcopae Lxx (Lev. 12. 5), aor. xadecGels Anth. P. 9. 644, Paus. 9. 3, 11, but v. Luc. Soloec. rr and cf. Phryn. 269: cf. «d@nua:—Buttm, held that the true pres, and impf. were xa6iCopar, éxabiCdunv, and that éxa- OeCopuny or xadeCuny was an aor. only; but our present Mss. are against him: v. Veitch Irr. Verbs ;—the trans. sense is supplied by xa0ifw, xa6t- dptw: Dep. To set oneself down, sit down, take one’s seat, dryophvie Kabeapecda ndévres Od. 1.372; emt Odpyar nadélerog. 417, cf.Il. 24.1 26, etc.; nar’ dp’ €Cev emt Opdvov Il. 24. 522; kar’ dp’ eer’ emt .. AlOorowv Od. 3.406; xabeCopévn mpdxvv (v. mpdxvu); so, x. ev .. ebvarnplors Soph. Tr. 918; émt (vyois Eur. Phoen. 75; és Opdvoy Aesch. Pr. 229; évOadi Ar. Ran, 200; ob Aaxdyres mpoedpevery, GAN’ éx mapackevis eadeCouevor but taking their seats, Aeschin. 4.8. 2. to sit, sit still, with collat. notion of rest, rip@’ ofrws kar’ dp’ feat Toos dvavdy; Od. 10. 378, cf.6. 295- 3. to sit as suppliants, ixérat xaOe(dpecba Bdpioe Eur. Heracl. 333 mpos 7d fepa ixerGy nadeCopévav Thuc. 3.70, cf. Ar.Lys.1139, Dem. 262.18. 4. to sit down in a country, encamp, Thuc. 2. 18., 7. 77. xaQetaro, Ep. for éxa0nvro, 3 pl. impf. of edé0nuat. kaQeipaprat, pf. pass., used impers. it is ordained by fate, esp. to one’s tuin, Luc. Philop. 14; «a. Tit, c. inf., Ib. 16, Arr. Epict. 2.6, 10:—so in part., Tadat cadepappévay rovTay having been ordained by fate, Plut. Alex. 52. kaQeipyvipt, and in Luc. Amor. 39 kaQelpyw (for xareipym): aor. I xabeipta. To shut in, enclose, confine, imprison, kara oupeciaw eépyvu Od. 10. 238; ob Kxadeipé’ yas Eur. Bacch, 618; rods pdvrias.. KaT- eipyvior és péoa 7a ppiyava Hat. 4.69; Tov warépa .. evdov kabelptas Ar. Vesp. 70; cf. Cratin. @pgrr. 4, Lys. Fr. 45. 4, Plat. Theaet. 197 E; «nplvos TAdcpast «. Ib. 200 B; év T@ oravpwpare Xen. Hell. 3. 2, 3; éy olxicony Dem, 258. 21. 2. rarely of things, xaOetpfar xpucdv év Sdpors Anan. 1; Thy cedjvyy .. és Nopetov Ar. Nub. 751; Tv pakpo- Aoylay «. to confine it within bounds, Plat. Gorg. 461 B. KdGerpts, ews, , Att. for ndreiptis, a shutting in, enclosing, confining, Ael. N. A. 15. 27, Plut. 2. 366 D, Aristid, 1. 303. xaQets, for xa6’ els, one by one, one after another, LXXx (3 Macc. . 34); els xa0ets Ev. Marc. 14. 19, etc.; an anomalous phrase (for efs xa6’ éva), prob. formed backwards from the neut. év xadév, noted by Luc. Soloec. 9. Kabeioa, v. sub xadi¢w:—but xadeizar 3 pl. aor. 2 of Kabinu. kabéxacra, v. sub Exacros Yexovcros, ov, =éxovoros, Lxx (Num. 15. 3). Kabexréov, verb. Adj. one must keep back, restrain, Plut. Cato Mi. 63, etc. Kabéxrys, ov, 5, (Karéxw) a trap-door, Geop. 14. 6, 6. kabexruxés, 7, dv, capable of holding or retaining, } pvhun eis Kad. broajpews Arist. Top. 4: 5, 1, cf. H. A. Io. 3, 3. 2. able to hold in, Tov mvevpaTos, opp. to mpoerikds, Id. Probl. 33. 15,4; “a. retentive, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 2. 60. kabexrés, 7, dv, (Katéxw) to be held back or checked, Opacis at BSedv- pos ob5t xa0. Dem. 515. 12, cf. Plat. Fab. 10, Pomp, 66; rav mpayyd- Tow obkért TohAoIsS KabeKxray since power could not be retained in the hands of many, Id. Brut. 47; év 7@ wabext@ efvar to contain oneself, Philostr. 818. Adv., ob xaOexT@s so as not to be restrained, Id. 712. kabeAioow, Ion. kareAioow, to wrap with bandages, kareAlocovat may 7d cpa awiddvos .. reAapaot, of mummies, Hdt. 2. 86; of wounds, Id. 7.181 :—Pass., rds xvipas paxect .. kaTeAtxaro (3 pl. plaf.), Ib. 76; xareihixOae Tarvin Hipp. Art. 783. kaeAkdopat, Pass. to break out into ulcers, Hipp.1213.D; xadeAnwOels Arist. H. A. 9. 37, 10:—Ka0éAcwots, %, a breaking out into ulcers, Vv. Kabnynots. kaeAkuopos, 5, a launching, Moschio ap. Ath. 207 A. Kabekw: fut. eabéAgw Ar. Ran. 1398, eaeAxtow Luc, D. Deor. 21, 1: aor. KafelAnioa Thuc. 6. 34: pf. eadeAnvea Dem, 60. 8 :—Pass., aor. and pf., v. infr.: (v. sub €Aqw) : 1. of ships, to draw them #o the sea, launch them, Lat. deducere naves, Eur. Hel. 1531, Ar. Ach. 544, cf. Eq. 1315; xa0eidoy vais és rdv Metpara Thuc. 2. 93; T&v vey Kad- Axvabeacay és riy Oddaccay Hat. 7. 100; ef Te vauTindy éore KabeEr~ kugpévoy Thuc, 6. 5o. 2. to draw down or depress the scale, Ar. Ran. 1398. 8. 7d oxédn Kadeidxvorat the long walls have been carried down to the sea, Strabo 380. KdDepna, 74, (eadinps) a necklace, collar, LXX (Is.3.18): written k4Onpa in Antiph, Incert. 78. «dOepev, Ep. 1 pl. aor. 2 of eabinus. Kaley, for xaé’ &, v. xara B. I. 4. #08. Plut. Thes, 18; v. Béckh C. 1. 2. p, 657. 721 Kabévvipn, fo clothe, v. karadvvupt, kadeEijs, Adv.,=the more usu. épeffs, Plut. 2. 615 B, Ael. V. H. 8. 7, C. I. 3208. 9; poét. xard 6° éfeins Opp. C. 3. 59. KddeEts, ews, , (earéxw) a holding, retention, Tis dpxfs Thue. 3. 473 év pynpn Kat adeger Plut, 2.968 C. 2. a holding in, restraining, Tov mvevparos Arist. de Somno 2,17; Tod Ovpou, THs emOuplas Id. Eth, E. 2. 7, 8. : KaQétw, fut. of xaréxw, as early as Hom. Kd0eppa, 74, in pl.=epyara (vy. épua m1), Anacr. 20. kaQéptw: aor. I xabeipnica (v. sub Eprw) :—to creep, steal down, da’ pbiav wéyov Kadeipney édagos Soph, Fr. 110; Kabéprucdy vuv és Kepapetkdy Ar. Ran. 129, cf. 485 :—metaph., apd 7a dra dprt tovdos -Kkadépme: Xen. Symp. 4, 23, cf. Asclepiad. in Anth. P. 12. 36. «&0es, imperat. aor, 2 of ea0inue. Kdbeots, ews, 7, (xadinut) a letting down, rhs kbps Diog. L. 1. 109. 2. a bringing of plays upon the stage, Schol. Ar. Ran. II. (from Pass.) a descent, Arist. Meteor. 2. 2, 22, Probl. 2. 5, 3. pet Pe Kabéroavro, aor. I of Kabice, kaPeoréov, verb. Adj. of xa0éCopat, one must sit down, Pherecr. Inc. 92. kaeornKétws, Adv, part. pf. act. of xabtornut, fixedly, steadily, calmly, wad. éxew mpéds 71 Arist. Pol. 8. 5, 22. kabeorntw, fut. 3 of xadiornut, with intr. sense. kabeoriaots, ews, 7), public entertainment, Keil Inscr. Boeot. Deb SBeu. KaleorSra, wy, 74, syncop. neut, pl. part. pf. of xadiornu. kaertp, fipos, 6, (kaBinus) anything let down into: 1. a plug of lint, pessary, as Galen, cites Hipp. (where ma@erqpioyv is in our text). 2. a surgical instrument for emptying the bladder, Galen. 2. 396; or for injecting into it, Id. 3. a fishing-line, Artemid, 2, 14. 4.=Ka@epa, Nicostr. Incert. 7, Clem. Al. 244; v. GAvats, KaGertptov (sc. dpyavov), 76,=Kabernp 1, Hipp. 659. 20; 7d dpyavoy 70 wad. Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 9. kabernptopés, 6, a putting in of the raSernp, Paul. Aeg. 6. 59. xabérys, 6, prob. a portcullis (v. mrepév 111. 9), Schol, Eur. Phoen, 114. Kaberikés, 4, dv, perpendicular, Schol. Arat. 112. Adv, -«@s, Eust. Opusc. 155. 45. KdOeros, ov, («adinut) let down, perpendicular, mpds riv yiv Arist. Mechan, 30; 2 :—as Subst., 1. «dBeros (sc. ypappyn), }, a per- pendicular line, Tim. Locr. 98 B, Arist. Meteor. 3. 3, 7.5 3- 5,14, al. :— a plumb-line, mpds tiv ndBerov & éuerpnOn Epigr. ap. Plut. Aem. 15; kara or mpds KaGerov vertically, Plut. 2. 890 F, 938 A :—perpendicular height, Tpidv jyucvoradion éxew Thy 1. Strabo 379. 2. («. dppid), a fishing-line, Opp. H. 3. 77, 138, Anth. P. 7. 637 (v.1. #aBérn). 3. (sc. duvds or Bots), 6, an animal let down into the sea as an offering to Poseidon, Lys. ap. Harp. s. v., Phot., Suid. II. suborned, Synes. Ep. 185 A. : Kaevdnréov, one must sleep, Plat. Phaedr. 259 D. ’ kaSevSw (and so the Mss. of Hdt, 2. 95, but late editors write xarev5w): impf. xadevdov Hom., Ar. Av. 495; «kaOnddoy Plat. Symp. 217 D, al. ; éxabevdov Lys. 93. 1., 94-1, Xen. Oec. 7, 11: fut. xabevdjow Ar. Eccl, 419, Xen. Cyr. 6. 2, 30, etc.: non-Att, aor. éxaGedinoa Hipp. 538. 54, Luc, Asin, 6: pf. #a0ev5nxa Epiphan. To lie down to sleep, sleep, ll. 1. 611, Od. 1.4, 304., 6.1, Hdt., etc.; opp. to dypumvéw or éyphyyopa, Theogn. 471, Plat. Phaedo 71 C, etc.; «. parny Aesch, Cho, 881: vuerds x. to sleep by night, Plat. Phaedr, 251 E; «. rds vi«ras to sleep all one’s nights, Bato Evepy.1; padaxas, oxAnpas xa. Antiph. Mapexd, 1. 6, Timocl. *Ixap. 4:—of male and female, iva rdvye kabevderoy ev giddryre Od, 8. 313; «. mera Tivos Plat. Symp. 219 D;—generally, to spend the night, Thy Bovdny els axpéwodw iévae wae? x, Andoc, 7, 10:—x, ént dAov, of a fowl, Ar, Nub.1431 :—é« Tod xadevdovros from a sleeping state, Plat. Phaedo 72 B. II. metaph. ¢o lie asleep, lie idle, xept Aesch. Ag. 1357, cf, Xen. Hell. 5.1, 20, An. 1, 3,11, Dem. 438.15; «. Tov Biov to be asleep all one’s life, sleep away one’s life, Plat. Rep. 404 A; opp. to évepyeiv, Arist. Eth, N. 7. 5,1; opp. to mpooéyev Trois mpaypact, Plut, Pomp. 15. 2. of things, fo sleep, lie still, be at rest, Amides otmw “a. Eur. Phoen, 634; adevdey édy &v rh yi karaxelpeva reixn Plat. Legg. 771 D; rods vdpous éGv «a8. Plut. Ages. 30,—Acc. to Schleusner, in N. T. of the sleep of death, like xotpac@ai, but all the instances prove the reverse, except I Thess. 5. 10, where there is a verbal reference to its usual sense iny.6; cf. adds véxus, ofa caevder, Bion I. 71. Oevipepa, 7d, an invention, LXx (Sirac. 35. 9, 12). «a0-cupect-Aoyéw, to speak fluently, Polyb, Excerpt. Vat. p. 397. kabeupioxe, to discover, Luc. Ocyp. 68 :—Pass., xafeupéOn koopotoa she was found in the act of adorning .., Soph, Ant. 395; but Nauck has restored xaOnpé0n she was caught, v. ka@atpéw It. Kd0ed0os, ov, boiled down, Achae. ap. Ath. 368 A, Oribas. p. 187 Matth. KaGepys, és, =foreg., Nic. Al. 586. ‘ Kabapnors, ews, 4), a'boiling down, Hipp. 356. 27, Diod. 1. 40. Kabersdopat, Dep., to mock at, Lat. illudere, c. gen., &s cebev ai wives aide nadeyidwvra Od. 19. 372, (cf. 373, Kaxelvy epeyrdavTo). Kadélpo, fut.—eYjow, to boil down, Diosc. 6. 6, 7, Plut. 2. 555 B; «. dp» yopiov Ar. Vesp. 795 :—Pass, to be dried up by the sun, Theophr. H. P. 7.5, 2, Diod. 1. 40. II. metaph. ¢o soften, temper, joined with mpaivew, Xen, Eq. 9,6; cf. réoow. Kap, Att. for xd46nca1, 2 sing. pres. of ea@nuat. . Kabnyepav, dvos, 6, },=Iyendv, a leader, a guide, ris 6500 Hat. 7. 128, cf. Polyb, 3. 48, 11; "Apar@ KaOnyendve xpyodpevos tept TOY Aw Id. 7.14, 43 4. THs dpers in or Zo virtue, Plut. Dior; as a name of gods, much like dpynyérns, Arévugos nad. C. 1, 3067-68 A; “Appodirn 3 A 722 xadnyéopat, Ion. Karny-: fut. Aoopar: Dep. — To go before, act as guide, lead the way, absol., Hdt. 9. 40, 66, Thuc. 6. 4; of karnyedpevor the guides, Hdt. 7.130; ob xadyyov, époua & éyw Ep. Plat. 312 B:— then xar. rin eis réwoy Hat. 4. 125., 6.102; émt rémov 7. 215; also, war. Tit Oddy Q, 104. 2. c. acc. rei, to go before and teach a thing, 4o explain, indicate, Lat. praeire verbis, xpnornpiov Kar. 1d. 2.56; 7d Eppa kar. rit Id, 7. 183, cf. Xen. An. 7. 8, 10; 6 Tov morapdy Kad. he who was explaining it, i.e. shewing where it was fordable, Plat. Theaet. 200 E, 3. c. gen., #a0. Tod Adyou to begin the discourse, Id. Symp. 199 C; &yv xaOnynoar’ dy Trodro of which this would be the beginning, Lach. 182 C; «a0. rijs orpareias, Tod moArrevparos to be its author, Plut. Camill. 15, Thes. 35. 4, to be the first to do, to estab- lish, institute, Hdt. 2. 49, 56; and c. part., od karnynoopa Tov vopov tévde ri0eis I will not begin establishing this law, Id. 7. 8,1: ¢. gen. pers. to be teacher of any one, Strabo 674, Dion. H. de Isae. 1, ad Amm. 5; and, 6 xaOnynodpevos a teacher, Plut. 2.120 A, ous, 1), @ leading, f. 1. in Antig. Car. 187; Bentl. xadeAxdoets. KalnynrTHs, ov, 6, a guide, Numen. ap. Ath. 313 D: a teacher, Dion. H. de Thuc. 3, Plut. 2. 70 E ubi v. Wyttenb., 85 D, etc. :—also KaOnyy- Thp, Hpos, 6, Manetho 2. 300: fem. Orph. H. 75. 6. KaOnyntucés, 7, dv, able to guide, guiding, c. gen., Galen. Kabnyoupevos, 6, an abbott; kabnyoupévn, 7, an abbess, Eccl. KabySive, to sweeten much, (wpds kadndvapevos mepirra@s Ath. 140 A: —to gratify, rvé Eunap. p. 13 ; Tv doppyow Eumath. xa0nSumd0ea, 1), a luxurious life, Hesych. Kadndimidew, to squander in luxury or revelling, rods Bapetkods Xen. An. I. 3,3; Tov xpévoy Kad. cat dvadiowey Plut. Anton. 28; rods Tod mod€pou karpods Ka0. Luc. D. Mort. 12. 6. kabyKw, Ion. karhKe, (v. fxw) to come or go down, esp. to fight, Lat. in certamen descendere, Aesch, Cho. 455. 2. to come down to, come or reach to, és Odkacoay Hat. 7. 22,130; émt O4A. 2. 32., 5. 49. Thuc. 2.27; mpds tov Mndraxdv KéAmoy Id. 3.96; xépkos .. eis Aero xa0jxovea tapering away, Arist. H. A. 2.11, 2: metaph. of descent, 4 [vévos] «is abrov #. Arr. An, 1. 11, 8. 8. to come to any one, Kabijxey és tps 6 Adyos the turn of speaking came to us, Aeschin. 31. 27, cf. Plut. Alcib. 2, etc. 4, of Time, éére kaOhka 5 xpévos Xen, Hell. 4. 7, 2; 6 xpdvos nabhjre the time is come, Arist. H. A. 8. 2, 233; éoprijs els Tas Huepas Exelvas KaOnxovons as the festival fell on ‘those days, Plut. Fab. 18, cf. Polyb. 4. 7,13 €«#Anoiay mojoa, bray &« tev vipa Kabhen when [the time] appointed by the law comes, Dem. 399. 6. II. to be meet, fit, proper, Tod KaOnKovros xpévou Soph. O. T. 75, cf. Dem. 50. 6, Aeschin. 71. 29; al wa0. uépar the regular, proper days, Dem. 1372. 8; év TH Ka0. &pq Arist. H. A. 6. 14, 2; & ois KaO. katpois Ib. 6. 18, 25; rots Kad. voulyos Id. Pol. 7. 2, 18; 4 «a9. ovvodos or éxxdAnota Polyb. 4. 14, 1., 15, 8, etc.; Tas EoO7- tas Tas Kad. del Tais mepiOerais suiting them, Id. 3. 78, 3. 2. impers., xaOjxee por it belongs to me, beseems me, c. inf., ofs Kabhicet GOpoifecPar whose duty it is to assemble, Xen. An. 1. 9, 7, cf. Cyr. 8. I, 4, etc.:—hence in part., 7d eaOAov, 7a KaOqKovra that which is meet, fit or proper, one’s due or duty, Ib. 1. 2,5; Ta Karhxovra rots Sraprinrno Hat. 7.104: esp. as a technical term of the Stoics, Diog. L. 7. 25, Cic. Off. 1. 3 :—but, 8. in Hdt. 1. 97., 5. 49, Ta KadqjKovra=Ta KaGeoTw@ra, the present state of things, circum- stances. 4. Adv. part. pres, caOnndvrws, meetly, properly, Polyb. 5.9, 6, Plut. 2. 448 F. . Audtw, to bring the sun upon, illuminate, Anth, P. 11. 428. KdOndos, by crasis for nat dOndos, Ar. Lys. 881. KaOyAdw, fo nail on or to, 71 mpds Tt Plut. Alex. 24; mpds 71 Diod. 20. 54; mept rt Apollod. 1. 9, 1:—Pass., cavior naOnrwpévy nailed with -., Polyb. 1. 22,5; xd@Anwpa ouppaytas ..év KamTwhiy Kado jjvat C. 1. 2485. 7. KabqAwors, ews, %, a nailing on or to, Symm. V. T., Eus, H. E. 4, 15, fin. KxaOyAwris, of, 6, one who nails on or to, Gloss. Ka0npa, 7d, =Kdepua, Antiph. Incert. 78 ; cf. xaberhp 4. Kd0npat, Ion. Kar—; 2 sing. 40noa Hdt., Xen., but « Hyperid. in A. B. 100, Com. Anon. 305; Ion. 3 pl. xaréarae Hat. 2. 86: imper. xd9noo Il., Eur., contr. «40ov Ar, in Com. Frr. 2. 1190, Anaxandr. Zaryp. I, a0ha0w Aesch. Pr. 919; subj. xaQ@pyau, xd0y Cratin. Incert. 176, Kd0nra Ar. Eq. 754: opt. xaSotuny Id. Ran. 919, Lys. 149, ubi v. Dind.; inf, xajcOa ; part. xaOquevos:—impf. éxaOqyny Ar. Eccl. 152, Dem., etc.; é«dnroh. Hom.6.14, Ar. Av. 510, Thuc.; €a@na0e Ar. Ach. 638; €«dnvro, lon. éearéaro Hdt.; but also without syllab, augm., «a0jo7T0 Il. 1.569, Eur. Bacch. 1102, Phoen. 1466, Plat., etc., or xa0jro Dem. 285. 2., 300. 26; Ion. xarfjoro Hdt. 1.45; xa0joGe (the pres. being «a@nc0e) Dem.776.7; xa0fvro Ar. Eccl. 302, Thuc., etc., Ep. cadelaro Il. 11. 76, Ion. xaréaroHdt.—These are the only tenses used in correct writers, (being in fact the pf. and plqpf. of xabé{ouar; cf. Hyar): the fut. cabjoopac (which may be allowed in Lxx and N.T.) is no doubt corrupt in Eur. Incert. 77. To be seated, airés re ndOnoo nat dddovs iSpve Aaods Il. 2. Igl; mérpp emt mpoBAArt KaOhpevos 16. 407; én’ ducrijs krate nad, Od. 5. 82; «ad. olos év “Idp Il. 8. 207 5 dyau Ke. 23. 448; KAatov 8 éy Aexéeoar Kad. Od. 10. 497; Ovpyor Kad. 17. 530; (so, émt rats Opas Ar. Nub. 466); abrddev é« Bipporo nad. even from his seat as he sat there, Od. 21.420; KaOhue? axpwv éx maryov (cf. éx 1. 6), Soph. Ant. 411; but, é« 700 pécov xarfaTo sate aloof, remained neutral, Hat. 3. 83., 4.66., 8. 73; év Opdvm nar. Id. 2.149; Opdym wad, Eur. El. 315; . mpos Tapy Id. Hel. 1084 ; pds 70 wip Ar. Vesp. 773; ent Sicpoy _ Plat. Rep. 328 C; ep imnwy Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 543 &s Tobpyacrihpioy 3-27 :—c. acc. cogn., €ipay-xad. Eur, Heracl. 55; so, eabjobat caOnryéopar — KabiCo. wabice It. 2. to be seated in court, ot raOhpevor the judges, the court, Andoc. 18. 13, Dem. 66.13, etc.; Sucaords odx dpa kaOnpévous Ar. Nub. 208; dpeis of xaOjuevor you who sit as judges, Thuc. §. 85; ove emt rovrw K. 6 Sixaorhs Plat. Apol. 35 C;_«. bmep Tay vépov Dem. 1329. 19 :—of the BovAg, Andoc. 6. 42; BovAjjs wept rovTav KaOnpévys Dem. 552.16; of the éexAnovaoral, Xen. An. 5. 10,5; the spectators in a theatre, Hegesipp. "AdeAg. I. 29. 8. to sit still, sit quiet, Lat. desidere, tin wep ev vepéecor xabnpévw Od. 16. 264; opotow evt pe- yapowr kabelaro (for éea@nvro) Il. 11. 76; év wévOet peydrw karijoro Hdt.1.45 ; pera xomv nad. to rest after labour, Soph. Fr. 380 :—and, in bad sense, ¢o sit.or lie idle, sit doing nothing’, ll. 24. 403, Hdt. 3. 1343 of an army, Thuc. 4.124; ovdtv moodyTes evOd5e KadjueOa, pédAdovTEs dei Dem. 156, 28, cf. 24. 20., 25.10, etc.: also of a besieging army, ¢o sit down or lie before a place, Thuc. 2. 20, cf. 101; éxOpav im’ avrois telxeow Kabnyévow Eur. Phoen. 752. 4. to lead a sedentary, obscure life, @v oxérw nabqpevos Pind. O. 1. 133; ef. Aesch. Cho. 919 ; ai Bavavoreat [réxvat] dvaryndfovot KabjoOa Xen, Oec. 4, 2: then, to be engaged or employed, esp. in a sedentary business, Hdt. 2. 86 ; k. ént rp TparéCn, of bankers, Dem. 1196. 16, cf. 1111. 28; én’ épya- ornptov Id. 1367. 26; ént rod .. tarpetov Aeschin. 6. 18. 5. of people, zo be settled, ev AéAporow Hat. 5. 63: of districts and countries, to lie, lie low, Lat. subsidere, Theophr. H. P. 8. 8,7, Ael. V. H. 3.1, N. A. 16. 12 (al. eaGeupévors). 6. of a statue, to be placed, Plat. Symp. 215 A, cf. Arist. Pol. 5. 12, 2. 7. of things, to be set or placed, Kayo én’ dutAw KaOnpevors Teleclid. Srepp. 2, cf. Pherecr. MeraAA. 1.173; 7d mpdddrov x. wAdyov. Arist. Mechan. 5, 3, cf. 5. KaOnpateupévws, Ady. part. pf. pass. of eabapatetar, KaOnpépav, Adv., better divisim, a0” jpuépar, daily, KaOnpepeta, 7, daily business, Polyb. 6. 33, 4, in pl. KaOnpéptos, Dor. kabap-, a, ov, day by day, daily (ka0’ jpépav), Eur. Phoen, 229:—later also kaOnpepivés, 7, dv, Plut. Lyc. 10, Ath. 259 F ; cf, Lob. Phryn. 53 (who however confounds it with peOnpepwés). II. on this day, viv ce poipa Kad. pOive Soph. El. 1414. KaPnpepsw, to soften down, tranquillise, rhv Yuxnv Porph.V.Pyth.32: —so in Med. to smooth down, xbpara ap. Fabr. B. Gr. 14. 148 (ed. 1728). KaPnvioxéw, =7vioyéw, Jo. Chrys. KGO7par, kahpas, inf. and part. aor. I of xaBaipw. Ka9notxalo, strengthd. for jovxatw, Polyb. 9. 32, 2, Philo 2. 71. kaSlyvupat, Med. =xa0iCoua, Hipp. Fract. 752, cf. 658. 38., 662. 19., 665. 11., 674. 49 :—KaOvyvica in Phot. seems to be corrupt for xada- yviou, cf. Schmidt. Hesych. s. v. xayadjoa. K498pos, ov, =Kabidpws, Lxx (Jer. 8.6), Hesych., Phot, Ka0uSpéw, fo throw into a violent sweat, Gloss. KaSlSptpa, 75, =15pupa, Gloss. KaPiSpitors, ews, },—=Tpuors, Lat. dedicatio, Diod. 4. 51, etc. the inauguration of an Emperor, Philostorg. 9. Io. KaOiSpve, Causal of xadéCopat, to make to sit down, ’Odvoja kabidpve Od. 20. 257; paxdpwy és aiay odv kafidpice Biov will carry thee to the land of the Blest that thou mayst live there, Eur. Bacch. 1339:—Pass. to sit down, settle, Ar. Av. 45, xa0.Spupévos év médet Plat. Soph. 224 D ; k. és “Apyw to take one’s seat in .. , Theocr. 13. 28. 2. to establish, place, & rots Tiyworéros 7d Tipdraroy (sc. Tiy Kapdlav) Kabidpucer % pots Arist. P. A. 3. 4,6; ép’ évds rémov x. tiv ioropiay to limit it, Dion. H. de Thuc, 6 :—Pass., «. és éavr@v xwpay to be restored; Hipp. Fract. 773, cf. Prorrh. 102 F; éy ais [foropias) riv GdAjGaav Kadcdpv- oat brodAapBdvopev Dion. H. 1, 1. 38. to consecrate, dedicate, Eur., who uses aor. 1 med, (I. T. 1481), and pf. pass. in act. sense (Cycl. 318), cf. Anth. P, append. 143 :—Pass., Mooede@vos Tod KabcSpudévros ind .. C.1. 2655. 5. 4. to found, yupvdovov Lxx (2 Mace, 4. 12). KaSiSpas, wros, 6, }, sweating much, tired, Basil. Kabtepevw, to sacrifice, offer, abrovs Plat. Phaedr. 252 C; Tv pyrépa Arist. Eth. N. 7. 5, 3; TOv ixérny Dion. H. 8. 1. Kaftepoupyéw, =foreg,, Diod. 20. 14. Kabtepdu, Ion. katipow, fut. dow:—to dedicate, devote, hallow, Hat. I. 92, 164; TH wey yap "AOnvG Kabiépwoer .. © orarhpas els dvab7- Hara .. Lys. 155. 24; 7d Aaxdv pépos Exdorw TO Oc@ Plat. Legg. 745 E; iepdv, dyahpa Polyb. 3. 22, 1, etc.; éaurdv bmép Tis maTpidos TH Baipove «. Plut. Camill. 21; ° 7d Oéarpoy Dio C. 39. 38:—Pass., Emot tpapels re kat KaQtepwpévos [i] Aesch, Eum. 304; % Kippata xapa KabtephOn was consecrated, Dem. 277.7, cf. Aeschin. 69. 8; of xaOcepw- pévot 79 Ait his priests, Sext. Emp. P. 3. 224. 2. to set up or establish as sacred, tiv phpny, 7d vdpipoy Plat. Legg. 838 D, 839 C; Sinaca ev orHAy Kabtepwpéva Polyb. 9. 36,9. Prose word, used once by Aesch. Cf. Lob. Phryn, 192. Kabtépwors, ews, %, a dedication, Aeschin. 60. 1 3, Plut. Popl. 15, etc. KaOrepwréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be dedicated, Plat. Legg. 809 B. kadtepwrixés, 4, dv, dedicatory, Ad-yos Sopat. in Walz Rhett. 5. 14. Kabibaver, to sit down, 0&xdvbe nabiCavov they went to the council and took their seats, Od. 5. 3; pavris és Opdvous x. Aesch. Eum. 29; «. ént vt Isoct.13B; été rwos or rit Arist. H.A. 8. 3, 14.59. 32, 12; mapa Twa Polyaen. 8.64; absol., od 52 «abiCave Pherecr. Incert. 92.—Cf. nabica, Kabitnars, ews, %), @ sitting, Greg. Nyss. kaGitw, Ion. kar-: impf. xabitoy or xdOiCov (as Wolf), Hom., Att. Exa@:Cov (as if the Verb were not a compd.) Xen. Hell. 5. 4, 6, Dinarch. 106. 34 :—fut. xa®icw Apollod. Com. Atapapr. 2, Att. Kabi@ Xen. An, 2. 1, 4, Dem. 708. 1., 997. 23, Dor. xai{@ Bion 4. 16:— aor. I éxd@toa Xen. Cyr. 6. 1, 23, Menand, Ae. 4, Ep. «d6toa Il. 1g. 280, Att. xadica Eur. Phoen. 1188, Ar. Ran. g1i, Thuc. 6. 66., 7- 82, Ion. warioa Hdt. 1. 88., 4. 79; Ep. part. xadiccas Hom., II. aia Id. Andr, 266; but. acc. loci, to sit on, dpinv 1d. Heracl, 394; cf.c Dor. xadigas Theocr, 1, 12, subj. xaGien Ib. kr: late gxa0icnca Dio = Kabinus —xablornut. C. 37. 27., 54. 30:—another aor. used by Hom. is xadeioa (Kd- 6eooa in Pind.) always in causal sense; subj. ea0éow, v. infr. 1. 4 (v. sub t{w 1) :—pf. wexdOina Diod. 17. 115:—Med., impf. étaOCduny Ar. Vesp. 824, #a0-Il. 19.50: fut. cai(jcopa: Plat. Phaedr. 229 A, Euthyd. 278 C, (mpoo—) Aeschin. 77. 33, later xa@icopar Plut. 2. 583 F, N. T., -todpai LXXx :—aor. (én-, map-)exaOioapny Thuc. 4.130, Dem. 897. 4, Ep. caftocduny Ap. Rh. 4. 278 :—Pass., aor. 1 part. eae(nOels Dio C, 63.5: I, Causal, to make to sit down, seat, ddAous pev Kabicov Tpaas Il. 3.68; ph pe Kal’ 6. 360; o° én euotow eyd yovvecor kadiogas 9. 488; «dd 5 elo’ &y Oaddym 3. 382; Thv per .. Kabeicey én Opsvou 18. 389; Karioa Tiva én’ oinnparos Hat. 2.121, 5; Kadioat ta. els Opdvoy ice, to make him king, Xen. An. 2. 1, 4. 2. to set or place, tov pev .. kadeicey én’ jidevra Sxdpavbpoy Il. 5. 36; Kad F év ’Adnyys claw 2. 549, cf. Od. 6. 202; Kpévoy..Zeds yains vépbe xabeicev Il, 14. 204; Kadica Twa eis Sdpov Eur. lon 1541; xabiou arparéy to encamp it, Eur. Heracl. 664, Thuc. 4. 90; «. 70 orparevpa és xwptov émrndeov 1d. 6.66; «. xwpls wey rods dmAlras, xwpls Be rods inméas Plat. Legg. 755 E. b. ¢o set or place for any purpose, post, oxonds by fa Kabeioey Atyabos Od. 4. 524; Kabioa pvddxous, pvda- was to set guards, Hdt. 1. 89, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2,14; GAAous ator dyayav «ard ras..mvAas Hdt. 3.155; «. évédpay Plut. Popl. 19:—rarely of things, re émt ryydvois Pherecr. Tepe. 4. 3. to set up, dvipravra nd0ecoay Pind. P. 5. §5; and in Med. xa0écoac@a Anacr. Ep. 10, Ap. Rh. 4. 1219; for Eur, Hipp. 31, v. sub éyxaifw. 4. to make an assembly ¢ake their seats, convene or hold an assembly, d-yopds juev Aver Hde xadiCe Od. 2. 69; Srav xabécwow dyava h. Apoll. ap. Thuc. 3. 104; #. 70 dixacrhpiov to hold the court, Ar. Vesp. 305, cf. Dem. 997. 23; Tods vouobéras Id. 708.1; but, «. Tevt Sucaorhy to appoint a judge to try a person, Plat. Legg. 873 E; édy re xuAtous édv & érdcous dv 4 mors Kabion Dem. 585. fin.: to constitute, Sicacrhpia Plat. Polit. 298 E; tiv Bovdhy Plut. Sol. 19. 5. to put into a certain condition, kdal- ovrd Twa x. to set him a-weeping, Plat. Ion 535 E; also, eAatew twa «. to make him weep, Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 14:—for Theocr. 1. 51, v. d«pd- TLOTOS. II. intr. to sit down, be seated, take one’s seat, sit, absol., Il. 3. 394, and Att.; ém «Aropotat, év Opdvowr nadifew Il, 15. 50, Od. 8.422; év O@eos Hdt. 1. 181; emt rots épyaornpios or Tay lov Isocr. 372 D, 142. D; ént oxipwoda Ar. Nub. 254; émt dévdpoy Arist. H. A. 9. % 1; (but «. émt xwmny, of rowers, Id. Ran. 197); «. ént tov Bupoy Thuc. 1. 126, cf. Lysias 132. 4:—in Poets also c. acc., «ad. tplroda, Bwpdv, dupaddy, iepd Eur. Ion 366, El. 980, H. F. 48, Ton 6. 1317 (as we say ‘to sit a horse’); cf. €Couar, i{w, Hat, EpeCopar, Epnpat, tpdonpat, mpoci{w, Lob, Aj. 191. 2. to sit at meals, Lat. discumbere, Xen. Cyr. 8. 4, 2. 3. to sit as judge, Hdt. 1. 97., 5. 25, Plat. Legg. 659 B, Dem. 728, 28, 4. to sit down in a country, encamp, és xwptov Thuc. 4. 93. 5. to settle, sink in, Plat. Phaedr. 254 B. 6. of ships, 2o run aground, be stranded, Lat. sidere, Polyb. I. 39, 3, Strabo 99. III. the Med. is also used in this intr. sense, Il. Ig. 50 (in tmesi), Theocr, 15. 3, etc.; dy 5& xabiCecOa xedeton if he order them to take their seats (among the spectators in the theatre), Dem, 532. 20; mply kal mpoédpous aditecabat Id. 567. 6, cf. Plat. Phaedr. 229 A, Rep. 516 E, al. 2. of birds, ¢o settle, alight, Arist. H, A. g. To, 1. Cf. eabéfopat. Ka0inpt, Ion. Kar: fut. eaOjow: aor. I Kabjna, Ep. xabénea: pf. nadeixa Lysipp. Bary. 1, Dem. 858.10: (v. sub inp). To send down, let fall, wad be [kepavydy].. qe xapate Il. 8.134; xara 5 iyddev Fey eépoas 11. 53; olvoy Aaveavins Kwabena I have sent the wine down my throat, 24. 642; xaOiere immous év Sivas sink them in the ‘stream, as an offering to the river-god, 21.132; [ioria] és vfjas #d0epev we let them down, lowered them, Od. 9. 72; Aatpos rabqaew Aesch. Eum. 5553 oxolvw omvpiéa war. to let it down by a cord, Hdt. 5. 16; cpa ripyov «a0, Eur, Tro. 1011 ; Kévrov és thy Aipyny Kar. Hat. 4. 195; €uavrov eis GAa Eur. Hel. 1613; Orda eis GAa Ib. 391; 5€Acap xabeioay (3 pl. aor. 2) Id. I. T. 1181; x. Tt és m@pa Id. Ion 1034; vapOnn’ és medov Id. Bacch. 706; «. orovbds to pour them, Id. I. A. 60; tov KAfjpov és pécoy Kabels, of putting lots into a helmet or urn, Soph. Aj. 1285 :—x«. dyxvpay Hadt. 7. 36; pe Sixrva Arist. H. A. 4. 8, 12:— «. katameipytnpiny to let down a sounding-line, Hdt. 2. 28; and absol., xabievar to reach by sounding, to sound, Plat, Phaedo 112 E; obOels nabels t5vv7On mwépas ebpeiv by sounding, Arist. Meteor. I. 13, 27; so, ciay mpipacw Kadqie (a joke mapa mpoadoxiay, as if he had intended to say olov dyxorpov), Ar. Vesp. 174; Adyous avpBarnpiovs x. to make offers of peace, Dio C. 41. 47; «. meipay to make an attempt, Ael. V. H. 2.12, N. A. 1. 57:—els Gpous x. xépas to let one’s hair flow loose, Eur. Bacch. 695, cf. I, T. 52; «. mé&ywva to let one’s beard grow long, Ar. Eccl. roo, cf. Thesm. 841; and in Pass., eaOetpévos Tov ma&ywva Plut. Phoc. 10; 79 yévetov abr® xaberro Ael. V. H. 11. 10:—KabijKe Ta oxéXn let down his legs, of one who had been lying, Plat. Phaedo 61 C;_ «. dépu to let down one’s pike, bring it to the rest, Xen. An.6. 5,25; «. Tas kamas to let down the oars, keep them in the water, so as to stop the ship’s way, Thuc. 2. 91:—rarely of striking, 5: dupadod xadjjev éyxos Eur. Phoen, 1413; KaORKe EbAov madds és Kapa Id. H. F. 993:—x. mpds -yatav yéru to kneel down, Id. Hec. 561; és 88 yy yévu xapdr@ KaGecioay sank on their knee, Id. I. T. 333 :-—«. Td és tmvor to let him fall asleep, Id. H. F. 1006; viva eis xivdvvov Dion. H. §. 27:—«. Tid és AEtmvoV xAdny Eur. I. A. 423; so of a general, «. orparémeba els .. , to let them march into .., Polyb. 3. 70, 11, cf. 3.92, 73 *- évéSpas to lay an ambush, Id. 4. 63, 9 :—Pass. to come down, of a cow’s udder, Hdt. * 2, cf. Arist. H. A. 8. 10, 3:—also to reach or stretch down seawards, dpea mpds riv Oddarrav rabepéva Plat.Criti.118A; xadetrora reixn were carried down to the water, Thuc. 4. 103, cf.5.52:—but, 70 xaBermevov 7ijs paris a low & [dpxovra] avrt abrod Xen, Cyr. 3.1, 12, etc.; also, 723 deep tone of voice, Hdn. 5. 2. 2. to send down into the arena, enter for racing, Lat. demittere ad certamen, appara, (ev-yn Thuc. 6. 16, Isocr. 353D; in full, xa0. read eis dy@va Plut. 2. 616, etc.; «. Spdpara Schol. Ar. Nub. 552; iv mpwrnv didacKadlay Plat. Cim. 8 (cf. xaGears): —so also, ebofe Trois mpuravet .. yvmpas Kadeivar (Com. for mpobeivar) Ar. Eccl. 397; Todrov rov Adyov Kabetke has entered this plea, Dem. 858. 10; xara tiv dyopay Ka9. Aoyoro.ods Id. 704. fin. 3. to set at, Lat. immittere, Luc. D, Meretr. 7; a0. cx@ppa éni twa Id. Merc. Cond. 34; pidous kat pyropas x. to employ them, Plat. Pericl. 7:—Pass. to put oneself in motion, 4 orparndacin Kxatiero és macav Thy ‘EAAdba Hdt. 7. 138. II. seemingly intr. (sub. éavrdv), to swoop down like a wind, Ar. Eq. 430; of rivers, to run down, éxa- Tépwoe és péoor Plat. Phacdor12E; «. els ydvu to sink on the knee Plut. Anton. 45; «. els dy@va Lat. descendere in arenam, Id. 2. 616 If Luc, Alex. 6; «. és ‘Pédov to arrive there, Polyaen. 5. 17, 2:—cf. avy. xabinu 11 and v, Lob. Phryn. 398. ka0ikerevw, Ion, kat—, strengthd, for ixeredw, to beg earnestly, ti Tivos Eur. Hel. 1024. 2. to intreat earnestly, xaru. rwi Hat. 6. 68; ToAAd Kad, Td Heliod, 6.14; Twa c. inf., Plut. Cato Mi. 32 :—also in Med., Eur. Or. 324. Kabiucpatve, =KxaTiucpalya, q. v. kaOixvéopar, fut. -ifopar, aor. —Txdunv: Dep. To come down to, to reach; but in classic writers only metaph. to reach, touch, we padioTa kabixero wévOos GAagrov Od. 1.342; pada mus pe Kabixeo Oupody erin thou hast touched me nearly, Il. 14. 104; also, napa .. xévrporot pov wabixero came down upon my head, Soph. O. T. 809; els SApous x. brépous Paus. 5. 18, 2:—in Prose, the gen. was more freq., «. THs mNYRS Id. 7. 21,12; «. THS Yuxfs to reach or touch it, Plat. Ax. 369 E; jyav 6 Adyos kabixero Luc. Nigr. 35; 7 UBpis ob perplws pou Kabixero Id. Tox, 46; «a0, rivos mpérara Ael. V.H. 14. 3; 80, a0. Twos oxdret, kovdvdw to strike one with a whip, etc., Plut. Anton. 12, Alcib. 7. 2. Ka. Tis émBodjs to reach or gain one’s purpose, Polyb. 2. 38, 8, cf. 4. 50, 10; absol., recxi{ew émBadrdrAdpevar wabigovrar they will succeed, Id. 5. 93, 5+ cad i strengthd, for itaptvw, Suid.; KaPAapeva, Eccl. KaOipde [7], to let down by a rope, abrév Ar. Vesp. 379, 399; KNAw- veov Arist. Mech. 28, 2; Tov tpdxnAov .. kabiphoas, of the heron, — Babr. 94. 3:—Pass., és 70 Kamrwuov é« Tod obtpavod xabipijcbar Dio C. 45. 2. KaGipnors, ews, %, a letting down by a rope, Plut. 2. 264 E. KaPipovetw, = xadipdw, Hesych, xaGitw, Dor. aor. 1 subjunct. of eabice, KaOimrdatopat, fut. dcoua: Dep.: I. trans. to ride down, over- run with horse, xa0. Thv xwpny Hat. 9. 14, 2. to ride down, trample under foot, like Adg wareiv, Aesch. Eum, 150, 731, 779; later, c. gen., &, pidocopias Diog. L. 4. 47: cf. xabimmedor. II. also as Pass., pf. xa0immdc0a, Macho ap. Ath. 581 D, sensu obscoeno, kabimmevorts, ews, 9, a riding down upon, Dion, H. 9. 9. Kaburmetw, =Kadimmdacopat, to ride over, overrun with horse, Ta media Dion. H. 3. 26, cf. Hdn. 6. 2; of fish, xdua nad. Opp. H. 2. 515 :— Pass., morapol xaOirmevovrae frozen rivers are ridden over, men ride over them, Arist. Mirab. 168, Hdn, 6. 7. 2. to ride down, trample under foot,’ Apyetwv orpardv Eur, Phoen, 732. ~ Kabirmokpiréw, =sq., Poll. 1. 164., 9.141. KaOummopaxéw, to conguer with horse, Poll. 9. 141. Kaurmorpopéw, fo squander in keeping horses, Isae. 55.22; cf.xaTaE. VI. KaSinrapat, v. KaTaméropat. kalarragts (fors. cabimmagis), ews, 7, Lacon. name for acavaleade, Hesych. Kdbiors, ews, 7), a sitting down, Plut. 2.158 B. II. a sitting idle, from grief, Ib. 609 B. Ka0iopa,76, the part on which one sits; in pl. the buttocks, Schol. Aeschin. 17. 43- 2. a seat, Byz. II. a swarming, pedioody Eust, Opusc. 58.70. III. sediment, Schol. Nic. Al. 95. IV. in Eccl., i the cell of a monk, also kaOsoparioy, 7d. 2. a portion of the Psalter sung at once, followed by a pause or rest, v. Suicer. s. v. kaOtordve, found for xaiornut in inf., Isae. de Menecl. Her. § 29, Lys. 171. 16., 176. 38., 180. 7, C. I. 3065. 22; impf., Diod. 15. 33; so Kabtordw, inf. cadioray Diod. 19.15; part. kabioravres (v. 1. -word- vovtes) Act. Ap. 17.15. Kkabiornpt, A. in Causal sense; of Act., the pres., impf., fut.; of Med., the fut. (Paus. 3. 5,1), the aor. 1, and sometimes the pres. (v. infr. A. 11. 2); also more rarely the pf. xadéordxa, Hyperid. Eux. 38, Dion. H. de Dem, 54, Diod., etc.: (v. sub ternpc). To set down, xpy- Thpa xadiora Il, 9. 202; vija kardarnooy stop it, bring it to land, Od. 12.185; x. dippoy to stay or station it, before starting for the race, Soph. El. 710; mot bef xaiordva wé5a ; Eur. Bacch. 184, ef. Xen. An. 7. 7, 22:—in Med,, [Aatpos] xatecrhoavro Boevor steadied it, h. Hom. Ap. 407. 2. to bring down to a place, Tous p’ éxédeuoe TWAovie karagrica to bring them down to Pylos, Od. 13. 2743 *- ria. és Nagov Hat. 1. 64, cf. Thuc. 4. 78; médw abrov x. és 7d retxos ody Kat bya Id. 3.34; &. Tods”EAAnvas els “Iwviay wadw Xen. An. I. 4,13; and without wéAw, to restore, és pas adv kar. Blov Eur. Alc. 362 :—Pass., od dy dytl mivay yapis Kadiorarro would be returned, huc. 4.86; as (sc. rds xdpas) ob8 6 MeAdumous .. karagTnocev dy Alex. Kpar. 2. 8. to bring before a magistrate or king, Hdt. I. 209; Vv. infr. B, I. b. IL. ¢o set in order, of soldiers, Xen. An. 1.10, 10; to set as guards, Ib. 3. 2,1, etc. 2. to ordain, appoint, karéarnce Tépavvoy elvas maida Tov éwirrod Hat. 5. 94, cf. 25; but generally without the inf., «. Tia tmapxov Id. 7. 105; adAov kar. tiva els dpxyv »3A2 724 Lys. 120. 30, etc., cf. Eur. Supp. 352; ét dpyhy Isocr. 260 A, cf. Ar. Av. 672; also, «. éyyuntds Hdt. 1. 196, Ar. Eccl. 1064; d:xacrds, émpeAnras, vopobéras Id. Pl. 917, Xen. Cyr. 8. 1, 9, etc.:—then of games and the like, ywpyicods d-yGvas x. Isocr. 41 A :—so also in aor. med, ¢o appoint for oneself, establish, institute, ppodpnua Aesch, Eum. 706; tUpavvov Karagrhoacba mapa odict avroio Hdt. 5. 92, 13 apxovras Xen. An. 3. 1, 39, ete. ;—rarely c. inf., of eadiordvres povourp -» Tadeve Plat. Rep. 410 B. b. esp. of political constitutions, to settle, establish, vopous, TeAeras Eur. Or, 892, Bacch. 21, etc. ; ar. modkireiay, dAryapxiay, etc., like Lat. ordinare, constituere rempublicam, Plat., etc., v. Wolf Lept. p. 229; but also fo set in order, arrange, ToAt- teiav Plat. Rep. 590 E :—in this sense also in Med., rodro BovAeurhproy ppovpnua yas Kaiorapa Aesch. Eum. 706; riyv ‘Inmiov xadicrapat tupavvida Ar. Vesp. 502; Kadioraro 7a wept tiv MirvAnyyny 7 aiTd ddxer Thuc. 3. 35, cf. 1. 76, 114.,8. 70; mpos ene 7d mpGypa karagrn- cacGat to settle it with me, Dem. 543. 15 :—Pass., } .. karagrabeion Sévapyus Isocr. 110 C. 3. to bring into a certain state, kar. 7) copa to prepare the body for medicine, Hipp. 648. 40; so, kar. Sijpov és povapxtay Eur. Supp. 352; «. Twa és dwévoray Thuc, 1.82; és poBov Id. 2. 81; és dwopiay Id. 7.75; els dvd-yeny Lys. 96. 33; «ls aloxdvny Plat. Soph. 230 D; eis épnyuiay pidow Id, Phaedr. 232 D; eis dy@vas Id. Apol. 24 C; ria els dopddeay Isocr. 107 B; tivas eis dy@va Kabé- araxa; Hyperid. Eux. 38, Lycurg, 148. 4: but also, «ar. Tid éy xivddvy Antipho 136. 26; riv méAw & modéum Plat. Menex. 242 A; rods pidous év dxwdtvy Xen. Cyr. 4. 5, 28:—also, x. Eavrdv és xptow to present himself for trial, Thuc. 1. 131, cf. Lycurg. 148. 26; but, «ar. Tia els rods dpxikods to reckon him as one of .., Xen. Mem. 2. 1, 9- 4. to make or render so and so, wevdh y epavrdv Soph. Ant. 657; Twa dpvjpova, dmoroy Antipho 115. 29, Thuc. 1. 68, etc. ; nar. Tt pavepdv Id. 2. 42, cf. 1.32; énémovoy Tov Biov ar. Isocr. 211 C ;—and c. part., xAalovra kafiordva Tid to bring one to tears, Eur. Andr. 635 :—rarely c. inf., xa9. Twa pet-yey to make him fly, Thuc. 2. 84, cf. Eur. Alc. 283 :—Med., riv vavpaxlay meCouaxlay Kabioracba Thue. 2. 89. 5. to restore, tds xépas Alex. Kparev. 2:—and in aor. med., caracrnoacbat evdaipoviay Isocr. 53 B. 6. rhv Cony karagThaac0a am Epyav dvocwrarew to get one's living by -. , Hdt.8. 105. 7. to make, continue, wavvuxor .. dudmAoov Kabioracay Aesch, Pers. 382; so in Med., xpupaioy éxemdovy ovdaph eabicraro Ib. 385. B. intr. in aor. 2, pf., and plqpf. of Act. (also in fut. eadeorhéw, Thuc. 3. 37,102), and in all tenses of Méd. (except aor. 1), and of Pass,: —to be set, set oneself down, settle, és rémov Hadt. 3.131; ddbvac és br0- yaorpiov Kabicravro Hipp. 1235 C; of joints, éficrara: kat xad. goes out of joint and in again, Id, Art. 784: simply, to be come to a place, és *Phyov Thue. 3. 86; bro xabéorapev Soph. O. C. 23. b. to come before another, stand in his presence, Pind. P. 4. 240; A€gov Ka- ‘raords Aesch. Pers. 295 (unless it be taken in signf. 4), cf. Hdt. 1. 151; k, és dw twos Id. 7. 293; Kataordvres emt rods dpxovras édeyov Id. 3. 46, cf. 156; xaraords ént 7d rAHO0s EdXeye Thuc. 4.84; cf. kardoracs ¥ 3: 2. to be set as guard, Hdt. 7. 59, Soph. O. C. 355, Xen. An. 4. 5,19, etc.: 10 be appointed, Seardrns .. abéornea Eur. H. F.142; orpatnAarns véos xaraords Eur. Supp. 1216; kar. xopyyds, orparnyés, etc,, Antipho 142. 31, Isocr., etc.; ef mpéBovAat xabecraaw én rois Bovdevrais Arist. Pol. 4.15, 12: v. sub oped. 3. in a physical sense, to settle, deposit a sediment, Hipp. 940 G, 945 F. 4. also to stand quiet or calm, of water, Srav % Aixvn Karaorh Ar. Eq. 865 ; amvedua etov Kat Kabeornxds calm and settled, Id, Ran. 1003; 6 OdpuBos- karéorn Hdt. 3. 80; ews 7d mpaypa Karacrain Lys. 132. 8:—so, of persons, karaoras san meh Aesch, Pers. 295 (but v. supr. 2); cf. xaGe- ornkdras; hpvxi Kabigrarat Arist. Phys. 7.3.15; dp@pev [rods vOovata- armors) .. kabiarapévous Id. Pol. 8.7,4; Kabecr@ri mpoownp with com- posed, calm countenance, Plut. Fab. 17; patvecOa kal ew Tod Kadeorn- xéros eivat Luc. Philops. 5 :—1) xa0eornxvia, Cicero's constans aetas,middle age, Thuc. 2. 36; of xabeornxdres thoseof middleage, Hipp.Aph.1243. 5. in pf. to come into a certain state, to become, and in aor.and plapf. to be, dv7t pidov moréjuov x. Hdt. 1.87; euppwy xadiorara: Soph. Aj. 306; és paxny Hdt. 3. 45; és médcpor iyiv wat paxny x, Eur. H. F. 1168; és méAnv Sopds Id. Heracl. 159; és inow Hipp. 97 B; és xtvduvous Antipho 118. 5; és péBov Hdt. 8.12; és d5éos, Admnv, Thuc, 4. 108., 7.753 é €xOpay tivi Isocr. 202 D; els dudvoray Lys, 151. 2; KaTaorivat és ovv- HOedv Tivos Ti wédwy Tmo.eiv to make the city become accustomed to it, Aeschin, 23. 37 ;—dvrioraciwrns xarearhnee had been, Hdt. 1. 92, cf. 9. 37; év deivart peyddw Katécracay 7.138; Karacrdvrov age eb Tay mpnyparov 7.132, cf. 2.84; rive Tpdmw nadéorare; in what case are ye? Soph. O,T. 10; govéa pe nat .. kabecrdvat Ib. 703; Gmapvos 8 ovdevds xabioraro Id. Ant. 435; xpumrds karaords Eur. Andr. 1064; of év rovry Tis HAukias KadecTHres Antipho 115. 4; év oly rpdmw [7 tTav “AOnvaiay apy] xaréarn how it came into being, Thue. 1. 97, cf. 96; dp£dyevos ev00ds Kabicrapévov (sc. ToD woA€puov) from its first com- mencement, Thuc. 1. I. 6. to be established or instituted, to pre- vail, exist, nai oge pavrhiov Aws kateorhwee Hdt. 2. 29; dypar.. modAal xareoréaow Ib. 70, cf. 1. 200; b5e api vdpmos KaTeoThKee I.1973 Bporotow ds nadéornxey véopos Eur. Hipp. 91; c. inf., dedv’Apdidpaoy mpwrois “Opamtos karéorn vopifev Paus. 1, 34, 2:—hence in pf. part., existing, established, prevailing, tov viv karecre@ra xécpov Hdt.1. 65; iv nareornKds ovdty mept pdpov Id. 3.89; Tods kareore@ras Tprakoatovs the regular 300, Id. 7. 205; of xadceor@res vdpor Soph. Ant. 1113, Ar. Nub. 1400 ; Ta Kaeor@ra ihe present state of life, Soph. Ant. 1160; also existing laws, customs, usages, the established constitution of a state, og. 798 B, Isocr. 151 B; 7d xareoredira Hat. 1. 59. 7. , méov %) 50 é cabiornus — xadopaw. y pot karéornoay more than they stood me in, | % Andoc. 21. 16. 8. fo sland against, oppose, mpos. Tia Polyb. 25. 25 5 —so in Pass., Ternveoor xaréoradey Hes. Th. 674. C. aor. 1 med, and sometimes pres. med, are used in trans. sense, V. supr. A. II. 2, sq. KaStoriptov, 76, a seat, Schol. Ar. Eccl. 729, Hesych. Kafiorns, 6, a rider, Macar. Kabiorropéw, strengthd. for ioropéw, Geop. 15. 2. kaliorépyots, ews, %, investigation, Theod. Metoch. xaQ6, Ady. in use for nad’ 8, =xad, in so far as, according as, Lys. 213. 19, Arist. Metaph. 4. 18, 1, Diod. Excerpt. 532. 83, etc. I, so that, Plat. Soph. 267 D, Plut. 2. 51 B. KaboSyyéw, fo guide, Plut. Cato Ma. 13; ¢. acc., Id, 2.558 D. KabodHyqots, ews, 7, =sq., Clem. Al. 304. KaPoSyyia, 7, a leading, guidance, Strabo 99. xaQoSnyés, 6, a guide, shewer, Orph. H. 7. 8, Apollod. 3. 4, I. «dQo080s, Ion. KdroS0s, 4, a going down, descent, Plut. 2. 378 E, Luc. Nec. 2: a way down, Id, D. Mort. 27. 1:—of things eaten, & TH kK. 9 ndovn Arist. P. A. 4. 11, 4. 2. 4 K. } emt Oddagcayr, like xard- Baots, Arr. An. I. 2, 4. II. a coming back, return, Eur. H. F. 19, Thuc, 3. 114; esp. of an exile to his country, Hdt. 1. 60, 61, al., Thuc. 3. 85., 5. 16, etc.; «. wal ddea Id. 8, 81. III, =mepiobos, Lxx (Eccl. 6. 6), Phot. KaPoAiKds, 7, dv, (K«dBodos) general, kaoduKe Adyw=as Kadddov elmeiv, Arist. Plant. 2. 6,1; #. Eupacrs (y. sub voc.) Polyb, 6. 5, 3, cf. 1.57.43 «. Kat kow? ioropla Id.8. 4,11; . weplAnyes Dion. H.deComp. 12; x. Adyot, general, opp. to special (eld:wol), Sext. Emp. P. 2. 845 vépos «. Philo 2.172; x. émorodn an Epistle general, Eus. H. E. 4. 15, etc.; so, 72 x. Ib. 3.33 4 &. xxAnoia the universal Church, Cyrill. Hieros. Catech. 18, etc.; «. mpoowdia, v. sub xa0ddouv:—Adv, —Kds, generally, Arist. Plant. 2. 8, 9, Polyb. 4.1, 8; Comp. —wrepov, Id. 3. 37, 6. II. as Subst. a financial officer, controller, Eus, H. E. 10. 6 :—hence KafoAucdrys, 7, his office and rank, Ib, 8. 11. KafoAkevs, éws, 6, (xadéAnw) a hind of bandage, Galen, 11. 476; also called kaBoAkés. Ka9oAKh, %), a drawing down of ships to sea, Aen. Tact. to, Ath. 204 C. KaboAkés, dv, (xadéAxw) drawing down, x. Bpi0os Poéta ap, Werusd. Phil. P. 28; v. Lob. Phryn. 316. «a0odou, as Adv. on the whole, in general, for xa0’ Odov, as it is written in authors before Arist. (e. g. Philipp. ap. Dem. 251. 3) 5 «. ypapetv, opp. to xara pépos, Polyb. 3. 32, 8; x. eimeiy Plut. 2. 397 C, etc. ; so, 70 «. Diod. 1. 77, Plut. 2. often in the Logic of Arist., 7d «a@dAov a common noun, opp. to 7d xaé’ Exacrov (a singular); A€yw Be x. pev d émt wrevdvav mépune Katryopetcbat, Kad’ Exacrov 5€¢ 7d pH de Interpr. 7, 1, cf. Metaph. 4. 26, 2: but also a'universal, opp. to Td Kara pépos (a particular), Rhet. 1. 2, 15, al.; ‘mporaois kaOdAov a universal proposi- tion, An. Pr. 1.1, 2, sq.3 7) «. dwédegis a universal proof, An. Post. 3. 24,13; general, universal, used as a predic. like an Adj., x. etoly ai dp- xai Metaph. 2. 6,7, sq.; Todro yap éore x. paddov Pol. 2. 6, 8; of K. Aéyot, opp. to of ént pépous, Eth. N. 2. 7, 1, etc.;—so, ) TOY K. mpayya- Tow aivragis universal history, Polyb. 1. 4, 2, cf. 3. 32,83 % «. mpoow- dia, or 4 KabdAov (sub. rpoowdia), also 7 KaBoALK? Tp., name of a work of Hdn. on the Accents, often quoted by Gramm., of which the work of Arcadius or Theodosius wep? tévev is an abridgement. un ob xaOddou, not at all, ne omnino quidem, Dem, 827. 9; ovde x, Polyb. I. 20, 2. KaPopnpetw, =sq., Hesych. s, v. xadwpnpevpeva. kaBopnpite, to describe Homerically, Aristaen, 1. 3, 12. KaPoptréw, fut. yaw, to conciliate by daily intercourse, to win the Savour of, robs yapipovs Arist. Pol. 5. 11, 33, cf. Plut. 2. 52 E, Id. Caes. 15 (ubi olim xadwpadrce pro xabwptdnoe), App. Civ. 5.63; also c. dat., hk. TO TANOE to associate with the people, Diod, 14. 703 so, «. Tovs katpovs or Tots Katpois, Lat. inservire temporibus, Ath. 513 B, Schol. Ar. Ran. 47, 546, 1001:—Pass., i2d Anuddou KadopuAnbels Diod. 16. 87. II. Pass. to be used in daily intercourse, to be current, } KadorpsAnpevy déga Polyb. 10. 5,9; SapSdvios yews eaOwpudson b a proverb, Diosc. Alex. 14: Adv., ca@wptdnpévws Eust. Opusc, 302. 29. Kadopodroyéw, fut. now, to confess or allow, esp. to one’s detriment, Plat. Crito 49 C, Gorg. 499 B. Il. ¢o promise, engage, vow, tiv niorw tut Bodvar Andoc. 6. 373 avd0nua 7® Oe@ Luc. Phalar. 2. i. 2. to betroth, KAavdiay rwvi Plat, T. Gracch, 4; so pf. pass. in act. sense, Tiy ddeAphy .. yuvaikd run Kabwporoynuévos Id. Crass. 33 5 but the same in pass. sense, Id. Pomp. 47. KafomAtfw, fut. Att. «@, to equip or arm fully, 7} mavordia Aeschin. 75- 33, cf. Decret. ap. Dem. 265. 23, Plut. Philop. g:—Med. fo arm oneself fully, Polyb. 3. 62, 7, etc.; mavrevytas x. to arm oneself in .., Joseph. Macc. 3. 12 :—Pass. to be so armed, Xen. Cyr. 2.1, 11; Ovpua- Typig nabwrdiopévos furnished with .., Joseph. Mace. 7. 117. II. in Soph. El. 1086, the phrase 7d yp} Kaddv xaBorAicaca is expl. by the Schol. xaramoAeunoaca 7) aicxpdy nat ruxhoaca, f KabomAtors, ews, 7, a mode of arming, armour, Xen. Cyr. 8. 5, 6, Polyb. 6. 23, 14: so kafomAvopés, 6, Id. 11. 32, 7; of ev Tots Bapéoe «. Id. 3. 113, 7, ete. kaPoparixés, 7, dv, able to see into: heen-sighted, Poll. 9.141. Kabopdw, Ion. kar—: impf. xadedpov Xen. Cyr. 3. 2, 1, Ion. 3 sing. warupa Hdt. 7. 208: pf. cabedpaxa: fut. carépoua, pf. kar@pyae Plat. Rep. 432 B; aor. 1 xatépOny Id. Phileb. 46 B :—for the aor. act., v. wareidov. To look down, & “Idns aBopdy Il. 7. 21., 11. 3373 émb tivos Hdt. 7. 44; so in Med., ém Opyxdv xaOopdpevos alay Ul, 13. 4. II. trans. to look down upon, Scous or bmécous HéAtos KaBopa Solon 14, Theogn. 168, 850, cf. 616, Xen, Cyr. 3. 2, 10; bydGer Tov cabopiCw — Kai. Tov KaTw Biov Plat. Soph. 216 C, etc. so Hom. in Med., Tpolny kara waa dpara Il. 24. 291. 2. to have within view, to see, perceive, Hdt. 7. 208., 9. 59, Ar. Nub. 326, Plat., etc.:—Pass., Thuc. 3. 20, 112, Plat., etc. 3. to look to, observe, Pind. P. 9. 87, Aesch. Supp. 1059 ; xaGopay tt & rit to observe something therein, Plat. Legg. gos B, cf. Gorg. 457 C; tv’ & wavoupyeis pi) xaOopa cou that he may not observe thy knavish tricks (& mavoupyeis ages mavoupynpyara), Ar. Eq. 803 ; also, «. rds tpixas et .., to look and see whether .. , Hdt. 2. 38. 4, to explore, Ta GAAa Hat. 3. 17, cf. 123. 5. to regard, reverence, 7) Tov Geod epdros Lxx (3 Macc. 3. 11). xaBopifw, to bound, define, Hesych. xafopiorixés, 7, dv, fit for defining, definitive, Clem. Al. 861. «aSoppdn, =dpudw, Anth. P. append. 52. : «aSoppifa, fut. Att. 1@: to bring a ship into harbour, bring to anchor, xabmpucay [rds vais] mpds Témoy Polyb. 1. 53, 10; Tov ardAov els Td vewptov Plut. Cato Mi. 39 :—Pass., with aor. med., to come into harbour, put in, és rémov Thuc. 3. 32., 6. 97, etc.; aor. pass., Polyb. I. 21, 5, etc. ; im’ "Axpayavrivay (Cobet in’ dxpay Twa) Kadwpyladncay Polyaen. 6. 16, 4. 2. metaph., és raade cavrdv mnyovas KaPwpyucas hast brought thyself to such miseries, Aesch. Pr. 965 (Med. MS. xaup .. ocas, whence Herm. xarouptoas); «a0. éavrov cis jovxiay Plut. 2. 455 C:— Pass., kaddpmora Kdoris éx TaY veppay is suspended from them, Arist. P. A. 3. 9, 7. kabéppiov, 76, =Spyos, a necklace, LXX (Hos. 2. 10), Phot., Suid. KaBoorda, like xafiepedw, to dedicate, dyadpa Poll. 1. 11:—Med., dv 6e@ Kabwoiwoaro Eur. I. T. 1320:—Pass., éret 5 Bwyd mémava xal mpotipara Kaducw6n Ar. Pl. 661, cf. Dion, H. 2. 23; adaoimpévos zwi devoted to him, of a person, Hdn. 7. 6, cf. Eus. H. E. g. I. 2. «, woAw Rabappots to purify, Plut. Solon 12. Kabociwors, ews, 7, dedication, dyadpdrow Poll. x. 11. 2 devotion, fidelity, 4 of x., as a title, Eus. H.E. 9. 1., 10. 5. II. crimen laesae majestatis, Byz., cf. Suid. s. v. ebvodxos. kaSdcov, for cad’ Boov, in so far as, inasmuch as, Thuc. 6. 88, etc. In the best Edd. now written divisim. Ka06r1, Ion. Kdréri, for cad’ & r1, in what manner, Hdt. 7. 2, Thuc. 1. 82, etc.: so far as, inasmuch as, Polyb., etc. In the best Edd. now mostly written divisim. . «aQod, imper. aor. 2 med. of xaOinut. II. imper. of xa0nyac. KabuBpife, Ion, kar-: fut. Att. & :—to treat despitefully, to insult or affront wantonly, c. acc., Soph. El. 522, Eur. El. 698; «. tadra abrév Id. Bacch. 616 ; tov Spyov Ar. Ach. 631:—also c. gen., Soph. O. C. 960, Ph. 1364; xa@vBpifera: rovatra tev xepwvaxray ind Tay GvOpemTav such are occasions of the artificers being mocked, Hipp. Acut. 391:—also ec. dat., Hdt. 1. 212, Paus. 4. 27, 3; also, «. eis Ovyarépas (but prob. tds should be read for eis) Dion, H. 11, 2:—Pass., absol., 4o wax wanton, Soph. O. C. 1535. xabuBpioréov, verb. Adj. one must insult wantonly, Clem. Al. 220. Kabuypaive, to moisten well, Arist, Probl. 1. 39, Theophr. C. P. 6. 18, Io, Plut. :—Pass., Theophr, C. P. 1. 13, 6; of the bowels, éo be relaxed, Hipp. Aph. 1250, etc. II. to liquefy, 7a oxAnpérara Plut. 2. 953 D :—Pass., Ib. xaduypacpés, 5, a thorough moistening, Aét. p. 93. 34- KaOuypos, ov, very wet, Hipp. Aph. 1255; of plants which grow in wet places, Theophr. H. P. 1. 4, 2; «. 7H capxt Diod. 5. 28. KdOubpos [i], ‘ov, very watery, full of water, x. kparhp Soph. O. C. 158 (cf. xparijpés eiow infr. 472); «. xwptov Polyb. 5. 24, 4. Ka0tAakréw, to bark at one, Plut. 2. 969D; tivos Basil. ‘KaOtAtSo, fut. low, to strain or filter, rov olvov Ath. 420 D. KaPidAopivew, to shoot into too luxuriant Soliage, run all to wood, Hipp. 1276. 41, Clem. Al. 138. kabupvéw, to sing of much or constantly, Cleanth. 6, Diod. 11. 11, Plut. 2. 1098 B, r117 A. KaQvopar, Pass. fo be rained upon, apodpots SuBpors Steph. B. kaSumdyw, to reduce utterly, destroy, Manass. Chron. 2775 :—Pass., Sovrcia rod Kabumny pévny Eus. V. Const. 1. 26. ‘KaQuTdpxw, strengthd, for imdpym, Plut. Cicero 23. ‘KaQureikw, strengthd. for bret, Eumath. p. 242, Byz. kabumepdatvw, =imeupatver, to indicate slightly, Eumath. pp.129, 130 (with v. 1. cadvmopaive), Eust. Opusc. 321. 51. KaSurrevdiSopt, strengthd. for irevd-, Nicet. Annal. 6, 2. kaOurepiixovrifw, to overshoot completely, wv’ of @eot rods Iyyevels .. xadurepnxovrigay Ar, Ay. 825. kafurrepéxw, fut. fw, to be much superior, rwéds to one, Eurypham. ap. Stob. 555. 41; twi in or by a thing, Polyb. 2. 25, 9, Callicr. ap. Stob. 486. 53; rarely c. acc., éfovalay «. Theano Epist: 8. kadurepnpavetw, strengthd, for dmepnpavéw, argument. Ar. Ach.:— so Med., Eust. 561, 1, Hesych. . kaOumep%e, post. before a vowel —Oev, Lob. Phryn. 284: Ion. karv- arepOe: Adv.:—from above, down from above, dewdv 5& Adpos Kad. évevev Il. 3. 337, cf. 22. 196, Od. 12. 442, Theogn., etc.; é piv rod meBiov.., Kad. 5€.., Thuc. 5. 59:—c. gen., «. pedadpépy Od. 8. 279. 2. over, on the top or upper side, above, opp. to bmévepbe, Od. 10. 353; naO. emppéer floats atop, Il. 2. 754; x. Tav SrAow Hat. 7. 36:—to denote geographical position, AéoBos dvo.., kat Ppvyin xaGurepbe Il. 24. 545; ¢. gen., KadvmepOe Xiou above, i.e. north of, Chios, Od. 3. 170 :—in Prose, 4) xwpy % «. Hdt. 4. 8; 7 «. 686s 1. 104, etc.; rd «. the upper country, i.e. further inland, 7d x. THs Aipyys Id. 2.5; 7d x. ris Onpideos Ib. 32; Tois x. “Acoupiav olenuevors 1. 194. 3. above, having the upper hand of, naOvmepOe yevécOat 725 8. 60, 3; also of affairs, €Aoyi€ero..x. of Ta mpfypara écecOar TeV ‘EAAquumay Id. 8. 136; xaxol 8 dyadav xaddmepOev Theogn. 679; #6x00v Ka0. superior to misery, unconquered by it, Pind. P.9. 55; ¢ens por Kad. xeipt Kal mAoUTy Te@y éxOpav Soph. El. 1090; also, «. %.. Hdt. 8. 75. II. of Time, before, c. gen., Id. 5. 28. Cf. dvw. KaSurreptepéw, of stars, to be in ascension, Porphyt.: to be in the ascen= dant over, twos Manetho 6. 687, Arethas in Apoc. I. 4 KaSurreptépyois, ews, 7), a being in ascension, Procl. par. Ptol. P- 179- kaOuréprepos, a, ov, lon. katum-, 7, ov, Comp. Adj.: (Ka@drepOe) = above, XeAnvains Manetho 6. 604. II. commonly metaph. having the upper hand, superior, x. yiryvecOae TB wodéuy Hat. 1. 65, 67, 68, ef. Thuc. 5.14; «. Tay Tepséav ywdpeva ra mphypara Hat. 7. 233, _ ef. Thuc. 7. 56; Ocots 8 ér isxts xaO. Aesch. Theb. 226; «. Zevs Theocr. 24. 97: c. gen., wédus x. TOY dvrimddav Xen. Mem. 4. 6, 14, cf. Theocr, 24. 98, etc.:—neut. xaOvméprepoy as Adv.,=Kxadvrepbe, Theocr. 2. 60.—Sup. ka®umépraros, 7, ov, highest, tv TH karumeprary Tis ys Hdt. 4. 199. : kabumnperéa, strengthd. for ianp-, Eumath. 9. 4, etc.:—Med., xeipes xa@umnperovpevat Schol, Plat. p. 62. kadumuorxvéopat, strengthd. for imox-, Luc. Hermot. 6, etc. kaSumvijs, és,=xd0umvos, Nic. Al. 434. KaOumvos, ov, happening in sleep, Oenom, ap. Eus. P. E. 219 D. Kdumrvos, ov, fast asleep, Parmeno ap. Ath. 221 B, Arist. Probl. 3. 34, 2. kafumvéw, Ion. kat-, fo be fast asleep, fall asleep, Hat. 4. 8., 7. 12, 15, 16, Xen. Mem, 2. 1, 30:—so in Pass., xatumvpévos asleep, Hdt. 3. 69., 7.14, 17. Kabumvwors, ews, %, a falling asleep, Arist. Probl. 11. 17, 2. kaburoBadAw, to subject, subdue, Eust. 1406. 41, Suid., Byz. kadurroypahw, strengthd. for iroyp-, Phot., Eust. 974. 13. kaSumodetkvupt, strengthd, for irod-, Eust. Opusc. 109. 52. kaburrobdéxopat, strengthd. for ixod-, Eumath. 6. 16. kaSumoSve, strengthd. for iro5-, Eust. Opusc. 291. 27. kaOvqokemat, strengthd. for idx, Artemid, Onir. 1. 1. kaOurokAemrw, strengthd, for iroxA—, Eumath. 9. 20. ka8vroKAlvw, strengthd. for éroxA-, cited from Jo. Chrys. kaOurrokplvopat [7], Dep. to subdue by histrionic arts, Dem. 449. 16; x. Tas Bovdnoes THY monpdtaw to destroy by their mode of acting, Dion, H. de Dem. 53; cf. xaravAdéw, karopxéopuat, II, xadvroxpive- o0a civar.., to pretend to be some one else, xaOvmoxpiverar Evimeds elvat Luc. D. Marin, 13. 2; also, «. pilav ‘to. counterfeit it, Philo 2. 520; thy cepvérnra Himer. p. 68. kaSuropéve, strengthd. for imopévw, Byz, kaPutrovoéw, to suspect, c. acc., lambl. de Myst. ka) amrw, strengthd. for bromimre, cited from Longus. kabuTonretw, =trorrevw, to suspect, Arist. Rhet. Al. 5, 1. KaSurocatve, Eumath. 4.18; ka0umockeAlfw, Nilus Ep. 275; KaQu- toondw, Eust. Opusc. 206. 34; -ortBiLw, dub. in Nicol. Dam. p. 20 Orell. ; oped, Eccl. ;—all strengthd. for éroo—. kabuTordcow, Att.—rrw, to make quite subject, Eus. V.Const. 1.46, etc. kaSuTrorpéxw, Eumath.5.5; ca0vmoupyéw, Id.1.8; strengthd. for im, KaQutrodaive, strengthd. for irop—, Eust. Opusc. 189. 94. kaburrowidipife, strengthd. for iroy—, Eumath. 4. 1. Kabuorrepéw, to come far behind, c. gen. pers. et rei, «. Twos THs Oepa- mins Hipp. 1277. 45; also c. dat. rei, Polyb. 24. 7, 5, etc.; c. dat. modi, x, wodd 7H Swget in pursuit, Plut. Crass. 29; soc. acc., LXX (Ex. 22. 29). 2. c. gen. objecti, «. Ts KaTacracews Trav imdtwv to come too late for .., Polyb. 11. 33,8; mavrow Id. 5.17, 73 Tis éerdgews Id. To. 39,5, cf. Diod. 5. 53, Strabo 653; Oavarov x. to be spared by death, Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 16; «. mdons tpophs to come short of, LXxx (Sirac. 37. 20). 8. absol. to be behind-hand, pr kadvorépe Menand. Monost. 396, cf. Polyb. 5. 16, 5, al. xadvorepilw, =foreg., Geop. 2. 13. kabupatvow, to interweave, weave in, LXx (Ex. 28. 17):—Pass. to be inwoven, Ib. (Judith. 10. 21); xpvo@ Kat dvOecr Eus. V. Const. 4. 7. Ka0udeots, 7), collusion, Lat. praevaricatio, Poll. 8. 143. : Kabudinpr, strengthd. for ipinut, to give up treacherously, katpoy édy 7s Exdv Kabvpp Tois évayrios Kat mpodd Dem. 343. 3, cf. 206. 17., 854. 29, Luc. Prom. 5 :—esp., in a lawsuit, xa6. tov dyava to conduct it treacherously, compromise it, Lat. praevaricari, Dem. 563. 20; ob TE ph Kadvprévae radra cepvivopat Id. 262.12; absol., Kabupévrwr Tév évavriovy when they let the action drop, Id. 652. 22 :—also intr. to fall back from, c, gen., Clem. Al. 287. II. Med., xadupicabat Tit to give way, give in, yield to any one, Xen, Hell. 2. 4, 23; Kabupierbat év ri to slacken in a thing, e.g. €v payas, Polyaen, 8. 24, 1, cf. Luc. Abdic. 7. 2. we also find the Med., with pf. pass., used trans. like the Act., ef xaOupelyeda rt tOy zpayydrov Dem. 30. 25 ; xadupiecbat éavrév Polyb. 3. 60,4; é dpyupiy 7d ripnpa wabpiaieds Plut.Cic.8; ovdtv .. KadupnKdpny Joseph. B. J. 2. 16, 4; of a physician, to ¢reat negligently, Luc. Abdic. 7. xafudiorapat, Pass. to be really consistent, Julian. Or. 163 D. Ka0upopdopat, Med., strengthd. for ipopdw, Sozom. H. E, 2. 27. KaQwrAvopévws, Ady. from xaSorAifa, Schol. Ar. Pl. 325- kaSwpatfopat, = dpatfoua, Phot. (ubi xarwp-), Suid. Kadwpiopévws, Adv. of raBopitw, definitely, Clem. Al. 861. ka0as, Adv.,=xa0d, Hdt. 9. 82, acc. to Mss.; but the word seems to belong to later Gr., as Arist. Probl. 10.10, Plant. 1.1,8, N. T., etc.; being never used by Att. authors, Lob. Phryn. 426, Sturz Dial. Mac. 74 sq. 2. how, Act. Ap. 15.14. II. of Time, as, when, Ib. 7.17, cf. 2 Macc. f. 31. kai, crasis for wai ai, Theocr. 29. 16. : ws, properly, of a wrestler who falls atop of his opponent, Hat. 1. 67., b kat, Conjunction, used in two principal senses, cither copulative, to 726 join words and sentences, and, Lat. et; or having relation to single words or phrases, a/so, even, Lat. etiam: (cf. Skt. ka, Lat, que; a com- parison of ts, guis suggests also that of re, xa). A. copulative, and, 1. merely joining words or sentences to others going before, as, 7 xal kvavépaw én’ dppvar vedoe Kpoviwy Il. 1. 528, etc.: for a more close combination, 7e.., wai.. are used, GpxToe te kat déovres bears and lions, both as creatures of one kind; Oavpaov- Tat ws gopol Te Kal edruxeis yeyevnwevor they are admired as both wise and fortunate, i.e. wise and therefore fortunate: (but in Hom. te «al are placed in the same clause, and also, Il. 4. 160., 21. 262; so too, #5 xal Od. 1.240; wat re Il. 1. 521, etc.; and repeated, nal re.., Hai TE.., Od. 14. 465) :—«al is repeated in Prose to string together two or more Nouns, ai 5¢ €Aapor kat dopxddes Kal of dypioe oles Kal of dvor of dyptot Xen, Cyr. 1. 4,73 6 dxAos tAclwv al mAciwy énéppee more and more, Tb. 7. 5, 39; often to add epithets after moAvs, woAAd xal éo6Ad Il. 9. 330; ToAAG Kai peydda Dem. 835.20; moAAol Kal dryaGoi, etc. 2. the word or words added by «ai sometimes serve to limit or define those to which they are added, mpds paxpdy dpos Kat KuvOiov byx@ov to the mountain and specially to .., h. Hom, Ap. 17, cf. Aesch, Ag. 63, Soph. Tr. 1277; (sometimes in reverse order, mpds S@ua Ards wal paxpdy *Oaupmoy Il. 5. 398): so also, to add by way of climax, Oeot wal Zevs, Oca .., nat TMocedavos all the gods, and above all.., Aesch, Pers. 750, etc.; €x@Opot nai €x®orot Thuc. 7. 68; so also, Ts Kal dAdAos Heind. Plat. Phaedo 58 D; rwwés wat cvxvot Id. Gorg. 455 C; and, often, GAAa Te Kkai.., GAAws Te Kal.., ¥. sub GAAos II. 6, dAAwS I: —OAiyou Tivos dfva Kat ovdevds, where we say, little or nothing, Plat. Apol. 23 A: —xat is also joined with the demonstr, Pron. ‘os in the same sense, iva .. SovAorwt, kal rovroret ws Spymérqor Hdt. 6.11, cf. 1.147; Kal tavra and this too.., yeAav dvameiOeyv, wat Tavd’ otrw modémov bvTa 7@ yéAwre Xen. Cyr. 2. 2, 16, etc. II. at the beginning of a sentence, 1. in eager appeals, ai por Sds Thy xetpa and now ..! Il. 23.753 Kat po Aéye .., Kal por dmdxpwa.., Kal por cvdyvwh.. , Plat. Euthyphro 3 A, Gorg. 462 B, and Oratt. 2. in questions, to introduce an objection, cai m@s..; but how..? nay how can it be? Pors, Phoen, 1373; «at 61) 7i..; but then what..? Eut. Hel. 101; «al motov ..; Soph. Aj. 462; «al 71s cide mumore Bos xpiBaviras; Ar. Ach. 86; so, xdmecr’ éxras; Eur. Med. 1398 :—so also without a question, Id, H, F. 509. 8.=xalro., and yet, Ar. Eq. 1249. III. after words implying sameness or likeness, xaé must be rendered by as, just as Lat. atque or ac after aeque, perinde, simul, yvapnor éxpéovro dpoinor xai ov they had the same opinion as you, Hat. 7. 50, 2, cf.84; tcov or toa et ; Soph. O. T. 612, 1187, Eur. El. 994; év tow pa kat «i .., Thue. 2. 60, etc. ; so also after words implying comparison, v. sub p0avw IV. 1; or simultaneous action, v. sub dpa I. 2. sometimes also without any word preceding, jv jyap devrepoy .., nal xarnydpny, where Sre might replace «al, Soph. Ph. 355; twapépxovrai re péoa vunres kat pixera TO Vdwp Hdt. 4. 181, cf. 3. 108., 4. 139. Iv. when «at joins an affirm. clause with a negat., kal ob, xal jxiora, etc., it acts like an adversative Particle, GAA’ Ws 7 Spacwy elpmwe Kod Oavovpevos Soph. Tr. 160: it also carries on the negat. to the second member of a sentence, and so stands for otre, Jac. Anth. P, p. F V. in loose definitions of Number, about, kat és €BdounKovta pupiddas, aigavépevos yivera kai és émraxaidexa mhxeas Hat. 2. 60, 68. VI. in Att., when xai.., wai ..are correlative, they answer to the Lat. cum.., tum.., not only.., but also.., as well .., as also.., wat ded wal viv, wat rére wai viv Plat. Gorg. 523 so A, Phileb. 60 B; xa? xara yiv wat xard O4daccay Xen. An. I. 1, 7 VII. by anacoluthon, ds papévn wal Kepdootvy Hyjoar’ ‘Adjvn, for ds én wat .., Il. 22.247; €pxerae 52 adry Te.., Kat Tov vid éxovaa, for kat 6 vids adrijs, Xen. Cyr. 1.3, 1; dAAas Te KaTy- yespevot aqu ddovs, nat TéAos éylvovro Hat. gy. 104 :—also after par- ticiples put for finite verbs, tootros dy, war’ dvip édogev civa, for Todos Hv, Kar’ .., Ar. Eq. 392, cf. Nub. 624. B. influencing single words or clauses, also, even, Lat. etiam, émerta pe xat Airro: aidy then let life also forsake me, i.e. life as well as all other goods, Il. 5. 685; raxa nev wat dvairioy airidro the innocent also, even the innocent, 11. 654, etc., cf. 4. 161, etc.; very often in Prose with demonstr. Pronouns, «al avroé they also, they likewise, Xen. An. 3. +443 ‘Aylas kat Suxparys xal robrw dreOavérny likewise died, Ib. 2. , 30, cf. 4. 1, 27, cf, eairor 11:—the construction may be expl. from the antithetic phrases ob pdvoy.., AAA Kal... , not only .. , but also.. , ob paov .. , 4 kat. .;—though the Att. even in strong emphasis omit «ai after GAAd, Wolf Lept. p. 257: so Lat. non modo..or non solum.., sed (for sed etiam) .., Passow ad Tac, Germ. 10. 15; cf. «al yap. 2. in Greek, this «ai is often repeated both in the anteced. and relat. clause, where we put also in the anteced. only, oxé~at, édv dpa kal coi fuv- dxf dmep kat Eyoi Plat. Phaedo 64 C, cf. Il. 6. 476, Xen. An, 2. I, 22: but sometimes the relat, clause is left unexpressed, AaBérw 5e Kal GAdos (sc. ds kat éyw) Od. 21. 152 :—sometimes «ai stands in the relat. clause only, when we put also in the anteced. only, dvdpeids ov obros, dv wal ov A€yes this man also, of whom you speak, Plat. Lach. 191 A; esp. in the phrases eiwep tus xat GAdAos, Id. Phaedo 66 A; ds 7s Kal dddos Xen. An. 1. 3, 153 €imep GAAw TH TEBoipny ay, Kal cot meiBopar Plat. Prot. 329 B. 3. often in apodosi, after temporal Con- junctions, GAA’ bre 84 fa .., Kat tore 5H .., Il. 1. 494, cf. 8. 68, Od. 14, 111; also after ei, Il. 5.897; so, sometimes, in Prose, ds 5¢ é5ogev, wat éxdpovy Thuc. 2. 93:—in Lxx and N. T. (prob. = Hebr. vé) as simple po x. Joseph. 3. 8., 4. 6, 7, ete. II. in this usage, ves to increase or diminish the force of words, O¢0s Kat I kai — kawodoyia. Sduevar wat petCov deOdoy (i.e. dAAo kal pel(ov) 23. 551, cf. 386; ds viv ye at dv Av marpi péxorro (i.e, GAAos TE Kal Act) 5. 362: but often no such explanation can be given, # «at por vepeohoea; wilt thou indeed be angry? Od, 1.389; év T@de KdxdpecOa .. Ady; are we in- deed bound..? Eur, Heracl. 498, cf. Bacch, 616; often with Advs., Kar wapra, xat Ainy at the beginning of a speech, full surely, Il. 19. 408, Od. 1. 46., 3. 203; so, kat pada, kal mada, kal wdvu, etc., Elmsl. Heracl. 86 :—when it diminishes, it may be rendered by even so much as, were it but, tépevos kal kanvoy droOpwoKovra vonoa Od. 1.58; ois 75d Kar Aéyew Ar. Nub. 528. 2. after interrogatives, m@s; vis; etc., where it may be translated tell me further, Lat. dic praeterea, see examples in Pors. Phoen. 1373, where he distinguishes m@s «ai ..; from kal mds .. ; Vv. supr. A, II, -2. 8. so ei xai must be distinguished from «a? 4. generally, to suffer, be distressed or afflicted, orpatov Ka- povros Aesch. Ag. 670; 7T@ memomperm k. peyadws Hat. 1. 118, cf. Aesch, Ag. 482, Eur. Med. 1138, H. F. 293; 00 xape? robpov pépos will not have to complain .., Soph. Tr.1215:—also, «. év rut Eur. Hec. 306, I. A. 966; so, of a ship, veds xapovons wovrip mpos Kipart Aesch. Theb. 210:—c. acc. cogn., ov« icov Kapay épot Avmns not having borne an equal share of grief, Soph. El. 532; xapdrous x. Hdn. 3. 6. 5. of xapéyres (aor. part.) those who have done their work, Lat. defuncti, i.e. the dead, ll. 3. 278; Bporay cidwaa xapdvrwy Od. 11. 476; €idwdra Kap, 24.14, Il. 23.72, cf. Aesch. Supp. 231, etc.; so, in Att., eexpnedres Soph. Fr. 268, Eur. Supp. 756; in Prose, of xexp. Thuc. 3. 59, Plat. Legg. 718 A, 927 B, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 11, 6 :—but in Eur. Tro. 96 xexpn- xéres are the spirits of the dead, Lat. dii manes.—The pf. is always intr. KaptaXéos, a, ov, (kann) =Kapnrés, Hesych. kaptravos, 6,=aTarnp, Gloss.; v. Ducang. kaprect-youvos, ov, bending the knees, Hesych.; cf. xappirous. Kop! , ov, bending the limbs, walyna K. puppets, Orph. Fr. 17. Kaptrh, }, (vy. xaumrw) a bending, winding, of a river, Hdt. 1. 185 ; Evfotéa x., of the Euripus, Aesch. Fr. 27. II. the turning in a race- course, turning-post, Lat. flexus curriculi, rept raiot kaprais jvioxa mentonéres Ar. Pax 904; kapnaior Spbpov Pseudo-Eur.I.A.224; evAaBy- Ofjvat wept riv «. Plat. Ion 537A: metaph., pO0or és kapmy dye to bring a speech to its middle or turning point, Eur. El. 659; so, Kapmds moveiaOat Plat. Phaedo 72 B;. cf. xdpmrm 11, kapnrhp I. III. in Music, a turn, sudden change, xapmat doparov Philostr.620; v. sub caxdrexyvos, and cf. kapmrw 11, karaxdprre : also in Rhetoric, the turn of a sentence, Dem. Phal. § 17. IV. the bend or flexure of a limb, rav daxriAwy, Tov wpav, Tov loxlav, Trav Bpaxidva, etc., Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 26, al.; of the head, obs éyovoa xaynds Plat. Tim. 75 C, cf. 74 E; v. edprrw I. Kapa (paroxyt.), }, a caterpillar, Lat. eruca, Hipp. 263. 36, al.; of the silk-worm, Arist, H. A. 5. 19, 10, etc. II. a fabulous Indian monster, Diod. 3. 72, Nonn. D, 18. 237. Cf. «dros. (Cf. the Vedic kapana (a worm, caterpillar): Curt. questions its connexion with xépr-ra, though it is difficult to doubt this, cf. the remark of Arist. de Incess, An. 7, 5, [7a dwoda] Suet xptiipeva mpoépxerar kapmais Kr.) Kapmpos, 7, ov, (apmh) bent, turning, dpduos Eur. I. T. 81:—also kapmos, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 213, etc.; Kdpaevos, Hesych, KGpros, €0s, 70, a sea-monster, Lyc. 414: ct. taméxapmos. Kapmryp, jpos, 6, a bend, an angle, Xen. Cyr. 7. 1, 6, Strabo 655. IL. the turning-point in the Biavdos, which was the goal ’ in the single race, like xaunq I, Arist. Rhet. 3. 9, 2, cf. Babr. 29. 4: metaph., «. Btov the turn of life, Herodes ap. Stob. 591. 34; «. méuaros life's Jas¢ turn or course, Anth, P. 12. 257: cf. eaumrw I, kaparnpia, 4,=Kxaurrnp 1, Tzetz. Hist. 8. 27. Kaprrruc Biba h, bv, readily bending, flexible, 6axrddov 7d x. Arist. H. A. Kivggis } «1d. de Spir. 7, 1; Povdpiov Poll, 4. 64. ” os—— Kay, kapmnrés, 4, dv, flexible, Plat. Tim. 44 E, Arist. Meteor. 4.9, 6. II. as Subst. =«aymrap 1, Schol. Ar. Nub, 28, E. M. 609. 29, Aquila V. T. kdpmrpa, 7), Vv. sub kéuya :—Kapmrpo-rotds, 6, a basket-maker, Gloss. Kdprre, fut. xdpyo Soph. O. C. gt, Ep. inf. -éuev Il. 19. 72: aor. Zxapya Hom., Att.:—Pass., fut. xappOjoopar Aristid., etc.: aor. éxap~ $¢Onv Aesch., Thuc.: pf. inf. wexdupOar Hipp. 830 F, part. eexappévos (ém-, ovy-) Id. 37, Xen. Eq. 7, 2. (From 4/KAMII, which appears in Kapn-, kapm-vAos ; yvapr-Tw, d~yvapn-ros are still stronger forms: cf. Skt. kump-as (crippled), Lith. kamp-as (angulus), kump-as (curvus) ; perh, also Skt. kuk, kufik-é (se incurvare).) To bend, curve, dppa irwy Kapyy that he may bend it into a chariot-rail, Il. 4. 486 (cf. imoxdparw); often, yévu «. to bend the knee so as to sit down and rest, gnel pw domains yovu wappew Il. 7. 118, cf. 19. 72; 68 dp’ dupa youvar exapper xeipas re oT:Bapds Od. 5. 453; ob Kaumroy yoru, i.e. never resting, Aesch. Pr. 32; dopevos Tay .. naupeey yévu Ib. 396; iw -- kappas yovu Eur. Hec. 1150; so, *. x@Aa Soph. O. C. 19; then, kdprrewv alone, to sit down, rest, Ib, 85, Eur. Hec. 1079; also, yévu x. to bend the knee in worship, LXx (Isai. 45. 23), Ep. Rom, 11. 5, etc. ; (so, TiWévar ra yévara Ey. Marc, 15. 19, etc.) :—Pass. to bend oneself, opp. to éxreiveoOat, Plat. Tim. 74.B; 4 xexappévn (sc. ypaupn) a bent line, Arist. Metaph. 4. 6, 14. II. to turn or guide a horse or chariot round the turning-post (xapmrfp 11, cf. xapmt 11) ; herice, of the horse or chariot, eépyar duavAov Odrepoy K@Aov madu to double the post (kapmrnp) and return along the second half of the diavAos, Aesch. Ag. 3443 Kapmroyros trmov as the horse was turning, Soph. El. 744; *. mept vuooay Theocr. 24.117; hence, metaph., *. Bloy to make the last turn in the course of life, Soph. O. C. 91; «. Blov rédAos Eur. Hipp. 87, cf. Hel. 1666, El. 956; ded Ad-you képpar kaxd to end evils by reason- ing, Id. Supp. 748. 2. so also of seamen, to double a headland, “‘Hpaxdéas orndas Hat. 4. 42; 7d dxpwrhpiov, tiv dxpny Id. 4. 43, 7.122; ws 5& Thy dkpav Kapnrovres Huas eldov Menand. ‘AA. 9, cf. Aeschrio ap. Ath. 335 C; MaAéay x, Poéta ap, Strabo 378, Diod. 13.64, etc.; also, «. mept dxpay Ar. Ach. 96; also, x. xdAmov to wind round the bay, Hdt. 7.58. 8. absol., wadw x. to turn back, Eur, Bacch. 1225, cf. Rhes. 235; éyyds Tav éuay ndyrres ppevdy (vulg. xdymrp) thou comest near my meaning, Id. I. T. 815. III. in Music, caprtov pe Kat atpépay bAnv biépOopev (sc. Phrynis) with his turns and twists, Pherecr. Xetp. 1. 15, v. kapnh U1; #. véas dpidas ém@y Ar. Thesm. 53; x. @das Philostr, 180, IV. metaph., like Lat. flectere, inflectere, kdprrety tivd to bend or bow one down, humble, Pind. P. 2. 94 :—Pass. to be bent or bowed down, mnpovaior Aesch. Pr. 237, 306, cf. 513, Thuc. 3.58; Kapmropa I submit, Plat. Prot. 320 B, etc.; xaymrecbat wal €Axe- ca mpods pirocopiay Id. Rep. 494 E; x. ént 7d Wedbos to be warped to deceitful practices, Id. Theaet. 173 A. KapmrvAy (sc. Baxrnpia), 7, a crooked staff, like the Rom. lituus, Ar. ap. Poll. 10. 173, Plut. 2. 790 B, Alciphro 3. 3. kaptriAvdfwo, =sq., Phot., Suid. kapmvAAw, Ion. for xazntw, to bend, crook, Hipp. Art. 826 in Pass. ; in Med., Ib. 812; kaparvAeve in Erotian. kaptido-eBijs, és, appearing crooked, Plut. 2. 1121 C. kapmiAdeis, ecca, ev, pott. for apmvaAos, Anth. P. 6, 28. KaptAdopat, Pass. to become curved, Achmes Onir. p. 54. kapmrvAé-mpupvos, ov, with rounded stern, Schol. Il. 2. 392. kapvAdp-pty, tvos, 5, 4), crook-nosed, E. M. 395. 36, Hesych. s.v. ypu més :—also kaparvAéppivos, ov, Malal. : kaprrvAas [i], 7, ov, (xdumrw) bent, crooked, curved, opp. to ev6ds, of a bow, x, réga Il, 3.17, etc.; &pya 5. 231; «. xUKAa, of wheels, Ib. 722; dporpa h, Hom. Cer. 309; dippos Pind. I. 4. 49 (3. 47); 8xnua Aesch. Supp. 183; «. és 7d éw Hipp. Art. 780; xapmdAa re Kal ei0éa Plat. Rep. 602 C:—metaph., «. wéAos an ode of varied metre, Simon: 36.—Cf. xaprvan. kapmvAdrns, 770s, 4, crookedness, curvature, Hipp. 153 B, Arist. Categ. 8, 20, P. A. I. 3, II, etc. KapmvA-oxos, ov, with curved carriage, of the plough, Orph. ap. Clem. Al. 675. fin. (ut Lob. pro vulg. Kapavddxpws). kdpipa, 7s, %, a basket, case, casket, Hesych.; written Kéipa in Phot. and Suid., cf. Lat. capsa, capsula: wdpatpa in late Gr., v. Ducang. :— Dim, kapipiov, 74, Hesych.; kaparplov, Gcop. 10. 21, 10 :—also Kapip- dxns, ov, 6, a cruse, flask, Aaiov Lxx (Judith. 10. 5, cf. 3 Regg. 17. 12 and 16); Katpaxtov, 74, Hesych. kappavena, 7d, rosemary, Diosc. 3.87. Kapipi-Siavdos, ov, turning the post (kapmrnp) so as to run the whole BlavAos : metaph. of a harp-player, running quickly up and down the strings, xelp «. Teleclid. TeAear. 5. kaptpinilo, = BapBapicw, Hesych, kapiplov, 7d, v. sub napa, Kapisi-oupos, ov, bending the tail, v. oxtovpos. Kkapipl-rovs, 5 %, tou, 76, bending the foot, in Tunning, i.e. swift- running, Epiwus Aesch. Theb, 791 :—Hesych. cites also kaptreatyouvos, Kapiis, ews, 7), (Kipmrw) a bending, Plat. Tim. 74 A; kop Exew to have a bend, of joints, Arist. H. A. 2. 1, 11. Kapips, 4, dv, (xdumrw) crooked, bent, like yapupes, Hesych, co gel [a] es =onapovia, Nic. Al. 484. kav, poét. for card before v, nay yd ind, - by, kay, crasis for cat év. Enos se eaGipee Kav (not xdv), by crasis, I. for nat dy .. Hes. Op. 355, and often in Att.:—not often when xaé is simply copulative, Plat. Phaedo 79 A, Gorg. 514 D; but frequent when xat is intensive, bye nav pé-ya boty even a great thing, Hes. 1. c.; waxdv 5% xév ev jpépa yotns ma Soph. O. T. 615, cf. 591, Aj. 45, etc.; sometimes repeated af bef % ; epeated after or before a MF ’ io kavaBwos — kavovias. Verb with é, dvSpa xpi) .. Soxetv receiv dy wav dwd ouixpod Kaxod Ib. 1078; éwel kav od.., et ris oe diddgecev.., BeAtiov dv yévao Plat. Prot. 318 B, cf. Rep. 515 D; this usage is common in the phrase «ay €i, where iat properly belongs to ei, even if, and dy to the Verb that follows in apodosi, viv 5€ pot Bonet, kav doéBeay el KatayyvioKot, TA Tpooh- kovra moety (for kat ei katayeyvwoxot, moeiv dv) Dem. 530. 22, ubi v. Buttm. ;—hence, 2. «av came to be used, even when the Verb in apodosi was of a tense that could not be joined with dy, as, nav el rodAal [aé dperat] .. ciow, & yé m1 eldos rabrdv éwaca éxover Plat. Meno 72 C; kav et wh ry doce? Id. Rep. 473 A, 579 D, cf. 408 B, Phaedo 71 B, Soph. 247 E, etc. ; often so in Arist., v. Bonitz, Index. 8. in later Gr. «dv, even not before el, came to be used simply as a stronger form of xal, even, kav vexpd xdpoa 7a od xelAea Theocr. 23. 41, cf. 353 ols ob3? Kay dvos imppte mumore Luc. Tim. 20, cf. D. Deor. 5. 2, etc., v. Meinek. Menand. Migovp: 11, and cf. Soph. El. 1480 dAAd poe mdpes kav opixpov elmeiy. II. for xat dv =(édy), and if, even if, al- though, with the same moods as éav, Soph. Aj. 15, Ar. Ach. 957, 1021, Plat., etc. 2. kdv..,ndv.., whether..,or.., Lat. sive .., sive.., Dem. 774. 7. : KavaBivos, 7, ov, of or for a block-figure, xnpés Hesych.; o@pa x. a body so lean as to be a mere skeleton, Anth. P. 11. 107:—in both places the Mss. give cavdBuor, kdvaBos or KdwvaPos, 6, a wooden block round which artists moulded wax or clay, a block-figure, Hesych., Poll. 7. 164., 10. 189; cf. Miiller Archaol. d. Kunst § 305. 7. 2. a rough drawing of the human frame, displaying the. veins, etc., Arist. H. A. 3. 5, 3, G. A. 2. 6, 18. 3. metaph. a lean person, as we say a skeleton, Strattis Kuv. 3, Hesych. [«a@-, Anth, P. 11.107; and Meineke writes it xdvvaBos in Strattis 1. c.] kéva0pov or rather kdvva0pov, 74, («dvva) a cane or wicker carriage, Hesych., Eust. 1344. 44 ; Agesilaus used it, Xen. Ages. 8; and, speaking of the same incident, Plut. Ages. 19 describes it as made in the form of ypurés and rpayéAapor. kivdoow, fut. fw, to make a sharp gurgling sound with water, as in the throat or pouring into a vessel, Hesych., Poll. 10. 85: elsewhere only in compds. &a-, éy-, &«-xavdoow, and these seem not to. be used in the pres. (From ; whence also come xavayy, —éw, —i¢w, and uév-aBos; cf. Skt. kaikani-(campana), cf. Lat. cano, cantus.) kKdvactpov, 76, (xavn) = xaveov, a wicker basket, Lat. canistrum, Hesych. ; also! kavurtpov Poll. 10. 85; and kévierpov in the Swallow-song in Bgk. Lyr. p. 883. IL. an earthen vessel, dish, elsewhere TpvBALor, Ep. Hom. 14. 3 (Wolf parox. xavdorpa), Nicoph. Incert. 2. kdviixéw, a Verb expressing various sounds, xavdynoe 5% xaAKds rang, clashed, Od. 19. 469; xavaxodar myat plash, Cratin. Mur. 7; xavaxav OrASpwvos drdéxtwp crowing, Id.°Ap.1; c. acc. cogn., #. weAos to let a song ring loud, Ap. Rh. 4.907. Cf. avaxitw. Kivixn, 7, ( D. TAT Strabo 800, Galen.; also kapvdris, idos, , cited from Diose. II. padn kapywrh a cup adorned with nuts (cf. Badav@ros 11), C. 1. 2852. 31, 33, etc., Semus ap, Ath. 502 B. kapoaA€os, a, ov, (xappw) dry, parched, jav Onudva rivdger Kappa- Aéwy Od. 5. 369 (cf. wapxadéos); dépua Hipp. Aph. 1256, Progn. 36; - dordxves, dpovpa Anth. P. 9. 384, 14, Orph. Lith. 266; «. dip Anth. P. 9. 272 :—of sound, xappadéor 5€ of donis .. dive the shield rang dry, _ tet Il. 13. 409. II. act. drying, parching, mip Nic. . 691. kaph-Gpdriov, 76, (4udw) prob. a rake for collecting fallen ears of corn, Lat. merga, Hesych. Kapdeta, 74, ripe fruit or (as the Schol.) chips, xédpou Nic. Al. 118, Képoy, %, hay, Xen. An. 1.5, 10, Arr. An. 1. 3. kaponpos, a, dv, (appos) of dry straw, ebvaiae kappnpai nests (cf. xappirns), Eur. lon 172; written kapdvpat (as Subst.) in Hesych, kapolov, 746, Dim. of xappos, Galen., etc. kapoiopés, of, 6, a reaping of fruits, C. 1. 2700 e. Kapdirns, ov, 6, built of dry straws, Oddapos x., of a swallow’s nest, Anth. P. 10. 4; cf. xappnpds. Kapho-edys, és, like xappn, Geop. 2. 6, 29. Kapho-Aoyéw, to gather dry twigs, x. 7d bévbpa to pick such off the trees, Theophr. C. P. 1. 15, I (vulg. xaprodoyovpeva) :—also, to pick bits of straw, wool, etc., off a person’s coat, Id. Char. 2, Galen. 18. 74. Kapdo-Aoyla, 7, a gathering of dry sticks, etc., Galen, 14. 733. Kapoos, eos, 7d, (v. sub fin.):—any small dry body, esp. a dry stalk, Lat. palea, festuca, stipula; Hdt. 3. 111 calls the dry sticks of cinnamon «dp- gea (which word bears a curious likeness to its Arabic name kerfat, hirfah, cf. Steph. Byz. s. v. "ABaonvot); of rice-straw, Polyaen. 4. 3, cf. Luc. Hermot. 33 :—then, generally in pl., dry twig's, chips, straws, bits of wool, such as birds make their nests of, Ar. Av. 642, cf. Sophron. ap. Dem. Phal. § 147, Arist. H. A. 9. 7,15 collectively in sing., Aesch. Fr. 22 a, Arist. H. A. 6,2, 20, Ath. 187 C:—in sing. a chip of wood, Ar. Vesp, 249 :—proverb., wnde xappos xveiy, i.e. to keep quite still, Id. Lys. 4743 dad ToD KUAuKos Kappos TE puxpO SaxTvAw adarpeiy Ath. 604 C. II. =xapmis, Plut. 2. 550 B; ovde x. €BAaBy not a bit, C. 1.4924. III. @ small piece of wood on which the watch- word was written, Polyb. 6. 36, 3. IV. in pl. rife fruit, Nic. Al. 230, 491, Th. 893, 941; cf. xappeta, (Prob. from same Root as Kappw, Curt. connects it with cxappiov, cxappdw, sKaptpos.) Kapow, =xappw, Anth. P. 7. 385: in Hesych., cappiv. Kapow, fut. edpyw, Ep. Verb, to dry up, wither, napa pev xpba naddv will wither the fair skin, wrinkle it, Od. 13. 398, cf. 430; meAtos xpda xapper Hes. Op. 573; and in Pass., xpds «apperat H5n Archil. 91; cf. Euphor. 54, Nic. Th. 328. 2. metaph., dynvopa xappe Zevs Zeus withers the proud of heart, Hes. Op. 7; xdéparot xappoyres yuia Nic. Al. 383 :—Pass., oir xdppeoda Ap. Rh. 4. 1094. (Cf. «dppn, kappa Aé€os, xappnpéds, perth. also Kappos.) Kappadys, es, (eldos) = Kxappoerdhs, Gloss, KapxaGAéos, a, ov, (v. Képxvos, xépxvw):—rough, divy kapxadéor rough in the throat with thirst, Virgil’s siti asper, Il. 21. 541 (v. 1. waps padréo, cf. Spitzn. ad 1.); so in Ap. Rh, é& 1442, Nonn. D, 14. 426; (kapparéos diver Anth, P. 9. 272, cf. 7.536). IL. rough, fierce, x. kbves Ap. Rh. 3. 10583; Av«or Tryphiod. 615 (vulg. xapxapeos, v. Wernick.): of sounds, ypeyeriopds, iuaoAn Nonn, D. 29. 199., 48. 307. kapxapéos, a, ov, =Kapxapos, v. Kapxadéos II. kapxiiplas, ov, 6, a kind of shark, so called from its sharp teeth, Sophron ap. Ath. 306 D, Plat. Com. @a, 1. 13, Philox. ap. Ath. 5 D. kapxdip-d50us, 6, ), our, 74, with sharp or jagged teeth, kapxapddovre bvw KUve Il. 10. 360; Kkivev ind xapx. 13.198; &pwav xapx. Hes. Th. 180; applied to Cleon by Ar. Eq. 1017, Vesp. 1031.—Those animals, acc. to Arist., are xapxapddovra, dca émadddrre Tods ddévras Tods d£eis, H. A, 2.1,51; cf. P. A. 3. 1, 6, where it is opp. to xavA:dbous; cf. also ovvédous.—Also of the lobster’s claws, H. A. 4. 2, 12. kapxadp-d5wv, ovTos, 6, 7), =foreg., Theocr. 24. 85. Kdpxapos, ov, and a, ov Aleman 132:—properly sharp-pointed or jag~ ged, and so with sharp or jagged teeth, ives Lyc. 34, cf. Ael. N. A. 16. 18; orédpa Opp. C. 2. 1423; Epucos Id. H. 1. 506; dddvres Philostr. 841; diyya Luc. Tragoed. 302; xdpxapoy pedjoas of the wolf, Babr. 94- 6:—generally, sharp, biting, metaph. of criticism, Alem. 1. c., Luc. Hist. Conscr. 43; pytwp Id, Merc. Cond. 35, cf. Ath. 251 E. (V. sub kpavads.) Kapxndovifw, fut. icw, to side with the Carthaginians, Plut. Marcell. 20, where worse Mss. Kapyndovd os. Kapxnbdav, dvos, %, Carthage, Hdt. 3. 19, Soph. Fr. 536:—Adj. Kap- RAY akg a, ov, Carthaginian, Ibid. ; Kapxndovnaxés, 7, dv, Strabo 832. Kapxyovov, Dor. -dovov, 76, a drinking-cup narrower in the middle than the top and bottom, Sappho 70, Pherecyd. 27, Cratin. Avov. 1, cf. Callix. al. ap. Ath. 11. 49; Kapxnolw dpyup& C. I. 139. 19, cf. 140. 19, 141. 8, 150. 26 ;—so Virg. uses the pl. carchesia: cf. Miiller Archiiol. d. Kunst § 299 A. II. the mast-head of a ship, through which the halyards worked, in sing., Pind. N. 5.94 (where (vydv mapxaotov is the sail-yard), Hipp. Art. 808, Luc. Mere. Cond. 1, Schol. Ap. Rh. 1. 595, Ath. lc.; in pl. Eur. Hec. 1261, Plut. Themist. 12; of. sq——In Epicr. Incert. 2 this isa play on the double meaning (i and 11). IIt. the upright beam of a crane, Schneid. Vitruv. 10. 5; Hesych. kapxjotos, 4, in pl. the halyards of a ship, Galen. Lex, Hipp. 2. surgical bandages, Id. 12. pp. 304, 377+ Fi kapabys, es, (l50s) drowsy, heavy, 6upara Hipp. 1217 H i—70 Kapa. des=Kdpwos, Id, 72 B; 7d wapwdea fits of stupor, Id. 75 H, 205 II. causing stupor, 1d. Art. 798. Adv. -ds, Galen. 14. 4- 748 Kdpwots, ews, 5, («iipdw) heaviness in the head, drowsiness, vwOph k. Hipp. Art. 798, cf, Philonid. ap. Ath. 675 A. kdpwrtides, wy, ai, the carotids, the two great arteries of the neck, Aretae. Sign. M. Ac, 2.11, Galen, (From xapéw, v. Galen. 5. 195.) K » , ov, stupefying, soporific, x. 6 «plOvos (sc. oivos) Arist. Fr. 101; «. @appaxa Galen. K , 76, a carrot, Diphil. Siphn. ap. Ath. 371 E. kas, the skin, Hesych. II. Cyprian for «at, Id. kas, crasis for xal els or wat és, e.g. Ar. Ach. 184, Av. 949, etc. * «doa, %, the Latin casa, a cot, Athen. Mech. p. 6, Hesych. wacaABadinds, 7, dv, like a strumpet: Adv. -xd@s, Eust. Opusc. 248. 53. iL, to behave like a strumpet, Hermipp. ap. Schol. Ar. Vesp. 1164, cf. Meineke Com. Gr. 1. p. 98. 2. c.acc., &. TOs OTpaTNYyoUs to abuse them in strumpet fashion, Ar. Eq. 355. KioaABas, ddos, 7, like xdoca, a courtesan, whore, strumpet, Ar. Eccl. 1106, Fr. 402 :—in Hesych. also kawavipa or kacavpds, 7; in Lyc. 1385, xaowpts, i5os; in Hippon, 81, Antiph. Incert. 95, kaowpirts, dos :—we also have Kicaptov, 74, a brothel, Ar. Eq. 1285 (libr. cagaup-), kaco- petov in Hesych.; and the Verb kacwpetw, fo go a-whoring, Lyc. 772. * ko&Bvov, 74, v. 1. (mentioned by Schol.) in Ar. Eq. 1285. ' Kagapov, 76,=KuKAdmvos, Aét. kdcas, ov, 5, also written kawGs or kao‘js, a carpet or skin to sit upon, a saddle, Xen. Cyr. 8.3,6. (Hesych. quotes Kas, a skin: or the word tay be akin to #@s, x@as,—unless it be Persian.) - Kacatpa, kacaupds, Kacatpiov, v. sub KacadBas. kiola, Ion. -ty, 4, cassia, a spice of the nature of cinnamon, but of inferior quality, brought from Arabia, Hadt. 2. 86., 3. 110; A‘Bavoy edwdas Te poivixas kactav Te .., Tépeva Supias oméppara Melanippid. Fr. 1, cf. Mnesim. ‘Imm. 1. 58; xacia, with cinnamon, frankincense, and myrrh, are among the gifts to the temple at Branchidae, C.1. 2852. 59: cf. kacwoBépos, ~vdoKacia, oupryyis. (A Semitic word, v. xwvdpapov.) {It is sometimes written xdoota, cf. kaoci{w; but casia in Lat. poets, and kactorvous in Antiph. |. c. require a, and therefore a single o.] kaovyviyry, %, fem. of xactyyros, a sister, Hom., etc.: metaph., like «dows, cue} dumédou x. Hippon. 25, cf. 64; Adyuve, .. x. vexrapéns Kv- Auwos Anth. P. 6, 248. i Kdoryvyatinés, 4, dv, brotherly or sisterly, Schol. Il. 9. 563. kaotyvyros, 6, (dors, yevécOat, cf. yvfotos) :—a brother, Hom., etc. ; properly, like d5edqos, of these born from the same mother, x. Kal dratpov Il. 11. 257: as fem. a sister, rHBe TH KaovyvijTw these two sisters, Soph. El. 977, cf. Pseudo-Luc. Philopatr. 11; (but Hom, always uses kaovyv7jTy in this sense) ;—in more general sense, a cousin, x. TE érat re Il. 16. 456, cf. 15. 545. II. as Adj., xaot-yvnros, 7, ov, brotherly, sisterly, xaatyvyroy Kapa Soph. Ant. 899, 915, El. 1164, Eur. Or. 294: so also may be taken Kacryvjrow pévoro, Il. 9.567: cf. Kaots, GdeApds. Kaov0-Bépos, ov, eating cassia, of a worm, Hesych. Kiovd-mvous, ov, breathing of cassia, Autiph.’Agp. I. 14. ‘Kéots [a], 6, gen. xdotos first in Orph. Arg. 1234; dat. pl. xacteoo, Nic. Th. 345 :—a brother, Aesch. Theb. 674, etc. ; voc. nace Soph. O. C. 1440: %, a sister, Eur. Hec. 361, 943 :—metaph., Acyviv, alddny mupds x. Aesch. Theb. 494; «. mndod .. eins Id.Ag. 495; cf. kaovyvfjTn. II, in Sparta, xacets were boys of the same class in gymnastic exercises, Hesych., v. Bickh C.I. 1. p.613.—(The form «dots does not occur in Hom., though it is implied in xagi-yvyros, ~yrqrn. All are post. words. The origin of «dois is unknown: perh. Kagodvdpa, Kaoovéraa are akin. “Kdokava, 74, (nds) =xacotpara, Hesych. .Kaomohéw, an Aeol. form of xaracréAAw, cf. Sappho 82. .Kéooa, }, = kacadBas, Lyc. 131: in E. M. 493. 28, also kaooaBas. Kacota, 7, v. sub acta, wacaile, fut. isw, to look, taste, or smell like cassia, Diosc. 1. 13. Kacotrept&es, ov, al, the Cassiterides or tin-islands (v. sub xagcirepos), Hadt. 3.115; cf. Strabo 120, 129, etc. -kacctrépwos, Att. katt, 7, ov, made of tin, Arist, Soph. El. 1, 2, Plut. 2. 1075 C. -Kacatrepo-mrovds, 5,=Kacorrepovpyds, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 251. Kacacttepos [7], Att. karr-, 6, tin, freq. in Il. (though never in Od.), mostly as an ornament of armour, Il. 11. 25, 34., 18.565, 574; or of chariots, 23.503. It was commonly melted, Il, 18. 474, Hes. Th. 862 ; and then cast upon the harder yaAxés, hence xedpa kagorrépowo a plating of din, Il. 23. 561; x. mavepOos Hes, Sc. 208; but was also worked with the hammer, as in II. 20. 271, where we have a shield of five layers (mrvxes), all beateu by the smith, and two of them are of tin :—greaves were of tin, xvnuls veorevxrov kacairépoio Il, 21. 592; xvnpidas éavod x. (where the epith. gives the reason for its use, cf. éavds) 18. 613. (The Skt. name is kastira, said to be derived from kash (Jucere), and tin is found in the islands on the coast of India. Hence it is assumed that the Phoenicians first got the name with the metal from the East, and that they took the name with them to Cornwall and the Scilly Islands, which thus came to be called the Kaoocrepides, a name known to Hdt. (3. 115) as that of the place from which tin came, though he knew not where they were; (there is a Cassiter Street in Bodmin); v. Lassen in Ritter’s Erdkunde 5.439. The Arab name is kasdir, prob. from the same source.) ‘kacotrepoupyés, 5, (*épyw) a tinman, Gloss. Kacotrepbw, fut. dow, fo cover with kacatrepos, to tin, Diosc. I. 33. ~Kéooupa, Att. katt-, 76, anything stitched of leather, esp. the sole ‘stitched under a shoe or sandal, a shoe-sole, Hipp. 1153 D, Ar. Ach. 300 (abi v. ~ 3 se , , Kapwals — kaTa, karripara to put on shoes made by an enemy, Ar. Vesp. 1160; cf. pare II. II. in Plut, 2. 1138 B, earrdpara are bad flute-tunes— prob. as being patched together, without regard to unity. kacove [Bd], Att. Kart-, cf. éy-, mapa-kacovw:—to stitch or sew together like a shoemaker, Plat. Euthyd. 294 B, Nie. ap. Ath. 370 A; so in Med. (nisi leg. xar7voper), Pherecr. Incert. 75. II. metaph., like Adwrw, to stitch up a plot, like Lat. dolos suere, of8° ya 10 mpaype 30ev xarrverat (says Cleon the tanner), I know the shop that this piece of leather comes from, Ar. Eq. 314; kartvew dcaBodds Alciphro 3. 58 ; kexartupeva copotixy TpomoAoyig Clem. Al. 998; cf. xdooupa, (Prob. xarrvw is, as above stated, the Att. form of kacotw, though the form with go is very rare (cf. carrs) ; it is however found in Hipp. 1153 D, Nic. Fr. 11. If so, it must be a contr. form of kara-otw, from 4/ZT, which appears in Lat. svo, sutor, sutura, subula, Skt. siv, sivydmi (suo), syiitis (sutura), Goth. suija (émppdrrw), O. H. G. suid (sutura), etc.) KaoraXia, Ion. -{y, 7, the famous spring of the Muses on Mt. Parnassus, Hadt.8. 39, Pind. P. 1.75, Soph., etc. (Prob. akin to xaBapés, Lat. castus.) Kdorava, wy, 7d, chestnuts, Lat. castdéneae, Mnesith. ap. Ath. 54 B; also called xdépva Kaoravaia, C. 1.123. 19 (and prob. Diod. 3.19), Kaora- vaixd Theaphr. H. P. 4. 8, 11, Diod. 2. 50; Kaordva, 7d, Galen. 6. 426, etc. ; in sing., kaoravea, 4, Id. 6. 426 F, 11. 648, Geop. ; kaordvea, 7d, Ageloch. ap. Ath. 54 D, (eaordvea xdpva E. M. 493.26); and in Nic. Al. 269, kdornva: (said to be derived from Kacravata, %, a city of Pontus, E. M., l.c.; Kaorévis aia Nic. Al. 271.) Kaota&vedv; vos, 6, a chestuut-grove, Geop. 3. 15, 7- Kdoré&vos, 7), a chesinut-tree, Hesych. s. v. kapvat. Kdortv, Att. crasis for eat éoriv, Soph. Aj. 1154, Ar. Lys. 838. Kaorév, Att. crasis for eal éordy, Ar. Av. 326. Kaorépews, ov, of or belonging to Castor ;—1d K. pédos, a martial song, set to the flute, used in celebrating victories in the horse or chariot races, Pind. P. 2. 128 (ubi v. Béckh.), Plut. Lycurg. 22., 2. 1140C; 6 K. #pvos Pind, I. 1. 21 ;—Castor being the reputed inventor of the fvvapis, y. Donalds. Pind. Fr. 80 :—it was also called immds vopos, Id. O. 1. 162. kacropides, ai, a famous Laconian breed of hounds, said to be first reared by Castor, Anth. P. 6. 167, Poll. 5. 39: also kaoréprat xives Xen. Cyn. 3, I. II. sea-calves or seals, Opp. H. 1. 398, Ael. N. A. 9. 50. kactoptte, to be like castor, cited from Diosc. kacréptov, 74, castor, Lat. castoreum, or (in pl.) castorea, a secretion found in two bags near the hinder parts of the beaver, not (as was believed) in the scrotum, Diosc. 2. 26, Galen. II. a kind of colour, Suid. kacréptos, a, ov, (xdorwp) of the beaver, Hesych.; #. ipdria of beaver- skin, Lat. castorinae or —eae vestes, Eccl. IL. cf. xacropisdes 1. kacropvica, Ep. for karacropvica, v. sub Katacrépyupt. kdorpa, 7d, =-the Lat. castra, C. I. 2972, al.: Kéotpyots or Kdc- tpnvors, 6, =castrensis, Ib. 3888. datwp, opos, 6, Castor, son of Zeus (or Tyndareus) and Leda, brother of Pollux, Il. 3. 237 sq., Od. 14. 204 sq. Kdorwp, opos, 6, the beaver, Castor fiber, Hdt. 4. 109, Arist. H. A. 8.5, 8 (cf. Skt. kasttri, musk). steph etaore Ses ut, Hipp. 659. 41, Aretae. Cur. M. Ac. 2. 10. III. a name of the crocus, Diosc. Noth. 1. 25. kaovras, ov, 6, prob.=xaduras, Hesych. Kaoxee, Ep. for carécyebe, karécye, v. sub KaTéxw. kdoapiov, kiowpetw, kiowpis, kicwpitis, v. sub KagadBds. Kat, for xard before 7, v. sub xarrd. karé [xdra], Prep. with gen. or acc.: (never with dat., for in places like Od. 10. 238., 2. 425., 15. 290, kard ovpeotow eépyvu, kara 5e mpo- tivoow é5noavy,—it is merely separated by tmesis from the Verbs, oupeois kareépyvu, mpordvas karéinoav). Radical sense down, down- wards: poét. form xarai is mentioned by Apoll. Dysc., and is found in some compds. with Baivw, as xaraiBarhs; v. infr. F.—In Mss. xara is easily confounded with werd, Bast Palaeogr. 825. A. WITH GENIT., I. denoting motion from above, down Srom, Bi 68 kar’ OddAvpro10 Kaphvov, Kar’ Tdaiwv épewy, kara wéTpys Il, 22, 187., 16. 677, Od. 14. 399; war’ obpavod eiAjAovOas Il. 6. 128; Kal’ inmay digavres Ib, 232; Saxpva.. kara Brehapwy xapadis pee 17. 4333 Badéew kara mérpns Od. 14.399; and so in Att., pire, dOeiv xara Ths mérpas, kara Tov Kpnuvay, etc.; GAdecOar Kara THs wérpas Xen. An. 4. 2, 17:—so in phrase xar’ dupys, v. sub dxpa. II. de- noting downward motion, 1. down upon or over, kata xOovds bp- para mhgas Il. 3.217; esp. of the dying, xar’ dpOadpav Knéxur’ axAds a cloud settled upon the eyes, 5. 696., 16. 3443 7@ wey .. Kar’ dpOarpay xéev axdty 20. 321; Tov Be Kar’ dpOadpay .. vdE exddvpe 13. 580; bapos Kau Kepadijs cipvoce down over .., Od. 8.85; [Kémpos] ward Oneious KEXUTO .. TOANH 9. 330 j—so in Att., Hdwp Kara yxetpds, v. sub XEelp; mupov nara Tis kepadgs karaxeiv Plat. Rep. 398 A; cf. xara~ orévbu ; so, vapkn wou kara Tis xewpds Karaxetrat Ar. Vesp. 713; KaTa Ths TpaéCas karandccey réppay Id. Nub.177; gaivew kara Tov vwTou modAas [nAnyds] Dem. 493, 43 kard Tis xwpas éoxedacpévor Polyb. 1. 17, 10, cf. 3-19.75 ward Kdppns rate, = ent xdppns, Luc., etc. 2. down into, vérrap ordte kata pay Od. 19. 39; of a dart, card yalys WXETO 13. 504, etc. ; EOnne Kat’ bxOns peldivov éyxos 21.172; of a de- parted soul, Yux7) kara xOovds @xeTo 23, 100; so in Trag., KaTa xOovds (or yijs) ddvat, etc.; kara xPovds kptrrey to bury, Soph. Ant. 24: hence, 6 ward “ys one dead and buried, Xen. Cyr. 4.6, 5; of xara xOovds Geol. Aesch, Pers. 689, etc.; Oeot of ward yas Id. Cho. 475, etc.; (hence Herm, restores kara ‘yas (for yav) in Eum. 374, 838) ;—so, xara 9ardcons karadivat, dpavitecbar Hat. 7. 6 and 235 :—also, Bare ear’ Schol.), Eq. 315, 869; metaph., bnodicacOa éxOpav map’ dvipGy gdvriGipav go down by or through .. , Soph, El. 1433, (cf. émi «Aipakos ee ee asinine , , xara — xataBaivo. xaraBaivew to descend by a ladder, Xen. An. 4. 5, 25). 3. later, towards a point (like éwé and mpds c. gen.), rofevey kata cKorod to shoot at (because the arrow falls down upon its mark), Hdn.6.7,19. 4. evxerOa or dudoat Kara Twos to vow or swear by a thing (because one holds out the hand over it or calls down the vengeance of the gods upon it), Thuc. §. 473 ward réxvov durvivac Dem. 852. 18, cf. 1268. 24; émopxeiv kara trav raldwv Lys, 210. 9; Kar’ éfwdeias duvivas v. sub éfwXeia :—also to.make a vow towards something, i.e. make a vow of offering it, Interpp. Ar. Eq. 660: cf. dpvupe m1, 5. in hostile sense, against, Aesch. Cho, 221, Soph. Aj. 304, etc.; xara mévrov pvecOa: Dem. 231. 14; esp. of judges giving sentence against a person, Aesch, Theb. 188, -Soph. Aj. 449, etc.; PevSeoOar Kara Tivos Lys. 164. 423 A€yerv xara Twos Soph. Ph. 65, Xen. Hell. 1. 5, 2, etc.; Adyos kara Tivos differs somewhat from Adyos pds Tiva, as Lat. oratio in aliquem, from adversus al., Wolf. praef. Leptin. cli.; also, AapBdvev Sapa «ard twos Dinarch. 109. 11, cf. 110.31; (hence the compounds karayyveokw, KaTabixd{m, KkaTyyopéw, c. gen.). 6. from Plat. downwds., like Lat. de, upon, in respect of, concerning, oxoweiv kata twos Plat. Phaedo 70D; kara ray dAAwy rexvdy To.adra eiphoopey Id. Soph. 253 B; éma:vos xard rivos praise bestowed upon one, Aeschin. 22.31; A€yev Kard Tivos to say of one, Plat. Apol. 37 B, Prot. 323 B, etc.; ef & yé Tt Cyrois kara mavrev Id. Meno 73D, cf.74D; domep elpnrat kara nacéy Tay wokTedy Arist. Pol. 5.7, 11; and often in the Logic of Arist., xara Tivos A€éyeaOar or Karnyopeicbat, to be predicated of ..; KaTapdvat (or dmopdvat) Tt kara Twos to affirm (or deny) of -.; etc. 7. nat’ ixvav twos dbevew Luc. Rhet. Praec. 9. periphr. for an Ady., esp. in #a@’ Sov and xara tayrds, for dAws and Tavs, in general, altogether. B. wirn Accus., I. of motion downwards, kara pdov down stream, opp. to dvd fdov, Hdt. 2. 96, cf. 1. 194., 4.44, Plat. Phaedr. 229 A; Kar’ ovpoy lévat, peiy to sail down (i. e. with) the wind, Aesch. Theb. 690, Soph. Tr. 468 ;—cf. war and dye. 2. of motion, on, over, throughout a space, and also without any signf. of motion, very freq. in Hom. «ard yaiay, “EAAGSa, "Axaida, Tpoinv,—xara Kérevor, névrov, kdpa, DANY, TréALy, olxov, Burov, orpardy, vias, KAolas,— kata mrédepor, opivnv, udOov, xddvov, etc.; so, Kad’ “EXAada Aesch. Ag. 578; xara mrédw Id. Theb. 6; ard ri dyopav Dem. 284. 25, etc.:—so in describing the place of a wound, BadAay, vicoey, obra Kara o7700s, yaorépa, etc., in, on the breast:—also, BadAew kar’ dorida, (worijpa, etc. ; BédAos kara Kaipioy HAGev struck upon a mortal part, Il. II. 439 :—in Hom. also, xara Ovyédy in heart or soul; ata ppéva rat xara. Oupdy (cf, however signf. Iv); in Prose, xara voor. 3. oppo- site, over against, kara Swvwmny rodw Hat. 1. 76, cf. 2. 148., 3. 14, etc.; dv}p war’ dvdpa Aesch. Theb. 505; poddy.. wot xara ordpa Id. Cho. 5733 of pév AOnvain xara Aaxedaipovious éyévovro Xen. Hell. 4. 2, 18; at, near, kata 7d mpodareoy Hat. 3. 54; TUuBov kar’ adréy Aesch. Theb. 528, cf. Supp. 869. II. distributively, of a whole divided into parts, card pdAa, kara pphrpas by tribes, by clans, Il. 2.362; kara opéas by themselves, separately, 2. 366; adr? nad’ airhy Aesch. Pr. 1013; and so in Prose, xara kwpas xatwKjaOat to live in separate vil- lages, Hdt. 1.96 ; ear’ Ewurods exaoro: érpamoyro each to his own home, 5.15; ar’ dydpa man by man, singly, 1d.6.79; ward play re Kal dvo by ones and twos, Id. 4. 113, etc. 2. so of parts of Time, a6” jyuépay, nar’ jyap day by day, daily, v. jpépa 11, Hyap. 8. of numbers, by so many at a time, xa’ éva one at a time, Hdt. 7. 104; Kat’ dAtyous Wess. Hdt. 8.113; xard rds wévre nal eixoot pas mevraxoclas Spax- pas elopépey to pay 500 drachmae on every 25 minae, Dem. 815.11; xara daxoclas Kat tpraxocias in separate sums of 200 and 300 drach- mae, Id. 817.1; so with a neut. Adj., card puxpdv, ddrLyor little by little, gradually, etc.; «a0 €v=xa0amag, Aesch. Cho. 317. III. of direction towards an object or purpose, freq. in Hom. ; mAciy xara mpngw on a business, for or after a matter, Od. 3. 72., ts 253; mAdCecOa Kara Anida to rove in search of booty, 3.106; xara yxpeos Tivds édGelv to come after, to seek his help, consult him, nearly = ypyodpevos édOeiv, It. 479, etc.; like éwi and perd c. ace., xara Aniny in quest of, Hat. 2. 152; lerae xara riv pavqy Ib. 70; xara Oéay Heev to have come for the purpose of seeing, Thuc. 6.31; xa” dpwayiy éoxedacpévor Xen. An. 3-5, 2. 2. of pursuit, xara mébas Twos édavvew Hat. g. 89, cf. 533 «ar’ tyvos on the track, Soph, Aj. 32. IV. of fitness or conformity to a thing, according to, kara Ovpdv Hom.; Kad’ jpuérepoy véov after our liking, Il. 9.108; xara véov mpytwpev Hdt. 4.97; ward potpay as is meet and right, Hom.; so, xat’ atony, Kata Kéc poy, opp. to mapa poipay, map’ aloay, Hom. :—so also later, altiay xa’ fvrwa for what cause, Aesch. Pr. 226; xa’ €xOpav, xara pOivov for (i.e. because of ) hatred, envy, Id. Supp. 335, Eum. 686; a6’ j5ovny so as to please, Id. Pr. 261; xard rd éx80s 7d Gecoaddy Hat. 8. 30, cf. 9. 373 Kara piAlay, kar’ éxos Thuc. 1. 60, 103, etc.; xara dvvapu to the best of one’s power ; Kard. rpémov Aé-yewv to speak to the purpose; xatT’ edvoray with good will; cara thy fuppaxtay, card Ta ovyreipmeva, etc. 2: in relation to, concerning, Ta kat’ dvOpwmovs=7a dvOpwmvd, Aesch. Eum, 930, cf. 310; 7a@ xara rov TéAAoy Hat. 1. 31; 7a Kara riv Kipou TeAcuTny Ib. 214; 7a Kara TéA€epuoy military matters ; Ta Kara Ty WAL public affairs, etc.; so, 7d xa6’ ipas as far as concerns you, Hat. 7.158 ; Kara ye éué, etc, ; xara rodro according to this way, in this view; xara Tavrd in the same way, xa6’ bri so far as, etc.:—so Kara is used in quo- tation, kar’ Aioyvdoy Ar. Thesm. 134; «ard Mivdapoy Plat. Phaedr. 227 B, etc, . 8. implying comparison or correspondence, xara Aomdy xpoptoo like the coat of a leek, Od. 19. 233; kara McOpaddrny answer- ing to the description of him, Hdt.1.121; kara mvvyéa very like an oven, 749 Aesch. Pr. 890; ob kar’ dvOpwmov ppoveiv Id. Theb. 425; Kar’ dvdpa, #1) Oedv Id. Ag. 925; ob kara ce none of your sort, Chion. “Hp.1; od xara Tas Mediou Naroupyias Dem. 569. 16 ; 7 Bacthela Kara tiv dpi- oroxpatiay éart Arist. Pol. 5.10, 2:—hence often after a Compar., 4 kard.. , Lat. guam pro, quam quod conveniat,etc.; peiCav h kar’ dvOpdmou gtow Hat. 8. 38, cf. Plat. Apol. 20 E, etc.; wel{w 7 xara Sdxpva too great to weep for, Thuc. 7. 75; Badvrepa i) kara Opnixas deeper than was common among the Thracians, Hdt. 4. 95 :—# mpds and 7} ws, c. inf., are used in the same way, cf. ds B. III. V. by the favour of a god, etc, xara daipova, Lat. non sine numine, Pind. O. g. 42, cf. P. 8. 973 kara Gedy Valck. Hdt. 3. 153. VI. of loosely stated num- bers (v. infr. VII. 2), nearly, about, rata éf{nedoia érea 600 years more or less, Hdt. 2.145, cf. 6. 44,79,1173 so also, ear’ oddéy next to nothing, Id. 2. 201. VII. of Time, during, sometime in a period, kata Tov wor€epnov in the course of the war, Id. 7.137; xa0’ jpépay by day, Aesch, Cho. 819, cf. Ag. 668; xar’ edppévny Id. Pers. 221; but cf. Ir. oe 2. about (v. supr. VI), kata Tov adrov xpévoy Hat. 3. 131; esp. with names of persons, kara ”Apagiv Baoihevovra about the time of Amasis, Id. 2.134; xara tov xara Kpoicov xpévor Id. 1. 67, cf. 6. 58, etc.; of war’ éxelvous bpérepor mpdyovor Dem. 561. fin.; of xara Tov TAdrwva, etc. VIII. with an abstract. Subst. used in periphr, for Adverbs, as, cad’ Havyxinv, kara raxXos, etc., for jovxws, raxéws, Hdt. I. 9, 124., 7.178; xat’ ioxdv, kara xparos perforce, Aesch. Supp. 390, etc.; xaTd pépos partially; ard pvow naturally; kara tiv téxvqv skilfully, etc. ? C. Position: xara may follow both its cases, and is then written with anastr. xara, as Il, 20. 221, etc.: so also in tmesi, when it follows its Verb, as 17. gt, Od. 9. 6. D. absol. as ADV. in all the above senses, esp. like xarw, downwards, Srom above, down, freq. in Hom, B. xara in Compos., I. downwards, down, as in xataBaivw, kaTaBadrw, kaTaKepat, KaTanépnw, KaTanintw, kaTamAéo. II. in answer to, in accordance with, as in karddw (occino), karavew, Karabupuos, III. against, in hostile sense (cf. A. II. 5), as in katayiyveonw, Kataxpivw, karaynplCopar; ‘more rarely with a Subst., as xaradixn. IV. often only to strengthen the notion of the simple word, as in xataxérrw, xataxrelvw, KaTapayeiy, etc.; also with Substs. and Adjs., as in earddnAos, Karofos. V. sometimes to give a trans. force to an intr. Verb, our be-, as in xaraOpnvéw, to be- wail. VI. implying waste or consumption, as in kataderoupyéw, KaOinmorpopéw, kataCevyorpopew ; and generally in a disparaging sense, as in KatayryvmoKrw, v. Cobet N. LL. p. 574. F. pn as a Prep. was sometimes shortened, esp. in old Ep. poetry, into Kay, Kak, nap, Kav, Kaw, Kap, Kar, before y, Kk, p, Vv, T (or ), A, T (or @), respectively ; see these forms in their own places. Mss. and the older Edd. join the Prep. with the following word, as xayyévu, xaddé, Kakkepadts, kanmediov, kampadapa, Kappdov, karrade, xarrév, etc. In compd. Verbs, xard sometimes changes into aB, KaA, Kap, Kar, before B, A, p, 0, respectively, as naBBadre, xarOave, KadAuTE, Kappe- (ovea; and before or, ax, the second syll. sometimes disappears, as in kagTopvica, Kaoxebe, kacovw, as also in the Doric forms «aBaivar, Kdreroy. A xard, Ion. for a6’ a, Hdt., v. Koen Greg. p. 400, Struve Quaest. Hero- dot. I. p. 343 cf. mapamoréw II. kara, Att. crasis for xal efra, v. efra sub fin. kardéBa, for xaraByO, imper. aor. 2 of xaraBatyw. kataBdSyv [Ba], Adv. going down, v. sub dvaBadny. karaBabpds, 6, a descent, a name of the steep slope which separates Egypt and Nubia, and causes the Cataracts, Aesch. Pr. 811 (in Att. form KaraBacpds), Polyb. 31. 26, 9, Strabo 791, Sallust. Jug.17 and 19: cf, Karddoumot, kataBatvw, post. xiBaives Aleman 22: fut. -Bjcouar Hes. Th. 750: pf. -BéBnxa: aor. xaréBny, post. 3 pl. karéBay Il. 24. 329, Pind.; im- per. xaraBn® Od. 23. 20, Ar. Lys. 873; «a7rdBa Id. Vesp. 979, Ran. 35; Ep. 1 pl. subj. caraBelopey (for —B@per) Il. 10. 97; poét. part. xaBBds Pind., Lacon. dat. pl. ea4Baor Hesych. :—Med., Ep. aor. I xare- Byoero Il. 6. 288., 13.17, Od. 2. 337, al. (in older Edd. often wrongly kareBhoaro) ; imperat. karaBAceo Il. 5. 109. To step down, go or come down, Lat. descendere, opp. to dvaBaivw. Construction :—in full with a Prep., «. € Opeos to go down from .. , ll. 13.17; ¢. gen. only, as, x. méALos 24. 329; obpavdbey x. 11. 184; and so in Att.:—x, és we- diov, és péyapoy, és Kphynv 3. 252, etc.; or c. acc. loci only, @4Aapov kareBhoero Od. 2. 337; KaréBnv Sépov”Aidos claw 23. 252, cf. Hes. Th. 750; and so in Pind. and Att.:—but also c. acc. in quite different senses, katéBaww’ trepwia she came down from the upper floor, Od. 18. 206., 23.85; and, wAluaxa KareBhoero (as we say) came down the ladder, I. 330, (so, #. kata Kdiparos Lys. 92. 30); feordv épdrnaiov karaBas having got down by the rudder, Od. 14. 350 (cf. xara0pwaoxe) ; so, absol., xaraBaivey 5 ov axoAn to come down stairs, Ar. Ach. 409 ; hence in Pass., trmos karaBaivera: the horse is dismounted from, Xen. Eq. 11, 7.—Special usages, 1. to dismount from a chariot or from horseback, dippou Il. 5. 109; &e rhs dppapdgns Hat. 9. 76; ap” dppd- tov Pind, N. 6. 87; awd rod immov Xen. Cyr. 5. 5, 6; but, x. dnd Trav irra to give up riding, Dem. 1046. 11. 2. to go down from the inland parts to the sea, esp. from central Asia (cf. dvaBaivw 11.3), Hdt.1. 94,€tc.; So, x. és Tetpaid, és Aiwéva, Plat. Rep. init., Theaet. init. 3. to come to land, get safe ashore, Pind. N. 4.63 :—hence, to come to one’s point or end, Ib. 3. 73; K. émt redevrqy Plat. Rep. 511 B. 4, to go down into the arena, to fight, wrestle, race, K. én’ deOda Hat. 5. Ar, Av. 1001; Kndedoat xa’ éav7dy to marry in one’s own rank of life, 7 KN x . » 22; and absol., like Lat. in certamen descendere, Soph. Tr. 504, Xen. 750 An. 4. 8,27; so, karaBaréov én rhy dpidday Plat. Legg. 833.D; x. én” avrous one must attack them, Ar. Vesp. 1514:—cf. cain I. 2. 5. of an orator, to come down from the tribune, Lys. 128. 33, Dem. 348. Io, etc.; rarely with dwd rod Bnyatos added, Id. 375. 20; so, karaBa"— kataBjgouat Ar. Vesp. 979 :—later, also, x. dxd Tod Adyou, amd Tav iapBetwy to cease from.. , Luc. Tox. 35, Necyom. 2. 6. rarely of things, mplv .. caraBhpevar x Ads odpoy Il. 14. 19; of teats, Eur. Andr. III; of streams, Plat. Criti.118 D; of the womb, Arist. H. A. 7. 2, 6; néaow xatéBa ro ad’ iorw; at what price did [the robe] come down from the loom? Theocr. 15. 35. II. metaph., 1. «ara- Baivew eis 7 to come to a thing in.the course of speaking, xatéBawve és Aurds he ended with prayer, Hdt.1.116; but mostly c. part., caréBawev avris tapaitedpevos Id. 1. go, cf. 1. 118., 9. 94. 2. x. eis Tt to come to the same point, agree in a thing, as, x. eis ypévous to agree in age, Arist. Pol. 7. 16, 5. 8. to come down or fall, of prices, Poll. 1. 51. 4. to condescend, mpés iva Basil. III. ¢o go one’s way, advance, Pind. N. 3. 73.5 4- 63. B. trans. to bring down, dAdo trep¥_e BdddAwv, Gddov B.. KaTa- Baive Pind. P.8, 111. kataBaxxevo, zo fill with Bacchic frenzy; and Pass., to be frenzied, Eumath. p. 154. IL. to insult grossly, rwos Theodor. Met. Ko » Pass. to be full of Bacchic frenzy, xaraBaxy.ovobe Spuds .. KAGBors in oak-wreaths ye rave with Bacchic rage, Eur. Bacch. 109. , fut. -BaA®: aor. karéBaAdor, Ep. 3 sing. eaBBade. To throw or cast down, overthrow, xara mpnves Badéew Tpidporo pédabpov Il. 2. 4143 € péoooy x. 76.15.3573 evt mévtw Hes. Th. 189; én’ derijs Il. 23.125; émt xOovi Hes, Sc. 462, etc.; «. Twa évOdde Od. 6.173; &. 7d oikhpara, 7a dyadpara Hdt. 1. 17., 8. 109; «. Twa dd Tod tmmov Xen, Hell. 5. 2,41; dm. éAmidos Plat. Euthyphro 15 E; «. els rd wndév to bring down to nothing, opp. to éapar tod, Hdt.9. 79, cf. Eur. Bacch. 202. 2. to strike down with a weapon, to slay, Il. 2, 692, Hdt. 4. 64, etc.; or by a blow, «. mardgas Lys. 136. 22; esp. of slaying victims, Eur. Or. 1603, Isocr. 19 A; #. Odpa Saiyoow Eur. Bacch. 1246. 8. to throw or bring into a certain state, x. Twa és fvppopds Id. I. T. 606; els dropiay, eis dmoriay Plat. Phileb. 15 E, Phaedo 88 C, etc. 4. to cast down or away, cast off, reject, Isocr. 238 A, Xen. Cyr. 2.2, 4: metaph. fo forget, Acl. ap. Suid. :—xaraf. els 7 to throw away upon a thing, Plat. Legg. 960 E, Arist. Eth. N. 1. 5, fin.:—x. éavréy, Lat. se abjicere, Plut. Caes. 38; hence, caraBeBAnuévor abandoned fellows, Lat. homines projectae audaciae, Isocr. 234 B; and so, 7a. kara- BeBAnpéva wadevpatra common education, Arist. Pol. 8. 2, 6; Adv. kataBeBAnpéevas contemptibly, Isocr. Antid. § 326. II, in milder sense, to let fall, drop down, awd €o naBBare vidy Il. 5. 343; “aBBadre veBpéov, of an eagle, 8. 249; of a fawning dog, ovata KaBBadev dupa Od. 17. 302; as nautical term, «. ioria Theogn. 671 ; rd«dria Epicr. Incert. 2;—also, eat’ dp@aApods Bade? Aesch. Cho. 575; Tas d¢ppiis k. Eur. Cycl. 167 (cf. 6pps):—to abandon a bill, é4v caraBaddvra év bre pooig Dem. 260. fin. :—for Theocr. 15, 85, v. sub fovdos. 2. to lay down, set down, Lat. deponere, xpetov péya naBBadev ey updos avyj Il. 9. 206, cf. Ar. Ach. 165, Vesp. 727, etc. 3. to bring, carry down, esp. to the sea-coast, «. ovria Hdt.7. 25,—where others take it to Jay in as stores or dépéts. 4. to pay down, yield or bring in, } Atuvn karaBddrct én’ huepay Exdorny Tadavrov Hat. 2.149; Tas émxaprias TH 76Aet Andoc, 12. 29. b. to pay down, pay, Tapyupiov Thuc. 1. 27; tpi@Bodov Ameips. Motx.1; dppaBdva Menand. Incert. 223; Tiny Ti dwep Tivos Plat. Legg. 932 D, Luc.V. Auct. 25; xara- Baddwy cot dSpaxphy rev Borptay for them, Philostr. 661; «. (nulav to pay, discharge a fine, Dem. 727.4 (cf. karaBoAn It, 2) :—Med. to cause to be deposited, 74 mpockaraBAnpara Dem. 731.7. 5. to put down into a place and leave there, twa els épuriy Hat. 4. 146. 6. to put in, render, paprupiay Dem, 921. 4: to deposit a written document, Plat. Soph. 232 D; and in Med., xaraBddAcoOar .. els Ta Snydova ypap- para to have [a document] entered on the public records, ap. Dem. 243. 25. 7. to throw down seed, sow, eis nolay yRv woioy onépya kara- BAyréoy Plat. Theaet. 149 E; and in Pass., Plut, 2. 905 E :—metaph., onéppa k. ToovTwY mpayparov Dem, 748. 13; K. pari, Lat. spargere voces, Hdt. 1.122, cf, Eur. H. F. 758. 8. to lay down as a founda- tion, mostly in Med., riv THs vaumnyias dpxiv karaBaddéyevos Plat. Legg. 803 A; xaraBaddopéva péyay otrov Eur. Hel. 164 lyr. ; "Apiorin- mos Tiv Kupnvaixiy pidocopiay xareBadero Strabo 837; KkataBdadde- o0a Tovnranoy Sosip. Karayevd. 1. 39; Kavi vopodectay Diod. 12. 20; aipeoty Plut. 2. 329 A; pAvapias Galen. :—Pass., drav 52 xpymis pi} kaTraBAnO7 .. 6p0Hs Eur. H. F.1261; also, karaBeBAnuevat padqoes, fundamental, established, ordinary, Arist. Pol. 8. 2,6; 7a «, madedpara Ib. 8. 3, 11. 9. c. inf., yapov xaraBdddAop’ deldew I begin by singing of, Call. Fr. 196. III. Pass. to lie down, «is ebvav Theocr. 18. II. karaBamrife, fut. Att. 1, to dip under water, drown, of wine, nk. 73 Civ, tiv (wruy diva Alciphro 2. 3, Alex. Aphr. Probl. 1. 17, ¢f. Ach, Tat, 1. 3:—Pass. to be drowned, tnd péOns, TH OArtpe Eumath. p. a : pe oes kataBanriopés, od, 6,=Bamrricpuds, Eust. Opusc. 137. 41. xatraBarrior hs, of, 6, one who drowns, coined by Grog’ Naz, I. p. 670, as opp. to Barniarns. wataBdamre, to dip down into, és BaOos Luc. Imag. 16; els yAedxos Geop. 8. 23, I. II. to dye of a deep colour, Hesych.; odpos karaBeBaupevos deep-coloured, Medic. KataBapBapbw, fo make quite barbarous, Thy Téxvnv Tzetz. 3 éw, to weigh down, overload, Luc, D. Deor, 21. 1: metaph., K. Thy ‘Trakiay éapopais App. Civ. 5» 67:—Pass., xaraBapeioba ind g vo). karaBaxxevw — kataBryTiKds. rhs paxns Polyb. 11. 33, 33 Tots dAos 18. 4, 8; b4d rod méBous Diod. 1g. 24. pt és, heavy-laden, xataBapeis [vies], xaraBaph [mAota] Poll. 4. 172., 1. 103, Dio C. 39. 42., 74- 13. KataPdpyors, ews, 7, a weighing down, Gloss. kataPipive,=xaraBapéw, Theophr. Fr. 8.9: metaph., x. tov Bioy Antipat. ap. Stob, 418. 44, cf. Hermes Stob. Ecl. 1. 404. kataPacavitw, strengthd, for Bacavitw, Hipp. 85 B. kataBacia, poét. KaBB-,=«xardBaars, acc. to Herm. Aesch. Supp. 828. xataBdctov, 75,=KaTdBaots, a way down, esp. to the nether world, Damasc. ap. Phot. Bibl. 344. 16 ; “Avdou Suid. s.v. mopOpniov. II. a place for relics under the altar, Byz. kataBdoros, ov, =KararBdatos, rip Lxx (Sap. 10. 6). katdPuors, ews, 3, opp. to dvdBaots, a going down, way down, descent, Hat, 1. 186., 7. 223, and Att.; # eis”Avdou x. Isocr. 211 E; v. Hdt. a. 122, and cf. xaralBacts. 2. the descent from Central Asia, Xen. An. 3.5, 4.5 §- 5:43 9 ml Oddarrayv x. Diod. 14. 25. 3. steep ground, a declivity, Dem. Phal. 248. II.=«araBanov 11, Byz. Kay atvw, strengthd. for Bacxatve, Plut. 2, 680 C, 682 B and E. kataBacpés, 6, v. sub xaraBabpds. KataBiaréov, verb. Adj. of xaraBaivw, Ar. Lys. 884, Plat. Rep. 520 C; y. sub karaBaivy I. 4. KataBarevw, to tread or walk upon, Schol. Soph. O. C. 467. kataBdrns [Ba], ov, 6, one who dismounts and fights on foot, Plat. Criti. 11g B. aiannss, n, ov, affording an easy descent, Porphyr. Antr. Nymph. 22. Adv.—«@s, Oympiod. ad Plat. Alc. 2. p. 78 Creuzer. xataBarés, 7, dv, descending, steep, Schol. Ap. Rh. 2. 353. xataBaréy, 74, =a€dts, Hesych., Boisson. ad Hdn, Epim. p. 2. kartBaitlw, fut. fw, to bark at, Heraclit. ap. Plut. 2. 787 C (as Wakef. for cat B.); Twos Anth. P. 7. 408 (ubi xaraBavéas, metri grat.). karaBavkadda, to lull to sleep, Ael. N. A. 14. 20, Poll. 9.127. kataBavkddyors, ews, 7), a lulling to sleep, Ath. 618 E. katraBavkaAtlo, fut. icw,=KaraBaveaddw, Com. Anon. 64, Phot., II. Suid. II. (Bavears) to gulp down, Sopat. ap. Ath. 784 B. KataBSeAvooopat, Dep., strengthd. for BdeAvooopat, LXX (Ez. 34. 27). kataPeBardopat, Dep. ¢o affirm strongly, Plut. Caes. 47. kataPeBatwors, ews, %, strong asseveration, Plut. 2, 1120 D. kataBeBAnpeves, v. karabaddAw, sub fin, kataPetonev, Ep. subj. aor. 2 of karaBaivw. kataBedys, és, stricken by many arrows, Dion. H. 2. 42., 5.24. karaBidleo, to subdue by force, Philo 1. 685 :—better as Dep., fo con- strain, kataBidoac0a Tapa yvwpny Tods ToAAOUs Thuc. 4.123, cf. App. Civ. 2.28; xdpire Plut. 2. 385 E. II, Pass. to be forced, Id. Thes. It, cf. Wyttenb. 2. 639 F; c. inf., Plut. 2. 75 F, Eunap. ap. Suid. s. v. Etirpémos; [vodonua] 757 bd xpévov modAAoD karaBeBracpévoy, of a chronic disease, Hipp. 303. 46. kaTaPiBalo, fut. Att. B.8a, Causal of xaraBaivw, to make to go down, bring down, Twa dnd ris mupis Hat. 1. 87, cf. 86; Tods é« Tod Kara- orTpwparos és Koth}v via Id.8.119; Thy wédAw mpds Thy Oddarrav Plut. Them. 4: to bring from town to country, Id. Camill. 10; down into a mine, Id. 2. 262 E:—metaph. to bring down, lower, «. Twa dd adx7- parov Dion. H. 7. 45. 2. to bring down by force, eis TO paddy 70 orparéredov Xen. Hell. 4.6, 7: to drive away, Hipp. 80 B. Ti. to bring back, tiv Siunynow emt ri apxny Dion. H. 1. 8. III. : — down the accent, i.e. throw it forward, Apollon. de Constr. 213, » M. 774. 33- kataBiBacpés, 6, a bringing, Procl. paraphr. Ptol. p. 67. i a throwing of the accent forward, Eust. 1361.39: so, kaTaBlBaots, ews, #, E. M. 610. 24. K&raPiBacréos, a, ov, verb. Adj. to be brought down, Plat. Rep. 539 E. kataBiBpdokw, fut. Bpdwooua: aor. karéBpwy: pf. pass. karabehpo- pat: aor. xaTeBpwOny: cf. kataBpwbe. To eat up, devour, h. Hom. Ap. 127, Hdt. 3.16; xaraBeBpwxas ovria tows érdepavrav TerTdpwv Antiph. Aid. 1; metaph., caraBeBpwxact .. rds ovcias Hegesipp. ‘Ad. I, 30:—Pass., xaraBéBpwrar Hdt. 4. 199, cf. Plat. Phaedo 110 A :—(for kataBpwéee, Dion. P. 604, v. sub xarafpdgece). wg =Bivéw: 3 sing. karaBivnot, barbarism in Ar. Thesm. 1215. karaBide, fut. doouat: aor. kateBiwy Plat., also xareBlwoa, Polyb, 12. 28, 6, Plut. Demosth. 24. To bring life to an end, 7d Hdéws Ka- taBiavat Tov Biov to have lived out one’s life, Plat. Prot. 355 A, cf. pert F; absol., Polyb. 1. c., ete. karaBiwors, ews, 7, a passing life, living, Diod. 18. 52, App. Civ. 4.16, kataBAdkeve, to treat carelessly, mismanage, Hipp. Art. 820, Xen. An. 7. 6, 22 :—Pass. to be careless or slothful, Greg. Naz. karaPAdrrw, fut. BAdyw, to hurt greatly, damage, h, Hom. Merc. 93, Plat. Legg. 877 B; BAGBny x. twa to inflict damage upon him, Ib. 864. E; naraBeBraddres thy mpdcodov C.1. 1570 a. 51; 6 Ka KarabAdyp for whatever damage he may have done, Ib. 1845. 103. karaBdéro, fut. —BAgpw, to look down at, dvaev eis .. Plut. Arat. 32: to view, Id. 2,680 D, 2. to look into, examine, Call. Del. 303, Plut, 2. 469 B, etc. karéBAnpa, 74, a deposit, cf. rporxardBAnua. II. any thing let down, 1. a curtain, the drop-scene of a theatre, Poll. 4.127, 131:— on the kataBdjpara of ships, v. Béckh At? Seewesen, p. 161. 2 a skirt or fringe, Ath. 536A. 3. an outer wrapper, Hipp. Art. 799 kataPAys, jros, 5,=émBArs, a bolt, Hesych. kataBAnréov, verb. Adj., v. sub karaBddAw I. 7. kataBAnrucds, UB év, fit for throwing off horseback, Xen, Eq. 8, 11: c, gen., &. TOU peyéOous THs ‘EAAGSos Dion, H, de Thuc. 19, kaTaBAnxaomat — KkarayyaptiCo. karaBAnxdopat, strengthd, for BAnydopat, Theocr. 5. 42. KaTaBAwokw, post. for xarépyopat, to go down or through, dorv kaTa- Brwoxovra Od, 16. 466; modqos voagu Ap. Rh. 1. 322: of seamen, Lyc. 1068 (in irr. fut, -BAwéw) :—of a stream, Ap. Rh. 4. 227. kataBodw: fut. —Bongopa: Ar. Eq. 286, Nub. 1154, Ion. —Bd&copat Hat, To cry down, cry out or inveigh against, c. gen., Hdt. 6. 85 ; #, Twov Ort Tas omovdds AcrvKdres elev Thuc. 1.67, cf. 115., 5.45 :— Pass. to have clamour raised against one, App. Civ. 5. 13. c, acc, to bawl down, outcry, Ar. Ach. 711, Eq. 286; cf. xara- page III. c. acc. cogn., xara por Boagov .. dma Tois ’Arpeldars carry down my voice .. , Soph. El, 1067. kataBow, js, 7, a cry or outcry against any one, c. gen, pers., Thuc. 1. 73-, 8.85; t «. 4 &s Aaxedaipova 8. 87, KataBonots, «ws, }, a crying out against, Plut. Pomp. 67, cf. 2. 420 F. II. acclamation, Philo 2.537: a loud ery, Artemid. 1. 24. kataBoPpevo, or —6w, to bury, overwhelm, prob. 1. in Cyrill. Al. joAevs, ews, 6, a founder, Georg. Pach. in Walz Rhett. 1. 566, Schol. Pind. O. 3. 1. II. one who pays, Gloss. kataBoAy, 7, a throwing or laying down, deposition, omepudrov Luc. Amor, 19, Ep. Hebr. 11. 11. II. metaph., 1. a foundation, beginning, Pind, N. 2.5; #. moteicOat tvpavvidos Polyb. 13.6, 2; é#« karaBodrs from the foundations, anew, afresh, Lat. denuo, Id. 1. 36, 8, etc.; «. xdgpov Ep. Ephes.1. 4; Tis abris x. yeyovévas Arr. Epict. 1. 13, 3 2. a paying down, esp. by instalments, caraBdadAew Tas Kk. Dem. 1352. 22; 70 dpydproy epepe xaraBodiy 7H 7éAex paid money as a deposit (by way of caution), Lex ap. Dem, 973. 4; cf. xataBaddw II. 4. 3. 1) «. Tis mepidbov the established or regular period, Arist. Meteor.1.14,18: the offer of a sacrifice, Hesych, III. a periodical attack of illness, a fit, Lat. accessio, Ths doOevelas Plat. Gorg. 519 A, cf. Hipp. Mi. 372 E; mvperod Dem. 118. 20: also, a cataract in the eye, Plut. Timol. 37. 2. «. Ged divine inspiration, Poll. 1. 16.—On the form karnBody, which is cited (in signf. 111) from Hipp. by Galen, and from Eur. (Fr. 617) by Hesych., vy, Lob. Phryn. 699. kataBddos, 6, a place for putting any thing in: I. a stew-pond, er aig Xenocr. Aquat. 27. II. a naval station, E. M. 336. 21. kataPopBéw, fo hum or murmur loudly, Byz. kataBopBépwors, ews, 7, a wallowing in mud, Plut. 2. 166 A:—the Verb —6o in Tatian. karaBéperos, ov, (Bopéas)=sq., Theophr. H. P. 2. 8, 1. Kat&Boppos, ov, under shelter from the north, i.c. facing the south, opp. to mpéaBoppos, Plat. Criti.118.B, Theophr. C. P. 2. 9, 7; olxia x. Arist. Oec, 1. 6, 9. kataBéckyots, ews, }, a feeding down or off, Symm. V. T. kataBécka, fut. —Booxnow, to feed flocks upon or in a place, Lat. de- pascere, X@ Tav Sapiav natraBdcKwy the shepherds of Samos, Theocr. 15.126:—Med., with aor. 1 med. and pass. of the flock, to feed upon, Lat. depasci, Long. 2.16, Geop. 2. 39, 2: to devour, consume, of a pesti- lence, Call, Dian. 125 ; 5€uas xaraBdonera dry Nic. Th. 244; Hovxin Be wédw xk. reigns throughout .., Tryph. 503. kataBdorpixos, ov, with flowing locks, veavias Eur. Phoen. 146, Aristaen. 2.19, Heliod. 7. 10. KataBoorpix sw, to furnish with flowing locks, Eumath. p. 110. kataBouxodéw, to lead astray, beguile, Themist. 330 A, in Pass. kataBpaBevw, to give judgment against one as BpaBeds, and so to de- prive one of the prize, deprive one of one’s right, c. acc., Ep. Col, 2. 18, Schol. Il. 1. 399, Eust. :—Pass., bd Mediov xaraBpaPevderra being un- fairly cast in his suit by means of Meidias, Dem. 544. fin. kataBpevOtiopnat, Dep., only used in pres. and impf., strengthd. for BpevOvopat, Theophyl, Sim. karaBpéxa, fut. —Bpégw :—Med., fut. -Bpéfopar Hipp. 649 :—Pass., aor. I kareBpéxOny Ar. Nub. 297: aor. 2 xareBpaxny [a] Theophr. C. P. 6527,52; To wet through, drench, soak, pr xataBpex9@ Ar. |. c.; dps év Sart karaBpexopévn Theophr. H. P. 5. 4, 3 :—metaph., «. Twa xados Xiov Hedyl. ap. Ath. 473 A; pwédite earaBpéxety, like ebAoyias paivew, Pind, O. 10 (11). 119; kavxnua ovyG car. to steep boasting in silence, i.e. to be silent instead of boasting, Id. I. 5 (4). 65; so, oy BpéxecOar to be silent, Id. Fr. 269. kataBpifw, to fall asleep, Hesych. kataPpiGe [7], fut. —Bpicw, intr. to be heavily laden or weighed down by a thing, dles uadAois karaBeBpidac: Hes. Op. 232; dpmaxes BpaBvaciot waraBpiovres Theocr. 7.146. « II. trans. to weigh down, to outweigh, O\By piv mavras Ke kataBpidn Bacdjas Theocr. 17. 95 (as several Mss. ; vulg. caraBeBpider). karaBpipdopar, strengthd. for Bpizdopa, Corinna 18. karaBpovrdw, fut. 7roua, to thunder down, rods pytopas Longin. 34. 4; cf. Themist. 337 D :—cf. xaraBodw I, karapréyw IL. kataBpétere, v. sub Bpdxw 2. kataBporéa, fo soil with gore, Hesych, kataBpox7y, 7, a soaking, softening, Galen. KataBpoxGilw, fut. ow, to gulp down, Hipp. Coac. 126, Ar. Eq. 357, 826, Av, 503; Tijv MeAonévynooy dmacay Hermipp. Mop. 3 :—metaph., Adyous x. Ath, 270 B:—cf. Bpdxw IL. kaTaBpoxMopes, 5, a gulping down, ingurgitation, Clem, Al. 185. kataBpixw; aor, 1 xaréBpuga Nic. Th. 675:—to bite in pieces, eat up, Hippon. 26, Anth. P. 6, 263, Nic. l. c. kataBpixdopat, Dep. to roar loudly, Cyrill. (who also has the form ~Bptxopat). II. =xaraBpixw, Eumath. p. 445. karaBpiw, to be overgrown, moo® kataBpvovoay Eubul, KuB, 1; but Pors, xapa Bpvovcay, coll. Soph, O. C. 473. - 751 katraBpo0w, late form for xaraBiBpwoxw, Babr. pars. 2. 67,18; cf. BeBpwOors in Hom. katéBpopa, 74, that which is eaten, food, Lxx (Num.14.9,al.), Eccl. kataBpatee, vy. sub *Bpdxw. kataBpwors, ews, 7, an eating up, devouring, LXx (Gen. 31.15). kataBpocopar, fut. of karaBeBpwoxw, kataBubifw, to make to sink, Hipp. 1284. 25, Theophr. H. P. 5. 4, 73 vaty Diod. 15. 34: metaph., «. rods Bious Longin. 44. 6. kataBupodw, to cover quite with hides, Thuc. 7.65: to sew up in a skin, Plut. Cleom. 38. KataBuw, Zo stop up, Ta wra Eccl. katdyatos, ov, Ion. for kardyetos. Katayiivéw, to make bright and shining, Clem. Al. 289. kat-Gydmde, fut. yow, strengthd. for dyamdw, Epicur. ap. Diog. L. 10. 94 and 116; cf. Schaf, Plut. 5. p. 28. katayapyaAilw, strengthd. for -yapyaAl{w, Eumath. p. 77. katayavptdopat and —dopat, strengthd. for the simple, Theophyl. katayyeAeus, éws, 6,=Kxarayyedos, Act. Ap. 17. 18. katayyeAla, 7), proclamation, mod€pou Luc. Paras. 42; @¢ xarayyeAlas émredciy dyava Plut.Rom. 14; car. movetaOaca decree, C.1. 3656. Rule a denunciation, Joseph. A. J. 10. 7, 4. kat-ayyéAAw, fut.